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MindFlex- The Story of Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
So,
I'm with Rabbi Yisrael David Grossman,
the Rav of Migdal HaEmek, the founder of
Migdal Ohr. And this is another project
that came came to me, unbelievable
project, through a long series of
projects. And each person that I'm
meeting is just more incredible than the
next. And here we have project inspired.
It's all about Am Yisrael. It's all
about people who love Klal Yisrael. It's
all about people who they give their
whole lives to Klal Yisrael. And when I
met Rav Grossman, I knew this is a
person that probably more than
I don't want to say more than anyone,
but
the top percentile of people who've
given their whole lives to Klal Yisrael.
And it all started back after the
Six-Day War. In essence, what happened
was that Kadosh Baruch Hu saved Klal
Yisrael from a catastrophe. The whole
world thought that the country was going
to be destroyed. A lot of people in
Eretz Yisrael thought that. They were
You know, it was really a a terrible
time for Klal Yisrael.
And but it was a tremendous miracle.
And Klal Yisrael won the war.
And at that time, Rabbi Yisrael David
Grossman was a young man.
And he went to the Kotel HaMaaravi.
And he stood by the Kotel and he said,
"Ribbono shel Olam, I have such a Kadosh
time.
You saved Klal Yisrael. You saved Eretz
Yisrael. What can I do for Klal
Yisrael?" And he said, "I want to give a
year of my life to Klal Yisrael. I'm
going to go somewhere. I'm going to give
a year pushing Eretz Yisrael, a love for
Klal Yisrael. I want to go and I want to
give of myself for a year."
And that was the promise he made
standing at the Kotel HaMaaravi, the
Western Wall. Rabbi Yisrael David, a
young man, young rabbi, went and he gave
this promise to Kadosh Baruch Hu. And he
went to Eretz Yisrael but the
Lubavitcher Rebbe. Rabbi Yisrael David,
what happened? Makara, what happened
when you went to Lubavitcher Rebbe and
you asked him, "Sha'alt oto, you asked
him, where should I go?" What happened
then? The Rebbe says, "It's Yitzchak
Dovid. My name is Yitzchak Dovid. You
got used to call me Yitzchak Dovid.
Yitzchak Dovid, after the Hogan Akikdam
Muskamin Abastin in Migdal HaEmek, maybe
you will go and take a look what we can
do in Migdal HaEmek. I never hear Migdal
HaEmek in my life. I used to grow up in
Yerushalayim.
I go out from his home. I ask people,
Migdal HaEmek, Migdal HaEmek, it's the
worst place. At this time, it was the
worst place, crime and drugs.
Can't believe what happened then.
But the Rebbe says, "I decided to go."
The Rebbe says that he should go to
Migdal HaEmek. And he decides to go. And
he goes home and he says to his wife.
And his wife says, "Listen, don't worry.
Don't get all nervous. You'll go there.
You'll see what the Rebbe says. And then
you'll And then we'll decide." Now, his
wife grew up in a house of of Rebbe.
When the Rebbe says, you go. They were
Chabad from the house. When the Rebbe
says, you go, you go. So,
it took him the better part of a day to
get there. He had to travel bus after
bus after bus. And he finally gets to
Migdal HaEmek. And it's like this
nothing of a town, but full of crime.
And he gets off. Now, he comes into this
place the Rebbe sent him. The question
is, where are all the Jews? Where are
all the bachurim? Where's the Torah? And
he walks in. And this is the funny part.
This is where it all starts. And he says
to this guy he meets on the street. And
he says to him, "Excuse me. Where is the
yeshiva?" Right? Amarta la bachur,
"Where is the yeshiva?"
I I come from a Mea Shearim. Every
building is a yeshiva. Everything is a
kollel. I come there. I ask, "Where is
the yeshiva? What yeshiva? Talmud Torah?
What? Where can I find the youngsters?"
They say "The disco."
"Disco? I never hear disco in my life.
In Mea Shearim, you don't know what
disco? I hear disco, maybe I think maybe
it's a yeshiva called disco."
I go to the yeshiva disco. I go in. I
see pulling in the middle of the night.
People dancing, girls, boys. They see
me.
They can't believe. A rabbi with
building parents come to
they say to the to the rabbi when they
saw the rabbi? What did they say to you?
I I In the beginning, they're thinking
maybe somebody died. They look for
minyan for kaddish. But they say to me,
"What are you doing here?"
I say, "I think to come to live here."
"You crazy? You living in Yerushalayim,
come here?" "Yeah, you make brothers.
I You you you you a Jew."
To let's
live together. Let's do together. And
from this first minute, it became like a
magnet between me and the youngsters.
And I used to go every night
into the disco. I have my
my corner.
My corner. And they used to come and
speak and ask. Then my home became a
disco. They come to my home. Then
Shabbat became a all in in
Shabbat night and Friday night. And this
was I became very very involved
in in in this youngster. Then somebody
tell me, "My brother is in jail."
I say, "Your brother is my brother.
Let's go visit your brother." I come to
the jail, Shatta. Going first time in my
life. A jail, 400 youngsters, Moshe,
Yaakov, Yitzchak. I go to the head from
the jail. I say, "Let's me Let me make a
program for rehabilitation
through Torah." So, you have a program.
How many years is this program of
rehabilitation in the jails in Eretz
Yisrael? How many years is that?
Right now, when I sit with you, we have
more than 1,000 prisoners right now in
all prisons that sit and learn Torah.
This program is going from 1973
till today. And how many people went
through the whole program, would you
say?
Hundreds. Hundreds. Hundreds. And they
became baalei teshuvah.
Next month was a big was a big what you
call a convention from the police and
the system from the jails. The head from
the jail
says
the head from the program from program
from all jails in Eretz Yisrael,
prisons. He says that the best program
is the program that we have from Torah.
Right. Because 70-80%
don't go back to jail. But the most
important in the end.
Then I decided
and start to go to the jails. Not in
start, but more important, what you're
going to the jails in in in the
streets, in the disco. Let's take the
boys and the girls
before they go to jail. Before they go
to come. Make him a home. And we started
Migdal Ohr in 1972
with eight 18 boys. 18 boys.
Today, we have more than 20,000
graduates.
Unbelievable. I also wanted to talk
about the the crazy story that happened
when the Rav was the Rav in Migdal in
Migdal HaEmek and on Rosh Hashanah. Cuz
this was an unbelievable story. The The
Rav is in shul on Rosh Hashanah and he's
He gets tapped on the shoulder. And he
turns around. What does he see? Sfi
Eldaradi, the mayor of Migdal HaEmek is
standing there. Sfi Eldaradi is a is a
is a real character. We're not getting
into that. But he he's tapping the Rav
on the shoulder on Rosh Hashanah morning
and he says, "We have a situation over
here, code red. And we need the rabbi to
come and put it out because if not, it's
going to be a massacre." Now, what
happened? What happened was So, the Rav
says to him, "What happened last night?"
He said, "Last night, there was a party
in the Sachnut in the city for the new
Russian immigrants who came to Migdal
Migdal HaEmek. And what happened was a
Moroccan boy passed by. And he heard the
the singing. He heard the music. He He
wanted to be in the party. And he came
inside. And the Russians said, "Get
out." And they told him he has to leave.
And they forced him. So, what did this
boy do? He took a bottle. And he smashed
it down on a chair. And he broke the
bottle. And then he killed one of the
Russians.
That's what happened. That's the
background of what happened that night
on Rosh Hashanah night in Migdal HaEmek.
So, what happened?
I don't know the whole story.
And they said to me that right now, the
whole Russians make a demonstration.
They come together. And they're taking
mamash
everything what they have to go to fight
with the Moroccan.
And the Moroccan are going to save
themselves. Going to be like a war
between the Russian and Moroccan.
And he says that he he goes there. And
they want to say something. They're
screaming at them. They want to to They
want to kill him, the mayor.
Then he says, "Maybe you come, you can
help." I leave right away the yeshiva
come there. I see what happened. All
Russian demonstration.
I started to speak to them in Yiddish.
In this time, they know in in '73, they
know Yiddish. I say, "Yidden!"
Ken yishana Hashem Yisrael.
What God did today? Can be a thing like
this Rosh Hashanah?
You must to make a demonstration as a
demonstration. A demonstration.
A demonstration. You must. But my idea
is let's go to make the demonstration in
the synagogue. So, instead of them
fighting, what the Rav did is the Rav
took them away from where they were
going to actually fight and maybe kill
each other to the shul to make the
demonstration in the shul during Rosh
Hashanah davening. The Rav pulled them
from the shul. I come in with all
people. I think all the mother also from
the boy and everybody.
The chazzan was there. Rabbi Yankel
Jacobson from Monsey.
He He is He has a beautiful voice. He's
a big chazzan. And he decided to come to
Migdal HaEmek to pray in his wife's
bell.
He's staying Jacobson is staying in
pray. And suddenly
the whole Russian comes in. Became a
balagan.
And they ask, "What happened?" We tell
them that somebody killed He fell down.
He fainted. Fainted. In middle of
davening. In middle of davening. Then I
go out. Everybody is inside. I go to the
Aron Kodesh. Open up the Aron Kodesh.
Say, "Jews!" In Yiddish. "Jews!"
Of course. Of course, very hard thing
what happened. But fighting?
I tell you, if you will fight, you will
kill somebody or or or or laftzoah, how
do you say it to To wound somebody.
somebody, you will not finish this year.
Who am I speaking? A helicopter is
coming.
You hear a helicopter outside of the
square of the show.
who is coming the head from the police
from the from Israel. The whole group
You what happened the fight comes down
they see him see the helicopter but they
are running to him they want to says
boom boom boom. I can't speak to
everybody. Give me a delegation. They
take few five six people
the Russian He was in the room near near
the synagogue. And what is a more kind
of you don't speak Yiddish.
And in they speak only only Yiddish or
Russian.
He says that they I want that I will So
you the rabbi is going to be the
translator the interpreter. Yeah. He
said that he is Yiddish to I said that
you must understand the more kind of
they come they have no they have no
apartments. They're very poor and you
come and the government gives you nice
apartment and this jealous is
I say to myself if I will say to them
what he says it will be
it will be in doubt. I say he says that
this boy will be a forever in the in the
in the
What the rabbi what the rabbi is saying
is that the chief of police was
basically telling the Russians things
that the rabbi knew if the Russians
would hear these things they would not
react well. So the rabbi basically
interpreted his words completely
differently than what he was saying. He
was saying you have to understand the
rabbi is saying we're going to put them
away forever we're going to lock them
up.
The newspapers wrote about the rabbi.
What was the line? The line the line was
for tight and for better.
For tight translated and for better and
made better. Basically everybody after
this they understood that the rabbi
understood exactly what to say and I
like to say that that Rosh Hashanah was
when the rabbi was cornered the rabbi
acquired Migdal Emek. He saved the city
from a massacre and that was
the moment he became the rabbi of the
city. Today
two cities in Israel that keep up
Shabbat 100% Bnei Brak and Migdal Emek.
Everything is closed. When you drive
into Migdal Emek there's a there's a gas
station in the in both sides of the city
there gas stations with signs that say
closed on Shabbos and you don't find
this anywhere else. This you find
Tachanat gas station which is closed on
Shabbos. I want to I want to talk to the
rabbi for a second cuz the rabbi is not
a you know he grew up in Mea Shearim
he's not a person into sports. He was
never into sports and yet somehow Rav
Grossman not just did he get into sports
he ended up being involved with one of
the most famous sports teams in the
world the New York Knicks and that how
did that happen? Where the rabbi ends up
going to Madison Square Garden
on the parquet floor of Madison Square
Garden. What was the story? Why did the
rabbi end up going to Madison Square
Garden? One day I was in my home.
And the old guys that you call in disco
in the beginning What what what was your
name for the guys from the disco?
What means the what means the The the
guys from the disco. My rabbi Akurelam.
Tzadikim. The tzadikim and the rabbi
always called these guys in from the
disco he called them his tzadikim. So
he's he's sitting at home and there's a
knock at the door.
Tzadikim they come they knock on my
door. The tzadikim are there.
I open up the door and they take me
and they started to singing Yesh Elokim
Yesh Elokim is a God. And they put me
over a car in the street of the car of
the back from the car and they dancing
Yesh Elokim. I think maybe Messiah is
coming. Yesh Elokim. What happened? This
night was a game between Maccabi Tel
Aviv
and Russia CSKA Russia. And Israel won
with one point this Russian in the in
the in television in the radio that he
gives the news from the game because
Israel is is is success he's taking he's
screaming Yesh Elokim.
So the sports announcer who was
announcing the game he was so excited
He was so excited that Israel won this
game against Russia that he screams out
Yesh Elokim there is a God. Now
all over Israel people went crazy and
and the tzadikim came to Rav Grossman's
house screaming Yesh Elokim Yesh Elokim
and they picked him up and put him on
top of the car and they're dancing
around the car screaming Yesh Elokim.
So what happened? Then after them
one for them
maybe three years after them one from
the boys in Migdal Emek very interesting
boy sitting learning and learning and
learning he finished he's he's decided
to learning Shas.
When he finished the whole Shas
that the boy not only in Russian
I make a big big party
and I say to the old people you remember
the the the the the screaming Yesh
Elokim for this for this sport. Let's
make a big party and singing Yesh Elokim
for this boy. I brought Rav Ovadia Yosef
to Migdal Emek he was the chief rabbi.
That was a siyum. That was a beautiful
siyum Yesh Elokim but then the rabbi had
an idea and the idea was I just want to
tell what I did. The rabbi said look
there's so many Israelis in in America
so many and they have no connection to
to Yiddish guide they have no connection
to Torah. How do I reach 20,000 Israelis
in one shot? How do I do this?
I want to I reach everybody in one shot.
So the rabbi had a great idea. Tal Brody
was the guy who won the game against
Moscow and the rabbi had become friends
with Tal Brody. So the rabbi goes to Tal
Brody and says listen I want you to set
up a game a basketball game between
Maccabi Tel Aviv and the New York Knicks
and I want I'm going to come and speak.
in Madison Square Garden I am going to
come and I'm going to speak in the
middle of halftime show. So what
happened? So tell what happened. In
halftime show At halftime right. They
say usually people stay up to drink to
don't they say never supplies everybody
sit to make darkness only middle of the
light then I come in with a microphone I
come in all people it says
Achim Karimov my name is Rabbi Grossman
I come from Israel to speak to you you
Israeli.
You remember are you what means what
means a Jew?
You never ever place that let's say
together Shema Yisrael then we started
Shema Yisrael then I said let's say sing
together
What song did they sing?
They all sang together.
Together all the people. 20,000 people.
And after them
I
I can't explain the feeling from the old
people they don't want to leave. They
singing again Am Yisrael Chai Shema
Yisrael. Many Israel many people in New
York remember.
And then they started to call me send
letters and many many people became
close to Hashem from this game.
Unbelievable from one game from one
night. Wait a second but we have to say
the best part of the story was that Dr.
J right? Dr. J said to the rabbi maybe
take a shot. Now Rav Grossman never
never shot a basketball in his life but
Dr. J says look let me help you and he
says okay hold the ball like this and
bend your knees like that. The rabbi
said
let me do it by myself. What happened? I
say let me then I take the ball I
concentrate myself and I put in is it
going in?
Swish.
Yesh Elokim.
I I want to I want to talk about one
other story. I mean we
Commercial matter we could talk we could
talk all day and all night Baruch Hashem
which we did when I'm the book the safe
the book that's coming out now from the
from the rabbi it's called Legends and
it's and it's with Artscroll and this is
a book that's
hours and hours and hours that I spoke
with Rav Grossman about his incredible
life but just one more story this story
was
really one of the most amazing stories
that the rabbi had in his life a life of
amazing stories but this story was like
Hakadosh Baruch Hu speaking to the
rabbi.
And this is going back to 2004 if I'm
not mistaken when the rabbi signed
I decided to build me build a beautiful
a very big campus for the boys. I signed
is I signed for $6 million.
I have maybe maybe 200.
200? That's it? That's it. Maybe more.
Then
when I signed you have a video to see
that I say the boy in Israel I signed to
you will pay.
That's what I say. Okay they're laughing
and they
After them I became the Israel prize. Oh
so at that time Israel gave Rav Grossman
the a very a very prestigious prize it's
called the Israel prize which is really
it was for a lifetime of achievement.
That's what it was and therefore because
he had the prize everywhere he went in
Israel people recognized him. Because
all all the Everybody knew it was a big
thing. It was a big thing. Also the
prime minister and the and the president
in televisions Right. I come to El Al to
go on fundraising trip.
Fundraising for the for the girls in El
Al
Rav Grossman mazel tov chatan pras
Yisrael you received the Israel prize we
want also to give you a prize. What?
They want upgrade me to the first class.
Now Rav Grossman never used to go on
first class because what I used to duck
money for for for travel? No no no. But
now they gave him the upgrade for free
he said Okay. Okay. I go in first class
with six seat two and two and two. I sit
there nobody is there in the last minute
comes a couple an American couple and
sit there. Okay the flight is take off.
Never I do this I don't know why I do
this I stay up go to this man and say
shalom my name is Rabbi Grossman I work
with thousands of kids they used to call
him the disco rabbi tell him the story
and say maybe you want to see a DVD a
video from my place.
Now the rabbi the rabbi knew he can't go
anywhere. He's stuck. He he can't go
anywhere. Where is he going to go? He
has to watch it. Say okay. Then I take
the the the DVD
and put him take this table from the in
in the plane put this in and he he hears
Him and his wife right?
his wife and they hear
I take on a eight minutes I see
finished. I come to take back.
Okay, slow down. So, let's let's get
what happened here clear. The rub gets
up from his seat. The rub goes over to
this man and his wife to take back the
DVD machine that he that he just watched
very nice.
Now, what happens next? What happened?
You know, in this plane you have a
button, you know. A button on the seat,
yeah. A button on the seat. If you push
the button, then the seat became like a
bed.
I come I I come with one one hand I want
to take the DVD from another hand I put
my hand on the button of the
And then I push the button. I make him
let let down.
goes from one second to the next from
sitting up to lying down without knowing
it. He's shocked. He doesn't know what's
what's going on. And I also been
shocked.
And of course he was shocked, yeah. She
she she saw look take somebody very fat
and he's put him in and lay him down. I
don't know what he's doing and I stay.
And then I I I I is is living like them
I give him a kiss in his his his
Okay, so this is a very funny part of
the story. Rub Grossman standing he's
towering above this guy. This guy just
went from sitting to lying down and Rub
Grossman he doesn't know why he does
this, but for whatever reason not
knowing why he bends over and he gives
the guy a kiss on the forehead. He
doesn't know why he does it.
say and say excuse me because I want to
show him excuse me.
And Rub Grossman felt bad for what
happened.
excuse me excuse me excuse me and then I
take back.
I go back to my place and I speak to
myself why you doing things like this.
Why did you do this?
I shame for myself.
Two minutes later he stand up.
With his wife come to my insurance and
says Rubai, I want that you know
I've been very close to BB.
And I've been very close to Bielski.
Bielski is the head of the Jewish Is
that Bielski? Zev Bielski from the UJA.
Very blessed. He says, I put away a big
amount from from for for building that I
want to save kids like what you're
doing. They show me many things UJA and
the the the Sochnut the home school The
Sochnut the Jewish Agency.
Jewish Agency and BB and they show me
this I don't like.
Ask my wife. I make a sign with God.
If somebody will come
and he's walking with these kids from
walking home orphans and he will give me
a kiss here, this is the man that I need
to give him the money.
Can you believe that this is make a sign
like a crazy and he gives me a couple
million dollars to build this building?
Unbelievable.
I just wanted to say we're going to
finish off with the this interview
the mice that all started. If we go back
in the beginning, it all started from
the Rub's with obviously Rub wanted to
go and save Klal Yisrael. That's how it
all started. That's where it began with
with the Rub with a person that you know
wants to give and save Klal Yisrael and
that led to a lifetime of the most
amazing amazing story. Because we say
every every day you say in the davening
Baruch Elokeinu
sheb'raanu lichvodo. I thank you God
that you created me for your honor. I
say every time in my speeches drosh in
my drasha I say a story.
This was a father in America
and he has
a son in America and two sons in Israel.
One is rich lives in Caesarea and one is
a poor lives in Migdal HaEmek.
And he marry off his son from America.
He sent a letter
to his son from Caesarea the big the
richest in shekels
say your brother is going to be
your brother is going to be wedding
I want that you come to the wedding.
Everything what you will spend for the
wedding I will give you back.
And he says also, please try that your
brother with his kids from Migdal HaEmek
from Migdal HaEmek will also come.
This son from Caesarea
save a letter that the father will give
back everything what he spent is going
to Tel Aviv.
In Dizengoff Center bought for his wife
a boutique boutique you know boutique
the nice clothes. He buys for himself
beautiful wood beautiful suit everything
for his kids. But the Migdal HaEmek his
brother he sent them I have a ticket for
you this and this day we're flying to
America. But you don't go to buy
clothing in in in in and for his wife
his brother's wife and the children.
Okay, they is coming. The two families
come to Elpelt Lud. They go on the plane
to America.
In America in Kennedy Airport the father
and the host and in the mechutanim
they're waiting.
First go out there from Caesarea with
the with the boutique
With the great. great good and he says
this is my Look look it's a mechuten.
This is my son this is my grandchild is
so proud he's so nice.
Then later comes the
the other son from Migdal HaEmek
clothing wearing like like poor.
He became ashamed. What can he do? Okay,
day after he take him to 13th Avenue in
Borough Park bought him clothing
finished.
The wedding was beautiful wedding
wedding in in Waldorf Astoria was
beautiful. After the wedding after the
Sheva Brachot
time to go home.
This son from Caesarea
waiting the father to give him the back
for his Where's the money? Show me the
money.
I see don't you go to his father and
father you know how much cost me the
whole boutique and the whole
clothing and everything. The father says
you're a big boy.
You will work a little harder. You will
you will pay back. He says yeah I have
overdraft in in bank. You will pay back.
Father, but you promised me
that everything what I will spend you
will give me back.
I promised you. I have the letter. Okay,
that's Show me the letter.
He take the letter.
Let's read together.
Everything what you will spend for mine
honor I will give you back.
And he says to his son, if you will
think of mine honor
you will try that your brother and his
wife and the children also have
beautiful clothing. What you spend is
for your honor. I never promised you
that I will give you for your honor.
What is the moshol? Baruch Elokeinu
sheb'raanu lichvodo. If you try only for
yourself that you learning and davening
and keep up Torah and mitzvahs, but if
you do this only and you don't try that
your brother also to have little
shiyurim and to give him love, God says
this is not for mine honor. You do this
for your honor. And every day we say
Baruch Elokeinu
sheb'raanu you came lichvodo.
And if you think lichvodo, you need to
take care of your brother's kids and
then you know, I grew up in a home in
Batei Varshin. My father was the going
Rabbi Yisrael Grossman. 10 kids in 70
meters. In the 50s
arrived in Israel the Yemenites.
My father go to Rosh Ayin
speak it going to Yemenites you
the let live they live this time in in
tents. Yeah. The winter very bad. He
goes from tent to tent.
if you have a problem for your kids I
have a place.
And he brought to my home. I in my home
were
five kids.
Yemenites. I used to sleep in one bed
with two Yemenites. I show you you see
them.
Sure.
This is my blessing.
70 meters. 10 kids.
He has patience to go and my mother and
father to take another five kids.
The Yemenites. Why?
This is Ahavas Yisrael.
Because you don't live for yourself. You
live for Kodesh Boruch.
Thank you very much Rub Grossman. You're
an inspiration for all of us against
Klal Yisrael. Thank you very much.
Amen.
Hi guys, my name is Steve Gar. A huge
shout out to Project Inspire. Guys,
thank you for making bringing this
together. The staff, the educators, the
leadership of Project Inspire
dedicated bringing Jews from all over
the world together to bring them to the
land of Israel to show them the special
the holiness the the beauty that exists
over here. So, you guys do amazing work
and I want to say thank you for giving
me this incredible opportunity. It's a
privilege that I get to
show you guys one of the most amazing
places in Israel. My name is Steve Gar
again. I live here in the Gush Etzion
which is just north of us where we
standing right now. I made aliyah from
South Africa. I serve on an elite
counter-terrorism unit. I'm the first
response to terrorist attack that
happens in the area. I also help run a
special needs yeshiva. This allows young
men and women come to learn in Israel
for their year away. They come to learn
but they have special needs Down
syndrome, autism, and we give them that
opportunity. The third thing I do, which
I'm absolutely passionate about, is I
love showing people around the Israel.
Showing them our history, showing what
it's all about. So, I'm honored that
Project Inspire has chosen me. I want to
give a big shout out to David Sussman,
who's his team production is putting
this production together. So, David,
thanks for making this happen.
It's awesome working with such a
professional. Guys, what we're doing
over here is going to explore the holy
city of Hebron. There are four holy
cities in Israel. Jerusalem being number
one, number two is the city behind us.
This is the city of the patriarchs. In
Hebrew, Hebron. The root of the word
Hebron is haver, which means friendship.
But, you know that it's much deeper, the
word haver. Where does that come from?
From a word in Hebrew that says chibur.
What is chibur? It's a connection. When
you connect to someone, that's how you
build a friendship. Do you know that's
right behind me in this gorgeous valley?
In there is the ancient
point where we believe there's a direct
connection between heaven and earth.
Guys, this is incredible. Our sages
teach us in the oral tradition that
heaven actually touches earth at that
very spot. If you look in the center of
those walls, looks a little bit like a
castle, that is the tomb of the
matriarchs and the patriarchs. We
believe that's a direct line between
that spot on earth to the Garden of
Eden, to Gan Eden. Unbelievable to be
able to explore this area, to see the
history, both modern history and ancient
history that happened over here. The
trials, the tribulations, what we have
are the massacres.
But, I want to take you through this
tour, and how we're going to explore
different neighborhoods over here.
Different stories, personal stories of
people who have lived here in ancient
and both in modern times. This is an
exciting tour, and I'm so excited that
you guys have
got this opportunity to be with me, to
really connect on a deep level to this
place, cuz that's what it is about.
Hebron is about chibur, is about
connection. The connection between the
Jewish people and the land of Israel,
the connection between us and the
almighty, the connection between each
other. And I think this is an
unbelievable opportunity that we get to
connect to such a special place. So,
Project Inspire, thank you for making
this happen. Join me on this awesome
tour of this city of the matriarchs and
the patriarchs. Abraham lost his wife
at the age of 127.
Sarah passed away. Abraham, looking for
a burial spot, came to this what was a
field. Guys, forget the rocks, the
stones, the brick structures. This was a
field belonging to Ephron. Ephron,
seeing that a leader,
a world leader, Abraham, had lost his
wife, said, "You can take this cave to
bury your wife for free." Abraham said,
"No, I will not take it for a gift."
And then, Ephron said, "If you want to
pay for it." He told him 400 silver
coins, which was way above the market
price.
Abraham, the first Jew, did not haggle.
What was the reason? Why wouldn't he
take it as a gift? Why wouldn't he take
it
or try and get the price down if it was
too expensive?
Abraham knew
that this
place would be disputed. He didn't want
a gift.
He wanted to pay the full value, so that
one day this would never come into any
dispute that this belongs to his family.
It's where our forefathers
are buried. It's where our matriarchs
and patriarchs
are the final resting place. He said,
"I'm paying the full price, and I'm not
going to bring you down. I'm not going
to negotiate, because we want you to
know that this is our land." This was
3,700
years ago.
Guys,
1,700 years after Sarah be is buried
over here, comes a Jewish king, King
Herod, at the time of the Romans. And
this is over 2,000 years ago. He comes
over here and he says, "We need to
beautify this place." What he does is he
puts up these stones. These are the
classic Herodian stone. We can see his
signature mark, how he does the border
of each stone. Probably one of the
greatest architects of the ancient
world, King Herod. We know Masada. We
know the Second Temple. We all over
Israel, he built. He's probably the
greatest architect in Israel in the
ancient times. So, this is the Herodian
stones, and it's beautiful to see the
size and how it's kept. We're looking at
a structure that is 2,000 years old.
That's real ancient history over here.
So,
this is a little bit about the
structure.
This is about the architecture that you
see, but I'd like to tell you how the
Jews came back here in 1967. Guys, we're
standing in the spot outside the Me'arat
Hamachpelah, the Cave of the Couples,
which for many years was known as the
seventh step. The seventh step was a
place just outside where Jews were
allowed to go. They were not allowed to
pray inside. And this all changed in
1967. We have the chief rabbi, Rav
Goren, who drives his vehicle by
himself, wanting to be one of the first
soldiers to enter, to blow the shofar as
the Israeli army enter Hebron. He drives
in and he finds he's alone. He sees the
Arabs are starting to surrender, and
this is where Rav Goren comes. He finds
his way to go to the door, the entrance,
just behind us at the Me'arat
Hamachpelah, but it's locked. He uses
his Uzi to try and shoot it open. It
doesn't work. He pulls it with his car,
and eventually makes it in to be the
first Jew in 700 years to pray inside
the spot.
What a feeling. And that's the chief
rabbi of the Israeli army, Rav
Goren, the highest ranking religious
officer who came over here in 1967. You
know, when ministers came to visit
afterwards, they knew about how a Jew
was disgraced by that seventh step where
I'm standing over here, and a Jew wasn't
allowed to walk in to the place of their
forefathers and their foremothers
proudly with their head held up high.
And this was all changed. You know, one
of our ministers, Rehavam Ze'evi, his
name's Gandhi. He, when he came to
visit, he brought with him a
sledgehammer, and he said, "Before I go
in
to pray to the the almighty, I'm going
to destroy that which disgraced the
Jew." A Jew now
is in Hebron. A Jew now is have come
back to their original heritage, to
their birthplace. So, he came over here
with a sledgehammer, smashing that
seventh step, and
this is
the place where I pray, actually,
because I'm a kohen, a priest, and
priests are not allowed to go inside a
burial site. So, for me, this is the
closest I can actually go. But,
the Jewish people now are able to go
inside and not be afraid to really
connect to their heritage, to their
birthright, and be able to pray in one
of the best places on earth,
and connect to the almighty. Guys, we're
standing in the ancient cemetery here in
Hebron. This is the ancient Jewish
cemetery that we can see dates back to
the 1300s. 1290 was where we can
actually find a written source for the
cemetery. The graves over here go back
many, many years. Famous rabbis, the
Reishit Chochmah, the Steipler Gaon,
Ra'avad, all are buried over here. These
are really incredible giants and
brilliant rabbis that
that lived in Hebron and would had the
merit to be buried over here.
Unfortunately, 1929, this cemetery was
taken over by the Arabs, and was
destroyed in the massacre. The last time
it was used was to bury the Jews that
were killed in that massacre. So, you
can actually see their graves over here,
and then it wasn't used. And it's then
we have a young family, the Nachshon
family, Sarah Nachshon, a powerful woman
who has her brings her three children,
brings seven families, and they come and
come back here in 1968, after the
Six-Day War. It's over here that they
are able to have more children. And in
1975, they have Avraham Yedidya. Do you
know their idea was to take this young
boy and to circumcise him inside the
Me'arat Hamachpelah. This was the burial
spot for the matriarchs and patriarchs.
It was not allowed to do circumcision
there, because that burial site is
shared with Muslims and Jews,
and according to Islam, wine is
forbidden. So, to show
not not not to
to offend, we do not bring wine into
into
We do not bring wine into the burial
spot, and that meant we cannot do
circumcision there. But, Sarah said, "I
am
determined. I want my son to have his
brit milah." We give circumcision 8 days
after a young boy is born, and she did
it. You know, her husband packed a bag,
because he knew he's probably going to
be arrested for doing such a criminal
act. And what happened was is that she
was able to have and circumcise her son
in the Me'arat Hamachpelah. Guys,
you should know that they gave him the
special name Avraham Yedidya, which
means Abraham, our beloved,
after the Abraham, our patriarch.
Unfortunately, it's a sad story. At 6
months old,
Abraham Yedidya died of sudden infant
death syndrome. And it was then
that Sarah understood there was a
calling. What she wanted to do, she
said, "I want to bury my son." Although
forbidden, against Israeli law, to bury
and to use this synago- this cemetery,
she said, "I want to bring my son back
over here." She drove, but the soldiers
didn't let her through. She said, "I'll
go on foot." Wrapped in a prayer shawl,
she carried the infant, 6 months old, up
from the Tel Rumeida, and she
encountered a
soldier, an officer, who broke down when
he saw a grieving mother. Said, "It's
too far. Jump in my car." They drove,
and he actually helped bury and dig the
grave for the 6-month-old infant Aramia
Didia. Guys, it was because that Sarah
had this presence of mind that she said,
"I want to come back over here. I want
to reignite. There must be a reason that
God gave me this precious kid who's
irreplaceable." If you don't mind, I'd
love to read you a little
excerpt that comes from
the the speech that Sarah Nachshon gave
at her young little baby's funeral that
happened right over here in the
cemetery.
"I, Sarah, am holding my dead baby,
Abraham,
in my arms. And just as Abraham, our
father, came to Hebron to bury his
Sarah, so too I, Sarah,
have come here to bury my Abraham. At
this moment,
I know why God gave me this
irreplaceable gift.
For only 6 months,
he wanted me to reopen the ancient
Jewish cemetery of Hebron. We're going
to see the grave, and I want you to know
it's because of her courage, because of
her determination, that this ancient
cemetery is now used by Jews to this
day. Okay, guys, follow me as we go to
our next spot. As you can see just in
the distance over there, I'm pointing at
an Israeli flag. That is called the Tel
Rumeida. That's the highest Jewish
little neighborhood here in Hebron.
We're going to have a beautiful view up
there and discuss a little bit of this
area. Follow me as we go to the Tel
Rumeida.
Guys, we're standing on Tel Rumeida, one
of the highest positions in Hebron. This
is the highest Jewish community in terms
of altitude, looking down very safe.
What we have here is a bunch of
caravans. Wasn't easy setting up these
caravans. Every inch of land over here
was was very difficult to to to acquire.
In fact, unfortunately, if I can take
you to 1998, 1998, there was a terrorist
attack that happened over here. A famous
rabbi, Rabbi Ra'anan, the
grandson of the first Chief Rabbi of
Israel, Rav Avraham HaCohen Kook, he was
his grandson and a tremendous Torah
scholar, and he was living up here in a
caravan with his wife. A terrorist broke
into his caravan, stabbed Rabbi Ra'anan.
Thank God, the Rabbanit, his wife, was
able to escape through the window. It
was then that the Arab set alight the
caravan with a Molotov cocktail, and Rav
Ra'anan was killed. He was a very famous
man, as I said,
a
grandson of the Chief Rabbi of the first
Chief Rabbi of Israel, and many
dignitaries came to the shiva, the 7-day
mourning period where we console the
mourners. And the Prime Minister at that
time was Bibi Netanyahu. He came in and
he saw the mourning widow and said,
"Money can't really help, but your
husband gave such a tremendous
contribution to the nation of Israel,
his learning Torah, his coming to live
over here.
I want to give you this check." And he
handed her an envelope.
The Rabbanit opened the envelope, and in
front of the Prime Minister, this widow
tore up the check. She said, "We don't
need money. You see, we fought for every
inch of land over here. Every inch of
land, it wasn't easy putting up these
caravans. Do you know that the
government at some stage gave a 24-hour
grace period. They said, "Build whatever
you want."
What do you build in 24 hours? So, they
scrambled and said, "What we will bring
is as many caravans as we can to place
on top of other caravans and next to
it." In 24 hours, they brought as many
caravans as possible. The clock ended.
One caravan was on a crane in the middle
air. This opened up a Supreme Court case
where the Supreme Court, the judges had
to decide whether the
caravan hanging in the air was allowed
to be placed over here or because it
hadn't been placed yet, would be removed
from this area. The Supreme Court voted,
and that caravan was allowed to be
placed down. They said, "As long as it
was in the air, it was on its way down,
even though the 24 hours had expired."
Do you see how everything over here is a
struggle? Because it's very
controversial land, we are completely
surrounded by Palestinians, by Arabs who
do not want Jews to return to this
place.
In the memory of Rav
Ra'anan, the special rabbi, his widow
has created an incredible yeshiva over
here, a learning house where
young men are starting to be ordained
rabbis in this very area. But what's so
incredible is what's underneath this
incredible yeshiva, this residence, this
Tel Rumeida. Come and follow me. I want
to show you an ancient archaeological
ruin. Now, guys, when we're talking
about ancient times, you know, old in
different countries. I'm from South
Africa, you've probably picked up the
accent by now. But guys, you know, we're
talking about ancient times. We're going
back to the early Bronze Age. This is 4
and 1/2 thousand years ago. Guys,
according to the Jewish tradition, we're
at
5781, 5,781
that year. This goes back to the
original time period. We're going back
to the matriarchs and patriarchs. As
I've said, and I'll continue to say,
it's not just that the matriarchs and
patriarchs were buried here,
here in Hebron, but this is where they
lived. It's very possible
that over here, down in these ruins over
here, this was the neighborhood where
Abraham himself lived. This is where
Sarah,
who gave birth to her son Isaac, we are
standing in a place where the great
matriarchs and the great patriarchs
lived. It's incredible to stand in a
spot so holy, so connected to our
tradition, to be in a place so close
to the second holiest
place in the Jewish for the Jewish
people. We are in Hebron, the city of
the matriarchs and the patriarchs. Guys,
what we're standing in front of over
here is a yeshiva. This is a place where
young men get to study the scriptures on
the deepest deepest level. It will be a
5-year program that these students will
do. It's called Hesder. This 5-year
program allows a young man, once he
finishes school at the age of 18 years
old, he'll come and learn in a place
like this. Now, this is a place where
they combine learning and serving in the
military. 2 years, they will learn
scriptures. They will learn the Jewish
oral tradition, the the explanation to
the Bible, to understand this age-old
tradition that goes back many thousands
of years, and this is where they would
learn it. It's all written in Aramaic
with many commentaries that go through
throughout the ages. And this is what
young men are doing. You know, we
believe as part of the Hesder program,
religious Zionist Jews will believe that
what they're doing over here is
protecting their nation in two ways.
There's one way of protecting our nation
physically with a weapon, and they do
that. After 2 years of studying over
here, they will go and protect their
nation, serve on an infantry unit, serve
on an elite unit, become commanders,
tanks.
Then, after they serve in the military,
they'll come back, and for another,
maybe year, year and a half, they will
study again. All in all, a 5-year
program, not only protecting
our country physically, boots on the
ground, but also protecting our nation
and our country spiritually by
connecting to the Bible, connecting to
our roots, connecting to our oral law,
connecting to what makes us Jewish.
Guys, we're very lucky to have found a
soldier over here. We would love to show
you the difference between the
Israeli-made weapon, the Tavor, and the
American-made gun, the M4, the one that
I'm holding over here. So, a lot of you
know the M16. It's a classic basic
rifle. And this weapon, assault rifle
over here, is the Israeli-made one. So,
what's the difference between them?
We're going to go through. I just want
to say thank you to this Givati soldier.
We cannot show his face because
obviously we want to keep him
safe. But this soldier over here is in
one of the best units, the in fact, the
second best unit in the Israeli army,
Givati. The best unit is obviously
Golani. That's the unit I'm from. You
ask any Israeli soldier, they'll tell
you his unit is the best unit. Now, just
kidding, guys. We've got here a
sharpshooter using a Tavor, the
Israeli-made gun. What's the difference?
So, guys, most weapons that when you
have a weapon, what happens is is that
you have the magazine. The magazine is
not something we read. It holds the
bullets, and that goes in front of the
trigger. And you got the handle. And
then, when you put the magazine inside,
just above that, you have the chamber.
So, that chamber is where your barrel
begins. Now, you know what makes a
weapon accurate is the length of the
barrel. The longer the barrel, the more
accurate your weapon. You got a short
barrel, it's not accurate over long
distances. The problem is, when you got
a soldier, you want him to have a weapon
that's close to his body, easy to
maneuver, go around corners, look under
places. You want a weapon that is
compact. You can never ever make a
soldier happy because it's either
compact but not accurate, or very
accurate and not compact. Israel
designed the gun. This is the Tavor. So,
just having a look at the Tavor over
here, you've got the back of the weapon.
If you look, and we're going to ask the
soldier just to show you, there is where
we put in the magazine. Now, normally,
the magazine goes in front of the
trigger. This magazine is all the way at
the back. So, what they've done is is
moved the whole shooting mechanism to
the back of the weapon, which means the
barrel starts here. So, this soldier has
a safety mechanism in here, and this is
a Magpul and this is the beginning of
the barrel. What I want to show you is
the size of his weapon compared to mine.
If you have a look at the size, my
weapon is a lot longer. In fact, his
Tavor is about 2/3 the size of this gun.
But, let's see.
We have combat. Let's see who's got a
longer barrel. So, I'm going to put my
barrel over on his barrel, and let's see
which has a longer barrel. And if you
have a look, you can see sticking out
1/2 in longer is the Tavor. We have an
Israeli-designed gun, which is more
compact and more accurate than a regular
weapon using the bullpup design. This
weapon is phenomenal.
It's completely ambidextrous, which
means if he's a right-hander and he's
shooting, the shells are coming out of
this window. But, you know, it's so
amazing, if you turn that around, all I
do for a lefty is take out that box, put
it over there, and the shells eject away
from the soldier, not into him. That's
not possible to do on an M-16. It's a
pain for a lefty to shoot with uh this.
Guys, it's completely versatile, this
gun. He's got a special Trijicon sight.
This is a reflex sight, very accurate,
and that's on the top of the weapon. At
the bottom, he's got legs. He could put
a flashlight, a laser, completely
modular. And that is something that's
pretty incredible. He's put also a
handle over here to make that gun really
firm. It's close to his body. Um for
ejecting, if he's a right-hander, he
ejects it over here. Left-hander, we've
put another um
uh place for us to eject. Um switching
off your safety, you never take your
hand off. So, when I take off my safety,
it's using my thumb.
Lefty and righty can use this. A
completely ambidextrous weapon. One last
thing to tell you, and this is
phenomenal. This shoots a 5.56
mm round, a NATO round. You know what's
so cool? If you want to change this, you
can take out this barrel, change the
shooting mechanism, and you can put a 9
mm shooting mechanism with a barrel. So,
you can change it and modify the gun to
suit the different needs. So, this is
Israeli gun. From Har Tavor, there was a
great battle over there. The battle with
Deborah, the prophetess. We had an
incredible soldier. She wasn't big and
tough, but she beat those Philistines,
the Peleshetim. How did she beat them?
Not because of muscle,
but because of using our brain, the
greatest weapon Israeli soldier has. And
our friend from Ashkelon will tell you
this. The greatest weapon we have is our
brain. We made a clever weapon over
here, and that's what makes a soldier
good is that we sharpen this weapon, cuz
that's the most important thing. I want
to thank you for helping us, showing us,
and letting everyone see the difference
between an Israeli-made gun, the Tavor,
and an American one.
Ta-da. Hi, guys. We are now standing
outside the Bikur Cholim Hospital. It
didn't have that name originally.
Originally in 1893,
this hospital was made by the famous
Baghdadi Jewish family. They brought in
the money to make this hospital. This
was a hospital that served for Jews and
Arabs alike. There were Jewish and Arab
doctors, nurses. There were patients
that were served the Jewish and Arab
communities. We shared hospitals
together. This was life over here, 1909.
The money to keep this hospital running
came from the women Hadassah
organization all the way in the United
States. Guys, thank you for that,
because I want you to know this Hadassah
hospital
is the original. We have Hadassah
hospitals in in Israel, famous big
hospitals that are really
at the cutting edge in the
when it comes to medical advances
through the whole world. So, this was
the original one, Hadassah, coming from
1909.
This is 100 years ago, guys. The
Hadassah hospital, the original one, we
standing right here, and that's got a
quite a special story. So, we're going
to go down the stairs into that hos-
into the uh the the original hospital.
It's been converted into a museum, so we
get an understanding of what happened
and what's the history over here in
Hebron.
Guys, we are in the Bikur Cholim
Hospital over here, converted into a
museum. This museum has different
chambers, each chamber focusing on a
different period in in the history of
Hebron.
I want to focus on a very difficult
history, the history of the 1929 riots.
You can see the difficult pictures
behind us. As we said, we had a
wonderful relationship with between the
Jewish and Arab community pre-1929.
What we have is British-controlled
Israel.
The British are in control over here,
and um under British rule,
Jews and Arabs get on fantastically. In
fact, in this hospital, we have Jews and
Arabs
being patients, being doctors, medical
staff, nurses. There were Arab doctors
who looked after Jewish patients, and
vice versa. Guys, there was a great
relationship. This all changed in the
1929 riots, brutally turning on each
other. These were communities that got
on, gave each other livelihoods, were
friends, looked after each others'
children. What we see over here
are not is not friendship.
Unfortunately, this hospital, which I
really believe was a symbol of
coexistence,
of tolerance, of looking out for one
another to see how two main religions,
Muslim and Jew Judaism, can really
coexist together, that all ended in
1929.
The beautiful Avraham Avinu Synagogue
was completely destroyed. What we're
looking at the blood pouring down the
steps, this is Jewish blood.
Jews were mutilated.
There were 435 Jews that were able to
evacuate, but the devastation, to see a
beautiful holy Torah scroll torn and
ripped, to see it being burnt,
to see the children that became orphans,
it's just horrific to go through all
these pictures. 67 Jews were killed,
but many, many were maimed,
amputated their limbs.
It was horrible to see how
cruel
one nation can be to another. So, this
left
Hebron in devastation. It meant that we
had to be evacuated, 435 Jews. It wasn't
only Jews that were here in Hebron, but
the the uprising against the Jewish
people in 1929 happened all over Israel.
All in all, 133 Jews were massacred in
those uprising. And um this was all
under the noses of the British. The
British were in control over here. They
had the guns, and uh they were
responsible for keeping the communities
here safe. So, unfortunately, that
didn't happen. 133 Jews killed here in
Hebron, we got hit the hardest. 67 Jews
were slaughtered. This beautiful place
where we're standing over here was burnt
down to the ground.
And um
rather than being a place of healing, a
place where people could come and
doctors could take care of them, rather
than a place of healing, it became a
place of death. And uh very sad that
this symbol of peace and coexistence was
completely destroyed in 1929.
But, this is one of the most beautiful
synagogues that was destroyed in the
1929 riots. Um it was created, this
synagogue, 480 years ago, in 1540,
by uh Rav Malkiel Ashkenazi, a Jew who
came here and he
and founded this synagogue. We know that
there's incredible stories that
happened. The synagogue being used for
480 years, 400 years. In 1619,
there's an incredible story written by
Rav Naftali Bacharach. He tells us he's
the Emek Hamelech, the Valley of the
King, how an incredible guest
came here 400 years ago to this
synagogue. Pretty incredible. But, you
know, in 1929, when the riots broke out,
they vandalized the Arabs vandalized
this beautiful synagogue. They tore the
the the books. They burnt the synagogue
down. The chazzan was able to run out
and save one of the sifrei Torah. From
until 1967,
this synagogue lay desolate, but not
just desolate, because it was a Jewish
symbol, a beautiful synagogue burnt to
ashes. The Arabs over here decided to
make this a place where they kept
animals. Goat It was a goat pen. They
used to They kept goats inside.
Very soon after that,
when it became too disgusting, they made
this the public toilet.
A holy synagogue, the public toilets of
Hebron of this area.
It laid waste. After becoming public
toilets, a garbage dump. People used to
throw garbage. And you actually can see
there was a dome on the top. We'll see
when we're inside.
There was so much garbage in this place,
they actually threw the garbage through
the broken windows on the top of this
dome. So, um when the Jews were able to
come back here, we not only restored
this the the the the actual synagogue,
it's not a museum piece. This is used on
a daily basis.
We pray three times a day inside this
very synagogue using that Torah scroll
that was saved in the 1929
riots by the cantor of this synagogue.
Guys, follow me inside, and we'll hear
an extraordinary story about a
fascinating guest who was inside this
very synagogue. Follow me, guys.
I want to tell you a story that happened
right over here in this synagogue. It
was a couple of years
after it was built. We're talking about
400 years ago. We have a very special
rabbi, the Emek Hamelech. And in fact,
behind me is written the entire story in
one of his books. He was a kabbalist,
and he wrote that it was
Yom Kippur,
the holiest day of the Jewish year, here
in the second holiest city for the
Jewish people. And what happened right
over here is that nine men were waiting
for the 10th to start their minyan, to
start the quorum where they were going
to pray.
Nevertheless,
all the Jews,
for some reason that year decided that
they were going to pray in Jerusalem.
So, came Yom Kippur in the city of our
votes, the city of our forefathers, our
four mothers, the matriarchs and
patriarchs, there wasn't going to be a
minyan. What would they do? They stood
and stood and the sun was setting. Kol
Nidre is the prayer where we open and
they're holding the sifrei Torah. That's
the Torah scrolls are in their hands and
they say, "What are we going to do? No
minyan? How can we not have a minyan on
the holiest day?" All of a sudden, the
door opens and comes through a door a
man with a big gray beard. They They've
never seen him before. What a miracle.
They finally have the 10th man and they
pray the whole of Yom Kippur. Coming day
end of Yom Kippur,
they drew lots. Who was going to
um have this guest who helped them make
the minyan come and break the fast, to
eat after Yom Kippur had finished.
It fell on the chazzan, a very holy man.
The chazzan was able to take the guest
and he said to the guest after locking
up the synagogue, they walked out
through the alleyways on the way home.
This guest
was standing behind him.
And as they turned the corner,
the chazzan turned around and wasn't
able to see he The man disappeared.
He was frantic. He didn't know what
Was he kidnapped?
The man didn't talk a lot.
He just didn't know, you know, he just
came to make a minyan and then he
vanished. He had to break the fast. He'd
been fasting for 25 hours.
After searching, he found he couldn't
find the man anyway. He went home, broke
the fast, frantic and and afraid that
something terrible had happened. He
went, sat down on his couch.
His wife said, "Don't worry, it's going
to be okay." He fell into into a deep
sleep.
And in that sleep, that old man appeared
to him. That man with the big gray beard
came up to him and he said, "Stop
worrying. Stop looking for me." He said,
"I don't understand. Who are you?"
He said, "My name
is Abraham Avinu,
Abraham the patriarch. Holiest day of
the year, there wasn't going to be
a minyan."
He said, "I got permission from the
ministering angels to be sent down over
here to complete the minyan. I was only
allowed to come for the entire Yom
Kippur. And I came down and made the
minyan. And it's incredible to stand in
a place
where we can actually feel the presence
of the great patriarchs and matriarchs
that are the bound foundation, the basis
of the Jewish religion. Thank you guys
for joining me here. Follow me and let's
go outside.
Guys, as I've mentioned before, there
are four Jewish neighborhoods here
inside Hebron. Now, Hebron is
predominantly an Arab city. We're
talking about four Jewish
towns, little little neighborhoods, not
even a town, neighborhood within a
massive city. When I say a massive city,
we're talking about somewhere between
100 to 150,000 Arabs in this area. Now,
I must be honest, I love coming to visit
over here. I love being in the city of
the matriarchs, of the patriarchs. I
love coming to pray at one of the most
important places on Earth for a Jew to
pray here at the Cave of the Patriarchs.
But you know what? The only reason I'm
able to come here is because of the
incredible sacrifice that these Jews
living here 24/7. I don't know if I
could do it.
You know, I've got a beautiful family,
thank God. Five children, a gorgeous
wife. I must be honest, I don't know if
I could live right here in this
neighborhood completely surrounded
by possible enemies.
But these families that are here do.
And they
make that sacrifice so that
Jews like myself,
friends, tour groups can come over here
and enjoy being in the second holiest
city of Israel. But it's incredibly
challenging because it was 2001,
March,
where a young baby, 10 months old, was
in her stroller. Her dad, Yitzhak,
Isaac, Isaac Pass, was standing holding
the stroller when a sniper, all the way
from across the valley, all the way on
that hilltop over there, aimed
his weapon.
He had a telescopic sight. He put the
crosshairs on the young infant and
squeezed the trigger. When we
investigated this horrible terrorist
attack, we found that this was a
well-trained sniper. He knew exactly
what he was doing.
He aimed at the stroller, at the head of
the stroller
of Shalhevet Pass.
This young infant baby girl, 10 months
old, was killed instantly.
You know,
that bullet went straight through her
skull into the leg of her father, Isaac.
Isaac was critically wounded. After
shooting the baby, the sniper turned the
weapon onto the father. The mother was
here.
Immediately after hearing the gunshots,
she ran for her little baby but found
a bullet hole straight through the skull
of her baby ba- little child.
It's a very very sad,
a very extremely sad story that took
place right over here. A tremendous
painful story. But you know,
I get a little bit of comfort when I see
the type of people who live here, who
are willing to sacrifice being over
here, maybe being surrounded by so many
enemies. Their sacrifice has not gone
for nothing. It allows us to be here and
to really understand and to connect to
our Jewish roots, to understand
what this city is all about, to connect
to the holiness of the patriarchs and
the matriarchs. You know, we have here a
memorial. This is a memorial
for Shalhevet. You know, Shalhevet
actually means a flame and we can see
over here the stroller that Shalhevet
was in when the sniper from the hilltop
shot her.
We can see the baby inside and the
flames going upwards. This is the name
of Shalhevet. Shalhevet in Hebrew means
a fire, a flame. A flame always rises.
No matter how much it actually defies
gravity, it goes up. These people over
here
defy being
sad, being depressed. They get up like
lions. Am K'lavi Yakum, they are a
nation that get up like lions. And
that's what we have over here. The
response to terrorism, the response to
pain, the response to a baby being
massacred is that we rise up. You know,
with these flames actually go up to a
window that I'm pointing at. That window
over there
is actually where there's a very holy
man, a scribe, a sofer stam. He's
sitting in that very window inside that
office. And there he is writing a Torah
scroll. We have Jewish law that when you
write a Torah scroll,
you have to be pure when you write the
holy name of God himself. When you write
God's name, you have to purify yourself
and that's why sometimes when I'm
standing here, I see this holy rabbi,
the scribe, come down the stairs
right past the spot going into the
ritual cleansing bath. This is a mikveh.
A mikveh in in in the Jewish tradition
is how we purify ourselves. Going into
the mikveh, he washes himself, purifies
himself just before he goes back to his
office
to write God's name. In between
purifying himself, he's not allowed to
take phone calls. He's not allowed to
talk. He's not allowed to do anything.
He has to have full intent
of the holiness of writing God's name.
Do you know what's so beautiful for me?
Is that he comes past the spot every
single time he writes the the holy name
of God. The very spot where a young baby
was killed and he won't be deterred. And
the families will not leave here. They
stay here. And you know what we call a
Torah scroll? We call it in Hebrew Etz
Chaim U'Machazikim Bah. It's a book of
life that strengthens us, that gives us
power.
This book of life
is not focused on death,
but rather on how these people respond
to pain and suffering. They get up. They
rise up like a flame. They rise up like
lions. Do you know
that Shalhevet Pass's mother
just lost her baby. Her husband was in
ICU, intensive care unit, in Jerusalem.
We did not know
if he would make it. But she had the
presence of mind to go to the Israeli
army and say, "I will not bury my little
baby.
I will not bury my baby until you can
assure me
that this area, these four Jewish
neighborhoods inside the heart of
Hebron, are safe for the Jewish people."
She had that strength
to say,
"I'm not burying." Now, in Jewish law,
to bury a baby, especially for a
religious family, a religious woman, is
one of the greatest acts to take the
baby and to send her back to her
creator. But she said, "I will not do
such a thing unless we can protect other
babies, unless we can protect other
Jews."
In that very spot where a Palestinian
sniper
put the crosses on an infant there in
Israeli army base. And at that army
base,
they are watching over Abu Sneineh,
which is the Arab neighborhood looking
over this neighborhood, the Avraham
Avinu neighborhood. So it's over here
that this young mother was able to make
sure that the Jews living over here the
Jews coming to visit over here
are safe from snipers. You know what
that army base if you look carefully. I
want you to see that on the corner of
that army base you see a symbol of
Jewish
strength and that is the symbol of the
menorah the candelabra that we light for
8 days on Hanukkah. One of our festivals
and you know that when you look at that
Hanukkah
how the Jews were able to survive even
against fighting a superpower that we
picked ourselves up and then we were
able to win the war.
The Hasmonean were able to beat the
Hasmonean Empire were able to beat the
greatest
military force of that time the Greek
Empire.
We were able
to push them back and we won that war.
You know on that army base.
We are able to show strength
that we can live here peacefully to
connect to our roots and to pray
to the almighty. This is the very spot.
Where we remember the Jewish response to
pain and suffering. We're going to get
up like lions just like the Hasmonean
got up in the history against the Greek
Empire just like
a young mother
after losing her baby while her husband
is in critical condition is able to get
up and say
enough Jewish blood is not hefker. It's
not meaningless. It should not be spilt
in vain. Let's keep. Us safe from
further terrorist attacks.
It's been an honor showing you around
taking you and seeing
Hebron seeing the beauty and this
mysticism the holiness the spirituality
that exists here in Hebron the
connection between the Jew and the land
of Israel between the Jewish people.
And.
The holy spots.
The synagogues.
The ancient mikvahs the spiritual ritual
baths.
The hills the actual stones.
Where the greats our great great
grandfathers the forefathers the
foremothers this is where they walked.
It's been an honor showing you around. I
hope you guys were able to feel a
connection
to this incredible place and I really
hope that you'll be able to come and see
it physically not just through a video.
Thank you guys. Thank you for joining me
and I want you to stay safe and healthy.