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Aish 2017 Day Program
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
as we do many times we save the best for
last just a few short announcements
before we begin this morning's program
firstly everyone received hard keys to
their room manual keys chávez keys to
their room we must receive those keys in
return as it said on your envelope and
in the emails that we sent apparently
they're worth a lot of money to the tune
of $100 so if everyone could please
return it so we don't have to charge you
that money if you lost the key you can
let me know you can let the front desk
know and we'll make arrangements however
it's very very important that we get
those keys back of course if you end up
with them back at home and you forgot
them you can email us or contact us
we'll tell you how to get that had to
get how to get the keys back to us but
it's very important we get those back
secondly lunch will not be served or
packed until the session is over we're
aiming to finish here at 12 o'clock if
it goes a few minutes over lunch we'll
wait for you and everybody's starving
after this weekend someone asked me that
next year by the conference that we
actually way people on the way in and
charged them according to pound that
they gained on the weight out we're
considering it our actuaries are on the
case
nevertheless when you leave here you'll
check out they'll be packed lunches to
go to the car or to ever you're going
packed sandwiches different types of
sandwiches and the waiters will have
them on your way out I think that's it
lost and found it's a big one we have a
facility it's about four storeys it's in
Clifton for lost and found from previous
conferences we have to fill in we have
everything that people left here but if
you did please again look around look
around for the things if you can't find
them better to find them before you
leave than to have to call afterwards to
just please check your belongings this
morning's program is an exciting program
for two guests who actually would did
not join us over Shabbos I told him that
it was a really boring Shabbos
everyone's hungry and we
okay these are the tremendous speakers
and presenters from around the world
that have joined us but to introduce
today's session we spoken our entire
weekend about our branches and our
heroes out in the field one of those is
Robert Mikoto and his wife Estie tolling
over here the entire Shabbos from
Detroit and - take it - take it away to
take us through this morning session to
the finale of this year's conference
it's my honor to introduce to you rabbi
simcha Tolan all right good morning
everybody and welcome to the final
keynote session of the 2017 partners
conference yes we we did an incredible
incredible job I actually felt a little
bit like Abraham last night when I was
sitting in the lobby completely stuffed
and not one but two waitresses came over
to me and said could we get you anything
and I looked around desperately is there
anything I need my coffee was polite
plates of food and I said like Abraham
said yes Lee call I have everything
there is nothing I need so yeah see
thank you so much for giving us
everything we need this conference from
the physical to the spiritual it's been
remarkable my name is Robbie Simcoe and
I'm the executive director of Asia tour
Detroit and I am super happy to be with
you here on this Sunday morning because
on a typical Sunday morning I would be
teaching Sunday School so this is a
great improvement thanks for having me
so in July of this year the Asia tour
branch has got together in Los Angeles
ace Los Angeles hosted us in Big Bear
Lake and we met with Steve Berg and
Steve grab a burger old us we are here
for you the branches if there's anything
you need we'll take care of it and we
said rabbi Berg since the Russia Shiva
rabbi Weinberg's passing we have been
like orphans without a father with all
the good that we're doing we feel like a
like a ship adrift at sea we need to
know that we have a tour presence in the
base Madras a tour guide that we could
ask our questions - we need River
Berkowitz's presence in the organization
in Asia Torah
and I'm sitting there on the couch it's
a very casual type of environment and
I'm thinking boy we are throwing Steve
Berg under the bus how is he gonna get
us ravit sock Berkowitz
riff it's like work you know we complain
we get a hundred emails a day if it's
like Berkowitz gets thousands of emails
he's inundated by phone calls and when
he gets home at night he literally has
people waiting outside his door he has
organizations that he runs he has a city
that's after him all the time for
different needs
how is he averts of work what's gonna
come and have a presence that's at all
meaningful and a cetera but in fact he
accomplished that today or Vic Berkowitz
Lita is a guide for Asia Tora Steve Berg
meets with him every single week we as
brand chat if we have any questions we
get we email rehrberg and immediately we
get a response if it's Berkowitz's
presence as we heard is India Shiva
every single week meeting with students
and this has been transformational for a
cetera so this morning it's a tremendous
honor to ask everyone here to please
turn your attention to the video screen
for a special recorded message from a
viewer which Lisa from Jerusalem
I've been told that I should do stand-up
comedy for 60 seconds I actually
discovered in doing comedy that really
everyone could be funny it's just a
question for how long could you be funny
you know if you're gonna pay $15,000 for
a comedian they'll be funny for about 40
minutes you go to the $3,000 can be up
we're good you spend some time together
you've got a wonderful Shabbos together
hopefully hopefully you're getting a
sense getting a sense of just what's
really happening you're getting a sense
of something big here you're getting the
sense of a real movement you're part of
a movement to reawaken Jewish identity
for Jews to be ready to stand up and be
counted as Jews to know that our
heritage is something that is alive well
and relevant relevant to our lives today
you're part of that movement because
this was the dream this was why we're
not set up Asia in the first place
the idea was not just to affect
individuals the idea was to start a
movement something big something big
whereby every Jew will have heard of
this never eg was gonna feel like being
part of this because without it you're
out of it that feeling of Jewish
identity something that's worth taking a
stand for something that's worth letting
everybody know I'm Jewish and I want to
be Jewish I want my kids to be Jewish
this is what it's all about hopefully
hopefully you got the feeling of that
momentum and you're ready to go back and
not just live it but share it and enlist
others get everybody to know get the
message back to everybody the Jewish
people we are ancient alive relevant we
are of people like no other people and
you want you want every every Jew to
know this to not in any way sell
themselves short
me not to be so baby go back and take
this message I'm looking forward to
working along with Asia and helping this
grow to grow more and more in today's
generation because times have changed a
lot the world has changed a lot in the
past few years a lot more that it did
even in decades before and because of
that the crisis is greater Jewish
identity is not necessarily so popular
and we've got to find a way to reach
people and make them part of this
movement
every one of you can be an ambassador
for this every one of you regardless of
how would you know about your Judaism
it's just the pride you've got to be
able to share with others share this
with others and enlist them and together
we'll being bring back the greatness of
the Jewish nation the nation that lasts
eternally the great Jewish nation
founded thousands of years ago that has
included so many great individuals that
is responsible for so many great values
that all of humanity is pretty much
adapted be part of that be part of that
and make it happen and we look forward
to the day that every Jew is gonna be
able to stand up and be proud as a Jew
say I am Jewish enjoy the rest of this
conference and feel great
so last night I was having a DMC a deep
meaningful conversation the kind you
could have after just one too many
glasses of wine and yes Errol Schwartz
walked over to me the son of Rabbi
Shalom Schwartz and he said you know
simcha I grew up always knowing that I
am the 2nd 2nd generation a sure because
you simply are the 1st 2nd generation a
sure and I said really where do you live
he said I live in Baltimore I said what
do you do as a second-generation Asia he
says me I work in a pharmaceutical
company I said really a pharmaceutical
company how could you call yourself in
Asia
he said simple are you kidding me I host
about dinners I teach classes I'm
recruiting for programs I'm an a sure I
said he surely you're absolutely right
rev Dolph Weinberg's vision was not to
build an organization of people like me
getting paid to do what we do
Rodolphe Weinberg's vision was a
movement as you just heard and a
movement is people like you Cyril and a
PETA movement is people like yourselves
that take responsibility for clothes for
all responsibilities for the Jewish
people
you Searle you are so right we are a
movement and every one of you as part of
that movement
one such partner is mayor Sherman mayor
Sherman who started what he called the
Borough Park village it's kind of like a
halfway house from what I understand
it's like when someone is finished with
you chief in Jerusalem and they're ready
to move back to New York and start life
there's an adjustment period and that's
where mayor and the Borough Park Village
comes in with job placement housing
assistance and transition into normal
life there's got to be a joke there when
Borough Park becomes a transition to
normal life that's remarkable mayor
that's amazing but seriously mayor and
your view you and your village represent
part of Asia Torre's movement it's an
honor of pleasure to introduce everybody
to mayor Sherman an alumni of Asia tour
well okay
Logan Irish mayor Sherman I'm a product
of Asia Toria a proud product of Asia
Toria and my no means did I go to age
expecting to change my life or to become
from in anyway I didn't want to change
my life where we come from I was having
a lot of fun actually I was a television
producer my career was on the rise
things were fun I was young I just want
to pursue that and keep going with that
it was really just two simple things
that brought me to age one was the cosna
I was very very very inspired by a hosta
I'd been to parties I'd been to weddings
I've never been to a Jewish simpler
before from Jewish simcha right and
there was something about it that I
wanted I can't really explain it I just
I wanted to indulge in it and explore it
and the other thing was my sister my
sister was a Broadway actress actually
when I was in Hollywood she was in New
York and and she went to Nevada a year
and came back just a complete different
person the woman that left in comparison
to the woman that came back was night
and day and borderline miraculous
honestly she was compassionate she was
nice yet expressive she was content I
actually enjoyed talking with her I
sought out her wisdom sometimes
seriously so that was it so I knew I
went I did it I wanted to learn more
about and I signed up for the for the
three week program at H comm and my plan
was very simple I was gonna go do some
traveling eat some cool people you know
get deep Jewish wisdom from rabbis with
long white beards and then Shalom
I'm out thank you I'm on my way that's
not what happened I ended up staying for
five years I live now a complete Jewish
lifestyle
I married my soul mate and ffb from
Borough Park believe it or not it is
funny yeah my life is just far more
fulfilling
meaningful than I could have ever
imagined so what happened really well
how does Asia tour turn three weeks into
five years and for me for my journey it
was really just three components the
encouragement of questions the deep
belief that every Jew that Asia tour has
for every Jew in their leadership and
their ability to change the world and
then finally was the Limu Torah and the
excellent rabbis of Asia Torah and Oxfam
let me expand really quick in six
minutes
so one of my first eight age when I
first got there was greeted by the
jolliest man ever rabbi Schwartz with
the biggest smile and he's showing him
around the campus show him around the
scene give me the itinerary I'm thinking
myself wow this is so beautiful this is
so amazing
what's the cache right like what kind of
an organization flies guys out for free
to the most prime real estate in the
world what do they want for me what am I
supposed to do for them so I asked him I
said very bluntly I said rabbi what's
the catch what do you want from me what
do you what am I supposed to do for you
hey and what he said threw me off threw
me off a bit he said just that you show
up to class and ask a lot of questions
ask a lot of questions so in my day if I
had explored into any other religion
which I did or ideology no one
encouraged questions in fact if you
proposed a question that challenged
their faith in any way they shut down
and usually just shun shun you right so
here's a rabbi asking me to challenge
him oh I'm in ok and that's what I did I
asked a lot of questions the big ones
the small ones day in day out and one
thing led to the next and eventually
with the questions comes a very very
very scary conclusion
gods real and he exists and he is
heavily involved in my life
so it's like that's awesome but gods for
you I produce reality TV shows what do I
want to do with God I don't need God
right now I mean this is great but what
am I supposed to do with this
information you know where do I live
where do I go with work is emailing me
left and right where I tell them I'm
moving to Israel indefinitely like thank
you I don't know how to go about this I
never I never knew a religious Jew you
know where do I live
what am I supposed to do I saw something
very interesting the guys that H who
stuck around were going through the same
kind of turmoil that I was in one way or
another one guy his family thought he
was crazy fell into a cult and was out
to save him another guy dropped a
girlfriend of 10 years for no other
reason that she was just not Jewish and
we were all in this kind of whirlwind of
emotion and we didn't really know what
to do or how to go about it you know
we're about to embark on this new
lifestyle what do we do a lot of great
camaraderie was built through that but
there was times that we honestly said
you know something are we all crazy is
it just a nut house
and then that's where the leadership
part came in
I'll explain see when of remove you know
and partials luckless ah he left he left
his father's home he left his society he
didn't know where he was going you know
what he was gonna do when he got there
he just knew that the xiety that he was
in was a contradiction to what he
believed and knew was correct and then
therefore left for no other reason than
truth and integrity alone and in doing
so imbued that great character tray into
the Jewish people every single year as
that
no great leader or CEO or iconoclast or
anybody ever changed the world for the
better by following the flock aimlessly
lava movie new who established the
Jewish people I'll change the world and
it's in that that they should Torah I
think stands alone and excellence
because they know and recognize that if
you come to H and you stay at H and by
definition it is proof you are a built
of the ingredients of everything that it
takes to be a leader and change the
world and therefore they invest in you
and that's what it did they invested in
me and they invested in all of us and
the proofs in the pudding the guys of my
generation who were at Asia tour are out
there now doing great things for the
Jewish people they abide and subscribe
to Rebbe hogs teachings and movement and
they're doing amazing things how are we
crazy yeah probably a little bit you
gotta be what's his name Steve Jobs
obvious Steve Jobs said something great
he said uh said only the crew only the
people crazy enough to think they can
change the world are the ones that
actually do I think they called Reb know
up crazy
there was a revenue up with sugar know
there's the guys gonna build a ball shoe
for you Shiva crazy that was it the
intense belief and the understanding of
the character traits of what it takes to
change the world in that and how they
bring it out and every comment there and
the next was like I said Lima Torah and
the excellent rabbi's of Asia tour
taking on the Gomorrah was tough you
have to learn a new language right you
have to learn the new style but I liken
it to the to go into the gym release you
start working out it's not fun once you
start seeing results comes a little bit
more fun studying inspired right and
then once you start seeing more results
it gets easier you actually enjoy the
process and that's for me very much what
it was I actually began to enjoy the
process and eventually sometimes and all
the time I can say all the time you get
that feeling that I got at that hospital
I went to whatever fiducia it was
so that's it that's my Asia tour journey
in six minutes and I'm gonna end with
this under this it was a beautiful
Shabbos it was but it can be more than
that
I encourage you I I challenge you if
there's something anything you know that
you can do a lot for the Jewish people
that you can change this world so go
ahead and do it before you leave today
take upon yourself something anything
remember for me why am I here today a
cosna somebody invited me to Acosta I
was impressed by the changes of my
sister she was just a kid a sham that's
all we have to do sometimes just be a
kiddush Hashem and invite somebody to a
Kozma or to a simcha to anything and can
do the world wins who knows what it can
do so I challenge you I inspire you go
out reach out do that thank you so much
is now my incredible honor to introduce
a dear friend Michigan Supreme Court
justice the Honorable Richard H
Bernstein
Richard graduated from University of
Michigan and then applied to
Northwestern University's Law School
where he had to fight the law school
admissions council against a visual bias
of the LSAT claiming that the test
discriminates against the blind because
of its requirements to of interpreting
visual material for schools agreed
amongst them the Northwestern University
Law School and at the time he was
admitted it was the only blind person in
the school Bernstein was elected during
a Michigan statewide election to the
Wayne State Board of Governors at the
age of 28 and a couple years later he
was unanimously elected as its chair
when I asked Richard what how should I
introduce him he said skip everything
just talk about the Athletics that's
interesting people like that so I read
deeper and I said wow that is remarkable
Richard completed 21 marathons at the
age of 30 for the Ironman for those who
don't know that's a 112 mile bike ride a
26-mile marathon and a 2.4 mile swim
without a break at 37 years old judge
Bernstein completed a half marathon in a
lot the competition the competitions
first blind competitor he did that with
the assistance of a pilot in the Israeli
Air Force currently Bernstein's
consulting with the Israeli government
and the integration of the special needs
population into the Israeli military
absolutely remarkable I personally met
Richard in New York though we were
neighbors in Detroit 15 years ago and I
remember picking up on picking him up in
a car and he says simcha do you feel the
energy of New York
said no he says could you hear it I said
no so he said roll down the windows so I
roll down the windows and I heard it
beep beep beep beep as a Richard what do
you hear
he says people there's someone crossing
the street there's energy there's a
train beneath us feel the rhythm it's
amazing and Richard you truly taught me
to see you're an inspiration in my life
over these past 15 years and I know that
like you inspired my life and you
inspired a life of those you meet we're
looking forward to your inspiration here
this morning ladies and gentlemen
Michigan Supreme Court justice the
Honorable Richard H Bernstein
may God bless all who are here today may
he give you guidance may he give you
wisdom may he give you strength and he
show you compassion may he allow you to
know mercy it was a short time ago and I
was asked to be the keynote speaker
before the United Nations in Vienna
Austria people were surprised that a
blind person could serve as the highest
court in his state there were 150
countries present but after the
presentation we adjourned to speak with
the global press and people simply
couldn't understand how this was
possible how can a blind person do this
work how can you understand the facts
that are presented how can you visit a
crime scene how can you keep up with the
information how is this something which
is even remotely possible then one
reporter said something I'll always
remember when she said just how American
is that that a blind person could be
elected by their state to represent
people in their highest court the values
of Asia Torah are found in the spirit of
America there's an energy at Asia Torah
there's an enthusiasm is an idealism
there's an eternal optimism there's a
wondrous passion there's an incredible
sense of mission Asia allows for people
to realize the beauty of Judaism the
kindness and the warmth of its people
the energy and boundless excitement the
eternal optimism that tomorrow will
always be better than today I got a call
one morning with some a wonderful young
mom as we go through life there are
always certain experiences that truly
define us
and this wonderful woman asked me she
said Richard I'm reaching out to you
because I know that you care about
people with disabilities but I'm calling
because I simply want to know why I'm a
good person
I'm a kind person I'm a pious person I
keep Shabbos I have a kosher home the
only thing that I asked Michelle was he
would allow for me to have a family he
would allow for me to have children that
I could raise and introduce into Judaism
so why is it that of all the people in
the world
Hashem would give me a child with severe
special needs help me to understand what
kind of a life is my newborn gonna have
do you think he's ever gonna have any
friends do you think he's ever gonna
live independently do you think now I'll
ever have grandchildren what's gonna
happen to my baby when I am no longer
here to care and provide for him and
when do you think that the God that I
pray to will ever allow for me and my
family to have an ordinary life and when
do you think that the God that I have
served so loyalty will ever allow for me
to no longer have to suffer and I
remember thinking back and trying to
answer this question by tapping into my
own life experience and saying I believe
it's okay to be upset
I believe it's okay to be disappointed I
think it's okay to be sad we don't have
to be happy all the time we don't have
to be joyous all the time we don't have
to be celebratory all the time we don't
have to have praise all the time I think
it's okay for us to feel that sadness to
feel that sense of loss
to feel as though our life isn't going
the way that we hoped or the way that we
had wished or the way that we had even
prayed and I remember saying to this
wonderful young mom I don't believe that
there will ever be anything about your
life or about your child's life that
will be remotely ordinary from this
point forward because I believe that
from this moment forward your family and
your child were sent here to not simply
be ordinary but to be extraordinary I
don't believe that Hashem would ever
create any human being with the idea
that we should ever have to suffer there
are some who walk among us that do have
to struggle let us use that struggle to
find greatness let us use that struggle
to find identity let us use that
struggle to connect with Hashem I
remember as a young judge having a
conversation with some other people
about what are the qualities that go
into being a good jurist being elected
to Michigan's highest court I was young
and new and excited but I wanted to
understand what do you think makes a
really good judge you're making
decisions that affect the lives of
people you're the last word for the
state of Michigan there's nowhere else
to go people's lives hang in the balance
their freedom hangs in their balance so
what are the qualities that allow for
someone to make the decisions necessary
to serve this role to do this well and
people said oh well to be a good judge
it's all about your academics
how about what school your LSAT score
it's all about your intellectual ability
it's about your really the research and
to write and to publish those are the
things that make a good judge it's all
about the books table of academics I
remember thinking that there's something
missing that was life experience Hashem
gives us our life experience for a
reason he doesn't give us our life
experience for joy he doesn't give us
our life experience for happiness he
doesn't give us our life experience for
us he gives us our life experience so
that we can have an impact that we can
have an effect and we can change the
lives of those who live and work amongst
us he gives us our life experiences so
that we can do something with it
it is our life experiences that create
understanding is our life experiences
that create appreciation it's our life
experiences that give us perspective and
understanding and empathy it is our life
experiences that allow for us to have a
true and genuine and lasting connection
with the Creator it is our life
experiences that give us fulfilment is
our life experiences that give us
purpose is our life experiences that
give us mission is our life experiences
that give us ultimate reason for
creation so we come to age because we're
all looking for something we come to ace
because we want to find answers we come
to ace because we've experienced loss
we've come to ace because we're curious
we come to ace because we want to have a
greater appreciation of the world that
lasts and exists around us we come to H
so that we can understand what our
purpose is what our reason
we come to H to find the joy in life we
come to H to experience the passion that
Hashem gives us but we come to H because
we want to know why we want to know why
if a sum is so great
the Shem is so merciful if a sham is so
kind what kind of a God allows for bad
things to happen to otherwise such a
good people and why is it that there are
some who walk among us that have to know
a greater struggle or a greater hardship
or good a challenge then others can
possibly imagine
we've attempt to understand as we go
through life there are experiences that
define us and often is the case that
people will say if you've gone through a
trauma if you've lost a loved one if
you're facing sickness or your family is
facing sickness people will often say
you're gonna be fine you're gonna make a
complete recovery but often it is the
case in life that there are some who
walk among us that don't get to recover
the power in life is the values of H
it's the idea that it's not always about
recovering but it's about adapting the
power comes through adapting the
strengths comes through adapting to the
life that you're given not that the life
that you want to the circumstances that
you're in not the circumstances that you
hope for the power comes an adaption and
with adaption comes great pride with
adaption comes a new sense of purpose a
new sense of mission a new sense of
excitement what comes with adaption is
the ability to survive the ability to
face life the ability to turn
Paige the ability to live the way that
Hashem intended for us to live beauty of
life is never a snapshot it's never
about one day it's about having the
ability to see things in a totality and
for so many of us it's about the idea
but you're gonna have bad days bad weeks
bad months bad years but if you can find
just enough good just enough you can
balance out the bad you can find the
meaning in your existence so why is it
that bad things happen to otherwise such
a good people and why is it that there
are some who have to know this greater
struggle or this greater hardship or
this greatest challenge than others have
to why is life so unfair to some why is
life so cruel to others as you heard
from simcha I've been blessed I've had
the opportunity of completing 21
marathons and a full Ironman competition
I invite you to picture if you would the
feeling you would have as you dive into
a frigid body of water
as you heard on the introduction an
Ironman is a 2.4 mile swim followed by a
hundred and 12 mile bike to be completed
by a 26.2 mile run if you stop if you
rest if you take a break you run the
risk of missing a cutoff if a cutoff is
missed you will be immediately
disqualified from the competition
if you finish at 1205 instead of 12
o'clock it is like you were never even
there two years of training work and
effort will literally be for nothing so
I invite you to picture if you would the
feeling you have as you dive into this
frigid body of water the water
temperature being 55 degrees imagine
swimming in total darkness you have no
idea where you started you have no idea
where you're going and you have no idea
where you are being the only disabled
competitor
you get kicked in the face over and over
again by all the other swimmers and
being blind you can't brace for the
ensuing impact you try to surface but
it's impossible because there's other
swimmers immediately above you and
lastly others become entangled in the
rope that connects you to your guide and
if they become entangled the Rope
becomes ensnared and as the Rope becomes
ensnared it starts taking you below the
surface the waves come crashing down you
try to surface but it's impossible the
more you want oxygen the harder it is to
obtain when you're looking for a
connection with Hashem you find it it's
your most vulnerable moments you find it
when you're scared you find it when
you're in pain we find it when your
future is simply unknown when you're
looking for a connection with Hashem you
come to realize at those moments that is
when miracles truly do happen you come
to realize that yes
there are some of us whose bodies are
mortal whose bodies are infirmed there's
always those very people who have
spirits that can soar who have souls
that know no bounds there's always those
people that have a resilience that is
stronger that is greater than the
weakest of bodies yes our bodies are
infirmed yes
our bodies are mortal but it's from that
that our souls are incredibly powerful
and have no limitations so why is it
that bad things happen to otherwise such
good people and why is it that there are
some who walk among us they have to know
this greatest struggle or greater
hardship than others it's a beautiful
day here in New York City at this point
I had done 17 marathons and a full
Ironman - August 13th of beautiful
beautiful Monday morning
five degrees and sunny the kind of day
you just love to be in the park I was
walking in the pedestrian lane I can do
that because I've memorized central park
so I can walk in the lane that serves as
a circumference without an escort or
without a guide it's a beautiful day I
was thinking about how great life is
actually there was a cyclist a bicyclist
was travelling at a speed of an excess
of 35 miles an hour which happens often
in Central Park and this bicyclist was
going so fast but he couldn't maintain
control and because he couldn't maintain
control he veered into the pedestrian
lane where I was walking and struck me
directly in the back now a 35-mile on
our impact is catastrophic to say the
least we have the right to be angry with
hashem and we have the right to
challenge him we have the right to look
up to the heavens and say no more I
worked my whole life as a blind person
to be an athlete I worked my whole life
as a blind person to become a lawyer
I worked my life as a blind person to
become independent no more now I have to
spend over ten weeks ten weeks at Mount
Sinai Hospital and it's those little
things in life that you really missed
the most as an athlete it's difficult to
have people carrying you or have to
touch you it's hard not to be able to
use the bathroom without assistance it's
hard that you're not able to take a warm
shower and it's hard that you can't
sleep through the night because the pain
is so intense we have the right to be
upset and we have the right to be angry
and we have the right to speak out
people used to come and they visit that
always ask them so tell me where are you
going after you leave Sinai let me say
all I'm gonna go
in pick up some groceries I want to go
meet some friends for dinner oh I got to
pick up my dry-cleaning and they say it
in a very rudimentary mundane way and
always say those are the things that you
have to cherish those are the things
that you have to enjoy those are the
things that make life great those are
the things that create life and its
essence and its core that ability to go
to the lobby that ability to go outside
and feel a fresh first to there a sense
of riding on a subway or taking a taxi
go into the park sitting in a restaurant
savoring the cuisine having wonderful
conversation being able to hear the
glasses as they clink tasting that
wonderful food Hashem is with us in the
little things he's with us in the things
that we don't always notice that we
don't always see but that through our
experiences we truly come to know him he
truly come to find him we truly come to
connect with him he's with us in the
small things it's the small things that
make life great the small things that
give it meaning it's the small things
that give it joy it's the small things
that give us our dignity our life
experiences
find the reason find the joy find the
purpose and the experiences that Hashem
gives to us the more challenging the
experience the greater the purpose the
greater the mission more important it
ever could be I just came back from
Spain yesterday in fact
working with the Supreme Court there to
allow for people who are blind to serve
as judges also working with the
government there so that people who are
disabled can have the right to vote
often in some cultures it's believed
that if you have a disability you
shouldn't be able to vote shouldn't have
the ability to become a judge have a
profession be independent remember
speaking in Spain I remember saying the
people that you have denied the right to
vote are the ones who have the most to
say they are the ones who have the most
to share they are the ones with the
experiences that give them the greatest
knowledge but give them the greatest
insight they are the ones with the
deepest purpose and the most wondrous of
missions they are the ones whose voices
should always be heard pretties those
who struggle it is those who know pain
that Hashem cares for the most that
Hashem is always there for that Hashem
is always guiding that Hashem is always
looking over and I would venture to say
that from our own life experiences are
the ones who have the greatest
connection greatest understanding we
battle and we fight and we challenge we
get angry we do all those types of
things but isn't that the sign of a real
relationship isn't that the sign of a
true parent and child isn't that the way
it's truly supposed to be my last
moments that I have with you today I
asked for you as you go on your journey
to celebrate every small victory
celebrate every small joy there is no
victory that shouldn't be celebrated
there is no joy that isn't worth
admiration in my situation I would
celebrate the fact that
I could sit up in bed I would celebrate
the fact that I could start using a
walker and I would celebrate the fact
that this one time marathoner and Iron
Man could find his way to the end of the
ward and reach the nurse's station it
was a short time ago and it was time for
the New York City Marathon never running
the New York City Marathon was gonna be
difficult with a shattered hip and
crushed pelvis it would be painful it
would be hard even would ask why would
you do this what's the point you're not
gonna beat your past record you used to
be a fast runner he'll be a marathon
nonetheless you've been experience
nonetheless it would just be different
it would be a different challenge would
be a different experience living with
chronic pain can be incredibly difficult
this xem is always there you might be
angry and curse him but he's always
there to help you deal with the pain
that you feel every day and every night
we ran through the streets of New York
pain was becoming so intense as we
reached mile 18 and started crossing the
59th refresh came down to First Avenue
when starting heading up to the front
the South Bronx the pain was becoming so
intense I remember praying to his Shem
and I said Hashem I really want this I
really want this please let me finish
this race
please let me cross this finish line I'm
working through the pain
I appreciate the pain I respect the pain
but please don't let me lose
consciousness please don't let me pass
out please let me have this
that moment I was able to find a sense
of peace you find a peace with your new
life and your new circumstance you make
a peace with your new body
at certain points in life you're
actually able to find a peace with
Hashem so why is it that bad things
happen to otherwise such good people why
are there some who have to walk amongst
us that know a greater struggle hardship
and pain and others can possibly imagine
or attempt to understand I think we
learn from a valuable lesson about life
a certain point you just simply can't
spend your time and your energy and your
effort trying to get over it realize you
simply have no other option and no other
choice but to just get on with it and
often it is those who know struggle
heartache and pain that will do what is
hard to achieve what is great we must
look at our life as a great novel within
any great story there will be chapters
chapters of pain chapters of step back
chapters of frustration it's only
through those chapters you can come to
find hope joy and triumph let us
celebrate life for its good and for its
bad let us celebrate why we are here and
why we are created but to celebrate the
experiences that the Creator gives to us
how to celebrate the idea that
extraordinary things can will and must
happen for us all for ultimately if I
didn't have the experiences that I did
it wouldn't be a good justice I wouldn't
be kind
it wouldn't be patient I wouldn't be as
understanding I wouldn't be able to
empathize
those skills would be absent it is
through experiences that Hashem gives us
that we can serve others we can impact
others we can make a difference for
others let us celebrate life let us
celebrate Hashem and let us celebrate
the idea yes
our bodies are mortal our bodies are
infirmed but it is our spirits and souls
that truly know no balance
Richard thank you so much for sharing
yourself with us I did have to ask
Richard if he finished that marathon and
he said oh absolutely definitely
I absolutely finished that marathon
Richard is now my incredible honor to
introduce rabbi Fareed
but before I do I just want to mention
that following the retirees presentation
we're gonna be hearing from rabbi Elliot
Mathias
director of Hasbro fellowship for final
remarks rabbi Ferrari who's joining us
today for the conference is Israeli born
an American raised by Ferrari was
brought up in the Syrian community in
deal New Jersey he has lived in London
with his wife and five children for the
past 10 years and is the founder and
director of Kazak a dynamic educational
organization catering to the specific
needs of UK's Sparta community a rare
blend of intelligence dynamism and wit
he is a product of top Israeli as she
vote coupled with over a decade of
expertise in both informal and formal
Jewish education rabbi Ferrari is a
charismatic and sought-after speaker and
lectures weekly in Jewish and non-jewish
schools university campuses and young
professional circles in the length and
breadth of the UK although he is
uk-based he travels frequently to direct
educational programs in Israel Eastern
Europe and the Americas to teach in
Jewish communities worldwide he serves
as an educational consultant to several
Jewish schools charities and communities
who seek to benefit from his innovative
approach to Jewish education and his
insightful understanding of the issues
that young Jewish people face today over
the last few years he has developed an
impressive array of Jewish theatrical
productions captivating short online
films and online classes that appeal to
Jews of all ages and backgrounds the fre
I'm one of those people that watch you
online and now it's a pleasure to have
you live here at our conference thank
you very much
wow that's quite scary I'm one of those
people who watch you online I also have
to update that that bio I now have six
children thank you very much
subscribe look it's a massive
achievement okay so the name of this
class was digging deep the Giants that
walk among us and it's quite sorry I
just feel very uncomfortable sharing
this so I'm just gonna begin with this
I feel very small specifically at this
conference not like a giant at all first
of all the fact that we're sitting here
in the presence of peoples like the
chief rabbis chief rabbi Lau chief rabbi
Lau it's unbelievable and all the
amazing McCarver and the amazing people
that are doing wonderful things Viborg
running Asia Torah doing was such an
amazing job Yossi Friedman putting this
entire place together you know the
person the person who first actually
bought me - brought me to come to H by
the way many many years ago who I'm
embarrassed to say he got me to work for
H with a line that some of you may find
is familiar he said why don't you come
to London I said I have no plans of
moving to London he said come to London
worst-case scenario it will just be a
free trip you know I never knew that
that worked on rabbis but ok so I want
to thank everybody for having me here
but I'd like to share with you why I
feels so small a little while ago I was
running a program called
Jay I left something that was started by
a remarkable woman he was here with us
today Jackie angle and and we rearranged
our entire schedule in order to be able
to have the former chief rabbi rebus
throw may allow sleet succumb to speak
to our group we moved an entire day to
the other side changed all of the of the
activities that was supposed to happen
everything moved in order to be able to
allow us to hear from him in Tel Aviv
is that so I get a phone call from the
guy who's in charge of running the trip
for logistics and he happens to be South
African so you know I don't if you
notice when rabbi goldstein Selita when
he spoke South African speak a little
bit differently than Americans do and if
you notice this right and the guy says
to me says you know I just got a phone
call from rubber Liao's daughter and she
said that he needs to he's yeah
unfortunately I'll be able to make it
because he's going to be checking
hospitals today so I said I can't
believe it today of all days he needs to
go checking the hospitals you know for
cosmos for this for that for Kohana and
like you know we changed the whole
program you know just in order to be
able to hear is there any way please go
back to his daughter and ask him to ask
her to ask Rav Lau if he could figure
out a way of checking the hospitals on
another day and coming to see us
according to the schedule he says okay
he's a little bit puzzled closing back a
few minutes later he says I spoke to her
Lau's daughter she doesn't know what you
want I said what do you mean see when he
said checking the hospitals he said it
like South Africans but he he said check
checking I had asked the chief rabbi of
Israel when he was checking into the
hospital if it was at all possible bring
the check in another day because we
really wanted him to speak to us and you
know those moments when you hear
something and you're like no no no no no
no no no no no no no no I've only had
that feeling once more in my life it was
when I was communicating with a very
important donor of ours who god bless
him he's an elderly man and he has
Parkinson's and I sent him a message and
I wrote the words Shalom sadiq and as I
sent it off I realized that it had
autocorrected to shaking tarik
Oh oh boy so so I'm hearing this on the
phone
the chief rabbis daughter doesn't know
what you want for her or his life he's
going to the hospital pal there's not
much he can do to rearrange it for your
program I wanted to die I turned up at
the event that day and we make other
arrangements and other people are
speaking and I think I've got away with
it and all of a sudden there's a
commotion in the back who's their
current chief rabbi Lau and he walks in
and I walk up to him and I say Oh Sean
Malaysian what is the rough doing here
he says the truth is I don't know I was
a very busy day but I got a phone call
from my father in the hospital
I said Do You Know Who I am he said no
and I ran so I think I'm uniquely suited
to be speaking about digging deep to
find the Giants amongst us because I
have very rarely felt so small and to
see the
and some of you were wondering why I
only came Sunday let's get cracking the
Torah is full of unbelievable messages
expressing to us what it means to be
great but the fantastic thing about the
way the Torah expresses greatness is
that it is often in a way which you
would not have thought of
at first glance and I want to speak
about one of these cases because I
believe that it carries a fantastic
message especially for a partners
conference run by ash shatrah
one of the greatest leaders that Jewish
people have ever had was a young man
called Shmuel morels mother kana had had
difficulty having children and she
prayed with all of her heart so much so
with such sincerity that that prayer
becomes the cornerstone and the way that
we learn how to pray for all of time and
the kana promises God if you blessed me
with this child that I so desperately
want then I promised you I will give him
to you from the young age he will be
here in the temple serving you kana
miraculously has a baby and as a young
child that child is brought to the
temple and he serves Hashem under the
tutelage of the great Elia cohan he's
still young man when one night in the
middle of the night Morel hears a voice
and the voice says well well jumps out
of bed and he says he may be Here I am
he goes running into the next room into
the room of a Leah coin this elderly man
who was informed was unable to see who
needed the help and he was sure it was a
me that was calling him he'd never
experienced prophecy or a divine message
before so he comes into the room and
says yes and a Leah Cohen says is not I
that woke you up and I want to read you
these words
Valmer he named Here I am Rhossili
because you have called
me vo Marigny says low karate I did not
call you
Shu it have go back to sleep
small goes back to sleep but it happens
his second time well he wakes up runs
into the other room he named me Here I
am you called me Eliot Cohen says I
didn't call you go back to sleep
shoot off a third time it happens
he runs in the room now is just getting
annoying and a Leah Cohen says it wasn't
me
but if you hear the voice again if you
hear the call once more answer it and
say da bear Hashem speak Assam Kishore
mayor of Dhaka because your servant is
listening is ready to receive your
message but up until that point n Leah
Cohen tells small to go back to sleep
rev mayor Shapiro was a child prodigy at
the young age of I think it was twelve
years old they realized that there was
no one in his hometown who was capable
of teaching him anything so his father
sent him to the shots there of far away
who was known to be a genius he studied
with his children who were also
brilliant brilliant minds and even
though they were older than him managed
to Pierrot came and studied with these
older boys with the shots of Rob but
when they weren't learning they would do
old grown-up things and he would play in
the backyard he was a kid he played with
the shots of rubs kids and he would tell
them as a young boy of the dreams that
he had not just of studying not just of
having a yeshiva but of starting a
movement getting every Jew quite
literally on the same page where
everyone would study the same book on
the same day and a Jew from New York
that would travel all the way to Israel
or from Israel to Europe or from Europe
to wherever they'd arrived and they'd be
on the same page able to learn with
their brothers
a blot Gomorrah page of Gomorrah the
kids told the mayor stop having these
dreams what are you doing grow up just
sit there study do your thing prove
Shekhar's go back to sleep because make
no mistake doing the right thing but not
the thing that you were made to do is
going back to sleep he grows up and
history is made he presents his idea to
the Hoff its Lyon and in an instant it
seems it's taken up across the whole
world
years later after the world is learning
domain today the numbers and the
hundreds of thousands when they make
these massive zooming in football
stadiums in Madison Square Garden in
Benin a home on years later he's
speaking at a convention maybe like this
and he hears that the shots of Rabbie's
daughter is in attendance he sees her
husband and he says is it all right
please would you tell your wife I'd like
to have a cup of words before she leaves
she comes over he says hello so nice to
meet you I just want to thank you for
all the time that I spent in your house
and your parents home I want you to
promise me one thing he says you now run
many schools filled with young women you
teach them you inspire them you push
them to grow promise me you won't do to
them what you once did to me tell them
to go back to sleep
could you imagine what would have
happened Shmuel gets the call again and
again and again but what would happen if
it only would have been called once and
he would have thought it wasn't because
how could it be that this is common to
me Who am I to do this Who am I to be
this and the message he gets from his
leader from his teachers from his
parents from his society is you're right
you're nothing it can't be that he's
talking to you what we would have lost
if we didn't have a relationship hero if
we didn't have as well this is my
friends is I think the most powerful
message of coming to Aparna's conference
and I remember being here when Rev Noah
was here and he would pound on the
fender and he would tell us that it's
not just a man like him with a gray
beard who knew all of Torah it's not
just him with a yeshiva with students
that are placed in every place but it's
every person in this room who is capable
of doing of going of being if not was
the ultimate alarm clock the opposite of
should have because the result of being
told that again and again you are just a
kid
you're just a you don't have you don't
know who gave you care of training the
result of that is what happens to some
well and I want you to pay attention to
this because it's so beautiful it's
beautiful it's poignant it's bittersweet
it's heartbreaking well says he hears
from Ailee Ailee says if the voice comes
again if you were challenged to pick up
the baton to be somebody again respond
and saying that they're saying to this
voice duh bear Hashem speak O God ki
show mer of death huh cuz your servant
is listening
Shmuel goes back to sleep
via for Hashem and Hashem comes for
idiots Ave and he stands by ecran he
calls keep on the palm as he had called
time after time sending this message
reverberating huge smiles very being and
Schmuel stands up after it's been the
fourth time after his Rebbe has finally
told him I believe in you it's you if it
comes again
you've been chosen and smell says that
bear
she's so mayor of death huh that one
word that's missing that one word that
is everything here he says to him to say
speak Jim because your servant is
listening
well can't bring himself to say speak
Hashem look at Rashi look at me to dust
of it
they both say Omar he said to himself
Shama call a guru maybe after all this
it's someone else speaking maybe
someone's playing a prank maybe it can't
be me what a tragedy that would be to
lose the ones that could make all the
difference in the world as they have not
got the message that someone believes in
them if you have heard rabbi Berg's
message loud and clear you know that if
you cannot find it anywhere else you can
find it here
a shutaura believes in you whether you
carry the name Asia Torah on your
t-shirt or not each the Torah believes
in you it exists to empower people to
make a difference to the Jewish destiny
we carry on revenuers mission of being
an alarm clock you know there are two
words in Hebrew which represent
different ends of the spectrum when a
child becomes a man and accepts the yoke
of mitzvoth he is known as a bar mitzvah
at the apex of his career the
me of his growth he gets Smith and he's
called a Roth bar child and Roth are the
same letters but what defines one as a
child is if the bet comes before the
rich and what defines you as a Roth as
the rabbi but not just as a rabbi a Rob
is someone who is great is if your rash
comes before your bet what am I talking
about the word rash in Hebrew also means
ahead the word bet also means the letter
bet also means a house what motivates
you what guides you is that your house
or is it your head when Avraham is
chosen for his epic journey to be the
man who would be God's flag bearer on
earth he is told and commanded in that
initial journey left with America leave
your country
let's look I'll leave your country
milada Takei the place of your birth may
better be that the house of your father
and the commentators asked truly that's
a redundancy all it needed to say was
leave your country if you leave your
country you've automatically also left
your City you've also left your father's
home and the concept is driven on with
all of its force Hashem was telling
Avraham not to leave physical places but
the manifestations of each of those
places your home is a place where people
decide sometimes for you who you are
going to be sometimes people are living
vicariously through you sometimes we
become byproducts of people who are in
our homes we develop into somebody
because of a dominant or past avoid
developing to someone because of an
abusive or a kind father or mother but
that's not you that's some reaction to a
circumstance so Hashem says sovereign
leave that leave melodica leave the city
we know the cities that we grow up in
like the palm of
and if you drop us anywhere in the city
we know how to get to anywhere else we
know the shortcuts leave behind your
comfort i sat and interviewed a man who
works for an unbelievable company he's a
man who got his start in the business
that he was in he was working in IT for
the Economist group
his name is mr. Andrew rosh vas they
promoted him to be the CEO of The
Economist group an IT guy he doesn't
know anything about finance or
journalism he then gets picked up to
become the CEO of Thomson Reuters a news
agency's news agency he doesn't know
anything about News and then he moves to
your own money he's not that finance and
I asked him how did this happen how did
you get to where you got to with the
training that you had and he said
something to me which first I thought
was a self-deprecating joke but then I
realized the power of what he was saying
he said I never let myself get too good
at anything that I couldn't do something
else the comfort that we feel that locks
us into places where we could be doing
so much more let's let gosh cam says to
Avram to leave it but what I found
fascinating about this and I shared a
couple days ago with rusev once that was
Avram has given Commandments of
everything he needs to leave he's not
told where to go in this journey of
excellence of achievement of greatness
it's not about going somewhere it's
about the process of cutting ties with
the things that hold us back when it
when a person can weaken the yetzer I
rather tries to inhibit him he doesn't
need to go somewhere automatically his
neshama guides him to places that he'd
never thought possible or she'd never
believed were receivable because inside
we are great we are powerful we are
infinite
we are expansive
you're not ego driven and low kindness
shamash tuna tartare B tempura we have a
holy pure in the summer a piece of
Hashem invested in each and every one of
us so long as we can leave behind these
things which unbelievable unimaginable
things the word in Hebrew for a dream is
the column and the commentators always
explained to us that when a word is made
up of letters the alternate variations
of that word are part of its own essence
if a person has a dream the very same
letters that spell the word column also
spelled the word Elohim to be a warrior
lock the people of dreams hyena kick
homie everybody in this room is thought
of something that they could do to
better the lives of somebody else to
reach out to somebody else to strengthen
Jewish identity and pride and shmear
Ottomans bought in their communities
we've all had good ideas but who's
willing to fight for them you want your
dreams to come true you need to fight
but it also contains a third amalgam and
that is Mikkel the ability that one has
to be able to have to forgive to give up
on something every great thing we want
exact a price from us it takes time it
takes care it takes effort it takes
prayer it takes Emunah and it comes at
the expense of something else so what do
I want to fight for what have I noticed
inside of myself that I want to fight
for we call this digging deep and it's a
great word that I've been playing with
for a little while in my head it was
said in passing conversation with
someone and it happens when you dig deep
you know what you discover when you dig
deep not just courage not just
determination
when you dig deep you find buried values
do you know what a buried value is value
don't even know that you have a feeling
which is much stronger than you thought
that it was you have Jews who don't
think all that much about being Jewish
until someone dares to say something
anti-semitic who don't really feel
connected with Israel I disagree with
Israel and its policies lalalalala and
then someone says something about Israel
and they come out like a lion that's a
buried value because when push comes to
shove these things they see inside of us
but it's uncomfortable to fight for them
it's not all wrong we better ve got to
fight for them it's not my place
culturally it's considered rude to talk
about politics so we hold back from our
buried values neckla
travel to yourself release yourself in
the world you are a gift that we have
been waiting for and I want to share in
ending because I know I'm running out of
time even though I have a lot more to
say unfortunately and that is that this
is possible even when people don't
believe not just they don't believe they
have enough they believe anything which
makes them who renders them capable of
achieving this
a fifteen-year-old boy whose name was
Jack and Draca lost a close family
friend to pancreatic cancer the biggest
challenge with pancreatic cancer and
it's 95% mortality rate is that by the
time that you know that you have it it's
too late to treat the pain hit him close
to home and pain is a great motivator
it's why Hashem gives us miss Janos and
Draca decides that if the reason why
people die from this terrible disease is
because they don't know they have it
surely all you need to do is check
people before what's the problem you
can't check everybody it's too it's too
expensive
so a 15 year old boy sends off 200
emails to universities to labs to ask
them for lab time to teach so he can
work on his idea to develop something
which ultimately would become a strip
that one could put blood on that would
be able to detect early on that someone
had the markers for pancreatic cancer do
you know the price of his test three
cents
if it goes ahead and they wind up
getting approval it would be something
that every single person can get tested
for with miniscule with minuscule costs
he works on his for seven months and I
want to just read this to you they
thought that he'd come for a couple of
weeks in Johns Hopkins the one out of
the 200 emails that was returned the
young scientist worked for seven months
every day after school and often on
Saturdays he's not Jewish until after
midnight subsisting on hard-boiled eggs
and Twix another sign that you know he
wasn't Jewish
they'd have been a lot more food as his
mother dozed in the car in a nearby
parking garage he labored through
Thanksgiving an Xmas he spent his 15th
birthday in the lab Robert I when you
know what you believe in you find it
within yourself to be able to exert to
fight to give up on things for you a
dream for our dream for Klaus riles
dream hey you know keelhaul man we have
been waiting for a day of peace for so
long a time when we're allowed to live
in our own country when we're not
vilified for defending our own citizens
but that dream meets people to fight for
it and I'm sitting in a room with
hundreds of people who are those people
we need to stop looking for the Giants
amongst us and realize that those giants
are us may our chorus Park will bless
our endeavors and we use okra to see NH
partners conference like this double
triple quadruple in size as many many
more people take on the mission and
recognize that they have it within
themselves to be able to do something
beautiful
something big in their world so long as
someone's sleeping in the car in the
parking garage believing that they can
do it there's an entire team
people believe in you so let's get to
work
Thank You rabbi ferry if I could ask
everyone to remain seated for a few more
minutes while I introduce nobelium
Mathias for a few final words
rabbi matthias is the founder and
director of the has bara fellowships
program which has trained over 3,000
students to combat anti-israel
propaganda and cloud campuses recently
having Matthias in the hospital
fellowship received a grant from the
Israeli government to expand their
incredible work rabbi Matthias besides
his responsibilities to the hospital
fellowship program took over as
executive director of Asian New York's
campus programs clap again guys each New
York college campuses it's been great
having your energy here for Shabbos
rather Matthias also serves on the
Executive Board of H global and the vaad
of the a muta ladies and gentlemen rabbi
le Mathias the wrap-up job never easy
the H conference is my favorite weekend
of the Year actually 15 years ago I was
engaged to my wife and I actually had my
offer off the celebration before you get
married at the H conference 15 years ago
and that made me realize something
profound why is the H conference my
favorite conference of the year the food
is good but that's not the reason
actually Yossi last night I heard a
rumor that between 3:30 and 4:30 in the
morning there was no food out in the
lobby I don't know what's going on here
do a little better next year
that's not the reason why and it's not
the reason even the speakers I mean
listen to what we just heard
unbelievable
having the chief rabbis the rabbis from
the H branches this has been incredibly
inspiring but that's not for me the
reason either the reason why for me the
H conferences
favorite weekend of the year is because
this is when we come together as a
family what is the family a family is
created in two ways one way is through
blood you're born into a family you
can't choose your family is but there's
another way a family is created I know
I've had the experience maybe other
people have had this experience you've
ever been in Israel and you see if
you're with an IDF soldier and they run
into another soldier that they served
with and they're like blood brothers
they've literally put their lives on the
line for each other they are so close
you would think that they were literally
blood brothers that they literally grew
up in the same house why because they
have a common mission they have a common
purpose they were live literally
dedicated their lives to that common
mission and to me that is what Asia tour
is about Asia tour is about the common
mission we have and come together for a
weekend and to spend that weekend
together and a Shabbat together with
people that we have a common mission in
and mission with that is family what a
conference has to come to an end you
know I was thinking about it this
morning you know the end of Shabbat it
can be a sad time you've connected to
Shabbat in a meaningful way but it's
also the most uplifting time you've sat
through an entire Shabbat you've gained
everything all the spirituality the time
with your family and your friends and
the wisdom you can gain you've gained be
the entire Shabbat you're at the
pinnacle but when we make Abdullah our
sages tell us that when you look at the
candle the Abdullah candle it literally
can give a person's sight what does that
mean it means that we look at the world
differently on Shabbat and if we look at
the hub dollar candle and we take what
we saw on Shabbat that we saw the world
in a different way were charged to take
that sight with us into the week and
that's the same when we're here at the
end of the conference if we walk out of
the doors today and say wow that was a
great weekend I was inspired that was
fantastic
honey where do we got to go where we
going for dinner tonight then we have
failed the point of this conference and
I heard once you
it's it's a rabbis role to comfort the
uncomfortable but also to make the
comfortable uncomfortable and so I'm
speaking to myself right now and I just
want to share the advice I'll tell
myself with everyone else we need to
become a little uncomfortable
I had the merit to study in a Satori for
five years under Eppendorf Weinberg and
there was a it was one rush of Shonna
towards the end of my time there the
rabbi Weinberg and his family came and
spent the brush Hashanah together with
the yeshiva and we were sitting over the
meal and a few of the guys in the
yeshiva had the idea you know what
let's end up and tell rabbi Weinberg
what we appreciate about him why we have
a car at the Tov what do we appreciate
about rabbi Weinberg so I've been there
a few years I felt a little comfortable
maybe a little too confident stood up in
front of Radley why mercenary why
America I want to tell Robert Weinberg
while I appreciate rabbi Weinberg and I
appreciate rabbi Weinberg I said because
rabbi Weinberg every step of the way Reb
Nowak has made me feel uncomfortable I
walked into Asia Torah graduated from a
good University wanted to go to law
school felt confident had the world in
front of me thought I knew a lot and I
walked in and he asked me some very
basic questions what would you rather be
happy or rich are you eating to live or
are you living to eat
are you a body or are you a soul I was
really uncomfortable but then I adapted
I joined I came part of Asia tour I
started studying and I started to feel
comfortable again and he looked at me
said really you're here are you taking
your study seriously do you know that
there's thirty 613 mitzvot do you know
them all have you memorized them all
have you studied this jacket have you
studied that and I realized I wasn't
being serious and I was uncomfortable
again and I committed myself more to my
studies and I was there for a longer
time and I got comfortable again and
again rabbi Murray said great
now you're committed now you're studying
what are you doing for others have you
joined this program of students to lead
them are you teaching others what are
you doing
and
I started husband fell oh and I was
leading trips of students and I was I
fell again okay now I've done the
mission of Asia tour I've built myself I
become more connected I'm teaching other
people and this is what I said in front
of Rabbi Y Marius t-value Romberg you
made me so uncomfortable along the way
and that's what I appreciate and without
missing a step for everyone Berg looked
at me and said then what are you still
doing here and that was him every step
of the way even today 15 years later is
very easy for myself to become
comfortable look what we're
accomplishing look what we've done but
that is our death now that is what stops
us from becoming great there was a woman
Kim and Linthicum from Reno Nevada and
she served in the US military
she had a ten-year-old daughter has a
ten-year-old daughter in this past
September she was watching television
and she saw the destruction of hurricane
Harvey in Houston and she made a
decision on the spot while she was
watching television she said I'm going
to Houston and within three days she was
in Houston volunteering for the Red
Cross she was leading a shelter for
people who weren't healthy enough to
evacuate and she said I guess I'm just
doing what I would want someone else to
do for me
she said I hope that my ten-year-old
daughter sees what her mother will do
for other people no again I'm only
talking to myself but what did most of
us do we saw what was happening in
Houston maybe we changed the channel
maybe we sent a text message to donate
five dollars right what's the difference
between Kim and and us how do we get out
of our comfort zone how do we realize no
it's not that someone else is going to
get the job done that it has to be that
the buck stops with us how do we realize
you know what yes it might be a little
bit uncomfortable to reach out to
another person to try to impact another
person to inspire a mother person maybe
they're gonna say no maybe they're gonna
laugh at us whatever it might be but we
have to get out of our comfort zone we
have to take that step and that is
really my message for everyone here if
we all like I said walk out of these
doors and say wow what a weekend it it
ends there we have failed but together
as a family with a common mission with a
common purpose knowing that we have each
other to depend on we have each other to
cheer each other on we have our branch
leaders and we have projects inspire and
we have all these amazing things about a
chitara to be right behind us we all
just have to think about what is that
one step then can get me out of my
comfort zone what's one thing that I can
commit to do when I walk out of these
doors before I get to the buffet one
thing that we can all commit to do to
help the Jewish people to connect a
person to the beauty of Judaism to think
about the state of the Jewish people how
many Jews are not connected but even
more importantly to be on fire the aja
of Torah that were on fire because we
are so inspired by being Jewish by being
part of the Jewish people by being part
of Asia tour we're so on fire that we
have to spread that to other people
that's the mission of this weekend
that's the message of this weekend and I
ask us all just to take a minute a
couple of minutes as we walk out and
decide how we can get out of our comfort
zone to join the mission of this family
and make a difference
thank you everybody just to remind their
final checkout today is 12:45 minica is
gonna be right here in this ballroom as
soon as I conclude here again your hard
keys please return them lunch is on your
way out to the garage thank you all for
joining us as we can to look forward for
you to bring your friends and join us
again here next year thank you