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America's Independence Has a Secret Biblical Connection - Rabbi Ori Strum
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Did you know that July 4, 1776 fell on the 17th of Tammuz, the day Moses shattered the Tablets after the sin of the Golden Calf? Coincidence—or a remarkable lesson about the meaning of true freedom? Follow us: https://www.hidabroot.com https://www.youtube.com/@Hidabrootcom https://www.instagram.com/hidabroot_global https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbCYZjl1CYoa4ulQIK2q #July4 #America #JewishHistory #Judaism #Torah #Israel #ThreeWeeks #17Tammuz #Freedom #Bible #Jewish #Faith #TorahWisdom #LubavitcherRebbe #Moses
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It was supposed to be a day of freedom,
a day of independence, but instead
became a day of slavery. I'm not talking
about July 4th. I'm not talking about
the American independence day. I'm
talking about the day when Mosher Rabenu
Moses came down the mountain on the 17th
of Tamos, Shiva Tamos, and broke the
LOS. He broke the tablets. Why? Because
the Jewish people were committing a sin.
The agel as of the golden calf. They
were dancing around the ego. They were
serving an idol. They were committing
idolatry. They were subservient now to
an intermediary between them and God
instead of serving God directly. And
this was a grave sin. This happened on
the 17th day of Thomas. Quite
ironically, and perhaps not
coincidentally,
July 4th, 1776, 250 years ago, when
America became independent, that Hebrew
corresponding date was none other than
the 17th day of Tamos, tough koflam, the
year 5536.
The 17th day of Tamos marks the
beginning of the three weeks, the 3-w
week period of mourning of the Jewish
people, which began on that day. Again,
it was supposed to be a day of
independence, a day of freedom. Why is
that? The Torah refers to the luos, the
tablets as engraved. And the Mishna in
piravos in ethics of the fathers teaches
us
don't read it as meaning etched. Rather
read it as meaning independence meaning
freedom. The point of the Torah is to
give us a sense of freedom. We the
Jewish people left Egypt. We were in
servitude to Pharaoh and the Egyptians
on the 49th level of impurity. But we
left that God gave us the Torah in order
to become free. Free from being stuck in
this world and free to connect to God.
Free to take the mundanity of this world
to take the physicality and uplift it
for a spiritual cause for a spiritual
purpose. And the luos were a symbol of
that. The luus were a symbol of kurus of
not something that was just etched by
God but a lesson for us. Something that
represented something that represented
independence. Something that represented
freedom. But instead of choosing God,
what happened on that day? We chose an
intermediary. We chose to be distant.
And therefore that day, the 17th day of
Dham was marked not a day of
independence, not a day of freedom, but
a day of slavery where we were stuck.
And it's ironic the day July 4th, 1776
was 17 day of Tamos. And perhaps it
gives us a lesson in terms of
re-mbbracing independence, reconnecting
to the Torah, reconnecting to what those
luos had to offer us, finding the shards
that have been strewn all around the
broken tablets. Our job is to find
those, find those pieces, find those
elements of light, find the elements of
meaning, goodness, moments of kindness,
charity, thoughtfulness, and to bring
them back to where they're supposed to
be. To come back to our mission, to
return to our calling, to be the best
that we can possibly be. You know, I
want to share with you something. 1776
was the year that America was founded, a
year of American independence.
I made a discovery. There's only one
verse in the entire Torah that has the
numerical value of 1776. You don't have
to look too far. It's in Genesis
Genesis,
the fourth verse of the Torah. The Torah
says
of God saw the light that it was good
and God separated between the light, the
light and the darkness. America is
filled with light and darkness as it
relates to the Jewish people. On one
hand, America ama, a land of emptiness,
there's a tremendous amount of impurity.
Western culture, so many Jewish people
have been lost, more so even than the
Holocaust. So many have assimilated. On
the other hand, America is a Medina
Shad. It's a golden medina. It's a place
that in 2,000 plus years of diaspora, we
have not found better home for the
Jewish people. there has not been more
of a Torah growth and spiritual vastness
that has been allowed. So yes, there's
there's darkness and there's a and
there's light. But perhaps the focus of
that verse is
there's an element of goodness. The
Kabad Rebba, the sixth Kabad Rebba, the
Freda Rebba, Ravitzkeren,
when he came to America in 1940, he said
something amazing. You know, he was a
man who was partly responsible for
Orthodox Jewelry in the Soviet Union. He
was trying to maintain it and eventually
he had to leave to Latvia to Poland.
Eventually, he made his way for the last
10 years of his life to America. And he
said something interesting. He said,
"America is nit is nitrish. America is
no different." And what he meant by that
was you know ner the Jewish people were
nervous. People think that people in
America would fall. Literally people
thought that those in America should
fall. What does that mean? The
astronomers had this question a couple
hundred years ago and that is why were
those people on the opposite side of the
world in theor
in the bottom half of the sphere of
earth? How come they don't fall? And it
specifically gives the example of
America. This is brought down in the
hayomy the daily regiment learning of
kabad. You look up in uh day number 14
for 14th of tamos and they ask this
question right how come those in America
don't fall down if they're on the bottom
side of the globe they should just fall
to their demise and the answer that the
balatana says is it's there's a truer
reality than just gravity gravity might
be part of it but there's something
deeper there's something more real and
that is there's this spiritual energy
this state called egulum circles and the
world is that earth is a sphere. It's
spherical in shape. And a circle has no
top and it has no bottom. And therefore
us meaning the astronomers who were in
the civilized part of the world in
Europe at that time they were on the on
the top side of the globe. And for them
the sky was above them and they were not
falling down. And the same reality was
true for those in America. For them, the
sky was straight above them and they
would not fall down because in a circle
there is no up and there is no down.
It's all relative and it's all really
the same. And this concept that those in
America would not fall is true not just
physically but spiritually. There's a
spiritual message of those in America
don't fall. Stand up straight, be tall,
be proud. And the Reb of Kabad would
teach America is knit under Andorish.
America is not different. We in Europe
can serve Hashem and we in America can
serve Hashem. There's a mission to serve
God wherever we are. The tablets that
were strewn, that were broken. Our job
is to pick up those pieces wherever we
are. There are sparks of holiness that
are that are hidden in all places around
the world. And there was a specific
treasure in America of spiritual
identity to be able to transform that
which was here in America and to turn it
and to elevate it and to become
something and especially to be proud and
not to hide the yamaka, not to hide the
tutus, not to hide one's Jewishness, but
to embrace it, to be proud of it, and to
be real with it, to be genuine with it.
America is knit underish. America is no
different. We serve God wherever we are.
Whether we're in Europe, whether we're
in Israel, whether we're in America, we
have a mission to do. And we can serve
our creator. We can serve our master and
connect to him in a most unique way. And
the the late
men,
he said in late 1981, he said that this
was regarding the lighting of a public
monora. He said a sense of pride in
their Yiddish kite to Judaism and the
realization that there is no reason
really in this free country to hide
one's Jewishness as if it were contrary
or enimical to American life and
culture. On the contrary, it is fully in
keeping with the American national
slogan.
I don't know if I said that right, but
and the fact that American culture has
been enriched by the thriving ethnic
cultures which contributed very much
each in its own way to American life
both materially and spiritually. It's
true there's darkness. It's true people
can fall, but we have to view it.
America is knit underish. America is no
different. If we're here and this is
where we're meant to be right now based
on our family situation, whatever it is,
and you know, we're not moving to Israel
yet. If you can move to Israel and you
are there, that's unbelievable. But for
those who are in America and even for
those who are not, but to have that
viewpoint that there's a there there's
navoda to be had. There's a spiritual uh
unlocking that needs to take place in
America. America is not different. We
have to be proud to be Jewish. Proud to
show our Jewish identity and proud to be
the best people that we can be. Our job
is to connect to the luos. We want to
really be free. We want to really
experience independence. We have to
connect to the word of God. An aspect
about the l that I want to share with
you is something mind-boggling. It was
it was able to be read on both sides.
Meaning that Mosher Abenu standing from
his perspective was able to read the
luos in its entirety and the Jewish
people standing on the other side were
able to read it clearly in its entirety.
It was magical. It was miraculous. It
was amazing. It doesn't matter what side
of the aisle you're standing on. It
doesn't matter what sphere, what part of
Earth you're sitting on. It doesn't
matter which location you are currently
present in. You can connect to the
Torah. You can connect to yourself. You
can connect to a life of meaning and
purpose.
It can be read from both sides. The
place where you stand is holy ground.
Our job perhaps during these three weeks
is to remember what it means to be free.
Remember what it means to be
independent. We have to connect to our
calling. We have to connect to the word
of God. each in our own individual way,
in a small way to move the needle just a
little bit and make that change in our
life just an iota showing that we want
true freedom. We want to really be
independent. I wish you all the