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Angels Are Right in Front Of Our Eyes | Rabbi YY Jacobson
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I once was invited to do a shabatone in
Sedona, Arizona. The other guest speaker
was the unforgettable rabbit and Esther
Yungres, a blessed memory. And I still
recall an amazing story she shared at
her Friday night address in Sedona. She
said they were little children in Bergen
Bellin in the Bergen Bellin Nazi
concentration camp. In some of the
camps, the Nazis allowed families to be
together and the Jews were treated a
little little better than in other
camps. They were from the lucky ones who
survived Bergen Belin under very very
difficult conditions. And she recalled a
memory when she was a little child in
Bergen Belin. The family was together.
They had a few few scraps of bread and
her father Rabbi David Yungrise started
to sing shalom on Friday night as they
would sing in their home in their before
the Holocaust
welcoming the angels that come to our
home on Shabas.
And Rabbi Syong, Rabbit Saung said her
brother turned to her father and said,
"Tata, father, I don't see angels. Where
are the angels? I see SS monsters. I see
Nazi animals, Nazi beasts. I don't see
angels. Where are the angels of Bamba?"
And her father turned to her brother and
said, "You,
you children, you are the angels. You
are the angels that are here." The story
remained with me because really there's
a very deep message here. You know,
people often ask, "Where are the angels?
I don't see angels." Okay, so first of
all, we don't see everything, but
there's also something else here and
that is, you know, all week we're
stressed. We're overwhelmed. There's a
lot of anxiety. People have deadlines.
They have to make ends meet. There's a
lot of dysregulation. Shabas is the day
focused on regulation, on tranquility.
When we come home from Davening Friday
night, we sing shalom. We sing
and then we look at our wives
and suddenly we see their angels. We
look at our children and suddenly we see
their angels. Maybe middle of the week
we didn't have the the capacity or the
sensitivity or the depth or the
tranquility to be able to see that
reality. But with the holiness of
Shabas, we look at all these people in
our lives and we say, "Ah, my wife is an
angel. My children are angels.
Welcome to the angels of my life."
I I Oh, the