0:00 / 0:00
Bamidbar | Rabbi Baruch Taub May 29th 2025
86 views
www.ouisrael.org facebook.com/ouisrael #OUisrael #torah #judaism #torahlectures
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Okay, good morning everybody.
So the
uh shear this morning shear this morning
is being sponsored by Estelle Harris in
memory of her dear husband Rafael Mayor
Benvi hersel Richard Mark Harris
uh commemorating his 13th year site
loving father and grandfather and the of
our learning should be alias
shamra. Okay. So, I have three pieces
today. Uh there there's some kind of
there's a little bit of a theme that's
going to go through. I have two pieces
on uh on the para and another piece that
is on migillat root which is which is
shuis. We read migillot on shuis. Um but
I did want to say something first about
Yamir Shalim which we didn't we didn't
have a shir in Yam but it was just here
just an interesting thing not
necessarily on Yum but some a strange
anomaly
um a mystery that I have no explanation
for but if you think about it I think
there's a great deal to it. Are you I'm
sure that everyone's familiar with Sir
Nicholas Winston.
Sir Nicholas Winston um was responsible
for saving
669 children that were kinder transport
from Czechoslovakia and Hungary to
England. 669 kids. He himself was um he
was born Jewish. Uh his name actually
was originally his father's name was
Warheim but they baptized themselves.
they became Anglican and he was raised
as an Anglican but he was a very
sensitive
uh ethical moral soul and when he was
the Holocaust was in the in the early
years this was done by 1938 just before
the Holocaust before the war world war
II broke out he actually saved 669 kids
all kinds of and there's a there's lists
there anyway and it was nobody knew
about it how was it discovered that his
wife in the attic one day found this box
and she opened it And there were
scrapbooks, pictures of kids, and an
entire listing of the 669 kids. So,
there was a television show in
um in uh in England,
uh something like that. That's life.
It's called, you know, I think in
America they used to have this is your
life, right? And I remember, but that's
life. So, they would have a life story
of some guy and he was invited to come.
They didn't tell him it's about
him and they start telling the story and
tell a story about a certain girl. They
show pictures of her and this woman now
was sitting right and then she's now
sitting next to Sir Nicholas Winston who
saved her. And in fact, could everyone
please rise who was part of the Kinder
Transport and the entire audience was
was made up of survivors that he saved.
Okay, beautiful story. Um, what's the
what's the connection
to? If you look in the there's an
encyclopedia talmuded. If you look in
the encyclopedia talmudas, it says that
yushlay is mentioned in all of its forms
669 times in the Tanakh.
Okay, just a fact that hit me and I'm
not I don't have an answer for it, but I
think if you think about it, there's
something there. There's something
there. He was on to something and Bashem
he saved. Now, I want to tell you that
one of the people that he saved a
fascinating uh one of the people that he
saved was
Ravitzkuvia Vice Zatal. Who was
Ravitzkaruvia Weiss? He went to London.
He went to yeshiva in London. eventually
came to Israel. He was the gy of
Jerusalem, meaning he was the chief
rabbi of the
adahedes. You know there are two chief
rabbi rabbi position in in Jerusalem.
One is the chief ravenet but the other
is the adaheda that goes back to
pre-state times where cook was the rov
of Palestine and ysef sonell was the ro
of the adaheda the more right-wing
community right so here you have
somebody who was from London right who
was was the head and he he wrote a
letter there's a letter on in that he
wrote thanking him on the stationary you
know it's probably the only English
English letter written on the stationary
of uh of Weiss and but it's fascinating
story that's my rush contribution for
you okay let's start with um there is a
kind of theme coming through in these
three pieces
um uh about uh leadership about uh
humility and about the need sometimes
for um a certain not necessarily
anti-humility
Let's say a certain holy
arrogance gava kadusha holy arrogance
we'll see we'll see what that's all
about. Okay, let's start with Kamki and
he talks like this. He um we have in the
para uh you
have let's say
uh there was a census take a census of
the Jewish people now a year into their
leaving Egypt right so
near he so he writes here that the whole
order that he set up the tribes God
It was a unique setup said there
at In other words he didn't set it up
according to birth he didn't do the
census according according to birth he
set up everybody in the order of the
camp
the I don't understand
hello as soon as came out
of came you know very
victorious uh Israel they were they were
armed they didn't come out like like neb
slaves they came out you know with their
head up
high they were free people
soim why were the flags set up the
tribes set up with their flags a full
year later. Now you have to understand
that was what's going on here. Each
tribe had its own flag and each flag had
its own color and own insignia. The
color was dependent on the uh the jewel
of each tribe because in the clothing of
the of the coen god doll there were 12
jewels in the shoulders of the koshen
and each one represented one of theatim
one of the tribes and each one had a
different stone which had a different
color and uh so the color of the of
everybody's flag was that color and the
insignia was based on the braha that
they received their their unique
personality their unique role in the
Jewish people, right? But why wait a
year for
that? He has an answer. What's about
flags? Flags create a kind of diff
differential, right? In other words, um
if you ever saw the uh Republican or the
Democrat national conventions, so when
they would call out by state, the state
people are there, they would stand up
and scream Illinois and they have their
flag, the flag, every every state in the
United States has a flag. Or if you went
to camp, so the you went to camp, they
had a color war. They would divide the
camp in two and each camp would have a
each side would have a flag. So flags
are kind of um competitive, right? A
flag is competitive, right?
Um every flag had a different color, a
different
sign. It was written of the paintings,
the
drawings because each tribe had its own
unique quality, its own unique
contribution,
right? Every tribe had a different a
different approach, right? to u in fact
the the medish says that each tribe had
its
own right we don't have that anymore but
each tribe had its
own and
um in fact the I think the Arizal the
for which
governs so I think the Arizal said that
this was uh the the 13th combination of
all the all
Anyway, so it creates a sense of
tension. Everybody's there with their
flag. So there's going to be fighting
competition and he came and what
happened a year later. So that's why
they didn't do it the first year because
the first year something was missing.
What was missing? What was erected on
the first month of Niss the second year?
the
Mishkan, the tabernacle, the temple in
the midbar,
right? So there was one right in the
middle of the camp was the Mishkan.
There was a central focal point of the
Mishkan and everybody encamped around
the Mishkan, right?
Meaning this doesn't create ascension
and
competition. Everybody has their own
particular role coming from the
Mishkan. So there's no there's no
everybody's got their role to play. But
the point is we're all playing the same
role because of the Mishkan and what
wants us to do. It's a it's a a a a one
role, right? To develop a relationship
with the raon and to spread the word of
the to the
world. Said like a human
being. The ears were created to read to
to
hear and eyes to
see. Would you think there should be a
mlo between the eyes and the ears?
There's no work together. Kimok they
work in
tandem. Same thing with the nation of
Israel. They all were encircling a
central
theme. So there was no danger that there
would be a division and fighting amongst
the Israel.
They're all with one central
purpose. So as long as there was no
Mishkan for that first
year, there was no central spiritual
force, right? The heart of the nation,
so to
speak. But once the Mishk was put up, no
problem. Let's put the Ben Israel in
camps. Let's do a census. Let's put them
there with their flags. Everyone will be
will be emphasizing what they do but
also rec in recognition and respect for
what everyone else does. That's okay.
Now let's go to number two. This is the
sheamish. Um we many times see the
shamish the safar reb the son of the
safar reba actually um a great kidic
scholar and um this is from migillat
root which we read on uh shw right and
um in the in migillas root there's a
very strange moment now we know that
nomi sent ruth to work in the field of
boas
because Boaz was a uh a descendant of
her husband and want she wanted that
Boaz who was at Sadi should some should
marry her hopefully and take the um the
the
uh marrying route we'll see in a second.
Okay. So what what went on here? Okay.
Um, so she's in the field and she's
going home that night
and so he took out he measured three
grains of wheat. Six grains of wheat,
excuse me. And he gave her six grains of
wheat to take home. Take these back with
you. Yehuda Rev Simon Boot.
So in the merit that he gave her these
six grains of wheat, she merited to have
six sadikim come from her. But
Sheshmot Davidid
David Yoshia Kan Mishel Vazar are
counted as one. Remember they went into
the fiery furnace.
Daniel uh Mashiach and the Mashiach. So
the of these six these six things are
going to be for you a merit a dma that
you're going to that will come. She
didn't know this. She he didn't tell her
this but this is what Boaz was thinking.
Okay. Very strange medish right
uh Zikni my grandfather uh the
kotskba amar he explained
this she was destined to give birth to
David Melik right David was going to
come from her genes right and then Msiah
was going to come from her right so
where where did it all start right
um you Where did she come from? She came
from Moab, right? Am Mo. What's this
origin of Am Moav? Was the incestuous
relationship that load had with his two
daughters, right? Her father was a
little more gentle. He said we called
her Moab because she's Mav. She he was
the baby was born from her his father,
right?
But there was there was a
DNA of Moab and Ammon in the uh seed of
David Malik Israel and Mashiach and
these six sadikim right why right what's
that all about so he says like this we
want Melik Mashia Melik the king of
Israel Malik David Melik is coming from
Right
This whole concept
of lording over people does not exist in
the genes of kalra to lord over people
as we just saw now. We just saw now from
uh just have to
hang just saw now from
uh Rabyakov that there was unity. Nobody
was trying to lord over each other. You
see the the theme coming from there.
They were working in tandem. They were
working together. So this idea of of mal
of maluka in the sense of dominion and
lording over doesn't exist by us. We
don't it's not it's not part of us.
Right? So he says like
this but they had to get it because it
was necessary. The king can't be a neb.
The king has to be the king. It has to
be the king. So that this came from the
genes of
Moab because that was that that's what
they were all about, right? It was a
king, right? That's what the Kotzkarb
said. So what does that mean?
Right? The simple understanding
is that all the Jewish
people that they're all like were like
one person, right? Like like we saw by
like like we saw
by he says the exact same thing here
as it's impossible that somebody else
should lord over the other because
The eyes don't rule over the heart. The
right hand doesn't rule over the left
hand and so on. It all works
together. He was the exceptional he was
the king
who over the
page he was completely different from
Israel. Right?
As he wasn't considered to be a limb of
Israel, right? Right. The Gomorrah says
that that Mosher Raenu was
shakra. He he was he was like Israel. He
was just equal to all of Israel, right?
Um Israel, he says
it is. So therefore, so we didn't have
this concept of lording over this uh
this necessary arrogance so to speak and
power sense sense of power, right? Um
but but we had to take that you had to
take
that because the essence of Moaz was
arrogance the evidence of they wanted to
destroy CL Israel they wanted would be
world leader like you see today the wars
that are going on today these power-
hungry people right it's a question of
arrogance right so that was mo that's
what Mo was all about
right moav
of that he that the prophet tells us
that he was the essence. He was the
epitome of
arrogance. So that in the in the genes
in the DNA of
Davidid lies also
DNA from Moab, the king of Moab. So he
had that that had to be part of his
persona,
right? In order to take out this concept
of power, the powerfulness
of but to bring it into holiness.
to be to lord over to be a king right
for the sake of heaven you need to rule
with a certain sense of dignity and
strength otherwise it's not going to
work so that came from the the terrible
the total terrible power hungry kind of
thing but in the DNA of that is the the
idea of being uh dignified and strong
right and have that presence in a holy
way. For example, he says this doesn't
work otherwise if you don't have that
what we
say holy arrogance
right for example king Saul was the
first king of Jewish
people it didn't
work the rabbis tell
us he didn't have he was completely a
humble person he did not have any of
This this
quality says to him,
"Hello, if you are small in your
eyes, you know, how can you be king?"
Right?
Mes and because of that whatever that he
what happened there that he told him
that so Shaw was no did not become the
king because he lacked this call it
arrogance that it's a pjorative but
we're talking about it in a very
positive a positive sense right um like
the Gmorrah says
um should have
amin of
arrogance 164th
164th um of arrogance. It's interesting
that uh 64 and here we take the number
64 gimatria
is secret right so it shouldn't be like
out front in his persona right it's
right
so he he lacked this arrogance and this
sense of
power so he said I'm afraid of the
people Right. And I have to listen to
what they tell me. Right. But that's not
the way a king that's that's that's
anarchy is going to happen. Right.
Right. Golden Mayor once said to
somebody I don't know who she said
somebody in the United States. You know
you have one president of millions of
people. Um I have people we have what I
don't know close to a million people.
I'm the pre minister of uh of a million
presidents. A million prime ministers.
Everybody's a prime minister, right?
Um, which is, by the way, very true
today. You know, everybody, everybody's
a diplomat today. Everybody's a diplomat
today, but there's no diplomacy. There's
no diplomacy today. It's ugly today,
right? So, now back to Boaz Vas. And
what was do what was Boaz thinking here?
Boaz knew this. Boaz was a very uh big
god be Israel and Boaz knew what was
going on here that he named Boaz he
wanted he knew that Mashia was going to
come and he knew Mashiah had to be
strong and powerful.
So, so why did he give her he gave Ruth
to six grains of
wheat right this was you know that at
present which was which will say that
from you will come these six grains
these the leadership and eventually
David Melik King David and
Meliach ano because he understood natan
law he gave it to her because of his
generosity his generosity he could have
taken it for himself Right at this point
he did not know he was going to marry
Ruth. Right? So through his his his
generous generosity of
spirit he gave her the six
sadikim that are going to eventually
come from
her because Boaz means
Boaz. Boaz strength is in him. Boaz
means strength is in him. Right? So Boaz
had this strength the o not only not
only powerful strength physical strength
but it means the o of of Torah.
Right? So he gave
her that she should have this that Msiah
should come from her. Right? He he felt
it was necessary because she came from
Moav. Right?
He had no idea that he was going to be
the husband. He was going to be the
father,
right? Why is that?
Because there was a closer relative to
redeem and to marry Roose, right? In
terms of marrying Roose, there was a
pecking order of who's in line to
inherit the the estate, right? And he
was there was he had an uncle. There was
somebody ahead of him, right?
But still that didn't matter to
him. He gave it to her. He gave her the
braha and he went she went home and Nomi
understood this. Nomi understood this.
She sent her back. Right. You have to
look at the we're not learning the
migillas. It's fascinating.
Migill called Israel. This is the Israel
the Mashiach. Uh this was the the the
great um icing on the cake for Jewish
history and the Jewish people, but he
gave it away,
right? He
knew I could try to become the king, but
I know that we need the quality, the DNA
of Moab, which was in Ruth that will be
given over to David Israel and to
Mashiach. that that arrogance, that
powerness, that that leadership, that
that lording of mal that's that was
necessary, right? Albeit to be
transformed into a holy kind of of
gaucha,
right? Didn't think about himself at
all. Israel was thinking about Israel.
If we're there's going to be a mel he's
going to have to have the qualities from
Moab that
the kingship should be
also to this is a that's what that
abbreviation is if you're looking
inside on the highest the highest form
had to have that quality
too whether it's from him or whether
from somebody else but it had to be on
the highest on the highest
Right.
Okay. Truth be told,
he this was great piety on his
part. He removed himself personally from
this. This was this was great. This was
greatness.
shall Israel that's also the royal men
so that Mala should come from right now
I don't want to read the end of it here
but what do you see from this that he
was rewarded for this that he became the
father of of bringing David Mashiach
because you need both of those qualities
the quality Ryakov was talking about the
quality that he was talking about now
with this strange moment of the six
grains you need the the
humility, right? And you also need the
arrogance, right? So, he brought in the
humility together with the arrogance of
Moab in the genes in the DNA of of uh of
Ruth of Ruth. Okay, last
piece. See if we I don't know if we'll
be able to get through the whole thing
inside, but let's let's go. also
uh dovetales with our theme of the
qualities of uh of the Jewish people of
individual Jews the quality of of
leadership right um and that leaders
have to be not only you know in Yiddish
so the word is right I don't know how to
translate
what proud very good you have to be
proud but you have to be right Good.
Good.
Barcai. So the para opens up the kesh
spoke to Moshe in the desert but midbar
ra the medish says
meat midbar anybody who doesn't treat
himself like see himself as a midbar
halfare
meaning modest right halfcare
right you can never acquire wisdom if
you think you know everything right now
he's talking about Torah of the ultimate
wisdom. But in anything you think you
know better than the teacher, you're
never going to learn anything. Right?
Just it's not going to happen. Right?
You you have to make yourself you want
to learn from somebody. You have to make
yourself I am your student. I want to
learn from you. I want to I'm open. I'm
open. Right? Open in a hefare in a
positive way. Right?
I if a person lives the whole center of
his life is on me right used to speak in
the 80s and 70s ' 80s speak about the MI
generation right um I think very much so
today but um but if if that's if that's
our
focus so you're creating a tremendous a
wall between ourselves and the
right Aal
said but if a person says listen it's
not it's not a man-centric universe a
god-centric universe right and via that
it will be a man-centric universe right
so if he does that drops that then he
drops then the makita falls away the
wall between himself and the whole
purpose of this world we mentioned it so
many times is is our whole purpose here
is to develop a personal relationship
with the reon right I saw a survey now
something recently just recently about
the decline of religion in America today
talking about Christianity decline of
religion because what's the definition
of rel of religion it's not about
creating a relationship between me and
God it's um there are other other
factors invol how people view religion
right but in any case
um so he says here so he
says then you can acquire our wisdom to
Torah, understand
Torah, which is what God God's
wisdom this concept of of
of this idea of being kind of I'm a
nothing to you the shalom is that I
don't I'm not trying to do it to become
a great scholar to get a name for myself
a reputation,
right? Right. I'm I'm, you know, I'm in
charge
here. The essence, if you if you create
Torah, you you develop some creative
idea in
Torah, you won't be upset if someone you
hear somebody quoting you without
quoting you, right? You know, I I'll
never forget one of the first days in in
in the ravenet for me many moons ago.
So, somebody asked me a Shiloh and I
gave him an answer, right? And he said
to me, you know, well, I'm sure there's
another opinion, right? So, I'm like,
you know, you know, you grow, you're in
yeshiva and you're used to the fact you
go to the rash, you ask, you're working
on something that's you know, I'm sure
there's another opinion, right? Right.
But he's right. There is another
opinion, right? And you're allowed to
argue with your with your RV, with your
Rebi, with your you're allowed to argue
in with your Rebi if and and right and
and maybe come out that you'll tell him
that he was he'll admit that he was
wrong. Right. So um that's the point
here. So if a person makes himself like
a desert, right?
He's not the owner of of
wisdom. He'll be to have wisdom. He'll
gain from a lot of people. He's he's the
Gora says, right? But Pik says actually
that I I I I learned from everybody,
right? Okay. So now let's get to the the
para the Nia. What's he what does he
want to say with this? He has a message
to say with this. I don't know that we
can do it all inside but let me try. Now
he says move on. Now we can understand
something very strange in the para para
is we are told
that
is appointing he's announcing the fact
that there are each tribe has a
president a prince a nasi right and I'm
appointing ish a man ahead of each tribe
right of the Torah
continues the Torah goes and gives the
names
again. As if this was the first time he
met them, but it's not
right. I don't
understand. This minion, this census
where they they list all the tribes and
their leaders, right, is a year later
like we saw before in the first piece,
right?
They knew they knew the prince. They
knew who their who their prince was.
Each person, right? The
nih three weeks
earlier there was the dedication of the
misbeha. It's a long para because every
one of the tribes the the princes every
one of these brought carbonus and each
one is listed separately in the Torah.
these quote unquote now he calls them
I'm appointing men over you right that's
going to be his
question these are the same people the
same princes the president the prince
who gave these carbon in the in the so
what what's going on here why repeated
here what do
we how it was repeated
because here he calls them men
right calls him I'm going to point a man
like you a man like you over over
you doesn't say I'm appointing
right even though these were the
same who offered those carbonaut for
He should have
said they will be for you princes,
right?
We have to
understand after he mentions their name
again and he says in the next in our
paraim he calls them anem so they're
nosy but they're also an ish para to
person you see a theme from these three
pieces we've done today
Right. Right. So the answer is that if a
person doesn't make himself like he so
to speak, right? Like a midbar, then
he's not going to be a leader, right?
But you need both qualities. You need to
be a Nazi and you need to realize that
you're also an ish. You're a simple ish.
So I'm appointing an ish over you,
right? That he has to see. He has to see
himself that way that he's not doesn't
should look himself as a Nazi, right?
Um, you know, I remember once also many
years ago as a young rabbi that a
certain rabbi would call me and every
time he I would speak to him, he'd say,
"This is rabbi so and so. Call him."
Right? So, I'm thinking to myself, you
know, I'm also a rabbi. What do you What
do you mean? So it's finally the third
time he did it. He said, "This is Rabbi
so and so." I said, "Can you do me a
favor?" He said, "What's your middle
name? What's your middle name?"
Rabbi, let's say Goldberg. What's the
middle name between Rabbi and Goldberg?
Right? In other words, person is not a
rabbi or a doctor, right? Any for
himself that he that it's other people
if they want, but you shouldn't call
yourself. You shouldn't call yourself
hello, this is Dr.
uh you know this is right so there the
need there's a it's a balance right uh
between being a ni see that you have a
role to play in kal Israel and being an
Adam being a a person that's why the the
melik we've been speaking about has to
have a separate mitzvah every Jew has to
write a safer Torah but a melik has to
have a second safer Torah that he
carried on his arm he carried wherever
he went to remind himself that he's
really nothing His mal his melik is
because of the right so that's the theme
of these three pieces here a little bit
of the theme of shu we're about to
receive the Torah again and we should
receive it with both
qualities okay thank Thank you.