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Can Your Judaism Survive Silence ?
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Who are you when know ones around ?
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
This Torah class is brought to [music]
you by torahanytime.com.
>> People love Judaism when Judaism is
alive. When the shul is packed, [music]
when the zmirus are loud, when the
cholent is hot, when the music is
playing, when [music] everyone around
them is doing what they do.
But I sometimes wonder, what would your
Yiddishkeit look like if you were
completely [music] alone? No community,
no social pressure, no expectations, no
applause, no one watching, just [music]
you and Hashem.
Because that's where the real story
begins.
How do you learn in an empty base
medrash? Not during a packed night
seder, where the room is humming and you
can barely find a seat. [music] I mean,
when it's quiet, when nobody would
notice if you would close the Gemara,
when there's no one to impress, there's
no status attached to it. It's just you
sitting across [music] from a Gemara
trying to connect to the words of Hashem
simply because they're the words of
Hashem.
How do you daven when life sometimes
[music] forces you to daven b'yechidus?
There's no minyan sh'mona esrei.
There's no crowd, there's no singing,
there's no energy carrying you. It's
just you [music] standing in a corner
whispering sh'mona esrei into the
silence.
How's your davening then?
How does your Shabbos look in a
hospital? When there's no beautifully
set table, there's no guests, there's no
[music] atmosphere, there's just
fluorescent lights and paper cups and
machines beeping in the background.
How's your Shabbos then?
Do you still feel the queen there?
Everybody loves a good Friday night
seudah. But sometimes I wonder, what
does your melaveh malka look like?
Shabbos is over, the dishes are piled
up, everyone's exhausted, the house is a
wreck, the inspiration faded, nobody's
singing anymore. How's your seudah then?
Do you escort the holy queen with song
and holiness? Or was the whole Shabbos
thing sort of just an experience?
[music]
How does your ahavas Yisrael look when
the Jew next to you doesn't validate
you, but he threatens you. When he
disagrees with you, when he competes
with you, when he gets the aliyah that
you wanted, when he gets the success you
wanted, [music] when he gets the respect
you wanted, when he seems to be doing a
vote of Hashem better.
Do you still love [music] him then?
Or do you only love Jews who validate
you and vote like you and make you feel
good about yourself?
How do your middos look inside your own
home? Not in public, not at shul, not
during night seder, at home
>> [music]
>> with your wife when nobody's watching.
How do you speak to your husband when
nobody would ever know?
How does your avodas Hashem look on
vacation when nobody around you knows
who you are? When there's no community
expectations, when there's no image to
maintain, there's no social
consequences. Do you still reach for
Hashem or was your Yiddishkeit sort of
just environmental the whole time?
You see, [music] there's a version of a
of Judaism that looks beautifully inside
of crowds and music and inspiration and
structure and social reinforcement. But
then there's another type of Judaism, a
deeper type, a quieter Yiddishkeit, a
Judaism that survives [music] in empty
rooms, in hospital hallways, in
airports, in loneliness, [music] in
exhaustion, in silence. That's the
Judaism that built this nation. The
Judaism of Jews who kept Shabbos in
labor camps with a crust of bread. The
Judaism of Jews who whisper Shema under
blankets. The Judaism of Jews who
learned Torah alone in basements even
though no one else cared. The Judaism of
Yidden who didn't need big shuls to
daven well. The Judaism of Yidden who
didn't need big kailalim to learn well.
The Judaism built by gedolim who would
roar about Torah even when it was
unpopular, even when it got them in
trouble, even when it got them killed.
That's the Judaism we inherited and
that's really the only Judaism worth
bequeathing because at the end of the
day the real question is not how Jewish
are you in front of other people. The
real question is when the singing
[music] stops, when the crowd
disappears, when nobody is clapping for
you, when there's no social pressure,
there's no validation, there's no
audience, there's no community carrying
you, when you close the door of your
house and you're all alone, the question
is
how Jewish are you then?
>> [music]
>> You've just experienced another Torah
class brought to you by
torahanytime.com.