0:00 / 0:00
Devorim: Charlotte, Moshe Rabbeinu and Our Sole Responsibility
3 views
By: Rabbi Shmuel Silber Download the FREE All Parsha app: https://linktr.ee/alltorah Follow us on social media: https://linktr.ee/alltorah Join the All Torah Clips WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/LhFsTY2R6Ll40SFdFmh8i6 Donate: https://alltorah.org/donate
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Dear friends, welcome to this week's
virtual Dasha. This week we have the
incredible privilege
begin and generally we know when we
begin a newish there's a certain feeling
of excitement of optimism and the truth
is there is with we know that the year
is coming to a close
before us are rapidly approaching
we will celebrate the beautiful
culmination and completion of the Torah
but also comes with a profound
heaviness. Of course on one hand paras
is always read on shabis the shabas
right before tishov but I think on an
even deeper level something that even
defines certain kundrical realities or
connections which is
last moments with cloud and one feels
the urgency throughout this entire s
moss that he is not going to shepherd
his beloved flock into this next chapter
of their national destiny and so there's
an urgency to tell them whatever he can
in the short amount of time that they
have together, there's an urgency to try
to convey to them all the necessary life
lessons that they're going to need at
some time in the future, but yet Mosha
will not be there physically to whisper
it into their ear. So now he has to
whisper it into their heart, into their
soul with the hope that they'll retain
it with them as they go forward. And the
par begins in a very almost raw way.
These are the words that Mosha went
ahead and said to points out that these
are the things these are this is rebuke.
This is rebuke begins with moshu
pointing out all of the times over the
last 40 years that we went wrong. All of
the things we did wrong not effort to
beat us up but an effort to remind us of
our mistakes and failures so that we
could do better so that we could be
better going forward. And in this vein,
Moshabu says this is infest
of in many communities to read this PK
in the haunting tune of
says how can I handle by myself
literally means like like the burden
the load
all of your fighting and it's such an
overwhelming moment. You know sometimes
a person could give rebuke and rebuke
can be given in anger and sometimes a
person can give rebuke and you wonder if
the person who's giving the rebuke loves
the people he is rebuking and sometimes
rebuke is given with such a pure heart
that through this stinging words you
feel the love and you feel Mosherenu
saying to us like what are what are you
doing to each other why why why
I'm the man who went up on the mountain
40 days, 40 nights.
I didn't eat bread. I didn't drink
water. I I I I was more mal than man,
more angel than man. I could handle a
lot of stuff. I faced down Pharaoh. I
faced down. I faced down and I did all
of these things. And yet none of that
compared to the difficulties I've had in
facing the challenges of the Jewish
people.
How can I go and carry by myself?
the the burdens, the burdens, the load
and the fighting. Here Mosha is
referring unfortunately to the negative
interpersonal conduct of Isra and the
great sad the imam has a beautiful
interpretation of this p and he says he
puts the as as often theic masters are
able to do he puts the punctuation a
little bit differently. He says the
reason the way he reads it is remember
the pik reads
Right now, it's an it's a question. How
can I shoulder? How can I hold by myself
all of your burdens, all of the
fighting, all the difficulty?
Says, "No, that's not how to read it."
I'm going to read to you the words of
the he says as follows.
refers to the destruction of the right
like we say
like we'll read on tish above so says to
us
when it comes to matters of when it
comes to the destruction of miktod to
the rebuilding of the b mikdash to
msiach to
fixing all of the global problems that
mankind and faces is all that stuff.
God says, "I'll handle that. I'll handle
that. I can handle that. The only thing
I ask you to handle is
take care of each other. Take care of
each other. Leave Leave the running of
the world to me. Leave the matters to
me. Leave the rebuilding of the B
Leave peace.
Leave all the global issues that
mankind. Leave that to me. All the stuff
I God will carry your shoulder by
myself. But all I ask of you,
excuse me,
we have one job, says who says to us.
Just take care of your
just take care of your take care of your
baseless hatred.
You just take care of the fighting. You
take care of the you take care to
create. And if you do that,
you have a profound and overwhelming
division of responsibility when it comes
to matters that fall under the umbrella
of global issues, issues, mankind. I got
it. All the stuff
your responsibility your burden what you
have to take care of
take care of your
an overwhelming message that mosh
says you think your biggest problems are
your external enemies we know all of
them it's not true it's never been true
our greatest challenge often is what we
do to each other our greatest challenges
are often how we mistreat each other you
know the mikdash was destroyed
because the second
so we often translate as baseless hatred
and the truth is it's a very strange
it's a very strange definition baseless
hatred people hate each other for no
reason there's always a reason right if
I don't like someone doesn't like me
there's always a there's always a reason
maybe maybe it's legitimate maybe it's
illegitimate reason but there's always a
reason so what does it mean people just
hated people what because they were
angry because they were bragg so
remember again when we see the word. So
one of the times that complained to
Moshu they said
excuse me
remember the fish right the fish the
cucumbers the melons that they eat they
sounds like they ate for free like where
the Egyptian is part of it that
everything says I don't understand parro
wouldn't give them straw but they had
all of the fish they wanted or all of
the cucumbers all of the melons
rather
means
free of responsibility. See were
lamenting the fact that although
technically speaking they were
emancipated, they were free, but they
were invested with so much more
responsibility. They were they were
waxing. They were they they were they
were they were remembering the quote
unquote freedom of Egypt because in
Egypt there was no responsibility. A
slave doesn't have responsibility for
himself. He has to fulfill his task, his
quota, but he has no responsibility
towards a destiny. We remember said to
complain to Moshabu when we were free
from personalistic responsibility
means to be free of responsibility
means that I'm in a state of I'm in a
state of discord with someone and I feel
absolutely no responsibility
to fix it.
I just don't feel responsible. Just not
my problem. either not my problem
because I say hey it's not my fault and
if it's not my fault then again what
what what what does it matter to me or
just someone else's problem or just I
don't care enough to get involved that's
is the state when there is within
and I don't care enough to fix it and I
don't care enough to do something about
it and says the
says but that's your only job your only
job is to do something about it. That's
your only job. You know, I'm sure many
of us heard about this overwhelmingly
tragic story about this little girl,
Charlotte Herzburg, who was killed in a
terrible accident and this beautiful
initiative called Shalom for Charlotte
where it turns out that it was the very
close friend of Charlotte's father who
who Rahman was driving the vehicle that
that that accidentally inadvertently
killed this precious little girl. and
how this Mishbah and this community
turned an overwhelming and dramatic
tragedy
into a call to responsibility.
And please, if if you haven't signed up
for the pledge, sign up for the pledge.
It's just beautiful. The whole
initiative is take responsibility to
make shalom. Take the first step. I bet
I don't have to. I wasn't the one who
did it. So what we so often speak about
that life is not about being right but
it's about being happy and sometimes
beautiful and profound happiness comes
when we just choose to take
responsibility. You see, we often focus
on so many of the things that we don't
control and we spend so much effort on
the things that we don't control and we
totally neglect the things we do
control. And says stop
like all the major stuff that's broken
that in reality you and I can't fix who
says I got that. I got that. We have one
sacred task.
The responsibility that we shoulder, the
load that we shoulder is rim to take
care of our
this beautiful holy Herzburg family
within Kali is used the most
overwhelming and heartbreaking and
tragic
circumstance
as a call to relationship responsibility
for Israel.
just take the first step because that's
the only step
runs a beautiful world and he knows
exactly what he's doing and he's got it
choreographed and he's got it
orchestrated and he doesn't need us to
insert ourselves in his affairs at least
some of the time. What he needs us is to
focus on the things we can change and
things we can change. It's me and you.
It's our relationships. It's how we
interact with each other. It's how we
treat each other
destroy the mdash.
See dear friends, it's important to
understand
is part of the human condition. There's
always going to be discord. There's
always going to be fighting. I guarantee
when comes there's going to be fighting
right the third I can imagine there's
going to be who gets up is going to be
has to wear a jacket has to wear has to
wear sandals. I I have no doubt I have
no doubt there's going to be
there's no such thing. There's no such
thing
is when there's and I feel no
to try to straighten it out. That's what
destroys temples. That's what destroys
lives. That's what destroys nations.
Dear friends,
It's shabis.
It's the nine days. It's but a few days
away from tishabuff.
And we all too often resign ourselves to
the fact that because we've been
mourning for almost 2,000 years that we
have to mourn this year also.
It doesn't have to be that way. Anything
and everything can change. Anything and
everything will change.
But nothing changes by itself.
Things only change when we find the
courage to change them. We've lost so
much because we haven't exercised the
sacred responsibility and ability to
change the interpersonal dynamics within
our people
because we've been suffering from sin
not from but from an unwillingness to
fix the for thousands of years.
Let's turn it around. We all have makas
in our life. We all have this card in
our life. We all have afraid or broken
relationships in our lives. And some
things you can fix, some things you
can't fix, but you could always try. You
could always try. The remedy to
interestingly enough is not I don't know
what means just love without boundaries.
Love it. I don't know. The antidote to
sin the antidote to the answer to is
take responsibility to fix the in your
life. And if each of us do this just in
one little small way, if each of us
takes just one little step, identify one
relationship, identify one pocket of
saying, you know what, I've neglected
doing anything about it for so long. I'm
going to do something about it. I'm
going to reach out in some way, in some
way, big, small, whatever it might be.
Just don't upsent yourself from the
responsibility to fix in your life
because that's the only thing Hashem
asks of us. The big things, the things
Hashem's got that
the responsibility that sits on our
shoulders.
take care of
let's use these days of the nine days to
address the which exists in all of our
lives to do our small part in Hashem
rolling up our sleeves and trying to
push away some of the negativity some of
the
who knows the nth of is going to come
because there's a day on the calendar
but the nature of that day is
fundamentally up to us
in this of all of us rejecting and
repudiating
and taking the responsibility to fix the
things that are broken
to celebrate the nth of together
with the rebuilt third bas with the mels
at our home.