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[Music]
Did you know that the forgotten founder
of Zionism went on to play a leading
role in Aguras Israel or that
Rafatramsky was responsible for the
continued presence of the Muslim wack on
Harabias?
It turns out that the margins of history
tell the real story. Behind the Times
dives into the big concepts and
overlooked moments that carry vast
meaning all through the lens of Torah
and rabbitic thought. This is Jewish
history like you've never heard it
before. Behind the times with Rabbi
Ephraim Zal Galinski and Gdalia Gutag.
None of us will ever forget where we
were when we heard the news on October
the 7th. Sastora the terrible attacks
then of Raf Galinski. In fact, I think
it's so great was the shock and the
trauma. Many of us will remember things
that happened in the days afterwards. I
certainly do. I remember one of my
reactions a few days later that I
started to hear many different places as
well from others. The reaction was this
changes everything. This has to change
everything. Now, that's a widespread
reaction to massive events, very
shocking events. But this was said in
the after sun after October the 7th was
said in the religious context. There was
a widespread expectation among fum Jews
that after such anti-semitic medieval
level hate there would be a new touva
movement almost universally and I think
we're going to get into this in this
episode over here as we live through the
aftershocks of this we here in Eritis B
living through a war still it's the
October the 7th war and as ll in you
know here we with ll it's a good time to
ask is there a tou of a wave. What does
recent history tell us about Jews
returning to their roots? And will it
happen? What the conditions that can
enable it, if it is happening, to
increase and grow this time around? So,
Prime Gam Galinsky joining you once
again over here in behind the times,
which is our newly renamed podcast. My
pleasure, Dalia,
>> as always. So, so let's start with some
facts. I think some data actually
because here in this country we certain
bodies do track the facts over here
related to children people's religious
status over here and I think one of the
most the things that struck me most of
the last period of time was a was a
survey that shows that again it caused
headlines more than 53% of Israeli Jews
under 29 years of age are now keeping
some form of halik shabas. It's
fascinating and it's also startling
because it kind of indicates this kind
of tipping point I'd say above 50% again
of this demographic. And it's
fascinating to note that this joins a
string of surveys that indicate growing
religiosity over the past decade or so.
There's no question about it. We see it
in the media. We see it every over here.
I think there like two parallel waves
happening. One is like you're saying
before the last several years there's
been surge of chuva among celebrities
and you know singers and all that but I
think what happened now was more due to
a breaking of a previous feeling of an
anchor. Their anchor
which was sahal which was Zionism
secular zionism
fell away during October 7th. And when
someone feels that he has no anchor, he
starts looking for a different anchor. I
mean there's two there are two parallel
things happening which might not be
related. I mean it could be the wave of
the celebrities would have continued at
a certain pace among them.
>> It wasn't just celebrities. This is you
know as celebrities were the most
visible and I think their influencers
their trends setters but they were also
the hamoam vast numbers of Jews. Right.
Rab Gillinsky, when you talk about two
things happening in parallel, what I
thought you were going to say, and
perhaps you're going to get on to this,
was that Israeli society is actually
very interesting because it seems to be
doing two things at once. On the one
hand, it's getting more liberal in
personal, you know, the public square
tolerates behavior, let's put it like
that, that is so far away from even, you
know, even among secular people, they
wouldn't have dreamt of doing things
like this 30, 50, 60 years ago. on the
one hand Israel is becoming more liberal
right socially liberal on the other hand
and at the same time it's actually
becoming more traditional so it's a
remarkable
>> right right so I think we have to
comment on this just like something
factual okay the idea of Israel becoming
more liberal is I think very is confined
to what the Israelis called Medina Tel a
Viv
>> the state of Tel Aiv
>> yeah you have to understand that when
you enter certain radius of Tel a Viv
you're actually entering a different
country. I heard this from people, you
know, like academics talking about the
situation in is the state of Tel a Viv
is like a cut and paste of a modern
goes secular state outside of but
besides for that very clearly defined
area and the areas that that are part of
that Medina, if you find places like Min
or if you go to the north next to Rash
Pina, everywhere you go, you're going to
mind
>> like small enclaves small enclaves of
this thing. Correct. You're right. So
those are the two trends. In other
words, it's actually a tale of two
countries.
>> Exactly. It's not happening in the same
place. That's what I'm saying.
>> Yeah. But I was saying in the public
square, you're having to when it comes
down to I'm not talking about, you know,
if you go to dies in Tel Aviv versus
obviously the two different places.
>> I'm talking about the countries between
Tel Aiv and let's say correct.
>> Correct. But it's a kind of the media
and different places like this where you
find a meeting where you find different
trends clashing and there are there is
definitely this thing and I thought one
more point to add on to this thing is
that when you're saying about what
happened on October the 7th was that the
smashing of previous ideologies for me
that is encapsulated by something it was
literally the first bit of reporting
that I did after October the 7th on I
was in London and so we were hearing
stuff over there. Uh but it was
obviously 24 hours later than my
colleagues here in the Mishbaka in Erit
is who got to work and a whole 24 hours
it was one of the most unsettled times
that I've ever had. I could not sleep or
eat normally or I prowled in the streets
of Gold's Green London with my in-laws
over there and I couldn't find any
manukha and I just and I was meeting
talking to Goyam and to people it was
because I couldn't I knew that back home
I had to be dealing with this and it was
I think we all felt like this and those
init felt the similar thing but as soon
as Yamv was out essentially the second
day of Yamv then init I picked up the
phone to somebody who put me in contact
with the first person, the first
survivor I spoke to and this was a man
from a place called Nativa Assara
Kibuts, a secular kibbutz on the
northern border of the Gaza Strip is
literally Nativas. For the benefit of
our listeners, you have to describe that
the area around Aza was populated by
very secular kibbutim
and very strong idealists from the
right-wing camp. He had both types in
the
>> so historically the border region
>> historically the border of the northern
border with Lebanon Syria and the
southern border which is with Gaza was
the frontier of the old shamir
very far-left essentially communist
communist origin uh kibbutim and all in
that era those for historic reasons not
going to get into it now but in the niva
Assera I spoke to one man I forget his
name he was a man in his 40s who'd
served in a special forces unit and he
told me that a couple of years before
this is a man who's trained to fight and
had served reserve duty in one of as I
said in this in a special unit and a
couple of years before the war the IDF
had come knocking and said we want to
everyone to hand over their personal
weapons and stuff that they taken to the
army that they're allowed to have
because we are responsible for the
security in the area the man said I
trusted the army now listen to what he
said he said the most terrible this is a
man who when they when kamas were going
house to house in you know killing
people. He was in in Civas where it
happened there literally on the border
right some of the houses there on the
border he um was there holding
discovering like many people that the
mama the bomb shelter that he was inside
there was no way to hold it closed from
inside and he was desperate and he had a
kitchen knife with him or something like
that he had no weapon whatsoever and
then he said the most terrible sound
that he's ever heard. He said, "The most
terrible sound that I ever heard was the
silence. The silence between the
shooting." He said, "I heard the birds
tweeting. I heard the sound of silence."
He said, "Because my 8-year-old and 12
or 13year-old son said, where's the
army?" He said, he says, "Listen." He
says, "In a minute, you're going to hear
the sound of the tanks. They're coming
to rescue us." And he said, "For 8 hours
straight between the shooting and the
killing, all I heard was silence." He
said that was the most terrible sound
I've ever heard. And he said that was
the sound of and it the collapse of my
belief because up to then I believed in
the army and now I don't have and he
said to me the following thing he said
to me he saw that my picture was you
know talking on the phone was religious.
He says you're religious. Imagine if
somebody managed to convince you God
didn't exist. One day that whole your
whole worldview collapses nothing left.
He said to me it might say he said to me
that was the sound that was what I feel
like my whole world has come shaking
down. So that is what you're saying in
that vacuum in that vacuum we've had the
rise of people turning against to
Yiddish. The question is how much how
much but it's definitely happening.
>> I think one of our we have the privilege
of meeting one another in the hallways
of Mishbah. So you
>> the privilege is all mine. You told me a
fascinating story about the mother of
one of the hostages. Trust yourself was
a hostage.
>> Correct. Yelena Trufanov.
>> Right. She was a academic who came up
because of October 7th.
>> Correct. So the lady's name is people in
America may have seen she has gone
around and certainly her her
daughter-in-law now to be a lady called
Dr. Elena Trouanov. She's not actually
she's a doctor. She's actually a chemist
as in chemistry. She lived in Kibbutz
near Oz again Gaza border area. Kibbut's
very far left near Oz has inside it had
I don't know what state it's in today
the industrial plant where they
manufacture one of Israel's big paint
companies those who paint their houses
over here know that they could use Nirat
Niratus is like paint company that I
didn't know until going there is named
after the near O kibuts and the place
was torched he said that the kamas did
such a it's much smaller than some of
the other kibuts seem like ber but
actually they told me that their kamas
did you know greater damage said by the
time that the Isra Israeli forces
arrived. Hamas were all gone because
they'd cleaned out everyone. Cleaned out
in the sense killed or captured and
torched. There was nothing left. She was
captured along with her son who's a big
tall guy, young guy called Sasha
Trufanov. They have Russian citizenship.
She and the sons now, you know, Kalo is
going to I think they're going to get
married soon.
>> This very emotional video of Ra
Zilbashin making with him when he was
released
>> and he was released. He had Vladimir
Putin. Hashem looked after him. Vladimir
Putin said he's one of ours and he and
it was part of the deal with Hamas and I
had a conversation with her and I
recorded it and I've been looking for
that video because sitting there in her
burnt out they was torched by Hamas that
a nurat the paint plant her lab just
destroyed in that lab she sat there and
she said I am today a bit why she said
the following thing she said I sat there
in captivity and I thought to myself
it's absolutely absolutely impossible to
explain in any natural terms what just
happened here. The army, one of the most
powerful armies in the world, right?
>> We now can say it with more conviction.
>> Correct. We can see this is an army
that's taken apart the axis of Iran's
axis of evil, right? In stunning
operations, right? Beyat Hashem, etc.
But in just plain the, you know, the
terms of cause and effect in this world,
it is a very sophisticated, powerful
institution. That army, she says,
utterly ceased to exist on October the
7th. So much so, she said, our captives
said to us,
we never expected to find to get more
than a few hostages from the army. They
said, what happened to your army? What
happened to it? She said, this Dr.
Yelena Troufanov said, I also don't
understand. I don't understand. She
said, I grew up in a Ukrainian, you
know, Soviet era home, totally
irreligious. came turned left winky
boots 1999 no connection with the
religious people I myself said there
must be a god there must be a god
because only a god could do thing like
this she came out of captivity all
effects a balis chiva just with needing
to learn and there she was sitting there
it was about a year ago sitting there
inside her lab holding a safer etc
and that is for me the story rabbinsky
of what is what has happened over here
encapsulates the whole of what's
happened over here hashem shook the
Jewish nation in such a way that those
who are balesh, those who are have a
sensitive enough soul, you know, can see
that there was something else going on.
And that that's an example. There's
others like this as well. Omar Shimtov,
who came out of captivity, he I just saw
a long essay in the Economist magazine
and his mother said, I I was in touch
with his mother and they wrote in this
article, he's keeping much more. He had
conversations with Hashem there and they
weren't ne they weren't a very religious
family to begin with. And the point is
there is something in the air that has
supercharged what was already happening
over here.
>> So we had a discussion at home. What's
the most push explanation?
Why should a person in captivity come
close to so actually one of the one of
the people at home I don't know if it
was my wife or my one of my daughters or
my sons they said if you read the
introduction of the
says that the basic necessity for amuna
is
right the uses the
I think that's the
>> we actually quoted is for those who are
great devotees of anything we produce on
podcast we quoted this in our podcast to
the yes the introduction to
>> right so so the idea is bringing out
over is that it's really contemplate
Bria and the feeling basic emotional
state has to be one of complete calmness
someone who is omit of like running
after Tyus or whatever it is he he
doesn't have head space for it and is if
he reaches a certain calmness in his
life then he can start seeing things and
trying to understand the bria and this
is what some one of my family members
mentioned he says that for these people
it took them the hours that were in
captivity those are the first hashet
that the khanish was talking about
>> I think what you what you're describing
and the is saying is a state in which a
person is stripped back to the essence
over there there's nothing else but in a
certain way I think that's what happened
after October the 7th as well in which
all of us there was a shock we thought
nothing else matters well if nothing
else matters all of us said then
everyone can see nothing else matters
and surely people are going to get back
to essences I want to just give this a
historical dimension over here because
recent times have shown us this trend
the recent times has shown us that these
things have happened before twice I'd
say one of them is the 30s as Hitler
rose to power and what happened German
Jews over there and the other thing is
after the six day war etc. And I want to
get into both of them. I think the
introduction to this is the is the
Gmorrah the Gomorrah talks about when
Hashem puts us under pressure Jews have
a way of reacting like that in a very
special way.
>> Correct. The Gomorra son
which talks about says if they don't do
chuva right
we talk about the process by which mush
is going to come.
what Hashem's going to do in the future,
he's going to bring a leader, some power
that's going to make to going to make
horrific degrees of destruction and
genocide like like Hmon
and that process of pressure was going
to bring people back and obviously we
saw this in the in Hmon was the
embodiment of Amalik and Hitler was the
embodiment of Amalik in our times. I
think there's a well-known period in the
30s, the late the second half of the
1930s in which the there was it was
undeniable that Hitler wasn't going
away. He was powerful.
>> He wasn't in control of Germany yet, but
he was on the way.
>> No, I'm talking about the second half of
the 1930s. Hitler came to power in 1933.
And in the initial years, there were
people who said, "Well, he's going to
come and you German people are going to
be forced into line by the by the
Western powers or Hitler's really he's
just a lot of talk." But by the second
half of the 1930s it was very clear that
was not the case and it was disaster and
German Jews well doumented started
returning to Schulz and it was not nec
you know Schulles could be for religious
reasons could be for cultural reasons
they just had nowhere else to go but
there was definitely a return that's
documented in one of the sources just I
immediately came to mind was in the book
Ishihoodi which was written about a
biography of of Yseph Kalabah the great
last ro of the Kalabach dynasty the
uncle of the singer Kalabak uncle of
Kabakish
and he's a very great person in his own
right and he wrote that in the 19
>> was authored by his son
>> his son who was
>> and he writes the son writes there that
during the 30s there was a noticeable
uptake Jews who were distant from their
religion and from their roots started to
come home so I mean there was definitely
that thing but I'm just I'm just
scanning there was Victor Clemper He was
a secular Jewish professor who was
actually intermarried. He wrote in the
1930s in 1935, "People have not entered
a synagogue in decades now went on
Shabbat. I saw men in Talat who could
not recite one prayer. It was a form of
protest, a reclaiming of something long
abandoned about other
>> that is very interesting what you just
mentioned now is a form of protest
because we find this in America
happening after October 7th."
>> In what way? Meaning in people who
encountered anti-semitism,
they're saying if people are looking me
as a Jew, okay, I better find out what a
Jew means. That was their way of
reacting to the anti-semitism on
>> correct. And that was I saw you know the
reform schools in England. I just sorry
to quote that were filled up in the
media afterwards. Jews felt and still
feel tremendously isolated in a world
which has turned against them. And I
just a quote from I wrote I wrote a
column a while ago towards the beginning
of the war about liberal the pain of
liberal Jews. The editor of the Atlantic
which is really the kind of the house
journal of the thinking you know
democratic democratic party in America
its editor was it's basically was a
mouthpiece for Barack Obama. It's that
senior. It's a very influential
magazine. And they had one of the
editors, Franklin Fur, wrote an essay,
wrote a cover story about the saying
that the golden era, the golden age of
American jewelry is gone. I'm struggling
to find the way to to convey what an
earthquake it is to write for a Jewish
editor of the most prestigious
periodical on the left in America to
write to do a cover story about that.
the cut the cover and he wrote about the
anti-semitism of the way that Jews were
being forced out of the arts and out of
media and out of everywhere and had gone
from this favored minority to this
horrific status of being thrown out by
the left and he there was like a kind of
an energy a kind of there was a kina
there as well like as in like kinth
right this sense of mourning of
something that is broken and is gone and
is shattered than is in the past I you
know and that that goes together with
what was happening as Hitler rose to
power I'm Just over here quoting again
the records from Berlin and Frankfurt
noted a sharp rise in it synagogue
attendance between 33 and 36. Quoting
from the and this is a virtue of our
friends at church GPT but they do the
work over here from the Frankfurt.
>> Who really tracked that information like
>> the Frankfurt Jewish community's annual
report said that in Frankfurt attendance
for Colidri in 33 nearly doubled from
the previous years. Entire families
returned who last attended for
Bameitzvah decades ago. I mean those are
incredible thing over here and over here
>> you can rely on the yakkesha communities
that they really
>> they tracked it they tracked it
>> they tracked it and the point over here
is I think it's intuitive I don't think
it's hard to understand and as garra
says
the removal removing of's ring as he
gave it over to hmon was what shifted
was what returns hashem Jews to hashem
and it's something we can understand we
see it happening in our times
but really I think the key point
therefore is to go to look at that
period 1967 1973 because this is the
where the modern chuva movement starts
in England in America and it starts in
Eric and it's in Russia by the way right
obviously in Russia we find and I think
the lessons if we're going to draw out
any lessons for what we can expect going
forward now to October the 7th are there
to be learned over there over to you
>> yeah okay I just want to point out that
whatever we're going to say now is not
true regarding ing Russia and I'm going
to get back to Russia at the end. Okay?
Because regarding Russia, I had a very
interesting conversation with a very
interesting academic who lives one of
these small houses on the way down to
Enaram, if you know what I'm talking
about. Like of all these artists
>> in the art area. Yeah.
>> Yeah. Very interesting. I walked into
his house. It was like he has sits with
like this big Bkarian
yamaka and like wild white payers and
white beard. He was a Russian academic
made aliyah. So he described that kufa
in in in Russia. That's when he grew up
in Russia. We'll get back to that and
it's I think it's for different reasons.
I mean it's not going to be parallel to
what we're talking about in
America and that kufa. But we'll talk
about first and I want to I want to
introduce my remarks with something that
I found very recently in a pamphlet that
was printed. In my eyes it should have
been printed as a full-fledged safer
because it's really unbelievable. And
I'll start off with something that a lot
of people know. I think many of us have
read Raviar's
>> Waking Up Jewish, right? Waking up
Jewish
>> or My Friends, we are robbed. The two
different titles,
>> right? So I think the main part like the
crucial part of the whole story is that
he's going to a friend of his and he
meets an oldman
and that's what changes his life. Okay.
Now the way I grew up with that story is
that
was a very
tremendous
and he kabo the cababo the and he
was like one of the as well as being a
thorough old-fashioned yakish education
right he was phenomenally wellversed in
everything that
>> right he was the son of the one who
translated rash on the toyra I think
that's what I heard
>> the silverman
yes
>> that's his father that's what I heard
and he came to us and he married into
Yushami family and he adopted the fully
Us Shami dress that's why he wore a
style and and a long coat and he has a
very large family and that's the whole
Zimberman
>> in the old city
>> in the old city right so so by the way
the Zimmerman family are very shim
shamay people and they're very not into
publicity right so I think
>> this episode is not funded by the Zuman
family
>> right right and no I feel that sometimes
it works against us because they have
such good things from Rabbit and they
don't put it out like because you know
they're not into it. They're not into
that. So they put out like a small
pamphlet of his about Amuna and that
whole small pamphlet is based on the
notes that he delivered to Uri in those
long discussions that he had with him.
>> That must have been amazing.
>> Yeah. And because Urizar writes how he
fought all the way. He looked down on
this, you know, quaint archaic Jew with
his rusty coat. He was a member of the,
you know, he was a member of the elite.
They were he was a philosopher. He was
an artist and he wasn't having any of
it. He went kicking and screaming.
>> The first discussion was between them
told listen I'm willing to give you as
much time as you want. Okay? But on one
condition that if I convince you,
>> it will change your life. Okay? If I'm
just wasting my time here, I refuse. And
I came with a few people with him was
the only one who said that if you
convince me, I'm going to go along with
it. So in any case, so in the to that
pamphlet, I think it's called
I'm almost sure something like that type
of a and it's like small pamphlet. I
don't know if people can get a hold of
it. And in the it says over there that
someone asked,
how did you have all these answers
prepared for Urizar? Now he really
attacked him from all sides. U was a
very learned person. He knew a lot and
they told him something shocking which I
think is going to be the key to our
whole discussion. Okay. And he says, "I
knew that there was a puk that there's
going to come a time avoid
knowledge of hashem."
>> Right? I knew there was going to be a
time like that and I knew that people
will be seeking all right and thirsty
forem.
>> I had to be prepared. So I sat down way
before Uri approached me. I sat down and
I thoroughly went through everything. I
think it was mainly based on the kuzari
for sure rahal and things like that and
I was prepared and when urizar came to
me I took out that mak and that's how I
>> like different nava. So no, so that why
is that shocking? Because the majority
of us when we see this nua, what what
comes to our mind that there will come a
time when will open up the heavens,
okay? And he's going to spill
>> knowledge knowledge,
>> right? And we're going to sit back there
on our lounge chair, right? And is going
to do all the work for us. And it was
thought not like that. He says that
because will create the thirst but
you're going to have to you're going to
have to work on it. Okay? And if we
don't work on it then it's not going to
happen. So that that led me to this
understanding that even the six day war
in 1973 there's a bit of m is exactly
what was the cause of the cha movement
that came out dropped later. It didn't
happen right away 1973. It took time.
Was it the six day war or was it the
breaking of the Kim that happened in in
the 1970s? I think can I just jump in
over here and say I think it's probably
both because I mean Revolva wrote his
famous safer which was for Bal on based
on the talks he gave to in air you know
air force bases and to different
academics and different and he called it
which is a play on the words you know
Beno between Rashashan and Yippa but it
was between the sixth day war oipa
the 10th day and I think to be honest I
I think it was that what we call a
double whammy you have over there the
incredible exhilaration the hope and I
come back to this the Russian Jews I'm
sorry I'm spoiling this thing come back
there but I know for a fact that they
felt kufa they felt proud of being Jews
again why because the Jews had won and
then six years later you had this down
from the highest level down to this
terrible breaking I think it was a
combination of both that did so I think
right anyway That's my view on what
would have happened then. But over
>> right so so basing on what Zan said. So
I came to that realization that with the
six day war and this the yum kipa war it
wouldn't have happened if not for some
dedicated individuals and I think
surprisingly I think the listeners
overseas will probably not recognize
many of the names that I'm going to
mention. Okay. And it's people who
worked really shame Shamayim and behind
the scenes. Okay. And I think the first
people who really realized that
something has to be done were three
people. Two of them themselves Bal Chuva
academics
and one of them a from birth Yid who we
all knew here in Mishbahha by the name
of Mosha Gilak and soon I'll soon
explain like why they brought him
aboard. Ed, editor, founding editor of
Mishbah,
>> right? And these two Yidden, one of them
is someone by the name of Dr. Scholam
Ser Bernick. Does the name mean anything
to you?
>> I've heard of him, a fan of
>> right. He was the founder of Arim
together with another academic by the
name of uh Ibal. I don't know what their
route was to the chuva but they were the
first to take the steps and they
realized that something has to be done
and they hit up with a certain idea
which I think works very well with the
hdma that we mentioned before is that
you can't meet a secular Israeli on the
street and try to convince him to become
a bal bal it's impossible he's middle of
his life he's middle of running after
you know his parnosa day night if it's
not his paros say he's going out with
his family to the beach, whatever it is,
it's part it's not feasible. So they
came up with this ingenious idea which I
don't think if this happened before in
America, they came up with this
mindfall, what we call in Yiddish. They
said we'll have to convince couples
>> to come away for us with some type of
seminar,
>> right? To come for shabas. Come like a
Thursday, Friday weekend, whatever it is
in a hotel. I don't think they ever did
it in a fancy hotel or anything, but it
was and people who had a thirst for
knowledge for Yiddishkite. So, you know,
it spoke to them. No, why not? Why not
have a nice
>> But that's the key thing, Raalinsky.
There was a thirst because if 10 years
before you'd said, "Come to a hotel
here, bunch of rabbis." They were said,
"Are you crazy?" Like, it was only
because they were capitalizing on the
fact that was, as you say, they noticed,
they saw that there's something going on
over here. There's a wave of interest
and they say, "Let's institutionalize
it. This is the way this is the vehicle
that we can use to deliver meaning. But
by the way, arim still does it it deals
with this people become ballet chuva.
There's no up to a few years ago it was
noticeably less and in fact one of the
who used to work here at Mishbah told me
that it was a Belid who said who worked
in Kiraov for bells has a kov
organization and he said that the bells
quoted the bleba the current bellba is
saying that the window of chuva has
closed it was closing and I think that
if you went back to the bells rabbit
today you he's going to say no this is
it's wide wide open against it
>> no the question is the venues how do you
get to the people I mean I today it's
going to be a long shot to try to
convince them to come for a shop. It's
like it's too much
>> people do but it's much lower level
there's kind of like a trend in society
and let's go over to what was happening
in America obviously you had I mean in
America there were Americans living here
often here in Eric but you had the you
know the great initiators of the chuva
wave very great people very different
people who set up after the big bang in
what was the in the kov movement the
original kovisha became became became a
well and knowberg or menbach different
different I'm sure going to miss many
out but there were different pioneers
and leaders like that but as you say
what it was they didn't just say I'm
convinced it can happen they said we're
going to do it
[Music]
weber has a story that he he's talking
to
in the mirror and says I don't
understand you want to open up a factory
to produce baluva
you're like you're out of your mind like
he he actually discouraged him
>> and had this he was convinced that it
was doable.
>> He was a visionary and if he'd asked too
many shilas it would never have happened
as well because the only it's the
example of a thing like this that the le
itself knows what needs to be done. He
knew it could be done. He knew it needed
to be done and he did it. I think that's
the key thing as well to notice these
were big right was one of the big minds
in Mir. He was a massive masmid
and they said they took and they said
they took themselves and they said no
there's something extraordinary going
suddenly a big moment
>> I just want to add something about
something that I've discovered only
recently I don't know if the in America
knows one of the very special
who was nif only several years ago was
and the reason why people in America
don't know who it is because right after
was nif so I I heard this I swear a few
times that there was a tufa where the
tur didn't know like who's going to be
taking over from the kadesh would it be
gaman who is his nephew and is like
prime talid or will be ra and rashiva
from panovich and and at the end it
happened that rashak took over the
leadership of the tow world and gam's
name was a bit forgotten on the side but
rahim gman was a very powerful force
here to soul. He probably had savings or
that he received that after he got
married or something like that. And just
recently, I heard from someone who was
like he was close to the family that he
gave out of his pocket $1 million.
>> That's remarkable. A nephew nephew of
the
>> found had a million dollars
>> to found to found and he had a whole why
it's more than you know you're not
allowed to give more than he said. Alis
you don't work with
>> I mean that's remarkable because I think
that people are not aware of and I only
came across this because in Tel a Viv
was doing kerov there was multiple
kaleim staffed or you know people
populated by aim who were you would
think the last people kov they were what
they call here in khaznik right they
were in very intense followers of the
kazunish and then I discovered that no
it was because raman had encouraged this
thing he was a visionary a visionary and
he said to him we can make a difference.
But I think that's the key point you're
making over here that it's not enough to
have a shaisha this movement this time
when people are prepared and are open
and listening. They got to have the
great people step stepping forward as
well. If I can add just something two
very interesting points. Rav Gilak told
me that they had to sit down him he was
like the from birth part of the team him
and Shalom Sarik and Baal they had to
sit down and build the curriculum of the
these seminars right this whole plan
like what to give them you know
different bites of information and
things like that. So he told me
something very interesting. He said that
they once invited to a seminar that was
taking place inim near and that's near
the yeshiva of rightio. So they said
listen we make a se seminar in inim we
have to invite
who was the of to give at least give a
schmoo. He was like the most sweetest
sadic you probably would ever meet in
your life. He was like very softspoken.
He spoke pureit because he wasn't he
didn't like he wasn't born in even
though he was like he was na over his
90s but he didn't he wasn't born in lit
and came to and he was like purely
Israeli and he spoke with pureit and
they asked him to give a lecture to
these the secular Jews who were at the
seminar and he got up there and he says
Ra
[Music]
Gulak was telling me
>> free translation how's it possible not
to believe in the creator of the world
you see what a beautiful world that is
he said immulac
told me says
like I put buried my head buried my head
shame I was so embarrassed It's like
what are you talking these are academics
these are secular academics he says at
the end of the seminar we handed out
papers to ask them feedback which was
the most powerful lecture and they all
said
and then I realized that what people
want is they want
>> exactly wants
>> yeah the Jewish
>> authentic an authentic Jew
>> see it again and again I think there's
so many names you got to mention as well
there with his
>> that is another part that's you have to
you pointed out something Right? That is
another the whole spari world was built
and pushed by other personalities. And
we're talking about Ruven Elbad Ruven
Elbad or Shiva of Orim and together with
Rabad Ysef's unbelievable charisma,
right? And his regal way of presenting
himself and his vast Torah knowledge
which blew people away and his pride.
So, so all that were like big kas in the
world.
>> But again, again, I think we have to say
there was the same ingredients over
there. The safari world up to that at
that point in already in the 70s was
starting to say as we saw in political
terms will say we're not we've had it
with the Ashkanazi elite. We're going to
go our own way. We have our own pride.
We have our own traditions, our own
roots. And then when you had that
situation, you had the right person at
the right time who said who was the
general who said, "Let's go for it. We
can do it." and he himself we spoke
about in our old series and the way that
that he did that but I think the key
message there if I'm taking it away from
that is that you have to have the a
situation which people are open to it
but then there needs to be someone to
capitalize it's not
>> just to add on one name when he's
talking about the youth the youth the
name that comes to mind is gross he had
this
>> the rabbi of the discos
>> he had the push to tap into the youth
>> and he was I saw with my own I I had a
Talmid. I teach in American yeshiva.
There was a Talmid like from background.
It was really like very like low
observance and all that. But at a
certain point he he connected to Ra Gman
and he made a see him when he was by us.
He made a sem or a peric I don't
remember and grossman came from mdala
to see him and the love that you saw
between this
boy and grossman hugging him and being
with this
was just unbelievable. You saw he had
the he had this of to connect to people.
You had this guy who grew up in May and
he managed
>> I think I think if I would summarize I'd
say that the that a couple of things
that the Chuva movement which you know
built 60s and 70s and became a big wave
and here in Israel we know over the
government keep statistics you know over
a quarter of a million baluva and vast
numbers in they've changed the face of
every community with baluva with their
dedication and sheer numbers and it's
still going on it's still going on and
And I believe that it's going to could
and I know from talking to macarim that
they say the pe number of people after
you know who are much more interested
before has definitely risen. I think
it's two things. Number one is that it's
the chuva movement is actually very much
an Israeli phenomenon. Meaning it's
strongest here. It's strongest here but
it's also radiated out from over here as
it were
because even the Americans over here
over here sent out its feelers and it's
all over the world right from over here
in the old city created a world movement
from here right and you even have things
like gateways in America which is
basically was a creation of arim right
and it's a very fascinating thing as
well to see see as well that the the
Russian chu movement we said we come
back there but the Russian chuva
movement the one of the biggest
organizations many people in the English
speaking world are not aware of is to do
it's called to do which is silver who
was a great the ra of the Russians and
from here the movement was from here and
radiated out all across the former
Soviet Union
>> in one word we're going back to the
Russian how it started it's actually
more fascinating than all the other
examples that we gave in America and
it's role because we're talking about
people who were behind the iron curtain.
People today cannot relate to what it
means to be behind the iron curtain like
a complete disconnect from the outside
world. And you, as you said before, the
six day war, this I heard from this
academic that I was talking to, they
felt this Jewish pride and they didn't
know what to do with it. So I said,
"What do you mean?" But you had from
Jews over there who were left over from
before the wars. We're talking about the
1970s, right? There were people. So he
told me, "No, but they spoke a different
language. those Jews was taught Yiddish
and these young academics spoke Russian.
There was no connection. He said the
situation was that they used to come to
shul like him. The shoe was packed with
old Jews. The courtyard was packed with
young academic Jews. There was no
connection between them until one of the
people, one of the young academics by
the name of Ala Esas, you probably know
the name. He established a contact with
a Talim
called the Rav Miller. He was like the
unofficial RV of Moscow Shul at that
time and at a great risk to his health.
He's he was already imprisoned
beforehand
Miller to teaching for teaching Eden and
he suffered a heart attack in prison but
he when he was released bleus managed to
convince him
>> and through Ilia Essus who is a
mathematician from Moscow he started the
whole chuva movement in Moscow I didn't
know that at all
>> right through the through I wrote an
article about this I think it came out
in the English edition
>> well I should read the mishbah
occasionally
>> right but that's what I'm saying that
the Russian scene is entire entirely
different this aside for what Kabad did
in Russia for sure was a great
>> I think when I'm taking pulling all
these things together I think it's
possible to summarize and say I think
it's clear amas been on a journey since
the 60s right of even the waves of chuva
and the we're on a journey it's you know
200 years ago and before the war
especially we reached this historic low
in which Kalisra was running away from
the Tyra from the 60s it's been climbing
it's going up. It's happening. And I
think after October the 7th, there's no
question that this is happening and
potentially to happen even far greater.
We're seeing that in all the statistics
in Israel. We're seeing that in all
these different pieces of the liberal
Jewish cry of pain that I identified.
And the question is therefore, do we
have this the people there and a way uh
cumin to bring people in? Because I
think it's important to know nothing is
linear. Nothing is inevitable. We have
to reach out otherwise they'll be left
in the cold.
>> Beautiful Dalia. Thank you so much.
>> Thank you.
>> Thank you for listening to Behind the
Times. We appreciate you joining us as
we explore the stories and people that
shape Jewish history. If you enjoy this
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