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Exclusive Interview with Gavriel Sassoon
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Exclusive Interview with Gavriel Sassoon
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Hi, this is Paris Burke Iikler in deal
on the Jersey shore. A summer day when
this part of the uh the state becomes
filled with people that come to enjoy
the weather, the shore and all the
bounty of this area both religiously and
culturally. But for some like Rabbi
Gabriel Sassoon, it's a time of
reflection, a time of thoughtfulness, a
time of
remembrance, a remembrance of a tragedy
that happened just a few short months
ago when seven of his children were
killed in a tragic fire in their home in
Brooklyn. For him, coming to deal is a
way to reinvigorate, to remember, to
commemorate, and to inspire others to
take the message of this tragedy into
meaningful moments in their lives that
will make a difference in people's
lives. And he's going to be speaking to
us about that right here in this
exclusive interview. But the words and
thoughts that he's going to say are
things that you're going to be hearing
much more now as he takes his message
around the state, perhaps around the
country, and around the globe. It is
filled with meaning, a message for all
of us.
Real Gabriel, if I may call you Gabriel,
it's the summer. It's deal. It's several
months after the tragedy that took your
seven children. It must be so difficult
for you now that now you're beginning to
speak on a on a broad scale to people.
Why why are you at this point starting
to go out and to really speak about what
happened? The Yeah. The reason I'm doing
it is because um I don't want my
children's lives to go to waste. You
know, they were madeshim. It moved
people. It opened up their hearts. They
want to change. I don't want I want to
take advantage of that opening to
continue
uh delivering messages of
and so that their life shouldn't go to
waste to maximize their uh sacrifice.
When you say amuna, yes. Is the amuna
that you have
now different than it was prior to the
tragedy? And and if so, how how is it
manifest? How does it show? Um, that's a
good question. I feel like I'm the same
person before and after. But the
difference the way I do have a
difference how I look at the world.
Before I was busy with my learning, my
kids and it seemed like everybody else
was fine. I never saw suffering by
people. Everyone seem to have a pretty
good life. Everyone's learning,
everyone's
this and I also saw a lot of like you
know you have different groups of people
and they don't interrelate but since the
fire I changed my attitude towards
AmIrael completely because I see the
oneness in AI is the oneness started
becoming from how they all gathered
around me during the funeral how they
all cared from all walks of life and I
still continue to see that outpouring of
love and care and how we're really all
one. So from my personal perspective, I
see the oneness. It was hard for me that
Amusa wasn't one all these years. It was
used to bother me and I saw it was only
my percept now I realize only my limited
perception. It was like that. But we're
really one on a deep
level. And another thing I see different
is how much people are suffering. I
didn't realize how much people were
suffering because now when I go out I
talk to people I see in their eyes how
much they're suffering, how much they
all need love, how much they all need
and direction. Like people are living
lives they don't know what they want out
of their lives. You know they didn't get
they didn't get a yeshiva or to
education so they go run after
materialism and doesn't make them happy
family problems. You're finding that
this is something across the board of
the economic spectrum. Yeah. Yeah. For
sure. So I see all over I go people are
suffering and I never knew it was so
deep and so widespread. It seemed like
everyone was okay. So maybe they became
more compassionate. I don't know. That's
what I see. That's the those are
differences I see. But I think I'm the
same.
Yeah. One of the things that you said,
Reb Gabriel, in previous interviews was
that you didn't know how you'd be able
to go on. Yeah. And yet obviously you
are going on, right? What what would you
tell somebody else who feels like that's
it? I can't go on. It's not worth going
on. Right?
So if you feel like that so what I told
also is like you have to surrender those
emotions and those thoughts those are
just thoughts you're thinking about the
future which is all in your thought it's
not real or you may be thinking about
the past which is al also all in your
head it's not real the only thing real
now is the present moment and that you
could control you could control your
thoughts and emotions people think you
can't but you have to train yourself
that you could and just let it all go to
Hashem and then you'll feel good and
then next step when you get to the next
step you let that go again. You go step
by step and by step by step you'll see
that you you travel the great distance
but looking forward after such a tragedy
or any kind of suffering that you have
that you feel like you can't go on
that's just the etera and and your
thoughts saying I can't make it I can't
make it and you create you make it a
reality because you're telling yourself
those things so you have to be aware of
how you're thinking aware of your
emotions and then let that go surrender
that to Hashem you know that's it's
really your ego because Hashem has
greater plans for you is totally
compassionate. He's totally loving and
all the suffering that's you you're
creating the suffering. Hashem gives you
tests. Hashem gives
you he gives you challenges but he
doesn't create evil. You create the evil
by thinking this is horrible. This is
terrible. I can't go on. But if you say
oh this is another test for me to it's
another uh hurdle for me to overcome you
know and it's too big of a hurdle. So
okay so break it down just this moment.
Can you surrender to yourself for just
this moment? Can you see feels Hashem's
love just for this
moment? And I think that would help
tremendously. Let me ask you this and
this is a painful difficult question
also, but from people that were not so
observant, you know, heard, yes, it's a
terrible tragedy, but don't you people
say that the shabas is supposed to keep
you if you keep the Shabbat? So what
would you tell somebody like that?
So someone asked me a similar question.
How come such a person like you did
everything right at Sadik or whatever
have such I said Hashem's ways are so
much deeper. It's not Ted for tat
hashkah is so deep you don't even know
what his plans are and what he's doing.
You know you have sadiklo and
sadiko those are the deepest questions
and there there are answers but it's a
whole you know philosophical thing. It's
not time now to get into it. But
uh you know if you make a bell sur the
reward is very great. It's very great.
You don't know. I don't know. I don't
know what my reward is. I'd rather have
my children. That's the biggest reward
for me. But
um I don't know. I don't know what to
expect. But Hashem knows what he's doing
and everything is for the best. And if
you know that that gives you a u a piece
peace of mind because I see it in my own
limited way how it should be. Hashem has
you know he loves you more than you
could even imagine more than he loves
yourself. He wants the best for you more
than you want for
yourself. So uh you have to trust him
in terms of when you say to trust in
medamuna and buff. This is a subject
that now you're going to be speaking to
groups around deal. coming to Lakewood
and other places.
What are you going to be saying in terms
of what you're talking about here? What
what other things will you say to to
fortify people? What's the gist of what
you're going to be saying? I don't know
yet. Okay. I don't know that the truth
is in my experience like you know I
learn so I know what to say but it then
just becomes another shear right and it
doesn't it's not so effective. People
are much more affected. I saw when I'm
much more simple speak from my heart and
just say my feelings and that's that's
more effective. So I guess that's how
I'm going to do it. I don't prepare
whatever comes to my mind I speak. Like
in the funeral I was so broken I
couldn't even uh say anything but Hashem
just gave me this gave me that I put it
together. Whatever came came and it
affected people because it was from my
heart. I it wasn't prepared. Someone
said did you prepare? I said how could I
prepare? I'm not in such a state I could
prepare.
But uh it's like you know so because I
rely on Hashem when you like when you
surrender he comes and he helps. So
that's what's happening. Baruk Hashem
your wife has just returned from the
hospital. Yes. Have you begun
conversation with each other to talk
about where you go from here? Yeah we
did. So
um when she she wasn't induced uh coma
for Wabas of the pain. So I think a
month and a half for like a month and a
half. So the world changed a lot since
then you know she doesn't know what
happened. So I was explaining to her
like a lot of people are being moved the
kids are affecting a lot of people. They
want to do chuva. I did it I was telling
her to encourage her to make her feel
that she's succeeding in life because
the whole purpose for a parent a Jewish
parent is want they want their children
to grow up to make Shamim. So I told her
you were you were
successful shamine and you don't know
it's not the same place and now you know
we have to do I I told her I'm already
you know whatever I say it's affecting
people so now it's your turn the women
are waiting for you they're waiting for
you and uh she has much more natural
imuna than I do. I I have it all from
learning Torah and you know working on
myself. she just has it naturally, you
know, like I guess a woman imun of a
woman is on a different level. And
um so I so I'm encouraging her that she
should, you know, when she's ready, when
she's more healed, that she should go
out and we even make a joke like because
I'm I'm a very private person, you know,
I was very modest in Sanua. I never
expose my feelings and thoughts. Even my
wife, she says, "I had to pry it out of
you what you were thinking and feeling
all the time. I mean, I'm your wife and
now you're going around you you're
you're openly expressing to the public
what you're thinking and feeling. So,
she was laughing about that, but uh you
mentioned Gabriel that you've seen an
effect on people in these in this short
period of time. Yeah. What type of
things have you seen that has made a
real intangible effect other than wow
it's such a tragedy and we feel terrible
and you know how are you feeling about
it? What changes have you actually seen
been implemented taken on by people on
people? They they're looking for more
meaning. They're
looking when I look in people's faces, I
see
um love for some reason. I see
um desire to
connect. I don't know if it's connect to
me or connect to Hashem. They're just
looking for more. some there Gdoleim
told me basically this happened to raise
the amuna of amrael to um to get them
ready to receive
Messiah. So you know all there's been a
lot of tragedies lately. So and as it's
happening people are opening up and have
they're forced to look for deeper higher
meaning and so just thinking the world
is coincidence and things just happen
and it's random. You had said that you
looked upon the tragedy as a kapura.
Yeah. As an atonement. How how would
somebody understand that? How would you
explain that to somebody?
See, for me it's a nama for me that
was
and you know was a day
that were taken as kobanas of fire in uh
when the the day of the hakamasa
mishkan. So you know it's kadesh they
were the closest to Hashem Hashem or
Hashem was was
u was mikadesh himself through their
death.
So I don't know if it's true or not but
I feel that my kids are sparks of Nadav
everywhere and they're doing the same
thing
and kadesh not doesn't mean he takes the
closest one but he makes everybody
closer the the the the pain and the
suffering the crying that everyone's
sharing with me and uh not being
understand how such a thing could happen
that makes him close to Hashem it's
another step it's it's not that you You
know, so I think the kapara itself is
that they get close to Hashem that the
amuna expands and they know there has to
be something deeper and they're
searching for more that that itself I
think is the result of the kapara.
I understand that there's a safety which
is going to be written. Yes. Can you
tell us about that and how one would
participate and will it be Ashkanazm
Sephard? Oh, so there's a few sephrator
I heard of. Uh the Chicago community
already made one for me. um Msaskki who
helped me in the tragedy they don't have
enough cphrra to give out in city shiva
right so every you know Monday and
Thursday they need sephr they don't have
enough so they want to they want to make
seven cphrra one for each of my children
they made the first one already it was
very fast the the community there got
together very
quickly so miss if you could get in
touch with miss they're looking for six
more the my boys learn in Israel is
making a safer Torah also for them for
my boys. Um I was there they started
when I was in I said for the
schlloim I was there I wrote I wrote the
first letter and uh they're going to
start trying to complete it.
You said, Re Gabriel, that you looked at
at the at the death of your beloved
children as as almost a mandate, as
something that compels us to do
something. How do you see it as a as a
mandate? What what do you want when
people hear you speak, when people
listen to you, aside from the sympathy,
perhaps even empathy, if that can be
possible, what do you want people to do
as you see as this mandate as you put
it, whether the person is religious or
not religious, right? So this bas
basically you have to be a better person
and everyone I don't know what to say
but everyone has to look into their
heart see what's missing and grow and
when I advise people they come to
me like I the way I raise my children
with so much love and so much nephesh so
I say you want to make a world a better
place start first with shalom bite work
on your shalom bite because when this
when the relationship between the
husband wife is strong then that's the
basis for the children to have feel
secure pure and feel loved and then work
on you know
uh being the children properly
understand them. Don't negate them
because what happens is in the
day-to-day life they get in your way.
You have to do this you have to do that
and you forget about the child. You go
okay later or you shout at them that
they're bothering you. But what happens
in the end is everybody knows the
moments you remember the rest of your
life are the times you spend with your
children and not the times that you're
busy with doing something else that they
were in their way that you don't forget.
you don't you don't remember at all.
It's it's you know like even like no one
would give their child away for a
billion dollars but you know you're in
business you have to make money so you
don't spend time with your children
instead so you're selling him out for a
few dollars. So you know the craziness
of life makes you think crooked. So you
have to keep focused what's important in
life all the time and not wait for
tragedy to realize what's important and
live that way all the time and not just
with children with others as well but if
the children are raised my children were
raised with uh my wife was very devoted
to them and I was also devoted to them
and we raised them in the way of Torah
mitzvah they had so much love that they
had so much self-esteem they they
naturally did with others and they were
also a magnet to others they weren't
loud they were very modest but their
natural that they had from growing up
with Torah mitzvah and love just
attracted people and they did naturally
with other people because when they see
things weren't right they would fix it
if someone was being teased or someone
was unhappy my ch my child would
befriend them all of them were like that
and that comes from being loved and
being having self-esteem and so if the
children grow up that way naturally
there would be you could affect the
whole community otherwise you have to
work kind on a you know much harder
level like you have to go out of your
way and teach others how to think and
that but if naturally you have
self-esteem it's easier to have a it's
easy to have a society that reflects
Hashem's uh aas so
um so and and it's to do that you have
to like the breaking the breaking of
midas on yourself like you have to stop
you don't do what you want you do what's
right you do what's best for the other
you learn to become selfless
You have to control your anger or
control your frustration or your grief
and do what's right and you become a
much greater person in that process as
well. So it's it's it's a win-win
situation. You know, you have to just
have the right hashkafa and then this
way you could change the world. You
change yourself while you're changing
the world. And uh you know to mitzvah is
our
guide and you know then you care about
others. You're non-religious people as
well. And if non-religious people, you
know, they also need meaning in life.
So, you know, like what I see is I teach
them to get away from the materialistic
uh pursuits. There's higher ideals.
It'll make you happier. Um it'll make
you more fulfilled and that's what
Hashem wants from you.
Um yeah, you know, there's so many
angles to it, but that's basically it.
Have you interacted and spoken with
people that are from the non-religious
population of the Jewish community? And
what has their reaction been? Um, have
you seen any change within the context
of people you met who are not yet shown?
Most people that ask me to speak or come
in touch with me are the religious
people and I would like to reach out to
the non-religious people as well. But I
don't go out looking. I just get phone
calls and I say, "Okay, because I'm not
at that stage where I'm making a
business out of it or whatever. Maybe I
have to. I don't know." But
uh like I might team up with
organizations that do koof and use that
use that as a as a power base like I you
know
um but it's something that you feel
compelled to do though the desire to do
it that it should not be something which
as you said went in vain that the
message should be taken and and utilized
and implemented. Yeah, I would like
that. I mean it's I'm saying I don't
know if I said it's a mandate but it's
like more like they're doing a for
me. I mean so not really for me it's
really for themselves
but you know for the make world a better
place and I want my kids
uh uh the impetus that they started
shouldn't be forgotten. I mean, would
you give a a bra to all those who are be
privileged to be able to see this and um
you know where you're going down the
line with it. We're going to give
everybody else a braha to be able to
feel the sense of obligation that you
do.
Um, so
I who
but we should all have clarity so we
know what's right, what Hashem wants,
and we're not uh sidetracked by the
little things of life and keep our focus
straight, what's important, loving
others, doing mitzvah, and helping
others, and going out and influencing
the world to make a world a better
place. We could bring the gula as soon
as possible. on me. Thank you very much.
Thank you.