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So this is the project Rabbi of Zamiro
Shabbat. It's a book. It's music. It's
bringing me back a lot of the older
songs I grew up with Ashkanaz a lot of
Ashkanaz a lot of even some and of
course could I had everything in my home
and I wanted to know coming from your
perspective as a as a rabbi as a a
person that's involved with a lot of the
community what do you feel in terms of
Shabbat of the community the Shabbat can
look like at the table and you can go
back even to your youth if you're
comfortable with of how your Shabbat
looked like and how uh you know what
what do you take out of it?
>> Right. So growing up as a little child
in Aleppo, Syria, I was to be there till
the age of nine. So looking back at the
Shabbat, what I can remember, all I
remember about Shabbat was the Shabbat
table and the bet because that's really
what Shabbat was. Friday night was a
Shabbat meal.
Then Shabbat morning before over there
they used to pray early. There's no
minan after seven o'clock. Seven was
like the latest because they had already
se they would eat at 10:00. That was
Shabbat in the morning.
That's that's what I remember. So that
was in the morning. They prayed early 7
o'clock and we would wake up two hours
before that to go to bakashot. They
would sing. You have people sitting in
the bedet
early in the morning. People had their
tea, their coffee, whatever it is and
they're sitting down. Little children,
older men.
Hundreds of people come before and they
would sing for an hour and a half, two
hours. beautiful songs written by some
of the holiest people and they sing
together. They give out certain parts to
each kid. You came into with a different
uh different with a different feeling.
Yes. And then
came back to school. We had school,
believe it or not.
>> Shabbat.
>> On Shabbat, we had school. We our
regular rebi that taught us every day.
We went to school for two hours on
Shabbat. We continued
>> went to a different Sunday went to the
actual building the school building. So
the school building was next to the so
we learned in shul or in the school I
don't remember exactly
>> two hours
>> two hours every Shabbat you continue
school it's regular school and uh so
Shabbat revolved around Shabbat table
and it revolved around the betet
it revolved around song and Torah and
food that was it that was all of Shabbat
>> and when you came you came at 9 years
old you came to America
>> I came at 9 old time America. Did it
shock you the whole,
>> you know, some different things going on
here? Definitely a different world. But
today, looking at what we have today,
it's beautiful to see how the songs have
come back. Obviously, there's also a lot
of beautiful new songs. People love to
be only in the past, but I encourage
people to also get some new songs,
whether it's the melodies that come from
halab or they come from Europe. It makes
no difference. At the end of the day, a
Shabbat table is what you remember and
what builds a family.
Talking about
the center of the home. I don't know
what it's like in the goish homes, but
in our homes, the place where everything
is made is the Shabbat table. The
Shabbat table is really what brings the
family together. I think back to my
family, my children, and think what is
it that makes us a family.
I have beautiful children and now
grandchildren and I see so much beauty
in them. And I think back, what is it
that I did in my home that made us a
family that made the respect of a child
to his father, to his mother? When did
that happen? When did our closeness take
place? When did we develop? And the
truth is it wasn't on Sunday. Wasn't on
Monday. It wasn't on Tuesday. Of course,
we were always together. But we were
just living in the same house. But when
did we become a family? It was on the
table. Just kush. Father makes kush.
Right there sets the tone. There's a
father in the house.
Everybody else is listening.
There's already a certain atmosphere
after kush everyone gets to drink and
then they come together by us they kiss
the father's hand they kiss the mother's
hand so that means my children kiss my
hand every week two times Friday night
Shabbat morning that set a certain
respect and gave me the ability to
advise them in life because they already
have taken themselves and lowered
themselves to their father and mother.
If if there's a full cup and an empty
cup, the only way you can fill up the
empty cup from the full cup is if the
empty cup goes under the full cup. So
long as they say on the same level,
there's no way the full cup could empty
could fill up the empty one.
That means to receive from somebody,
you need to be under them. If you're not
under, no matter how much they have to
give you, you can't be filled up. So
when did that become the atmosphere of
the home that my children are lower not
in value but in relationship that they
know they have to receive from their
parents that respect. Where did that
come from? It came from the Shabbat
table without saying a word without
having to say you listen to me. I'm your
boss. I'm your advisor. I'm your father.
We don't need all that. the Shabbat
table. How the matana of Shabbat is that
somehow it brings clarity into the
family and it brings the right into
who's who
and that's we didn't start eating yet.
We just all we did is we said kush the
father said the kdouch everyone was
listening everyone is y through the
father I mean everyone could have said
their own kdush but no the way to do it
is the father does it and everyone's
listening you're going to be y through
the father and then they gives them to
drink I give you to drink and then they
come get a bra you kiss the father's
hand the mother's hand already we set up
a it's a new it's a it's a new world he
talking about 8 billion people in the
world. They don't have this one time in
their entire life. Such a such an
atmosphere.
>> Even the Italians.
>> Yeah.
>> The family even the family oriented
>> you you can't you you can't replicate
this. This is godly. This is Shabbat.
It's a matana. And we didn't get to the
food yet. We didn't we didn't get to the
meal yet. We didn't get to the And then
the Shabbat table just continues. We go
wash. Come back
again. The father takes the bread.
>> We wait. Right.
>> Patience.
>> What? Discipline. People are late. We
wait for them.
Learn to wait for people. Give cavote to
people. Everyone sits down. We give out
the bread to every person. Again, the
father is the one who gives out the
bread.
And as the meal comes and the food is
brought and of course to to praise the k
to press to praise the the mother of the
home who made all this possible and to
talk about her efforts and how much it
took to make the the meal
when do we sing to the during the week.
We don't have time to sing during the
week, but Shabbat, we have a time to
give her that appropriate praise. Not
only for her, but for everybody else
around to understand that this was the
product of a lot of hard work, just like
your songs. When you you sing a song, it
looks gorgeous, but you probably spent
hundreds and hundreds of hours per song
to make sure it comes out perfect.
Kindle back a memory. My father, I I was
young and I was in Israel. I was born in
Israel and Michael Mala from the
community was a guest in my house a lot.
He's my first cousin and he said he came
to my house. He says my father I don't
remember this my father in used to act
out like a play
he had all his move. He said we was all
in on the movements and on every little
>> and and he said it made a big rush on
him that how he when he got married put
your wife on a pedestal on Shabbat and
all the details that go into it and like
you speak on all your classes how the
depth of is to really understand how how
much hard work goes into it. Most people
in music, I could say, cuz I'm in it,
don't know the details that go into it.
It's just very hard. When you hear a
song today, just stream it. It's free.
It's just take it and you don't It's
like that with everything. Like you're
saying in your classes is a song, you
know, the idea of one of the songs that
just came out now came to me three and a
half years ago in some place. It didn't
fit with the low part. I had to wait
three years to get the shiduk of the low
part. Then I gave it to three arrangers
and I threw it out three times. I spent
money on arrangers and I didn't see it
come to fruition the way I thought it
would be. Threw it out. Went to another
arranger and another arranger. It took
three and a half years. It's one short
dance song of two and a half minutes. I
think two 40 whatever it is.
I I think back to it when I listen to it
because it takes me back to the hard
work and effort. But when my son says,
"What are you coming out with next
week?" He he forgot already. just things
just came out last week and it goes by
so fast. I try to apply that to
everything in life like you say you know
the the Shabbat go also so fast and this
what details do you leave your children
with what like you're saying the s there
the the the whole but it's amazing so
you came to America rabbi and you saw a
different world you saw a different
world but what did you pick up from your
in terms of the the singing itself the
music at the meal itself you sang two
hours before
>> the singing was done more in the betessa
there was more done in that but uh you
know in in my table you know when in my
family you know I don't know if it's a
product of America or that's the the the
different ways of setting up the day but
by us there's no question the music on
the table it just brings a certain
joy to the table it brings a certain
festivity to to the table. It brings a
certain depth to what's happening. You
know, on a Monday, we're not going to
sit down and sing songs. We just don't
do that. Um, Shabbat
is a day of the soul and songs are a an
expression of the soul. You know, we
talk all the time, but we don't sing.
Sing comes from the nish. And there's no
greater celebration of the on Shabbat
the day of the you know we we we say in
of
we say
shalom I mean the Shabbat is not about
resting it's not about sleeping it's
about the getting its diet. So it's not
possible to have an elevated Shabbat
without elevating the nish and it's not
possible to elevate the nama without
song because song is the language of the
soul because they are things that cannot
be expressed with words or actions and
only music can express certain feelings
that the nama is able to express to its
creator.
And uh that's why Shabbat is a day that
while we sing all the time and we hear
songs all the time, but a day that's
dedicated to singing as part of the
avoda of the day. And the future of the
family is very much dependent on these
songs. This is not just a a moment. It's
not an extra slice of uh of of of food.
This is
the building block of our families.
Because when we
elevate our Shabbat through song, that
table is going to give birth to a lot of
holiness, a lot of beautiful children
and grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. One day after 120,
they're going to walk us back through
our accomplishment. Just like if you
made a song, you'll walk us back through
all the different steps that got to the
end. And after 120, they're going to
walk us back to show us how, oh, how was
this? How did you have that beautiful
grandchild? How did how did your
daughter become such a great woman? How
how did they're going to walk us back?
And I'm very confident that there's
going to be a very big marker on that
road, which is going to be Shabbat and
its song
because it just elevates everybody. It
elevate it elevates the one who's
singing. It elevates the one who's
listening.
Everybody's there. And
>> one of the things Rab Far said, it was a
minhag of the the the
few generations ago to take a piece of
the table, the Shabbat table and bury it
with the person. They wanted the piece.
I think the Benes brings it down also.
piece of the table like you're saying
that I want this testimony to go with me
after 120 that my table was kesh I sang
with kesh I got everybody involved
I just came back from the kam so praying
a few weeks ago and one of the things I
heard is that he was willing to give
half or onethird of his aba if hashem
taught him how to sing
and the students would ask him like give
half of his fair even minute every
minute was
everything was why song why and years
ago when I heard it I said okay it's
nice it's a nice but now hearing from
you rabbi it's it the l the the language
of the soul he was all about nishama
you're learning you're you're you're
touching a place where so can you
imagine to express that and to express
it with song with the the pen of the
nishama is the song, he would probably
channel a lot. He he was telling his
students, I'm I'm going to get a lot
closer through the channel of music
and and able to to to connect in a lot
higher and deeper level. You heard the
story of Rabshak that he said he had a
neighbor that he had a neighbor with a
lot of kids that always sang
and he was overheard telling somebody.
There's few versions of the story, but
he was overheard telling somebody that
the reason why that his neighbor, every
single one of his children were
they always all came out really really
solid individual, each one in their own
way, but always close to Torah is
because the man did not stop singing on
Shabbat and he,
you know, was learning and focused on
other things on Shabbat. Well, now you
see a new generation even you're running
a school. You see thousands of kids to
have some of your kids by me all the
time and I see how they're developing
and I see how they're they're
acclimating and connecting to to do
Judaism every single one on their own
level. But what would you tell them in
terms of running their own Shabbat
table? I think the first thing to
remember is that the Shabbat table is
not a betin. It's not a court. It's not
a place where people have to wait their
turn to speak and it's not a place where
you have to say your make sure you say
it right and what did you learn this
week and how come you didn't learn more
and how come you didn't do this and
that's not maybe there's a place for
that in the home but that's not the
Shabbat table. The Shabbat table is
supposed to be a place of mina
doesn't just mean sleep. Menua means a
person has peace of mind. A person is
free to express himself the way that he
can, the way that he likes, of course,
within the parameters of Shabbat. So
someone can't be pushed on people in
general and for sure not on Shabbat.
It's not something you could pressure
your family to be involved in. Some
Shabbats you may feel that
the song is just not
not right for this moment for whatever
reason. Maybe we started late. Maybe
people maybe maybe the weather
somehow didn't make it the feeling. When
it comes to Shabbat table, while we have
to do all the of Shabbat the proper way,
but the element of what needs to be done
to elevate the Shabbat, we have to
always
live within the comfort of our reality.
And when we do that, generally what
happens is we bring out a lot of
beautiful things from as long as we're
committed to elevate the Shabbat table.
We don't have to worry about the
specifics. We don't have to worry about
what song are we going to sing. We don't
have to worry about which kid is going
to sing what. As a father, you come into
Shabbat, you're dedicated that your
Shabbat should be elevated. And song is
a big part of it. whether you understand
the words. You know, one person asked
me, I don't understand the words I'm
saying.
>> Well, this book is, by the way, gonna
help him.
>> It's gonna help him understand it.
>> Understand it. And also inspiration
behind the song. Sometimes the story,
well, that's the also a a a goal of ours
is to understand.
>> He says, I don't I don't understand the
words. So, I'm singing.
I don't listen to me. A person when it
comes to music doesn't have to have
words. words sometimes take away from
the music. I said, "Do you enjoy the
melody?" He says, "I enjoy the melody."
I said, "Put whatever feelings you have
towards your creator with those
melodies. Whatever it is you want to
express to Hashem, you want to tell him
thank you for your wife, for your
children, for your health, for your
prana, for Torah, for for your parents,
whatever feelings, whatever you want to
ask him, whatever you want to talk to
him, use the melody. So, while you're
sitting and enjoying the song, you don't
have to worry about the words. Of
course, understanding the words just
takes it to another level. Now you're
putting
your mind in the minds of great people.
You know by us songwriters for the most
part we're David Melik.
So you're singing David Melik's words.
So now you're putting your head you're
going through him now.
That's whose words you're you're you're
saying. You're talking about the greatim
the great aaronim. have great people
that that wrote songs. So you know the
bet wrote a beautiful song
you told me that you're going to include
that. I mean the bet Joseph was he had a
that learned with him but yet he found
time to write a song. That's that in
itself is pretty amazing. He said let me
take I don't know an hour a day of my
time to write a song. Now those words is
connecting to the bet yourself. You're
going through now you're you're
elevating. So understanding the words
and where they come from is a another
level of elevation. But there's an
elevation for everybody in music. A
little child who's one years old can
enjoy music. And a 95year-old who's a ga
in Torah can understand the music and
can enjoy it on different levels. But
they're all elevating from it. So you
know again the Shabbat table is not a
court. It's a place of
it's a place where people are able to
express themselves in the way they're
comfortable. But the leader of the home
should be mindful that his goal is that
the music needs to be part of his
Shabbat table. that if his kids 20, 30,
40 years from then, they'll be
interviewing them and they'll tell them,
"Could you tell me about your home? What
do you remember from the Shabbat table?"
>> Yeah. Oh, I remember
the the Shabbat table. It was just
royal. It was music. It was the food is
>> maybe maybe the last thing he would talk
about because of all the spiritual
memories that he had. I don't remember
what food I ate on the Shabbat day. Me
neither. My mother was goulash. I don't
know what was going on yet. I remember
beautiful. You're right.
>> But but the feeling the atmosphere. So
this is the leader has to keep in mind
this is my goal and I get there.
>> You'll get there. No voice. You sing
yourself. You come in, you sing. You'll
see others want to listen to you. They
might want to join you. Of course, if
you are into it, they'll be into it. And
slowly you bring everybody along. Uh
obviously the older they start, the more
difficult it becomes. And then, you
know, we need different kind of uh you
know, strategies how to get them more
involved. But if you're starting your
home today, you just got married, you
have it easy. Learn, learn up the songs,
>> try to understand them as much as you
can. You don't have to have beautiful
voice. You have to have a beautiful.
That's all you need. And every Jew has
it. So you're you're good. You're born
you're born with you're in.
>> We must always remember
that Hashem gave a matana, a gift our
people is called Shabbat. A matana
doesn't just mean a mitzvah to serve
Hashem. That we have every mitzvah is a
beautiful gift to serve God. So when
Hashem says, "I have a gift for you," it
must mean something else. It means that
Shabbat has in it the
for so many issues in life that we would
never connect how this could have been
solved through Shabbat. Before I gave
you a few examples of respect in the
home, of a hadoot in the home, of so
many things that we never would think
about, but Shabbat is doing. Shabbat
could take care of a lot of issues that
people have if they would just take the
recipe and go full 25 hours. You go into
the 25 hour Shabbat zone and you come at
a different person, not just for
Shabbat. You're a new person for the
week. So one of the beautiful
that we say in Shabbat really expressed
this because when you read it you say
what are they talking about? We we we're
talking about the Shabbat,
how
this Shabbat,
Hashem, you gave your nation a day of
rest and holiness. That much I think
everybody could know that's what Shabbat
is. Abraham Yagel Abrau
he's rejoicing
when he saw the Shabbat practiced by his
children and grandchildren. Means when
we're sitting at the Shabbat table we
have to imagine Abraham Ainu is sitting
there he's so excited. He can't believe
now Abraham is excited for every good
thing that we do. But it seems that on
Shabbat he's excited extra. There's
something because he sees that we're
doing things that we don't even realize
are happening.
Singing.
Now listen to what's going on. What are
they seeing that we don't see?
Who ever dreamed of such words?
>> They saw this in their lifetime or they
see it. No, they see in our Shabbat
table.
When they see our Shabbat,
they're rejoicing because they see that
our menu
is bringing us ahava.
Who ever dreamt
to imagine that the of Shabbat makes us
love people?
What does what does Shabbat have to do?
You know, living a life where you love
people around you makes such a sweet
life. When you live with hatred like
many people live, they hate their
neighbor, they hate their cousin, they
hate this one, they hate that one,
whether they express it or not. But they
have these feelings. It's a terrible way
to live life. But yet Shabbat has the
ability that the is
it makes us love the people that we live
with, the people that we spend our lives
with.
We become
we become givers.
Yeah. Abraham is excited because he sees
that we're becoming more and we become
more of a nadiv.
This makes us more real,
more sincere,
more honest.
The
Shabbat makes us people who have
strength of amuna.
Which which which issues can a person
have if they have
if they love all people
if they're givers if they live a life of
sincerity and truth
they have strength of
shalom it's a that creates shalom with
people that we live together with people
helping each other completing each other
hashket
A life of tranquility,
a life of confidence, a life of
security.
If a person can get all this out of
their Shabbat, tell me which which issue
is left that a person has to deal with.
Where's the anxiety in such a person who
has where's there room for so many
things that people struggle with?
Obviously, there are medical issues that
people have that they need to go to
doctors, but so many of the issues can
be solved right here. You have all these
things in your life. You have a it's all
set up for you. So, how why do they
still have during the week this I'm not
talking about medical, you know,
hereditary. You're talking about kids
that are just like you said, I think in
one of your
speeches is that you tap any kid today,
you tap any teenager and they have
issues. So, are there not tapping into
Shabbat correctly or
are we not giving over Shabbat what it's
supposed to be? Why is there still such,
you know, trouble and sadness for kids
that have everything in the world to be
happy about? Like everything else in
life, there are different levels of
connection to people and there are
different levels of connection to
mitzvot. So a person could be a share
Shabbat,
you know, and and not do one thing wrong
and sleep 25 hours straight. So
technically he's shabbat. He could put a
sign
Yeah. He said he he rested, but
obviously he missed out on Shabbat. A
person can say, "Oh, no. I I I I only
sleep 16 hours and the rest I eat and I
go to shul and okay. So then you did a
little better than that." So obviously
there are levels even within the
observance of Shabbat that can elevate
the person. But there is no doubt that
if a person really is connected to
Shabbat in the way that it's supposed to
be done, he's waking up and praying the
way of Shabbat should be done
that's not at you know very late hours
but a little bit at least within this
because that means you're taking
seriously. You go in and you pray the
right way.
You have a good kazan. You have a good
environment where you're spending your
time praying the right way. You're
learning the right way. You're sleeping
the right way. You're eating the right
way. You're singing the right way. The
physical body it's also talking about,
right?
>> Everything's all all in. I mean, to
sleep on Shabbat is is okay. It's it's
it's
everything that we're supposed to do on
Shabbat is going to create this. Where a
haba is created on Shabbat, I can't tell
you. But I know Hashem says if you take
this recipe,
you're gonna have a you're gonna have
love. You know, I'll tell you a story
once. It's an interesting story.
I was learning with somebody. This is
going back maybe 20 years. I was
learning with somebody and uh I knew he
wasn't so careful on Shabbat. Let's call
it that. But I never brought up to him.
I didn't think he was ready to hear
that. So I was learning with him. And um
after maybe 4 months
he says to me he says right now I want
to tell you I think I want to start
keeping Shabbat.
I said it's very very beautiful. I'm
very happy for you very excited for you
and I didn't want to go further. I felt
that he needed his space.
So maybe a month or two later I saw him
actually was in Deal New Jersey. I saw
him and uh on Shabbat and I didn't see
him for about a month.
So I told him, "Hey Joe, how you doing?
How's how's everything?" He says, "Yeah,
thank God everything is beautiful." I
said, "How's Shabbat doing?" He told me
Shabbat is something else. He says, "I
don't know how what I was doing the rest
all my life. I missed out on this
beautiful day. What Shabbat is doing for
me, I can't tell you enough." He said,
"But I have to be honest." He says there
are some parts of it that are very hard.
He says, "So while I have a lot of great
things on Shabbat, but I also have a lot
of things that are hard for me." He
said, "And I don't even keep probably
50%
of your Shabbat.
I can't even imagine how hard your
Shabbat must be.
How do you do it?
So usually I control myself but this
time I felt that he gave me a a good
pitch. Yeah. I tell him Joel let me tell
you a story. I think with the story
you'll understand.
>> One time there was a lady on Friday
afternoon right before Shabbat. She went
to visit her friend her neighbor next
door. And as she walks into the door she
smells the most
amb smell of cookies. and she goes in to
the kitchen and she sees magnificent
looking cookies
and she takes a bite of one of the
cookies and it's out of this world. She
never had a cookie like that before. So
she tells us her friend, "This is
amazing. You mind sharing the recipe
with me?" She says, "Of course." She
takes out a a card. She writes down all
the things her friend tells her. She's
very happy about the visit.
The following week, her friend comes to
visit her.
She walks into the house and it's this
horrible smell. Terrible.
Something burnt, something not right.
She follows the smell to the kitchen.
She sees these horrible looking cookies.
They look not the way cookie supposed to
look. And then she takes a bite with
fear. And it's worse than they look.
and she sees her friends staring her
down.
She says, "Uh,
next time if I ask you for a recipe, if
you don't want to give me the recipe,
just don't give it to me."
He said, "What do you mean?" He says,
"These are the cookies that you gave me
the recipe for."
She said, "Are you sure these came from
the recipe I gave you?"
She says, "I'll tell you better.
I only used 50%
of the ingredients in your recipe and
this is what came out. Could you imagine
that I used 100% of your recipe? What
would have happened?
So that's obviously a silly story and
it's you know maybe insulting to the
intelligent mind but I told them I said
what what are you saying? The creator of
the world gave us a recipe.
This is the way to do it from beginning
to end. You're telling me you're having
a hard time and you're only keeping 50.
The reason why you're having a hard time
is because you're only keeping 50. If
you did the whole thing, you'd see the
most precious thing. It would be good
all around. It would be gorgeous. So,
Shabbat is the ingredient. Everything
Hashem said, just follow it and this is
what you get.
>> What's the follow through with that man?
>> Yeah. It was It was well received. was
well received and today's thank God his
family different family his children his
grand he's a grandfather today Shabbat
saved his life changed his life and
saved his life and I think Shabbat is
that clearly that ship that Hashem gave
our people that no matter where we are
no matter
what struggles we have we take on that
Shabbat it just changes everything look
what happened by the
After they sin with the eel, what was
the commandment? Hashem says keep
Shabbat. What does that have to do with
anything? We just did the sin of the
ego. What does Shabbat have to do? We
already knew about Shabbat. We knew
about the commandment of Shabbat already
in before Matan.
Hashem says,
"Gather everybody together. I have a big
message for you." Imagine how
disappointed they were when they heard
keep Shabbat. I know that already. What
he was telling them was that in life,
no matter what challenge you have and no
matter how much you failed,
the eel was a major disaster, failure.
The Jewish people, Hashem says there's
one thing that can get you out of that
Shabbat. In fact, the word Shabbat is
the same letters as tashu. Tashu
person struggling comes the Shabbat and
just transforms the person. So the
people that have again the the the
technology and all this if they do one
step at a time and they not take
everything is you see that Shabbat
according to your story according to
what we see even in our community and
even in the world at large when when
there is a Shabbat when there is a shul
when there is you see that that's is
that the core of Yiddish kite meaning if
a person has a lot of things to work on
and there's
the social media, the this to that and
this the world run around him. If he
starts with Shabbat, if he starts with
the meal, he starts is that the way is
that the foundation of I think there's a
proof of that. There's a proof of that
from the fact that the Torah that Hashem
gave us,
we had to first commit to it. Now, we
had no idea what we were committing to.
How many thought maybe we had to fast
365 days a year. We had no idea when we
said
what was going to be the
mitzvah that Hashem gave us. But Hashem
gave us the Shabbat before
Shabbat we got already before in Hashem
gave us the Shabbat. How come? Why did
he give us Shabbat before? How come
there was no sevenish.
So the the rabbis explained because
Hashem was afraid that when he would
give us the chance to receive the Torah,
we might say no.
We may not have the right answer. So he
decided to give a sample
that when this sample comes, we're going
to understand, oh, if this is a sample
of the rest, we're in. Which sample did
he choose? He chose Shabbat. That means
if you want to give somebody who's
looking to elevate himself, where's the
first place?
>> Shabbat. Of course, they have to learn
Torah and they have to educate
themselves. But Shabbat
is a gift that Hashem gave for all of
us. the highest, the lowest, it's the
island
that elevates the nish and spills
through the whole week. When he started
getting to heavy heavy, my father had a
good voice. So he I lost it a little
bit. I wasn't so much into he loved
which I actually
I'm doing this in his memory taking his
favorite Moshabushaim.
He loved Moshabusha, my father. So the
songs that I I love the more melodic
ones, [snorts] you know, the more
melody, the more interesting because we
did harmonies when there was no guests.
My brothers and sisters, we all did
different harmonies. It was just a uh
>> is a beautiful song.
I think we do it really rashana time
where it's talking about help me help me
open up the doors of teshua I want to
come back my you know it's it's just a a
a beautiful rendition of how you know
every Jew wants to be in a place where
chuva plays but it's done in a happy you
see how
it's a horror it just seduces me and
wants bad for me so I just want I want
the answers help me the living hashem
help it's just a beautiful if you think
about the words sometimes and think
about the simplicity of it I do yas
green is ready wrote a brand new atashta
we sayashashta on Friday Right.
[singing]
So,
de [singing]
la
me.
Oh,
>> [singing]