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I got knocked out completely. I saw
myself. I saw my dad. I saw everyone
else. And slowly I'm departing. And
slowly I'm going up and up and up. The
paramedics came. They put a blanket on
me and they told my dad that I'm gone.
This old man came straight at me with a
big smile and told me, "This is not your
time." Leaned over, touched my face, and
told me, "Promise me you will always
sing for Hashem." And then I woke up.
>> So you went from club life to a kosher
lifestyle.
>> Yeah.
[Music]
>> I was on the floor whipping like a kid
and I needed to perform. Director came
into the room, see me like that. He
says, "How are you going to perform
now?" I couldn't breathe. I couldn't
talk. After the concert, my entire body
was sick for 10 days. Sick. Literally
sick.
Hi everybody, it's Arya Finger. Welcome
back to another episode of the Jewish Jo
podcast. This week I have an incredible
episode for you. Something like you
never ever heard before. God Alba has a
craziest story. From being a child
prodigy singer to near-death experience
to clubs to doing a lot of bad things to
divorce to almost losing everything. God
Alba has the craziest stories. I have a
question for you. Where do you live? We
asked this before. We got some crazy
answers. I want to know where you live.
Do you live in Barak? Do you live in
five towns? Do you live in Flatbush? You
live in Lakewood? Do you live in Africa?
Do you live in Australia? Do you live in
the UK? Do you live in China? I don't
know. Let me know. Comment below.
Wherever you're watching, please comment
below where you live. Please make sure
to follow and subscribe. But we have
some great news. By the way, we now have
a hotline. So, no internet, no problem.
You don't need internet right now. If
you only have a flip phone, that's
great. And you can now call official
hotline. Be sure to stick around to hear
our number. You can also check the show
notes. Later in this episode, you're
going to hear about our friends at Kabad
and the incredible work they're doing
and about their new app as well as
knowledge and we have some more
incredible interviews coming out. Be
sure to follow subscribe and enjoy this
week's episode. Welcome God. So excited
to have you on the podcast. A lot to
uncover and there's a lot of things
people probably do not know about you.
So great to have you on the podcast.
Welcome.
>> I'm really happy to be here talk all
your good work.
>> Thank you. So can you take us back to
your upbringing to your childhood? Tell
us where you grew up.
>> So I grew up uh in a city
called Ra. I moved so many places that
it's very hard for me to catch up
myself. I've learned in uh non-religious
schools then went here to America. It
was Kabad and went back there as well to
a nonreligious school where my parents
are not religious. We moved always
around. Um my dad never owned a house.
We just travel from a place to place.
One of the reason is my dad was when he
was non-religious
when we moved around he was a famous
singer and he was traveling a lot but he
was also like I would say Frank Sinatra
back then that was involved with all the
mafia. So my dad was the same. He needed
to move us around. Not a very normal
childhood. Needed to adjust every time
to new friends, new communities.
the beauty about it because if you see
the good in everything, you realize why
you love Jews and why you can adapt
yourself to actually have unity and and
uh and see everyone equal. And I and I
lived in a non-religious city that hated
religion and we were probably maybe 2%
of the entire city that were uh
observant.
>> What was your religious observance like
as a child? So we weren't religious at
all. There's nothing that we did besides
I remember my dad doing a kadush and
that's it while we watching TV.
>> Wow.
>> Okay. So now what made you the man you
are today? When did you and your family
become religious?
>> So my family and I became religious
after I had a near-death experience and
and that shook my entire family. Um my
mom my dad became very karate and my mom
became just uh shmer chabas slowly uh
grew into it and my dad never pushed us
religion. So in the age of 16
um when I was uh asking myself did I
choose religion or it's because my dad
chose it
>> then I took a break but we're going to
go back when I was 9 and a half years
old and I'm going to share with you this
beautiful story Shabbat of
that was the third Shabbat that my dad
is keeping without us he's doing ku he's
going to and so that before Shabbat he
said to my mom listen if you're not
going to keep Shabbat, we're going to
get divorce. I have a bad feeling.
Please do not turn the TV on this
Shabbat. He said, "Sorry, Benny. It's
not happening. You can live your life.
I'm going to live my life." It was u
minim Shabbat
and um I was outside playing with all
the kids in the neighborhood. We had a
competition, who runs the fastest. and
we used to run down the hill
and um I had a competition with one of
our friends and then he pushed me while
we were running and I hit my face right
here
on the side curve on the on the sidewalk
right on the curve and I got knocked out
completely and it took me to a whole
different um
journey. During that time, my dad was
screaming down
going down the stairs, running towards
me. The paramedics came and they put a
blanket on me and they told my dad that
I'm gone. My dad lift me up, took me
from their hands and scream, I'm not the
time to sacrifice my son. This is the
only
you only knew back then.
>> Wow.
>> And I woke up. But this was a long time.
During that long time for me was
eternity because I saw myself, I saw my
dad, I saw everyone else. And slowly I'm
departing and slowly I'm going up and up
and up and I was nervous till I got to a
very
quiet, bright, beautiful
energy.
And this old man came straight at me
with a big smile and told me, "This is
not your time, leaned over, touched my
face, and told me, "Promise me you will
always sing for
the word." I didn't know. And then I
woke up
Shabbat. I shared my dad the story and I
said the name
and he was crying and he composed the
song with me.
That song made hundreds of thousands of
people in Israel religious and my entire
family.
Um, my dad was showing me pictures of
rabbis. When I saw the Babasali, I ran
to the room because I was scared that
he's going to grab me again.
So, as a little kid, I got panicked. And
then we realize that the same person was
the Babasali.
>> So the person that you saw when you were
let's say unconscious world in a
different realm
>> that was the Babasali and he told him to
be okay.
>> Yes. And we digged into the Babasali
legacy lineage and we saw that the
Babasali last name is Elbaz. Abu Kha is
just a nickname.
So you know you meet your ancestry. So
that's probably what happened. And since
then my dad started performing with me
all over Israel 40,000 60,000 since I'm
a little kid on the on the knees of
all the biggest
the age of 16 I told my dad I don't want
to do this anymore too much pressure
everybody's asking me what's what's what
which which page I'm at and my Gamara
before I go on stage I feel the the
micro lenses on me and my soul and I
felt the pressure and I said I don't
need this I don't want to perform this
is not for me and my dad instead of like
being extremely upset on me he said you
know what God you don't want to sing
don't want to
and then I worked for two years and I I
got to say that to every viewer here
that this is something I didn't share
till now But I want to give K to
everyone that is falling and he's a
teenager and he went to a party and he
got drunk and he did whatever he needed
to do to feel loved or whatever it is.
I'm going to tell you this after 2 years
of wondering the only reason that I
wanted to go back and find for myself is
because when you go out there and you
want to build a kosher home and you want
to have a wife sitting next to you and
your kids around you on the Shabbat
table, there's nothing can replace that.
Only if you're looking in the right
places. So if you want to have the right
wife next to you, you need to say stop
to all those things and take upon
yourself and exile yourself from the
entire world. And what it means to be
kadosh kadosh means is to
be sacred
to God.
The only way to do that is by adding
more and more and more.
And that's what I did. And I wanted to
build a kosher home and not with what I
saw around me when I was 16, 17, 18.
From the age of 18, I I decided that I'm
going to go back in Chuva and I do
everything and I was show that day show
everything. And I learned two years
straight till I found my my my first
wife. Got married in the age of 20 and a
half years old. And I was about to
release a non-religious album when I was
18. My dad was listening to it and
instead of being auntie of this music
and the non-religious lyrics, he said,
"Wow, this is amazing. This is amazing.
This is amazing." I was shocked that
this was respond. And it made me rethink
and it made me talk to Hashem to give me
the strength to stop going out, stop
doing whatever is not
off the basically. And he showed me the
way. And that day that he showed me that
he loves me, that he showed me that he
wants me back. That day turn changed my
life. I lift my eyes to Hashem and I
said, "Hashem, thank you so much that I
just walked out from this gem."
And I saw everybody's dancing like
monkeys.
With my own eyes, I went upstairs to the
second floor. I never do that. And I
just observed everyone dancing and I saw
this best friend of mine has a
relationship with someone and she is
talking to someone else while he's not
watching and I saw so many so much chaos
in one place and I realized that's not
the life that I want. went outside,
looked at Hashem, and I said, "Hashem,
thank you so much for revealing to me
such in bright colors that this is not
where I want to be." And he took away
all my desires and he just put a a nun
shama inside of me that burned burned
and burnt.
>> It's unbelievable. Wow. So, you went
from club life to a kosher lifestyle.
>> Yeah.
>> So, what encouragement would you give
what what encouragement give someone
now? Let's say someone thinks that the
club in disco life is the is place where
it's at late night and you get to have
fun and party and they say, "Oh, I'm a
yeshiva bak." Or they say, "Oh, I have
to be from and I can't go to those
places." Or let's say someone that's
there right now and they want to maybe
get out of it. What would you give them?
How could they work and improve on their
kaduca and all
>> the only way the only way and they know
already whoever is listening knows
already that it's not the right way.
They know it. They wake up in the
morning feel very very sad
>> and and you feel it because your nama is
being emptied out. So the the first
thing I would say ask from Hashem or
Yeshua.
Show him what's your what's your will.
The way the the letter is
this is the thing. Whoever goes with
with the
he will become
and his also his his legacy will be
sadikim. Why? Because the is the it's
the same letters of and you right away
tap into the
just like
if you know that you know everything.
What does that means? When Hagar was
crying to Hashem and Ishmael was praying
to Hashem,
he did chuva that moment and Hashem
judged him for that moment only. His
desire, his was to return to and Hashem
judged him by not what he was, not what
he's going to be. We all know what came
out of Ishmael.
He judged him at the at the spot and he
gave him everything that he has till
today till Mashia will come because it's
all about the now. Where are you now?
Even if you went yesterday, you went
before that, you know, you may be going
to go tomorrow, take your step out of
the equation and speak to Hashem in the
middle of it because he is there
>> never leaving you.
>> It's it's all about the present.
>> Yes.
>> Wow. Um I also want to tackle obviously
Jewish and joyful, we try to tackle
mental health aspects of people and
their lives and their journeys. So first
I I want to talk more about your
childhood and how that influenced on
your later life. You said that you were
you switched a lot of schools when you
were younger and you always moving
around constantly. What effect did that
have on you as a child and your
well-being and your mental health? Like
I said, it was very traumatic and I went
from sphartic the non-religious
religious this this all type and I'm an
outsider and I'm a son of someone very
famous and I sing but everybody's
mocking here or there
and I was always alone and I was never
talking. I didn't talk to no one. I was
very very shy. Uh believe it or not.
>> Are you still shy now?
>> No.
>> No. It's me and being shy. It has
nothing to do with each other. Uh I
blossom eventually.
And um like you see, I um I'm very
social by the way. And I think that's
that's why because I was seeing and also
living other people's
uh um walks of life, different
binoculars, different I would say
different glasses
to
to the way we look at Torah, the way we
look at Hashem, the way we look at
Judaism from different aspects. And it
made me not judge no one. It made me
understand each type and stream of
worshiping Hashem. So it made me not
judge anyone. And because of my
versatile
music that I was raised on and came from
different places,
listening to um American music, country,
Latin, hip-hop, R&B, to Israeli, to
Moroccan, to Arabic, everything. It It
made me who I am.
>> Your latest album, Ghoul, is a large mix
of different types of songs from
different cultures.
>> Yes. because I want to touch every Jew
and I want to I'm versatile. This is who
I am. It's not because I'm catering to
people. It's also who I am and I love a
lot of things in music and I compose
that way and I compose every style and I
like to talk to to touch every genre and
unity is what I'm all about. And I had a
dream when I became religious
that I want to unite and I want to do
collaboration with religious and
non-religious and I want in my audience
to have religious and non-religious and
I was the pioneer and I was one of the
first Jewish singer ever that
collaborated with non-religious artists
made concerts for separate seating and
also family sitting so non-religious can
come and and watch
and I was the first one doing modern
modern music and bringing it to the
to the orthodox world and took beats and
created hip-hop and dance and all that.
I'm one of maybe three that were at my
time of Simus and
and I don't even remember to be honest
but but that was my mission and I
brought modern music to the orthodox
world
against all odds and against a lot of
rabbis that were against me and all my
music was people put my albums
basically underneath their mattresses in
yeshivas and I already saw in the future
that this is a mistake and they are
looking and they are hearing in
non-Jewish music and I am just making it
much more closure for them to listen and
I touched a lot of Jews a lot of people
in the shama throughout the years and I
made that unity and I traveled the
entire world and I think because I was I
was closer to Kabad the Rebel Eskafa
made me not give up and continue in
Kabad embraced me and slowly everyone
else.
>> We got to some of my favorite parts of
this week's episode. I want to talk to
you about Kabad. Kabad is helping the
needy people in Israel and they already
helping over 47,000 families. Imagine
47,000 families who otherwise won't have
food. Kabad is there for them. They're
supporting them. They're helping them.
You can now help them by just
downloading their push app where you
could donate anytime, anywhere to kabad.
To visit their app, you can visit the
website pushapp.cc/joyful.
That's pk.cc/joy.
CC/joyful. You could also make a general
donation to Kabad by visiting
kabad.org/joyful. Be sure to check out
Kabad. Download their app and you could
help save and satisfy thousands of
hungry people that are just dealing with
the flack from the communities. I was
sad to be honest. People were calling me
Set
all over Jerusalem with like posters
with my name calling me Setame.
And uh I remember sitting with my dad,
my rabbi at the time, and he said, "What
do you think Hashem knows and sees to
the heart, sees to the inner why you're
doing it, and you know the truth?
Because you've been all over. Wait, with
time you're going to get the reward."
And it happened. And I was completely
sad in the beginning. Then I realized
that you cannot do good without have
having people
um going against you even the Rambam
everyone you know so I was ahead in my
time
and today everybody's like wow there's
cool music I was the only one investing
in music videos tons of money to do the
best music videos so everybody can say
wow Jewish music is cool
>> wow it's cool so yeah
>> beautiful so what would you say was most
stressful time of your life? Definitely
if you look look at the business side I
was traveling a lot going Israel the
world traveling back and forth back and
forth back and forth and slowly because
I got married so young and I didn't have
noa
I
this cost me my marriage this cost me of
us growing apart and then to save my
marriage she came up with the idea to
move to the United States because I was
there a lot and I took
everything I have all the tools I
stopped music I stopped performing I
took only few gigs just to save and
build my marriages again unfortunately
didn't work out cuz she was already away
so much away from where I was at and we
couldn't we couldn't connect again I'm
saying unfortunately back then right
>> but everything is for Letova for her and
for me. We moved from New York to Miami
and I got to share again, this was the
hardest time of my life, losing uh the
love of my life. I lost not just my wife
back then. I lost everything I had.
When it's raining, it's pouring.
It's just nonstop. I lost everything I
have. started from scratch again. And
because I know and I have Hashem beside
me, he helped me step by step to recruit
myself and
stop any uh I will say that out loud.
Stop any addiction. So, I started
drinking alcohol and and not finding
myself and ask Hashem, please save me.
During that time, my ex-wife flew back
to Israel with my kids. And I need to go
back and forth and back and forth every
six to eight weeks and see them for four
days and go back and work and work and
work and and and try to recover from
everything that happened to me.
During that time, then CO hit.
So, it was another punch, but it made me
stop every single uh uh uh uh things I
got used to drinking and and sleeping
late and being sad and being like all
over the then the world stop and it made
me stop. Wait, what if God takes my
voice also? Who am I?
What am I?
Does Hashem love me also?
Do I have any? If I don't have that,
where is Hashem in that lowest point
in my life? Then I realize that I just
don't have just a voice. I have my
personality, my life experience. I can
teach others. I can make people become
much closer to Hashem even if Hashem
takes my voice.
>> Wow.
>> So I started doing more lives on
Instagram. I started touching more
people's nishama, my surroundings. And
then I came up with what I'm doing today
that I'm starting it right. I was
supposed to start it before October 7
but because of the war I stop I stopped
it. I'm starting it again igniting it
and I called it the Sheffer House
Foundation.
It's a hub for wealthy, strong people
to come give their donation and with
their funds we do
a weekend that is amazing for singles
events, amazing for couples
to save their marriage, amazing for the
business owners that want to collaborate
with others that they are supports the
chef system and I'm developing an app
right now while we're speaking that you
open the app and you don't have a place
to spend Shabbat. If you're green and
you see a house that's green, you can
communicate and you can do kush by them.
You can spend by them. There is a lot of
people do kushim but they don't know
where to go. And this is going to be the
map the map of unity. This is what I'm
working on only because I had co only
because I got divorced and only because
I said what if I don't have my voice?
Wow. So sometimes you became the man.
>> All those challenges made me start God's
gallery. I have art from artists from
all over gave me their art and I did
some popup events here and there. I went
to the wine industry and I have my own
uh brand with Shilo Collaboration. back
before I lost everything I had, I became
a partner with him and I made this
bottle and it came out and from that now
I'm working on a Jadea situation that I
have my own brand uh together with the
collaborations and it's it's not ending
and chef a house is basically me knowing
that I know so many wealthy people and
strong people and influential people I
need to create that hub and with this
relationship I can put this one that
needs
money for his project in Israel,
high-tech or whatever it is, and have
this family uh uh offices that they can
support and I do the matching. And I
said, you know what? Let's just open a
hub for that. And with their funds, with
their m with their tadaka, I'm going to
give back to the entire community and
make people save their marriages so they
don't have to worry about any financial
from psychology to rabbis to support
every everything. And also to build
Jewish homes and have it the right way,
not as a coming to a party, everybody
drinks and go home. No, to have it with
the system. So, I'm building it right
here in Florida. We'll be the hub and
from here in a year from now, we're
going to go everywhere else. Get back to
some of my favorite parts of this week's
episode. I want to talk to you about the
Parish inspiration at changing so many
people's lives. We all want something
nice in the parish. We all want an
uplifting thoughts, something that will
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And you could join for free by emailing
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646397200.
>> I would say that that uh yeah I had a
major concert in uh King's Theater
back then. It's either was King Theater
or it was uh uh Brooklyn College. I'm
not sure.
It was full house. People paid to see me
and this is before I moved to America.
My ex-wife calls me. She knew I had that
show. Uh, I don't blame her at all. She
was exhausted.
She couldn't handle any more of my
profession. And she called me. I know
you have a concert, but I got to tell
you, you're coming back home and all
your stuff is by your mom. And when you
come back home, it's done.
>> Oh, wow.
>> And that was 15 minutes before I went on
stage. I was on the floor whipping like
a kid
and I needed to perform
and the director came to the room see me
like that says how you going to perform
now I couldn't breathe I couldn't talk
said I need I need 5 minutes I went out
I looked at myself in the mirror
I talked to my inama and I reminded her
that what you do
was meant to happen what happened just
now and you already knew it as the nama
and you gave me the tools to overcome it
and I need to remember that the reason
why I'm here in this world is to make
all of those zoos happy and sometimes
it's not about me it's about what you
give and now I'm going to give the best
show of my entire life to everyone
sitting there I went outside and I gave
literally the best concert I've ever
ever did in my entire life.
>> Wow. But how did you do it?
>> I just breathed say she a minute before
I went on stage like I do all the time.
I closed my eyes and I said this is what
you came here to the world to do.
That's it. No. You think that only
you're able to do that? Anyone else
could do that in this situation? That's
so
>> any situation.
>> Yeah.
>> And how do you handle with this after
after the concert? Did you cry again?
Were you sad?
>> After the concert, my entire body was
sick for 10 days. Sick. Literally sick.
Cuz I put all my energy last just like a
fight. I don't know.
>> Do you think it was because you withheld
those tears or maybe you don't
>> holding everything because I was uh
putting it aside didn't let the mava to
give it a lot of power and uh yeah broke
me to pieces. I went back to Israel and
then she said, "You know what? Let's try
one one last time and let's move to
America together." For me, it wasn't
even an option. I didn't never thought
she's going to say such a such a thing.
She did. But uh then slowly it fell
apart and hashem I got to talk about my
positive situation today that I overcome
all challenges and I have a bigger
relationship with Hashem that I ever
had. I know I made a lot of people
become closer to Hashem, but Hashem
rewarded me for all of that and he made
me his son is working on becoming his
slave and and and and
like I can talk to him like I talk to
you. And this relationship is what saved
me. and I got my reward and I got
married to the most amazing wife that
has exactly
all the tools to help me become the best
version of myself. And even now, I'm
working to be what it is
to be I would say
uh uh to be worthy to the most beautiful
woman, the most amazing woman in the
world. that happens to be my wife. So,
so hashem everything pays off in the
end. I got married to a beautiful wife
named she has three kids. I have three
kids and
like you say
we're going to have more kids in the
world. Amen.
>> Amen. Amen.
>> So, was there a certain point when you
were single that you were performing
between your first marriage and your
second marriage?
Um,
I was I was more into myself. I took
jobs
here and there and I couldn't perform. I
was like broke into pieces. It took me a
year and a half to recover almost two.
>> Did you do any weddings at that time?
>> Yes, I did. So, if you're doing a
wedding and you personally are single
after a broken marriage, how did it make
you feel and how did you cope with your
feelings? If you have a new
>> Unfortunately, I had to drink a lot of
alcohol.
>> Oh, boy. So, you were drinking alcohol
to cover up your feelings.
>> Exactly. And then co literally like
stopped everything and then I re re
regroup.
>> Wow.
>> And said like I said to you before, who
is God? Who is God? If he's not a
singer, who is God? Who is me?
And then
I started healing.
>> Beautiful. We just had on Lipa
Schmeltzer our last interview. Alipa has
an incredible story of healing. So it's
amazing that you guys both have such
incredible stories of healing and
growth. We have some more incredible
parts of this episode coming. I just
want to tell you about our Shabur, the
revolutionary Misha that's enhancing so
many people's ways learning Mishuba. If
you never learn, now's the time to
start. Our Mub makes it so so easy. It's
Hebrew English Mubal.
You also have some beautiful pictures
and diagrams and Q&A's in the back. So,
it's perfect. You can go on your local
bookstore. You can also click on the
link in the show notes, get the RL
Mabura. It will change your way of
learning Mabura. And we also now have a
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could join by WhatsAppapping 646397220.
You could click on the link in the show
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United States, you can call
605-562-3522.
And for Israel, you can call
972-79-579-5099.
So again, US605-562-3522
and Stra Israel 972-79-579-5099.
So say that in your context and be sure
to share with friends and family whoever
will enjoy it. You think that looking
back instead of using alcohol to
overcome to cover your feelings, how
would you cover your feelings now?
>> It's very easy now. after Hashem saves
you and you are in your focus and you're
in your zone um to come over challenges,
you just say
you learn
you go to the mikvah and and you purify
yourself with your thoughts, with your
mind, with with the relationship with
Hashem that you develop and you just
need time and you need to remember that
those moments that you felt alone,
Hashem made it happen. It's all Hashem.
Everything is Hashem. Everything.
You know what separates
for being holy or not?
When you complete
the letters, everything then it becomes
holy.
>> This is the journey of our life. We need
to complete the journey in order to be
where we're supposed to be. That's
number one. Number two, what makes the
claf holy? the the the the
paper holy
black ink.
All your damn fobs, all the black dots
in your white nama
is what makes it
a holy nishama. Because hashem, if he
wanted us to be blank, white and pure,
he would have not brought us here to the
world.
What is Hashem biggest desire? Lust is
that you you in those moments when you
are suffering and you don't see the
light, you put Hashem and you say,
"Hashem, I love you and I know you're
going to save me. I love you."
>> Take that black ink
and you penetrate it into your na and
everything becomes holy.
>> Wow. So even when things seem tough and
challenging, it's really all from
Hashem. So that reminded me of a story
you once said that you had a huge huge
concert and right before then something
happened. One of the big sponsors pulled
out.
>> Yes.
>> Had a concert my major concert age of
26. I'm the first religious Jew that
took Cesaria amphitheater and filled it
up.
The religious people didn't want to
touch it because a lot of robbers were
against amphitheater in general. Um, so
I was the first like in other things.
>> Why did you decide to do it if other if
the rabbis weren't really didn't want
people?
>> Cuz I had uh because I know what's my
mission. My mission is to unite. I had a
rabbi that were backing me up. I had the
reb that that's what he's all about. And
I knew that I have to do it by and uh I
did it. But the story of how I got there
is remarkable and I'm going to say it as
fast as I can.
I had a company that was supposed to be
the sponsorship 2 months before they are
telling me they don't have the money to
send it to me and I could not do that
show. And that show used to cost back
then those numbers used to be extremely
high and it was $220,000.
>> Wow. to do that concert back then
and they were supposed to give the down
payment
and they bailed out. I speak to my rabbi
and he says to me, "Who do you think is
the one that told you to do that?
Hashem, you believe in Hashem? Hashem
will get you the money." Tell him, "But
but I got a call from from the from the
place, from the venue. They want the
money by Monday."
This was Wednesday when I spoke to him.
I took a flight to New York. I had a bar
mitzvah and he said to me, "Don't don't
worry, miracles would happen. Hashem
wants it to happen. Don't worry."
Said, "You know what? I'm going to fly
to America and whatever will be will
be." I flew to America. First thing I
went was to the Reb's oil. It was 6:00
a.m. Straight to the Rebel crying my
eyes out if I already and my face is all
over Israel. billboards, buses, and if
I'm not going to do it, everybody will
say, "Oh, probably he couldn't fill it
up." This and my own house was a
signature guarante to the entire show.
>> Wow.
>> So, I'm going to lose or go to court and
lose my house.
>> Oh my gosh. I can't believe how you're
feeling.
>> And I went
whatever my rabbi says I do.
And I went to America. It was 6:00 a.m.
I'm devastated. There was a guy looking
at me praying like that. And he went to
me straight and he said, "Why are you
crying so much?" Said, "It's a long
story. Never mind." He said, "You know
what I do for a living? I'm a clown in
hospitals. I want to take you first to
the mikvah and then I want to show you
my thing." I was so drained out. I said,
"You know what? I'll go with you." I
went, tried to hype up. didn't work. I
got a phone call from a friend of mine
that wanted me to help him with his new
album.
I'm going to say his name. His name is
Gum Varoba. He called me that he needs
me. I wasn't
in a in a situation to help anyone and
listen to anyone's music. He insisted.
Then I said, "Hashem, Hashem, how I'm
going to go to him? I don't have the
power. I don't have the energy in my
body to go and help him. It's it's so
hard for me to do it.
Then I got a phone call from the lady
that I did this bar mitzvah. She said,
"Listen, he called me. I don't know how
he got to me, but he asked if you can go
to him." Said, "If he goes all the way
and he calls her and he reach her,
so I should just go to him." I went to
him. There's a couple sitting there
watching my music videos and I'm like so
depressed. I go to the piano. I play a
song.
May all the sources will come home. Back
then was kidnapped.
>> I turn around. I see them crying. They
go outside. They come back. They say,
"Where can we listen to this song?
Where?"
I told them I was supposed to have a
concert because I already believe the
concert is canceled because there's no
money to give. I was supposed to have a
concert but I need to cancel it out. Um
they say where I showed them the place
and I already cancelled because Monday
whatever like that they go outside they
come back
after 2 minutes. They ask me let me ask
you a question. if you have money now,
are you able to revive it? Said, "Yeah,
but I'm never going to have money for
what I need." They go out, I'm playing
the music to him, we're working. They
come back. They say, "Let me ask you a
question. If we give you the money, will
you be able to do it?"
>> Said, "What? What? What do you mean? You
don't know me. What do you mean?" I
started crying right away. couldn't like
was joking. They say, "Stop. Don't
worry. Give him water." They got water
to drink. I said, "Listen, it's a
miracle. What do you mean? Why you want
to help me?" Say, "We saw and we heard
you now alive and we saw this
amphitheater and you're the first
religious Jew that going to sing there.
When we saw just in Wikipedia that was
dying there in front of all the Greeks
and the Romans or whatever this said,
yeah, this is exactly why I want to do
it. I want to bring Kaducha back." So
they said, "How much is the down
payment?" I said the number.
It said he's sitting in the computer and
he's wiring in the money. I didn't
believe the money is going to be in my
account on Monday because I have to give
it to them cash. I flew to Israel
Shabbat. Sorry, Sunday. I arrived in I
arrived there Monday. I drove to the
bank to check and pray that the money is
there. The money was there. I drove to
Casaya. I gave them they sitting in
Jerusalem but I had to go to the Cay
anyhow. So I gave them the money and
that's how this show happened.
>> That's crazy.
>> They flew into the concert. They came to
my rabbi and my rabbi I cannot say his
name because he's not allowing me to
saw the guy that gave the money the the
couple and he told them, "Listen, I know
you cannot have children."
They were shocked. What do you mean? How
do you know that? Yes, I know you cannot
have children, but because of you doing
this,
I'm going to promise you next year the
same time
and you're going to have a baby boy. And
I was like, how can you promise such a
thing?
>> Whoa.
>> They had an they had a baby boy a year
after
a year after a baby boy. They named him
named him Leo because he was born on
August the same date of the concert the
year after.
>> Oh my gosh.
>> And they had two more kids after that.
>> And this is the story of and believing
in Hashem. How did you came up with
Hashem?
How was it? The story goes like this. I
went in a tour in Kaneka all over. I
finished in Leil France. The rabbi
before Shabbat said, "I got to play you
a song. You can hear it after Shabbat.
You're gonna you're gonna you're going
to your mind is going to be exploded."
And he's repeating it the entire
Shabbat. Wait, Shabbat did not go
anywhere. He plays the song. I listen to
I said, "Wow, that's a hit. But I don't
do covers."
That's it. I fly to Israel. 1:00 a.m. I
got a phone call from my dad. 1:00 a.m.
after a tour of 10 days. Where are you?
I said, "What do you mean, Aba? I'm I'm
sleeping. It's 1:00 a.m." He said, "I
don't care. You got to come to the
studio right now." Said, "Aba, I'm
tired. I can't. I'm just like, this is
Kibu. I'm telling you, you got to come."
I heard Kibav. I woke up, put my shoes,
and drove there. Arrived there. He plays
me the same song, but he came up with
the course.
I take the sidur. I open the sids up in.
And before
book there is
and it fits exactly. I record it. After
an hour and a half, we hear the song.
It's amazing. And he asks me, "Please
put it in your album." I said, "Aba, I
can't." I finished the graphic. I
finished uh all the mastering.
Everything is ready to go. And my album
is more to the non-religious
radio station. And it's very mellow. And
I cannot put a fast song that speaks and
blow the name of Shem to straight to
their face. They're never going to play
it in the non-religious radio station.
He got upset. We went out of there. 10
days after
his birthday, we sit together. We're in
front of all of his friends. I asked
him, "Aba, what do you want for your
birthday?"
He says, "You know what I want for my
birthday? I want you to put the song
that we did a week ago at your album.
Inside of your album." So, what Aba?
Everybody's looking at me.
It's 5k more and I have to change all
the graphic and
and I can't really name it hashem
because nobody will listen to it in the
non-religious radio stations. He said
you can name it whatever you want. Said
you know what for kibuab I'm going to do
it. I put it as number 21 or 22 in the
album words of spirit and I named it
the song. So I put the song and I named
it Lam
so they can listen to it but we renamed
it after to
because it was a huge success.
>> Wow. So the the the scale the
is that if you take the
no matter what
you will receive in this world all the
while you're alive and I had mega hits
before
and many many etc
reached the level so much that nim black
called me after two years. And by the
way, the song is not Mark Anthony. It's
an Algerian song that just came out two
weeks before me. I heard it right away
recorded a month after went out to the
radio and a year later Mark Anthony did
it. He heard probably the Arabic version
as well, not mine, but he did it very
beautifully. Then people said he took
Mark Anthony. I said, "No, it's not Mark
Anthony." Nissim Black called me, loved
the song, gave me a call. I didn't know
who Niss Black. He wasn't famous at all.
He sent me a link to his old non-Jewish
stuff. I listened to it and then I spoke
to him on the phone. Said, "I have I
have a new version for it." Said,
"Listen, you cannot say you cannot do
the same joke twice." You know that
phrase
>> too many.
>> I cannot do the same. So, it's not the
same. You got to listen. I heard it. I
loved it. I invested so much. We did
another music video and it blew up
again.
>> So you made Niss Black big
>> and Hashem Hashem brought Niss Black to
my life. We did many songs together. I
believed in him. He was signed in my
record label for almost two years.
>> Hashem, he is now where he's at.
>> Wow.
>> Oh, you're sing nice. I'm going closer
to the to the screen just because I want
the light to to be on my face. I want to
finish up by giving you a braha that
>> you are taking people's story and you
bringing them to life. It helps so many
people in their journey. I'm going to
wish you that that help you help others.
Hashem will see that and will help you
in your own journey. You'll always have
Hashem right next to you. You will see
him.
You will see the grace of of Hashem on
you and you will have an amazing life.
And to all your viewers, thank you for
watching. Thank you for listening and
hope with no judgment you will
understand that everybody everybody can
fall and everybody can rise again.
>> Got back up. You have a song rise again,
right?
>> Yes. Rise up.
>> So
>> when I fall,
>> just just one fun question we always
ask. Who is the happiest person that you
know?
>> Vika Borenstein. the one that writes
lyrics in English to my songs and we
produce a lot of productions. He's the
happiest person no matter what he's
going through in his life and we did a
musical together of Ysef and it was
amazing and we do a lot of things and
pes I'm going to spend the first hog
with him the second hog as well and in
between I'm going to travel uh four
different places with Costa Rica so I
can't wait
shout outs for you
>> and what's coming next with god Albazy
anything new coming up any new
>> besides the chef house foundation
besides the wine and the holidays is
that's going to be mush in all the
restaurants and my current wine.
>> Besides that, I'm coming up with an
international album. It's going to be
called It's All About Love and it's uh
it's it's to represent the Jewish nation
in Israel to show that we are all About
Love and that's what we're here for.
And it's a beautiful song music video
that's going to come this this uh this
summer leads to a full international
album.
>> Amazing. Thank you so much for coming
on. Thank you so much for coming on. God
>> beautiful podcast.
>> I hope you all enjoyed this week's
episode with God Albas. God's story or
stories to be precise is so incredible
and amazing. So much to learn from. God
had such crazy stories and he made such
big changes in his life to get closer to
Hashem. Shows us the power of change and
shows us the power of letting go and
letting God. Make sure to download the
Kabad app by visiting
pushkapp.cc/joyful.
Help the anarchist. So go ahead and
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