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Impassioned Ahavat Yisrael in the Land - Rav Kook’s Eretz Chefetz 8:1 by Rabbi Aaron Goldscheider
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all right good morning everyone Booker
to and uh very very nice to see everyone
this morning thank you for uh for
joining together in our learning of Rook
a very very special to be studying Rook
together and uh I'd like to begin
by thanking those that are sponsoring
this year this morning we have an annual
sponsor and that
is
and we have a uh a special sponsor this
morning sponsored by Ethel Fischer my
aunt Ethel in memory of her husband
Eugene M Fisher on his six yard site
which will be this to bishvat in a
couple of days yob Ben
yud may hisama have an alyah so it's a
very special for me for uh for my uncle
to be able to uh to learn this morning
in his memory and he was a very special
person in my life as well so very
special to uh to learn this morning and
especially tat eritel in his
memory okay so this morning we uh we
continue our study of Ru
cook and um what we're going to look at
this morning is a uh a topic within rev
cook which I think is one of his most
beloved ideas and uh one of the reasons
why we love Riv cook and that is the
idea of aus the idea of unity the idea
of AAS ISAT Isel the love that he had
for Jews and the love that he believed
every one of us should have for our
fellow
Jew and this is certainly an area that
Riv cook put great emphasis in terms of
the importance of of loving one another
and there's no question that the days
that we're in right now this is one of
the themes one of the ideas and one of
the things that we're we're feeling
these days in terms of the Aus and some
something that was sorely missing here
in AR Israel in terms of the Jewish
people in terms of am Israel and
something that we
are with all the all the difficulties
and all the challenges turn this off
I'll turn it back home with all the
challenges of these days what we are
seeing these days is uh the beautiful
sense of AK andas Isel so let us um let
us look at the following the following
piece from R cook we are studying
eret um on the top of page one and those
that have been with us for the last year
and a half or so we are beginning now
chapter8 which is you see the very top
of the page the name of this chapter
which was named by
rapo he named it or Yeshua the light of
redemption and we're going to be looking
over the next few weeks at pieces from
um from this section from the eth
chapter of eret so let's begin here here
and uh this piece originally is found in
a letter of R cook we have hundreds if
not thousands of letters of rev cook and
here we get a sense of um of the emotion
that rev cook has in terms of the the
feeling of the Jewish people returning
to the land of Israel so let us follow
along here we're the top of page one
we'll Now read from rook and uh there's
really one idea that I want to highlight
in
particular yesu this feeling this
emotion that we have of or Yeshua that
we're we're we're sensing the light of
salvation of redemption
MK it's it's it's ringing like a
bell all the boundaries of the land of
Israel all of them om cavod all of them
are speaking of honor the honor of
Hashem the honor of the Jewish people
returning to the borders the and they're
calling out the land itself is calling
out to usit to
awaken to a spiritual
awakening and also physical in terms of
our material life as well that it's
bringing back that there's a great joy
that there's a Great Awakening of the
Jewish people as they are returning to
the land of Israel again I always find
this you know striking that Ru cook is
writing this early 1900s he's not seeing
what we're seeing today but he's feeling
he's sensing this great return this
Great Awakening
of and this voice this sound of the
Jewish people returning is only going to
get
stronger from day today it's only going
to strengthen we peric Le peric from
time to
time that this vision is going to
Roar this is a vision that is wondrous
that is
eternal this is a from the because the
time has
come that he senses that the time is
coming this beginning of the
return and the secret of the creation of
the
world that it's there just beneath the
border the the boundary or just beneath
the
surface it's ready to to flower to break
through with light from the
darkness we are filled with
song and a drunkenness of
comfort and
return there are going to be battalions
groups are going to be coming together I
mentioned last week and I saw another
advertisement for another organization
that's working on not just bringing
Neeses bringing people but how to bring
communities as a whole to ER Israel to
pick up an entire congregation a sh and
everyone go together to
eritis I just uh a family member just
who who's doing it there are two
different organizations Simon aorf
shiman aist dorf just started an
organization I saw an ad for another
organization that's now working not with
people but with communities you know 60
at a time 100 at a time you what do you
call what are they
called what are they called I I forgot
the I forgot the names one of the rabbi
Shimon abor it's it's uh bringing them
home or something like that is the title
again I saw it ad for a different
organization as well they did that years
ago you're right oh you talking about R
Riskin and those yeah that's right
that's right yeah yeah
yeah so Rook says again he's sitting
there in in ER Israel sitting here in ER
Israel almost 100 years ago over 100
years ago that he's writing y it's going
to happen that groups are going to come
battalions that is as shs as communities
we're going to be making our way to
Isel they're going to come from the
other side from
a to
rebuild to rebuild the Brokenness that's
found in the land of Israel the ruins
of our eternal love okay so here just
reading this you get a sense of the who
Ru cuk was and in terms of his his
passion in terms of the emotion in terms
of his bond with ER Israel and as some
point out some asked the question did
ruk attain a level of navua did he
attain a spark of Prophecy well I don't
know if we know the answer to that but
when I read a paragraph like this and
see the way the ruk is seeing the Gula
unfolding I don't know it it seems like
maybe he did he saw something he's he he
did see a
vision and here we go the this one more
line from rook and here this is where I
want to highlight a uh an idea the idea
of of
AAS or he writes also that there's a
light of
kindness that there's going to be a
greater sense of of kindness that's
going to strengthen throughout the
world and he says as the Jewish people
are returning to the land of Israel that
there's going to be a is a love for one
another
that's that is going to continue to grow
that's going to be a flame that's going
to be passion
it in the very core of the soul of of
Kess Israel the Jewish
people and the and the streams the sweet
streams the street this the Sweet Waters
will
sweeten all the bitterness all the
bitterness that we've had in the past
all the troubles all the pain will be
will be uh will be sweetened as we're
returning to Israel she
that will activate a great
strength that will lift the voice of
yob with the strength of Hashem so here
we see this is classic R cook to some
degree in terms of his his
poetry and um and his language and the
question is what is RI cook speaking
about if we can kind of you know kind of
dig a little bit deeper and the question
that I had when I read this piece is the
statement that he makes about
the it that it becomes even stronger
when the Jewish people return to the
land of Israel and why is that the case
and is that the case and I thought aad
Isel is aad Isel wherever you are
whether in you're in New York or
Baltimore or California right Jews
there's avad Isel everywhere that we
love one another but R cook seems to be
making the claim here that there's going
to be a a a more passionate avad Israel
that's found only in the land of Israel
when the Jew Returns the land of Israel
so so I want to point out the following
yeah
please yeah I think I mean I think you
have to in each case you have to look at
look at the context and you're right
sometimes Israel is the Jewish people
sometimes Israel but again it's usually
ER Israel but again I think it's not yes
yes y it could be there are times that
it's uh maybe refers to both or it has
both connotations so where do we find
this idea and by the way I I would say
this idea can be can be captured in in
in a phrase that we're all familiar with
and that
is
or which means that we are all we're all
connected with one another we all love
one another we're all responsible for
one another so that is an idea that's
really a very basic idea the question is
when did that when did that come into
play in other words when even
halachically or maybe from from the
hashkafic point of view as well when did
that happen now I was was all always
under the impression that well maybe the
Jewish people always had that I mean
maybe going back to aam to the family of
AR is and Yakov I would think from Hari
when the Jewish people receiv received
the Torah at Hari that at that moment
and that famous
P that the Jewish people that there was
a Oneness of the Jewish people when they
came to that place and famously right by
Yan in the in the singular that at that
moment that there was a Unity of am
Israel but we're going to see something
really f fascinating and that is not
until the Jewish people enter the land
of Israel does the idea of arut or arut
of of responsibility for one another
only comes into play at that time now
that sound that sounds a bit surprising
and I was surprised by that idea as well
like why should that be the case words
if you're talking about a Jewish people
and you're talking about a Jewish people
that receives the Torah at harini and
everybody is now responsible for one
another we care for one another why why
doesn't it happen at that moment and why
do we have to wait so to speak so look
at the following PUK look at the
following PUK this is a p that comes
towards the very end of the Torah the PK
itself is a difficult PK just in terms
of translating and understanding the PUK
and I want to share with you the Rashi
what Rashi says so here's the PUK the
PUK says the following this is number
two on your
souri and this
is says the following and you probably
this probably rings a
bell what that you have it yeah yeah
very good very nice and it also I think
the Trum and and it's and it's uh I
don't it kind of stands out people
remember this P the question is what
does it mean by the way there's
something else in rash is going to
address it a very strange thing that's
found in this pug is that over letters
and you see it here on the page there
are dots over every single letter of
those two words and that's found in a
safer Torah as well and what those dots
are but before we get to those dots
let's just translate the the PK itself
the translation
is that which is hidden is to God to the
Lord Our
God and that which is
revealed is for us and for our
children
forever to
do to do all the words to the Torah you
see it's a very difficult P right well I
mean what what's going on here the
hidden things are for God the revealed
things are for us and they are to be
done and
to and to do all the words of the Torah
or to observe all the words of the
Torah so there by the way there are many
many different interpretations of what
this means many interpretations and let
me share with you what Rashi says let me
just share with you for a moment outside
I'll just want to want to read a few
words of Rashi with you Rashi says what
are n what are nlot what they refer to
are the actions of other people of other
Jews around you and that you have an
obligation or the question is do you
have an obligation to respond to that in
other words when you see somebody else
that's doing something wrong do you have
an obligation to respond and we
know and in this also it
says that which we see right that which
is nigla again not not an easy P but
this is how Rashi is going to interpret
the PUK right that which is known about
another person if they're desecrating a
you know a Mitzvah transgressing a
Mitzvah that they should be doing or
they're doing an AA do we do we have an
obligation so the PK is saying yes we
have an obligation to respond how about
the nista road those things that we do
not know about another person
right that which is done in a in a
hidden way is there any obligation to
that or how can we possibly respond to
Something That We're unaware
of the PK says hanist
wru right that which is hidden that is
in God's domain right we're not able to
to really do anything about
that but that which we know about other
people you have a neighbor that's um not
keeping chabas not keeping kosher is
there any that you can do to kind of
bring that person
along that which we know about our our
friend about our neighbor that is our
responsibility it's for
us that's the way the Rashi interprets
the P by the way many other
interpretation you could see how that
almost is like a difficult
interpretation let me read to you the
following this is from the Rashi itself
so Rashi if you go to the middle of the
Rashi I think I have a little arrow
there where it says Al
luuu so they're little dots now what do
those dots represent the dots
represent according to Rashi words that
are there but could also not be there it
was a way of Crossing out words if you
didn't want to if you didn't want to
cross out the letters themselves or the
words he just put dots on top of it and
that was a sign that those words should
really not appear does that make sense
at all I mean it's kind of like in other
words instead of erasing so you just
make like a mark on the page and that
Mark will tell you that those words are
really not meant to appear there so now
we have this interpretation that those
words
lanu are words that really should not
appear in this PK they do appear they
don't appear the question is what does
that mean exactly yes you put a do
something you really want to
see the do would highlight what you
would want to like to to emphasize okay
yeah it's a good question I mean the
words themselves are there we know that
all the letters and the words they're
there to be read how do we how do we
identify or highlight a word so in some
way we wrote it already but we don't
again I know it does it sounds a bit
strange a word that's there that's not
there fully okay this is or should not
be read so this is what Rashi says and
I'll read now we can see the words of
Rashi you don't have to trust anything
that I just said now we'll see it
inside aluu there are dots over the
words lanu vanu for us and for our
children in the stic
text to indicate that we are to
expound that even for the revealed sins
he did not punish the
many
okay until the Jewish people crossed the
Jordan until they enter the land of
Israel only once the Jewish people came
to AR moav and they came to harim and
haral and at that moment moment when
they entered the land of Israel they
took a shua that moment of accepting the
Torah again accepting an oath of Hashem
only at that point and here look at the
last words of
Rashi only once the Jewish people
entered the land of Israel did this of
is come into
effect when they were in the midbar even
when they received the Torah they did
not have that obligation yet only once
they enter the land of Israel so you
could that's and that's what it means
here without getting you know too
entrenched in this in this uh in this
comment lanu you could really remove
that because it's true it was not true
at that moment when the Jewish people
who were outside the land of Israel it's
only going to come into play when they
enter the land of Israel because at this
time they're not in the land of Israel
they're still in the midbar and
therefore lanu that obligation that it's
upon us and our children did not exist
yet so those words are read and they're
not read because the obligation was not
there yet yes it sounds a little bit
confusing sounds a little bit confusing
but let's what's
that
okay um I think that's yeah I think it's
a a it's a complex issue the question is
taking somebody's life may be a
punishment it may not be necessarily
based on the idea of irot that you have
an obligation to one another but yeah
some something something to think about
yeah it's it's an interesting
point so here we have the following idea
and this is this is the idea that I want
to highlight the idea is as Rashi says
and this is I I would say this is a
novel idea this may come as a bit of a
surprise and it did to me as well as I
was learning this material that that
basic idea that fundamental concept of
AR
ofus of the obligation that we have the
interconnectedness that we have with one
another as a Jewish people that it did
not exist until the Jewish people people
enter the land of Israel in the fullest
sense does that mean that we didn't care
for one another does it mean that Ley
does it mean we cared for one another
there was a concern for one another but
the full sense of interconnectedness of
the Jewish people of am Israel according
to Rashi right according to Rashi the
Rashi that we have on the not an obscure
Source you have that obligation
of that you have an obligation to your
fellow Jew whatever your fellow Jew is
doing that you have an obligation
towards that person only once you enter
the land of
Israel that is uh that's how rashan
persists the marala prag asked the
question why is that the case and here
we're going to see the words of the
maral pr so here this is from of the
this is Source number five three lines
down in the
bracket and again the question is what
is unique about entering the land of
Israel that had created this special
status of arvut
Kasher once the Jewish people enter the
land of Israel
we are not one nation the wholeness of
the nation until we enter the land of
Israel and what is the
proof before they cross the Jordan River
before they enter the land of
Israel they were not punished for those
sins of you know that were done
privately those sins that we were
unaware of of other Jews
until the Jewish people enter the land
of
Israel until the Jew enters the land of
Israel we do not have that full
status what is the term AR what does it
mean that we
are bound with the our fellow Jew that
we are interconnected with with our
fellow
Jew
that we did not become one nation the
Oneness of our people in the fullest
sense only once we enter the land of
Israel and one place who
is so this is the the maral explaining
this idea in Rashi that the nation of
Israel although the nation received the
Torah at
harini and in a sense at that moment you
would think that they now have a a full
sense of responsibility it does not
become the fullest sense of
responsibility until land of Israel and
even that concept that we all are
familiar with that we quote
K according to Rashi according to the it
does not happen it does not actualize
until the Jewish people enter the land
of Israel there's uniqueness to the
Oneness of am Israel in the land of
Israel where we function as a nation are
we a nation outside the land of Israel
as we're living in LA and Baltimore and
Hong Kong your son was in Hong Kong
right for a while as a rabbi yes so
you're Rabbi in Hong Kong a beautiful
Community is that a nation is that a
nation outside the land of Israel do we
love one another do we care for one
another absolutely yes is there Co is
arim Rashi says no the marala prag says
no not until we enter the land of Israel
at that moment we are bound to one
another right we are interconnected with
one another we are now functioning as a
nation and we are we all know that today
yes please well since that was the
lesson I told him last very very nice
laar lazor so yes so that is unique to
ER Israel and here I believe maybe this
is what perhaps this is what R cook is
referring to as well when we come back
to the land of Israel the sense of aat
Isel changes right it it goes up a few
bars when we're here in as much as there
is Av Israel outside the land of Israel
but the true aru the true
interconnectedness of the nation or of a
Jew to a Jew is here in Eric T we can
turn to the second side of the page I
want to share with you the following yes
please we know that it's
applying today maybe they back then when
when we were first entering
right I I think the principle stands I
mean it was true at that time and I
think as I said I think it's true today
as well the the idea it doesn't say that
right doesn't no ites doesn't say that
it doesn't say that it could be that
once what's that doesn't have an
expiration doesn't have an expiration
date that that's right but again the way
the marala Prague is explaining it
that's not it's it's not based on on on
the history or ancient of ancient times
of the Jewish people entering the land
of Israel that's the reality of what it
means to be a nation in the land of
Israel so look at s we turn the page now
and this very much speaks to our uh of
our mat the mats that we're in today in
terms of when the Jewish people are
going through a difficult time and what
it means to care for one another so I I
just came across this gamar I thought it
was a very very beautiful gamarra and
this is s this is from Tinus DAV Alf Al
and it says the following and I'll just
read the Hebrew you have the translation
of art scroll here
turn when the Jewish people are in a
time of distress which we are in today
and one Jew decides just to kind of go
off and do his own
thing there are
two that are with a
person and that those put their hands on
that person's head and they say to that
person this individual who left who
walked away from the community that
they're not Shar that they're not part
of thear of the community
they're not going to be a part of the
they're not going to feel the joy when
the day in is uh is going to arrive I
was thinking about this this past uh
this past week or two you know in
America there's what's called now the
ISA break or the ISA week where they're
where they're on vacation and um so I
saw a lot of ads I guess on Facebook and
other places of like going town going
down to Miami and S Shiva week and to
you know the beautiful pictures of South
Beach and Miami and
so I don't I don't know the answer I
actually saw a very um a very
well-respected Rabbi who's again he's
he's he's speaking at a program at a ski
vacation this week as well so I don't
know I I don't know what what a Jew is
supposed to do but a Jew is supposed to
according to the gamarra should be
thinking very seriously about when it's
a time of Sara it's a time of distress
for the Jewish people to be a part of it
and how is one a part of that time of of
distress and the the gamar says if
you're not if somehow you step away from
it this's interesting language here that
they malim that put their hand I always
think about it as AA but here it's not a
braa it's actually a bit of a um a curse
that if you're not part of it so then
you're not going to be a part of the
either yes
EV yeah no no you make a you make an
excellent point that the word AR in AR
is more than just
responsibility and maybe that's the
difference between what it means as the
speaks about in Rashi that outside the
land of Israel we do have that sense of
responsibility for one another we care
for one another but to be a guarantor as
you as you said very beautifully right
to be to be um a rave that we are
interconnected T you know T is in SM you
study tar for six months tarov is the
mixture of milk and meat that's that you
spent six months on that issue studying
to be a rabbi and uh all the AL that
relate to to you know when the milk
falls into the drop of milk falls into
chalant does that ever happen I know we
we study that for a long time in the it
happens so what's that mean what's
what's T what is that t means it's mixed
in right that it gets that milk there's
no way of taking it out now what happens
right what can you do with that is it TR
is a kosher so T when we talk about AR
Ze it's only in the land of Israel that
you have that you know that that it's
not just responsibility not just care
it's that we are interconnected with one
another exactly
so let's read on in this gamar so the
gamar says the
following um reading now the second
paragraph on the First
Column when the community is going
through a difficult time a person should
not
say let me go to my own house let me eat
and I'll
drink right in my soul you know Shalom
AE right every let me just let me just
get to a safe place let me kind of block
out everything else that's going on and
let me live in uh with some Serenity he
says you should not be doing that the
top of the second
column yes a person has to feel the pain
the this is what we find
with that he felt the pain of the now
where do we see
that this is with the war with a
appropriate to be speaking about war
with aik and what
happens
that he placed a rock below him and he
sat on that rock and that's where he
prayed look at what what the gar
says he didn't have a mattress or he
didn't have a
pillow he couldn't find a more
comfortable place they couldn't bring a
pillow for MOS to an old man to sit down
and be more
comfortable Moshe MOS
said if the Jewish people are going
through a difficult time
I'm also going to feel that pain as well
I'm praying here on the mountain and
they're fighting below and I shouldn't
be comfortable here I should feel that
pain as well where did mosh raenu learn
this from so this a very beautiful a
beautiful vort and uh that takes us back
to the beginning of the life of mosenu
as he's coming to the
mountain and he sees the SN and hasem
says to
MOS right take off the shoe that you
that you are wearing because Adas KES
because this is Holy Ground so the kakar
has the following explanation he says
why does Hashem and many interpretations
why does hasem ask him to take off his
shoes in order to feel the rocks in
order to feel the pebbles in order to to
feel the sharp Stones right you're here
you're at a distance right from the pain
that your brethren are in you need to
feel that as well and then says the
kakar then it's admas KES that's
holiness Holiness is to feel the pain
the burden of others and that's what
mosh who has taught that lesson right
away that we need to feel the pain of
others that's part of what it means AR
what it means call yeah I'll take on the
back and then yes ofn in the marathon
yeah no
that not even a handful but to feel
connected to that's okay so this is this
is a and my own family I it bothers me
tremendously okay so this is this is an
important lesson this is what the gamar
says you can quote this gamar in Tinus
what it means to what it means to feel
the pain of others um we spoke about we
spoke about this idea of
of so look at source number three so
this is the gar uses this language it's
found in
sh we'll look at just that first
paragraph and we spoke a moment ago
about that word arvus and what the word
means arvus means that you are that
you're mixed together that you're a
guarantor that you're an obligation to
one another laab rebi brings one other
interpretation of what the already
brings a few interpretations but to
highlight this AR what is the word
AR he says the word AR also means
sweetu ASAS which we say every morning
that the aror should be sweet the word
AR also has that meaning as well
says right why do we why do we care for
one another not that we have a
responsibility and a guarantor we love
one another we're sweet the sweetness of
a Jew right we love one
another there's a deep love and
Brotherhood that we have one for
another right why do we why are we
concerned about others because we care
about others
right is not about finding a fault in
somebody else it's you want the best for
the other you want the person to
experience shabas you want the person to
experience what it means to be part of
am so that's another nice a nice idea
around around um arus laabi says that it
relates to the word the sweetness that
we feel for one another R cook as we
open with this morning speaks about the
AHA a great sense of AA is going to
return AA Israel is going to return to
the Jewish people when we come back to
the land of Israel and Bash we're seeing
even though we struggle with that at
times and especially in the last before
the war we were struggling with that but
something that we're seeing today and a
new track that we're taking please God
from uh from this time forth but the
flip side of a lack of a Isel of course
is the and this is something that Rook
is famous for where he speaks about if
that was the reason for destruction of
the temple so we need to add even
greater love and the gamarra says As We
Know Why did we have the destruction of
the second bdash so it says that there
was that there was a that there was a a
hatred a baseless thank you a baseless
hatred and the story that is told
there's one story that is told to
highlight that and I'm sure you're
familiar with that is Kam baram right
that is the famous story and that's
found in the gar in gon and it tells the
story of a man who is having a
celebration who's having a party we've
all heard this story he invited kamsa he
invited his friend kamsa but somehow the
invitation went to not his friend but
went to baram it went to this other
fellow and he makes his way to the
Celebration he walks into the wedding
right it almost sounds comical it's so
petty right the story itself and I think
that's part of what the gamar is trying
to convey to us the pettiness of that
kind of somebody else showed up at your
Simka you didn't want that person to be
there and the gamar says that he begged
and begged to stay even offered to pay
for some of the party or for the entire
party and the guy literally picks him up
and throws him out and that's the story
that the Torah that the gar tells Tama
tells us about what it
means yeah please yeah please yes the
part that also really B that whole story
makes me so ill yeah but part that
really bothers me is he said that the
rabbis were sitting very good that is
part of the story I left that out but
that is part of the story
and the gamar says as that story is
unfolding it says the rabbis were
present the rabbis saw what was
happening there were great rabbis
present at that party and they also
don't don't don't say anything they
don't respond I want to share with you
one idea that's found and something that
I never thought about the language of
the gamarra is and you can see it on
your on the source sheet the language of
of the
gamarra is it
says because of the story of kamsa that
yalim was destroyed the marala prag
asked the following
question and now we can turn to page
three the marala prag asked the
following question the maral says why
should we always remember the story and
remember this incident this is the top
of Page Three we'll read a couple lines
from the maral in
his why um why do we remember the story
as a story of kamsa and bar kamsa now
kamsa didn't do anything wrong right bar
kamsa I don't know if he did anything
wrong either but certainly kamsa right
he was he was just this fellow that was
supposed to be invited to the W to the
wedding to the to the Celebration and
the other this other fellow there was a
mixup and bar kamsa made his way in so
why do we mention and that's like the
title We Know kamsa bar kamsa that that
we know that it's the story of kamsa and
bar kamsa what did kamsa do wrong that
that's the question that the maral of
Prague asks look at the uh look at the
maral this K this is page three the
maral one of his great contributions is
his commentary yes which is the one that
came toy the bar barsa came to the party
kamsa was his buddy he wanted kamsa
there the invitation got lost in the
mail and made it to baram's house and um
so that's his question yes not yeah yeah
Kam is not even in the story so this is
what the maral writes and we'll just
read a few lines in the
maral
what this is the maral prag and it's
where the right in the middle of the uh
there two paragraphs is an arrow
V he says you should think about the
following
question and what's his sin in other
words why does every Jew know and we
know this for you know the last 2,000
years the the the destruction of the B
mdash
is that we're going to say because of
it's Kam and bar that the that was
destroyed says the you should know the
following because in general there was
this kind of enmity and people not
liking one another there were
clicks says the they took
friends how did you choose your friends
in that EnV ironment you choose your
friends based on not necessarily who you
liked about but people that were on your
side and people that would take the
other side people that you had your
enemies I'm going to my click is going
to be this this group of people not
necessarily out of friendship but out of
a you know out of a certain position
right that they were on on the same team
as uh as I'm
on and that's why he
befriended that kind of friendship is
not a real friendship that's a
friendship of divisive divisiveness and
the marala prag says the following what
is the word Kam
mean like a
Kaman and he says whenever we have words
like this in a Gad they have meaning as
well not only there are names what's a
kamson anybody know stingy that's right
there was a stinginess a stinginess in
who we chose as friends a stinginess in
terms of our hearts right in terms of
who we wanted to be friend that was the
environment and Kamas to some degree
says the maral must have been guilty as
well of that and that whole friendship
their friendship with one another and
the fact that they didn't bring baruma
into that friendship that really
reflects the kind of the kind of
relationships that we have with one
another and that really is a question
for us today and that's what the gamar
is saying to us right do we are we
choosing our friends or our the
camaraderie that we have only with
people that see you know see the world
the same way that share the same
positions as we right are we able to be
friends with those people that take uh
that take another position that see
things differently so that's the comeon
that you're you're a cson in terms of
the way that you treat one another yes
please question
yep I don't hate them
but yes you know I'm it's a problem no
no it's
not so simple it's not a uh it's not a
excuse me no it's not a simple not a
simple thing it's a a complex issue but
we have to begin with this with this
understanding with this sensitivity with
this approach in terms of trying to
find trying to find a way to make peace
and this now brings us to uh to the end
of our the end of this year in terms of
Ru cook himself did not only teach this
did not only write about this idea but
it was very much a part of his life very
much a part of who he was and I want to
share with you
um just three three examples of uh in
the writings of rook and a story or two
of rook in terms of the aat that he had
the avat Israel that he speaks about in
terms of what it means for a Jew to be
in the land of Israel to return to the
land of Israel to appreciate what it
means to have a nation here in Israel so
this let's go to the bottom of the page
this is Source number three I'll just
read it to you share it to you in the
Hebrew with the translation is actually
from a volume called I have the name of
the sa
herea which is a book which is a
collection really of oliv of cooks the
love that he had for for am Israel and
for his fellow
Jew this comes from you see on the very
bottom of the page R yob lein which is a
son ofin the
famous so he tells the
following Al ruk would carry the Jewish
people the nation of Israel on his heart
in his
heart he felt the
pain
he felt their
pains as if it were were his own
pains his heart was filled
with there was one
incident that his love of the Jewish
people that he noticed he took note of
this overwhelming love that he had
forel my father of my
father he was is very much moved by this
love that he saw that R had for the
nation and he
asked how do you achieve
real he answered the
following just follow the which is
theah to emulate and what does it say it
says it says in the P that we the Jewish
people are the children of ofm he this
is an attribute
of that we are
called
okay if you follow in
the so just as Hashem sees every Jew
as them that I see every Jew that way as
well that just as Hashem acts as a
father to his children so too I should
have the Rahim I should have the mercy
of a father to my children how could one
not love their children and that's how
he answered that's how he answered rarin
to see every Jew as your own child and
the way that you love every child no
matter what that child does and asem
that's a Mida of AEM turning now to the
last the final page this is four on the
top of the page is marea Raya and this
is I think a pretty well-known statement
that R cook makes about the way that we
are to see one another and he speaks
about different terms that are used for
Jews in those years this is the top of
page four in those years they would use
I
think like we use
um we have and I don't know if they use
that word in in the early years I think
they called them K but there were two
words that they used right for the
religious community and the
non-religious community and ruk was not
happy about that was not happy the idea
that there were any labels on Jews and
he
writes he says there are really three
don't talk about two camps there really
three camps of
Isel there is a ancient that we have
it's that the
word that the word if you look at each
letter
and that really stands for
sikim that is the Jewish community that
we are one seore everybody is part of
that
seore but he writes you know what those
terms are they're terms that we are to
think about in terms of our own actions
never to place those labels on anybody
else that's for us to determine are we a
sadik are we benoni are we a Russ God
forbid as the gamar says that even
people are calling you a sadic and say
you're righteous you should see yourself
as not being so righteous that You' you
have a lot to improve
on where should you be putting your
effort think about yourself think about
your your own actions don't be judging
right everybody else we're very good at
judging every other community and every
other person but think about your own
actions make
that and you should look at your M look
at your what's missing in your life
right your mistakes right that which is
that can be
improved but always with a good eye to
see
others and here classic of cook and
really classic
and that is there may be hidden things
you don't necessarily see it but in
every single person that there's there
there's hidden righteousness and
potential so when you look at others see
the potential in others when it comes to
yourself so that's where you should be
doing
your and those terms terms we should not
be using any terms yes you have aore but
those are that's
aad but that's just about yourself right
just a way to evaluate yourself am I in
the sadic camp I'm the B Camp Maybe I
need to improve and not be in the Russia
Camp one more one more uh line or two
from of cook and I'll end with the
following
story this is from aota kodesh we go to
the very bottom of the page and this is
from one of the great works of uh of R
cook which was compiled by the Nazir of
daken it's a very very large work of all
the philosophy of R cook and here R cook
also speaks about I think this speaks to
the idea of what it means for the Jewish
people to return to the land of Israel
and why
there's a
greater here that we find in the land of
Israel a person must should free
himself from personal concerns and
preoccupations we should be thinking
less as R cook about ourselves right
think less about all of our problems all
the issues that we're
having and
rather that fill all of our being
right we begin to think more about and
put more emphasis on our own lives
what's right about our lives what's
missing in our
lives all the issues that we're facing
but he says try not to think so much
about that kind of move away from from
all the personal preoccupations and
personal
concerns then you go into really like a
small small way of thinking about life
and about
yourself and if you're going to be
thinking about yourself and the focus is
more on your personal self that becomes
kind of selfish and uh it
actually actually brings about a certain
kind of uhur right it it I don't know it
becomes like painful as you're thinking
about all of the all the different pains
and all the things that we're each of us
are facing says than think less about
that that all of your thoughts and all
of your
desire you should be thinking more about
the sake of the nation and
the to embrace all the where you can
make your contribution to
others what can you bring to the world
around you that's what we should be
thinking more about to
others theum to all of the entire
universe right to be focusing more on
what can I do for others what can I add
what can I bring to somebody else how
can I help how can I be a help to
others and through
this it's low no
sorry yes like B it'll be established
for that
person
then you will establish your own
personal life you'll create your own
personal uh your personal path in the
most positive way and I think that's
part of what Ru cook has in mind when he
speaks about aat Israel that's here in
the land of Israel then we come to the
land of Israel we are more concerned we
tend to be more concerned with the
nation that we're tied into to what's
happening to the nation of Israel to Ben
Israel to am Israel in uh in in the
bigger sense of the the bigger sense of
the word so R cook says yes we should
try to focus as much as we can on on
others let me conclude with uh with the
following
story this is a there's a book I'll just
I'll just share it there's a rabbi here
in Israel Kanan Kanan Morrison who's
written a lot on R cook this is a these
are stories of R cook stories from the
land of Israel very beautiful collection
of stories and he has the following the
following story of Riv cook I think it
was the year
1919 when Riv cook had what was called
the masach Chua that he took a group of
rabbis and he spent a number of weeks on
the road as he was visiting the new
kibuts the new settlements in the north
specifically in the North of Israel and
he wanted to connect with that community
that in itself is already a KES if you
think about what it means for a great
Rabbi for a chief Rabbi to leave his
world at the base medish and to go
literally to go on the road and spend
time and and we know many of the stories
where he spent time in places that were
not Sher shabas where it was not easy
for him and for the group of rabbis that
was there but to meet the people where
they were and to show and to extend to
them the love and appreciation the
admiration that he had for them so a
story is told there was a night in a uh
in a kibuts called pora I don't know if
it still exists today says near Taria
and he was there in aot chabas he spent
chabas in one kibuts he made his way to
that kibuts to spend time again these
were the the early Pioneers that were
coming to khim as they were working the
land of Israel they were coming back to
the land of Israel many of them were not
religious and he came and they were what
they would often do they didn't have uh
they didn't they didn't have internet
and their iPhones in those days so at M
shabas they would all get together they
would sing together they would tell
stories together did people ever do that
people did that right you can do that
yeah that something like that you can do
today so that's what they did so he came
there were a group of people they were
together the the workers theim
and uh he joined them he joined them in
their singing in telling stories and at
one point he asked two of the these
fellows that were there to kind of come
with him over to the side and he brought
them to the side and he said if you
don't mind could you can we change
clothing with one another I'd like to
put on your they were AIA AIA like the
like the Arab dress like the Arab
headgear that they would wear these the
early settlers and they had rifles as
well so of cook put on this Kia is that
how you pronounce it Kia and and and he
and he puts the uh and he puts the rifle
around him and he comes back into the
circle and he's now dancing now he's
dressed as great Rabbi this this Rabbi
who wor wore a strial right he's now
dressed with his Arab gear on his head
and with a rifle on his back and he's
dancing and he's singing and he
introduces one of his
songsu that we should purify our hearts
to serve Hashem and at that moment he
turns to the group and he says you see
that I'm not any different than you are
right that you are you're wearing this
dress but it's a dress that I wear as
well in terms of you're bringing
security and and how much you care for
Amel right we are really we're really
the same we're really not that different
from one another and he said to them
that just as you are shrim and that's
who he took these these guards that he
took the the rifle and and theia from
these guards he says that I'd like you
also to guard not only am Israel but if
you could guard the Nish the soul that
you have inside of you as well that you
also have a great legacy that you come
from Ab Y and yov and I want you to
guard that as well so this is R cook who
who extends his love who sees the who
sees the best in one another I just I
don't know think about like rabbis today
for you know rabbis out of mayaram or
wherever may be Ben and to to change
clothing with a with a secular Jew
that's what R that's what R cook did
that evening and this was uh this was
the this was the beauty of of his
teaching the beauty of his life and what
he believed to be one of the great
things that will happen to Amel as we
return to the land of Israel a greater
sense of avat Israel a greater sense of
love and
concern of really feeling the Oneness
the bond with uh with every Jew we
should be Z we should be Z to feel that
not only in war time we should feel that
every every single day a great love and
a great concern empathy and
connectedness to one another wish
everyone a uh a good day and a good week
if anybody has any other comments or
questions what
good yes yes and a happy Tu bishvat to
everybody enjoy
tuat