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Karev Yom ( Vayehi Bechatzi Halayla) | Rabbi Dr. Aaron Adler
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and the um theim
in from that we're going to read on the
first day of
PES attacked all the firstborns
in from the top to bottom of the social
ladder whether it was the king on top
whether it was a prisoner and the the
firstborns of animals I said it was a
coalition of forces of who would be hit
in what's significant here is this
display on precisely at
midnight the um the
term becomes the name of the poem that
we're going to do and this poem which
entered into the hagada was
originally used as the um one of the
poems to be recited on Shabbat
In what's called the yotsro yro here in
Israel we don't have a clue what it is
but we remember that a certain special
shabat there were extra poetry
integrated into
the both from and sometimes from musaf
specifically in
zahesh had yots wrote for shakar and had
yots wrote extra air on poems in the
khazarat for musf there's also poet
for for certain they're called and and
and here in we say none of it and that's
because of the objections of the vagin
to all kinds of interruptions in the or
in the dvenings of the official that
were established by
the
says whoever alters from the specific
coined phrases of toe is an error and
perhaps even has to repeat and so on. So
the students arrive here in Israel about
init 250 years ago and they bring to a
world of Ashkanazi vacuum. We did not
have Ashkanazi custom init until the
arrival of the students of the vilgoyin
and they were the pushim where here in
this neighborhood you have the uh the
besset of the name of the vagoyin and so
on. They were here the
pushim zonenfeld of one of the big names
and so on and already the days of the
students of the vaggoyan who arrived in
Erit Israel the author of the
shulhanim they eliminated many things
that were done in ashkanaz because of
the objections of the vilgoy so it's
interesting the vnagoy didn't have what
did not have what to say in vna he was
not the town rabbi nor was he a rashiva
he was a private person in an apartment
in a house where some students came to
his house to study Torah. He did not
impact on VNA at all. VNA still
maintained classical Ashkanazi custom.
But the customs of the VNO make it here
in Erit Israel because of the students
of the VNOY who arrive on the scene in
not with no competition against other
Ashkanazi custom. And uh and and that's
why it happens here. That's why there's
some in the neighborhoods of who don't
even say Shabbat before because of this
same reason. And there are many here in
Israel who for Tal and Gishm do not do
the standard integration of the poetry
of Tal and Gishm in the but rather they
do the poetry beforeray for the same
exact reason that the Vgoyan felt that
this was a type of ak. So
this was just part of a poem that was a
very long- winded poem that had to do
with and uh it was then cut and pasted
out of the mur out of the sid rather of
the ding of and grafted upon the hagada
and it's said at the tail end of the
hagada with another poem that was said
in the hagada as
Well, in we used to say it on the second
night. Remember there was a thing called
the second seder. I you can see it in
the Jewish museum. They talk about it.
So it's you know an archival thing. Um
so here in Israel because we have one so
we say both poems at
the
and just a word about the authorship for
many many years we did not know who
actually authored
the although we did know who authored
the second
poem and that was
Alazakh from 7th century Erit Israel was
most famous poet of Erit Israel at the
time He authored the talent gash that we
say in our forus and for
pes is on pes is on and many other poems
that are found in this that are found in
the keynote
of so we do know that is the author
of but what he did was he simply
borrowed a style from an earlier poet
init Israel in the late fifth and early
sixth century. His name was Yani. Yani.
He's known. He's a known poet except
that for many, many years, for
generations even, we never knew that
Yanai was the author of the until the
Chairoa. The Chairo unveiled a version
of the poem that that gave away the
secret that the poet was uh indeed
Yanai. And not only that, but in the
version of the chairoganiza of there's a
line that does not fe fit or or fit in
to the uh the version that we have in
the hagada. And I'll point it out. So
let let's get to this is a a long poem
and uh what basically it says in a word
is that not only
did the smiting of the firstborn take
place at midnight but so many other
things took place at nighttime and the
tradition was they also happened at
midnight. So let's just to to to get the
hakic idea of midnight correct. We're
not talking about 12:00 on our on our
midnight on our clocks. We're talking
about the halik midnight. What is hak
midnight? And that is to take the um
beginning of the night and then take the
beginning of the daytime and split it in
half. So let's do the other way around.
When does the mo the day begin
hakically? So according to everyone by
sunrise it's daytime. The question is
does the daytime begin a little bit
before sunrise and there's a concept
called hashar which in itself is a
debated how many minutes before sunrise
the classic accepted time is 72 minutes
before some have a 90 minute view of
ammur shahar before uh sunrise but 72
minutes is the accepted but for all
practical purposes if we have a mitzvah
of the daytime for example putting a
mitzvah like like Lulu and Rogue has to
be taken in the daytime. Shaifer has to
be blown in the daytime. So, we're going
to make sure that we're after sunrise to
be on the safe side. That's for sure.
Now, what about the end of the day? So,
according to the idea of sunrise, the
flip side would be sunset. And then if
you take sunrise and sunset and split it
in the middle, that's going to be the
the midday for various purposes. If you
do the same for the nighttime from
sunset to sunrise and split it in the
middle, you're going to get midnight.
That's going to be Now, in case you
haven't heard, tomorrow night we're
moving to summertime. In America, we
called it daylight saves time. Here we
call it shayets, which means that
midnight on seder night will be
approximately 12:40 on our clock.
Approximately 20 to one. And that
becomes important because of the
consideration that we shall have eaten
the matzah of afikiman by midnight. Now
if a person does not had not eaten a by
20 to 1 in the morning you could still
eat it because there's a big mlo as to
when the t final time of eating the
corbes was. So according to one opinion
the you can only eat the corbes until
midnight. And according to Rabbi you
could eat the pes the entire night and
that impacts on the impacts on the so if
you hold
like that the the pess can be eaten only
till midnight then we ought to eat the
until midnight. Most of us get it get
there without any problems. But some
people they say that just drags out and
they're looking at the clock and they're
and they're gonna maybe miss midnight
for for the but going to where you could
have eaten the pesak the entire night
you could eat the entire night and
that's why if a person didn't eat but
till midnight you eat it that's al
another piece of matzah at least going
to you know you're still within the
bounds but nevertheless according to
there's the linkage of the eating of the
pesak with the moment of makurot because
the moment of makurot was really the
moment
of that was the time that parro said get
out get out I mean we were taught in
yeshiva that he he ran with his pajamas
to find raenu and and and get out so
that was the moment the moment of
redemption and then what kazal did was
they gathered up other sources of great
uh you know, redemptions and help and
and so on that bailed us out of all
kinds of big problems in the middle of
at night. But when was the middle of
night? It happened at midnight. So the
the midnight becomes the the basis for
events prior
to and post.
This was the great moment of delivery by
he and to go through the poem you have
to you have somebody who's knowledgeable
in to know all the stories that are
being alluded to poetically. So first
you have to figure out poetically who
we're talking about and then recall the
stories as well. Okay. So we were lucky
we have a daughter who's a he knows by
heart. So she was able to supply the
information at the save the table for
all the u stories. So let let's get
going here.
Right. The poem was written in the se in
the late six late fifth or early sixth
century by this poet called Janai. Yud
nun alfud
yani or yud nun sometime write it
without the olive but yana. Fine. I
don't know how somebody named somebody
Yani. My gosh. Ian was a king in the
second day of mikdash and he wasn't all
that good. I mean he drove out the
Shiman Machetak his brother-in-law who
was the head of the Sanhedrin to Egypt
and the whole Sanhedrin was exiled to
Egypt and so on and I couldn't
understand how the city of honored
Yanamel with a street near
Schlomiona but then when I saw that it's
a very short and crooked street I
realized it was appropriate you know
schlom she got an autora she got a main
street she was terrific kazal really
loved her and and valued her and so on
Uh but Jana Mamelik was for the bits and
and he got a little stall little siman
you know goes around little crooked
street perfect for Yana but here they
gave somebody Yana when the Ethiopians
came on aliyah so Jewish a just handed
out biblical names to them without
considering what their former names that
changed with time and they tried to
heasize the names that they actually had
but I had a student in my class 1981 his
name was uh I mean my gosh to give
somebody a name like I yeah Oh yeah,
there's there are people in Israel who
have the name Nimrod. Oh my god. Okay.
Ishmael is such a bad name. There
was I mean that's not a terrible name by
the
way at the end of his life. You know you
can you can carry the name. All right.
So what I printed here not only with the
poem but also in brackets this was not
part of the poem this is already an
insertion who are we talking about. So
just scroll down Abraham Aime Lavan
Yakov Makatarot Cisra
Sanval I'm reading just the brackets as
I'm scrolling down with my eye
bel and again Hammond. Yeah, we get to
get him
twice redemption and so the idea of of
putting
in after each paragraph I don't think
the poet did that I think it was just at
the beginning at the end and it was
thrown in maybe for song purposes to
break it up into uh stanzas and the
reason why I say that is because some of
the stanzas are runons uh the end of one
stanza is h the beginning of the next
stanza is h I I I don't think the poet
would have done something like that so
these aren't individual stanzas so let's
see it from the top
roima most of the miracles most of the
miracles these wonders they happened at
night so not all miracles happened at
night were miracles that happened in the
daytime but the following are great
miracles that happened at
night ashore zala Let's translate this.
Many people who study Mishna, and I'll
ask you a question. I'd love to ask
adults the question, what was the first
Mishna you ever studied in your
lifetime? So many people scratch their
heads, especially if they're over 40.
And they uh and they
say, you know, whatever. I and then I
remind them the first Mishna you was
probably two years old. It's
manana except that the ganet never told
you that it was a Mishna. She may not
have even known it was a Mishna. But
that's usually the first Mishna that
people have studied. But it's it's a
Mishna. It's in the e 10th the last
parrot the eth chapter
of so um so but but in school many times
we begin with the beginning of which is
beginning
of from when from what time do we start
reading at nighttime and Mishna
continues
[Music]
um something
[Music]
about
when come back come home at night. It's
it's it's convoluted and and that's a
try to understand what what the what the
meaning is and the meaning is it's at
night time after the appearance of the
stars from time of and then the the the
the question is until what time can you
read the at night time? So there are
actually three opinions. Two opinions
was expanded into three. And the first
is what's an ashor means a section of
the night. So there were two opinions
whether the night was divided into three
sections in the days of beta mikdash or
whether divided into four sections in
the days of beta mikdash. The Mishna
that
says is referring to the view that the
night was divided into three sections
and it meant a third of the night.
That's not our opinion because the
second opinion is until midnight and the
third opinion
is which is really the opinion of the
ultimately but they said you shouldn't
drag this out till the 3 in the morning
because you're going to forget. So you
should make sure you read of the night
time until midnight. The opinion that
says that the asharot were four. So it
means the middle of the night was the
end of the second ashra and the third
ash. The third section began exactly at
midnight. And that's what the poem here
is taking into
consideration
ash the beginning of the section of the
middle of the night. So it's just a
reference to
Who is the first G
in was
Abrau? Clearly Abrau until Abrau. We
were Ben Noah. We were all children of
Noah. Abramavu becomes the first convert
essentially. And um and there's a lot to
say about that. Maybe before we'll talk
about it, but um where was Ged? Where
was he victorious? As the night was
divided again as the night was divided
equally which means something happened
to Abrainu at
midnight. So let's go to the source page
and it's source number two
from It was the war of the four kings
against the five kings where Abrainu
actually didn't want to meddle in
international business except that his
nephew Lot fell into captivity and
Abraham puts together a militia to
rescue his nephew Lot. And it
says that his basically means his nephew
here. He got together uh his students.
His you think this is a group here? He
had and he got together his students.
How many?
318. 318. He had a militia.
done. Um, some there's a that says that
the word
vayar
is the gimatria is the numerical
equivalent of
318. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Eleazar. Eleazar is the gimatria is the
numerical equivalent of 318. And
Abramovino just went with his sidekick
with Eleazar and and they did it. There
wasn't the whole militia. So the the
question is so why did the Torah just
tell that to us? So this I'm going to
tell you now is just a joke. Okay. Is
that Ramafino actually went with one
soldier except for MR to he put down 318
names to get the financing. Okay.
Unfortunately unfortunately
unfortunately there's some truth behind
this little joke here. Yeah. So Aramino
drafts a militia
van. Dan is in the north of the
country. Here's the point. The night was
divided. He and his
servants. They're going into Syria.
They're going into Syria to rescue Lo.
But anyway, the Kazal say that this
division of the nighttime, the split was
exactly at at midnight and aosh
obviously was there to help
Abrahamu be victorious in this
particular battle. So that's the first
thing that happened at
midnight. Next
[Music]
stanza. All right. So this is now going
to bring us to source number
five when takes
S
right and S come down to M come
down
to and takes
Sah. What happened was gets a dream in
the middle of the night and a kadu tells
him don't touch the woman and so freezes
and and he comes back to you know why
didn't you tell me I meanu was panicked
just like it happened when he went down
to Egypt as well the same thing that he
says that she is my sister and so on so
when did this dream happen so we'll see
a tradition that this dream that aime
has and he gets a word from god to not
to
touch. This happens at midnight as well.
So this is the second
[Music]
stanza. So is actually in the area
of Aza. Exactly. The area of
Aza who's
the so
too when leaves in haste after 20 years
and he packs up and he flees the house
of Lavan back to its Kenan. So Loven
tries to follow him and basically
perhaps even to kill him. And also in
the middle of the night, Loven gets a a
dream from God and he says also to lay
off and not to touch Jacobu. So
frightens when in the middle of the
night. This happens
also the battle in between Yakov and the
representative of Asov the Malik the
angelica figure. And that happens at
night. And there uh he receives a
blessing from this malik that that uh
that that he overcame he vanquished
elim and that's why he gets the name
Israel for the first time. He later gets
the name Israel from directly but the
first time Jacob is named Israel is is
right
here and he is able to vanquish and
overcome him. That happened at night
time. So go back to the source page to
source number three. This is the medish
rabbish
on and it
reads going back to and it
says his creator divided the night means
God divided the
night. Your forefather that is Abraham
served me worked on my behalf at
midnight. So too I God will function to
save his that is Abraham's children
grandchildren great grandchildren in
Egypt at
midnight. Where will this take place?
in Egypt as it
says knows the precedent that said did
what he did at midnight kicks in this
whole and it's source number four with
regard to the medisha
in so the medish then goes to say this
is the implication of what's said about
the night
of leimashem
All the miracles that
performed and God took care of the evil
people at night time. So they all
happened at
midnight. It happened at night
time. We just talked about and then it
says
and this already
at and this was again
by the med says all of them there just
so many as we would say etc etc etc and
here the yani gives us the etc etc etc.
Right? He's spelling it out. So, let's
get back to the poem. The third
stanza, who is the nation of Patros. So,
here I'm going to look at the source
page and on on source number uh nine,
it's where in parat Noah you have the
genealogy of Mitraim. It says of Mitzim,
Mr.
There was a man by the name of Mitim,
one of the grandchildren of Noah
Yaladim.
So is a gene from from the uh offspring
of Mitzim. So sometimes poetically in
Mitzim is called Patros. And and just
look at the line right before from Hosa
perutbet. You get the phrase that Jana
uses to refer to the naming of Yakov as
Israel that he overcame the
Malik. So you have this phrase that that
he lifted out of this and you see it in
the last end of the second paragraph
where it
says and now we're in the next
paragraph.
The firstborns of the Egyptians you
smash when
exactly there are different explanations
to what this
means. Some say the word the word we use
it today in terms of uh soldiers or
defenders. In Tanakh it actually refers
to the wall around a city which was the
mode of protection and it's not an
accident that the
word or which means
warriors comes from that too because
they're they're walking walls. The wall
is to protect around the city and the
country has protectors who move around
and they are theim. So when we
say it means will protect the pro the
defenders or or where it says shalom it
means that the protection of Israel
should be blessed and it's a spin-off it
has to do with soldiers too but the
simple understanding of the
word is wall in this particular case it
must it could mean the booty
that am took from the Egyptians before
they even left. You know, the Torah says
that that was asked to go to the
neighbors and quote unquote borrow
borrow some jewelry and borrow some
this. And the Egyptians were very
gracious, you know, but they're leaving
for three days. That's what they were
told. They're leaving for three days.
And uh and the the the moral
justification for this was it was 210
years worth of back salary, back pay.
That's what it was. we we deserved to be
paid for it and we weren't paid for our
labor and and therefore I mean to a
certain degree I know there was a very
big national outcry here in Israel in
1951 when the German West German
government offered reparations to
Holocaust survivors so there were those
who said okay we'll take it and they
will say others say no you can't pay
back for what happened okay there were
different things you know was very
against it but Bengurian was in favor of
it and because he felt it would help the
economy of the country which was
struggling in its first days and that
time connau from the prime minister of
Germany. So he offered it as a something
you know as we say in Yiddesh epis you
know something something you know
whatever and and and the rale of people
who took it understood said listen this
is not to return you know people who
were murdered that will never there's no
forgiveness on that but there was also
DNA mut there was also monetary
considerations they stole our property
they stole our belongings and everything
they made us work in the camps so we
deserve you know back pay for for all
that work so why shouldn't we take it
okay but I'm not here to be judgmental
one way or Another I'm just pointing out
that it was a a national outcry. The
country rocked in 1951 over this issue.
Today it's it's a mood issue. Nobody
talks about it anymore. But uh the idea
that we had a moral justification of
taking this this as payment for that
which we were you see that according to
the Torah that that was perfectly
legitimate. So it could be a reference
to
that. When the Egyptians woke up in the
middle of the night when when when Egypt
was rocking because of Makarot and
everybody was screaming they found their
drawers were empty. Why were they empty?
Because they unloaded it to the Jew to
the Ben Israel and and then you know
they were yelling oh you know gamlan
ganov you know and so on. So that's one
understanding. There's also an
understanding that uh they they were
when when they went out as as an army as
a the the
sus chariot and and and rider the army
of the of of the of the Egyptians they
were actually in Yiddish we say fat they
were all mi mixed up they they they just
lost it in in English we would say and
if you take a look at source number 10
by the Egyptians were running after
Israel
And as the morning
came, somehow the the there was a a
pillar of fire that blinded the
Egyptians and they were completely
disoriented. Means they were disoriented
completely. The chariot wheels broke and
they were shleing. They were beating the
horses to move.
Anyway,
said it's a lost cause. God's on their
side. God's on their side and so on. So,
this could be the reference that Yana
has and they got up at night, they
couldn't find their way. They were lost.
They were completely lost. That's
another understanding. And then it says,
We've jumped now in history to the story
of D'vor. This is the book of but before
that happens there's a possible line
instead
of I'm going to read now from a line
that you don't have but this was a of
the found in the
chairoinesa and it read instead
of it readil
[Music]
the story of Gon and the Midyanim.
Another story in
Sepherim where um there was an episode
that happened at night time that was the
camp of the
Midyanim caused the bread stock or the
food stock to start vibrating and
apparently it like it sounded off like
an alarm and they didn't know what's
happen maybe caused an earthquake
something started moving moving I mean
people have been in earthquakes at home
so sometimes you have, you know, pots
and all kinds of uh kitchen uh utensils
hanging nicely very and all of a sudden
if there's an earthquake, they start
banging, right? And uh and you start
hearing ding-dongs um and and it's very
scary. So this happened and they were
frightened. The Midianim were frightened
and ultimately ultimately that fright
caused their downfall. Fright is is is
is contagious on the battlefield. The
Torah knows that and that's why it
says if somebody is panicstricken send
them home. We don't need him on the
battlefield. We don't need him on the
battlefield. I remember uh u when we had
the Gulf War and u Rabbi Brahm Shapiro
Zatal who was the chief rabbi of Israel
at the time u I was invited by the
Israel radio to get on the on on on live
Fridays to to give over the the the
latest updated information of how to
keep Shabbat with the Gulf War going and
was interesting it took about six weeks
for the Rabanut to get it right because
they were making changes they were
refining and updating meeting each time
and I remember sitting with Raf Shapiro
um you know trying to give him in my
language what I was getting from the
authorities from the Pikur I don't think
we had Pikura or then I think they
created it afterwards but whatever the
army was giving information and he was
then translating it halakically of how
we should uh give it over to the people
uh but what
turn sirens what to do and with the
sealed rooms and whether you allowed to
have plastic and and seal build the room
on the bottom there all kinds of
questions of course with the radio
that's when they started the gala shaket
right it was so quiet that people didn't
hear it you know that's a it was the the
the the u the the problem of uh of uh of
of dealing with this uh in middle of the
night so um what's that say right so so
Rash Shapiro told me to emphasize to
emphasize that there's one mitzvah in
the whole concept of muhammed mitzvah
you're not allowed to be afraid Remember
me telling me this emphasize this you're
not allowed to be afraid to be afraid is
an a and if you're afraid it's going to
make the next person and if it's in the
household you know the parents are going
to make the kids scared and and and the
parents have an obligation to calm the
children down he explained he says more
important than this this the tape by the
windows and by the door he felt you know
you should talk about this and how
important it is that we have to you know
be be calm and collect as much as
humanly possible but this was an event
that took place at night as well. Why it
got shafted in some of the Nusk I don't
have a clue but the next line that we
have takes us to D'vorah and that was
the war against uh Cisra. So we have um
the shirat in paragal in you have the
shirat now we read it
on we read it
on we have so we read we read it
actually and
the good they just read the sh the
ashkanaz have two twice as long as ara
because they read the pros also the pros
is the story and then the shira
poetically reviews the story if you
remember a few weeks ago it was a very
very long because you have to read the
whole that includes the if you look
at it
said not it
says here the
start she starts okay so so in that
story if you look at source number 11 it
says at Kribo Shame Barzel. He had armed
armed chariots. I mean, this is like a
tank. He's got he's got the his chariots
were armed with were coated with with
armor
900. Okay, so let's look what the poet
does with this. And he says,
go on to say that organized
the as almost an astrolog astrological
point to work in our favor. I mean it
basically meant a kadoshu was moving the
stars to work in our favor. Um the word
tissa very close to my heart. The uh
right it means flight. In this case it
means he he was in flight. He was moving
quickly very very quickly. The the nagid
karoset nag karoshet here is the the
leader of that group at
koshetim from the puk in source number
11. And it's a reference to Cisra and um
he on his track on his track was
battered at midnight as well. So that's
another episode. And then the next
paragraph this is already the time of
and it's about 110 years before
the destruction of the first bet mdash.
It was at the time that the 10 tribes
were driven out of Erit Israel in the
north and what was left was just the
center of the country what was called
the Maka of Yehuda. It had the two
tribes of Udan and those kohanim who
levim from Levy who were there. But the
10 tribes were driven east and Sanv the
king of Ashure
um was surrounding you and threatening
to destroy beta mikdash and was cursing
out.
So it says
here is from expression of of cursing
no is a nickname of beta mdash here. He
was
like
no means in Yiddish we
say just just get rid of him. He really
he was he wanted to get rid of mdash but
a kadosh who had different plans.
There was a nighttime that the entire
troops of were just dead were just dead.
They were found dead. They all had a
heart attack and and the just put them
away miraculously at night time and
talks about this. So that was another
thing that happened at midnight
according
to this has to do with the downfall of
Bavl the Babylonians uh who also were uh
were I think I have a puk here the
second
page right
right right source 15 karab fail
corase here
what is doing he's forecasting the
collapse of the Babylonian Empire and
that happens at night as
well who's the
ishamot all my grandchildren Right.
It's like uh somebody asked they saw
somebody a grandmother wheeling a
grandson on the raovi in K Moshe and
somebody said who was the elo said he's
the
elu
right is Danielle Danielle and Danielle
is a story in itself the most of the
book is written in Aramaic so it's a
little bit of a a hard study you have to
have translation for the Aramaic but uh
what happens at the beginning of the
Danielle is found in
Bavl and um he somehow another he and
Misha Aar they find themselves in the
court of
uhar as adviserss
and actually is very interested to hear
from his adviserss about a particular
disturbing dream that he has. Uh it was
a dream that he wanted to see who really
knew his business because he didn't even
reveal what the dream was unlike parro
in paratik where parro has a dream very
disturbing set of dreams and he tells
his he tells his adviserss what the
dream was but nobody gives satic answer
until Yoseph comes along and gives an
answer
um either he didn't remember the dream
or he remembered the dream but was
testing his advisor to see who's really
could who can tell me what the dream was
and the only one who really was able to
do it was Danielle and Danielle is
really promoted to a very high position
which ultimately almost leads to his
downfall because the other sim the other
ministers were very jealous of him and
one suggested that um that they make a a
a law uh and I'm sorry this is already
notar this is already Daraveesh this is
not thear it's already the Persian It's
already the Persian era of uh and and it
was
Darius who who is uh convinced by some
of his uh workers that maybe for a
month's time anybody who prays to any
god should face the king the direction
of the king. Okay, they knew that
Danielle prays to God facing you and
they're gonna catch him in the act is
exactly what happens. And the and the
what happened was the rule was if
anybody's caught not facing the king in
his prayer is going to be thrown to the
gayo to the lion's den. Um and just like
we remember from the story of
Milair Persia had an interesting
law if if if the if the the ruling you
know was official you couldn't retrieve
it you couldn't repeal the law and had
to deal with that you couldn't repeal
the law so all right so came came around
and he said all right you make another
law that you guys can fight you Jews can
fight back but we cannot undo the law
that Hmon set in so
Danielle was was caught in a trap here
and and the king was was was caught. He
realized what did they do to me? I can't
repeal the law. And and and and of
course they caught Denil in the act and
they throw him in the gvarot and
miraculously he's saved and and and they
pull him out and the king orders all
those other sim to be thrown into the
the lion's den. And the lions actually
had a very good lunch that day. No
doubt. Uh and and the king was extremely
grateful obviously that that Danielle
was saved. So this has to do with the
fact that number
one to
Daniela he it was revealed to him the
secret of the dream that the king had at
night. And then it goes on to another
story.
Kodeshala. This was Belhatsar. Belchasar
is the son of Nvadar. This is a little
bit out of historic order now. Um where
the um the son of Nuhanets, the end of
the Babylonian era, literally the end.
He gets drunk using the vessels from
beta mikdash that his father
bel that that had brought down from your
and somehow he is murdered because
there's a message that's scribbled on
the wall at this party that the
Babylonian era is over and indeed
Belshhatar is murdered that night and
the next line brings us back to Daniel
nosha he was rescued He bore arayot from
the pit of the
lionsa. The one who means actually a
prayer. The one who who who revealed all
the
interpretations through his at night
time. Okay. So now we're at who is the
aagi? Ham ham ai. the hatred that was
propagated by
Hamarim and he wrote the laws those are
the books that were put together at
nighttime right because uh this is when
Hmon
visited at night and and he had this
great plan of what he's going to do with
Israel and then the next pul is also
referring to this purm story but with
the twist on the purm story where does
turn around. Where exactly in the migill
does the to story turn around for
Amish's favor? It's the beginning of the
sixth
chapter. Right? So many bal would read
the word in
the
hamelah on that night. Now you know
there's a four-way mlo how much of the
migillah do you have to read on purum to
fulfill the mitzvah. So of course we
adopted the maximum strategy that is
from the
beginning. Second opinion was from
um the appearance of mori if we just
started from there and you read
throughout the you fulfilled the
obligation. The third opinion is the
beginning of chapter three when Hmon
arrives on the
scene. Okay. When Hmon arrives on the
scene. The fourth opinion is when
arrives on the
scene.
When couldn't sleep well that night. And
um okay. So the med says who couldn't
sleep well that night? Mal shalom.
Kadoshu wasn't sleeping well that night.
when is in that kind of imminent
danger as if to say awakens awakens and
that's
why was jolted into and say that is it's
a reference
to so here this
was you awaken the your victory you
your victory when when you self jolted
from the middle of the
night. This is now a reference to the D
again. It's shifting. He's shifting back
and forth historically. But if you look
at um source number 18, Pura
Diadi, this is Shayahu forecasting the
downfall of the Babylonian Empire. So
again, we know there's 70 years of
exile, but when does the clock start
ticking? So there were actually two
messages of 70 years in ya in chapter 25
and chapter 29 because the clock started
ticking twice in different times
frameworks. The first time was when Bavl
took over Israel 18 years before the
destruction. Babylonians were here
already and 70 years start ticking. And
when does that end? When the Persians
take over, there's still no beta mikdash
yet, but the Persians took over. There's
another 70 years from the destruction of
the first beta mikdash to the beginning
of the building of the second beta
mikdash. So there's an overlap. It's not
70 and 70. There's an overlap of 18
years on each side. First is 70, but
then 18 years after the se first 70
begin the next clock of 70. And there
was a third clock in between there of
where Akashes thought was the 70 and
that was from Galuta 11 years before the
destruction of the uh first beta
mikdash. So this is a a a prophecy of
the downfall of of not only Bavl but
Yesha was talking about Edom and who is
edom classically by Kazal Rome. This is
our exile
adro to means to stamp to trample on the
grapes. When they would squeeze wine,
make wine they would stamp, you know,
step on the grapes. We the is going to
step on
them. They will be screaming. The enemy
will be screaming as their nighttime
will come. And all this moves into the
last paragraph
of a
loyal. This is a takeoff from
Zakaria source number 20. The go the
last war before the coming of Msiah.
That's where the we say three times a
day. What does it say there in
[Music]
It's going to be
illuminated as the night begins. This is
going to be very important. Look what he
says in the
poem. It's not day, not night. Even
though on the clock it's already the
beginning of night.
has been watching over the city of day
and
night. Illuminate. This is a prayer, a
petition,
illuminate. We say
illuminate the darkness of the night. It
should be bright. It should be bright
because Zakaria is saying there's going
to be a brightness in the air as the end
of the night. The end of the night means
the end of the galut. The galut is going
to be illuminated. And here comes a very
important. We know that the saying of
hal is only to be said in the daytime.
So in the second chapter
of it's a whole string of things that we
only fulfill in the daytime and one of
them is halal. The only exception that
we have is sedar night. Seder knight
carries hal in the sedar and according
to many many customs and now it's across
the board here in Israel during during
of the night of the night we also
include it's there's no precedent for
this so people say okay every rule has
an
exceptional every rule has exception and
our said this is not an exception but
the hal that we say at night of say the
night is because It is the morning
daytime. There is brightness there. And
this is the the feeling that even though
we might still be in
Galora, when do we get to say hal in the
s night after we've eaten the then we
get to the halal which is at midnight.
And to us while astronomically it might
be dark outside that's a figment of our
imagination it is bright light outside
and that's why we were able to say hal
on the night of the sedar and this is
the story
of what's interesting is the rabbi who
was a naturalist and felt that barba
could have been Messiah he believed that
The is actually going to come about by
natural causes by natural events. Those
who studied yesterday
on the Gmorra brought the
from its time I will hasten seems to be
a little bit of an oxymoron. If it's in
its time it's not hastened. If it's
hastened it's not in its time. So
[Music]
says is worthy it's gonna happen
instantaneously. If not it's going to
happen anyway in its proper time brings
another from that it's from it's that
it's will be through as the prag says
the from the material worlds can happen
naturally is proponent that the galut is
going to carry out throughout the whole
night time and when is the moment of
gula in the
morning but aaria said no there's going
to be divine intervention in the middle
of the night by
hea and that's
where attached the the idea of
makar put the moment of and that's why
the pesak according
to can only be till midnight and if you
remember the story of the seder in bene
they were sitting who was there among
others rabaka and raziah with
rabishuar And they were sitting the
whole night. Why were they sitting all
night? Because Raaka was the mar the
bene. And therefore they followed his
opinion that the seder continues until
the morning. But what did Rablazam and
Aaria do when the clock struck 12 midic
midnight? He didn't get up. He says, you
know, I'm done because I believe the
sader is finished. There's no more. And
the mitzvah of storytelling
of is linked to the mitzvah of eating
the
but he didn't walk out but he made a
commentar most of you in the won't have
that word it's in the Rom's version of
the said at
this to the
others almost 70 years
He was talking about the mitzvah of
every night, the third chapter of so
what is he bringing this in? He's trying
to teach us that I believe that even
though there's no mitzvah of the unique
mitzvah of the storytelling
of after midnight but I believe that
there's a mitzvah
remembering every night of the year. So
normally we fulfill it in about 30
seconds by saying that at the end
of but there's no on this I can go five
hours on
the so what I'm remaining now at
the is carrying on now the other mitzvah
the regular routine mitzvah
of but according to it's the very unique
mitzvah of talking about that's linked
to the eating of the pes God willing we
will have the
opportunity and we'll have the Sanhedrin
to tell us if we can eat the pes until
midnight or go the
distance to all of