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It is an impossibility
for a year to experience the Vegas
without a course outside of Torah and
mitzvahs. That's an impossibility.
>> Tell me I had an emotional experience
when I went to a michal chinuch shiur,
you know, okay, okay. It doesn't exactly
compare to your kabbalas shabbos over
there on a
shalom street, you know what I'm saying?
Grade B neshamos need the, for lack of a
better word, the feel good, the chizuk
just to allow them to stand, but avad
just allow them to get to the point
where now [music] they're capable of
doing Torah and mitzvahs and doing the
real work.
Welcome to the Learning Curve Podcast
brought to you by Mishpacha Magazine.
We're raising children in a changing and
challenging world. So let's tackle the
important issues facing families today.
I'm Rabbi Yisroel Garfield, menahel of
Yeshiva Tiferes Shmuel in Houston, and I
love talking about chinuch. I'm Rabbi
Aryeh Schonfeld, menahel of Yeshiva
Ketana of Manhattan, rosh mesivta of
Bais Shmuel of Manhattan, director of
Camp Bais, I also love talking chinuch,
and of course, a little bit of fishing.
>> [music]
>> Join us as we answer your questions and
discuss the topics that matter to
parents the most.
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Hello to all of our beloved Learning
Curve fans. As you know, Rabbi Schonfeld
and and myself are so committed to
chinuch and thinking of ways to improve
the chinuch system, etc. And one of the
areas that I've been thinking about for
a while is with regard to chinuch
habanos, the chinuch of girls.
We spend so much time and energy
inspiring our daughters,
giving them the skills and tools that
they need to learn. We invest thousands
and thousands of dollars in their
chinuch over the years, both elementary
school, high school, and even seminary
in Eretz Yisroel.
I sort of wonder what happens after
that. What's our hope for, not for all
of them, but for the girls who really
enjoyed the learning?
What opportunities do they have after
they finish seminary? And I've come to
appreciate that it's really hard for our
daughters and the women in our community
who come back from Eretz Yisroel and
have lives and have jobs and get their
life started, whether they're married or
not, to find a level of engagement in
those classes like they had in seminary
or in high school. In seminaries and
high school, we have so many wonderful
rabbaim and and moros who spend time and
prepare shiurim for them on an ongoing
basis and really get into a level of
learning that's very relevant and
connecting.
But after that point, it's so hard to
find that in communities. Online,
there's some stuff, but it's more
one-off shiurim on tour any time, etc.
So I attempted and am working on a
project to bring a more serious and
focused learning opportunity for women.
It's called Machon Kasher LaTorah. The
website is www.mykasher.org.
And the idea is that I've found three
exceptional, exceptional female
teachers, rebbetzins in their own right,
who are all very experienced and beloved
mechaneches.
We have Rebbetzin Feiner from the Five
Towns, Rebbetzin Miriam Gedinger, and
Mrs. Zeitlin. All three of these
teachers are extremely experienced,
extremely popular,
and are preparing really meaningful
classes, shiurim, for women after
Pesach, between Pesach and Shavuos, a
little beyond. It's eight classes, one a
once a week, each one. And I'd love for
you to either, if it's something that
works for you, or if you could share it
with others who you think might be
interested. I'm really trying to create
this opportunity for our daughters and
for women in the community who want to
continue what we've invested so much in.
So check it out, www.mykasher.org.
Please take a look at the offerings and
the opportunity, and b'ezras Hashem,
we'll be able to continue for those
girls who benefit from it, the beautiful
inspiration and connection that comes
through meaningful learning.
Thank you for your support and
attention. All the best.
Baruchim Habaim and welcome back to
another episode
of the Learning Curve as we
leave the Yom Tov of Pesach and we
welcome in the Yemei Sefirah as we march
towards Kabbalas HaTorah and June, the
end of the year. Rabbi Golf, we've got a
lot to get to in this episode, so we're
going to leave all of our pleasantries
aside. You can say hello, and then we're
going to get going. Hello.
Okay, that's it.
>> [laughter]
>> So, and that's it. Let's start. Ready?
>> Let's go, yeah.
Let's go. Our last episode with the
anonymous rebbe struck a chord, I think
would be an understatement. I think I've
gotten more feedback on that episode
than any other episode we've done. And
fast, also. I mean, it right away. Like
like automatic.
Like went viral a little bit. Right. If
you want to say something like that. So,
Rabbi, I'll let you begin on your
thoughts of the last episode. I just
think when things are on people's mind,
but they haven't been articulated, and
then you articulate it, there's an aha
moment, and that's really what it is.
Like, I think everyone in this industry
feels this way to a different degree.
And it's, you know, in one way it's very
encouraging to have it out in the open.
On the other hand, it's a painful
conversation cuz it's not really, we
don't have an answer. We don't have an
answer.
We don't have an answer. Yes, I I share
that. As was mentioned during that
episode, and my wife and I have made
moves since then. Oh, yeah? Um, adapt
the rebbe.org, adapt the rebbe.org, as
we hope to make really, you know,
inroads into this sugya. And, you know,
as we mentioned, rabbaim are not the
only people that are struggling. They
are the only people that are A,
institutionally
struggling, and and there are children's
rabbaim, which demands more of us. And,
you know, I I a couple people were like
said to me, and this isn't a chiddush
that we maybe call this is not for us,
this is maybe the chinuch system has to
figure out, and that is a couple people
came over to me and said, "Please don't
play the episode. Please take it down."
I said, "Why?" Because if my in-laws
hear it, they're going to make me leave
chinuch. Wow.
>> young rabbaim, and I think the idea
being that
what what what surprised so many people
that I have spoken to since that the
last episode came out was,
people don't go through their finances
and cheshbon before they go into
chinuch. The answer is no, by and large.
Correct?
I think the answer is no. Totally not.
By 99%.
>> Yeah.
>> There's idealism, there's idealism,
there's maybe also people are young and
dumb, and the fact that the finances
don't work and never work for a rebbe,
the rebbe we spoke to,
you know, someone also, one of the one
of the criticisms I got was, "Why, you
know, you spoke to that rebbe, he's the
top of the food chain.
He makes 180,000 He's an afternoon job
that pays him well, right? He has a job
in the summer, which most rabbaim can't
get a job that pays that well. He has a
night seder job. Like, he Most rabbaim
are making 120, not 180. And it's
institutionally
it it demand unless you are zocheh to
be, whether it's a menahel, which
chances are not that a menahel makes
lawyer money, but I, you know, you have
a big job in a camp, it's institutional
poverty, and it's
what it
uh
unfair. Unfair if you're I consider
myself um very fortunate to do the jobs
that I do. It's funny you picked those
three things. I'm like, "Oh, okay."
Yeah, but it's I it's something that
really,
you know, the tzibur has to really think
about. How we setting up our rabbaim
that we want our rabbaim to be on call
24/7, and yet we're demanding
they live a life of poverty, which, by
the way, they kind of sign up to. They
know they're giving up gashmiyus. An
amazing story someone told me that he
went into Rav Shmuel Weiss, shlita, in
Eretz Yisroel's house,
and it was a bunch of wealthier people
and a bunch of wives apologized to them
when he walked in and said, "I apologize
for the way my house looks.
When my When my wife and I got married,
we decided to prioritize and not
and you know, that is a rebbe's
life.
But it's also the rise of the
to
help our we started that conversation
and hopefully we'll continue it.
And that's what we're here for. We're
not here to sell every issue. We're here
to bring things to the forefront and
help people think. Absolutely.
I will ask you the first question,
you'll ask me the second and then we
have a guest tonight that we've been
trying to get for 2 months. So, I want
to tease it. So, here we go.
Question number one and this goes to you
because this is at you, so to speak.
Dear TLC,
I just finished listening to a podcast
in learning curve. As a teacher in an
out-of-town school, I felt there was a
lot to gain from it. Ooh la la, is
Houston called out of town? I don't
know, I was there recently. Seems pretty
in town to me. Booming, busting,
make me troll it was so I was there for
a
my nephew
had a whole
here we go.
There we go.
I had a question in regards to something
that was said and how to use that when
raising my own kids. I love the line
that Judaism should never be used to
weaponize the kids. I'd find myself
telling my kids almost three and almost
six on
we can't do Play-Doh, color, stickers,
noise toys, etc. because it's us. I try
to emphasize that we have cereal, party,
etc. So many things because it's
but I'm wondering how to phrase the
negative without it sounding like is at
fault
that we can't have fun.
Thank you for all you do for the club.
So, there's there's the macro of is
surin,
right? He's his muscle was or his
example was
but how to frame is surin limitations
that seems to have
and not have it negative.
I don't know why this is an out-of-town
community question. I'm curious why this
is out of town. also exists in town, I'm
pretty sure.
Listen, I I don't know that I have any
grace or wisdom, but I could just
respond. I'm sure many of our listeners
themselves could respond to what I'm
going to say, which is we always should
look for what you could do on and the
beauty of and what do you want the kid
to do? They come to you with Play-Doh.
So, what are you going to do instead?
So, you say,
"Let's do this. It's exciting." And you
and you de-emphasize
at that age at three and six, I don't
think that's necessarily the age to like
teach them the year aspect of
and and you make a party and you make it
exciting and you yourself are excited.
But I would also point out maybe on
their level
things that they appreciate that you
can't do. Like for example, we all
struggle with being on our phones and
technology and we say, is about taking a
break." Like isn't it exciting for you
that is not on his phone on That's I
can't be on my phone on
Isn't that exciting for you that you get
to have more of me?
In other words,
talk about the
in the way that the
are not
taking away.
All are like that. The things that are
also meant not to be mean to us.
They're not meant to limit us. They're
meant to free us from things that are
dangerous for our
So,
yeah, it's about So, it's about you you
say focus on the positive, you know you
know
I mean, make
it into an extreme positive. Like it's
let's play the special games or like you
said cereal. I mean, you know, that
makes it Yeah, I have a brother. Some
people have soda on or
you know, it's all that all comes
so that it's true they can't play on the
computer, but like there's a lot of
other to it and the general vibe Right,
but I would not tell my kid, "I know you
can't be on the but there's good parts
to too." No, I wasn't saying that. No,
but more like
let's not play on the computer. Let's
play the
game. Not but you can play the game, but
like redirect them in a positive way,
you know?
Go to the store and say, "We're we're
buying games for Everyone could pick a
game they want for free, whatever."
>> Right, but would you try but what
happens when your kid says to you,
"There's so many things that are that I
can't I know Why is
Why can't I eat this and eat that or
have this or you don't have any Why
can't I If he's asking you that, sign
him up for in Manhattan cuz they're
going to need a really special
If What if he's 10? What if he's 10? I
think you can have a conversation about
the beauty of and the construct and I
when sometimes when you don't have
things, it's an opportunity to get
together and take our break take a break
from
and it's a beautiful thing that keeps
together and you know, I think there's a
lot there's so much good
that you could teach a 10 10-year-old.
You don't think so?
Yeah, yeah, I do. I do. All right, well
good luck with that. I think you sound
like the right mother that you're
worried about that message and thinking
about it. Mother? Whoa! Who says it's a
mother?
I win.
Who says it's a mother? You're right,
it's a teacher.
language in it. Oh, cuz it says Judaism.
Oh, oh, because it says Judaism, Rabbi
Garfield. Would you like hold on. Since
this is an entertaining question
>> you know, you know. If If you didn't get
that joke, that means you haven't been
you're not an avid follower of All
right, now I'm going to ask you the
question, Rabbi. Here we go. Now, this
question seems to you from a
I don't know for sure, but I have a
feeling it is. Dear TLC, I heard in camp
in the name of a fifth or sixth grade
rabbi. So, this guy heard in camp in the
name of a fifth and sixth grade rabbi.
So, it's the cliche narrative.
Who was reveling in how the kids'
vibrant personalities were
I guess in fifth and sixth grade, but
that once the boys get to
quote unquote it's all downhill from
there. I guess I'm wondering
if this is a conversation worth having.
Well, we're having it. There it is. You
made it. So, what's the question?
Can you like what's the question? The
question is it true? I assume he's not
asking should a rabbi say that or not.
That's a different question. But we'll
leave that. But I think he's asking is
it true that
the kids' personalities are threatened
by the system? I assume that's the
question. I think threatened is a big
word. I think What word would you like
to use?
mitigated. Okay. Not as important. No, I
think it would be foolish. Now again,
there is a vast
spectrum in what systems look like. But
you want to take the mainstream
right? You learned
You learned in Israel. Yeah. Yes. I
learned
I learned in South Fallsburg. I learned
in the mirror. You learned
You know,
and anywhere in between. I think that
most people will agree that yes, when
you get to
a lot of the
extra curriculars and all that, you
know, the wow and the
the
goal and the interest of the to bring
out the boys' personality
is definitely not in the setting. Not on
the agenda. So, I think that really
there's two parts to this. There's the
why and then there's maybe there should
be a little. This is my opinion. Just
totally my opinion. I've been in in
also as you are and were. Currently, I'm
not.
I think when you're developing a kid and
he's not ready yet or he needs
self-esteem and he needs to He's a
child. He's a little kid so he plays in
the sandbox, right? And then he needs
recess often throughout the day and
incentives and raffles and tickets. And
as you get older, you know, when you're
an adult, you don't have all of the
stick and all of the fun stuff. And
really, the question maybe is when is it
appropriate, but I don't think anyone
can ask that maybe in the mirror they
should have, you know, raffles, right?
So, it's really is the shift too quick.
But
which is the breeding ground for
development of
and of
and of intellect and of thought and of
and of
and all of working on yourself,
it's it therefore demands a certain
um seriousness, focus
>> of focus, right? You know, and
consistency and commitment and therefore
it's supposed to be different than
elementary school. Right. It's It's not
supposed to be That being said,
I think even in the best
I think there are boys definitely maybe
all boys, but boys we've discussed this
different parts in this podcast that
could use
I'm not talking about raffles, but more
self-expression, more
being noticed by their I don't think
you'll find 11th grade I don't think
you'll find that that even know who's
talented in their class in most
mainstream
whether their talents what what whatever
their talents are. Whatever their
talents are. You know, I want to share a
story I heard recently from Rabbi
Shapiro.
He told me about an eighth grader
who was really struggling in he was
Shiva.
He said over
so I could say it over and I don't know
how long ago the story was and
called over this kid and he said like
what's and he says, "I'm I have nothing
in life.
The only thing that gets me up in the
morning
is the Denver Nuggets."
And the Nuggets
that's only thing. It's the basketball
Okay. No, this is not
and the Denver Nuggets have a player
Nikola Jokic who's like what the best
player in the NBA.
He's the only He's all I get up for in
the morning.
The rebbe I'm paraphrasing the story.
The rebbe in the next couple of days or
weeks bought him
a Nikola Jokic jersey.
Okay? And gave it to him. And the story
is said over that changed the boy's
whole year. Wow. And
he said there was a big
in Baltimore like a tremendous
big time, right? I don't know well, but
my father
Yeah.
came to
not just but he's a person that's called
right? And he came to
the
and the rebbe told him about this boy.
The now the boy is like the top of the
class.
And he called over the boy and he said,
"I want you to give me a blessing."
And the boy said, "Why? I hope one day I
could as much as you." An amazing story,
right? What a beautiful story. My point
is that Okay, it's an extreme you know,
it's a story you say over at a maybe at
a Yeshiva but my I do think that it
would behoove the Mesifta Rebbeim in the
top Yeshivas
to get to know their talmidim a little
better. I think it would only help. It's
not the reality. I'm being unfairly
stereotypical. I think it would have a
lift but I think
>> it come out when they're like when
they're away in camp, right? Huh. It it
explodes
in camp.
>> it's not like it's lost.
It's not like it's lost. They will tell
you the bachurim, some of them,
during the year they feel stifled and
they feel not their best self. Right. I
know if I have a Rav Licht my Rav who
listens to some of the podcasts or at
least people tell him about the podcast.
I can have him shout there. He will be
he will make a macha. I know everything
going on with my bachurim. I love my
bachurim. I reckon it. This and this is
not every Rav. My point is this letter,
this whatever, this email has merit. I
think there is truth to it. I'm always
in the small Mary's Road which I'm
connected through, you know, as we
mentioned, has the perm stick. It's a
big deal over there and the 11th grade
it's like their thing. They pick a
night. I am so always so inspired from
the creativity that they have. Sometimes
it over goes over the line. A little
bit. Yeah, but it's so remarkably
creative. Like the kids who do art and
the comedy is like, you know, and even
the creation where they build things and
It's a tremendous operation and I'm
always inspired like this talent is
latent there sitting there. Such talent.
But like you said, it's not the time for
art classes and stuff. Maybe a little
they could do but fundamentally it's
time to focus on learning and you know,
it'll
you know, I think I hear the concern but
I think it's like one of these things
like, "Okay, it'll be okay." You know,
the characters will be characters and
the boring guys will be boring guys.
We'll be boring guys. But I think the
boys that are struggling in these larger
aleph level Mesiftas, this is one of the
big struggles. They don't feel seen. I
think those boys really feel unseen,
unheard, unvalidated, not noticed, not
recognized.
>> I have so much to offer. I just I'm just
the kiyum ha'ager is not something that
I'm awesome at and therefore I have so
many other ma'alos.
>> I'm a singer. I'm a creative. Right. I
can run the kitchen on Shabbos. I think
this is a huge struggle for the boy
that's struggling in Yeshiva. It's a
fair point.
Rav, I just a little bit of housekeeping
at the disclaimer fuel before the
spotlight question. The guest that we
brought on, Rav Yisroel Zakatinsky, Rav
Yisroel Zakatinsky shlita, we actually
did the interview right before Pesach.
So you'll hear mentions of Pesach and
the Haggadah and Shabbos Hagadol, right?
Even though you're now listening to it
after Pesach, but that's why the
seasonal, you know, spice. We all hear
that from Rav Yisroel Zakatinsky. All
right, wonderful.
So now we move on to our spotlight
question of the week and it is before I
read
the email that we received, it's a
tremendous zchus and a kavod for us
to welcome in a Rav that we've been
trying to get for a while and I already
warned Rav Yisroel Zakatinsky shlita
that I'm going to read Rav Yisroel
Zakatinsky what I was given by your
ba'alei batim as the introduction to
you. So any of the and this mix shach
b'peh but here we go.
So Rav Yisroel Zakatinsky uh shlita is
the Rav of Kehal Nachlas Yakov Yisroel,
KMH, of Lawrence, New York.
He is known for his unique ability to
weave together Nigleh, Kabbalah, and
Chassidus into one unified living Torah.
Drawing from the teachings of the Baal
Shem and his talmidim, he brings the
deepest truths of pnimiyus ha'Torah to
life, making them both relatable and
practical for daily avodah. Rav Yisroel
Zakatinsky learned in Shaar HaTorah and
my alma mater.
We learned at the same time, a little
bit younger than me. We received smicha,
which is not typical, from Rav Yisroel
Kalman Epstein shlita, which is not
typical.
Rav Yisroel is the author of the sefer
Yam HaTefillah as well there as well as
the sefer Mayim Mayim and recently
he has published a set of four sefarim
covering the shiurim and drashos from
tafshin pei dalet on every parsha and
Yom Tov.
A very popular sefer that is available
in sefarim stores and at website
Mevakshei Yichudcha.
dot com.
It's a kavod to welcome Rav Yisroel
Zakatinsky. Aleichem shalom. It's good
to see you.
Nice to have you. So
I'm going to read you an email that we
received.
It's a hot topic, so we'll see where it
goes.
>> Maybe before you do that, there's one
thing about your bio that I wanted to
know before we get into it, okay? How
did the shul start? Was that you said,
"I want to start a shul and this is a
vision I have"?
Or did people start it and then you
came? Just like I'm not clear about
that. No, it's not It's a good question.
It sort of happened organically. It
happened organically. I was, you know,
born and raised in in Queens, in Kew
Garden Hills.
And so um after I got married, for the
next, let's say,
I don't know, five or six years or so,
so I was sort of leading a a little shul
in Queens. Really part of a larger
organization of Hashivenu that my
father, my parents started and they
continue.
>> Was it Bais Yisroel shul? Was it that
shul? It was before It was before that.
It was still like basement
>> was like a kiruv thing, I assume, by the
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So Hashivenu Hashivenu
is is a kiruv organization my parents
began.
You know, I grew up with it. You know,
it was part of
>> Was your father or your uncle my English
principal in the '90s? That was my
father. Wow. Okay. We're not going to go
there. That's for a different episode.
>> we should leave that for a different
discussion. We've a past. Sorry about
that. But yeah. So yeah, so Hashivenu is
a kiruv organization, you know, it it's
sort of following up with the many of
the ba'alei teshuvah that come from
Eretz Yisroel, whether it be, you know,
men or women from all the different
Yeshivas. So when they come to America,
Hashivenu sort of follows up with them.
So over the years, it became a need of
sort of them having, you know, while
the intention is for them to become part
of, you know, sort of acclimated to the
general community, to sort of have their
own minyan. So
it sort of began like that and I started
running it and, you know, it quickly
moved just beyond, you know, ba'alei
teshuvah that we were familiar with and
it became like a community shul. So I
was doing that for five or six years and
then, you know, we needed to, you know,
we needed to move on a little bit and I
was always giving shiurim in different
communities, different locations,
different people and, you know, it's a
thing with my wife. I always tell her,
we remind each other that whenever I
went to Lawrence to give shiurim, I
would just give shiurim different
places, different chaburos. Whenever I
came back, I'd always say like, "I like
those guys. I like those guys. There's
something about those guys. It's a
shidduch, you know?" And so it really it
was just like, you know, perfect timing,
you know, we were looking for something
and a lot of the guys were looking for
something to start as well.
And we just said, "Let's do something
together."
I just needed the context of the shul.
Go ahead. Thank you, Rav Yisroel. Dear
TLC,
the post-war Torah world has focused
mainly on Talmud Torah as the primary
means of avodas Hashem and across the
spectrum of frumkeit, this has been the
accepted center where we focus all of
our energy. But lately it feels like
things have shifted. There's been a
bigger focus placed on the need for
emotional connection to mitzvos and
validation of people even within their
struggles. While this has no doubt
helped many Yidden grow to feel closer
to Hashem,
I worry that people are begin are
becoming too obsessed with their
emotions, with performative virtue
instead of focusing on personal action
and growth. From a chinuch perspective,
as parents, we're worried about losing
the ikkar and how that will impact our
children.
So there's a premise
which believed to be true that obviously
our Byron and and post, you know,
post-war Jewry America Jewry was all
around limud ha'Torah. Pre-war Jewry
also. Yeah, yes.
Is has there been a shift?
Is there something to be concerned
about? Something to celebrate? The floor
is yours.
There's always a shift in generations.
That's always true. I mean, every
generation has a different personality,
a different avodah,
different tikkunim that they need to
accomplish. So the question is never
whether there's a shift. There's always
a shift. The question is what is the
shift and how to
sort of navigate it properly. You know,
I teach a lot of Chassidus and inyanim
like that and people might think that
I'm in the chizuk business. I'm not. I
don't see myself as in the chizuk
business.
I don't see myself as like that.
So what business do I find myself in?
What what business do I think I think I
think I'm in the teaching Torah
business. That's what I that's what I'm
in. I think people very often
mistranslate,
let's say, terms like dveikus
to like an emotional experience.
The emotions is one strata. It's one
dimension of who we are.
Every aspect of the human being needs to
be
brought into the experience of dveikus,
into attachment to Hashem.
Intellectual, emotional,
and physical.
Intellectual dveikus comes with
learning.
Emotional the to sort of conquer the
territory of the person that's called
emotions, so that's with hislavus,
ahavah, and yirah. To to conquer the
physical territory of the person with
dveikus, that's through mitzvos
ma'asiyos.
So all of the strata, all the different
elements of who the human being is, both
in terms, again, intellectual,
emotional, and experiential, all of
those dimensions need to be overwhelmed
with the light of Hashem.
So
it's not a matter of chash v'shalom
sacrificing one, you know, one aspect
for another and it's not a matter of
defining connection to Hashem as an
emotional experience versus intellectual
one. These are all different aspects of
who the person is and every single one
of these layers needs to be sort of
brought into the experience of dveikus.
Dveikus is something that
one cannot really put a finger on and
say, "This is what it is." It's the
experience of the person becoming
attached to the Eyn Sof, to the infinite
one. When we say a person, a person's
multi-layered. There's the intellect,
there's the emotions, and there's the
practical, the mechanical side of who
the person is. All these elements need
to be brought in. In your answer, you
seem to be being mash the equalizing
these different components as like
equally important. And that's where
perhaps the hidush lies because I'm not
as familiar with Shaar Ha Tosefta as you
are, but I'm familiar with the yeshivas
I went to and the kinna I have. And
still in Shaar I assume in Shaar Ha
Tosefta and the places I went, there is
not an equation between the other
elements of one's avodah and their
lomdus gemara, that's like an exclusive
place. And it's not just because now is
the time to focus on it. It's because
the shmuzen our comic Torah is the ikker
and outskirt, you know, I don't I can't
give the shmuzen well as Rabbi Shonfeld.
You could probably do a better job
beyond the chizuk business, but in
Talmud Torah,
you know, and so I wonder, do you
recognize the hidush in what you're
saying klappeh at least the standard
yeshiva world?
So I'll tell you like this. I I don't
mean necessarily to equate all the
different strata of a person. Again,
let's see the three dimensions I
mentioned, intellectual, emotional, and
mechanical. I guess we can call like
that. I'm not saying that they're all
equal in significance. What I'm saying
is that in order for a person to be
completely sort of swallowed up in the
experience of dveykus, all three need to
be sort of engaged. And our yeshiva
system doesn't historically I maybe
disagree with this, I don't know. I
would the yeshiva system I experienced
was multi-dime was
mono-dimensional, excuse me, singular
dimensional. Right. So here's the thing.
Even when a person is learning,
all those three dimensions are engaged.
So for example, you know,
when a let's see again learning for
example, so obviously when a person is
learning, the intellect of a person is
certainly experiencing dveykus through
the if through the information. True.
The mechanical side of a person is also
experiencing dveykus through akimas
v'sayim or even if a person many places
can say if a person is will understand
the sugia in learning better without
moving their lips, they don't have to do
that. Our Rabbi Yeruchem Spitz, I think
used to ask his chavusa on the tzadd
that you need akimas v'sayim and he's
reading the gemara to be moitzim. Yeah.
In Talmud Torah. Yeah.
>> So a person should be conscious of that.
So that's when you're mekayem when
you're learning, you're mekayem mitzvas
Talmud Torah, one of the 613.
And we know from the Rishonim already
and Geonim it goes back that the taryag
mitzvos are connected to the 613 evarim
of a person. Which means and we have a
kabbalah regarding many mitzvos which
aver it's connected. Brocha b'panim, if
you're mekayem one of the taryag, that
means that there's a certain aver in you
that's being engaged.
Reb, but are you Maybe the emotional one
>> the two out of the three.
That's the hardest one. Right. No, so so
the and the emotional
>> screaming at your chavusa with a lot of
passion. Right. No, so for sure, yeah.
>> And the emotional strata of the person
certainly also has to be engaged with in
Talmud Torah for the shleimus of the
mitzvah which is through the
on all levels. So there's the gishmak
aspect of it which we all know from
Igros Moshe Feinstein and Minchas
Chinuch and all the shmuzen Talmud
Torah.
And then there's higher madregas of and
that's all invested within the mitzvas
Talmud Torah. So what I'm saying is here
I'll give you the it isn't I said this
once at a shmuz and people were shocked
that I said it, but I'll say it again.
It's it's a davar pashut.
It is an impossibility
for a year to experience dveykus
with our course outside of taryag
mitzvos. That's an impossibility.
Now when we say taryag mitzvos,
you know, there's a way of expanding the
dimension of what a mitzvah means, but
there's that's an impossibility. The
framework that the Ribono Shel Olam
created
for us to experience attachment to
Elokus is only through taryag mitzvos.
But in order for every mitzvah to be
complete, it has to engage in all those
levels. It's like the gemara says in
Sukkah that every mitzvah that we were
mekabel lishmah l'ilmay d'olam hazeh
lishmah v'laasos, there's all different
strata within every mitzvah that engages
all the different strata of who we are.
Reb Aryeh, I'm sorry, I just have to I
just have to say one more thing.
Am I hearing you say there is no change
and that is what I experienced in my
yeshiva was a mevakesh Hashem kinna. I
just didn't realize. Is that what you're
saying? Because I can't believe you're
saying that.
>> a hard sell, you know what I mean? To
tell me I had an emotional experience
when I went to a Minchas Chinuch, you
know, okay, okay. It doesn't exactly
compare to your kabbalas Shabbos over
there on Mevakesh Hashem street, you
know what I'm saying?
I'll tell you like this.
Listen, you know, I I personally don't
think I say too many hidushim. I think
I don't know, to me it's pretty pretty
obvious the things that I say. But
in yeshivas when we were
you know, sort of trained and mechunach
to focus our attention in learning
100% but what does learning mean? The
shleimus of Torah is an experience that
engages all aspects of who we are. So if
you have a kid who is like, you know,
excited about Minchas Chinuch and
whatever this you know, whatever he's
learning, givaldik. I would just I would
tell his rebbe
that an eitzah tovah
is to articulate this to the kids. To
say, by the way, when you're learning,
realize
that what you're doing right now is an
exercise in attaching yourself to the
Borei Olam.
And what you're trying to do along with
every mitzvah is attach all of yourself
to the Borei Olam, which includes your
mind, which includes your heart, and
includes your actions.
Now,
how do you know that you are takka
becoming attached to the Borei Olam and
you're not just
faking yourself? Right. So I'll tell you
something. What's brought down in the
sefarim, I've
you I said this
No, true. I've said this many I said
this in shul many times without like a
mar'eh makom. The the Baruch Hashem I
found the Kamma writes this. And this is
the nekudah and it's a hard it's a sharp
idea, but this is the metzius. Again,
attachment to Elokus is something that
you can't it's not a physical zach.
Again, we have exercises to do it.
But again, Talmud Torah, every mitzvah
to engage the intellect, to engage the
emotions, to engage the mechanical side
of who we are. That's those are the
exercises that we do through taryag
mitzvos to become attached to the Borei
Olam.
So the actual experience itself is
something that it's hard to articulate
and hard to pinpoint. But what we do
have are markers.
You can sort of like when you put a rock
in a pond, you can sort of even if you
didn't see the rock go in, you can grab
that it will happen because of the
ripple effect. There are two markers.
If a person is experiencing these two
markers in their Yiddishkeit,
thumbs up, you're doing well. If not,
Uh-oh. I'm so nervous. I'm so
Which is if a person's Yiddishkeit is
producing more ahavas Yisrael and more
humility.
That's a siman Wow. that you're touching
Elokus. Wow.
That's beautiful. Can you unpack that a
little? Why those I sort of understand
ahavas Yisrael, the humility less so,
but what's what's the shott? When when a
person is is engaging in taryag mitzvos
properly and they're becoming more
attached to Elokus, then what happens is
mhm the reality that the neshama
naturally experiences becomes a little
bit more on the surface of one's
consciousness.
And so the reality that the neshama
experiences
is a reality
of ein od milvado, a reality of
everything is created constantly
mechadesh b'chol yom tamid maaseh
bereishis. And so and the neshama
experiences itself as just part of
Knesses Yisrael. And all of Knesses
Yisrael is just like a ray of light
k'viyachol coming from the sun which is
k'viyachol Hashem so to speak like as a
moshel.
So automatically the nature of the
neshama's own experience is one of
ahavas Yisrael and of complete bittul
humility.
I was thinking, do you get Cool.
nervous? Are you nervous at all that you
know, I know a little bit about you. I
was in yeshiva with you. I watched you
sit against the pillar. That you know,
again, I'm not here to talk about you
and Minchas Chinuch b'fanav, but here we
go. Mhm. So you finished Shas and you're
you know, the Litvish way. And I know
you went to Reb Gamaliel and Reb Aryeh
and he told you you can't learn, you
know, really nistar until you got
married. And Baruch Hashem you got
married. And I said He told me He told
me I can't learn I was in high school I
was learning a lot of chassidus along
with this dar and you know, Right. the
and I went to Reb Gamaliel he told me
that I have focus
you know, cold turkey until halacha and
hakawa. All right, good.
So so you therefore are steeped in in in
nigleh in gemara shas
in shulchan aruch in bavli yet your
your you know, kehillah and your
talmidim are their introduction or at
least correct me if I'm wrong, avodas
Hashem but your main thrust is that not
incongruous with your the way you got to
where your derech aliya?
So I'll tell you the truth.
I'll tell you the truth, it's going to
sound a little bit strange. It'll be
sound a little bit funny, but I'm
telling you anyone that knows me
personally, you know, I'm a mamish an
open book.
For good or bad, I you know,
I it's very hard to make me
uncomfortable. Let's put it that way.
You know what I'm saying? So I'm going
to try. I have a graphic straight
I so
I'll be honest with you. Um
in the beginning, you know, I'm not the
same person I was
last year, two years ago. I think a
person should always be growing and
moving forward. So
years ago if you asked me like what
shear I'm you give,
I would have said I give Gemara shear
I'm I give shear my Halacha and I would
tell you that yeah there's some people
that for whatever reason because of that
are their fault not their fault in order
to engage them I have to give them shear
I'm in Chassidus and only then will they
become a little bit more softened and
opened and then they could also learn
Gemara. Not to say that that Chassidus
is only there as a gateway. Right. But
as I'm At this point I'll be honest with
you and then you ask anyone in the shul
they'll they'll tell you the same thing.
At this point I like I don't really see
much of a difference anymore between
Gemara, Halacha, Chassidus. It's not
any given shear that that we have in
shul will be and again I'm not talking
about like praising myself. That's not
the point. I'm just trying to give over
an idea. Like the Maran Hakarmis will go
you know it'll be you know Gemara,
Rambam, Rashi something from the Arizal,
the Baal Shem Tov, Rav Nachman
you know Rashash, Rav Shagarov, Victor
Rav Nachman. I So so someone what you
know someone A lot of guys in shul talk
like they have a joke of like like how
does like a newcomer
relate this? You know you if you haven't
been there over the years like how do
So and it's not coming from like a
disjointed all over the place type of
thing. I don't think so. It's you know I
think just over time I think a person
you know develops a sense of
understanding
that how Torah is truly unified truly
unified and just like a person has a
body and a guf a neshama and a guf and
the neshama can't express itself unless
it has a guf and the guf is dead unless
it has a neshama. So that's how Torah is
as well.
>> So it's different than what you were
told what your rebbeim the ladder that
your rebbeim wanted you to take.
I don't know you have to ask them but
it's
again I don't really think so. I don't
really think so because
Can I give you a an example? Sure. You
want an example? I'll try. I don't know
if this is supposed to be like a light
podcast. It's supposed to It's a light.
This is light.
But we haven't brought up thank you
Hashem yet. It's coming. Don't worry.
>> [laughter]
>> So it's like this you know every sugia
that a person learns
So it's like you know whatever it is
whatever the sugia might be right? So so
it's like when you read it so it's
telling you information you know
Reuven and Shimon have a tiny with each
other. This bias is like this the Rebbe
says like that whatever you know.
But the truth is every sugia that's the
covering. That's the covering. It's like
a computer right? If I send an email we
were talking about before like my
technology level. It's not the 1994 so I
think there were maybe a little bit
emails then like that's it. So if you
write an email to someone and you write
hello Rebbe are you type in those words.
So that's what you see on the screen and
that's what your friend sees as well.
That's not really what's going on in the
kishkes of the computer right? What's
going on is code 0110
whatever right? It's just that I don't
know how to read codes and I couldn't
So it has to be sort of packaged in a
way that I could understand and I could
engage with it. So the derech mashal
obviously we'll have the love dollars
that's how Torah is as well. Every sugia
in Torah every sugia in Shas is behind
the scenes
an infrastructure through which Elokus
is able to come into my neshama and into
and into the world the chola. Now in the
Kisei Re'i the Arizal explained what the
codes are for any given infrastructure
to allow their bonishlam into the world.
Which means that once you understand
again to each one their own madrega the
infrastructure that the Arizal revealed
for example which is then explained in
Chassidus on a level of the nefesh the
Gra in his way all different ways. But
once you get that basic code then you
should find that in every sugia. Now
this is not what we learned in Shaar
HaTorah. I'm just letting you know. When
we learned in Shaar HaTorah it was You
learned about Rebbe. But I'm also
learning this way. But about Rebbe and
Rebbe it wasn't just that. What you see
is just the shitchiyus. No. The
machlokes about kinyan whether you own
something yesh. That needs dveykus.
Not that it's just the shell.
Like you think of Shimon Shkop to bring
a example of was really thinking about
all this or Rav Chaim?
I'm saying I got an email once. They
weren't secretly chasbining the code
were they? I don't think so. Do we think
that Rav Chaim? You were
Listen I never met Rav Shimon.
You know what I mean? I met Rav Shimon
in yeshiva. What do you mean? You were
learning grob in Shaar HaTorah you
didn't meet Rav Shimon. Yeah yeah
exactly. I was learning after that.
It was a lovable. I got an email once
someone said Rav Moshe Feinstein isn't
it true
isn't it true that if Rav Moshe
Feinstein learned Kabbalah he would have
become even greater? Oh wow. I was like
what do you derive from that you know?
Rav Moshe Feinstein It's not even a
matter of like we don't know what they
were doing at 3:00 in the morning. It's
also true. But they were experiencing
Even the code is really just a garment
for something deeper.
What's that inyan that's the deepest?
You can't articulate it but you know it
when you become more humble and you
become a bigger Av Yisrael.
That's beautiful. That's really
beautiful. Thank you. I want to ask the
elephant in the room and that is
>> Excuse me I wanted to say before that.
>> Yeah. Like I said in the beginning I'm
not in the chizuk I'm not in the chizuk
business. I couldn't care less if it's
beautiful or not.
That's the mitzvah. It's not a beautiful
No yeah no I appreciate it. I'm just
saying that's the beauty of the whole
system how multi-dimensional it is but
it's all echad in that way. It's a
beautiful visual to see the different
pieces and how they fit. It's just a
very nice perspective. Sorry go ahead
Ari. So so as Rav Zidinski I know that
you don't work for thank you Hashem. I
know that most of them are your baal the
baal batim in your shul.
Why do you think there has been such a
visceral
almost cos
like boomerang reaction
to you know what seems to be on a
without the codes but on a shitchistic
level a way of promoting positive
relationship with other Jews? How does
it work with Rebbe and Rebbe they're
looking to find Rebbe in everything and
some silly music right? And maybe some
music that is even worse than silly but
basically the music is just benign.
Other than may we let's leave the Zusha
song out of it which got a little bit of
of of a Believe it that's that's just a
cute little shtick. It's a bunch of guys
that were trying to promote maybe
shitchistic but promoting what seemed to
be a positive messaging and there has
been a I'm talking
anger like a revolt. Why has there been
such reaction against some of you enough
of you about that against that concept?
And I want to share before I just give
you a minute to think about it a maiseh
that happened and that is
my son went to Lawrence for Shabbos a
few months ago.
And he might say that you were He might
say that I was I was teasing. I was
teasing. It was on your maiseh. He said
to me Abba I know you you you know
how do we get Rav Zidinski to give us an
ayin ek? And I said Azi Rav Zidinski
isn't he doesn't give ayin eks he's a
rav. You want to experience his ayin ek
go to his davening Friday night.
He goes to call to KMH Friday night he
calls me Motzei Shabbos. My son is in
11th grade in Shaar HaTorah. He's a
Litvish bachur.
And he said I shared this with Rav
Zidinski a few months ago. And he says
Abba I'm very confused.
It was the most incredible davening of
my life.
All of that? He like he didn't know what
to do with that. You know a long you
repent the
He's like doing it is that it was like
mind warp. So and that seems to be the
positive you know I I actually davened
there once cuz I said if if you're going
to speak lashon hara about a place at
least daven there and it was the most
unbelievable davening in my life. So why
is there
a visceral reaction to this you know
this email is obviously really part of
that of this just what seems to be a
bunch of guys trying to create positive
vibes in Klal Yisrael. Yeah when I was
joking before that my technology
you know I graduated 1994 and that was
it. It it remains this day. I don't have
WhatsApp like I'm mamish old school. So
I'll be honest with you I don't really
know much about like reactions and
things like this. I mean obviously I
hear a little bit you know. But I don't
think I'm as knowledgeable in
you know in the inyan as as You don't
feel an achrayus to understand or defend
your baal batim? Well I you know I do
the best I can but I also have to keep
my own sanity.
And I'll be honest with you there's too
many Rebbes and Rambams to work through.
I don't know if I have the time to sift
through every comment on you know
whatever the platform is.
But listen
where am I coming from? I I come from
Whenever I hear for me personally I can
only speak for myself. I can't speak for
other people and I'm not in the business
of trying to
put words in other people's mouths or if
you know if I'm driving
and someone says something nasty to me.
Not say they do whatever it is.
Then I try to be mechazek myself like
what the Baal Shem Tov said which is
that everything that you hear is a
message from their bonishlam to you.
Somehow to be mechazek your own self in
your avodah to move forward. So to me to
me the question of like
why do people say what they say I
it's a foreign language to me. Question
is does that represent the taina? Right?
>> Question is what's their bonishlam
telling me if I hear something?
And what could I do to become a better
eved Hashem in my own personal life?
Like that that to me that's
that's the only question that resonates
at all. I I I don't
I've made a decision some time ago that
to me I'm only going to say and think
positive things about you and and and if
and if you didn't say something that
that to me seems you know something the
opposite of that that's just it's a
message to me to work on myself more.
So when you hear that message of thank
you Hashem is taking people away from
Torah and mitzvahs and it's taking away
the seriousness of avodas Hashem of
Torah and mitzvahs. It's turning klal
Yisrael into this clown show and turning
I'm not I'm not I'm not I'm just
parroting.
>> meaning of the Tanya Rebbe Barry? The
Tanya is and this is like I'm not a
bucky and and and Rav Nachman and all
this stuff, but to the extent that I've
learned it I actually my son has been on
Purim a a close haver of yours who lives
in Houston gave him Likutei Halachos so
we've been learning it since Purim. So I
read the first five sifim and basically
the message there is it's a beautiful
synthesis very much related to what you
were saying about different aspects of
Torah unifying. But the message is that
the nekudah tovah that you wake up in
the morning you have to think about your
good and the idea of dawn being a focus
on the good in a person in klal Yisrael
the mishkan the whole deal. And this
idea I think the criticism comes that
this message that you're good even when
you're not good. Like it lowers the
standard so much. Like I don't know them
lyrics either, you know, so well. Maybe
Ari you could share some lyrics, but the
fundamental idea of thank you Hashem the
ruach of it is that you're good
I don't care what happened yesterday and
there's truth to that, but when you're
trying to be mechanech a generation that
have she'eifos for god less and you keep
telling them they're good it's a steer
to what we grew up where we're always
being pushed to excellence. I I think
that's the deeper nekudah. Well said.
>> holiness, you know. Yeah. So
I'm debating whether like how deep to
go. Again, we're trying to keep a light
podcast but I don't know if I want to go
deep into the sugya. Like I'm not sure.
Well, we want people to understand it
because I think this question is really
the crux of the opposition. So maybe I
can explain it very well. Yes.
>> I can share something that'll confuse
some people but I can give them arm
achainus so maybe they can
>> Okay. Well, it's the beginning of a
conversation. They could come by the
shul to get more
>> Right. So like I said everything that
you'll find in in in in chassidus and so
on is rooted in kisvei Ari. It's rooted
in in the codes in the code of what
reality really is. In the kisvei Ari we
do find the following idea. I'll say it
like this.
Again, whether it's
you need a lot of hakdamas to appreciate
this but it is what it is.
There is also you know, I'm sure you've
heard of the term of like through
through davening and through avodas
Hashem there's this inyan of like
redeeming sparks, right? I'm sure you
know nitzutzei kedusha, right? There's
something you know, people okay. So
there's like keying wherever you go
there's like sparks all over the place
and you have to redeem them you have to
uplift them. So there's such a there's
such a thing. So I'll share with you
something in the way the Ari puts it and
then I'll show you how chassidus
translates it and maybe it'll give a
little bit of a better context to this
sugya that we're talking about. It's
okay? Yeah, please. So the Ari says as
follows.
When you're dealing with redeeming these
sparks which is again the basic
objective
that you're doing let's say by davening.
The Ari says that you're you know, sort
of every part of davening there four
parts of davening. You have brachas you
know, korbanos pesukei dezimra shema
u'virchas shema and shmoneh esrei. Okay?
Again, these are the words. The Ari says
that corresponds to the four there are
four universes four dimensions of
reality. Asiyah bottom is us asiyah
yetzirah briyah and atzilus. This is the
dimension of the Ribono shel Olam that's
that's the goal. That's the end zone.
Says the Ari again, these are the words.
I'll bring it down
soon in a moment.
You take you find these nitzutzei
kedusha these chaotic sparks that are
stuck in the mud
and through davening as you ascend
through davening you ascend along with
these sparks and then when you get to
your final destination which is shmoneh
esrei then these sparks are put together
to become a full construct and the
Ribono shel Olam's presence can be
funneled within the the light of Hashem
can shine through them.
Okay.
The Ari says as follows. He says that
there's really two categories of these
sparks.
And again, this sounds like I'm
veering off but you'll see in a moment.
You give me a one minute and you'll be
okay. The Ari says there's two
categories of sparks. There are sparks
let's say grade A and grade B. Okay?
Grade A sparks that's the malach.
They're chaotic they're disjointed
they're all over the place they're just
little sparks and they're only put
together till they get to the finish
line.
That's the malach.
But then the Ari says that there's
another category of sparks which again
we'll call them grade B whatever you
want to
that
they need a lot more tikkun. A lot more
tikkun. And the Ari says but they also
have to go through this process of being
of going from one level to the next only
finding completion and tikkun by their
final destination. But since they're
very much stuck in the klipah in in the
mud so you have to start the process in
the following way. First you have to
arrange the nitzutzei kedusha even
before they get started you have to
arrange them in an infrastructure
similar to the infrastructure that
they're going to reach in their final
destination. You have to arrange them
now
to at least begin the process of moving
forward. In the kisvei Ari this is the
kavana that you have in the beginning of
davening when you say you don't have to
say sfar sfar dem that right after hoidu
right? So there's Hashem malach Hashem
malach Hashem yimloch what you say that
twice why Hashem malach l'olam va'ed
they're both psukim like they're random
psukim. They're nice psukim but like in
the kisvei Ari every single word of
davening is code. Every single word of
davening is that you're being poel
something. You're not just going through
the siddur you're going through
universes. You're being poel something.
I'll give you an example it's how thick
is our haggadah. Not thick at all. Not
thick at all.
>> haggadah is quite small.
>> Exactly. I happen to have this in front
of me right now.
Whatever you want to a thick safer.
Pretty big. This is the haggadah of the
kavanas with the Rashash and Ari. So
it's a haggadah. So I'm just again, I'm
not they happen to be on my table.
>> I'm not coming to your house.
It's a long night.
>> I'm not a people's monster. Wow.
>> It's nitzutzei kedusha. These are code.
This is what's being activated when you
say a word of davening. When you say a
word of haggadah. So what So the Ari
says this process of engaging grade B
nitzutzei kedusha this and putting them
together in a way that mimics a little
bit of what the destination is only to
get them moving forward is what you're
saying when you say Hashem malach Hashem
malach Hashem yimloch l'olam va'ed. And
how it works with gematrias and
nitzutzei kedusha ayin sham in there if
you're brave enough. Okay. So when you
read that and you learn that in Shaar
HaKavanas and the sifrim so it's like
some floaty ideas spar I have no idea
what you Zacktinsky I don't know what
you're talking about. I can't I'm still
I start listening to this podcast I'm in
my pajamas at night I'm trying to wind
down from a long day and you're talking
about nitzutzei kedusha and making
things complicated.
Chassidus comes and and and takes the
kisvei Ari just like the Vilna Gaon did
as well and explains it as an experience
of the nefesh and explains it also in
experience of history.
In in the kisvei Ari the nitzutzei
kedusha there's another term that the
Ari uses for nitzutzei kedusha which are
neshamos. So there are neshamos every
neshamah starts off chaotic and I'm not
talking about people off the derech. You
understand? We're talking about people
that know shas and poskim also can be my
I'm number I'm not the only shas and
poskim I'm just saying I'll be the first
one to admit I'm a spark I'm a lost
spark disjointed all over the place and
I have to move from asiyah to yetzirah
to briyah to atzilus and in atzilus I'll
be put together.
But
there is such a category of grade B
neshamos
which in the writings of the Vilna Gaon
is identified with the neshamos of
ikvesa d'meshicha that also need to go
through this process.
But the Ari was megaleh in the kavanas
of Hashem malach Hashem malach Hashem
yimloch that in order for them to even
begin their journey they have to I see
themselves as
put together enough that at least it
could resemble the finished product. And
only then can they begin to move
forward. Here's where it becomes more
complicated.
You could have one generation
with multiple generations within it.
In other words we're living taf shin peh
vov so we assume that everyone living in
taf shin peh vov is from taf shin peh
vov. Lav davka. Lav davka.
Neshamos don't work in that in in that
way. You could have people neighbors you
could have people in the same family
that one is from a previous generation
and one's from a future generation.
There's a famous story with Rav Nachman
Breslover. His big opposition was he had
a few but his one of his big oppositions
was the Shpoler Zeideh one of the great
tzaddikim. We have no asogah of these
people but the maiseh goes the legend
has it that one of the chassidim of Rav
Nachman was by the Shpoler Zeideh and
the Shpoler Zeideh told him he said go
you're going to go back to your rebbe go
tell your rebbe that I it's not that I
don't think he's a tzaddik but he's 200
years too early. Huh. So Rav Nachman
sent a message back they call you the
Shpoler Zeideh because you're 200 years
too late. Gevaldig. It's not a machlokes
there's no machlokes it's a matter of
timing.
It's a matter of timing. So if I can
make it try to even make it lighter.
Wait bring it home. What what's the
answer to the question? Is are you
saying that the this movement or this
concept is I'm going to use your your
nusach that the grade B neshamos need
the for lack of a better word the feel
good the chizuk just to allow them to
stand but avad just allow them to get to
the the where now they're capable of
doing Torah mitzvahs and doing the real
work. Well, it's a I mean, listen,
everyone has
these aspects to them. So, it's not like
it's not like a person can't, you know,
can't get started without first
listening to a song. It's not like, you
know, you need that to wake up in the
morning. But, my point is that the way
of Chassidus, which is which is very
much oriented towards his Chassidus is
speaking to these
I got I said grade A grade B, maybe it's
the wrong term, whatever it is, but
speaking to this category of Nitzutzei
Kedusha. Now, the truth is
all the swarm say, you know, it's like
when you have these Nitzutzei Kedusha
that eventually get to their
the end zone, when they get to the mark.
There's no greater There's no greater
Kiddush Hashem Shamayim. There's no
greater There's no greater There's no
greater There's no greater
>> anytime a kid is does anything, Rebbe,
I'm just using him as a mashal cuz we're
talking this Nitzutzei Kedusha grade B.
Rebbe, I'm a grade B guy. I need I'm not
like Basically, isn't this taking away
the any chance we have at creating a
certain tzurah of what it of a derech, a
standard? If everyone has their klippah
and their Nitzutzei Kedusha that need,
you
>> goal is not to feel
that just like Hashem loves you, but the
goal is to feel that you're part of a
system that
the Ribbono shel Olam respects you. You
know, like you love your pet hamster.
You know what I'm saying? But,
you you know, a Yid shouldn't feel like
he's Hashem's pet hamster. Right. You
know what I'm saying? You love your
wife,
right? And you respect your wife, and
you need your wife, and your wife helps
you, and there's like
that's where the sense of it Like anyone
that, you know, like it is is I you
know, davening in in our shul is hard.
It's hard for many reasons. One reason
is because I I'm very demanding.
I'm extremely demanding. You know what I
mean? If there's
You know, people know I don't like
shushing,
but I'll just I'll literally just stop
davening and give like a shmooze.
You know what I mean? And if I not even
if I just feel that the energy is not
where it's supposed to be, I'll also
stop it.
>> And I know And the energy level that is
expected in that shul is not typical. I
mean, I'm down to walk What about
Tuesday morning?
>> to walk, yeah. It's exhausting. I down
to once in shacharis I walk into the
shul and with my 21-year-old son and I
didn't have a tallis and I asked the
gabbai for a tallis. He asked me if I
was a Yekke. And I said to him, "You
think I'm a bochur, don't you?"
That was my introduction.
And the Simcha l'Am Yeah. It took like
10 minutes of the of the chazzan. Yeah.
Following, but it's Pesach on Shabbos,
obviously, right? Where is this coming
from? It's coming from
I ex-
I expect the people in the shul sort of
to identify themselves as neshamos, and
you're needed, and the Ribbono shel Olam
needs your tefillos right now, and Klal
Yisrael needs your tefillos right now.
Like, what are you doing?
So, yeah, it's rooted in his Chassidus.
It's rooted in believing
that any word of tefillah that they're
able to get out of their mouth it is a
representation. Is a is a davar shalem.
It's a complete zach. It's an
unbelievable nachas ruach. But, adraba
adraba, if you're capable of that, then
how much more so can you do if you push
yourself weiter?
So, it it doesn't stop with just that
you're amazing. It's like you're
amazing, and you have any idea how much
you could accomplish with your
amazingness. The Ribbono shel Olam needs
that. How does this express itself in
the seventh grade? Let's just bring you
to Cuz this is a kind of podcast, and me
and Reb Aryeh we're we're menahelim, and
we want to bring this to that pro- And
it really is the guy even to parents of
a seventh grader. I'm taking seventh
grade because that's when a child pretty
much is going to go to yeshiva or not be
so You know, it's an important year for
that. You could sort of coast until
then, and then you got to learn. You got
to step up. So, a child's struggling. He
says, "I don't like Gemara." You know,
but
Now, the traditional approach would be,
"Listen, you got to go to yeshiva. You
got to be matzliach in Gemara.
You know, you want it or not, I don't
know, but this is it, you know, what we
got to do." And let's you know, say that
nicely. Parents, do not follow that
advice. Specifically, that's not to be
copied, but that concept.
But, if this is takka a neshama that
requires a different approach, like what
are you supposed to do with that? What
are menahelim supposed to do with that?
How do you not hurt the child, but at
the same time, you don't know who to
push and how. It's like It almost leaves
you lost. So,
I'm not known for my practicality.
Now you tell us, an hour in.
>> [laughter]
>> All right.
So, but I will I will tell I will tell
you like this.
>> Are you blessed to be a father?
Huh? You're blessed to be a father. I
hope. Thank God. So, you have to be. You
don't have a choice. Yeah, yeah. Yeah,
yeah.
I I once I once there was a big tzaddik
that I once went to, and I'm obviously
I'm not into this,
like, you know, giving chizuk and, you
know, looking for things like that.
But, I was once by a big tzaddik, Chaim
Sanzer, and I gave my name, and he
looked at it, and he's like, "Ooh, you
are very not practical."
>> [laughter]
>> Yeah.
Like, that you have a chashuve wife to
be able to put up with you. Yeah, that's
great. Yeah, that's right. Okay. So,
that's it. That With that being said,
with that being said, the one thing I
would say is that it
Like like we're
Jewish people are not human beings with
different sets of obligations. We have
to understand we we
Mamesh neshamos, pieces of the Shechinah
Kedusha sent into the world enclosed in
bodies.
Like once we think like that, therefore
we have to understand
that communication between one Yid and
another is much more complicated and
much deeper
than it is, let's say, between one guy
and another.
If one guy wants to communicate with
another, they have to talk. They have to
say something. And the other person only
hears what's being said.
Neshamos are not like that.
If I see a kid,
and I'll tell you the truth, I've seen
this in shul work with adults.
It might not happen overnight.
If you look at a Yid and you think to
yourself and you say, "Listen, mamesh
like whatever like we're one. My I'm I
want I want to connect my neshama to
you. I'm I want to find the the things
that you're struggling with,
I want to find it in my life, in my
bechinah. In the bechinah that I'm that
in my life. And I want and I'm trying to
create that hiskashrus
with that neshama,
and then I'm mechazek myself, and I try
to pull myself up from that inyan that
this kid is struggling with as it
translates in my life.
You'd be surprised how much how
effective that is.
Now, again, is it overnight? No. Do you
still have to say something? Of course
you have to say something. But, while
the bodies talk, the neshamos are doing
the heavy lifting.
This is really
this is the way
tzaddikim fix neshamos. This is the way
the nevi'im operated. This is the
People ask me like, you know, what do
you need Chassidus and Pnimiyus haTorah
for? Just to get kids that are mechallel
Shabbos to get them back on track. I'm
like, "No. Unless we're all nevi'im, it
means we're not there yet." Right. So,
like we're operating Like galus is so
traumatic for us. We're operating as if
we're a bunch of human beings bumping
around each other like like like
Happens to be we're wearing yarmulkes
and we do mitzvahs and we got a lot of
s'char and we're big avreichim. Let's
Like we have better self-help books than
them. It's lunacy. It's lunacy. We're
we're we're That's not That's not That's
not what's happening
come together. It's b'chol not. Right.
You know,
I give an example, you know, the it's
coming to Shabbos haGadol almost, right?
So, all the rabbonim. So, it's a sharp
It's a sharp word from the Toldos Yaakov
Yosef. He says, "Why is it that the
minhag is by rabbonim?" He's talking
about by Shabbos Shuvah, but it's the
same. He says, "Why is it" He used to
say by Shabbos Shuvah, so I'll say like
the way he said it. "Why is it by
Shabbos Shuvah the rabbonim say like a
pilpul and a long this and then say a
mussar shmooze?
Chuvah, say a mussar shmooze."
So, he said, "Why?" He said, "Because
the only way to really uplift a Yid is
not by telling him and communicating.
That's that's the packaging. The real
way to uplift a Yid is by bonding your
neshama with them, by finding their
struggles in your life, identifying
yourself with them, and then you pick
yourself up, and they get picked up,
too." Wow. So, the Toldos, there's a
problem. The problem is the chevreh in
the shul,
they need to do chuvah. The rav
presumably doesn't. So, how is he
supposed to be mechazek them in chuvah?
So, said the the Toldos Yaakov Yosef, he
writes this. He says, "So, what he does
is he says a pilpul. He says a long
this.
He looks around the room. No one chaps
he's talking about. And he feels good
about himself. Oh, look at me. I'm such
a talmid chacham." Now he has the
chuvah.
>> [laughter]
>> Now he can be mechazek them. Beautiful.
Beautiful. So, that that That's number
one. Once you have that
deep hiskashrus, so then you'll then the
words that you'll say, the neshama will
chap what you're saying. It's like if
bodies are just communicating, then
yeah, then if I just tell this kid,
"You're amazing." You know, it's
gevaldik. The line of Gemara that you
struggled with and you put an effort for
and you learned to me and to Hashem is
as equal as 50 blatt that Rav Chaim
Kanievsky learned. You know, you say
those type of shmuzin, if it's just
bodies talking, then that's all the kid
is hearing. And then all the kid is
hearing, he's saying to himself, "Okay,
so one line is enough." But, once you're
once it's coming from a place of
neshamos communicating, neshamos are
like candles. They're like fire. Ner
Hashem nishmas adam. Neshamos want to go
move from level to level.
So, Yeah. once the neshamos are
communicating like that, then it's just
a matter of packaging. So, then when you
put in the right words, the neshama will
fill in the blanks. It'll chap on its
own the rest that maybe is not If I want
to talk about this at the next Rebbe
meeting, I'll have to ask this guy. I
might have to call you just to get
chizuk.
Play play the game.
Beautiful beautiful thing. I have to say
you might be in the chizuk business,
even though that's not your focus. I
could say for myself, and I'm sure for
Reb Shonfeld and our many listeners that
this meeting this conversation was
exceptionally m'chazek. It's a wonderful
thing to meet you and to hear your
perspective and to see the vitality of
what you're doing and the relevance and
also how it's rooted in in in our
mesorah. It's not you know, it's a
beautiful synthesis and we really
appreciate you taking the time and
coming on and talking to us about it cuz
it's very
>> be that's an honor pleasure anytime.
Reb Aryeh Garfield, wow. That was deep
stuff.
That was deep stuff. Do you How many
people you still you still think are
listening? All right, those three
people. Probably his family, his
kehilla. No, but they don't know how he
doesn't I don't think he has technology
to
>> right. So his kehilla the cover of his
kehilla called the book here.
What I will share is
it's humbling for me to listen to a
person that is a vel talmid chacham in
the nigleh in Bavli pesakim Yishal, you
know, and is just steeped in
in in interest in
desire
to really help people connect to Hashem.
Like this I I I felt I was talking to to
to someone special. I didn't understand
everything he said to be honest. You
said you you know, maybe you can unpack
it a little bit. He did say he was not
so I can't see that working so well in
the seventh grade Rebbi pulling up to
connect to the neshama. What the
concepts by the way of you know, I think
a soul shucker would say yeah, that's
empathy, right?
In a certain sense on in oh but Much
deeper. There was a lot of deep things
that obviously stroll and I know it was
very deep and profound those two
markers.
When I was a bochur, I had an
opportunity to learn the writings of Rav
Kook a little bit. Which he has a safer
called Orot or Orot, okay?
And what was amazing about it and I am
feeling the same hargasha now which was
this recognition of the multiple layers
of existence. Like he saw Klal Yisrael's
Knesset Yisrael wasn't the land of
Israel. It was just like super spiritual
metzius, you know? Klal Yisrael Rav Kook
writes the way he writes beautifully
about Klal Yisrael all this stuff. So
like I feel like all over here too with
the Rav, it was like
he sees Torah as this multi-dimensional
mosaic of you know, I mean Great work.
>> Yeah, and we see Torah in the way you
know, at least I see Torah like I see
Torah and it's so beautiful. That's why
I was so touched. It's so beautiful to
see that. Now, not everyone could relate
to that you know, and whatever but
And it still leaves a concern when he
spoke about great A neshamos and great B
neshamos that great B neshamos might
need more songs and and
>> success. They need to feel success. And
that's what's so interesting about the
Likutei Halachos of Rav Nosson his
talmid who it's like a Shulchan Aruch.
It's written halacha. He's talking about
Ashkavah Boker but he uses all these
mystical and sort of spiritual aspects
and it's a weird mix of the two. It's
really interesting. But the idea there
being that you have to feel success.
It's about feeling success in the here
and now and that only is able to propel
you forward. That's what he was saying
from there on in is all even.
Right, there still is this challenge of
again using Reb Zaktinsky's you know,
language of great A and great B and do
you I mean again these are very esoteric
concepts but I'm but even on a practical
level of the struggling kid versus not
the struggling kid, if you just speak in
one language
>> Yeah. to everyone
>> know how it works. So you're born an A
or a B and then it's like you know,
you're stuck. So then you can mess up or
due to parent conditioning nature
nurture, I don't know how it all works.
Let's assume you're born an A or a B in
which case you're having your class I
don't know percentages and all this
stuff but like you're having your class
A's and B's. So how do you have a school
for A's and B's? I don't know. It's
something to think about. You know, when
you listen to someone who is steeped in
chassidus try to be megashim and to try
to you know, make simple very deep
concepts
it was hard. I might have to listen to
this again a few times but as you said
listen you know, it was definitely just
the way he's like sometimes you see an
apple and the person says I don't see an
apple, I see I don't know, a car. Yeah,
yeah, yeah. He has definitely a
different perspective. I mean I think
that might be part of why the movement
or whatever it's called the thank you
Hashem you know, emphasis is so hard to
understand for a lot of people because
it is as you like to say nuanced and
seeing like this whole shikul Torah
you know, whoever you know, this is the
first time I ever considered it in
thinking about the thank you Hashem. You
wouldn't necessarily appreciate this and
Right. you know, and we still have
problems that aren't resolved. So I
think in a way we've made it worse in a
way but at least we understand it but I
don't think it's resolved. I don't think
we answered the question well, right? If
you go back to the original question
I don't think we did. We unpacked it
but we didn't answer it.
Nope and we're going to leave it at
that. I think honestly it comes down to
a level of mesorah and your own personal
dostara and your orientation and we
don't have to pasken for people. I mean
it's like there's so many it's really
about your whole hashkafa outlook to the
world and to life
a little beyond our scope. I will say
that maybe as yeshivas today we do try
to do everything. I'll mention closing
as you get older, it's only grade A. As
we discussed in the beginning of the
podcast, you know, but yeah, so I
definitely in my yeshiva we try to do it
all. The great A great B to use the is
not so wonderful.
All right, my favorite part when I get
to tell everyone how much we appreciate
them listening and sharing their
thoughts.
We get great feedback. It's like it's
getting better and better. So keep it up
on both the positive and the
constructive. So we appreciate that. You
can send an email to the
[email protected],
the
[email protected]
or if you're really brave and you want
to leave a voice note we have a number
for that. It's 443-686-9339.
Again, 443-686-9339.
I can't wait for shacharis.
Take care.
I just
yeah.
All right, all the best.