0:00 / 0:00
Noach - The Dangers Of Unity
268 views
• ⬇️ Download the audio for this episode from rabbiorlofsky.com/podcast • 📅 For event schedule visit rabbiorlofsky.com/events • ✉️ Send feedback to Rabbi Orlofsky at rabbiorlofsky.com/contact • 🤗 For sponsorships check out rabbiorlofsky.com/podcast and click “Sponsor an Episode” Follow Rabbi Orlofsky around the web! • torahanytime.com/#/speaker?l=256 • facebook.com/rabbiorlofsky • twitter.com/RabbiOrlofsky • youtube.com/rabbiorlofsky
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Hi, this is Evolvski and welcome back to
our third year of the parish in five
where in five minutes we set out to give
you insights into the para just a little
short idea that you can say over at the
shabas table or hopefully just for
yourself to get a little extra insight
parasak
obviously the last two years we spoke
about the marble aspect of paras noak
but that's not the only disaster
that takes place in paras Noah. Yeah,
there are three major stories of
destruction in the Torah. Stone Amora,
which we haven't gotten to yet, the uh
the Mabble. And the second one of this
week's par, which is the Dha Floa.
What's the Da Floga or as some people
pronounce Dha Pala? Yeah. Everybody got
together and said let's build a city and
a tower and a cobra goes down to see
this and he gets very upset and he
changes everybody's language B of Bale
he mixes up everybody's languages and
spreads them all across the earth and
that is the which split up and it spread
around etc.
What what exactly did they do that was
so terrible? In other words, the kazal
tell us that they were trying to get the
entire world to serve a voter. But it
doesn't say that in the parish. It
didn't say they were all getting
together to serve a voter. It says they
were getting together to build one city
and one tower and everyone spoke one
language and they were all united in
this purpose. So, so what was the danger
here? So, uh, I've mentioned this in the
past that the Jewish people, uh, our
story is the story of all of,
uh, people kind. We did not start with
the Jewish people, right? The Christian
calendar begins with the birth of Yoshka
and the Muslim calendar begins with
Muhammad's first vision from Allah that
becomes the Quran. Ours starts with the
creation of the first human being. And
we don't leave out anybody. Everybody's
in our story. Non-Jews get roles to play
as well. And so the first two parios,
which is close to 2,000 years, there's
no Jews to be seen. Aan becomes the
first Jew. He makes his appearance in
next week's parl.
But until then, yeah, this is just world
history.
Abraham Ha.
What does mean say the kazal? He was
and the entire world was
he was on one side and the entire world
was on the other side. He was literally
the first iconoclast.
You've heard the term iconoclast which
we use today to mean like an individual,
right? Iconoclast means he broke the
icons. He broke the salim the statues
and he was literally the first
iconoclast. He went around and smashed
all of the idols.
In order to be able to have individuals,
you have to to a certain extent
sacrifice the sense of absolute unity.
And very interesting. So Thomas Moore
wrote a book called Utopia which of
course a little bit of a joke because in
Latin you means nottopia is a place. So
utopia means no place. And he writes the
perfect society and there is really no
room for freedom of expression in this
society. Everybody dresses the same.
Everybody has to act the same. It's
basically a precursor of a communist
society.
And the picture that they put on top of
the book, at least in my particular
edition, was a painting of the building
of the Tower of Babel because that's
what it was. It was total unity and to
the point where we could not breach any
exception. There would be no
individuality. And if that world was
allowed to exist, there could never be
an Arau. And there held up a prism to
mankind. Whereas a prism splits light
into seven colors. So this prism split
all of the languages into 70 languages
and spread people around to give them
the opportunity to develop their own
personality and cohos something that
can't happen when we insist on rigid
conformity. And so every society has
this uh difficulty. How do you guarantee
uh uniformity and at the same time allow
room for individual expression? And
that's uh ultimately the goal. You can't
have everybody where you stifle any
sense of individual achievement and
you're not going to have a world. You
have to be able to have the opportunity
for individuals so that Arabus Salanta
can pop on the scene and start a Musa
movement so that different individuals
at history have been able to
revolutionize the way we look at the
world. And needless to say, the same
thing is especially true if we want to
have a Jewish people who is a who are
living a different life who is an every
and that's why uh mdal bevel tells us
the story that absolute uniformity is
not necessarily the best way. Good job.