Transcript
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Hi, this is David Alowski and welcome to
the Rabbi Alowski show.
And whether you're watching with our
friends over at Tory Time who as we
established when we came back are
actually the ones who are filming and
editing uh the podcast and putting it up
on the various platforms. Much to uh to
their credit, not just for what they're
doing, but the fact that they're willing
to put it up on other platforms and not
just on Tory Time. That's certainly a
wonderful thing. or wherever you watch
or listen to your podcast. As always,
it's wonderful to have you along for the
experience. Welcome back. And uh I uh I
need to first make a public service
announcement and that is in the last
podcast I mentioned about our upcoming
PES program that's looking more and more
like it's going to happen and I have
received quite a number of panicked
emails from people saying please let me
pay now. I don't want to get left out. I
don't have the the finalization with the
hotel. We're still meeting and working
out the details. So, I'm happy to take
your money under any circumstances
obviously, but
but until I know exactly that the hotel
is going to do things the way that I
want and agree to, you know, my various
uh requirements and then we can able to
put together the pricing. We're not
going to be actually opening up for
reservations. But all of those of you
who wrote me, I have you now in a
special file. And once we're ready to go
public, I will tell you first. As as I
mentioned, I'm only advertising through
um Rabolowski forums, my podcast, my
Shiorum, my website. So it's only going
to be us uh various crazies who are
going to be coming for PES. And uh don't
worry, those of you who have reached out
to me, I'm going to make sure and uh
keep keep a spot for you because people
are saying, "Look, I don't want to miss
out. I need six rooms. I need eight
rooms. I need 10 rooms, you know." Okay,
there's 150. So, we haven't gotten rid
of all of them yet. So, don't worry, you
know. So, um uh but certainly, you know,
we will close this deal up sooner rather
than later. So, just stay calm. Don't
worry. We have not forgotten about you.
I'm not ignoring you. And uh speaking of
uh people who are thinking of us uh over
here at the Rabiolowski show, we have a
sponsor this week from anonymous. I'm
finally sponsoring an episode. I decided
that it's about time to show at least an
itsybitsy physical amount of Hakkar
Satov to Rabbi Olowski and his show.
Thank you so so much. It's people like
you who uh who make this possible. And
you know, we uh we were off the air for
a few weeks and you know uh um a lot of
people uh had uh had a hard time. So I'm
I'm glad about that.
I would hate to think that we just
missed a few weeks and people could care
less. Yeah. I'm not exaggerating or
being dramatic, though I've been known
for such things when I say it has saved
my life. Yikes. I'm glad you're still
with us. Yeah. Remember those of you who
uh who whose life is dependent on this
show, you can always rewatch the old
ones until you know if something goes
wrong. Yeah, it reminds me of the little
and big joys of life and in Judaism and
I am so grateful. The Rabbi Olowski show
makes me feel good and reminds me why I
want to continue on my life's journey. I
love your laughs and the sense of
community it gives me.
There's so much I have to say on this.
This is not the first time somebody has
said this to me that this is not a show.
It's not a shar. It's not a show. Yeah.
It's it's a community. We're we're in
this together. And uh and uh you know my
kids tell me sometimes that you know
they meet people strangers. like are you
the one who
because I'm an oversharer obviously and
uh you know my my kids' lives and uh and
ours and and my extended family
everybody is is included in this whole
thing and everyone feels like they're
really a part of it which which to me is
is um a very very special thing. Um, I
now have three boys, you know, but I I
had two girls and then my son, Yako,
who's been on the show a number of
times, and then six girls. So, for a
long time, I only had, you know, I had
eight girls and one son. Later, I got
the two little boys, you know, uh, later
in life. But, um, but that was it. So,
my son said to me once, you know, when
you say one of my girls or one of my
daughters, nobody knows who you're
talking about. But when you say my son,
everyone knows you're talking about me.
I said, "Okay, I I won't say my son
anymore. I'll say one of my kids." So,
one of my kids was going to
didn't really help. But anyway, uh yeah,
so my kids know we're all in this
together. And that's why um I'm just
going back to to this, you know, the
Pesak program. Uh my I I'm recruiting my
family. Everyone is very talented.
They're all going to be doing things. In
fact, my son-in-law in America who
didn't know uh that I had announced this
that everyone's going to be doing
something. Someone came up to him on the
street and said, "So, what are you doing
at the Pesak program?" And he was like,
"What? What am I doing? What do you
mean?" You know, he didn't know that
I've already recruited everybody to to
uh be doing things. And uh I just had
this ironfall. I had an idea that I was
thinking of having sign up, you know,
for uh you know, for a veer call. you
know, if you want to get up for domining
and you're afraid you don't have an
alarm clock. So, I'm going to maybe
recruit a few of my grandchildren who
get up at the crack of dawn and and
we'll have your room numbers and they'll
go around and knock on your doors and
wake you up, you know, which uh which uh
is making use of another talent that we
have in the family. But, um but you know
that we're all in this together, you
know, the uh the the whole the whole
family is is into this. It's not just
something that I do. And uh so hopefully
yeah um we're all in this together. So
definitely it's a community and uh and
when you mention this makes me feel good
and reminds me of why I want to continue
my life's journey. I got to tell you
they didn't have it last year. I hope
they have it this year but they didn't
have it last year. Um there's a a
tremendous event that they have during
the nine days here in a giant kennis to
be mazek in Salash. they used to bring
in top speakers when originally in its
first itineration. Uh every community
would have um speakers you know during a
day and then they would end in English
and in Hebrew in every community they
would put out this gigantic chart and
there would be um fum taking place every
place all around Jerusalem. It was an
amazing thing. And uh and then they
would end with a giant kennace binar
thousands of people. They would have one
in Hebrew and one in English. I was
never invited to speak at the big
kennis. Um because
the people writing it either felt that I
wasn't that important or that I was too
much of a loose cannon. And then
eventually it closed down. But somebody
came along and restarted
the large kennis and um and I was
recruited to speak one year and um and
after that they would include me almost
every year. If I wasn't speaking then
they would make me the MSE of the
evening and they wanted me to be
involved. I remember one time when they
asked me to the MCbachal
I was working in and he says I don't
think it's covered for that you should
just be the MC. I said, "Look, they have
to mix up the speakers. They can't bring
the same speakers every year." And I
think this is a very important thing.
So, I'll do whatever they want so I
could be makazik. It's such a evening.
It's such an amazing thing. You know, I
said if they ask me to set up the
chairs, I'll set up the chairs. You
know, I just think anything you could do
to be mazic. This is a tremendous thing.
Anyway, um and uh
Mary Weinberger who took it over and was
organizing it would would ask me you
know can you suggest English speakers
etc. So this went on for a number of
years and every now and then I would
meet Israeli girls
sometimes Israeli women but but Israeli
teenagers who would say to me you know
I'd come to the English candidates and I
said, "Is your English good enough?" He
says, "It's a basic."
I said, "Why don't you go to the Hebrew
one?" And they said, "Because it's so
heavy and it's so negative." And I I
walk out feeling like I'm being beaten
up. When you go to the English one,
everyone is so positive. Everybody, you
know, it's it's it's a positive message.
It's happy. It's enjoyable. I'd rather
listen to that in my in in my poor
English comprehension than to to go
where it's negative. And uh I uh I would
like to think that I had something to do
with this. The very first time I spoke
um people started applauding and my wife
said to me, "You don't understand.
Nobody applauds at these things. It's
very heavy and it's like, you know, um
but uh I tried to lift the level up a
little bit to be more positive. I think
uh you catch more flies with honey than
you do with vinegar.
Why you want to catch flies, I'm not
very clear. I never understood that part
of it. But you you'll get more of them
that way. So since I'm trying to catch
catch the flies which the kazal tell us
that the is compared to a fly. So I want
to pull everybody's yahara away from
them so that they can go on and grow in
the yahadus. So thank you so much for
this uh for this beautiful um beautiful
sponsorship.
So last time we talked about uh the the
war that just took place and uh we have
obviously been at war now already for
two years in in Gaza and uh we've talked
about this at length. In fact, we had a
whole series of Shurim on Shabas because
there were those Gdolei Torah who said
it took place on Shabas. So that we need
to be Makazak Ashmir Shabas and we had a
whole series of Shuram Mazak Shab. I
talked about this a lot
and I had at one point uh
Allesa who used to go around and work on
all the college campuses to talk about
the anti-semitism on campuses and things
but uh there's a recent development and
I don't I don't like to talk politics
per se in fact one of the questions the
question answer is politics I don't I
don't like to talk about politics per se
I leave that to my son Yakob you know uh
who comes on and talks more about those
in Yanim. He's very Isaic in these
things. Um but uh the um
um there's there's
it has to be seen not not so much
politics as much as being seen in a
broader context. What do I mean by that?
um
already when the attack took place
before Israel responded and it took
Israel a while to respond
but even then when the attack had taken
place 1,200 people were killed and and
and raped and burnt and beheaded and all
those terrible things there were people
coming out in support of kamas
I I don't it's mindboggling
It's mindboggling. And then as you
follow the news and you see all of the
hatred and the vitriol that goes
supposedly against Israel, but of course
is against the Jews in general. The the
the line between Jews and Israel is very
thin. In fact, there was an amazing
story. The Satma Rebba
was not a proponent of Zionism. to put
it mildly. Yeah, he was anti
anti-ionist. He felt the Zionistic
movement was a bad thing. And um
him because when you're a politician to
be able to get a voting block is a very
thing. You want to get you want to get
that group of people voting for you.
Especially if there's somebody who votes
together and obviously a community of if
the Reb says vote this way, they'll vote
that way. You know, that's the way it
goes. So, it's true about other voting
blocks. Um, not all of them are
monolithic because the Democrats took it
for granted that uh, blacks and
Hispanics will vote for them and a lot
of them crossed over and voted for
Trump. But, but when you can get aid
community, if the Reb says, you know,
vote for this one as a rule, they will.
Yeah. So, uh, if you can get the Reb on
your side of a particular group, it
definitely helps. So,
um,
whoever the politician was was coming to
meet with him and, uh, he's speaking to
his Jewish adviser beforehand and he
says, "Look, I'm I'm not worried because
I have a 100% voting record with the
state of Israel. I've always supported
the state of Israel." So, he says,
"Look, you're going to have a little
problem here because this rabbi doesn't
support the state of Israel."
He says, "So, what do I do?" He says,
"You have other things that you can talk
about.
Uh talk about um programs that are going
to support large families. They have
large families. Talk about uh um you
know um subsidies to parochial schools
because their kids all go to parochial
schools. Yeah, there are other issues.
You can talk about housing. You know,
fine." So he comes in to meet with the
Reb and the Reb says, "Okay, what have
you got to say?" And he gave all of the
reasons that his adviser told him why he
should support him and the sadb is
listening. And finally at the end he
says okay I just have one last question
you know what's your position about the
state of Israel.
So he says he wasn't going to lie. I
he's a politician. I guess he figured
what's the point? You know he could just
look up my voting record. He said I have
voted 100% with the state of Israel.
and he held his breath and Rubio said,
"In that case, you have the full support
of my community. I will tell everybody
in my community to vote for you."
And after the politician left, the Gabby
said, "Reb, you're becoming a
he says, you don't understand. If I
criticize the state of Israel, I'm doing
it because I'm a yeid." And this is a
fight among us. But if someone out there
criticizes the state of Israel, it's
just anti-semitism. because they don't
like Jews.
So, uh, so you see this when people say
anti-Israel, anti-Zionism, it just it
it's it's a second away from the Jews
and the Jews this and the Jews that, you
know, it's it's a terrible thing.
Anyway,
uh, I mention this because of a
tremendous development that has taken
place in New York City.
Um,
life for from Jews has not been so good
in New York
as it was under let's say Giuliani and
Bloomberg where they ran the city well.
Uh,
Mayor Delasio who
um his campaign slogan was taken from
Sha Gavara. He was basically a
communist, you know, did terrible damage
to the city. Mayor Adams came in.
He he did not he let's just say he's not
a Giuliani or a Bloomberg. He was not
able to fix the damage and and put the
city back the way it was supposed to be.
He claims that some of it's not his
fault because he doesn't have the
control that he needs, you know. But
okay, whatever it is. Um,
but at least he was trying. This what he
says.
I'm not a politician. I can't tell you.
I I can't tell you about reality. Um,
what I know about politics, I get from
watching Trump. And Trump is not a
politician. I don't know what he is. He
is a force of nature.
It's just unbelievable. But anyway, the
Democrats came after him. it wasn't
really much of a secret because he
criticized the Biden administration
uh handling of the illegal immigrant uh
situation and how New York City was
being affected by it. And so they opened
up a you know a justice department case
against him and it was clearly
intimidation. It was uh they they like
to use the justice system against their
enemies. time after time has this has
been seen and um and so
he became very upset and very
disenchanted and he became an
independent decided he's not running as
a Democrat he's not going to become a
Republican he's going to run as an
independent fine so that meant who's
going to be the Democratic nominee for
mayor
and
there was a large field of candidates
that were going and the most uh
candidate with the most name recognition
was of course former Governor Cuomo who
left
under uh questionable circumstances
whether he needed to resign or not. I I
again that's politics. I don't get
involved. But he had been governor of
the state. Now he was running to be
mayor and he had the name recognition
and um and the person who eventually won
was a fellow whose uh father
was from Pakistan. His mother was from
India. He was born in Uganda and he won
he won with 10% of the vote. Nobody came
out to vote in this primary. Nobody
cared that much. It was hot, you know.
And he claims that he is sometimes a
socialist, sometimes a communist. He
wants to have governmentr run uh uh
grocery stores, you know, but one of his
positions that he's very strong with is
he speaks in the language of
anti-semitism. He sometimes cloaks it as
anti-Israel, but it's clearly
anti-Semitic.
When he says the inifada, which of
course was the uprising to kill the
Jews, needs to be globalized,
what he means is that everybody should
go out and attack the Jews. That's
that's the message. Not that we should
protest, not that we this. He was one of
the people who came out on October 8th,
the day after the massacre when Israel
hadn't done anything in support of
Hamas.
This is just it's just a disaster. This
fellow is terrible.
Um I happen to be uh a um a Governor
DeSantis uh afficionado. I really like
him. I like his policies. I like the way
he writes things. It's it's a little
unfortunate that he has this sort of
like, you know, voice that doesn't go
over it so well.
A little flat, a little nasal, you know,
a little monotone, but as far as his
policies go, he's great. Yeah. And he
had the best quote when he got
nominated, and he said, "I didn't think
prices in Florida could get any higher.
there are communities
the that are starting to move and mass
down to Florida
and uh and I mean he's proposing racist
policies. He says I think we should have
a higher um tax rate in areas that are
mostly white and wealthy. you know, so
when you say I want to tax white people,
yeah, it's it's kind of racist, you
know, and um uh it's it's just terrible.
It's just terrible to watch this. And
let's keep things in perspective. Is he
a terrible person? Yes. I think that's
pretty clear. Are his positions
terrible? Yes. Does he have supporters?
Yes. As much as everyone thinks, I don't
know. May Adams is still running.
So is Curtis Slew. He's running on the
Republican uh ticket over there. He's
never done particularly well in in
mayoral uh in mayoral races. And uh
personally, I think that uh the
Republicans should find somebody of a
Giuliani stature and um cut a deal with
Adams and and uh Sivwa that they should
drop out and run somebody who's a
serious candidate. And I think it would
be a a real big uh opportunity to change
things in the city and really repair it
the way that it was under Giuliani. But
uh like I say, I don't know anything
about politics. I'm not really involved.
But um um but in Chicago, they elected
um also a communist racist black mayor.
And um he has something like a 8%
approval rating. He's destroyed Chicago.
They do this wherever they go. They put
in these really extreme people and uh
they destroy the city. San Francisco.
Uh, San Francisco at one point was was a
uh was a beautiful city. It was uh it
was an unbelievable accomplishment and
and it was very upscale and nice and
wonderful and uh it's destroyed. It's a
it's a it's a slum. You know, it's a
terrible thing. And um uh that's that's
what poor governance has the ability to
do. Um it was very interesting when when
Giuliani took over from Dinkens became
mayor of New York. The had city was out
of control. Terrible crime rate. All
kinds of things like this.
And Giuliani told the police, "We're
going to focus on two things.
You have to be old to remember this.
When you would stop at a um traffic
light, these homeless people would come
in with a spray. They'd spray your
windshield, rub it down with a dirty
rag, and then bang on your window till
you gave them money. He says, "We're
going to get rid of the windshield wiper
people, and we're going to get rid of
the graffiti artists. We're going to
clean up all the graffiti, and if we
find anybody, we're going to prosecute
them to the full extent of the law." The
police were like, "We have murders, we
have robberies, we have all kinds of
terrible crimes, and that's what you
want to focus on?" He says those two
things send a message to the people of
the city. It says New York is Hefker
Hefka. You could do whatever you want.
And when you have people who feel like
it's heer,
I give you an example.
Um
there are neighborhoods here in
Kedi neighborhoods which are not very
clean. There's a lot of litter all over
the all over the streets
and this has led to uh people making
claims of course that oh the don't care
about dirt they don't take care of their
neighborhoods and I'm concerned etc. And
somebody asked me this once in a
question and answer and I said I have a
kasha
when I go to kirit safa which is a
completely run city it's not like that
there's not dirt all over the place so
according to you it should be one of the
filthiest places in New York how come
it's not that way
I said I'll tell you why
because the city would put out dumpsters
based on what they anticipated a family
is going to be.
And so, um, when you, um, take the
average Israeli family, which has one
kid and two dogs, so they don't produce
that much trash, and you don't need that
many uh, dumpsters. But when you come to
a Karedi neighborhood where if you only
have eight kids, you're going for
fertility treatments, you know what I
mean? And there's just an enormous
amount of people.
Um I I tried to give a perspective to
people. Um, I uh grew up in a little
town called North Merrick and my father
was one of the founders of a
conservative synagogue about a mile
away. The East Metal Jewish Center. East
Medal had Jews. North Merik was mostly
Catholic.
Merrick was Jewish, but that was three
and a half miles away uh from us, but we
lived in North Merrick, so East Meadow
was closer and uh you know, it was a
conserv,
you know, uh had my rebi rebu well Zatal
who helped to
get me to become. Um I started deting at
the Young Israel of North Bmore. I was a
mile and a quarter away. Uh okay. But it
was an Orthodox Jew. It was a small
Orthodox Jew.
And uh
we had maybe 30 families, maybe 40. I'm
not sure. It was a it was a very small
sh.
I live here in Harnov. There are many
buildings here that have 24 apartments.
And I tell people that two buildings in
Harov has more more yidden than I grew
up with in my community.
Um, four buildings, that's already a
reasonably sized one. But you go down
one side of one street, forget about it.
You know, it's one of the biggest shills
you'll find in a in in uh in America.
you know, a whole a whole half of one
side of a street. So, there's enormous
tens of thousands of people living here.
So, when you go to put in your garbage
and the dumpsters overflowing
um through poor management because
somebody dumps a few bags on top, if
they would move it around, everything
would tumble in and it would be okay.
But people don't. They just load it up.
So you end up leaving the bags of
garbage outside. So now when I have a
wrapper, you know, why should I stick it
into the full thing? I'll just toss it
on the on the ground to the pile. And so
you start to lose respect for the basic
functioning of society.
And now it's better. They put in these
uh these uh dumpsters that are
underground and you just open it up or
you drop it in. You don't see piles of
garbage outside like you used to. and ma
you find that it's cleaner things are
more massudar people don't just throw
things on the world on the ground
because it's a heft belt so he said you
have to show people that it's not hefka
that there's a quality of life that you
have to keep it going that's gone now
when you have homeless people living in
the street and they do not have access
to bathrooms and uh the whole city just
becomes this terrible place and people
you see videos of these homeless people
going around and and accosting people
and attacking people and, you know,
doing all these terrible things. After a
while, you just you just start to lose
hope.
So, all we're missing now is a mayor
who's a communist, who is an
anti-semite, who really, you know, he
says, uh, you know, the problem is
supermarkets. We should have city-run
supermarkets that people can buy food
cheaper. Oh, yeah. Because the city
because the government does a great job
with that. Uh they take a look and see
how it how it went in Cuba and in Russia
and and in uh Colombia and all the other
communist havens, how well that that
works when the when the government works
on food distribution. Yeah. So, uh
so it's a terrible thing. So, it doesn't
mean anything cuz it could be he's not
going to get elected, but it just sends
a a call to how mainstream it's become.
And that's not the scariest thing. Okay,
the left wing hates us. One can give
theories as to why that is. Um, some
people say it's because, you know, the
whole left-wing philosophy is that the
world is divided between oppressed and
oppressors. And because the
Palestinians, you know, don't have their
own state, they are seen as oppressed.
So therefore, anyone who tries to fight
against them are the oppressors. Even
though we've said many times, we'd be
happy to try to work out some kind of a
peace deal, etc., they don't want peace.
Uh both Prime Minister Barack and Omar
basically offered them the entire West
Bank in Gaza make their own state you
know and when Barack made them this
offer they counted by starting the
second inifada. Why? Because there was a
guy named Sadat who was the head of
Egypt and he said I'm going to sign a
peace treaty with Israel and they shot
him dead. So how long do you think a
Palestinian leader is going to last if
he says let's make peace?
Oh, shoot him in the head. So you need
the conflict. Arafat knew that when he
when he was offered, you know, whatever
he wanted. He says it can't. Our whole
is to hate Jews and to fight against
them, but we can't sign a deal with
them.
And it's a big problem. I remember when
I was in discovery, it was a question
and answer and Mati burger who tends to
be you know
state his positions in a very clear and
strong manner. So somebody said look you
know he was talking about the whole
situation in the Middle East and they
said look the Arabs want the same thing
that we want. Everybody wants the same
thing. To be able to earn a living, to
be able to live in a safe area, to be
able to send the kids to school, you
know. And he said, "The biggest mistake
you make is thinking that everybody
wants the same thing." That's what
Neville Chamberlain said when he went to
meet with Hitler in the Munich
agreement.
He doesn't want war. He doesn't want
death and destruction. He just wants a
fair deal for his country. He wants to
write the wrongs that were done in the
treaty of Versailles at the end of World
War I. But everybody wants the same
thing. No, he wants to conquer the world
and kill everybody.
Do you ever read Mike? But but he
couldn't process that because doesn't
everybody just want the same thing? No,
they don't all want the same thing.
Douglas Murray, who of course is a
brilliant commentator, he talks about
the the he refers to um kamas as a death
cult.
Now
um I forgot which which uh Palestinian
leader it was who said that we're going
to win this war because we're willing to
die and you're not willing to die for
what you believe in anymore.
as a good gaz. Yeah. We don't want to
die. We think life is important.
Yeah. Where as the Arabs, this one guy,
he he says he was running he he runs a
uh you know car garage, you know, repair
store. And one of his Arab workers said,
"You don't understand." He says, "When I
misbehaved, my father took me up to the
roof, held me by my foot over and said,
"Next time I'll drop you." That's how I
grew up. You know, talk about creative
parenting, you know. Says, "We don't
mind."
I I assume people have seen the videos
of where the kamas people will grab a
child and hold him as a human shield as
they're shooting. They don't care. And
they tell you, "Oh, everybody wants the
same things." No, they don't.
You know,
you'll never find an Israeli
who even when he shoots a terrorist will
call up his parents and say, "Mom, I
killed a killed an Arab today. Oh,
you're so proud of me. They have a
recording of the kamas people on on
October 7th. I killed Jews. I murdered
them with my own hands. you know, I he
there were these three soldiers who made
a wrong turn, ended up in Palestinians
uh um uh area and they were they were
butchered or killed.
And I remember this picture with uh the
Arabs who had killed them hold their
hands up covered in their blood to a
cheering crowd.
When I saw that, I said there is no way
to make peace with these people. This is
these people want to die. The they they
want to die or they want to kill us and
they don't care. Life is not important
to them.
You know,
you're not allowed to wear shoes with
cleats on Shabas, says the Gar. You know
why? Because one time there were Jews
who were hiding in the cave
and there were people on top walking
with shoes with cleats
and they heard the sound and they
thought that the goyam were coming for
them and so they ran out of the cave and
some people got trampled and got killed
and because of that they said you can't
wear shoes with cleats and even though
there are times you need shoes with
cleats at least on Shabas. This incident
took place on Shabas. So on Shabas has
nothing to do with dash has nothing to
do with uh um with you know has nothing
to do with anything like that. Yeah. It
has it's not it's not making holes. It's
because these people died on a shabas
because of someone with shoes with
cleats. We never wear shoes with cleats
because life is important
and therefore you you could be shabas to
save somebody's life.
Yeah.
We understand that life is such an
important concept.
Whatever you can do
Feinstein and this is what I heard. I
tell you the truth. I never saw the pak
and I never checked it out. I'm not
pone. Everyone knows this, you know. I
just I hear something and I say it over.
But people in uh in Hatal told me that
they have a they have a sock that you
can drive someone to Shabas on Shabas to
the hospital and you can drive back.
Why? Because if I know I'm going to
drive this person to the hospital and
then I'm going to be stuck in the
hospital for the whole Shabas, I'm going
to hesitate about whether or not I
should drive them there.
And that hesitation might cause them to
die.
Ray Burkitz has a very interesting uh
sack. I again I've heard this from
people. I didn't hear it from Ray
Burkwood. You can be m Shabas to go to
the hospital and you can m Shabas to
leave the hospital.
Because it's so dangerous to be in a
hospital.
There are people that I know who went
into the hospital for something and then
they caught a staff infection in the
hospital and that's what they died from,
from being in the hospital, not from
what they went to the hospital for.
So hospitals are a dangerous place.
But that's how seriously we take life.
Don't hesitate.
Somebody told me I made Kushalvki laugh.
I didn't I didn't I never saw him
actually. I got him to laugh because
there was somebody in Ben Brock who put
out a safer
and he said if your wife is giving birth
on Shabas
so the best thing is to take her there
on a bicycle.
If if she won't go with the bicycle, try
to get a horse and carriage. can't get a
horse. He kept going up until until you
know if you have to drive it there. He
says someone showed him this block and
he just burst out laughing.
He says, "You know, some nut might
actually do this. Someone might think,
oh yeah, wait, my wife is in labor. Got
to get in the hospital. I'll put her on
the bicycle." Yeah,
this is this is what you do
when it comes to
and so of course to us life is so
precious and so valuable
what we won't do to try to keep somebody
alive a little longer
and very often in hospitals they don't
understand this. Yeah.
My father
um
when we were in the hospital,
you know,
uh I got there on on Arab Shabas, he was
he died Friday night. So I got there
that Arab Shabas, we were in the
hospital and at some point they come in
to my mother and say, "Uh, we want you
to sign a DNR."
She said, "Do not resuscitate
because you don't want him to suffer."
And she was like, "No, I don't want him
to suffer." And she signs the DNR.
I didn't say anything because, you know,
my mother was was from the time my
father went to the hospital, she stayed
there and slept in the chair next to him
and never left him. You know, she was uh
she she wasn't ready to hear anything.
But very often uh they pressure you to
sign a DNR because people haven't really
thought about it.
Do not resuscitate and they're trained
to get you this. Why? Because they want
your organs and they can't take the
organs out of uh um
a dead person. So they had to come up
with a new definition of dead. So you're
kilo dead, you know, and take take so
they can take your organs. They came up
with brain death.
Anyway, but people are not prepared for
this question.
So,
you know, I had thought about it. I read
up about it and of course, hologically,
it's a problem.
So, I was in America going in for a
gallbladder operation, emergency
gallbladder operation, and they said to
me, "Do you want to sign sign a DNR?"
And I said, "No."
And they said but you know the
procedures could be very uh invasive.
I said be as invasive as you can. I am
not going.
And they said but you know you you might
be a vegetable. You you know you might
have to live. I said my goal is to be a
burden to my children.
I'm not signing it. So they didn't know
what to do. They apparently had never
met this kind of certainty before
because they're trained to get you to
manipulate you psychologically to sign
it.
But to be able to keep somebody alive.
And that's why very often when there's
certain procedures, the hospitals will
say things like, "Look, he's so old
already. Why don't you, you know, why
should we, you know, do this procedure?"
And our position is, "Keep him alive.
Keep him alive. If we can do something
that'll give him an extra month, an
extra hour, we do it because life is
precious.
Yeah.
When you're alive, you can do things.
When you're alive, you can accomplish
stuff.
When you're dead, it's all over.
So, these are people who don't care.
They celebrate killing Jews.
If we have to kill Arabs, we kill Arabs.
But that's why the climate claim of
genocide. Oh, Israel is doing genocide.
What a ridiculous thing to say.
We We could just send in planes and blow
up everything.
Instead, we send soldiers into uh into
houses. Sometimes they're booby trapped
and they get killed. just happened
recently. We send we send our children
in there because we're worried about
loss of life of of civilians. It doesn't
make a difference.
I say if they're going to accuse us of
it already, we might as well just, you
know, go in there and blow it up. Why
should we risk Jewish lives to do this?
But you see, Israel goes to tremendous
length and health
doesn't make a difference. whatever
happens they they they will come out in
the same way with the same criticisms
and the same accusations. It's just
terrible. And the same people who are
apologists for kamas, you know, who who
murder Jews and their whole sheet is to
kill Jews. Yeah.
Someone show me a video from this place
called the I think it's called the
Babylon being. It's a it's a they do
takeoffs and uh the person is
interviewing the kamas terrorist you
know and he says what are your
grievances that have led you to this
situation that you feel that you you're
so oppressed that you have no choice you
know what is it that you're that you're
really looking for and he goes we want
to kill all of the Jews
he says no no no that's only because of
part of an uprising because you feel
that you're oppressed. He goes, "Oh, no,
no, no. That is our chart. We want to
destroy and kill every Jew wherever they
are." He said, "No, of course that's not
really your position." Goes, "Yes, it's
in our chada here. I'll send it to you
right now." He says, "Okay, can we just
stop there?" Goes, "No, really. Is there
any Jews here? I'll kill them right
now."
This is and then the Christians
that's what that's what they write in
their their charter and everyone's
trying to say no no no they don't really
mean that they you know so anyway the
guy keeps saying it over and over again
you know so at the end of the interview
he the interviewer looks at the camera
and goes I guess we'll never really know
what their motivations are
pretty clear you know Ben Shapiro uh the
commentator said a very interesting
thing he says They're worse than the
Nazis because at least the Nazis tried
to hide what they did. He says Kamas
puts up the videos of them murdering
people and and they're proud of it and
they they dance in the streets. At least
the Nazis tried to cover it up and and
and and fake out the world that they
weren't really absolute, you know,
horrible people.
So the point is
when you when you see what's happening
in New York
and you see people you know screaming
anti-semitic things when you see in
London anti-semitic rallies when you see
in Sydney mobs screaming gas to Jews
when you see all these things taking
place
it reminds us people don't like us.
That's the reality.
And the said that that there's a
president of the United States who wants
to defend the Jews, wants to defend
Israel, and he put together a cabinet of
very pro-Israel people. It means that
is peing through the cracks. As the PK
says in Shirim, Kuru is letting us know
that he is not giving up on us. But when
we see the hatred,
it's there to remind us we're a nation
that dwells alone
and that people don't want us to be part
of them. And and when we try to become
part of their society and be accepted by
them, you know,
Israel, Israel goes to uh this uh song
contest, the Eurovision.
I didn't see it, but people tell me the
the singer, the Israeli singer is being
booed and being screamed at and insulted
and
and we think, yeah, yeah, they're going
to accept us. They're going to like us.
Yeah. There's only us and there's only
that's all that there is.
And um and hopefully, you know, when we
we'll have enough friends to get us
through till Mashiah comes to keep us
going. Uh and and when you when you see
how quickly things turned around, Iran
said they surrounded us with a ring of
fire, Kamas on one side and his bull on
the other and the and the Yehud and
Shamron on the other and and everybody
was supposed to come and attack us and
destroy us and Kuraku one by one has
stopped these threats and took them away
and took them down
and uh and we need to appreciate,
we need to express that appreciation and
and to give that to Hashem that Hashem
we've been saved and um and and have
that idea. And so when we see this
anti-semite
be nominated by the Democrats for uh
mayor of New York City and uh and Jews
are wondering what does this mean for
us? It means that we've got room here.
It doesn't you don't have to go to
Florida, you know. We have room in it
shell. We'll find more room for you.
We'll we'll fit you in. We'll take care
of you, you know. And uh that's not to
say there aren't problems here. Plenty
of problems here. But uh but it means
that that the yid and stand together.
And uh we should appreciate this.
Okay. And that brings us to the question
and answer portion of our program.
Anonymous writes, "I was a student of
yours over 25 years ago in seminary."
Oh, I can't imagine how that was
possible. 25 years ago, I was still in
high school.
Um, you know, they're coming out with a
new Superman movie. So, I always say if
they can reboot Superman every few
years, they I can have my own reboot,
you know. So, I'm I'm rewriting my
thing. But, okay. I was a student of
yours over 25 years ago in seminary. I
discovered your podcast a few years ago.
You know, my friends, there are a lot of
people who don't even know that that
this has been going on for six years.
So, um you know, send clips to people. I
have to I have to send this out there to
make sure that people know about it. Uh
because uh there's a lot of people who
appreciate it. Every now and then I meet
somebody who says, "I just discovered
the podcast. I started watching from the
beginning. Six years of it. Yikes."
Anyway,
I especially enjoy that you answer
questions on a v variety of random
topics which leads me to my question. It
is said that during a it is one of those
times considered apicious to Davin. I
have noticed recently after the ceremony
people are walking under the to there's
something specifically
about being under the also what does it
mean apicious time? Aren't ouris always
heard? Okay, let's uh let's make a
seder. Areis always heard?
Uh yes.
Yes.
However,
as you know, when you have a childproof
cap,
it's very hard to open the the cap. I
always think it's ironic that arthritis
medicine comes in childproof caps when
people with arthritis can't possibly
open them up. But you know that the
suggested way is to line up the two
arrows and then it opens easier. I can't
say it opens easy, but it opens easier.
What if the arrows are not lined up? Can
you open it? Sure. You can get yourself
a pair of pliers and rip it off and get
a knife and cut it open. But it's not as
easy as when the arrows are lined up. So
too, we live in a world that's limited
by time and space. And so there are
certain times and certain places which
are more opicious
for our to be accepted.
And therefore
right the mdash is a
says when people dive in here that
should be answered. So we understand
that the mikdash you go to d by the
closer you get to the mak mikdash the
stronger
your felus have a possibility of being
accepted.
uh years ago uh I was doing a question
answer this woman said I saw a guy who
had a necklace with a yud k vke on it
and I said to him you know you can't
bring that into the bathroom and he said
why god's not in the bathroom
I didn't know what to answer him I would
say and god is in the synagogue it just
means that there are certain places
where the concentration ones is stronger
so too there are certain times
and So um dear
you should seek when he's closer to us.
These are the days between rash and yum
when au comes closer to us. Of course
hashem is infinite. There's no such
thing as closer. It just means that he's
moreoy
and so there are certain times. So yum
kipper obviously is a time when ouras
are more accepted
and uh can I dive in on a random
Tuesday? Of course I can. But it's going
to take more energy to rip off the
childproof cap
than when the arrows are lined up like
during rashan and kippa. There are
certain times
at the
the kala are fasting and they say a vidi
just like kipper and they wear a k
they he wears a k just like on kipper
and she's dressed in white. Yeah.
because you're going into
uh a day where when you get married
forgives all your sins. It's a
why it's like why
people don't appreciate this.
When you get married, you're becoming a
different person
because now you're you and she's her and
each one of you is a separate entity.
When you join together, you become an
Adam. As the Torah says made an ish and
is he separated them and when they join
back together, they once again become
adam.
So until this point, you know, you've
been and she's been Mali and now you get
married and you become a new entity
mali.
Yeah. you you join together to form a
new person, a new entity and that wipes
the slate clean and you start over again
as a new person.
So that has the power of all the avonos
being forgiven.
So for sure for them to be able to dive
in under the it's it's a special power
of
and what about the people at the
so I already mentioned that the
B mikdash is a special mo
said when he built the base of mikdash
that will be accepted at the base of
mikdash it has that power They are feel.
We speak about the gul that once again
in the streets of will be heard the
sounds of a and a kala. Why? Because
when a andala get married and build a
bias
a bias.
What is a bias? It's the mishkan.
Eleza comes back and says tok I got a
girl for you. First of all, she's
beautiful. Second of all, she's got
wonderful midas. Third of all, she's
from and she's a balid. Oh,
unbelievable. Yeah. And plus, you know,
the mal killed your father-in-law, so
you don't have to deal with him. Yeah.
And um the uh uh
going there, you know, and um and um the
water comes up to greet her in the well
and said, "Unbelievable." I said,
"Picked a special girl for you."
Unbelievable.
And he says, "Very nice, but none of
that is what I'm interested in. Let's
see when she goes into my mother's tent
if the nissim that took place when my
mother was alive takes place. Does the
bread stay warm like the upon him and
the mdash stayed warm a whole week? Does
the cloud come over the tent like the
cloud was always over the is the near
dul like the n
the ravi which stayed burning in the ba
mikdash all the time.
Yeah. So um uh I want to know whether
she is able to make my home into a
mishkan.
That's what I'm looking for.
And that's what Bum said when he wanted
to curse the Jewish people and he sees
their homes and he says
every one of your homes is a mishk
and that's why when we go to a and we
watch the kala there's an aspect of the
gul there
there's an aspect of the ba mikdash
being rebuilt of the moat
that the BA mikdesh is that's why for
everybody at the it's also a massugal
time to be able to davin because we're
accessing the bas mikdash itself. And
that's it for this episode. If you want
to find out more about the show, you can
go to my website roloski.com.
You can sponsor an episode. You can
sponsor a para in five. We're going to
be restarting the para in five on Varim
because I missed so much of the midb in
the middle. So uh uh I got a email from
somebody who said they sponsored a para
in five we will move it over mashem to
the dvarim section. Um you can ask a
question leave a comment uh download
shiorim download the uh the theme song.
Sign up for one of my online shior. And
that's it for now. Until next time I am
David Alowski and this has been the
Rabbowski show.
It's the Rabbi Orlovski Show. Torah and
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