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>> Thank you for your very kind remarks and
words. Thank you to the Arari family. So
I was here a few year I was a few years
ago invited to come into a classroom a
Shia room in BMG in Lakewood
and there were enough people to fill the
room. It was pretty packed. A few of you
went to some other rooms. I think that
was the coron uh right before the corona
year right the year before and uh to be
able to see the growth of this
and of the community coming together
with such aim
is really thrilling and inspiring and a
privilege and a gift for me personally
to be able to be here with you during
these special days leading up to a new
amazing, incredible year with God's
grace and to be able to feel once again
the warmth and the hospitality
and the friendship and the brotherhood
that this community is known for the
world over is really a great gift and
very very inspiring and empowering. So,
thank you for the invitation. Thank you
for the privilege and thank you for this
and may God grace us all.
May you have your most amazing year yet
for you and your loved ones materially,
spiritually with the most revealed
abundant blessings in all of that your
heart desires and a year of true victory
and a year of true redemption. Amen.
>> So
I was once in Miami. I was at a lecture
and I went out and I was late. I had to
get to the airport. It was before Yum
Kipper. I needed to get back home and my
taxi didn't come and I ordered another
one and it also didn't come. A few cars
were not coming and it was very very
late. And then I saw something. I saw
the late Senator Joseph Lieberman. All
shalom. He was a senator of Connecticut
for many years. Joe Lieberman and his
wife. May she be healthy. Hadassa
Lieberman. see them going into a limo
and even though he was a senator and
it's not so nice but I needed a lift to
the airport and I had a hunch. So I went
over and I said, "Senator, forgive me.
Maybe you go."
He said, "Yeah." I said, "I know it's
maybe inappropriate, but maybe I could
sneak into the front seat cuz I need to
get to the airport and my taxis are not
coming and I won't say a word. Don't
worry, I'm going to be quiet." "Sure,"
he said. Come in. So I went near the
driver, but once he was there, I'm going
to be quiet.
So I'm going to go home. It's not a
Jewish thing to do. Yeah. Somebody once
asked Ellie Weisel if there is a
tradition in of silence in Judaism
because wherever he goes, they don't
stop talking. So he wants to know if
there's a tradition of silence in
Judaism. So Weisel said, "Yeah, but we
don't talk about it."
So what am I going to talk about? My
silence. So I turned around. And I
apologized again. I said, "I'm sorry,
but once I'm here, I have to ask you a
question. There's a joke, a story I've
been telling about both of you for many
years now, and I don't know if it's
true,
and I want to verify it. Here's the
story. Joe Lieberman was running to
become vice president of the United
States. You may remember, together with
Al Gore, on the ticket of Al Gore,
president, and Joe Lieberman, vice
president. Many Jews were ecstatic. An
orthodox Jew, Ashimo Mitzvah, vice
president of America. At the end of the
day, they lost. Gore lost and Lieberman
lost. He came home that evening and his
wife Hadasa greets him and she sees that
he's depressed. They lost elections. He
was depressed, melancholy.
And she looks at him and says, "Joe, you
don't have to be depressed and sad. In
this house, you will always be vice
president.
I heard this joke. I heard it years
ago." And I say it, it's a good joke.
You know, Jewish women, Jewish husbands,
I don't mean to remind you. I know you
ran away, but whatever. You're going to
come back
over here. You could be presidents. I
don't care. Over here, you could be a
president. I'm fine.
So, uh, Hadas Aliban looks at me and she
says, "It's a good story."
I don't know what that means, but you'll
give your own interpretation.
But I remember this because I was
reflecting very deeply on the state of
the Jewish people today,
not just in Israel, of course, but
really the world over. And it's
something that is on one hand so
baffling,
so disturbing,
so startling,
so enigmatic,
so bizarre,
so unfathomable. You understand my
English? You learn English not too bad.
So unfathomable
and yet in a very strange way. Also very
moving, very holy, very inspiring. You
know sometimes
students ask the question and it's a
very common question today. Rabbi
Jacobson, can you really be a rational
person and believe that the Torah is
divine?
I mean, there's 12,000 religions that we
know about. Many others that are
absolute we don't know about. And
everybody claims God said it. That's
what they do.
Can a rational thinking, open-minded
person who doesn't just want to accept
what their grandmother told them, but
they really want to appreciate it
internally just like you would
investigate science, physics,
mathematic, cosmology, or the stock
market. Can a rational Jew
who thinks about things, who wants
truth, authenticity,
really believe wholeheartedly, sincerely
that every word of the Torah was
dictated to Mosher Rabenu, by Hashem
himself, by the creator of the world.
And it's a fair question. It's an
important question, which is why sages
and commentators and thinkers have
discussed it and explored it over the
generations. And I know professor kel
rabbi professor kel will speak soon.
It's one of his great topics permission
to believe. But I told my group of
students I said that I want you to know
something. The way I see it is that
maybe one of the deepest deepest proofs
in a very real way to the truth of Torah
is what has happened in the world.
October 8th,
2023.
Because when you look at it, it is so
irrational to the point that it's mind
staggering almost like the sun telling
me the sun has risen today in the west
and setting in the east. A little
country,
6.6 6 million Jews
surrounded by 57 Muslim countries. Not
two, not 10. 57 Muslim countries. One
little Jewish state. The size of Dallas
International Airport. That's Israel. Or
near my hometown, the size of New
Jersey. Tiny little country. It would be
like a football field and a match on the
football field. And this little country
one morning
October 7th is attacked by monsters who
invade 6:30 a.m. burn, behead, rape,
torture. I'm not going to get graphic
now, but everybody knows what I'm
talking about. abduct, capture until
today
with not just murderous intentions, with
a sadism, with a barbarity, with a
cruelty that we thought
we heard about in the from the Middle
Ages from 1648, 1649 pgrams of
Kalanetski of the Kazaks in Poland and
videoed and recorded and proud. The
Germans wanted to hide the evidence.
They understood
that it's shameful, at least for the
world. But they they recorded it. And
you have to hear something fascinating.
I couldn't believe it till I read it.
Two weeks ago, there was a international
film festival in Toronto. And one of the
films was about October 7th. And they
didn't accept it. You know why? They
said, "We don't have permission from
Kamas to use their footage. It's
illegal. And I'm like, wow. Imagine
we're not allowed to publish pictures of
the Holocaust because Hitler and Gobels
Himmler and Aishma didn't give us
permission. And you don't behave
illegally towards such special people.
Unbelievable. This is Toronto 2025.
And the country is attacked. 250
hostages taken, 1,200 murdered.
And Kamas says, "We're going to do it
again and again until every last Jew,
heaven forbid in Israel and in the world
is dead." So a country a few weeks later
goes into Gaza
to destroy this enemy that wants to burn
would love to burn every Jew alive
in its day. You would think that the
civilized world would at least show a
little empathy
towards this Jewish homeland. What
happened in the days and weeks and
months until today afterwards
baggle boggles their imagination. Not
only was Israel not empathized with, but
demonstrations emerge all over the world
and they're protesting pro- kamas
against Israel. And you're not talking
about demonstrations in Afghanistan,
in Syria, in Egypt. I get that. You're
talking about Harvard University, Yale
University, Oxford University, Colombia
University, Ivy League universities
filled with Jewish boys and girls that
Jewish parents were so proud of that
they could pay $400,000
to get your kid through four years of
Harvard. Turns out he comes out after
four years. He doesn't know the
difference between Hitler and Churchill.
A rabbi at Duke told me nearby there's
UNC, University of North Carolina. On
October 12th, 2023,
there was a demonstration there at UNC
University North Carolina. And the
demonstration, of course, was pro kamas.
There's a Jewish professor, a secular
Jew, who teaches at the university. And
when he saw this from the window, he was
disgusted. So he went out and he started
to scream, "You're a bunch of Nazis. You
support genocide." And the police escort
him away supposedly for his own safety.
As he was screaming at the pro- kamas
protesters, you're Nazis.
He comes back to the university and then
he comes in to give his lecture
and before he begins his lecture, one of
the girls, his students comes over to
him with a rose.
He says, "Why rose?" She said, "I saw
and I heard what you said outside of the
protest and I was so proud of you how
you stood up for truth. I just want to
show a gesture of support
and sympathy and here is my rose. He
looks at her and says, "You must be
Jewish." She says, "I'm not. I'm a
gentile. I'm Christian." So he says to
her, "So why do you care?" She says,
"What do you mean? You're the chosen
people." He looks at her and says, "Come
on. You already know me. You're in my
class for many months. I'm an atheist. I
don't believe that we're the chosen
people. We're not the chosen people.
We're just the regular people. I don't
believe God exists. What are you selling
this to me? And this girl looks at him
and says, "Professor, you may not
believe it, but we all know it.
It was such a powerful moment."
Because you ask yourself, I don't
understand. In the Congo last few years,
5 million people were killed. 5 million
in Cheschna, 200,000 in Darur, Sudan,
4 million people in Syria, 600,000
people by their own government,
including through chemical warfare and
many children
and many other massacres in the world. I
didn't see one demonstration. Nobody
even knows about these things. Nobody
even knows about it. And here a tiny
country attacking an enemy that's
swearing to destroy every Jew. And it's
condemned by professors and journalists
and politicians and leaders and
thinkers,
including some self-hating Jews. How do
you explain this? I don't understand.
You care about human life. Syria,
600,000 people.
Congo, 5 million, not 20, not 30,000,
not 40,000.
And the only way you can even begin to
make sense of any of this is when you
appreciate the truth. And that is that
everything the Torah says about the
Jewish people is not just valid, but
it's authentic to the tea. that there's
something about Israel and there's
something about the Jew that is so
metaphysical
is so transcendental is so
meta-historical
that it triggers people in ways that
they themselves may not even appreciate
how deeply it triggers them that when
the Torah keeps on saying again and
again that God says I've choosing this
people to be a blessing to the world he
tells the first Jew
You Abraham, you will become a blessing
for all the nations of the world. You
are the moral beacons, the ambassadors
of the creator to transform the planet
as we say three day times a day
or as we're going to say it two weeks.
Our goal is
let every creation, let every creature
become consciously cognizant of the
truth of oneness of anoid
and that the Jewish people represent the
ambassadors theim
of Hashem himself in this world to
represent that there is truth, there is
goodness, there is morality, there's a
difference between good and evil, truth
and falsehood
and that this title tiny tiny nation
represents that truth and it's eternal.
Then you look at it and suddenly we see
4,000 years later we still trigger
that same passionate response that is
completely disproportionate and
irrational. Why? What? When?
You know, there's one mitzvah in the
Torah that always baffled me. It's so
interesting. You come into any shul in
the world and they want to know if
there's a minion. Over here we know
there's a minion. But sometimes there's
eight people, nine people. They're not
sure. So you expect, right? Any newcomer
to a shul, they're always baffled. The
rabbi 1 2 3. No, you're not allowed to
count Jews. So you come into say not
one, not two, not three, not four. And
if they're hungry, they do.
And if they're not hungry, they do.
What's the big deal? Just do 1 2 3 4 5.
You're not let it count Jews. A verse in
Paris, God tells Mosheisa,
when you want to make a census of the
Jewish people, do not count them. How do
you count them?
Let everybody give a contribution of you
count the money. What is this? God knew
that this is a way to make a Jewish
appeal.
How you going to get them to give? You
make We have to make a census. We can
only count money. Wh What's the point?
What's the big deal? And there won't be
a plague. Why is it so serious?
My friends, there's a very profound
message here. Why do people make a
census? Why?
Why does anybody make a census? The
answer is when you take a count, it
demonstrates power.
If a country shows we have 1 million
troops, it means don't start up. If a
company shows that we have 3,000
employees, it demonstrates potency.
When a country has a large number of
citizens, it means there's a great
workforce, there's taxes, there's
revenue, there's potentiality. Whenever
you count, it's in order to show an
impressive power. God tells Moshe,
"If Jews ever count themselves, you know
what's going to happen? They're going to
go into depression."
You know why?
It's a tiny little people.
How many Jews are there in the world?
People don't realize we do not
constitute even a quarter of 1% of
humanity.
People sometimes think Jews are like
20%, 10%. We're not even 1%. We're not a
half a percent. We're not a quarter of a
percent. 0.2.
The number of Jews is smaller than a
statistical error on a Chinese census.
Yeah. Check it out.
We have almost three billion Christians,
almost two billion Muslims, 1.2 billion
Chinese. As I'm talking, another million
were born. They're going to have shalom
zak Friday night.
And Jews, we struggle for every soul.
Every soul, 14 million, maybe 15, 15 and
a half, 16k.
Not even a quarter of a percent. Jews
are going to look and say, "We're
supposed to survive, thrive, and change
the world. Is this a joke?
What a mockery." They say, "There was
once a Christian priest and a minister
and a rabbi. They went to Starbucks to
have a latte for 950.
So, what are they going to talk about?"
They talk about what they would like to
hear people say at their funeral. That's
a nice conversation. The priest says, "I
would love to hear somebody say at my
funeral, he was a true man of God. He
served the Lord." Minister says, "I
would like to hear somebody say, "At my
funeral, he was a real friend. He knew
how to be there for the people." Rabbi,
how about you? What would you like to
hear someone say, "At your funeral?" The
rabbi says, "At my funeral, I would love
to hear somebody say, you know, I think
he's moving.
I just got it.
A nation,
a nation to experience such persecution.
I don't know if you know, we can count
on one hand, maybe two hands, the number
of cities and countries from which the
Jewish people were not expelled
throughout history. Panama is one of
them. But not many. Not many.
Almost on one hand, the countries that
did not expel us over three and a half
thousand years. So you're telling me,
Hashem, we're going to survive. We're
going to thrive. But not only that,
we're going to influence the whole
world.
Doesn't make sense. God says, don't
count Jews. You're going to get the
wrong impression.
Count their contributions.
Don't count them. Count what they have
given the world and you'll see a
different picture. You'll see something
that is also super rational.
We have something in America called the
Nobel Prizes. Nobel Prizes began around
120 years ago. Alfred Nobel, the
inventor of dynamite, gives a Nobel
prizes for five great contributions to
advance progress in the world. If Jews
don't constitute a quarter of 1% of
humanity, how many Jews should have
received a Nobel Prize from the 900
Nobel prizes in the last 100 years? The
answer is a half a Jew. Actually, a
quarter of a Jew. That would have been
statistically correct. In reality,
you'll take a look and you'll see that
in some of the areas, Jews have received
almost 40%
or 30% or 25% of Nobel prizes. And
people are like what? Muslims have
received four Nobel prizes and one of
them Yaser Arafat for peace.
Yes. Yes. Chinese 11 Jews shouldn't have
received one. Disproportionate. God says
don't count them.
Count what they give. Count their
contributions. And that's in the world
of medicine, literature, peace,
economics, cosmology, science, physics.
I've told my students in the last 100
years there have been four revolutions
that changed the world in the year world
of science, the world of biology, the
world of politics, and the world of
psychology.
The world of science and physics was
transformed by Professor Albert
Einstein.
The world of psychology
by Ziggman Freud whose real name was
Schllo Miller Freud just for the record.
Politics for good or bad but the world
was changed by Carl Marx
and biology by Charles Darwin. Marx,
Freud, Einstein were Jewish and Darwin
was wrong.
Now
I should say this Markx was also wrong
but it would have ruined the joke. So
okay
it's fascinating. Now if you look in the
world of spirituality
of ethics the flow of sages, rabbisim,
kings, leaders, visionaries,
righteous, holy people, what they gave
the world in terms of ethics and depth
and godliness and holiness. It's
incessant. It's endless. Not 40%. It's
endless till till this very day. that
the righteousness the sensitivity to
goodness the fight for goodness the
holiness the
God says don't count them
you have to always look what they give
then you'll be able to appreciate you're
dealing with a different type of people
and this doesn't generate arrogance it
generates humility I once saw a
Christian writer wrote people accuse the
Jewish people for calling themselves the
chosen nation by God it's so arrogant
and he writes something so profound and
moving. He says, "Don't you realize that
when you look at how much they
contributed and their achievements, the
fact that they called the themselves the
chosen people is the humblest
explanation for their achievements.
They're actually giving God the credit.
It's the humblest explanation of their
achievements. The most humble
explanation. They're like, "Nothing to
do with us. We just ended up here. God
chose
But Jews doubted this for many
generations. Could you really believe
this? I mean, come on. We just had bad
masle in Europe, bad masel in Poland,
bad masle in Russia, bad masle in
Germany, bad masle in Spain. That's why
we came to Panama.
Masle mausle mausle. And finally after
the Holocaust, Jews had an era of peace
and acceptance and no more
anti-semitism. And then suddenly I know
I come from America. Many American Jews
really really believed we have finally
integrated successfully. The world loves
us. And how many Jews have been the
greatest
proponents of left causes for
humanitarianism
and me too movements and women's rights
and minorities rights and every fight
against bigotry and even
microaggressions
and suddenly when women are tortured the
way they were on October 7th all these
movements
you're Jewish you're human. You're even
human. Has a Jew eyes
a Jew nose as Shakespeare wrote in The
Merchant of Venice.
And Jews say, "What happened? Where we
where did this come from? What did we do
wrong?
How bizarre.
But it all goes back here. You see that
every word of the Torah is authentic.
The Jewish people are the link between
heaven and earth. The Jewish people are
the ambassadors of the creator of the
world that represent truth, eternity.
We are conduits. We are channels. And
even the Jews who say, "Not me. Not me.
Not me. I'm just a regular guy. I like
sushi and golf and a couple of dollars."
They don't believe it.
And sometimes we ask ourselves, are we
the same Jews who stood at Sinai?
Are we the Jews who left Egypt? We're
the Jews who crossed the Red Sea. We're
the Jews who went over the Jordan with
Joshua. We're the Jews who built the
first betam mikdash with David and
Solomon. We're the Jews who fought with
Rabbi Aaka, who learned by Rabb Zakai.
We are the Jews who sat
and produced the Ramba and Rashi and the
greatest of the greatest sages and
sadikim. We We're just regular Jews.
We're not the same people. Come on.
One second. Just take a look at the
hatred and you'll see it's the same
Jews. The same way we were hated 3,000
years ago, 2,000 years ago, thousand
years ago, 500 years, 100 years ago,
it's the same hatred to these very same
people.
And no difference what type of keeper,
no keeper, this hat, strial, no hat.
Why?
I'll tell you why. Because evil
senses
holiness and is allergic to it.
Things have been compared to the miners,
canaries of history. If you know how
miners work, they go down to dig for
coal. Before they go down, you know what
they do? They send down canary birds
into the mines cuz canary birds are
sensitive to poison, to noxious fumes.
If the canary birds don't come back, you
know, don't go down. There's poison. If
the canary birds come back, the miners
follow. The Jews are the canaries
of history. Wherever there is poison,
we attract it first. The Kuzari says,
Rabbi Alvi says, wherever there's evil,
they attack the Jews first because they
sense the holiness, the godliness, the
kusha,
and they attack it. But it never ends
with Jews. It starts with Jews. It never
ends with Jews. Stalin began with Jews.
Didn't end with Jews. Hitler started
with Jews, didn't end with Jews. The
suicide bombers started with Israel.
They don't end with Israel.
The miners canaries attract that. And
when you look at this, you could say,
"Wow, what a disaster. What a
catastrophe." And it's painful.
We must also say, "Wow, look at the
kadusha of amra. Look at the holiness of
the Jewish people." It says in
King David says, "I become wise from my
enemies." And one interpretation is tell
me who your enemy is and I'll tell you
who you are. Don't tell me who your
friends are. I don't care. Tell me who
hates you and then I know who you are.
And here we ask a question. Wow. If we
are a people that was hated by Pharaoh
and the Vader,
by Hmon and by Titus, byki and Turkade,
by Hitler and by bin Laden, by Narah and
by Ahmedad,
every one of them evil monsters. I want
to know what are the Jewish people doing
so right to attract all these people's
hatred.
If Hitler sees you as his greatest
enemy, I want to be your friend. There
is something so glorious, so powerful,
so divine and sacred that the kipa, the
tuma, the impurity experiences in such a
deep way and is so allergic and is so
committed to destroy, to annihilate, to
obliterate.
What you're seeing today in the world is
not just anti-semitism and hatred.
You're seeing this spiritual holiness
that the creator of the world invested
in his people with a mission to light up
our lives, our homes, our communities,
and the world with truth, with msuat.
Sometimes I look in the mirror and I
say, "I'm just a simple guy."
They don't think you're simple. Somehow
they see in you
In every Jew, they see everything. And
it's true. You could learn from this the
power of
that a soul is a
peace of hem.
And when you ask a very deep question
and the deep question is how did this
happen? God says no count their
contributions. But how did this happen?
How do you explain it? How do you
explain it? If you ask today,
where is the Egyptian Empire? Where are
they? Where is the Assyrian Empire?
Where is the Babylonian Empire, the
Persian Empire, the Greek Empire, the
Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire?
Where are they? And the answer is
they're in Wikipedia.
They're all there in Wikipedia. And then
you ask, where are the Jewish people?
This little little minority. And the
answer is we created Wikipedia
with Google, with Facebook, with ways,
with Instagram, with Telegram, with all
the other interesting stuff. Why? Cuz we
like to write the obituaries of our
enemies. As I'm talking, you can go on
to Wikipedia, go to
and edit their orbituary.
But we don't only like to edit their
obituaries. We also like to eat them.
And that's why we took our greatest
enemies and we turned them into the most
delicious Jewish foods. That's our
revenge. We took anti and we turned them
into a latka. We took Hmon and we turned
them into a hint. We took Pharaoh and we
turned them into a matzab ball
and we're taking kamas and turning them
into humus.
We don't only want to write their
obituaries. We want to literally become
fat from our enemies. Humanached,
moatza balls, lkas. And these foods, my
friends, do make us fat.
It turns out actually that our enemies
are still killing us. But this time it's
through the food. Because the common
denominator of all these foods is carbs.
Somebody once asked me not Jewish. Why
do Jews eat so many oily stuff on
Kaneka? Latkas, donuts. So for Jews, we
have the answer, but I knew it's not
going to work for a Goya. To explain to
Hershe, professor that really the minora
was supposed to burn for one night, but
the oil burned for eight nights and
therefore we soak the LKUS for eight
hours and then eight years in oil
to commemorate the miracle of the
minora. So for Jews it's perfect. Of
course, of course. Give me another
donut. Another one. Another one. The oil
eight days, eight donuts.
But for that doesn't work. So I needed a
simple explanation. The simple
explanation I give is Kaneka represents
the victory of the Jews over the Greeks.
The Greeks were into looks, sports,
Olympics, and fashion. So on Khan when
we defeated them, we make sure to eat
those foods that will guarantee that we
will never look like them.
Say, "Oh, this is a deep cabalistic,
very deep cabalistic explanation."
But when somebody really asks how does
that happen, you write their obituaries,
you eat them, turn them into foods.
And if you again take a very rational
approach, those of you who are familiar
a little bit with the scientific method,
you know, whenever scientists want to
examine how something survives over many
many generations in difficult
circumstances,
whether it's an insect, a reptile,
You'll hear me.
What scientists do is they search for
a characteristic that this organism has
maintained throughout its entire history
because you can't attribute longevity to
something that was only there part of
the time. You need to look for something
that is a constant and then you could
say, "Ah, this must be it."
When you ask a question, we're here
3,400 years since Moses, 3,800 years
since Abraham. It's a lot of time. They
once asked a Chinese politician, "What's
your opinion about the American and
French Revolution?" He said, "It's too
early to tell."
But for us, it's not too early to tell.
And you say 4,000 years later going
strong Panama.
Going strong. How? Tell tell me how. So
we have to look for a characteristic
that was always there. Can't look for
something that was there for 500 years,
1,000 years, 2,000 years. That doesn't
explain the eternity. So now you ask a
question. Is there one characteristic
that accompanied the Jewish people from
the day we stood at Sinai till today
3,337
years later? Exactly. Is there one
characteristic that we can identify and
say this is it? And people ask this is a
great question. So people will tell me
food.
But no different cultures of Jews ate
completely different food. Some Jews
don't know what geila fish is ramanlam.
Some Jews don't know what is. Even
worse,
culture, Jewish culture varies
constantly. Till today, there are
cultural things of Ashkanazm this farm
think. And conversely,
some people say a country we wish, but
for most of our history, we were exiled
from our country. Some people say
language. Halavi. Most Jews till today
don't know the language our language
military an army hali most of our
history we didn't have that and we
suffered the question is is there one
thing that carried the Jewish people and
was there with them from the day we
became a people in every corner of the
world in good times bad times thrilling
moments and horrible moments when the
sun was shining and when the sun set in
the hol the holy land and outside of the
holy land and north and south, east,
west
have a few. You would have to ask which
one is the most important, but there's
only one
and that is from the day we stood on the
mountain till today.
three and a half thousand years wherever
Jews were.
They had the Torah and the celebration
of the mitzvah that they lived,
breathed, celebrated and bequeath to
their children with nephesh with
commitment and love and devotion.
The Messma, the great of andal
both give a brilliant commentary.
There's a very strange mitzvah in the
Torah. You weren't allowed to take away
the poles from the auron. From the ark
when they put the ark into the holy of
holies, the poles had to remain
steadfast to the auron.
Why? Who cares? Do you know that the
mishkun in one place was for 369 years
in Shilo? You can't take out the poles
369 years. If you buy a Van Go painting
or a Rebrand for $29 million,
you leave the suitcase in your dining
room. You put it away. It's not nice to
have poles. You put it away.
Say as follows. There's a very profound
message here. The ark was in the holy of
holies in the capital in Jerusalem in
the holy temple, the epicenter of the
Jewish people. What happens to every
single nation when they get exiled?
They lose their independence. They lose
their commonwealth. They lose their
army. They lose their political and
military power. They assimilate. Even
the Roman Empire, most powerful empire,
where are they? They were defeated and
they assimilate. I never go to Macy's or
Century 21 and meet somebody. Who are
you? I'm a grandson of Caligia.
I'm an anacle of Julius Caesar.
My ela ela ela zeta was Vpasian
but I meet thousands of Jewish nudnik.
My z was
you know who I am.
How does that happen? God says don't
take the poles away from the ark. As
long as the Jewish people will carry
with them the auron, the ark, wherever
they go, they will have a transplant of
Israel and Jerusalem and the beta
mikdash and the holy of holies in their
dining room, in their shs, in their
schools, in their communities. That's
what happened.
Henria was a German poet. He converted
to Christianity. And he writes, he says,
German for the 1700s. They were making
fun of the Jews that they don't have a
homeland. This is the 1700s. And hyena
said he was a mashummed he was a
convert. He said they do have a
homeland. It's a portable homeland.
How do you think the miracle happened
that 70 years ago and today 6.7 million
Jews live in Israel? In 1948 there were
600,000 Jews in Israel and 1% of them
were killed in the war of independence.
6,000 Jews. Today there's more than 6
million Jews there. Do you know that in
a few years, for the first time since
King Solomon, more than half of the
Jewish people will be living in the Holy
Land? Don't take that for granted. How
did that happen after 2,000 years? The
answer is cuz we, the Aron, had polls
and wherever we went, we took the ark.
So, we could be living in Panama or in
Sustavitz, in Budapest or in broad.
And when it came time for you faced
Jerusalem
learning, observing, celebrating whether
it's
learning about the carbon or the carbon
the consciousness
of the shakadashim of the ark was alive.
That's the secret of the polls. So
there's one constant characteristic that
was always there. So if somebody asks
what is the greatest power of the Jewish
people, we don't have to be brilliant.
You don't even have to have crazy faith.
You could use science as a guide. Look,
look
where is Hmon? Where is VPian? Where is
Titus?
Where are we?
That's the significance of when Jews
know who they are. They understand their
holiness. They understand their power
and they understand that the world feels
it and senses it and looks up to that.
Everything changes. Everything is
transformed.
My dearest friends,
I'm going to conclude with a story that
happened with me. I was invited a few
years ago by the Pentagon to give the
keynote address to the chief of chaplain
of the US Army, the Navy, the Army, and
the Air Force. They have an annual
spiritual retreat, a Christian
where the chief of chaplain come
together to inspire themselves. Now,
usually they always had Billy Graham,
the great Christian preacher, to speak.
It's a whole story. Douglas Carver, the
chief of chaplain, met aid, Colonel Yank
of Goldstein at the first Gulf War and
they became friends. They slept in one
tent and when he became the chief of
chaplain, he said, "Enough with Billy
Graham. I want to hear from a Jew." And
he asks Goldstein. Give me the Jewish
Billy Graham.
So he calls me up and he says, "I'm
giving you sma. You are the Jewish Billy
Graham. If the Pentagon calls you,
you're officially the Jewish Billy
Graham." I said, "Shr, don't tell my
mother-in-law I don't need this.
It's good for the Jews." He says, "It's
very good for the Jews."
And show the Pentagon called the Jewish
Billy Graham. And I was invited to South
to Hilton Head, South Carolina to give
the keynote address to more than a
thousand Gentiles, the spiritual leaders
of the US Army, mostly Christian,
Catholics, Baptists,
Mormons, all different branches of
Christianity, Epis Episcopalian, few
Muslims, a few Hindus, a few Buddhists,
very few Jews because there's not so
many Jewish soldiers. They like more
real estate for whatever reason. So
there's not many Jewish chaplain over
there. like 10 of them, mostly
Christians.
So, how did I know it was a non-Jewish
event? The keynote address was 8:00 in
the morning. Who ever heard of a Jewish
event with a keynote? 8:00 in the
morning. 8:00 in the morning. Mat
a bagel. Maybe you think you're this,
you're that. 8:00 shine. They were
already up 4 in the morning jogging on
the beach with their Bibles.
It was quite an interesting experience
for me. Anyway, I spoke to them and it
was very novel. It was also very
intriguing because, you know, Gentiles
listen to speeches different than Jews.
You know that. Now, I love Jews. I love
Jews. In fact, my mother is Jewish. My
father is Jewish. I married a Jewish
woman. My kids are Jewish. I'm Jewish.
But one thing, I don't like to fly with
Jews. And I don't like to speak uh Okay.
And speaking to Jews is hard. Flying
with Jews, you know what it looks like.
Right. It's a shul. It's not a flight.
It's a shul. It's a bish. It's a k.
Yeah. The other day in ll there was a
guy. He wanted to sleep for 11 hours.
Ll. Good luck. Good luck. So he put up a
sign by his seat. I ma I david mv. I
don't want a davin shak here. Okay. I
don't have sushi. I don't have a
pacifier. I don't have baby wipes. I
don't have a cider. I don't have an art
scroll. I do not have the bubbali's
gulas for turbulence. I have no tissues.
I have no diapers. I have no band-aids.
I have no kami. I have no tahillim. I
have no I have nothing.
And he thought nobody will wake him. 5
minutes after he falls asleep, somebody
is already banging him in his ribs. They
don't just wake you up. It's like right
in the ribs right here. You know what I
mean?
He's still sleeping. He's like, "Read
the sign." The guy says, "I read the
sign. I need something. Read it again. I
read it. What do you want?
Nothing like flying with my brothers and
sisters. Do you remember there was an
airline tower earlier?
So once they're going to Israel, it's
Kaneka time. You know, December 25th,
January 1st. They land, the captain says
to all those who are sitting, happy new
year. To all those who are standing,
happy Kaneka. Okay. Speaking to Jews is
also very interesting because every Jew
who hears you speak already has an
opinion. Do you know that? Jews don't
listen. They have opinions. And if they
hear something either it's like this I
heard already. This I heard I know it
already. He's repeating himself. And if
it's good you're like I'm going to use
it next week. Very hard for Jews to
listen really. But though and also
feedback is not so easy with the Jews.
They don't like giving feedback. The
best you get is
especially the Ashkanaza but I'm not
going to go there at the moment. It's
like stiff neck.
But over there they were like,
"Halleluah, rabbi. Halleluah. Yay.
Halleluah." They also know the Bible.
I'm aaya. They finished the verses and
we had a great time over there. It was
very interesting. I got like a hundred
invitations to come to the churches next
Sunday to speak. But uh yeah, I didn't
think it's a career for a nice Brooklyn
Jewish boy. So that was the end of that.
But something very interesting happened.
Douglas Carver, a Baptist, a Baptist
boy, gets up and he turns to the crowd
and he says, "I wonder where did Rabbi
Jacobson learn to speak with so much
passion
weird." And then I know he learned from
the Baptists because if you know the
Baptists, they're like, "Oh yeah, God
loves you."
So he says, "Rabbi Jacobson must have
spent time by us, by the Baptists." And
that's where he learned how to
communicate. And everybody started to
laugh. You know, it was pretty funny
with a yam capas, a beard, you know,
Baptist child. I'm Jewish. So, of
course, I'm part of the website
www.jwegilt.com.
So, right away, I feel guilty. Why do I
feel guilty? Publicly, he said that I
was spending time with the Baptists.
Baptism is Christianity. I have to make
a mah. after protest. But then I'm like,
"You idiot. He was joking. Everybody
sees you're not a Baptist. I mean, the
Yamaka gives it away a little bit." And
then I'm like, "Yeah, but even if one
guy," and I'm going back and forth. I'm
torturing myself. And then I'm like,
"The guy was joking. It was a cute joke
cuz he's a Baptist and he was
complimenting you." And then I'm
thinking, but even as a joke, Jews had
so much sacrifice not to embrace
Christianity. That's why we're here
today because of our ancestors. And in
America, first century, I'm going to be
quiet. And I'm going back and forth,
back and forth.
And then I decided, you know, they
didn't invite me because of my looks or
my brains. They invited me as a
representative of the Jewish people. And
if my ancestors paid such a deep price
to stay Jewish, I owe it to them just to
say something. And I knew you're not
supposed to interrupt a four-star
general. If you do, you have to do 900
push-ups.
Now, I'm a slim, handsome guy. But 900
push-ups is pushing it. I'm not the Navy
Seals yet.
And then I thought, Yankl Goldstein is
never going to forgive me, and they're
never going to invite me again. You
know, they won't invite me. It's not
nice, but I don't have a choice. And I
literally interrupted him. And I said,
"General Carver,
no, you got it wrong. The Baptists
learned it from us. We stood at Sinai
and the Baptists learned it from us."
And suddenly the entire audience broke
out in an applause. And even Carver, the
general, is also applauding me. And I'm
like, what? When he said I was a
Baptist, they all laughed. When I said
you learned it from us, they were all
applauding me. And then I realized the
powerful truth that I always heard from
my Reb, from my teacher. The world
respects Jews who respect Judaism.
The world is embarrassed by Jews who are
embarrassed by Judaism. Thank you very,
very much. You've just experienced
another Torah class brought to you by
tora anytime.com.