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Heat. Heat.
[Music]
Okay, we're going to dedicate our Torah
for the protection of all of Israel, in
particular all of our
should only hear good tidings for all
the whole Jewish people.
Let's sing a little niggan and get
ourselves in the zone and then start
learning some strong Torah.
I N
I N I N
[Laughter]
I am
hal A
[Music]
I I I
am
I I am
I I
na
Nana
[Music]
[Applause]
I
hana
[Music]
I am n
[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
I'm
[Music]
okay everyone in this very very special
night. I think it's is of the yard site
of the ishes unless it's tonight. I
think it was last night and who I'm
named after
the ishes.
So his light is still shining into the
world. His his love the greatest thing
in the world is to teach is to do
something good for another person. So
this should be
and for the whole Jewish people. So
we're continuing our explorations of
we're up to the of
we're going deep deep into understanding
the first mitzvah that we do every
single day. So we'll start with a story.
The story goes that it's deep somewhere
in Bashento land where is me and it's
shall and all the are singing the
holiest time of the year and suddenly
the BMTO goes kind of into his own
world. He's flying and he's in a
different world and then he wakes up and
they continue singing. After Shabas goes
out, they ask the what happened and he
says, "The light of the west has been
extinguished. The holy
has passed away." And indeed that was it
that the holy or passed away. They asked
the how did you know? He said that the
secret of yadim was revealed to me at
that moment at shalashidis. You see in
every generation there is one sadic who
knows the secret of
and was that sadic when he passed away
the secret was revealed to me. Um and
that's the story and now I'm about to
reveal to you the secret of natil.
No not I don't know sorry but we will
definitely uh explore it together and
based on the teachings of our holy sages
we're gonna go some
and it should be great. Okay. So let's
reveal one beautiful teaching from
that is a pre that we do before every
mitzvah except it's not really true. If
you think about it, there's certain
mitzvah that we do that don't merit a
bra. Okay? For example, we have a
mitzvah every day to remember
morning and night. We fulfill it in our
but ain't nobody saying before you dab
in uh before you do that mitzvah, right?
Mitzvah that are done with our speech
and with our with our brain with our
don't merit a bra but mitzvah that are
done with actions with physical actions
like washing of hands so they get a bra.
Yeah. So says the roshuwab in his
beautiful teachings beautiful uh safer
on which we always quote rashwab on
prayer often my students ask if there's
one saper that you want me to open to
learn on my own they're not to come to a
like this I recommend on prayer very
often because it goes through the whole
feel and not just the amid unbelievable
explanations so explains that all like
this that our bodies are holy Okay. And
how do I know that?
Every mitzvah that we do, we bring
kadusha into our body. Okay. And we
infuse holiness with every action. And
that's why even after we die, the body
of aid is on a hold is still holy
because it's been sanctified through the
mitzvah. A gentile, as amazing as they
are, they're going to lift up their
souls through every good deed that they
do. But their body is just a shell so to
speak which is encasing the soul. But a
Jew's body retains holiness even after
the soul has gone to the next world.
That's and that that that's what speaks
at length about is the secret of a Jew
has holiness and that's why a Jew has
the laws of washing hands and not
washing hands. A gentile is holy as
beautiful as a person. His body is still
a gentile body, but his soul is is is
can be lifted very high. The Gmorra says
beyond the high highest level, but his
body does not get uplifted. Maybe that's
why we care so much about these 13
bodies that are still stuck in Aza
logically. Okay, their souls on a
different world. What does it really
matter? No, but the body is still holy
and it needs to get a Israel, you know,
and that's why we still go to
some of the holiness of that saddic is
still infused in the body which has been
uplifted through the mitzvot that we do.
That's why we care so much about the way
that we're buried. I just heard a really
beautiful story at Aza 24 just came
through me that uh there was a yid and
uh he was he was he died and uh when the
kadisha saw that he was buried in the
wrong spot. He was buried in where his
wife's plot was supposed to be and the
man is not supposed to be buried next to
a woman. So they had to dig up a whole
new plot. These guys, normally they have
the Arab guys dig the the big spot and
they just do the finishing touches, but
they quickly realized that they had no
choice. They quickly quickly dug a whole
spot and put the the body in the right
place. So they went and they told this
to the stu to those children of uh of
this person who passed away and they
were in shock. They were totally blown
away. Why? Because that person had been
dabbing for months. He asked his
children that a Jew should bury his
body, should build the whole the whole
burial spot should be dug by a Jew. And
they went and they asked the Kadisha and
he refused. He said, "No, if he's going
to ask, then everyone's going to ask and
soon we're going to be having to dig all
of the the graves." And he refused to do
it, but he wouldn't give up and he kept
dabbing and diving. He never gave up.
And unbelievable.
Uh God arranged it that Jews should be
the ones burying digging the burial
spot. And again we might think who cares
the soul's in heaven but no the body is
holy and we remind ourselves of the
holiness not just of the soul of the
body when we do every time we do a we're
reminding ourselves of the holiness of
the gof not just of the nama. So that's
one secret that Rwab reveals to us. But
I want to go kind of start from the
beginning and ask yourself as we try to
do every year where did this whole thing
come from? what is the history of
okay so the truth is in the garra it's
not completely clear it's not explicit
uh where it comes from but putting the
pieces together we can come up with a
little bit of a story the mhammed my u
who I learned so much from in his way
succinctly sums up the evolution of but
not starting actually from in the
morning but starting from uh before
eating bread so basically it started
with The whole body, the whole body is
one unit according to Judaism, right?
Let's say you became impure from
biblical times. How do you purify
yourself? You got to immerse your entire
body in a mikvah, right? If even one,
you know, little inch is out, then
you're not pure. The body is all one
unit. But comes in Shabas and he teaches
us that made a specific decree that the
hands should be spec considered their
own unit. hands are different than the
rest of the body. That started with
Schlommo. Schlommo decreed that if I
touch um a corban with my impure hands
and a
regular hand is considered impure. If I
just touch a corban, it's a pussle
corban. You can't use that as a
sacrifice. Based on that decree of
Shomik came and they decreed that Cohen
who touches um Truma holy coen food and
his hands were not purified were not
washed beforehand.
So then it's possible you have to burn
it and based on that says
comes and decreed I think it's
that all food is considered impure until
we wash our hands and purify ourselves
before we eat bread. Okay. Okay. So it
was a decree that led to another decree
that led to another decree in the time
of kazal which is why we have to wash
our hands before we eat bread because
and this is really whole difference here
because all of us are really mini kani
right every time we sit down to have
dinner we have to remind oursel that
we're kani based on that of time for
breadal also enacted says the
um to wash our hands in the morning.
Okay. And now in the braos in two
separate places and
discuss it in but does not give the
exact history that the exact evolution
that I'm expelling it out to you but
putting the pieces of the puzzle
together Rashi kind of puts this story
together. Okay. So that's a little bit
of the history, but let's step a take a
take a step back and ask ourselves
before made all these decrees, is there
any biblical precedent? Something I
always like to ask myself when I'm
learning where did get these ideas from
to make these decrees and it's always
starting of course from so do we have
any precedent a of the hands and b of
water insh okay or no so let's start
with the hands
where do we see this the uniqueness the
specialness of the hands
in the Torah itself where the hands are
being used in a different level.
>> Oh, beautiful. So, the first thing that
comes to mind is the cure, the lav,
which is the big washing vessel. If you
want to see a live one, you go to
Mikdash. They built a whole big one. Or
if you're lazy, go on YouTube and write,
you know, labyrin. You can see their
Google images version. Um, but it's
worth it's definitely could die at some
point to see that one that the temple
institute built. It's really big and
cool. But back in the day, the kanim
were obligated to wash their hands and
their feet before they did the holy
service in the beta mdash. So we see
that the the kanim were doing holy
things, washing their hands, purifying
their hands and their feet before they
did their holy service. So certainly
that was in the background when khazal
made this decree of us washing our hands
in the morning. Are there any other
ideas which come to mind? Yeah, Larry.
>> No, but I'm just trying to I was
thinking when the
strangers the
came to Ara.
>> Excellent.
>> But he washed their feet.
>> Yeah. Fat. So you and Romo think
similarly. Exactly. There we go. Great
minds think alike. Right. So Abrau is
looking outside in the desert and he
sees a bunch of holy Arabs as says it or
idoltors or desert desert dwellers. We
don't really know but they're wandering
around and he brings them in and Torah
says he washes their feet. Why did he
wash their feet? So it says
he's washing away their
okay. They had idolatrous practices.
They may have been using their feet for
bad stuff and he didn't want to bring
that into his tent. So he washes their
feet. Okay. Says that's also that's also
the idea behind when we wash our hands.
We're mimicking that energy of we're
washing the aodor off of our um off of
our hands before we start going into a
meal or before we start our day. We're
washing away all those thoughts of oh
look at me. I'm in charge of the world
or all of that anim animalistic uh
energy that may have come into me that
when I'm about to jump into my steak and
I wash it away and then I'm able to go
into my uh my day and my food in the
right uh in the right state of mind. So
in other words, it all really began with
Abrau washing the feet of those holy
idolattors. Now Larry's going to ask me,
okay, so then we should wash our feet.
Why? Why? Why are we Why don't we wash
our feet every morning like Abrau? And
the answer is I don't know. It's a good
question. Um but I do have a a custom
that I made up that on uh the first
night of sukus, I wash my guests feet. I
take water and I I pour it over them. We
have a water fight. It's a lot of fun.
>> But you're always talking now about
washing our hands in the morning.
>> Correct. They're they're related
concepts
>> because there are other
times like
when you're entering uh
to pray,
>> right? So I'm going to have to clarify
on the hikic level like all the
different situations of washing your
hands if we have time for that because
meant to really just do I just want to
understand but if we have time I
definitely want to explain the
difference between the different times
but on the simplest level there was
value in washing our feet in fact the
kin used to wash their feet but we are
washing our hands because our hands are
dealing with the world we'll get back to
that that's what the rush says
the hands are the things that are
interacting with the world the most. And
therefore, it's most important that we
wash our hands and purify our hands
because our hands are the things that,
you know, nowadays that's what we're
typing with. That's what we're checking
our phones with. We probably use our
hands nowadays more than in any other
time. And so, since our hands are
interacting with the world, that's what
needs to be purified and sanctified. But
the original energy goes back to Abrainu
purifying those uh angels back in the
desert. Perhaps we can suggest. Okay,
there is another famous story that comes
to mind. There's there's a few, but
there's one that comes to my mind when I
think of hands. Hands in the Torah being
used in a holy type of way.
Now that I think maybe another idea
comes. Any any ideas come to mind?
So, I'm thinking of the story of when
Mosherenu and Yeshua are fighting
Amalecch
and they raise their hands to the sky
and the Torah says
their hands were loyalty. Their hands
were faith. Their hands reaching to the
heavens
is that connection point between Hashem
and and the Jewish people. So, we see
the power of the hands.
In fact, that brings me back to another
hands. Who else is using their hands?
>> The kohanim raising their hands to bring
the chef of
interestingly enough says a coen. He was
he's on the of a cohen. So maybe that's
why he was washing the hands of those,
you know, angels. But the coen are using
their hands to to bring the blessing of
God to the world.
What about Elijah?
>> Yeah. What did he use his hands for?
>> I have maybe I have to study the story,
but I thought that he put his hands up
and and the fire of Hashem came out of
the sky.
>> It could be. You're right. I don't know.
>> We'll go after this year. We'll do some
on the Eliu story. I remember. I'm sure
there are many other times of we see the
P power of hands.
time day. Yeah.
>> Right.
>> When Yakov came in and to trick him and
he felt
>> right, the hands and I'm trying to
remember the phrase. We'll have to think
about it. The voice of Yakov, but the
hands of Asov when he's using his hands
in a negative way. Anyways, there's a
lot of power in the hands from a
biblical perspective. And let's just
take 3 minutes, four minutes to think
about water. And there's a lot of places
we can go with this. Where do you think
Khazal got this idea of water being a
purifying element? Well, the most
obvious thing that comes to mind is
again the cure, the the the washing of
the hands of the Coen. But there are
other situations where water is being
used as a purifying element. What else
comes to mind?
>> Noah.
>> Noah. Right. Right. This is para I've
got God restarting the world
specifically through water. Beautiful.
Where else do we see water as a
purifying element?
>> Okay. The red heer is a good example.
What else comes to mind?
All of the immersions of the Cohen,
everyone else, the women, it always
starts with water. And maybe it really
all starts
it all starts from the
the spirit of God which is hovering over
water and the water which seemed to
exist even before the world is created.
So says that there's something about
water that when you go into water, you
feel like you're being recreated. You
feel like everything starts again, you
know. At least for me, I try to start my
morning. I go to the mikfire. It's like
a restart, you know. And actually, in
this past army service, I was lucky
enough that on my base, they had a
little swimming pool, you know. So,
there was uh wasn't much exercise that I
could get on in my shmero between
shifts. So, I would in the middle of the
day, I would go swimming in this little
pool that the army somehow got for us,
take all the bugs out. And I always felt
like it was like a restart, you know, re
reconnect to myself, reconnect to my
body, reconnect to my soul. So there's
something powerful about getting back
into the water. There is there is such a
custom indeed.
>> What when is that?
>> Um it's a it's a hanhoga. It's a custom
because they're just being in a bath
house. And since one one custom is even
in a bath house when you're surrounded
by naked people, you kind of wash your
hands and purify yourself. You don't do
it with a braha. It's not a it's a it's
a min there many many different I could
think of 14 different scenarios where
there's customs to wash our hands but
we're not giving here so I'm not going
to go into all the details
>> yeah yeah once it comes up for sure so
there's a lot to unpack the power of
water and power of hands
with all that biblical background I want
to give the most classical explanations
of the rishonim as to why we wash our
hands so The most famous explanation is
given by the rush Rabenu usher. He was a
Spanish uh reishon a great tamudist. He
was actually originally from Germany and
he writes
cuz when you go to bed your hands
they're all over the place.
They're going to touch dirty sweaty
places at night.
So to prepare before a person reads and
says the rabbis decreed that we need to
wash our hands in the morning. So it's a
little bit of a practical element
and note it's because we're going to say
and so in other words the rush is
already trying to answer a question that
you might have asked yourself which is
why are we only washing our hands before
and why not before and
many people do have a custom to wash
their hands before and but that's a
custom there's
before you do it's an obligation. So why
do we specifically wash our hands
before?
So perhaps he's answering because we
went to bed, our hands are are dirty,
and we're going to say schma in morning.
So maybe putting those factors together,
that's his explanation, kind of a
practical explanation as to why we wash
our hands, right? What if a person uh
made sure that he didn't get his hands
dirty? Let's say he was wearing gloves,
right? Well, let's say he stayed up all
night. A little bit more practical. So
then according to the rush, would you
have to wash your hands? Could you say a
braha before you wash your hands?
According to the rush, if you stayed up
all night,
no, you can't because it's a practical
element. Maybe you could say loo. We
won't make we won't distinguish. But on
a simple reading of the rush, no. In
that scenario, if you know your hands
are clean, so you don't say. On the
other hand, comes the rash and he argues
again the gumar is unclear. Thear
doesn't say the rationale for washing
hands and that's why the rishim argue
about it
the holy also 13th century they're
contemporaries he also lived in Spain
and he argues and he says
in the morning we become a new creation
we're recreated
Um,
every day we're recreated. We talked
about this in our mod year. Our soul
comes back to us and
we have to thank him.
We were created to serve him.
And that's why the rabbits establish in
the morning.
We have to sanctify oursel
and specifically use a vessel because if
it's really just about cleansing ourel
like the rash seem to understand it. So
then why do I need a why do I need a
vessel? Why don't I know to do it in
this whole specific way? But since rash
rash has a rash has a whole different
understanding. He says
we are like the priest who would
sanctify his hands before he would do
the holy service and that is why we wash
our hands. So just to review the rash is
basically saying two separate
explanations but he's kind of putting it
together. First of all, we are recreated
every morning. And since our soul is
coming back to us, we need to somehow
kind of thank God and remind ourselves
that we're here to serve him. And so,
how did Kazal enact the best way to
remind ourselves that we're here to
serve him? So, we wash our hands with a
vessel in the same way that the kanim
used to have to wash their hands before
they did the sacrificial service. So
using the energy of the sacrifices, the
rabbis
did and kind of drew it to every Jew.
The implied message is where are the
kohanim? Who are the kohanim? Now it is
we are in other words again this is
decreed apparently seemingly at the end
of the second temple era around the same
time that is making all of the blessings
and the amid. So in other words, they're
shifting the energy from the kanim being
kind of the leaders doing the holy
service. And now who are who are the
kanim?
We are the kanim. Every Jew when he
wakes up in the morning and he's washing
his hands every day, he's reminding
himself that I am a cohen that I am here
to serve God
to to to
sanctify myself to do his holy holy
service. Okay, got the rash's
explanation. Now both of these are given
by the rishonim and the and the po can
write. We should be strict like both of
them. We should take both of them into
account. Both the Rashba and the Rosh,
we consider them both correct. Which one
inspires me personally? You probably
could tell from the way I explained it.
I connect a lot more to the Rashbasa's
approach than the Rush's approach. To
me, the Rush is more practical
cleanliness.
Okay. Uh but Rush makes it to me is much
more spiritually inspiring. Um that
every Jew is a Cohen and that's why
we're washing our hands. Now there is a
third explanation. There's a lot of
explanations. I just we don't have time.
But there's a very important third
explanation and that is based on the Gar
and Shabas. I think it's the 50th page.
But it's also alluded to in the Zohar.
And that I'm sure we've heard of this
concept is the concept of
what does mean
evil spirit.
There's an evil spirit that falls upon a
person. When does that evil spirit fall
upon us? When we go to sleep. every
night. Something about the fact that we
no longer have our intellectual
capacities or something about the fact
that our soul is going up and down um
and when it comes back into us, there's
still a little bit of that evil spirit
and apparently it sticks on the corners
of the body which is the hands.
Okay? And that evil spirit stays within
us. And how do we get rid of that evil
spirit?
We're washing our hands. Water is a
purifying element. So we're bringing
that purity of godliness and we're
getting rid of the
and we're washing our hands and getting
getting rid of that negative energy
through the washing of the hands. Okay,
that's also the way explains it.
If you count the words in
there's 13 words. So says through the
mid of
we're being the we're separating the
negative energies out that somehow came
onto us and uh and taking it away. Okay,
there is a bit of a dispute. Is the ru
because we went to sleep or does it
happen automatically? In other words,
let's say guy stays up all night.
So, did the evil spirit come on him
because he didn't go to sleep
or is it something about that change
between night and day that somehow
brings negative energy into the human
soul? So, we don't really know. Uh, have
a good night. And so, we compromise.
Actually, it's a big what do you do if
you stayed up all night? Um I believe
the you wash your hands but without a
braha cuz we're not sure which task like
and the Mishnab suggests going to the
bathroom touching an impure place and
then you have to say uh and then you
have to wash your hands cuz it was
impure or dirty and then you wash your
hands and then you um say it with a brah
that's generally the Ashkanazi practice
but uh in any case these are the three
main uh explanations in the rishonim as
to why we do.
Okay, one interesting side point. Um,
there are a lot of rabbis who write that
either doesn't exist today or at least
doesn't exist as strongly. And so we
need not necessarily be as concerned as
once upon a time uh about this evil
spirit. Okay. Um who t who speaks in
this language? the Maharsha about 400
years ago. the Rambam some some read him
in this light and toos says that in
these German lands we're not concerned
about the
okay um and there's a famous interesting
msor brought down by the gro by the
vagon that after the kdish hashem of
count patski
is a famous uh convert who converted to
the Jewish people and then they caught
him he was the famous uh church member
and they said we're going to kill you.
We're going to kill you unless you
convert back to the Christianity and he
said no and they killed him in front of
the whole vilna I I believe and it was
such a great keshm that somehow it
nullified the ru
and so even many pe students of the gr
believe that the kot of evil spirit are
no longer as strong in the world. um
since that happened. Now this is not
universally accepted. Okay. And the you
see this mlo when it comes to washing uh
within four amos of your of your uh bed.
uh many great cabalists like the and the
benish and many many and the mishna
uh write that we should be strict to
make sure that we don't go even for amos
without our hands being uh washed
because of this evil spirit which rests
upon a person but other rabbis are a
little bit more lenient a because we're
indoors if you're indoors and the yakov
says that whole cabalistic thing doesn't
apply if you're indoors and B because of
the ru being weaker in our generation.
Um some explain in other words once upon
a time the world was very spiritual. Now
since the enlightenment and the we're
very brainy and we kind of don't have as
much space for spiritual stuff and also
the negative side of spiritual stuff the
so it's a fascinating uh different
argument.
um some distinguish between the rah
mentioned in the garbar and the rah
mentioned by the cabalists to it's a
whole interesting discussion but you
should know it's good to be strict in
any case to why not if you can but uh
some rabbis are more lenient about that
that for amos thing of uh washing your
hands in the morning
>> so it's not to do for
>> it's a cabalistic
uh stringency that's some postkim are
strict about
>> um And but I wouldn't call it an
outright hal means something accepted by
all the postim. It's a bit of a
something that everyone would say you
don't hurt, you don't lose. But in
certain situations it's it's hard. Let's
say in the army, you know, it was it was
challenging. I meant sometimes it's
challenging if it drives your wife nuts
when I have the four and the
>> Yeah, exactly. It happens.
You have to know you know
when I was a kid I read the kids are and
everything I said I took to be
it's good to do you don't hurt and will
be very happy with the so why not but if
it's hard for you you don't have to do
too much chuva there's other things to
worry about
okay but anyways I want uh I want to get
back to a little bit of the meaning of
the words itself okay I share kishan
That itself is already I alluded every
mitzvah we're bringing infusing holiness
into ourselves.
Okay, the famous is it better to be
commanded? Is it better not to be
commanded? They're both a very high
madrega to do something optionally, but
it's even higher to be commanded to do
something and still to do it because as
soon as somebody tells me to do
something as a man, I don't I want to go
to the other way. I want to not do it.
But I still do it. And in that way, I'm
connecting to God. This is one of the
seven rabbitical laws in decreed by the
rabbis. Um so it's an early early
rebbitical tradition. And I'm also um
proclaiming my faith in the rabbis by
every day opening up my day and washing
my hands. The custom by the way, not the
custom is to wash right, left, right,
left, right, left. The Mishna Bura
actually writes right for and left for
for Gura and right it's called Sirugin,
right? somehow gets rid of that negative
energy that
why that is. I don't know. I'm not a
cabalist, but you can talk to your
cabalist friends and let me know cuz I
was I was always curious why somehow the
right maybe it's a zus of going I don't
know right, left, right, left, but
somehow that gets rid of the negative
energy. Uh if you if you're not don't
have enough water, you could technically
just do one and one, but the min is for
sure three times. Um, that's just now I
want to analyze these words
because really what should the be if we
were to be
this
if it's bad cleaning oursel like the
Rash says or
washing that's normally the language
used. So why did change from the normal
language and
and and uh explain and call it
to take water literally. It's a good
question. No, maybe never thought about
it. We're doing it our whole lives, but
it's it's good to know. So, explains
the
that is
Meckllinburgg. He was a German rabbi
around the same time as Malbim defending
to.
And uh he gives a beautiful explanation.
He says just like Natim was to if you're
a Coen to raise you to a higher level.
So now I can eat my truma.
So too
every time I wash my hands I'm being
raised to a higher level. And
is actually a language of raising myself
higher. He brings a few sources. For
example, in Daniel and in Yeshu the
doesn't mean to take but to raise high.
Okay? So that's why they didn't just say
to wash my hands, but I'm changing my
status. I'm uplifting my mindset. I'm
lifting myself to be like a Cohen
every time I wash my hands. And I think
that's just a beautiful thing to know
about every time we say
few more explanations. Why don't we say
the and then
wouldn't that make more sense? Normally
teaches us we always say the and then do
the mitzvah over
because the brah is there to prepare us
for the mitzvah. So why here then we
wake up say the braha and then wash
rather we wash and then say the braha
and then dry our hands what's going on
what's up
>> oh so the explanation is given just like
a g a g
cannot
say a braha before he goes into the
mikvah he's not Jewish yeah so Two, I'm
still impure. I'm in a different status
until I wash my hands. And when you feel
this the most when you in the morning
and you really I don't know about you
guys, I used have to go to the bathroom.
So I'm not I'm in no state to say a
braha, right? So then
I'm purify. I I wash my hands and now I
go to the bathroom. Then I wash my hands
and then I'm feeling ready spiritually
to say the brah. So because of that
situation, the rabbis just decreed that
it should be done after I do the action
of washing my hands.
>> Modifi is modi considered a braha.
>> So modi is not a in fact that's why it
was decreed without God's name because
it doesn't have name. So you are allowed
to say in fact encouraged to say modi uh
before you do anything else. Um
I'll get back to a second explanation.
No, I'll give a second explanation and
then I'll give you a few practical tips
about the stuff that comes up. Uh
there's a second explanation. I read
this years ago, I think from Salvik. I'm
not sure. Uh but some explain actually
that washing your hands is only the
beginning of the process of the mitzvah,
but the drying of the hands is getting
rid of the impurity, the tum. So that's
actually a part of the mitzvah,
interestingly enough. And so now I've
completed the mitzvah by drawing my
hands and then I say the bra.
So that's just good thing to know that
the drawing of hands is actually part of
the whole uh process of fulfilling this
mitzvah. Good thing to know. Um now what
do you do practically? So there are
different customs
how to do this. Uh one custom is first
of all you wake up in the morning you
say mi and most of the time in our
generation we have to go to the
bathroom. Okay. So, we go make a beline
to the bathroom cuz you can't do um I I
take it back. Some suggest you
immediately do do washing your hands. If
you don't have to go to the bathroom
that badly, wait a little bit. Get rid
of the evil spirit, okay? Cuz you don't
want it on too long. But then you can't
say because you still have to go to the
bathroom. So then you go to the bathroom
and then you wash again one, two, one,
three times. Okay? And then you say the
Okay. So that's one recommended way to
do this. Uh ha the second if you don't
have to go to the bathroom at all when
you just wash regularly.
Um
and the another custom which is brought
down by some of the pushim is you go to
the bathroom wash your hands but don't
say because you're still not ready
you're not in the frame of mind to
bless. Okay. So what do you then do? you
go to shul and then as long as there's
not too big of a break between washing
and and going to shul right before you
go to shul you wash your hands again and
then you say the bra this would seem to
line well by the way with the
explanation of the rush because for the
rush it's all about preparing for
the rasha it's not specifically about
but rather it's about a preparation for
my whole day as a service of god
so if you go with the rasha way doing it
makes a little bit more sense to do it
right away in the morning. If you go the
rush way of doing it, you want to do it
right before you dab. It's a big mlo
whatever you do, you have big rabbis on
your back.
>> Yeah. If you don't wash your hands
before
>> uh technically you could you could say
and then do later. Oh, so you're kind of
contradicting yourself because if you
could say God's name for a so why
couldn't you do it for Sudan? Good
point. Good question.
>> I don't know. Maybe by the time you say
Yeah. No, I I think the custom is not to
wait to do a later to do a right after
you go to the bathroom.
>> Can you can you uh go to the bathroom,
wash your hands,
say
>> do then do a
>> Yeah, after you do.
>> Yes, absolutely. You could definitely do
that. In fact, that's recommended by
many of the posters. That's often what I
do.
>> Okay. Beautiful. Um, a few last notes.
Um, there's a strong custom to wash
little kids hands. It's a good thing to
know by both the mystics and the brisk
and the apparently spiritually it's very
healthy. And so I have I have a 2 and 1/
halfyear-old. So since he was one and a
half, I started that's my I wash his
hands. I don't know if he knows what's
going on, but it's fun. It's good. It's
good good abba Alicia time. So I
recommend it heavily first of all to
have kids. It's a lot of fun and second
of all to wash their hands. Um another
thing worth mentioning
um is the teachings of
Carlbach. So I just want to finish off
with
this is a Carlbach's book on he didn't
write it. I wrote it but I compiled his
different teachings on different parts
of so uh I want to bring a few sweet
teachings down about
to cap off our sweet night together. So
first of all
says like this says the deepest thing
what are hands for? Hands are for
reaching. How do you reach out to
another human being? It's beyond giving
and taking reaching reaching out to God
in heaven.
The Gmorrah says that Hashem created the
world with his hands.
God we are the work of God's hands. God
created us with his hands.
Would say that the hands could reach
higher than the head. Hands have the
power to heal people. There are people
out there use their hands. They can
actually heal people through their
hands. this certain kak you know there's
a passage in the zora which is the most
beautiful Jacob when he prayed he held
his hands up gaval
he was reaching up to the heavens as
when he prayed his hands were always
down he didn't want to reach god he just
wanted to get something from god so our
hands are there to connect
doesn't mention it here but by yid
nephesh he teaches yid is yady a friend
are two hands connecting
two people trying to connect to one
another. That's the essence of a friend
and that's the essence of relationship
with our
then connects it to our relationship
with one another. You know, sometimes he
says someone gives you hands, someone
gives you a handshake and he's just
giving a little bit of flesh and you
kind of want to just like move on and
sometimes someone shakes your hand
and his mama shaking your soul, right?
Sometimes when a person gives you that
hand that you feel like he's really
really love expressing his connection,
his love, his desire to connect. So we
wash our hands in the morning, we're
reminding ourselves of our to connect to
and to connect to each other and to use
our hands to connect to one another. By
the way, cabalistically, I don't know
the secrets, but I'll mention a few
spiritual things. Hands have 10 fingers.
You know 10 is very powerful. 10 is
10 words. God created the world. The 10
m 10 spheros. So 10 represents
completion.
And we're using our hands bringing
Hashem to connect to each other connect
to to to one another and connect to in
the most complete way.
That's why I when they say
they reach out their hands to connect to
not just many of this custom to connect
to the
so we should every morning to use our
hands to connect to one another and
we should be
to know the power of water. We were
talking a little bit before the secrets
of water secrets.
One last teaching of a mo without water.
Nothing grows without water.
The uniqueness of water is that it
brings out the hidden potential from
within the ground. Right? Think about
it. You have a beautiful plant but it's
not going to grow without water that he
gives it.
>> So what does water represent in
terminology?
Water is that words of encouragement is
that smile is that love that we give to
one another.
Water is saying, you know, you have so
much strength. You have so many
treasures inside of you. What's missing
from all those people that still haven't
grown, that haven't found the strength
to change? They just need a little holy
water. They just need one person to just
believe in them, to really believe in
them. And I I've seen this many times in
my life. You know, sometimes it's just
one person's compliment. One person
comes up to me and says, "Oh, you know,
wow, that minion that we were at." One
guy came up to me after the minion and
said, "Wow, that was amazing." And that
gave me the kak the next time to be a
little bit crazier to be a little jump
up and down when no one else is jumping
with me. But if that one guy wouldn't
have told it to me or someone would
criticize me,
criticism is okay, but if it's not in
the right place, I wouldn't have had the
strength to do it, you know. And it's
true for everyone. Doesn't matter the
guy got to be the biggest star in the
world. We all need that holy water. We
all need that encouragement. You know, I
know we all live off of that love, that
encouragement, those compliments.
So maybe when we're washing our hands in
the morning, another kavana we can have
is that we should be that water. We
should
just like mi as we discussed at length
as hashem showing us how much he loves
us. And so we should be that water to
spread that love and give other people
the strength to be the best them they
can be as told in this week's para you
should be the blessing you be the
blessing you spread your light to the
whole world. So just to summarize what
we saw tonight
is tapping into the power of water re
every single morning recharging
ourselves recreating ourselves tapping
into the secrets of the creation of the
world and reminding ourselves that we
are all like kanim
doing redetting ourselves to do our holy
service to aes
we taught we we studied the rashbah and
the rash and the zohar and the three
different explanations of uh practically
speaking why we do
and uh a little bit we learned the
historical evolution of
and we capped off with some beautiful
teachings from and about the the power
of
the power of connecting to one another
and the power of being uh each other's
is water. So, we started with the and
we'll end with one last niggan to uh
bring our our Torah together up to
protect all of Amish.
I I am
I
am
n
I am
na
[Music]
na. N
[Music]
I am my
my
Yeah. Beautiful.
Beautiful.
You
see your