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PIC 2024 R' Orlofsky Bitachon for an Upside Down World!
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Thank you very much and a good night and
first and foremost there's 20 minutes
left to the men's swim. I don't know why
you're here.
The women Mrs. Schumacher is speaking in
Greenwich.
So I don't know why you're here.
Anybody who wasn't planning on to those
other two things, why don't you getting
ready for Shabbos? I have no idea why
you people are here. Yeah?
I was so hoping to come here and find
nobody here and go, "Well, what can I
do? You know, I'll have to I'll have to
go back to my room and take a shower and
lie in my bed and relax reading the
Kichels, which is
Thank you very much. The only part of
the Mishpacha that I read along with the
recipe section so that I can laugh.
Anyway,
I wonder if anybody actually makes these
things. But
that's what I do. My wife gets all the
all of the Jewish publications and I
turn right away to all the
cooking sections and I say, "What is
wrong with these people? Why would Why
would they think anyone would do this?"
But anyway, it is a privilege to be
here. It really is.
We're here obviously for the
inspiration.
How do I know that? Cuz there's no Coke
Zero. That was the first thing I looked
for.
There's no Coke Zero and instead they
have Fresca.
I I don't even know what to say. I'm I'm
at a loss for words. So
we obviously didn't come for the
gashmius. Anyway,
no Coke Zero. What am I supposed to do?
But um
uh
really a tremendous asher koach to
everybody. I I said this when I was here
2 years ago and I repeat it that in my
opinion this is the single most
important event in Klal Yisrael that we
have today. And the the truth is there
are other
places that have gatherings that are a
pale imitation of what we're doing here.
Because you mamish have the lineup of
some of the
I say some because I know they they've
had others in the past some of the
greatest
Mashpi'im and Machanchim and Marbitzei
Torah in all of Klal Yisrael gathered
together to be able to provide us with a
weekend of inspiration. I'm going to
tell you something that the convention
does not want you to know. Yeah? First
of all, there were cameras in your room,
but that's not it.
Just kidding. I'm just kidding about
that.
Anyway, they're they're only in the
showers. But um
But
the the fact is that we are here to
inspire
us to go out and save Klal Yisrael.
Because it's after the 11th hour. When I
say it's after the 11th hour, I mean
that
5 years ago, a friend of mine told me he
took his talmidim to see Rav Chaim
Kanievsky. And one of them said, "Is
Mashiach coming?"
He says, "He's not coming. He's outside
the door knocking."
That's how close we are. So it's mamash
now at the end that we're going to
decide who
the Chazal say in the end, just like
when we came out of Mitzrayim, chamushim
all ubnei Yisrael me'eretz Mitzrayim,
only 20%. It's going to be the same
thing with Mashiach. Only 20% of Klal
Yisrael is going to come out. And who's
going to have that zechus is going to be
totally on us. I mean, at minimum of
20%. But it means that everybody that we
touch
I have to tell you, I have been in the
field of chinuch now for about years and
um
Someone just came up to me now and I'm
I'm so moved by this, you know, said, "I
was in your Discover seminar, you know,
in Eretz Yisrael you know,
decades ago, and I became frum and I'm
here now." And I I thought to myself,
you know, it's mamash this is it.
Everybody has this ability. That's why
they want you to be here. That's not why
I want you to be here.
I want you to be here because
when I was running NCSY in Long Island,
uh
and um Matt Trop, by the way, was a
legend in New Jersey NCSY. So, I was I
also did some work in Long Island. But,
um
uh when I was there, I used to have
advisor training. The people who are
helping out.
So, uh we had uh we had a discussion
once
about the role of day school kids in
NCSY. Now, I'm not talking about Yeshiva
and Bais Yaakov girls. I'm talking about
people who went to co-ed high schools
who would also come. Yeah?
And uh we had the principals of three of
the schools on a panel.
And they all said the same thing. They
said uh
"Listen, if they're coming because they
want to help out, because they want to
be much beer, then maybe there's a
reason, you know, maybe this."
And two kids raised their hand right
away and they said, "Rabbi, you're
wrong. We never came to give. We came to
get.
Because there's nothing more inspiring
than watching the Here, I've been
benching since I was five.
You know, and the average teenager is
sick of benching. Very hard for them to
really bench. Parents know this.
You say to your teenager, you know, "Did
you bench?" Cuz yeah.
"Can I go?"
"You didn't bench. I'll do it again."
"Can I go?"
Because since they're five,
you know, they've been singing, which
let's face it, it's an unbelievably
annoying tune.
Oh, hate day one, hate day one, hate day
one, hate day one, hate day one, hate
day one, hate day one, hate day one,
hate day one, hate day one, hate day
one, hate day one, hate day one, hate
day one, hate day one, hate day one,
hate day one, hate day one, hate day
one, hate day one, hate day one, hate
day one, hate day one, hate day one,
hate day one, hate day one, hate day
one, hate day one, hate day
You have to sing at the top of your
lungs or your bunk won't win a
watermelon. You know what I mean?
So, the average teenager is sick of it
already, you know?
So, uh
uh uh people want to bench. He goes,
"I'm sitting there watching some kid
with a ponytail and an earring
with a transliterated bench cracking his
teeth to be able to bench, and I
realized then what I have."
So,
I say this, and like I say, that's not
really the purpose of this Shabbos, but
between me and you,
we're not here just to give, we're here
to get.
Because this is I can tell you this is
my fourth
convention. Um there was another one,
but I was only there
for the closing, but my fourth that I'm
actually at the whole thing,
which is much better than the Agudah
convention, cuz the Agudah convention
only had me once.
I remember they called me up, they said,
"We'd like to invite you to the Agudah
convention." And this was
a lot of years ago. And and I said,
"Aren't you afraid that I might say
something controversial?"
And they said, "Yeah, we discussed this
in committee.
So, we're going to give you the women's
fellow shooters, cuz none of the roshei
yeshiva come to that.
And we'll give you the closing Sunday
morning, cuz everyone leave all the
gedolim leave
Saturday night." I said, "I was kidding.
I didn't realize there was an actual
meeting. How can we invite Orlovsky and
minimize the damage?" But anyway, that
was the last time I was ever invited.
But um
the I think they found out I killed this
story. But um
um
I know for myself how incredibly
inspired I am. And listen, we are the
cream de la cream of the frum community
who's here. That's why they have
attracted us, but that's not why we
came. We came because our hearts are
just a little bigger, we just care a
little bit more, and we take a look at
the mitzvah, and we're going to walk
away from this Shabbos and mitzvah
Hashem ourselves inspired. If we help
out some un-frum people, that's also
nice, but but for ourselves,
I'll tell you a terrible story.
Um I have a lot of them. Anyway,
when I used to teach in seminary, one of
the girls coined the term the horror
files. You know, it goes, "Oh, no, he's
going to the horror files." You know,
so, um,
uh,
there's a show in Monsey. Uh, I actually
mean a show in in Flatbush. I don't know
if the Rav wants me to mention the name
or not, so I will. It's Rabbi Zilka.
And, um,
because the rule is don't tell me
anything in confidence, okay? I have no
filters. Anyway,
someone said to me once, "I feel like
when you're speaking, every now and then
you stop to consider whether or not you
should say this, and then you say it
anyway, so I don't even know why you
waste your time, but anyway, he said to
me, he says, "I got a call from the
Agudah. They want to do a lecture series
about Kedushas Habayis."
Rabbi Zilka says this to me. He goes,
"And I said to them, 'What are you
wasting your time for?'" He says, "You
think that's what Klal Yisrael needs?"
He says, "Bring in a lot to you to do
his Why Be Jewish that everybody
understands why we're doing this. You
know? That's what you need to focus on."
I said, "What happened?" Cuz I never
heard from them again. Anyway, but, uh,
but the the fact is that we ourselves
are desperate.
We're desperate for inspiration.
I was giving a shiur every other Motzei
Shabbos in Har Nof, and I wanted to stop
it because I had a lot of things going
on. Once upon a time, I had a lot of
jobs.
Now, I, uh,
I lost them all through my wit and
personality. And, uh, now I basically
sit around and reminisce, you know? All
I'm missing is one of those sweaters,
you know? I remember when I was younger,
we used to go out to And my mother, all
of a sudden, would always say to me,
"Why do you think when you get old you
get a Yiddish accent?" I said, "I don't
know."
Everyone who's old has a Yiddish accent.
Anyway, so, um,
so, uh,
um,
you know, when I I was running around, I
had too many things to do. So, I wanted
to cut out this year.
And, uh,
my friend Rabbi Nissan Rotter on me and
took me to Rabbi Moshe, Rabbi Moshe
Shapiro, and he said to me, "You're
right, you're too busy. You'll have to
cut out something else." Yeah?
So, I, uh, I got rid of a couple of my
kids. But, um, um
R' Zeira, I I said, "But, I don't have
time." And he says to me, "If you can do
anything that gives chizuk to people
today, you're mechuyav to do it.
Cuz we are a dor that needs chizuk."
And I thought, "What?" And
And the older I get, the more I realize
how wise R' Moshe was in so many
different ways. But, but we need chizuk.
We are a dor that needs chizuk. And
there is nothing that gives more chizuk
than this this convention. So, this is
my erev Shabbos introduction, where I
say to you, you are surrounded by some
of the biggest lunatics in klal Yisrael.
How do I know? Because I did a panel 2
years ago, which was started at 12:15 in
the morning, and the room was packed.
I was there cuz I'm being paid.
Otherwise, I would have been in bed by
10:00. I don't understand why frum
people would do this to themselves. You
people are obviously crazy. That's why
it's erev Pesach erev Shabbos, you know?
It's what else are you going to do? Even
more than that, there's food out there.
This is the most assimilated group I've
ever seen.
Anyway, that's all my introduction. Oh,
we out of time? Anyway. So, um
So,
these are not my the titles are not my
titles. You know? I I always come up
with my own titles. And um
um
it's uh
I I when I used to give the shiur in in
Har Nof, I had to publicize the title
beforehand.
And uh and very often, we would people
who would just like try to learn shot in
the title to see if they could figure
out what I was going to talk about, you
know? But, um
the I have a friend of mine uh
who runs this organization uh called uh
Torah Live, Dan Roth. Uh some of your
kids might be familiar with me as Rabbi
Sitter. I'm the
I I'm an animated character. Frankly, if
there was anyone who was ever meant to
be an animated character, it's me. And
a lot of kids watch this. It's It's
called Dude, it's all It's all my
shiurim from you know, that I gave for
years, but it's just animated. So, it's
a lot of fun.
So,
so Dan Roth, originally, how did I get
into this? Because he was writing a book
on Pirkei Avot, and he asked me to make
up titles for every one of the chapters,
and then to come up with a title for the
book. So, he liked my titles, so he
invited me in to to start doing these
recordings, and that's that's how it got
started.
I didn't make up the titles for this for
this
convention. So, today is called Bitachon
in difficult times.
I really don't understand what's shot in
the title.
As soon as I saw it, I've been trying to
learn shot in it. And uh
basically,
when are you supposed to have Bitachon
in not difficult times? What's the trick
to having Bitachon when there's not
difficult times? That's not doesn't take
that much Bitachon, does it? So, I
realized maybe that's what it means.
There was a famous story about this
businessman who his ship sunk. He had a
whole lot of merchandise coming in, and
his ship sunk. And they were trying to
figure out how to break it to him. So,
the rav comes to him and says, "Listen,
you know, you're a businessman, and you
know, business has its ups and downs.
You know?
As Jackie Mason says, no Jewish
businessman has had a good year ever.
Anytime you ask him, "How are you
doing?" "All right, could be better,
it's not so bad, you know? You know, so
it's always it's always rough."
I said, "You're a businessman, it has
its ups and downs. It must be
you must rely on a lot of Bitachon.
Yeah? To be able to I'll try to sway
over here because I know some people are
being blocked by the pole, anyway.
So,
you must have a lot you know, a lot of
Bitachon. I wanted you to give a shiur
in the community of Bitachon." He said,
"Sure."
He says, "But are you really about
Bitachon?" He says, "Of course, Rev."
He says, "So, what if you lost your
wallet? Would you still be talking to
Rev?" He goes, "Yeah."
He says, "Yeah." Yeah.
"What if What if your your warehouse
burnt down?"
"What if your warehouse burnt down?
Would you still be talking?"
Thought about it and he says, "Yeah." He
says, "You could give a share." He says,
"Yeah."
"Well, what if that boat that's coming
with all of your merchandise sank? Could
you Could you
accept it with equanimity and and and
give a share and be talking?"
Thinks about it and he says, "It would
be hard, but yes, Rev. I could do it."
He says, "Good, cuz your boat just
sank."
He says, "What? Oh my gosh, what am I
going to do?" What does he say? What's
he going to say? He says, "I thought you
had be talking." He goes, "That was to
tell other people, not for me."
It's very easy to give other people
speeches about be talking, but when it
You know,
there's always a certain disconnect that
we have. I have a friend of mine whose
brother, when he went to medical school,
the guy who was teaching about lung
cancer was a chain smoker.
And he's holding up the x-ray.
You can see here the
the diseased lungs and this lung
has been a thing, you know.
Okay, you know.
But But that that that that may give you
a certain technical level of expertise,
but it doesn't It doesn't help you when
it comes to MS. Not when it comes to
Tyra, because people can see through in
a second. My son I
I have kids who are smart, I have kids
who are geniuses, and then I have kids
who are sick geniuses. So, my oldest son
is one of my sick geniuses, and
he had a very hard time in Yeshiva
because he saw through everything.
Really everything. He would always make
fun of me. Say, "Abba, you're just a you
know, a dumb baal teshuvah. You believe
whatever they tell you. You're so naive.
You know, he says, 'I'm on the inside. I
see everything, you know.'" And he did.
It was It's It's sad. But anyway, but um
um
but he would see this Rev that. So, he
would say, "You know, the Rev says you
have to come on time. He goes, he
doesn't come late. I see him come late
here. I see him this. I see him run
outside and talk on his phone, you know,
taking care of stuff in the middle of
class.
Don't talk to me.
But he had a rebbe in eighth grade.
This guy never missed. You know, if he
was supposed to be in the classroom at
8:00, he was there at 5:00 to 8:00 every
single day. And my son was in this spoil
that he actually got with the program,
you know, in eighth grade. He did
everything he was supposed to do. Cuz he
says I I I can't catch this guy.
Mittleman. Yeah, it was it was a messer.
And and one night his daughter's getting
married. So, he says, uh-huh, I'll get
him. Tomorrow he's going to come late
because he was up all night at the
hazana.
5:00 to 8:00 he was in the classroom.
And my son says, okay, I got nothing to
say. This guy is real. This This guy has
consistency.
Yeah? Bertrand Russell, the
mathematician and philosopher,
uh was being hired to teach ethics in
NYU. And it came out that he was a very
unethical person in his behavior and
different things.
So, they said, Professor Russell, how
are you going to teach ethics? You're
not an ethical person. He said, when I
taught mathematics, nobody demanded that
I be a circle, a square, or a triangle.
I can teach it even though I it's not a
part of me.
And by Torah it doesn't work that way.
It's got to be real.
So, when people say bitachon in
difficult times, that means it's easy to
have bitachon when you don't need it.
Yeah?
Before the the real estate market
crashed, a lot of people had bitachon.
Yeah? Yeah, of course. Cuz they were
buying things, they were this. I'll give
you the shiva pose on that.
You can use that on my
use that on my card if you want. I want
to give my give you I'll give you the
inspirational speaker pose.
Anyway.
Delete. So, listen.
Listen.
What's great at this point is I have no
reputation to protect, you know? I am
what I am, as Popeye would say. Anyway,
so um
uh
so uh so the people I'll be talking when
they don't need to be talking.
Right? It reminds me Mark Twain once
said, and he says a um
a banker is someone who lends you his
umbrella and asks for it back when it
starts to rain, you know? So, they'll be
talking when I don't need it.
But when when times get tough,
when things get hard,
we've all had hard times in our lives.
Everyone does.
You know? And that neighbor that you
always look at who has the perfect
family and the perfect kids and the
perfect marriage and everything is great
and everything is terrific, you know?
Sometimes we see
that things, you know, are not as
wonderful as they appear. And not that
we wish it on anybody, but the um I say
everybody has hard times and challenges
in this world. It's just a reality. And
sometimes you find out and sometimes you
don't find out and and you you know,
suddenly you you find a I I had a
fellow in my school when I was growing
up, you know? I I meet his uh daughter
here in our cell.
And I said, "How's your father doing?"
He goes, "Much better since the
transplant."
I said, "What is that?" "His kidneys
failed years ago. He's been on
dialysis."
I said, "I didn't know." He says, "He
didn't want anyone to know." He was a
doctor. And when he would go on his
rounds in the hospital, he would he
would do his his dialysis. Didn't want
anyone to know.
You know?
You find people have financial problems.
You find people who have health
problems. People have problems with
their family. So many difficulties that
we we don't even know about.
Everybody has hard times.
So, I remember there was one time I had
a particularly difficult time. I was in
the middle of a particularly difficult I
remember one time I said to to my
shishiguru,
you know? He said to me, "No, David, you
know, how you doing?" I go, "Hashem no
sin you have koach."
He said to me, "I will rock me I gave my
mash."
You have to really be spent. I said,
he got the I got there. That's where I
am. You know, so I was going through a
tough time. I had a Jewish friend and he
sees me and he could just see it on my
face, you know, I try I try not to if
you saw the says your face is a problem.
You have to really work hard to to you
know, to
become a call them and save upon them
your face. You know, yeah, you know,
people people should know. I always get
a kick out of it because people, you
know, say to me they they all Rabbi
Alansky, you one of those naturally
happy people. I said no, I'm one of
those naturally depressed people. I
suffered from depression for most of my
life. If I was a kid today, they'd have
me on on a whole bunch of meds, but they
didn't have them back then so they just
said cheer up. But uh
which is harder than you imagine when
you're suffering from a chemical
depression, but okay. But uh eventually
I managed to deal with it, you know, and
so people say, "Oh, you one of those
naturally happy." I said, "No, I work
hard to stay positive. I work hard to do
that because I know that it's
important." And so you see somebody with
Moshe Shapiro, I did not know him before
he lost his daughter. But everyone says
he was a different person after that. I
met him afterwards, you know, but I say
before that he was much much and much
more of a brand. He was much more fiery,
you know.
And they say he was broken. His mom's
broken.
He's coming back from the levaya. Coming
back from the from the funeral. He just
buried his daughter.
And he'd been storming the gates of
heaven to try to save her life.
And he's coming back and he's bent and
he's broken and he sees someone in the
background.
And he walks over and he smiles and he
says a few words and then he gets back
into the car.
And everybody was shocked cuz what was
that?
He said he's a chassan and he's getting
married tonight. I didn't want him to
think I wasn't happy for him.
You know? So,
okay, so I'm not on that madrega, but
you know, but but you have to you have
to put it forward. So, yeah, it's so he
sees me and he sees things are going
through a hard time and he tells me the
following story, which was a
life-changing moment for me.
He says, "Reb Levi Yitzchak of
Berditchev was walking with his
chassidim and he stops.
And he says, 'If I was the Kodesh Baruch
Hu, you know what I would do?'"
I said, "What, Rebbe?"
He says, "Just what he's doing now. Why
you think I'm smarter than him?"
I burst out laughing and I said,
"That's it.
That's it. That's the source of
everything. We all think we're smarter
than God."
"Kodesh Baruch Hu,
I know you created heaven and earth.
I know
mechadesh betuvo bechol yom tamid
ma'aseh bereishis, but this time you
dropped the ball."
And so,
you know,
I don't have to tell you. I don't know
what you were thinking up there. What
were you thinking?
You know? And that's what I I I mean,
that was changing for me, because I
realized, you know, every one of us,
deep down, we think we're smarter than
God.
And then I said, "That's that's the
problem.
That's the problem is that I
um
I think to myself, you know, if I was
the Kodesh Baruch Hu, what would I do?"
"First thing, death penalty for double
parking. I I worked that one out right
away. That's the first thing I would
institute if they ever put me in charge.
But, uh I then realized, I I don't want
that job.
Lo ya'numu v'lo yishanu. I don't like
the hours. You know what I'm saying?
I don't want the responsibility. I don't
know everything. I'm not, you know,
You have you have to understand. So,
um
Reb
Reb Baruch Horovitz,
one of Reb Zalman's sons
during the week of his daughter's Sheva
Brachas was in a crosswalk.
An Egged bus ran him over and killed
him.
It's It's like a tragedy of biblical
proportions, you know?
And uh
the whole family's sitting shiva.
And the old Rosh Yeshiva of of Etz Chaim
comes in with his cane, sits down.
Everyone's wondering, what is he going
to say?
And he sits there quietly
for about a minute and then he goes,
"Nu?
About 6,000 years the Aibishter fed the
world."
About 6,000 years God's running the
world.
I'm like, "We're not going to understand
this whole shiva until he leaves."
So all try to figure out, what was he
saying?
And then one of the brothers said,
"This is a big kasha.
But it's not the first kasha in 6,000
years.
And there are other kashas.
And there are things we look at and we
don't understand it.
We don't know why Hakadosh Baruch Hu
does what he does all the time, but I
don't want his job.
I have to assume that he knows what he's
doing,
which is by the way the inside of
bitachon."
Um
I'm not going to get now into the
relationship between bitachon and
emunah, but
um
there was a famous story where Reb Shach
came to the Brisker Rav
and he says, "Emunah?
Well, what do you need What do you need
emunah? Anybody who's intelligent
and honest can figure out there's a God
who gave the Torah.
I mean, the evidence is overwhelming.
You know, when you when you
talk to atheists
and try to get their evidence, it's
almost impossible.
There's no evidence for the
non-existence of God, you know?
Whereas Dr. Schroeder, who I was
teaching with in Discovery, who has uh
who has uh two
PhDs, one in oceanography and one in
nuclear physics.
Very smart fellow. Yeah.
When my brother-in-law was working in
Discovery, um like all geniuses, you
know, he didn't know how to use the copy
machine.
So, it's my brother-in-law, he says,
"How do you work this thing?" He says,
"I've waited my whole life to say this.
It doesn't take a nuclear physicist to
figure it out."
But he said something as brilliant, he
says, "You can still be an atheist
today, but it takes a lot of faith."
You know, so this is what the shochet
said to the Brisker Rav. He says, "You
know,
it's so hard to believe to believe, to
understand that these things are emes."
And the Brisker Rav said something very
sharp. He says, "You're right.
Emunah starts when it doesn't make any
sense."
Uh when it's easy, it's easy.
Before the Before the real estate market
collapses and everybody's making money,
after we was in Chicago telling me about
some lawyer who was making $250,000 a
year, you know, scraping by. And uh now
he lives on Tomchei Shabbos packages.
Somebody lent me a bungalow for the
summer.
I'd never been in a bungalow. Uh full
disclosure, you know, I I didn't grow up
in uh and uh from home, and so we used
to go to Grossinger's.
People used to go to bungalows, we went
to Grossinger's. Uh my parents could not
understand why people who live in nice
houses would pay money to live like a
refugee.
You know.
Sleep in the kitchen. I don't know, I
don't get the whole thing. Anyway, so
they let me a bungalow cuz my wife went
to a bungalow and she wanted to relive
her her her youth, you know. Uh it was
it was uh it was brutal. You know. I
called up my brother, he goes, "Where
are you?" I said, "I'm in a bungalow."
He goes, "Oh my gosh, what are you
doing?" I said, "Sitting on the porch
listening to myself sweat." You know.
I don't know, I have an air conditioner
hours back in the city. I don't know why
I'm here, you know?
And my wife, I mean, I got off easy. My
wife all the women are forced to sit in
the circle, you know what I mean?
You're allowed out to swim and then you
have to come back, you know what I mean?
And they all just sit all day in the
circle. It's like It's like uh you know,
you're being punished or something. I
don't know what it is, you know? You
know you're in a bad place when the big
excitement is going to Walmart, you know
what I mean? Like you know, that's when
you know that you've really maxed out
all of your life potential. Anyway,
you're sitting at Walmart at 2:00 in the
morning, you know, 800 from people and
one cashier, and you're just standing
there re-examining all of your life
decisions that brought you to this
moment, you know?
But uh
um so uh uh
so why in the world am I telling this
story? I I was in a bungalow
and Bungalow? Yeah, why? Why was I
telling the bungalow story?
Oh, that's it. So, we go to the bungalow
and the the bungalow next to us, there's
a guy who's fixing, you know, the the
this and making repairs. And so, I said,
"Oh, listen, could you maybe take a look
at my screen door?"
He says, "I'm not a fixer man."
I said, "What are you?" He goes, "I'm a
real estate developer."
I said, "What?" He goes, "I had a piece
of land in New Jersey. I was building
condominiums. I had a whole thing going
there. And then the market collapsed. I
lost everything."
So, now I'm trying to pay back all of
the investors anyway I can. So, the guy
who owns this bungalow had lent me
money. So, I'm coming to fix up his
bungalow to try to to get back his
money, you know? So, beforehand?
Beforehand? Be talking's always easy,
you know?
My My wife said something to me. My
daughter came in uh with us.
That
that is just amazing.
Just amazing.
There was this concert.
Oh, that's why. Cuz she plugged in the
music into my into my car.
And uh
and Mo- Mordechai Shapiro
and uh uh um
Avraham Fried's nephew, uh
Benny Friedman, are singing together.
So, they start reminiscing. They went to
a concert in Beit Shemesh
where they were
where they were uh singing together.
And they realized this was like Erev
Simchas Torah.
And they said
you looked at the world at that moment
and everything was perfect.
Couldn't ask for better.
And then 2 days later, the entire world
turned upside down.
I mean, horror that you can't imagine.
I have never seen the film of the
atrocities.
You know? I I
The the little bit I've heard is more
than enough for me. I I I I can't handle
these things. I'm I'm I'm very
sensitive. But um
but the horror of what people
experienced
it's it's it's beyond belief.
To to try to be able to wrap your head
around it.
And the whole world turned upside down.
And Israel turned upside down.
I I have a friend of mine who's in an
organization where they just have people
all day making tzitzis.
Cuz there are all these non-frum
soldiers, they want to be in tzitzis.
For the first time in their life. People
who never would have considered
something like this.
Can you understand it? So, I don't know
if anybody else does this. Yeah?
Um
One of the things I do, since I have no
jobs is um
I I play this
little fantasy game in my head. What
would happen if I go to sleep and wake
up, I'll be 5 years old
with all the memories I have now.
I could go over my life again and make
different decisions.
So, I'm sure I would eat differently to
prevent my type 2 diabetes. Or not, I
don't know.
Certainly, I I'd have different things
to say, different things I would do and
experience, you know.
It would be uh
uh
So, I said, "What if I woke up and I was
30?"
You know, what if I woke up at this
point in my life and I could look at
forward?
Here's the problem
with this worthless game. You can only
go too far before you don't recognize
yourself anymore.
Cuz you're the sum total of all the
decisions you've made.
And sometimes I think about history.
I live in Har Nof.
And you remember it wasn't that long ago
that the shul up the street from me,
while we were davening Shacharis,
these Arab terrorists came in
shooting and stabbing
neighbors of mine.
Neighbors of mine. They were all on my
street.
I remember when they were paying the
shiva call.
You know, they were
all four of them lived on my street. You
just saw the crowds going up and down
the street, back and forth, back and
forth, you know.
And uh
uh
It was a rough thing.
I thought to myself, "What if I could
put myself back
just before it happened and warn the
people?"
And then I thought to myself, "Would
they thank me?"
I don't know.
They died al Kiddush Hashem. They went
straight to the highest levels of
shamayim that you possibly could
imagine.
You know?
I I don't know. Would they thank me if I
stopped that? And if I did, would
something worse come down the the the
the the path?
Did this accomplish something? That
means, if you're not a Kiddush Hashem
and you have to start making these
cheshbonos, very hard.
We're talking in difficult times comes
down to saying,
"Do I know more than God or not?
So,
if I was to make these choices, there
are many choices that I would make
differently based on my understanding,
but I don't know what's going on.
I had a guy in my share and our Samir
who is an
uh
entomologist
as a an entomologist as opposed to an
etymologist, right? An entomologist
studies bugs, an etymologist studies
words.
And uh
he was talking about how people don't
realize when they introduce foreign um
organisms into an environment, how it
messes things up.
So, he says the Australian dung beetle
uh project was one that worked out well.
What happened? They brought When the
British came to Australia, they brought
cows and sheep,
but there are no ungulates,
almost no mammals in Australia. There's
mostly marsupials.
And therefore the bacteria that's used
to disintegrate uh their uh their manure
did not exist.
So, entire fields were just covered with
manure.
So, they know what to do.
So, the scientists decided to uh bring
in the African dung beetle to Australia,
which would then
uh
eat up the manure. The cow choir.
And he says, "That's the example where
it worked out. Sometimes it doesn't."
Cuz for example, they brought rabbits to
hunt.
But the rabbits had no natural
predators.
And rabbits, as the expression go, breed
like rabbits. So, they were destroying
all the all the you know, the grasslands
and the and the plants and everything
were eating them up.
So, what did they do? They brought in a
stoat, which is is animal that hunts
rabbits.
But the stoats realized that it was much
harder to catch rabbits than all of the
little native marsupials who ate the who
lived there, so they ate them instead.
So now they have these stoats and the
the rabbits eating all the vegetation
and the stoats eating all the little
things. So then they
they brought in a horse.
She died, of course. Anyway, but um
but you don't realize sometimes when you
start varying things.
I tell people all the time, you know,
the Torah is like a fitted sheet. It's
not a flat sheet. It's a fitted sheet.
You can only pull so much on one side
before the other side pops up.
So we look at situations and we think,
"Oh, okay.
I would have changed this."
Uh
people people who learn Gemara know that
um before the make a takana, it's a very
difficult process. And sometimes they
make a takana and they realize that what
they thought would be a benefit is in
fact a chissaron and they move out of
the the takana cuz they realize it was a
mistake.
That means when they make something,
they've really put a lot of thought into
it.
And in the words once again of Dr.
Schroeder, there's a reason they're
called sages, he says. They're very very
smart.
And so
it it's easy to, you know, to
second-guess and say, you know, "Well,
you I would do this. I would do that."
But do you understand the consequences?
What's going to happen if you do that?
But we don't we don't always understand
where things are going to go.
So
sees the big picture. We don't.
Needless to say, I I'm sure if we could
have sent the message to to the
government about what was going to
happen on some and we could have gotten
somebody to listen to us because there
were these women who were monitoring the
wall and everything that was going on
and they warned everything that was
going on, and they were ignored.
They saw what was happening. They had
the evidence. It was ignored.
But what if we had that information, and
we could get somebody to listen to us,
and we would prevent it?
Would it be better?
Sure, if you assume that God doesn't
know what he's doing.
So, we talking comes down to a very
simple you say.
Cuz God knows what he's doing.
And we don't.
And we look at our lives
and and we look at the world
and we look at so many things, and we
think to ourselves
I would do it differently.
But of course, I don't take everything
into account.
For those of you history buffs,
then you know that the largest battle
ever fought in North America was the
Battle of Gettysburg during the American
Civil War.
And there were 50,000 casualties killed
and wounded in that in that battle.
And this was the high water mark of the
Confederacy. They made it all the way up
into Pennsylvania and to Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania. And it was this tremendous
war going back and forth, and he had
gone through a whole bunch of generals.
He went through McClellan twice, and he
went through, you know, Hooker, and he
went through went through all these
different generals, and he finally had
this guy Meade.
And Meade managed to
fight Lee to a defeat, first defeat he
really ever had.
July 1st to 3rd.
And then Lee realized he lost, and he
started retreating.
And it started raining.
And the Potomac River was flooded, and
he couldn't get across.
If Meade had rallied his troops and
pursued Lee,
he would have defeated the army of the
Confederacy, and that would have been
the end of the Civil War in July of 1863
instead of August of 1865.
He would have saved tens of thousands of
lives.
Abraham Lincoln was furious.
And he penned an extremely angry letter
to General Meade.
And uh
And history
does not record Meade's response.
Cuz General Meade never got the letter.
Cuz Abraham Lincoln had a shita that
whenever he wrote a letter, he would put
in his drawer for a week before he sent
it.
I do that with my bills. But that was
his
That was his shita.
And over that week he thought to
himself, I wasn't there.
I didn't have as many casualties as he
had.
I don't know what kind of state the army
was in. I don't know what he was
feeling.
It's easy for me sitting in Washington
to second-guess what's happening on the
battlefield.
And he didn't send it.
It's easy for us to second-guess a
Kodesh Baruchu.
If I was a Kodesh Baruchu, you know what
I would do?
And that's why we say in davening,
You know, it's it's it was one of Reb
Mendel Weinbach's fam- favorite stories.
It wasn't his story, but he loved to
tell it.
This guy falls off a cliff and he's
falling to his death and he grabs onto a
branch. He's holding onto the branch and
the branch is starting to crack.
And he cries out. He says, "If anyone's
up there, please save me. If anyone's up
there."
And a voice comes out and says, "I'm
there. I will save you. But first you
have to show your faith. Let go of the
branch."
And he says, "Is there anyone else up
there?"
There's nobody else up there.
And that's what we say in davening,
"Kaveh el Hashem."
And if that doesn't work, "Chazak
ve'ematz libecha vekaveh el Hashem." Cuz
there's nobody else up there.
And the Kodesh Baruchu knows what he's
doing.
And at the end of the day,
we
understand
that at least we know we don't know.
Ish bar lo yada, an empty person doesn't
know. Uksil lo yavin etzot, and a fool
doesn't even get that.
So, in my experience,
I'm not around that long, God knows what
he's doing.
And there are times when I look and I
just shake my head and I say, I can't
figure this out for the life of me.
But, Hakadosh Baruch Hu has it all
worked out, and it'll all work out for
the best. Whatever's involved in that
and however it works. It may not be the
ending that we want.
Douglas Adams, who wrote The
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, he had
this quote, and someone used to make it
his tagline on his email, that's how I
know it.
He said, "I don't know if I went
everywhere I was supposed to be, but I
think I ended up where I was supposed to
go."
So, I say the same thing. Hakadosh
Baruch Hu has everything that is leading
us to a conclusion, and I'm sure Hashem,
we have to chazak v'yametz libecha
v'kaveh el Hashem, and know that
Hakadosh Baruch Hu will take us where
we're supposed to go.
A good night, Shabbos. Amen.