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Rabbi Moshe Taragin - The Irrationality of Jewish History
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Thank you Rabbi Shore and big to Rabbi
Shore and to all the OU um staff for
putting together such a beautiful
evening of Torah. Um this of course
should serve as a protection form and
for and for all the people who need
refor
the safer in which he describes the
dreiness
the dreiness and the sadness of as it's
destroyed and lay in ruins. He begins it
with a very strange word a word that
hardly appears throughout Tanakh. It's
an iconic word. It becomes of course not
just the title of the migillah but one
of the catchwords of tishabad
the word of course absorbs multiple
meanings that's why he chooses the word
at its root it stems from the word and
it's an inquisitive word and it
introduces a description how do you get
somewhere here are the directions how do
you bake a cake here are the
instructions how do you put together
something you bought in the Or here is
the manual. So
and the next four proim four and a half
proim detail how the city which was once
bustling once was the center of humanity
the metropolis of the ancient era became
so desolate and quiet. So at its root
it's an inquisitive. How did it happen?
Here's the description. Kazal had two
additional meanings. It's not
inquisitive. It's more declarative. He
isn't inquiring and then beginning the
description. He's rather declaring. What
is he declaring? So the matter says
source number one
it's acknowledging guilt acknowledging
culpability accepting responsibility
which is interesting because it seems as
if at least in the first person to
accept responsibility was Danielle at
least publicly. Danielle finally says
after doubting and wondering and
questioning says
so Danielle seems to be the first to
accept responsibility but is already
hinting at it
acknowledging accepting bearing guilt
according to the second day in it's not
it begins the suffering the sadness the
indulgence and sadness says in that so
whenasi passed away they issued a decree
that
anyone that says that Rebi died should
be stabbed. If we make believe Rebi is
still alive will resuscitate him. If we
just don't mention that he died, he'll
leap to life. But everything described
becomes more vivid. Everything thought
is much more vague and distant. When we
describe something, we clothe it with
words. It creates more compelling, more
emotional response. So we all knew the
basic was destroyed but Yermir walks
through the streets of Yalai and
witnesses the scenes of ruins and
destruction and punishment and
persecution and begins to describe it
and as he processes what he's about to
describe he fills the kina and he mourns
and he sobs. So the second layer of is
not inquisitive how did it happen and
here's the list but the second layer of
is either or and it is important I find
that sometimes because mourning not
maybe for Israelis because we've
suffered so much and we're all in
mourning but at least before the war and
maybe for people who are not as
engrossed in the war it's very easy to
transform tishab into yum kiper and
tishab is not yum kiper tishab is not a
day for chuva tishab is not a day for
vidoy tishab is not a day the end of the
day maybe but the beginning of the day
is a day
And could you imagine standing at a
grave and the second the person or you
sham suffers the tragedy you immediately
transform it well how should I improve
my life and what are the messages I
should take away and I have to perform
chuva that'd be grossly inhuman there
are people suffering there's a death as
a human being you mourn you cry as says
love you sit quietly in the corner
because your crown has been taken
put dust into your mouth
So the is once the a subsides
so then we turn our attention a little
more to cha but even then even then it's
not a day for it's not a day of
says the day the b mikdash was destroyed
there's an iron curtain that separates
and as if nothing happened with the mik
destroying ignores that reality business
is normal
so it's important to carve out a space
for morning that doesn't immediately
bleed into how can I improve and what's
the chuva that will come a month later
on two months later
but there's an interesting medish which
implies a third meaning to that's the
meaning I want to speak about tonight
medish says that three employer
the beginning of
pares
Now in those other instances, Moshe
doesn't really describe. He's not
inquiring to begin an answer. He doesn't
describe. He's explaining something.
He's not certainly not suffering. Mosha,
there's no there's no
when Yesh describes the city that has
become a den of prostitution and of
corruption and of moral immoral immoral
behavior. He doesn't describe it. It's a
one-off sentence. Kazal say source
number two.
Moshe
those
is not describing anything. It's just
he's exclaiming something. Evidently the
word is iconic. It's foundational to
tishabove. It's a gateway to
understanding something beyond tishabove
because tishab part of the challenge of
tishab is not myopic or myopia.
Sometimes we develop myopia about the
bas mikdash. I encourage people for
example to split tishab into and gullis
kurban is to experience what happened
during the bas mikdash the first bas
mikdash the second bas mikdash gullis is
the aftermath of the ba mikdash and we
suffer that on tish above and of course
we relive some of those moments during
the kinos but you can't just take
snapshots of the holocaust and of 1666
and of the the the crusaders has to be a
thorough panoramic view what did we
suffer over the last 2 years what was
taken from us how was Jewish history
reoriented. So there's something deeper.
Dishab is a day of Jewish history. It's
a day to walk into some tunnel of the
last 2,000 years that shouldn't have
ever occurred. And now they were slowly
walking out of that tunnel to look back
at that tunnel and to appreciate what we
suffered just as a little bit of a
smile. And hopefully tonight we'll end
with a smile. We keep his famous smile
just like it's all right to smile in
Tishab to recognize the triumph of
Jewish history. But to recognize the
triumph you have to suffer the misery of
what we've experienced. What is that
term? from a and why is it so iconic and
how can we decode the meaning of a by
the fact that three different prophets
employed the same term well the medish
actually distinguishes between the three
prophets they didn't just all converge
on the same term they used it at
different stages of Jewish history so
now we have a little more work a little
more meaning the term when the Jewish
people were successful they were growing
exponentially in the desert they were
asking questions it's not clear whether
This refers to Moshe in Pares Israel. We
spending all day and all night answering
their questions. Maybe Mosha in paral.
But either way, this is Moshe facing
this indomitable cha task to deal with
the needs of a growing bustling nation
that had newly been liberated and was
starting to grow physically, nationally,
spiritually, and looking for answers.
And Mosha just can't solve all the
answers.
They're looking for spiritual spiritual
input and Moshe is wearing himself thin
and Yeshua guides him at least in par to
delegate.
Yeshes
term binulam during our moral
degradation. Yesh witness the walks
through and sees the thieves and sees
the zonos and sees the hypocrisy.
Remember the first Bikdash
essentially there are three or four that
it could be broken down to but one of
them is hypocrisy hiding behind ritual
we have we have ritual we have mitzvah
and underneath it moral rot moral decay
exploiting the weak taking advantage of
the vulnerable ignoring the widows
ignoring the orphans it's just hypocrisy
it's over ritualization where we check
the boxes and we know what we're doing
but it doesn't reflect any inner moral
spirit
And yes witnesses this and he says
this is mostly the city of presence is
truth and and moral compassion and it's
become a den of lies in a den of
exploitation and then yer sees the
Jewish people as they've already
unraveled and he uses a so it's not just
incidentally the three different nim
chose the same word they chose it at
strategically different points Moshe at
the apex of Jewish success at the moral
degeneration and yuria with the
calamitous consequences of our moral
collapse. What are striking at or of
course are really decoding? Why are all
these returning to the word? Because the
word doesn't just mean an inquisitive
how. It also means a rhetorical how.
Sometimes when an event happens that you
just can't fathom, you're overwhelmed,
you're bewildered, it boggles the
imagination, your first response is just
exasperation. Very
How could this happen? And the answer
is, oh, the person was killed in a car
accident or this is how the sh They're
not asking for information. It's a
rhetorical how in the absence of any
capacity to lend ration or explanation
or reason. How how does this make sense?
Why is this happening to us?
And
aha it becomes the password for Jewish
history
because it captures the irrationality of
Jewish history. The Jewish history does
not conform to typical patterns that
govern every other nation in their arc
and trajectory. We are compared in safer
braces to three different metaphors
because Jewish identity is
multi-layered. So one metaphor can fully
encompass Jewish identity. The three
metaphors in braces are stars, sand, and
dust. And sand and dust are different,
but that's not for now. But one of the
implications of being compared to the
stars is we hover above. Stars aren't
subjected to the natural forces that
affect this earth. I mean, they're held
together by gravity proof, but they
don't suffer the same gravitational
pull. That's why they're fixed in this
in the sky. We're grounded on Earth. So,
they're not subjected. Stars
metaphorically represent something
superernal that hovers above that
transcends not just biology, chemistry,
but referring to nations, transcends
national laws, the laws that govern
races, religions, ethnicities, peoples.
Our history is like the stars. It's
meteoric. It's exponential. It's
irrational. It's asymmetrical.
And that asymmetry and
disproportionality expresses itself at
every stage of Jewish experience when we
rise, when we fall, and when we're
punished. And all of these Naveim were
addressing the same phenomena, but from
different moments. We're at different
moments, from different vantage points.
Moshe saw the meteoric rise of a nation
that had weeks earlier, assuming this is
Israel, been enslaved for two centuries.
Think about, for example, the
African-American community who suffered
far less than what we suffered in Egypt.
I mean, it wasn't complete. It wasn't
total. It wasn't death. It wasn't
murder. It was terrible, terrible
slavery and dehumanization.
And how long it has taken in some ways
that community to recover from some of
the disadvantages that they suffered and
to liberate not just their bodies, but
their minds and their cultures and their
family life. And and here we are five
weeks later, six weeks later. of
and we're standing underneath Harina
about to accept the most complicated
religion known to manism
and this is strategically prior. This is
even prior of all sorts of questions.
Who would have thought that slaves could
ask these questions? Slaves barely
surviving. Where am I getting my daily
bread from? One foot in front of the
other. How can I make it to the end of
the day? How can I keep my family
intact? And all of a sudden they're
thinking about God and theodysy and
spirituality and creation and afterlife
and whatever they're thinking about
whenever they're asking Mosha Rabenu and
not just that but they're also growing
they're populating and the families have
remained intact. So Moses is bewildered.
This doesn't make sense.
Zoom out from October 7th and look at
the last 90 years or 80 years of Jewish
history. It's a great anthropological
miracle. I'm not referring to the
2,000-y year anthropological miracle,
but the last 80 years that a nation can
pull itself out of such depths, out of
such suffering. We lost a third of our
population and close to a half of our
collective wealth and we have refugees
wandering the earth and not just
reconstitute ourselves and build robust
communities which most of us come from
and achieve affluence and influence and
build and construct but also conuct this
historical project of building a
homeland in the face of international
opposition and hostility.
in the wake of the Holocaust collecting
dialects from 52 different countries. If
you just take a walk back a step back
and you view the arc of Jewish history
and our successes, it leaves you
confused. It's different. We're not
we just we march to a different beat. We
are imp we are not influenced by the
typical trajectories and sign graphs
that affect other nations. And
unfortunately as we know when we sin we
sin phenomenally incredulously
weeks after
it almost it defies the imagination but
part of the challenge of living in front
of a kesh with pen the pendulum effect
when it swings so far to one end it
sometimes it swings wildly sometimes
both collectively and individually it's
hard to keep that pendulum from swinging
and we're people of great spirituality
and we're stubborn people that's why we
were chosen because the less stubborn
people would not have been able to
withstand the trials of history and the
persecution of Jewish exile. So we're
stubborn and sometimes that stubbornness
works against us as reminds us and
sometimes that stubbornness works for
us. So yes looks at these people says
you have the bas mikdash you have just
try to walk back walk yourself back into
the days of the bas mikdas we all walked
into this room without moral failures
and our hypocrisies and our false
narratives about ourselves but if
there's a mdas landed tomorrow would you
sin there make us landed tomorrow I
think we'd all experience spiritual
revival spiritual inspiration none of us
would sin and exploit and curse and and
how did it happen and don't sugarcoat
don't sugarcoat the past we have a very
very dangerous tendency to look back at
the past as if they were all righteous
And we're all fallen. There were certain
the generations that were righteous and
there are certain generations that were
fallen. And our generation is a
righteous generation with the faith that
we've demonstrated. And the people of
that era fell headlong into Gilario and
fell headlong into a vodara. There are
crypts that have been discovered up
north. And the crypts have little idols
in them. So it wasn't a a righteous
generation. And it's hard to imagine how
they fell so precipitously. And that's
what Yesha sees and says aha this this
nation just defies logic defies
and then Yeria sees the suffering and
when we suffer we suffer miserably. The
Romans Yia of course did not see the
Romans. The Romans conquered many many
cultures
and their secret was that to establish
and expand their empire they would not
annihilate their enemies but they would
subjugate their enemies. So march into
the village, kill a few dozen men, rape
a few dozen women, but then maintain the
village because they required two
elements to fuel their empire. Coin and
soldiers. So they would collect taxes
and collect soldiers. And without those
two resources, the empire couldn't
expand. So Ram had no interest
whatsoever in completely rooting out
their enemies except for one. There was
one nation that they pursued maliciously
and tenaciously. Their leaders, their
executions were gory and grizzly. Not
one Jew could be left alive.
Unfortunately, so much of Jewish history
is cyclical and repeats itself. The
bodies of Betar were left unburied for
years and years. And that was such a
collective trauma as we are experiencing
now. would imagine an entire city that
when they finally allowed those bodies
of betar the last stronghold to fall to
be buried added to
could you imagine the fourth to and what
a braha we're so thankful to Hashem
because thousands of dead bodies were
finally buried life is that way life is
a mixture of joy and sadness and just
because you're cloaked by sadness
doesn't mean you must ignore the joy and
the thank and and the gratitude spar for
whatever you're able to achieve whatever
you're able the scrape together. So the
fact that Moshe, Yesha, and Yeria all
arrived at the same conclusion is not
incidental. They were standing at
different vantage points at history.
Moshe at the apogee of Jewish history.
Yeshiah as Jewish history was tumbling
down the mountain. And Yuria as we lay
in the valley exposed and lame,
vulnerable and defeated.
But this roller coaster of history is
uncommon
because we are the people of Hashem.
because we're chosen by a Keshbaru and
the normal anthropological cycles that
other countries endure and experience
don't apply to our people. Jewish
history is irrational. Jewish history is
indescribable
and that's why they all use the term a
would have been inquisitive. A is
how could this happen?
So Yermia strategically chooses that
term first of all he wants to ask and by
the way it don't take that first layer
for granted. Yuria teaches us going back
to that first layer something crucial. I
think it's very compelling for 2025.
Part of faith is asking hard questions.
As long as those questions are posed
with reverence
and as long as you know you probably
won't get answers.
Think of the last two years.
If you believe that Hashem is Malikim
and he's Malikishb
and he's bris, he's merciful, he's just,
and he remembers the bris. How could you
not ask the following three-word,
threeletter question when you dive in?
Why? Why did October 7th happen?
And don't reverse engineer. Oh, because
we have so many military victories over
our enemies and over Syria and over
that's offensive
because Hashim has many algorithms to
achieve those m those miracles. And
don't ever reverse engineer suffering
the so many people have suffered just
because the endgame provides benefit
just like you should look at the
Holocaust. Well, we needed the we needed
the Holocaust. Really? We need October
7th. Really? It's morally offensive and
it's theologically bankrupt.
So you ask why
empowers what empowers us to ask those
questions with his why. The next level
of is the
speak about the final level of is it
just doesn't make sense and I throw my
hands up. How how is how to make sense
of this?
And the word aka actually has a cousin.
There's another word in Jewish history
that captures the mystery and the
irrationality and the unfathomability of
Jewish history. It's not a and it's not
a four-letter word, but it's a
three-letter word. And to appreciate the
three-letter word, let's visit Yeshai,
excuse me, let's visit Yuria moments
before he writes. I don't mean moments
before a few minutes, but literally
before he writes, the city has yet to be
destroyed, but it's about to be
destroyed. And he's walking through the
city and it's in flames. Close your eyes
and imagine the movie. Flames shooting
up from the huts, walls falling down,
boulders being shot into the city,
Castine soldiers rampaging through the
city, women running and screaming,
people being speared in their hearts.
You can imagine the scene. And that day
charges Yeria not with speaking with his
tongue but delivering a message for
Jewish future with his behavior. What is
Yeria's assigned task of that day? Go
buy some land from your uncle.
Go buy some land in Yurus from your
uncle.
And he's flabbergasted.
And he anticipates Hashem responding. He
says, "I know I'm a ny. I know that I
can't understand you, but still this is
preposterous. This is completely
off the reservation.
So Yermia says in source number five
after I purchased
line two and then he begins his ramble
you created the earth and the heaven.
You're the master of wisdom and the
possessor of secrets. These are obesum
lifted from Io. Basically, Yermia is
saying, "I've already read Safer Eov. I
know that we can't understand you."
That's the take away from Zion. Yo
tries, he fails and Hashem appears to
him in a storm and says, "How dare you
arrogate the prospect to understand my
ways?
So I know that I can't understand you."
Yia says line number three, you're the
master of wisdom. Your eyes are open.
Source number five, line five.
The ramparts have been built.
And the have already controlled the
city.
You tell me
purchase land. It's ridiculous. I can't
even get a lawyer. No one wants to sell
it. They're giving it away. A dollar for
the land. And you want me to go through
the motions.
And Hashem delivers this threeletter
word to you. It's like a password to
your Google account. The password to the
Google account, [email protected].
I don't know this is cook that one is
lucky I would kill to have that
[email protected]
but the password to Jewish
historygmail.com
is a threeletter word hashem tells yeria
last line h ani hashem el k basar source
to you it seems baffling because you
parse history in swaths of 100 years 200
years 500 years. I span eternity. Hashem
says,
"Your thousand years is my hiccup
and you will return one day
and Jews will live in Jerusalem one day
and the real estate market will be
obscene in Jerusalem one day, forcing
you all to live in a fraud or at least
come to the share in a fraud because you
can't afford to maintain his office."
Hope you didn't hear that. One day
people will live in you.
And you are foreshadowing that future
because
history is a pella pay lammed olive.
Jewish history is a pella pay lammed
olive. It's a mystery. It baffles you in
imagination.
One of my lesser desirable parts of my
job is to conduct interviews for the
yeshiva. If anyone wants the job, you're
happy. I'm happy to give it to you. It
isn't elegant. It isn't pleasant.
Everyone, I I want to see not just how
the boy reads Gimarra and Davins. I want
to see who he is as a Jew. Is he a good
Jew? Jewish identity. Such a foundation
of religion. Something we overlook in
today's world. We work at ritual. We
work at mist. But are we a good a good
ye? Are we a good Jew? So one of the
questions I ask is if you had a
Delorean,
yeah, you get the reference, right? 80s.
If you had a time machine, okay, and you
had one setting and you could set it to
go back to one point in Jewish history,
where would you go?
So, there are a million different
answers to that question. They're all
right. If he says, "I'm going to the
Yankee game," he's probably not accepted
to Yeshiva. But any other question, he
said, "Any other answer." So, about 25
years ago, a boy looked at me and said,
"Rabbi, what would you choose?"
So firstly, when he wasn't looking, I
put a big check next to him because I
like kids that are a little bit
irreverent because a reverence, a little
bit of a reverence gets you far in life.
You know, he's he has the moxy to ask
that question. He's not terrified of his
own shadow. He's standing up to the
rabbi. If he stands up to the rabbi on
the interview, he'll probably stand up
to other pressures in life. And he's
going places. I put a little check next
to him today. He's a big rabbi, so I
won't say his name. So he asked me,
"Where'd I go?" I said, I would like to
go back to 1945 and walk out of Avitz.
Why? What was the first thing that
survivors did? They found someone from
the cousin, their sister's friend, their
aunt's daughter, something or other.
Let's remarry. Let's rebuild. Let's
bring new people into this earth. And
so 2020 hindsight lets us know that
those children born in 46 and 48 and 49
would march in the fields of dreams and
bring goula to our people. They'd be the
pioneers of Jewish history, the finest
generation of Jewish history, pioneering
history.
But they didn't know that.
And I asked myself, what type of moral
courage must it have taken them to just
walk through the darkness and hold the
line and act courageously and morally
just to do the right thing even when the
world doesn't make sense?
I'm addicted to moral courage. I love
finding people who have moral courage.
should do the right thing because it's
right when no one's watching regardless
of any consequence because you act in
accordance with your principles and you
stick to your guns regardless of
whatever calculus may or may not even
fault. I met someone like that. His name
was Ramita
and I learned a lot from him. Stick to
your principles, stick to your
convictions, hold fast to your ideals.
The world doesn't always accommodate
them, but it doesn't take away the
nobility of the of the of the of the
position and the decision. I just want
to feel their moral strength. I think a
lot about the Holocaust when I think
about Yeria standing in Ushal and
wondering I should just trust me. Trust
me. Build by Jewish history cycles in on
itself. If I you know if I had a second
okay thank you.
>> Okay. If I veteran.
So if I had a second DeLorean, I want to
go back to 1960 to Las Vegas. I want to
go back to 1960 Las Vegas. I'd land
somewhere on the strip, find the
quickest bookie that I can. I want to
place a bet. 1960 Las Vegas. Which
country is going to last longer? the
Soviet Union or some fledgling little
Jewish state in the middle of the Middle
East maniacal murders. Where's going to
last longer? What type of odds you think
I get? 1,000 to one, 10,000 to one.
Soviet Union 69 years. We're going with
78.
So I would have won that bet. Make a lot
of money. Sakuresh Bar delivers that
second message. Moshe, yes
understood it. Yermia understood it
probably before he said when Hashem told
him how many
which illustrated to him the
irrationality unknowability of Jewish
history and that's why he began his say
for
but Yermia grasped this in the first
basikdash
his spiritual descendant grasped it when
he walked amongst the ruins of the
second basa mikdash and well this will
end and this is riva
but pay attention because is we're going
to read that gimmar that we know too
well because we don't know the details.
You know the story. They're all walking
amongst the ruins. They see rats and
vermin. They all start crying. Aka
starts laughing.
Why is he laughing? And aka is a
consmate outsider because he comes to it
later in life. And that's why he's a
fresh set of eyes. Always important to
see things with a fresh set of eyes. Not
just the common way that you've been
trained to see things, but the reverse
angle. Why is Riyaka see redemption when
they all see suffering?
because he sees a pak in Yesh source
three. Yesh
summons two prophets
literally symbolically
source number three
speaks about um it's quoted speaks about
the destruction of the mikdash I'm
reading it from source number for
so Ura speaks of the destruction.
Of course, Zakaria, as we'll soon see,
speaks of the redemption.
And since Yesha having nothing to do
with Ura and Zakaria but Yesha some
third party bystander loops the
destruction prophecy of Ura and the
redemption prophecy of Zakaria into the
same Puk.
So when you witness the fulfillment of
Ura's destruction prophecy, you can
anticipate the fulfillment of Zakaya's
redemption prophecy.
Is that all? simply because Ura's
destruction prophecy and Zakaria's
redemption prophecy appear in the same
pekk.
No, Ura and Zakaria saw the same thing
from different angles.
Ura saw the basikdash raised,
demolished, and sold. As I said before,
Rome had no interest in renaming any
other empire or annihilating any other
empire except for one. He saw not only
the defeat of the Jewish people but
the plowing, the raising, the salting,
the annihilation
which which I'm sorry which which leads
it to sorry my phone just went which let
make sure I'm still recording
which leads to it becoming a graveyard
where rats are scampering around. Why
did this happen? No other nation was
subjected to such devastation, to such
destruction.
Ura is looking through Jewish history
through those same lenses. This is
irrational.
This is incomprehensible. No other
nation is suffering this miserably. He
sees what Yuria basically sees in
Yaleim.
And Ryaka sees it hundreds of years
later. What does Zakaria see? What's
Zakaria's
redemptive vision? And what words does
he uses? Let's we'll end with this
source number seven.
We all know this.
Men and women of elderly advanced age
will stroll.
The streets will be filled by children
frolicking.
What is so apocalyptic about these
visions? Is an apocalyptic.
People in Norway stroll through the city
streets of Oslo. People in Italy stroll
through the city streets of Rome.
Children frolic in Moscow. Children
frolic in Tokyo. What is so apocalyptic
about men and women walking on canes and
soft summer evenings and children
frolicking on monkey bars?
The answer is what's normal in Tokyo,
Moscow.
What's normal in Oslo and London is
apocalyptic in Usain.
And it's apocalyptic for Jews. And we
still haven't achieved it because Jews
are still not free to stroll through the
streets of the streets of Kyon or the
streets of Sterim
and kids are not frolicking bars are
hiding in bomb shelters.
Amal Rebi told me that when he escaped
the holocaust and he lived in Gat Morai
and he attended the yeshiva of Kevron,
he would walk every day to the yeshiva
and stand by the playground transfix
watching little children play and crying
for hours
because those same eyes that now
witnessed the prophecies of Zakaria had
witnessed little Jewish children being
lined up on stony walls in Europe being
shot dead at point blank range. And now
he was privileged to see and to see
these nas.
And how does Zakaria conclude his nevu
of redemption? This is one of the
biggest hyperboles in all
source number seven.
That's their word again.
Those that are privileged to live out
the end of history will be shocked.
I'll also be shocked. Here's your
hyperbole. Hashem is not shocked. It's
just a matter of speech to show how
shocking it is.
So it's not just that the destruction
nva and the redemption nva happened to
be joined in one p and yes and that
tipped off rava. Well since they appear
incidentally in the same p of
about and about goula then if the is
coming true because I see the rats then
the goula should come true. We give us
to the life of things. No these two
prophecies are speaking the same
message. Jewish history is unfathomable.
It's unknowable. It's mysterious. It's a
pella. It's a pella that we sink so low
that our mak mikdash isn't just captured
but is devastated and raised and salted.
It's a pella.
And if Jewish history is a pella at its
nadir, it will be a pella as it rises
mccurally from its ashes. And it can
happen overnight. Serbia twinned the two
nvos not only because they're juxtaposed
in some puss and Yesha. Yeshos them
because they're two sides of the same
coin. And that coin is the irrationality
of Jewish history.
And that's what a means. And when we
begin our experience, it's almost as if
tishab is a threelegged table. It's
suffering the mikdash. It's suffering
the tragedy of gullis, but it's also
pondering the mysteries of Jewish
history because gullis is not incidental
to Jewish history. It could have been
avoided, but once it occurred, it
transformed Jewish history. And to a
degree I want to say it's a triumph of
history where the way in which we
navigated gullis and we're slowly
pulling ourselves out of that tunnel
into the next room of history is a
triumph. So allow yourself a little bit
of a smile on tishabove because if you
keep smiled on tishab
and living in Israel and witnessing the
miracles if you don't smile in tishab
I wonder if you've absorbed that third
leg. We suffered the we suffered gullis.
But we are redeeming Jewish history and
walk in the footsteps of
the
we should know no more tragedy for our
people.