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Rabbi Paysach Krohn | Elul: A Month To Come Home | CHAZAQ
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Welcome to tonight's very special
shares.
We so special for the entire community
together in unison this very special
event. Of course the events being
dedicated
loving memory of Lisa or Nanov and David
is
um of course all the everyone's
encouragement in the back and of course
all the learning tonight of course is
format
and of course for
um and the the theory time daily book
was still was given out to to um over
150 people tonight and of course we
thank all our generous sponsors for
dedicating the book
or
we want to thank the partner
organizations for for for tonight's
event of course of course Kazak we want
to thank Israel Hillrestn
and leadership of the for tonight's
program
we're also together with renewal which
hear about it from momentarily and um
All about kindness and bot mel of course
all about kindness is in the name itself
they tremendous organization in the
community which does so much said
kindness for those in the need in the
community of course an amazing
organization and the organization called
bot mel which is an organization
supporting women teens families in the
community by strengthening um the
connection between the families through
through dynamic programming and events
events. Thank BA and Aura of course and
of course Kazak. We're we're just one
week away from the new school year and
of course um each one of us if you think
for a second we know of a friend,
neighbor, coworker who has children in
public school and we still do something
about it. There's only a few days left
before the new school year. So of course
let them reach out to Khazak to help
give my Jewish education. Kazak has
after school programs over 20 different
locations these public school students
and have transferred over 2,000 students
from public school yeshiva. So of course
reach out to Kazak to help give them a
Jewish education
and um we're we're we're going to start
off um tonight's event with some of
course
it's our honor to call upon Rabn to lead
the first chapter. Everyone can please
rise.
[Applause]
[Music]
say
[Music]
Mary is
for
network
to lead parliamental.
Lord,
Adonai.
[Music]
Adonai
Laber.
Adonai.
[Music]
Okay.
And um it's a it's a great great honor
to call upon one of the partners of this
event renewal and by Josh Sturm. It was
a very special message for for everyone
and a great opportunity for everyone
over here. Thank you.
>> Thank you so much. It's really a a
privilege for us to be here tonight. A
special thank you to Kazak for putting
this wonderful program together. It
should be a uh for the entire Nissano
family and they they should see and feel
that we are all together with them
because we are Cla Israel. I want to
just explain to you a little bit on that
message of Clal Israel of what
how abnormal a nation we are. We are not
normal. And I've been told that by
doctors, by hospital people, by CEOs of
the hospital over and over and over
again. They say, "You are not normal."
Renewal, the Jewish people, you're not
normal. Why? Because in the United
States, if a person needs a kidney, the
average person in the country goes to
the hospital with if they're lucky,
extremely lucky, they go with one person
that may donate a kidney to them. Maybe.
We don't know if they're a match. We
don't know if they're willing, but
they've said maybe they'll do it. That's
the average person in the country. If
they need a kidney, they have maybe one
person.
In the last three weeks, Renewal has
been fortunate to have collected over
1,000 swabs of people that are willing
to donate to a total stranger.
This is Claudius. I'll share with you
just a quick story.
Friend of mine who's a RV uh donated his
kidney a few months ago and I went to
visit him in the hospital the day after
his donation and we were smoozing. We're
friendly and he said, "I have to share
with you something." thing. I said,
"Sure." He said, "I asked the doctor a
question that I don't think I was
supposed to ask." I said, "Okay, what'd
you ask?" He asked the nefologist,
that's the kidney doctor. He asked the
nefologist at the hospital as he was
going through the process. He asked him
a very tough question. Remember, this is
a kidney donor. He asked the
nephologist. He said, "Would you do it?"
It's a tough question. He put him on the
spot. He said, "Would you do the same
thing? You're testing me to see if I'm
good, if I'm qualified. Would you do it
yourself?"
And the nephologist who we work together
with very well, he's a wonderful
individual, does a lot of good. The
nephrologist gave him a very honest
answer. He said, "At this point in my
life, I wouldn't do it for a total
stranger." He said, "I'm not ready to do
it for a total stranger. Maybe later in
life, but at this point, I'm not ready
to do it for a stranger, but for a
family member, I would do it in an
instant right here, right now, I'd be
willing to do it for a family member."
Well, this friend of mine turned to me.
He didn't say this to the doctor, but he
turned to me and he said, "You know, the
truth is he and I have the same
criteria. I just have a much larger
family."
Kalia is not normal and we're proud to
be not normal. The world at large may
act one way, we act differently. the
ability to be able to give of oneself in
order to save a life. And it's not for
everybody, but for those that make that
wonderful decision to be able to do it.
Of course, the results are life-changing
because there's something that you
should realize. I'm not going to single
people out. We are doing this on behalf
of a specific person from the community
here tonight. And their family is here.
And the idea of a person donating a
kidney, they should realize that when
you donate, you're not just donating to
that person. You're not just saving that
person's life. You are saving the life
of the whole family, of their friends,
of their community,
of their whole world. It's not for
nothing that the Mishna tells us that
one who saves a life is as if he has
saved an entire world because that's
what it is. And this is who we are as KL
Israel. Renewal is proud. I'll give you
one more statistic. Renewal is very
proud to have this idea that over the
last 13 years, we have been responsible
for roughly 18% of all altruistic kidney
transplants across the United States. I
want to just explain what that number
means. Altruistic is when a donor and
recipient don't know each other. It's a
terrible term because anybody who
donates a kidney is altruistic, but
that's the term the hospitals use when
the donor and recipient don't know each
other. We're responsible for 18%. But
who are we? We are Clai Israel. Cla
Israel is responsible for 18%. You know
what Cla makes up as a percentage of the
Jewish people in America? Sorry, as a
percentage of the of the population in
America, we're about 2%. That means that
2% is responsible for 18% of all
altruistic transplants that happen
across the country. I'm going to take
that statistic one step further because
whereas renewal while renewal services
all walks of Jewish life our kidneys are
coming not exclusively but almost from
the orthodox from the religious dati
population of the Jewish people the
orthodox population of the United States
is roughly 2%.2%
is responsible for 18%. You talk about
this is who we are. This is how we
weather every storm. This is how we
weather every trial and tribulation. We
band together as one family as one
united.
And that is
as we enter into the that should stay
with us and should carry us through
should bless each and every one of us
and our families with wonderful health
for those who need it for all wonderful
things for us for our families and for
all of Isel. Thank you so much. If
anybody wants to get tested after Rabbi
Cronh's speech, we'll be in the lobby
doing swab testing for those who are
interested. Thank you.
>> Thank you, Rabbi Seru for all the
amazing work you do.
Introduce our next speaker. I think you
can say it's a tall story by Rabbi Far.
He said that once that in Israel there's
a part of Israel on the border and by
that border a lot of people who are
burglars they try to they try to smuggle
cars into that part of Israel and
because once once it goes through that
border then then you're never going to
see the car again. So it happens so so
there's there's two checkpoints at that
border. So the border patrol at that at
that checkpoint they they saw a certain
car and the first the first um the first
officers they said they they check the
license plate and everything they said
let it go through. So what happens as
it's going through? They're about to go
to the second checkpoint. The officers
say, "Stop the car. Stop the car. We
have to check it again." The officers
said back, "We you already said it's
good." They said, "No, no. Go check the
car." And what happens? They checked the
car and they saw it was stolen. So they
asked the first officers, "What? Why'
you What happened? What was the
difference?" They said, "We saw a bumper
sticker in the back of the car." What
was the bumper sticker? It said ain't O
no. There's nothing but Hashem. So they
What they do? They they took this car,
they drove it back to whoever owned it.
And who was it? It was it was somebody.
It was a it was an irreligious man and
and and the irreligious man said um they
told they told him the story of of of
what happened by the first border patrol
and the second thing and he said, "Wow."
And he started crying and he said,
"You're not going to believe what I'm
about to tell you." He said that that um
a fam um there's a group of young bakr
young men and they came to my family and
they said um you should start maybe
keeping a little bit of Shabbat of
Shabas. And his family said no no no
it's too much for us. They said fine
maybe put on fill in every single day
once a day. They said no no it's too
much. They said fine at least just put a
bumper sticker on the back of your car.
And what was the bumper sticker? Ain't
no there's no one but Hashem. And that
weak is is car stolen. So I think that
um to introduce
and um of course I think you can say a
lot of these three words is um they're
such a role model literally hundreds of
thousands of people around the world
were were inspired by the amuna of
Rabisana Rabin and the the whole family.
So everyone everyone we call everyone
could please rise as we call upon to say
some opens.
Thank you for the introduction.
Should
my mother,
my in-laws,
my beautiful wife, my children,
and all the family members who are
watching at home who cannot come
tonight.
I am forever grateful
for Israel. I've been saying to
everybody Isra
Jew
and I'm proud to be part of this greater
family.
for me to stand here
and to
say publicly to everyone,
thank you for your prayers.
Thank you for being there. Thank you for
being with us.
I think I spoke to my wife.
The half an hour we were trying to save
my daughters was the only time I felt
alone.
Otherwise since then and the whole thing
how it happened I still we saw it with
our own eyes
we didn't understand
and
no one else was there to jump in so I
just jumped in the water. What would any
other father do except that I don't know
how to swim?
And to see
I really thought we're going to be
collecting body parts because you know
they went so fast slammed into a slab
of cement. I thought you know the head
is going to be one part and the body is
going to be another and just to come
over got closer we didn't blow up those
jet skis and to come and see my daughter
first I saw Aviva face down
and they kept saying you know we have
one we have one I didn't understand
they're talking about my daughter Aiva I
thought they were talking about
So hashem with my wife and I, we pushed
them up. My wife is screaming at the top
of our lungs, please call 911.
And for some reason, the guy who's
supposed to be with us disappeared
left the scene of the crime.
So like we're trying to push her up.
Hashem again
that they were working on the house. So
the workers helped us pull them out one
by one.
And now all of a sudden I'm so happy my
daughter comes to she wakes up. You
know, I don't wish this on anyone to see
your daughter's face down in the water
unconscious. I don't know what to think.
I just
And then all of a sudden after we got my
daughter out of I see my other daughter
under the under the dock all the way
like from here to the beimma. I like I I
got so panicked. I ran. I don't know how
I grabbed her. I don't know if my wife
helped me. We pulled her up and I've
turned her over again,
but she had a severe head trauma. Her
head was she hit severely against the
pole, which is cement.
I have scratches all over. I had
scratches all over my hand trying to
save them cuz I had to hold on one thing
to try to pull them out.
And when by the time the ambulance came,
they were doing CPR, chest compressions
on my daughter, my baby,
and they took her in the ambulance, and
I'm standing over there trying to figure
out what, where, when, how. Now, you
know, I have a red cap on. Thank God I
had it because I have a bald spot.
I learned the hard way. If you get a
sunburn, it hurts. really hurts. So like
I've just saying I'm just praying
and like walking back and forth. We
don't know what to do.
Our stuff is on the boat, our slippers,
nothing.
And once we came to the hospital,
from then on
we did not feel alone.
Kabad rabbi came from
rur county.
My wife's sister from another mother
Vicki. She showed up
and
the rebbitson also her name also happens
to be Rael
and they come and give us the news that
I wish no parents ever have to hear that
we saved one of your daughters
but we couldn't save the second one
and before
initial shock
The first thing I said to myself is,
"What am I going to tell my mother?
What am I going to tell my in-laws?"
And I started apologizing to my wife. I
said, "I'm sorry. I couldn't save my
other daughter."
My grandmother used to always say,
"Things could always be worse.
Shem shouldn't make it worse cuz no
matter how bad you think good things
could be even worse
and how fitting it is tonight
which is
I am to my loved one and my loved one is
to me
and I didn't know
how many times
my youngest daughter
always was thinking about her bo her
grandfather my father Shalom
David bin Islam
[Music]
28 years ago I was telling people when I
was sh I sat in my house 28 years ago
when my father passed away I was 26
years old and my father was 54
and I was sitting there and I was
telling everyone
and then my wife told me that she always
cried. She wanted to say, "Mommy, I feel
Bobo. I feel my grandfather.
I want to see him.
I pray for Mashia should come
and she would cry."
And you know, Lord of Hashem, we have
seven other ones. I never heard any of
my kids say that. None of my other kids
say that. You know, we miss Mo, we miss
our grandfather.
And it's not for nothing that
tonight,
tomorrow night is my father's yard
and the is going to be exactly on
September 11th, a day after my
daughter's birthday. She would have been
14 years old.
But I am forever grateful and I said it
and people think I had something
scripted. I said it
from the bottom of my heart.
I love you
and I'm happy if you could say that that
of all people that happened to me to my
wife cuz I think it will be somebody
else he would have been knocked out. He
would have been asking questions of why.
But my father taught me many years ago
we don't ask why.
The goim say why we as hidden we never
say why
why was my father the youngest passed
away 6 months after my grandmother I
don't know why did my father lose his
oldest brother at 42 years old only two
months after he got married I don't know
why did my cousins
who were not even bar mitzvah my oldest
cousin was 12 years old and my youngest
cousin was only 2 years old. 42 year old
man walked out of the house and they
brought him back in a in a you know my
grandparents were alive. My my father,
my two two brothers, my aunts, they were
all alive.
We don't say why. Why is the worst
answer to us? We just continue living.
I have never seen such a as was
mentioned before. We are one big family.
Adam,
we are considered one.
Adam in singular and plural is one
because we are I never thought I would
see so many people.
2:00 in the morning, people are coming.
When I left the hospital at 2:00 to go
get my passport to get ready to go to
Heritage Israel till 2:00 people were
coming. I didn't know that the state
police trump securityities of the
hospital.
People just said, "Okay, we know why
you're here. Just keep going. Keep
going." 2:00 in the morning. I left the
hospital 2:00
till 3:00. I asked my wife what time
people were coming. 3:00 in the morning.
The next day I had to go to Miami to
pick up my passport. 7 o'clock in the
morning people are calling me ready.
I am proud to be
I am more than that. I need
I need Bkhari. I am proud Bkharian. We
are basian America not BS.
And I saw it when we sat together when
everybody came when everybody was coming
to supposedly consult. There is no
consolation.
There's nothing he could say.
But the most important thing is that
as my father would always say,
John, you have to continue living. You
have to continue. And that's why I carry
my daughter with me all the time. She's
alive.
She will always be with us. Someone
asked me, "So, how many kids now do you
have?" I said, "I always have eight
kids. I will always have eight kids. She
is my infinity. She's the eighth child.
It's not
my
she will be always a living thing.
How fortunate it is for everybody.
Everybody came together as one. Rabbi
Paris Steinberg when he came to my
house, he said, "Rabbi Nissan, this is
not your Shiva. This is Shiva. The whole
Jewish people are sitting Shiva with
you. Don't feel like it's only you. Only
you going through this. People came. I
don't know. I don't know. I thought
maybe that my sons maybe some No, people
just showed up. I said you don't know
me, but we heard we came. We wanted to
give you Makah coming to be
to give you offer of condolences during
the time of Shiva.
And how fitting it is tonight of all
times that we gather here in this
beautiful hall of young Israel of where
we have many here, many bar mitzvah,
everything. How feeling it is that I
have
pes who I've known for many many years.
We did our first Shabbaton almost 25
years ago Hudson Valley Resort when it
was still alive and looking much better
than it looks now. And we had a
beautiful Shabbaton
and the rabbits in Chrome was been my
wife's teacher when she went to Sherak
and she was she is continuing to be my
daughter Aviva Rafas
when I over there and we're a big family
did the breath of my grandson my oldest
grandson
also Abro did the breed of my nephew you
David
and what a small world together we're
coming and unfortunately I don't know if
Rabbi Chrome remembers unfortunately we
were together at Auda convention I came
over with my wife to the to Rab Cone and
to Rabbit Chrome and we said I'm sorry
Rab Cone we won't be able to hear you
Friday night because we have to go back
to Queens and little do we know that
what happened may you
when you continue to inspire others and
on a great note I'm very happy to say
that my daughter
with the filot of all gods from all over
the world uncles from Australia from
Austria from Israel all over the you
guys all prayed for my daughter and
she's doing very very well
[Applause]
yes she's worried about her missing
teeth but the dentist said don't worry
about it we'll take care of your missing
teeth. It's unbelievable. Nim flow the
miracles that have happened. She's
sitting in the front and she didn't get
hit on the head. She how you know she
had the right side broken arm and and
some couple of teeth, but she didn't get
hit on the head. It's unbelievable.
Hashem, like I said in the beginning, I
thought I lost both my daughters, my two
girls after my six boys.
Hashem for Hashem's reason we don't know
why we accepted the
we accept it because this is this is the
works of
there was a famous thing which we done I
will conclude
to wrote down
we know that we one of the questions
that everybody's asked is when is mashia
coming
is The only onra we say we don't say we
don't say
the only prayer if you look at the only
prayer we say all day three times a day
only for your south Asian
do we really want mashiach
so the famous question the asked the
question is if mashiach did not come
during the time the Rambam's time
the Rashad
those people who
they are the people who are let us
continue learning Torah why would
Mashiach come in our generation where we
are so far removed
that's a question that bothered me if
Mashia didn't come so many times more
there were more Torah more Torah people
who are doing so many flaws my Z my
great great-grandfather who's buried in
Haram next to the
where it says on his
he was he died in 1911 and it says
came to visit my grandfather's
grandfather
when he was awake
all the time if Mashiach did not come
during his time. Why would he come
during our time? Why would he come
during the time of
who am I?
It's a good question.
And the gives emotion.
He says, "Imagine a giant big, huge,
tall guy. But no matter how tall he is,
the mountain is a little taller. It's
about 2 feet tall. No matter how much he
tries, he cannot go over it because he's
2t.
All of a sudden, he takes someone who's
a dough. He's a small guy, two feet. He
puts him on the soldier on the soldiers
and he says, "Let's go now. Let's go
over it." And now they will be able to
cross the dust shall. The fact that we
had my grandfather's grandfather, the
fact that we have the Rambam, the Rashi,
and everyone before, it's only telling
us that Mashiach is on his way. We are
at the equ.
And I for sure sought them because my
daughter wanted Mashiach because she
really wanted to see her above.
She said, "I want to see my
grandfather."
And that's why she's buried in next to
my father.
Aba
Papa,
I know you hear me. I know you're with
me. I always say to myself, what would
you do if you would be in my place?
There are times I want to do something,
say something to people I don't like,
but I am reminded of you. He always told
me, John, don't argue with a foolish
person. We don't know who's the fool. If
you argue with him, then you might be
the fool also.
And my father used to tell me, if
someone spit at your face, just look up
and say, "Wow, where is it raining
from?" Guys, spit at my face.
If Hashem didn't want that spit to hit
your face, it would have never happened.
And if it happened,
don't ask why.
With that, I'd like to introduce my
mentor, my storyteller. Every year at a
good convention, I know why they let him
speak last Friday night. Friday night,
nobody's going to stay up till 11:00.
But when Rab Pesak speaks Friday night,
everybody's going to stay up, including
myself, including my wife
Pesak.
I'm deeply grateful to my dear friend
Robbie Abof and all the officers of
Kazak for inviting me to come here
tonight to this tremendous crowd to
speak to all of you.
I'm so proud to be up on this podium at
this podium without a doubt I must have
done 50 brristen over the years over the
different button and I'm proud if any of
you are people that I did the bris for
or for your family I thank you for your
confidence but I must say also if I did
50 brristen I ate 50 bagels and locks
back there as well so you know it was
always a good day I just want to thank
also The Balsam family they sponsored
part of this
riff
bas
Mrs. Bolson's family helped sponsor
tonight. We have come here tonight on a
night of contrast. The first contrast,
we're now in L. L is the end of the
month, end of the year. But L is also
the beginning of the time of Chuba. 40
days of Chuba from beginning of L to Yum
Kipper. As a matter of fact, I wrote
this book which is called
the mag which is available outside
afterwards and this talks about the 40
days of elyra.
So on one hand it's the end of the year
but at the other hand it's the beginning
of a time of chuba. That's the first
contrast.
There's an amazing p that tells us
something that shows us the fear and the
awe that we should have of these days.
The p is an
it says
if a lion roars
wouldn't you be afraid
is spelled alf
it stands for rashur
hash.
If these days are roaring
or shouldn't we be afraid? So that's a
beautiful way of understanding this Pik.
So many years ago on night
already passed away he quoted this and
then he said something very interesting.
He said, "You know that actually um
on the past summer he had taken his
children to the Bronx Zoo and they heard
a lion roar and the kids weren't afraid.
They were running to the cage. They
wanted to see it." So he said, "What do
you mean?
If a lion roars in the Bronx, if a lion
roars, nobody's afraid." And he said,
"The answer is because the lion's in a
cage. And if the lion's in the cage,
nobody has anything to be afraid about.
And when he said that afterwards on
Ashaba, I saw an amazing that we say
if I if we put in a cage or behind an
iron barrier, then we're not going to be
afraid of these days. So that's what we
ask that the that cage that barrier
between us and Hashem should be removed.
So we should feel that awe of.
So that's the first contrast. L the end
but the beginning of cha there's a
second contrast. The baba once said
something amazing. He said, "You know
what stands for?"
That means like this. There's some
people that in let's say they'll look
back at the past year and they'll say,
you know, I dabbled with the minion all
the time. I learned I gave I was nice to
people. So what did what did they have
to do in the next year? They have to go
up. They have to be even better. It's
true. They were good, but they have to
be even better. And there's some people
they look back at the past year they
didn't always d with the minion and they
didn't give stuck the way they should
and they were nasty and they didn't
learn the way they should they didn't d
the way they should. So so they looking
back at the
so again it's a contrast some people is
they're looking to get even better than
they did last year and some people is
they're looking back at the they have to
improve. So that's the second contrast.
And here in Queens, we have a third
contrast because of the beloved Nissan
family. All of us know that tonight is
the
bas and yet so that's we're engulfed in
sadness. As he said, Rabbi Steinberg
said it wasn't the Shiva just for the
Nana family. It was in it was a Shiva
for the family of Clustro. And on the
other hand we have a night of hope
and as was mentioned my wife was the
teacher of so we have this contrast. I
once were engulfed in sadness because of
the passing of
but we have that hope forem.
Now I just want to tell you that I spoke
to people about Raisa and I want to tell
you a mida that she had that I think is
so important for all of us to adopt in
the month of El and the next 40 days
from Elo until
and that was she had the mid of
Vatronus. She was alo vatronis means to
give in and not to cause arguments. In
other words, sometimes people say
something against us and we want to get
even. But if you're a vat and you're
able to look away, it's a tremendous
tremendous. And she was able to look
away. If anybody ever said anything, she
never got even. She never got into
arguing. She would rather walk away if
anybody did anything against her. And
that's a tremendous me. And I want to
tell you
there was a drought. There was no rain.
And they asked Rebel Lazar to daven and
the Gmorra says Rabin
and it still didn't rain and then it
said Rabbi Yaka ded and all of a sudden
it started coming great. Some people
said, "Oh, you see is greater than
says no no
not that was greater but he had a mido
and that mido caused that his feelings
should be answered and that is he was a
vat and he was able to be to look away."
Now, we know there's so many people who
say something against us, our families,
and and we want to get even, but if
you're able to look away,
if somebody doesn't want to look away,
how in the world are they going to
survive?
Cuz then Hashem won't want to look away.
We all have done things that we're not
proud of. And we want Hashem to look
away from those things. The only way
Hashem will look away from anything that
we did that was negative the past year
is if we have that mid that we are
willing to look away from other people
uh who have done something nasty to us.
And like this Hashem would also look
away at anything that we did. And so we
have to adopt for us the mid of Alisa to
be a to be a vat.
Now I just want to say something
regarding Aviva Braha. You know we're
all ding for her as her father mentioned
and Cla is diving for her. Now I just
want to tell you what said
every day in we say
is the compassionate one. His never
ends.
We're always hoping for you. So Schwab
and his genius said, "What is the word
mean?" Everybody says kina means we're
hoping. But he says kav is like a cord
or a string or I would like to call it a
rope. And he says and based on what he
says I would say we have a rope of hope
is that rope of hope that aid could
always have and if a person has that
hope that's why only after do we say
Allah why can we say Allahim because if
aid is connected to Hashem with that
robe of hope anything can happen the
whole miracle of puran happened and we
say all when Jews thought everything was
over. But being that we have that rope
of hope of connection to Hashem,
then we could say Allah and that's what
we hope for.
Of course, she had very very difficult
accident and she needs miracles as the
father said miracles are happening
and that's exactly what we're hoping.
And I want to say also I don't know how
it is by but by
we say theem
we switch it around three times.
Why do we switch it and say it in
different ways and the answer is because
when a person is looking for salvation
many times it doesn't come in the
regular way. It comes in a roundabout
way that you wouldn't even think about
it. And I'll give you an example. For
example, let's say you know somebody
sends their son to a yeshiva and there
is and it turns out that the guy ends up
marrying his kusa sister and how many
times does it happen girls want to go to
a seminary and they don't get into the
seminary that they want to. They get
into another one and they're very upset
and then it turns out they married their
roommate's brother but that's not the
seminary they wanted to go into. But
that's what
And therefore we know that that needs
big and so it's not going to happen in
the conventional way. It happens in a
roundabout way in miraculous way as said
and that's exactly what we're hoping for
in that way.
Now the topic tonight the topic tonight
the way Robbie gave it to me before
everything happened was coming home in
that that was the topic and of course
you want to come home to Hashem so what
is what is Hashem's home and that's what
I would like to talk about for the first
part of this talk in
it says
my home you want to come home I'll tell
you what my home is
that's the Ber that's the that's every
is a mdash every
is a mdash every is a mdash and that's
what we have to strive tonight every
single one of us as we work from
the 40 days of we have to one of the
things that we have to improve is to
improve our so how are we going to do
that. So I just want to tell you certain
things I would never ask you to do these
things unless I do it myself. But I
believe with my whole heart that if you
do these things your dying will change
and you'll dine better. And the first
thing is to have your own sitter that
you underline expressions in it. When
you have your own sitter, you come,
let's say,
you can't take a sitter off the shelf
and underline an expression that
impresses you because it's public
property. You can't deface public
property. But if you have your own jewel
that you have your own sid
becomes your friend that's talking to
you every day. I'll give you an example.
One of the words that I have underlined
in my iso
every morning in halal in the halalucas
we say hashem is the one who heals a
broken heart. We know so many people
even in this holy bes have broken hearts
and hashev is able to heal the broken
hearts. So when you underline that at
once say what are the first letters of
those words
is hal
that's the biggest praise you could say
on somebody so when I see it in my s
under light I'm beginning to realize I
can't say I think about it every day but
many times I do that life is not about
you life is what could you do for other
people how could you heal so many people
how could you give to other people so
many people are broken
So if you're underlining your s your s
that s is talking to you and that's how
you improve the ding by underlining
certain things that mean something to
you and it teaches you how important
those things are.
Now there's another thing also
you see
says that when you're ding you're
supposed to add words in your own
language. For example, in RIU, we know
so many people that are sick. So, I have
a whole list of people that I doubt
before. Add words. Talk to Hashem. As
Rabbi said before, talk to Hashem in
talk about
talk about the you may have done and you
want to say and you mention some of the
ae
and that's how you improve your ding
because ding is a conversation with
Hashem. So, it's not only that you
underline in your own sitter, but you're
supposed to add words to your ding. And
not only that, I want to tell you a
great story that when you look at the
sitter, you're supposed to think of
double and triple meanings in the words.
Now, I once heard a great story about
Abramski who was the uh Rashisha of
Slav. He lived in Bayan. One time
somebody said to him, "Rebi, you know
your neighbor, the Reb is very sick. He
needs a blood transfusion." So he said,
"Okay, we have to D for him." But he
said, "You should know I d every day
that I don't need a blood transfusion."
He said, "Where do you d every day?" He
said, "You also d except you don't
realize it." Now listen to what he said.
Hashem make it that we don't need the
present of boser like flesh like a heart
transplant or lung transplant or a
kidney transplant or um like in um
a transfusion. So I remember I asked
could you have that in mind? So he said,
"Of course, if it made sense, so when
you see certain words in DNI, it could
have a double and triple meaning." And
I'll give you an example that happened
with me after I had the stroke. I
couldn't move my fingers. Now I'm able
to move my fingers. I couldn't move my
pinky. And now I began to realize kufim
has now a new meaning. Kufu means Hashem
straightens out those that are bent. So
normally it means those that are bent
over, Hashem makes them that they can
walk straight. Do you ever think about
the fingers? If you can't move them,
that's also like a kafu him. So that's
way how you think about something more
in the doubling. It has a double and a
triple meaning. So I'll tell you a great
story. A guy came over to me once. I was
in a restaurant
and he says to me, "Rabbi, because of
you, I got a nuke shot in D." I said,
"Because of me?" He said, "Yeah, don't
for remember you told us that story
about day mas."
He said, "I'm in the food department."
And the says,
"Hashem gives bread to the whole world
cuz his um is forever." He said,
"Imagine a guy wants to eat a hot dog.
So, what bread is he going to eat for a
hot dog? He eats a bun." Right? Now,
what happens if a guy wants cheese and
locks? He's not going to eat a bun. He's
going to eat a bagel. What happens if he
wants a schwama? He's he's not going to
eat a bun or a bagel. He's gonna eat a
lafa. And if he wants falafa, he's gonna
eat a pa. So look how great God is.
He gives us all kinds of bread for any
type of meat, right? So I thought it was
adorable, but I didn't underline it on
my sit up.
So like I say, try to think of double
and triple meanings. And like I said,
psych
is one of those meanings.
Now I just want to tell you that I want
to talk about small things. We spoke
about which is major things but you know
the mit the mit was
he lived in the time of the when the
lived in the mit was there and he said
you know what chuba is chuba is
different than any other mitzvah for
example let's say matzah you're supposed
to eat matzah pes if you don't eat a
kazayas matzah so that's it you weren't
you weren't m kind of mitzvah you didn't
do it in its fullness and let's say suka
you didn't eat a kazay in
So you want to kind of mitah? He said,
"But chuva is different. Chua means to
return." So any way that you return,
even a little bit, if you do a little
bit of the mitzvah more than you did
before, that already is chuva. And
that's what we have to do. We have to
take little things that we weren't
careful with. And you become a little
bit more careful. And that's what chuva
is. Chuba means to return. And if you
take one step, that's one step closer to
Hashem. That's one step of chuba. And
that's why I want to talk about certain
things that maybe we're not always so
careful about. Now, I wrote a book. It
was called from sorrow to celebration.
And from sorrow to celebration, it was
about the three weeks, the nine days and
tishov. And you know, the book was in a
sense very sad because it talks about
the saddest days of the year. And I
wanted to build it up, make it a little
bit more positive. So I looked up in
history the passed away in the three
weeks was Rabbi Yashv Rashi Raboi
Gazinski and and other people like that
and their result and I saw a fabulous
story about that result that I want to
tell you affected me and it should
affect all of us. That result was able
to look at your face and he would see
exactly what you did wrong and with the
tik that you need. So of course if
people came to him they were able to do
chuva right away because then he was
able to see exactly what was wrong. So
listen to this. A guy came to his house
and he was walking very stiffly. So the
Arizal said, "Are you in pain?" So he
said, "Yeah, my shoulder hurts." So the
Arizal looked at his face. He said,
"I'll tell you why your shoulder hurts."
He said, "Why? Because you're not
careful of my he said my what has that
got to do with it?" He said because the
man says take care when the dealers you
die in as soon as you wash your hands
and you're supposed to bet you're not
supposed to talk out. So the guy said I
always live in after um I wash my he
said you can't even talk in ter that's a
half sick and take is tough cough pay
and co is cough tough pay. So because
you're not careful in the take of of
that's why you have pain in your
shoulders and that's something that I
think that we should all be a little bit
more careful about. First of all even
women should be washing and as soon as
you wash
right away you should start veging.
Don't talk don't don't start singing or
the don't worry about what the kids are
doing. They'll be texting right after
takea
and that's something that we could all
start being careful from tomorrow.
Whenever you wash on a bagel or whatever
whatever you wash on bread you have to
be very careful. I want to talk about
another thing that we should be a little
bit more careful about. Again, these are
small things compared to, but these are
small things that we can do chuva in and
how we can make a little correction and
that is keeping your feet together. I
want to tell you what Mosha says about
those people who don't keep their feet
together like one during shimanas.
There's some people that keep their feet
so wide apart you can kick a field goal
between them. But that's that's not how
you're supposed to dab. You're supposed
to dab so that the heels and the fingers
of the feet are supposed to be together
as one like a mala and writes
that if a person doesn't do it even if
he's rebi even if he has
and some of the they like a triangle
only the heels are together not the
fingers are together says don't let the
man d for the even if he's following his
rebi take him away from the Could you
imagine? It's an
if you want to look it up. And he says,
"Even if people d like that." Now,
you'll see people don't always d with
their feet together. But from tonight on
when you dive, don't forget to say, of
course, but you got to keep your feet
together from the heels to the toes. not
like a triangle because that's not
keeping it like like like the ma.
Now I want to show you something very
interesting. You know there's a medish
that has a mus
There's a medish that has the the medish
tells us that there's so to speak as if
it's a mus
between Hashem and CL Israel.
The prophet says
you
turn you return to me and I will return
to you. But we say to Hashem,
you take the first step. So Hashem and
so to speak,
we say Hashem, you take the first step.
But we but Hashem says to us we should
take the first step. Now if you notice
the Gor tells us in that the world was
built like a hay.
And what does that mean? A hay as you
know has a ceiling on top and no floor
on the bottom. Why doesn't it have a
floor on the bottom? Cuz a person could
fall all the way down. There's no end to
how far a person could fall. But a
person has to know that you could always
come back to chew. But that's what that
door, that's what that little space on
the side is. A person can always come
back to chuba. And so that's what the
hay is all about. And that's why the
Gmorrah says that the world was created
like a hay.
And the truth says it's so amazing that
the fifth in is hashu. That's five.
That's the fifth. Hey is a letter of
chuva. It begins with a heash of and it
ends five and five is 10 and that's the
and that's what we have to be as careful
as we can you know during these
chuba and that's the of that's the one
that shows us you know that that's the
of
now I want to tell you about another
thing that nobody ever talks about and I
think it's very very important and I'll
tell you some unbelievable stories. The
Friday night suda is one of the most
important vehicles of msura that we can
give over to our children. When parents
sit at the table and a father says on
the para he's giving over his ashkas of
what he feels the are of the para to his
children. a Friday night suit. This
should not just be stout conversation,
just kidding around. I mean, it's a
wonderful time for families to get
together, but a person has to know that
um that uh that's a time when you could
give over
and not only that, but even the
inanimate objects on the table have a
meaning. For example,
inf
says that the bread, the kala has to
have a cover. I don't know if you know
why. Do you know why the kala has to
have a cover? And the brings it
that the past the bread shouldn't feel
embarrassed because really if you have
bread and wine middle of the week, you
have to make the on the bread first. But
tonight you're making on the wine first
because the kdish. So the bread could
feel embarrassed. So listen to this sir.
Abdavid le was the father of Rahan. Abd
was one whose daughter he once said
imagine a father comes home from sh and
he sees the table wasn't set the way he
wanted with either the dishes or the
napkins or the silverware and he says
something to his wife and he embarrasses
his wife or let's say a kid comes home
from yeshiva and he doesn't say the
terra the way he's supposed to say it.
And what happens? The father scolds him
in front of everybody and he doesn't
realize that the cover on the kala is
teaching him don't embarrass anyone.
Don't embarrass even an inanimate
object. How much more so a child or a
wife or anybody at the table. You have
to be so sensitive to the people around
the table.
So I want to tell you an amazing story
that happened many years ago with Rabio
Desler. With that we'll close. Raul
Desler who was the was a great sadik and
his wife Luma she died on a Friday and
the next Friday was going to be the
first Friday that he was going to be
alone with without his wife in all the
years. So his tom came and the tom
started setting the table the way they
set it every week and he put the bear on
the table and reba said take away that
beak. I want the becca that's on the
shelf and the couldn't believe it. Why
does the revi care what beha is on the
table? you know that's that wasn't that
important but whatever it was he said
revi I would like to ask you something
after the meal and after the meal he
asked the revi why revi did it make a
difference what bear I put on the table
so listen to what he said he said I want
to tell you a story that I never told
you before he said from 1941
to 1949
I was he was the head of the ko gates
rap had called the old desa to open up a
k in gates and that's where he was in
gates and in 1946 the pornov came to
gates and he was so impressed with the
old desa he wanted him to be the mashia
in pornovich but he couldn't go then he
came two years later in 1949
three years later in 1949 and that's
when he was in pornovich and inra and
when he came to he found out that the
shashir of the is bigger than the one
that he was using. So he went to a store
and he bought a bigger bea and when he
put it on the table the first Friday
night his wife said to him why did you
switch the bea we've been using a bea
all these years now what was so special
about that bea
got that bea fromkiinski
was the goa the
and he got it from
salis
was the grandfather of mo's's first wife
salisa
and moisa used it all the years. So his
wife said if it's good enough for it's
good enough for salanta it should be
good enough for us. So he saw that she
was but she felt bad. So he put away the
and then but then he said to the so that
was in bias but and she had on her side.
So therefore that's why I felt that
should overrule it. But now that she's
not here anymore, it's not an issue of I
feel that the has more of a value here.
And that's why I wanted to change the so
we see that the Friday night table is a
time not only to give over but even the
things on the table could have an
influence. So that's the brah that I
want to give everybody that we should
know that we come in and we come in and
we have 40 days of chuba and we have to
remember that the world is like a hay.
There's no end to how far we can fall.
But that door is always open for chuva.
A person should never feel bad of what
he did. No matter what you looked at, no
matter where you went, what you said,
and what you did, you could always do
cha. That's what the hay is all about.
Hashem should bless each and every one
of us that we should be able to fulfill
our potential that's the biggest braha
every man woman and child that's going
to be watching from kasak
it's all over the world to any time and
that's really at rabbi shabat that's
when I met shin co yakov the first time
and ruben kakov that's how to any time
started from that chalus so we thank you
so much and uh I don't know where my aid
is but he's usually behind me.
Oh, here he is. He deserves a tremendous
thanks. Please give him
[Applause]