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[Music]
and the other stories as well but I'm
going to focus on something at the very
very beginning if you remember the end
of partial todos where Yaakov took the
blessings that should have the district
intended to give two ways of and Yaakov
engaged in what is apparently deceptive
behavior so a sub in his rage has
determined that he wants to kill his
brother and there's kind of a double
reason why Yaakov has to flee in fact
this is what the commentaries say it
says variates a Yaakov maybe Java Yaakov
leaves their shava but yet karana
and he goes to Horan so they point out
when you leave your place sometimes
there are two reasons why you go
sometimes it's because you have to leave
and sometimes it's because you have to
go somewhere meaning to say is the main
purpose what you have to get away from
or is the main purpose where you have to
go to in Yakov's case it was both he had
to leave bare shava to get away from the
wrath of Asaph he had to go to Quran
because that's where we would find a
wife from our Brahms family so that's
why the Torah emphasizes by Yeats a
Yaakov he leaves by Ayla and he goes
because this was a double double trip
Rivka's primary motivation was get
yourself out of harm's way but she
didn't want to tell you sucked if that
was the problem because you still had a
love for a self so these are the it's
like she presented it as the need to
find a wife now the Gemara gives kind of
a backstory here that's not so clear
from the text and that is Yaakov
actually arrived in harem which is like
a thousand miles away he then decided he
wanted to turn back and pray at the site
of the future temple in Jerusalem he
wanted to pray at the temple mount's
because that was the site of the akkada
god miraculously shortened that journey
so he got there very quickly and he
prayed and then the Sun sets suddenly
even though it was not the end of the
day forcing him to stay there so he
would experience the great and beautiful
dream
of divine love and divine reassurance so
that's the meaning of the puss ik he
went all the way to harren then he went
back a Shem made the sunset and he was
forced to stay because it was dark he
could not travel once it was dark and
the puss ik says forgive gaba macomb he
encountered the place for y'all and shun
and he lodged there Kevon Shemesh
because the son had sent the Gemara
focuses on the unusual word Villisca he
encountered an dimensions n PG a-- elet
Fila
encounter is a term for prayer when man
encounters God and Yaakov established
the custom for the Jewish people to pray
to Hashem at night according to the
gomorian Braavos Avraham established the
idea of praying to Hashem in the morning
Yitzhak established the idea of the
afternoon service and in this
prosecutive Aveeno established the
practice of turning to Hashem at night
now obviously the Gemara does not mean
to suggest that the text of the Amidah
or the text of the prayers were composed
by the of us that's clearly not the case
that is a much later development around
the time of the Second Temple but the
idea of chakras Mincy arvit comes
according to least one opinion in the
gomorrah and the Rambam so rules it
originates from the of us so now I just
want to raise a very very simple
question there is a mark locus in the
Gomorrah
if the Arvest prayer is obligatory or
only optional
now the Shama of the evening is
certainly in the Torah but the Amidah of
the Arvest we actually pass him is an
optional prayer which is obligatory
today only because it's a long-standing
custom so now it's obligatory but at its
inception it was an optional prayer so
the question is we seem to have a
fundamental contradiction here and on
one side of the ledger
say Avram did chakra T attracted men huh
Yaakov added Arvest but then we say
chakras and Mincha are obligatory
prayers and Arvest is optional why would
the prayer of Yaakov be inferior to the
prayer of a Brahman you talk
you see if you followed a different view
in the Gemara there is a different view
in the Gemara that the three to fill out
are not because of the oboz but they are
to correspond to the sacrificial cycle
in the basin McNish as a replacement
then the distinction between arvid's and
the other two prayers actually does make
sense because every morning there was a
daily offering and every afternoon there
was a daily offering there actually were
no Corbin note that were brought at
night except any leftover fats or organs
from the morning offerings that were not
consumed you could burn them the entire
they would have to be burnt over the
night but since that was not a necessary
situation so one could say that's why
it's Fila Sarvis is reshoot which is
optional but the problem is that the
Rambam in inhale hosts its Fila postions
to things that seem to be contradictory
he follows the view that these fellows
are because of the avos and he also
follows the view that our Vedas are
assured meaning Maariv is optional
except for the fact that of course it's
become an established custom so the
question is how can those two things
coexist why would ya koves prayer be
relegated to a position of inferiority
right that's a serious question in many
ways in Casals hierarchy they consider
Yaakov to be the highest of the of us
although it may be like the not a
but a person standing on the shoulders
of the giant can see further because
basically we know that albarran
represents the epitome of
loving-kindness
but too much loving-kindness can be a
bad thing right your children will have
tooth decay because they eat candy all
the time and that's why I've run
produced a yeesh Morel who could not be
part of the Jewish people and yet Clark
represents the other extreme of
discipline and introspection and inner
strength Guevara and that is why there
is an Asaph who was also excluded in his
only Yaakov that is called to ferret to
ferret this beauty beauty is synthesis
beauty is integration beauty is taking
the opposite forces and blending them
together in a harmonious whole - Ferris
beauty and that is why all of Yaakov
children in spite of our many problems
of course all of Yaakov children are
part of God's nation we are told on
God's divine throne the face of Yaakov
Aveeno is engraved so it's true that
Avram might be greater in the sense of
being the pioneer but in terms of
bringing the synthesis of kindness and
discipline to its perfection in this set
to be Yaakov so back to the question why
would ya coves prayer of our vets be
optional if Avram's prayer of chakras
and yes experimenta is obligatory are
you taking away my share okay
short answer and then we can going them
early tonight it maybe not but you're
right hundred percent correct right I'm
assuming in the question something that
in point of fact when my question that
assumption and that will actually be the
approach and I'm going to try to show
you from Rosado why the optionality of
our vets if there is such a word
actually connotes its superiority but
that'll that'll be the general approach
to you kind of know ahead of time where
we're going to be going that's right I
certainly wouldn't tell you to say it
give the chair give this their way but I
appreciate that we're thinking on the
same I'm honored that we're thinking on
the same wavelength
so that's
that's good so here with this Mohammed
let me share with you the thought of
rhapsodic of Lublin and I mentioned of
static different times over the over the
years and let me just digress for a
moment just for people who are not
familiar with Ithaca of static of Lublin
died in 1900 so he was a great great
Hasidic leader in the latter half of the
19th century rhapsodic was an
extraordinarily genius he was not born
into a Hasidic family he was born into a
family of monogamy and only when he was
18 19 20 he was already on his own did
he wander around Europe for various
reasons and he encountered casitas and
the story goes he was an extraordinary
genius as even as a very very young
adolescent he had mastered the entire
Babylonian Talmud the Jerusalem Talmud
the writings of the re absolutely
brilliant brilliant person but he once
went into here the person who became his
Rebbe the spitzer those of you that are
a little more comic fans although i know
that that itself is kind quite
controversial right now and i'm not
gonna go into that certainly but those
who are cottontails know that of
Carlebach often quotes the each Bitzer
Rebbe tamashii Luwak and the may see
Lord was in fact the Rebbe ever father
Andrew Sadek wandered in as an 18 or 19
year old and the interpreter is speaking
at the Sioux - Lucius Andrew Sadek is
hypnotized he's transfixed he had what
other religions call an epiphany
although we can certainly use the word
here as well and he started screaming in
the middle of a group of Cocina my heart
is on fire my heart is on fire
can't you see the fire can't you feel
the fire and then he was grabbing his
head he says all I was until now was a
brain I wasn't a person and this is the
first time in my life I feel I have a
brain and a heart
and from that moment on he became very
very devoted to the issue sir although
in in technical learning elite reserve
was a Thomas Holcomb but in technical
learning Rob's article was probably
greater than the in spirit sir but he
was move out tell himself he truly
considered the instrument 3 to be his
Rebbe in a Vedanta Shem and rev Sadiq
did not become a rabbi he essentially
was you know he essentially made himself
a Talmud for many many years and in fact
he wouldn't even speak in public he did
a lot of writing people would talk to
him privately but he refused to have any
type of public realm
he was Movado himself first to the
interpreter and when to the interpreter
died there was another colleague of
rhapsodic
a colleague who was reberty Baker's
grandson amazingly not from here what's
the correct snagit and this is a label
ager and nobody became the next grubby
and only at the very end of of southwark
life he agreed to be a Rebbe for maybe
two or three years
so because of obstetrics phenomenal
brilliance his se Goods is a very very
unique combination of deep Talmudic
analysis mastery of kabbalah
and very powerful emotional truth as
well so it's a very very heady mix and a
very heavy mix and very very difficult
so you know in fact my host here tonight
probably takes up three or four lines of
reps set up and you can unpack it you
can do it just take an hour like four
four three lines so it is a very
beautiful very difficult very dense very
worthwhile there are some a few not that
many there are some English adaptations
not really translations but adaptations
of rifts others writings but I find
myself that Hasidic writings get
tremendously diluted in translation I
mean there are a lot of things that
translations are going on the article
translation of the babylonian talmud you
know it's quite helpful
but I find translations of procedure
works tend to be I know the only the
prostatic that's the only one in fact
the prostatic is II didn't even write
these are people took down the ones that
he wrote himself are more in the nature
of diary entries and that there are
really no translations at all okay so
the thought I'm gonna share with you is
from Cedric and and let's go back to
remember don't forget the main question
why is our vid optional if Yaakov or
Vina was met Akane Arvid right that's
our question so if so doc says let's
focus on the idea that in our prayer
structure we pray morning afternoon
night now on one level we say the same
words at least the Amidah the shamone s
ray same words morning afternoon night
bro so doc says the fact that these
prayers are linked to times of day
suggests that the emotional mood of each
Tila is different the emotional mood of
chakras is not the same as Myntra and
Myntra is not the same as Arvest chakras
morning and ideally what is the best
time to dive in the morning chakras
ideally although many of us might not be
up then is you dive in the shmona s ray
right as the Sun goes up that is called
the Vatican minion now in many ways I
think people miss the point of a Vatican
minion because they turn it into a
mechanical looking at the clock in
almost an obsessive-compulsive way as
opposed to linking yourself to nature
and singing God's praises with the
universe that's what it is
the Sun is rising in a symbolic and even
in a spiritual way the Sun is praising
the Creator as a new day begins and you
join in that symphony instead we're
looking at our atomic clock I mean I
remember I once had my a my day my
father's yard site happened to fall out
on the day that I needed to get up very
early I had to be somewhere else so I
had to dive when I was there I was the
Box fella for a vast seeking minion
and I think what happened was if I
remember I was thirty seconds late
thirty seconds late less than a minute
and they told me I could not dive in
there again as a phazon because I missed
it now let me make the obvious point in
the time of Casale they did not have
atomic clocks they were not measuring
this in a range of 30 seconds that's not
okay
okay but be it is it okay my venting is
finished for the night but what is the
mood of us seeking its optimism hope
resilience a new day is beginning even
people that have a difficult life even
people that you know things aren't going
so well in the beginning of the day now
maybe it fades even five minutes later
but in the beginning of the day there's
always a pull in your heart that things
could be better there is something about
the Sun rising there is something about
the bird singing that conveyed to a
person a sense of optimism hope
gratitude resilience right that is the
dominant mood of chakras a karate Tov
for the life that God has given us for
the opportunities that he's given us
that is why of course in a sense the
first words of the chakras prayer not
the Amidah but the first words of your
prayer to God in the morning is Moda
Aniela Faneca I am grateful time that
you've given me back my life and I can
live another day right so that's the
dominant mood of chakras how could they
that the Gemara hadarom actually
says that you're not supposed to visit
ill people early in the morning because
they'll be so good they'll look so good
and feel so good that you're not going
to pray for them because you'll figure
it enough there's no problem similarly
you shouldn't visit them when it's
already time to go to sleep because
they'll feel so bad that you'll give up
I feel oh he's a goner what's the use of
praying you visit them in the middle
where you know
not so good not so bad so you know they
need your prayers and you'll pray you
don't think it's a it's a lost cause so
this is what chakras is so chakras is
connected to Avram because of Rama's own
life had that trajectory at least by the
time he finished
Avram was wealthy Avram was respected
Avraham brought thousands and thousands
of people to Hashem taka to convey a
Shana even the so called bad son Ishmael
according to rabbinic tradition did
chuva after Sarah died and came back to
Opera
Avram had his beloved son yet suck at
the age of 100 Avram was 100 years old
it is true of course his beloved Sarah
died in the aftermath of a akkada but
she was no youngster either I mean she
lived 127 years they had a relationship
they built something together so Avram
lived a life of fullness a life that had
it struggle and a life that had its
challenges but his prayer of chakras
represents the gratitude and the joy
that you have in life indeed part of why
I forum's dominant method of abode
Akasha is loving kindness
right that's what Avram is known for is
because that is how he perceived the
creator in many many ways the model for
our behavior is how we perceive God and
Avram did perceive God in terms of God's
kindness God's benevolence God's
compassion and therefore that is the
life that I for I'm left by the way then
it's injected igress for a moment this
idea that the way we perceive God is how
we behave in real life also has an
opposite effect the way we perceive
human relationships affects how we
perceive God it works the other way - in
other words you can go from God to the
human you can go from human to the God
let me give you an example you know
everyone knows that you have the Ten
Commandments and the first five are said
to be between man and God and the second
five are said to be between men and men
right that's a very famous classical
dichotomy problem is the fifth
commandments the fifth commandment is
honor your father and mother and that is
a cop that is in column one now but past
us honoring parents is an interpersonal
obligation similar to don't kill don't
steal honor your parents so why is keep
it up the aim in column one it ought to
be in column two now grant it that'll
create a symmetry problem because then
you'll have four and six okay
so God could make the 12 commandments in
two different other Commandments in
column and column one why is keeping of
the aim being Adam Lama calm
Cupid of the aim seems to be analogous
to Bernardo Mojave row and one of the
answers that's given is that the
psychological way that one internalizes
their understanding of God is how they
view their parents if they view their
parents of a child views appearance as a
source of security benevolence love
acceptance then they can look at God as
super parents and say uh God is my
father God is my mother God will take
care of me as I been and EEMA
always tried to take care of me and even
more so but what if one's relationship
to one's parents parent is abusive
unpredictable arbitrary capricious the
child internalizes the idea that those
forces that have power over me I can't
trust I can't rely upon I don't know
what they'll do to me that turns out to
be how they look at that as well now you
might say well isn't that very childish
every a person as an adult should have a
different conception of divine yeah that
may be true but the reality is
in some surprisingly and distressing
ways the images we form of God can arise
in at a very early stage based on our
relationship with parents so cubit of
the aim is in column one because in a
sense my relationship to my parents may
very well be a very important definition
and components of however late to God so
it goes both ways I mean a mystery sense
meaning my human relationship may be the
paradigm of how I connect to God but the
point I'm making about Avraham is moving
in the opposite direction
Abraham's perception of God formed the
way he related to other human beings
so chakras is the prayer of gratitude
hope resilience appreciation connected
to Avraham who experienced that in his
own life and the reason why it's tied to
the new morning because the dawn of a
new day is precisely that physical
astronomical phenomena that elicits from
the human personality that sense of
gratitude for life yeah okay already so
now let's go to your truck let's go to
your target
now it's chakras meta can the prayer of
Minnesota mentally is still a daytime
printer somehow see them do pray after
sunset but that's not not really correct
right you guys got one before sunset
but the tell me you show me says ideally
it shouldn't like be 12:30 although be
the average you could be outside you
know pretty early it should be when it's
still daylight but you begin to see the
lengthening shadows of the evening
approaching meaning the Sun is already
below the treetops and the like
so in minta there's a sense it's still
day but night is approaching rapidly now
this fits the instruction
everyone remembers the Covenant of the
parts God made a covenant without brown
and God told him your children will be
in slight we'll be strangers in a land
that is not theirs
and they will be enslaved and they will
be persecuted for 400 years and I will
judge the nation that enslaves them now
Rashi points out what is this 400 year
number the Jews were not in Egypt 400
years the Jews were only in Egypt 210
years so Rashi says ah the 400 years
don't start from the time they came to
Egypt it starts from the birth of
Yitzhak it was from the birth of Yitzhak
until the exodus is 400 years although
the actual time we were in Egypt was
only 210 years now this is a very
well-known rush it's based on huzzah but
the question is what on earth does he
mean what why are you counting the four
hundred years of birth or gates I mean
you Turk was not a slave youth luck was
not in Egypt yes I've never even left
the Land of Israel in what way are you
counting it from the birth of Islam
right what is Raffy mean and what Rashi
means is the following
it doesn't say they're going to be in
Egypt 400 years in fact it doesn't even
mention Egypt at all it says there will
be strangers in a land that's not theirs
and even though it's huckle lived in
Eretz Israel and they're just rel is our
land get stuck throughout his life was
made to feel like a stranger and like
him alien even within his own country
that is why the Philistines harassed him
they filled up his wells the sense of
you don't really belong here unlike
ivory mabini who was universally
proclaimed the CLO Kemet arbiter hey no
you are like a prince of God yes luck
was arrest I think often of the way Jews
in Germany might have felt in the early
1930s after Hitler came to power 1933 90
/ 40 before before Kristallnacht I mean
technically they still had most of
rights but there was a sense that things
were beginning to to happen they were
there were communications subtle and
often not so subtle that you don't
really belong here I mean that's after
all what the Nazis campaigned about and
you know amazingly enough there were
many many Jews in Germany including some
some great rabbis who thought Hitler was
just Hitler's you know anti-semitism was
only a campaign tactic to get you know
right-wing voters and once he was
elected and once he was in power he
would be a normal guy in a moderate guy
and we could work with him I mean there
was actually such a belief in in in
Germany so the idea of the it's clock is
the experiencing of Gullit even when
everything is still technically in place
it's yeah yeah yeah it's a good question
but apparently it's hard for us to
psychoanalyze personalities from such a
distance but you see that
Yitzhak had a certain passivity about
him he was not of the same activist
temperament as Abram he was more
withdrawn he was more introspective part
of it was the experience of the akkada
kind of separated himself from the
normal affairs of men that in fact that
might be why he he was taken in by ASA
because he could not appreciate
duplicity or fraud so he thought ASA was
a righteous person etc so yet suck in a
sense could be on this physical level I
mean not spiritually of course he was a
giant but then this physical level he
could be pushed around a bit more he
simply was more passive more withdrawn
than was a brahma v no less involved in
the affairs of the world
so if chakras is the prayer of gratitude
Mincy can be described as the prayer of
panic in which things are beginning to
slip away
and you're turning to God so let me hold
on to my blessings think about you know
Yap you remember to someone wrote a book
about this I think was called the
history of darkness or something that
the coming of darkness before
electricity was you know a very very
very significant event the kind of you
know once it was dark you basically had
to stay home I mean the people some
people traveled etc but you just didn't
go out when you were dark you couldn't
work the fields you couldn't do a lot of
endeavors you know candlelight is
limited in terms of what you're able to
do so darkness had a certain finality
that it doesn't really have today today
you know minica my room you know it's
all it's all the same right if you don't
have a window you don't even know is it
light outside not light outside but
darkness was the end of the day and the
only in modern times sometimes it's that
way it still let me think about the New
York Stock Exchange which closes I think
it's five o'clock whether it's dark or
not so if you think about the last few
minutes of trading people are crazy it's
like a chicken with a head cut off
they're running around getting in that
last rate I'm holding on please please
let the lights beyond a little bit
longer I remember many many years ago
when I was in college so we took a class
trip to the Maryland State Legislature
on the last day of the session just to
see Annapolis just to see them pass laws
and their session expired at midnight
meaning they weren't a lot they were not
allowed to continue to legislate at
midnight so we were there we were there
like we were actually there the last
session and every time it was five to
twelve you know four to twelve three to
twelve so a guy just climbed up on a
ladder and he just turned back to the
minute thing so instead of being twelve
it was a quarter of patrol he given you
did like five times this until this
clock says twelve you know we keep on
going so there is a sense of panic note
that there when a deadline approaches
and it's the end of things that's it
and min hey is that panic moment night
is approaching I'm scared I'm losing
things that was his hugs existential
experience as a stranger and he turns to
God out of desperation protect me let me
experience the light
don't let these blessings slip away so
chakra is gratitude
mrs. panic even in terms of its time
window
mentha is the most panicky of prayers
not so much in Israel because in Israel
if you're caught you can dive in in the
streets it's not a big deal okay I saw
somebody but an open letter to seminary
girls please do not dove in the middle
of multirow street you're blocking
whatever okay but you know in the United
States I remember this very well at the
time before there were cell phones in
widespread use if he walked into Penn
Station in Manhattan
in late afternoon you would see all the
payphones occupied by religious Jews who
were you know making believe they were
having a phone conversation when in fact
they were dialing midnight because
chakras we can dive in before we go to
work usually and our vich we can dive in
when we come back ministers in the
middle of the day and you got to do it
before sunset
so you're often caught in different
places you don't have a private office
necessarily business meetings so even
the Suhana the physical form that feel
Atman heart aches has a certain aura of
panic about it yeah so in those days
that's what people do today you know
we've learned we've learned from the
Muslims to be you know not to be ashamed
of public prayer but in those days
people were embarrassed people didn't
want to just start governing it look
they felt they felt embarrassed that not
that they should so they had to make
believe they were doing something else
of course it's interesting this paradigm
of Prayer is it as a phone call to God
you know someone should tell them that
if you do the call here it's local do it
there it's long distance so it's it is
cheaper here and that in that way but
okay so this is the idea of chakra and
min huh now let's look at arvit arvit
although you know there are hotel room
to dive in early but ideally you dive in
my roof SATA coke oven when it's dark
that's what Myra vis it is dark there
was no light of the of the Sun that is
above the horizon now let's look at
Yaakov avenues mats of his situation
when he was Mitaka in my refer he's
running away now keep in mind Rashi
gives us a very intricate chronology
Yaakov and I suffer not youngsters at
the story of the Broncos Yaakov a native
are 63 years old now she gives you the
complicated calculation but the
calculation is ironclad
63 years old so a 63 years old Yaakov
does not have a wife he does not have
children a leaf as a sub-sub took away
all of his wealth he's penniless
childless specialist he is fearful of
his very life his brother is threatening
to kill him he is leaving the holiness
of the Land of Israel to a much more
profane environment he thinks he will
never see his father again although
Yitzhak manages to survive many years
yes it is a life when Yaakov comes back
but district thinks he's going to die in
Jakob thinks you'll never see his father
again he in fact never sees his mother
again and he is also running from the
frying pan to the fire in some ways
because if a sub represents a threat to
his physical existence
LaVon represents a threat to his
spiritual existence
love and as a cheater love what is
involved in deception lovin welcomes
Yaakov and the guise of a brother in his
Rafi says hey we're brothers because you
cheat night cheat we can work together
and Yaakov is legitimately fearful that
loved one might destroy any possibility
that Yaakov could establish a nation
that would be devoted to serving a Shem
in fact the passage in the Haggadah that
lovin is worse than pyro because lovin
would destroy everybody that doesn't
mean Loveland would have physically
destroyed people these are after all his
own grandchildren
luckily money right the Schwartz admire
his grandchildren but it means he would
have destroyed their value system their
morality their ethics he would have made
them incapable of being a nation devoted
to God so Yakko cannot and of course to
highlight this look at the visuals here
the Sun sets
not necessarily the middle of the day
but it sets way too early
plunging Yaakov into physical darkness
which mirrors his mood exactly so Yaakov
cannot pray the prayer of opera which is
full of hope and joy as he looks at the
wonderful life that God has given him he
cannot even pray the prayer of Yitzhak
in which Hashem let me hold on to the
blessings that you've given me
Yaakov has lost everything Yakov has
nothing he's lost everything Buderus
hatela there's no particular hope now
it's true that God gives him a
magnificent vision of the latter but
that's after he prayed that was the
answer to his prayer when he prayed
there was only darkness physical
darkness
and the darkness of looking at a life
without hope and without recourse so
here is rafasa docks quick images twist
if shock rich is the prayer of gratitude
and maja is the prayer of panic our vit
is the prayer of emunah of faith because
faith is what you have when you have
nothing else faith is that realization
that even if it looks like I'm in a
hopeless situation I'm in or it's I'm in
the concentration I believe that God is
with me that he loves me that he will
take care of me now again we don't mean
the Pollyannish sense that everything
will have the happy ending that we want
I think realistically we understand
that's not always the case but that even
in my suffering and even in my
difficulty God is walking with me and
he's suffering through it with me and he
will give me the strength to endure that
is emunah that is why in the burkas
krishna that we say after the Sh'ma of
the morning we say Ms Fiats is firm and
upstanding because in the morning of our
life i see the truth of god's promises
and his reliability but at night in our
vids and met via muna I have faith in
God's truth even though I don't see it
and of course this is the very very
famous interpretation I think it
tributed to the Baal Shem Tov of the
park that we recite Friday night from
Tehillim Sadiq base 90 tomb is more
sheer glioma shabbat Rajiv's baba care
hasta ha vm una table la notes mm Allah
says I proclaim in the morning your
loving-kindness
and your faith in the Knights so it is
said in the name of the Baal Shem Tov
that morning and night are metaphorical
terms for the different stages in human
existence there are many times in our
lives that are mornings times of joy
times of celebration times in which we
feel the kindness of God the goodness of
God and what can I declare in those
morning's hotstepper I see your
loving-kindness but then there are times
in life that might be dark times of
illness calamity depression despair
loneliness they could be national and
collective like the Holocaust or they
could be very individual and private the
different struggles that we go through
and there it's a little more difficult
to feel and see the facet of Hashem the
Deborah de Mello says M not ha ballet
lives in those dark moments
you're at my emunah in you sustains me
and lets me go on right so this hot
dhamma chakra is the prayer of gratitude
Myntra is the prayer of panic our vit is
the prayer of emunah let's go back to
the very first question that we started
off with if Yaakov Aveeno was mistaken
arvit why would it be optional so as you
said at the very beginning the question
is assuming that if something is
optional that would indicate it's
perhaps a less of an important thing and
then we have a question why would ya
coves prayer be less important but I'm a
deeper level it might be the opposite
because keep in mind the following basic
idea any religious ritual that is
obligatory is something that we can
expect and demand of every
thirteen-year-old boy and
twelve-year-old girl that's why it's
obligatory it is expected it is demand
so the prayer of chakra twitch is
gratitude
everybody is expected to be grateful for
the goodness that a Shem has put into
their lives
the nervious yo-yo says even animals
appreciate the hand that feeds them so
gratitude chakra obligatory of course
you say thank you to God of course you
feel gratitude to the Almighty mija when
you have blessings but you feel that
you're losing them they're slipping away
well that's also a natural response of
Prayer as the saying goes there are no
atheists in foxholes
so chakras and Mincha are obligatory
precisely because they represent lower
levels of spiritual attainments that
every person can be expected to meet our
vid is a madre de to which we aspire but
not everybody could reach it the idea of
even when life is totally dark and
despondent even when in your desperation
there is no way out you connect to God
with a Munna confident in his love even
when he's not yet answering you
that's the Maitreya vehicle so by making
it a reshoot what are we saying it's
something you strive to reach but we
can't automatically expect that
everybody can reach that level so the
optionality of our Viet is not because
it's less important but it represents a
more sublime spiritual maturity which
cannot be automatically expected of
every bar mitzvah boy or about bust
mitzvah girl but something to which they
aspire as opposed to chakra 10 min ha
these are not regarded to be it can be
expected of everybody I say thank you
for the good nourish M has given you you
know we're in the month of kiss life
and we are approaching of course the
great beautiful beautiful holiday of
Hanukkah it's a funny thing
every year in the United States and this
has been going on for many many years
already probably a hundred years there
is what's called the December dilemma
because it happens to be that Hanukkah
is usually in the same month as a very
well-known Christian holiday purchase
especially well known here all the stuff
happened here but but in America perhaps
people feel that spirits a bit more even
than here and in the non-orthodox
movements they kind of debate how do we
get our kids to identify Jewishly as
opposed to identifying with the
Christian culture so there's a maha
locus within the reform movements like
this some reforms say we have to build
up Hanukkah we have to make Hanukkah
arrival to Christmas by kind of making a
glitzy making its showy making advancing
and then there's another schita in the
reform movement that says Hanukkah is
not one of the major Jewish holidays and
it is absolutely wrong to build it up
and therefore we have to you know make
it modest and not a big celebration
so they debate should we make Hanukkah
like extra important should we make
conical less important and this is
called the December dilemma and they
debate you'll you see if you open up any
Jewish newspaper not the Jewish press
but I think usually that's nuts it's not
limited to orthodoxy that is communal
paper you will see this Hanukkah debate
every year so it gets boring after a
while but they debate back and forth
back and forth back and forth this has
been discussed ad infinitum but the
truth of the matter is
Kanaka is an enormous ly important
holiday for a lot of reasons not only
because of the historical event it
commemorates but the symbolic message it
conveys
because Hanukkah is about the ability of
light to conquer darkness that's an
important message because darkness
exists on many many levels there is the
darkness of violence and hate and war
and bloodshed and terrorism there is the
darkness of ignorance there is the
darkness of poverty there is the
darkness of the individual depressions
and illnesses that people struggle with
and it is said a lot of attributes to
say this all the time
it's the job of a Jew every Jew to try
to bring light in the darkness but
sometimes we look at darkness and it's
so overpowering that we think what's the
point whatever little light
I could try to bring here would be like
a drop in the bucket it wouldn't do
anything so think of the Hanukkah story
they only had enough oil for one day as
far as they could figure we light the
menorah today it's going to go out
tomorrow what's the use but what's the
lesson of Hanukkah you do as much as you
can do even if you think it's not going
to have any lasting effect and then what
happens Hashem takes over and the great
message of Hanukkah metaphorically is in
a world and in a life that can be filled
with so much darkness we have a
responsibility as Jews as parents as
teachers as spouses whatever capacity we
are in and many of us are in multiple
capacities but in any one of those
capacities or even if it's just a
question of looking at our own lines to
bring light into that darkness which
requires a double measure of faith faith
in Hashem love
faith in my ability to accomplish
something useful and good in the world
in fact in another part of Reps at agra
of Sadick writes elsewhere not not even
in connection with this these thoughts
at all
he writes beautifully just as a person
must have faith in Hashem
they must have faith in themselves to be
an emissary of Hashem to bring goodness
into the world so that's an enormous ly
powerful message that I probably will
give a share in the history of climbing
in more detail let me just add that
contrary to popular understanding the
miracle of the oil did not occur at the
end of the military struggle against the
venom
there was another 25 years of fighting
after the Hanukkah story the miracle of
Hanukkah occurred three years into the
battle but the war continued another 25
years now I think that that itself makes
the miracle much more meaningful because
that's God's message to the Maccabees
because here you have this small group
of guerrilla war guerrilla warfare that
is fighting against the most powerful
army of the world at the time
and most of the Jewish people think the
Maccabees are fanatics anyway they are
not supported by their own people and
you know they're in caves they're living
like the Taliban I mean they're you know
they're hiding out here and there and
there and there and there
and one could understand that they would
get discouraged and their spirit would
be broken so what what did the miracle
of the menorah tell the Maccabees you
light your little light even if you
think it's ineffectual and God blesses
your efforts beyond what you thought is
possible to tell you the truth that's a
much more meaningful message at the
beginning of the war than it is at the
end of the world
God is telling them keep on going don't
give up don't despair
you're doing the right thing you're
doing the good thing
all right so Hanukkah and my roof I
think are very very much connected
because both of them are generating
light out of darkness through faith
indeed Yaakov himself Hashem answered
Yaakov prayer with the light of the
dream of the ladder of the angels of God
going up the ladder and down the left
let me let me just end with one one one
little story about this it is a very
powerful story the Khoisan Bergner Rebbe
wanted a great Hasidic rebus this is not
the present one the one before him and
the Khoisan Berger Rebbe lost his wife
his first wife and eleven children in
the Holocaust and he was in
bergen-belsen now if you know the
history of the time you know that
Hungary was conquered occupied by the
Nazis relatively late in the war 1944
the war was over in Europe in April 1945
so it was less than a year before the
end of the war but and the Nazis knew
Hitler knew that know things were not
going well for them and the war would be
over so as a result the annihilation of
Hungarian jewelry occurred with
tremendous rapid nough suggest they were
working overtime they were they were
they were killing at a much faster rate
than even the annihilation of the Jews
in Poland because in Poland they had
time they had started already back in
nineteen forty one forty two so no they
did what they did hungry they had to try
to wipe out on Geary and jewelry in less
than a year so bergen-belsen was like
the last concentration camp and this was
the first night of Hanukkah and the
Rebbe and wanted to light Hanukkah
candles but he had to wait till two
o'clock in the morning so the guards
wouldn't be watching them that closely
and several hundred people gather in
silence and the Rebbe had some threads
from the pajama uniforms and some rancid
margarine to be oil and the idea would
be they would light a can't they would
light a thread and they would blow it
out right away this light it blow it out
so the Rebbe recites the first bracha
first night of Hanukkah I share to the
shine of a mitzvah of its even though
the Hardwick national Hanukkah okay he
then recites the second burka just
Sinise him Shem did miracles for our
forefathers then the third brother is
what I'm the first night saffiano then
cash em for letting me be alive so he
didn't go straight to that Brucker he
hesitated he looked around and then he
made chuckling I know with the candles
so there was a fellow who went over to
the Rebbe afterwards and the fellow
became a non-believer because of the
Holocaust because of the suffering he no
longer believed him done he said to the
Rebbe you know I don't believe in any of
this stuff but okay you believe in it it
gives you comfort so much you know do
what you want but I have a question in
Rebbe I want to ask you something
I understand how you could make the
braava God commanded you to like tronic
okay you but you believe that the
rabbi's were acting through God to give
you this mitzvah okay you believe it I
used to believe it too second bracha
God did miracles of our forefathers okay
you believe that do you believe that I
can't question you but I can question
the third blessing how could you make
the blessing thanking God for letting me
be alive you lost your wife and 11
children do you really want to be alive
and how many of us go to sleep every
night hoping and praying that we will
not wake up the next day now it's true
it is true and this is a very
interesting discussion that the suicide
rate of Jews and concentration camps was
extraordinarily low almost almost zero
that that's a very interesting
thing to grapple with but still many
people hoped that they would not wake up
the next morning so how can you make a
piano and the Rebbe didn't say happy
call rachet gets get out of here I'm not
going to talk to you
the Rebbe acknowledged the question the
Rebbe said you have a very good question
and that's why I hesitated before I can
make the brown because in one hand the
halacha says on the first night of
Hanukkah you make a Chicano and I keep
the halacha on the other hand God is a
God of truth and you don't why do I
share and at that moment for me to say
chef Ian will be a lie how could I lie I
didn't know what to do the halacha says
I got to make the brother Luca says I
can't lie how do i reconcile my two
obligations so the Rebbe said I looked
around and I saw hundreds and hundreds
of Jews that had nothing that suffered
bereavements that I had no help and
legitimately felt that they probably
were going to die and they still had
such a love for God and such faith in
God that they wanted to do this Mitzvah
and I said to myself what a privilege it
is to see such holiness and such
righteousness and for that he said I can
make it kalyana Thank You Hashem for
letting me see the greatness giving me
life to let me see the greatness of your
people I mentioned many times before
I think Victor Frankel's work he wrote a
few books but the most famous is man's
search for meaning and Viktor Frankl is
is an interesting person because on one
hand you know he's not a Torah scholar
he was even he was not really until the
very end of his life about claims they
made him about Cuba I don't know I don't
know if it's true but maybe maybe it was
but he's certainly for most of his life
he had no Jew
education at all but he was a deeply
spiritual person and he intuitively
perceived many many truths that are
asking the truth of the Torah so as a
result it's one of the relatively few
books that are not Torah books that are
commonly recommended for us as part of a
Seva students spiritual education we
treat it as a muster book we treat it as
a book of ethics we treated as a book of
spiritual growth even though it's you
know it's not based explicitly on Torah
thoughts but frank'll makes the point
over and over again and this is not no
pretentiously it's no she's lecturing
from of Amadeus this is through the
experience that he himself had in the
concentration camps that it's often our
confrontation with the greatest evil
that can be the catalyst that brings out
the greatest strengths and the greatest
goodness and that's a sign by side point
and therefore one has very little choice
over what happens to them in life but we
have all the choice in the world
of how we decide to respond to it and
that is what defines the greatness or
lack thereof of a human being right the
message of Chanukah the message of
barbets so may occur to you know give us
the strength to grow from whatever
difficulties that we do have made may
they always be minor difficulties but
through the matter is the beauty of this
message is that it does apply to minor
things as well as major things you know
we have the major calamities of illness
poverty and the like but then we have
things that are you know we didn't get
the job we wanted a relationship didn't
work out your seventh grader didn't make
the basketball team maybe that's more of
an American muscle and you know need
your frustrations you know things didn't
work out the way we want it they're not
no Holocaust proportion but there are
things that bother us things that are
serious in their lives
and then we have to follow Victor
Frankel's hard rock ah meaning how do I
grow from this how do I become a better
person how do I learn from my failures
and my mistakes in many ways failure is
a better teacher than success because
when I have success I don't learn
anything from that that just confirms
that I was right from failure from
adversity I can learn something new
about myself and it could be a very very
valuable gift so may we be so sure to
learn what we need to act
[Music]