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trepidation because we're looking at our
lives and we're preparing our best
defense and that we literally will be on
trial it is called the Omaha den the day
of judgments and then yom kippur is the
also a day of judgment although it's a
day of forgiveness as well but at the
same time it's very very important to
remember as the alter rebbe writes in
the third part of the tanya Higuera
tsukuba and rough cook develops it as
well that the experience of chuva should
be a profoundly joyous experience it is
the joy of renewal the joy of
reconciliation the joy of feeling Hashem
loved as he wants us to come back to him
and even the process of looking into the
aspects of my life that are negative and
need to be corrected can be approached
in a very joyful optimistic hopeful
spirits that yes there may be problems
but uncle Mitch Berney who gave me the
colour to correct them because Hashem
would never give me a mission would
never give me a job unless he also gave
me the co-host to be able to overcome
that which I needs to overcome
now the alter rebbe throughout the tanya
writes a lot about something that even
he acknowledges would be difficult for
many people and that was even in that
generation and called the comer today
and that is the simultaneous emotion of
joy and sadness the simultaneous idea of
renewal and at the same time remorse and
regret he says most people are not able
to handle two contradictory emotions at
the same time not only that but they
can't even switch it we can't say for
example from 10 to 10 15 you are to be
sad and then at ten fifteen to ten
thirty you are to be happy although the
alter rebbe seems to have behaved in
that motility he basically says
designate a little bit of time every day
to cry over your sins with profound
sadness and then shut it off and just be
the symptom though it's not so easy to
kind of move back and forth that way but
that was the alter rebbe said raka so
once again therefore although there's no
question that the yum-yum nope I am
literally days of
our days of trepidation and days of
seriousness that is why the gomorrah
says we don't recite Hallel on your
session a yom kippur even though they're
hugging
because tsipras hiya mister freemasons
circle more fun of the books of who was
alive and who is dead is in front of
hashem that's not the time for the
unrestrained joy that how well
represents some so once again i hope
that all of us should be soca together
with all of qualities throughout through
axiu azeema Toba and certainly be france
for for for eretz israel so what i do
want to talk about today is really
connected to last week's parsha but
there is a universal message and one
that is appropriate for this time of
year i'm going to pick keysight's a is
very very difficult parsha to speak
about for a very simple reason it has by
far the most mitzvahs of any parsha in
the torah 74 mitzvahs in a single parsha
74 out of 613 are in one parsha
so you can pick anything but i'm going
to pick the very first mitzvah which
raises a whole bunch of controversial
moral questions and i will not be
addressing those controversial moral
questions i'm going to really use a
peripheral aspect of the mitzvah that's
relevant for ello and that is the whole
Halawa of the beautiful woman that is a
captive in time of war the asia you fat
toe her and the torah describes a
scenario when the jewish people go out
in war against their enemies and god
will give them success and if a man sees
among the enemy among the non-jewish
enemy a beautiful woman and he lusts
after her and he wants to take her for a
a wife so the Torah basically says he is
permitted he is permitted to have
relations with her remember she's a non
Jew at that point but if he wants to
continue with our relationship there is
a protocol where he brings her into his
home she must shave off her hair kind of
bald
she must let her fingernails grow wild
at least it's mcCluggage but that's how
Rashi interprets
she mourns and she cries for her father
and mother for 30 days and only after
that period of time if he still desires
her may he then marry her if he does not
want to marry her he must set her free
he cannot keep her as a slave or his
servants had he not had intercourse with
her and he simply captured somebody as a
prisoner of war he would have been
allowed to keep her as a maid servants
but because he had somewhat abused her
by the sexual relationship the only
alternative is either marriage or
freedom meaning marrying her or freeing
her but at the same time the Torah wants
to discourage the marriage so the Torah
says if you want to continue the
relationship you have to bring her home
but make her repulsive in that short
30-day period so that you will not want
to marry her so the tower is like doing
two contradictory things at the same
time it is setting up the possibility of
marriage and at the same time
discouraging marriage now the parsha of
a shoe shop not so art is
extraordinarily difficult number one how
could the Torah possibly legitimate
intercourse with a non-jewish woman but
number two which is even more disturbing
at least to modern sensibilities is is
the Torah permitting what would be
called military rape rape in time of war
I mean that is a war crime under
international law now granted the Torah
doesn't have to follow international law
but I think most people feel intuitively
that this is a very very despicable
violation how could the Torah permit it
so the one thing I do want to share with
you is the comment of the toast was rid
this house first Reid was a Rishon Ravi
Shia of Trani rubbish ioud atrani and he
was a bit of a very independent thinker
even among the we shown him and I just
want to point out that he does make a
point that the whole parsha of Asia
Shafaat o R is not referring to rape it
is referring to consensual intercourse
that's very very interesting that does
not seem to be the impression you would
get from reading the verses but at least
a toast was read who is certainly an
authoritative source
and I think people need to be aware of
this a lot of people aren't even aware
that there is such a commentary that the
social sphere does indeed say that the
Torah is not at all the Judah mating
rape the Torah is still permitting the
extraordinary violation of being with
the Gentile that much the Torah is
permitting and that's in that itself is
a big finish
but Laharl approach we are not dealing
with a violation against the will of the
of the woman now you may recall a few
years ago the Rafah rushy of the Sahel
the the chief military robbery of the
Sahel wrote an academic article just a
toe article about you flat toe where he
was my flower Belle and it's a little
bit and he was certainly not advocating
anything practical but some of the
higher-ups thought he was actually
advocating the reinstitution of via
futur
I believe he was he had to resign he was
forced out of his position because of
his people on your photo our Sierra
Keisha is a little different than
American America people can write all
sorts of theoretical articles because
everyone knows their theoretical
anything you write in Israel might be
taken as something you can actually do
another example would be of I'm not sure
if they were doing it theoretically they
were tore up on him who wrote a very
very interesting book on the sheva
mitzvos bnei Noah not that you know if a
non Jew violates the Noahide laws
according to halakha they can be put to
death and this book was espousing the
idea that you don't need a baton you
don't need a court to officially carry
out the Noahide laws the nullified laws
can be enforced by by anybody so no they
wrote it as the Sheba type book you know
people of sources and listen that but
the government arrested the two rabbis
they consider them guilty of incitement
to riots because obviously it's a very
dangerous idea once you start saying hey
if I'm aware of a non-jew violating no
oxide well I can just go in and kill
them well they'll be quite quite a few
of our neighbors that might get killed
and unfortunately if our neighbors get
killed and monoliths Lud
it may turn out in the other direction
as well so the police actually arrested
the to rub on him
on accusations of incitement so in
Israel you have to be careful things are
because we're in a Jewish state these
discussions are much more than academic
okay so that is my little
acknowledgement that Asia plateau are is
an extraordinarily difficult Varsha
to to understand Rashi gives us a little
bit of a hint of what's going on and
Rashi hint is the Ayatollah can negate
Sahara the Torah makes a concession to
the overpowering evil inclination that
flares up in moments of stress and times
of war because if we would not give the
person some type of carte blanche then
indiscriminately there might be rape and
various other violations and therefore
by the Torah giving you a protocol
giving you a procedure that at least
directs the passion moreover if the guy
knows ahead of time that if he is with
this woman he must bring her home for 30
days and go through a whole protocol
that may act as a deterrent against him
doing it so part of the protocol is to
reduce the likelihood that it's going to
take place in the first place that's
also a very important point it's not
that the Torah wants him to do it and
then follow a procedure rather the
procedure might be a way of him
disengaging from the act in the first
place because he's aware of the great
consequences and the inconvenience that
will follow the commission of the Act by
the way the Bollywood sir often gives
this suggestion in other contexts as
well of simplices on the altar of Kellum
had a minoc he had a kabbalah he
accepted upon himself that whenever he
felt angry he would not allow himself to
express anger till he put on his special
red jackets that was called his anger
jacket now all of us know whether it's
putting on a special jacket or counting
to 10 if you have to go through that
ceremony by that time you know the anger
dissipates of the light so
psychologically why do you go through
those games why
you say I will not get angry to like
count to ten I will not get angry till I
put on my jacket why don't you just say
I'm not gonna get angry the answer is
that if you simply say I'm not gonna get
angry in other words I'm totally not
gonna sin the eights of hurry gets very
very strong but if I say yeah I'll get
angry but I just got to do something
first so psychologically that dissipates
the feeling so you factor or reason is
along the same way if the turret just
would have said no the guy's gonna break
the rules but if the Torah says yes but
you gotta do X Y & Z at some point the
guy's gonna say huh it's not worth me
the bother
okay so there's a whole bunch of moral
questions as they say I'm not going to
be addressing them tonight what I want
to share with you is a beautiful
allegory that the hora Kaiama Cardoso
offers in explaining if a tower and how
it would apply to this time of year in
particular he starts off with there and
again it's based on the aerosol and it's
based on the ZOA
as well the hora time many of you heard
of the hora hora Khayyam
he is roof hi I'm Benna he was requiring
Benatar very great grav from Morocco in
the 18th century who came to you shall I
am he's buried and her as a team his
yard site is and Tom is Thomas and it
does attract you this very day tens of
thousands of people on the yard site and
every Mick Road could dole out every
homage with commentaries has the
commentary of the orihime a very very
great mokuba
one of the great great tsadikim now the
ORAC I am writes that the neshamah of a
person can be described as a beautiful
woman the neshamah has radiance it as
Grace and as holiness it is a failing
economy mal in fact it's a part of the
Shekinah that is within us and as you
know the word Shekinah itself is a
feminine word it refers yemen's this is
already quite complicated but it refers
to a certain feminine
aspect of divinity because God is
infinite God includes all aspects - Rena
is the feminine aspect of vodka - vodka
so the beautiful woman is your neshama
so here's what the Torah says ki say se
llama llama allo Yvetta when you go out
to war against your enemy who is your
enemy
what is your greatest enemy your
greatest enemy is the HR Hara those
forces within you that want to lead you
astray that want to lead you to
negativity to sin to rebel against God
to hurt people to be selfish so a Shem
says when you sincerely decide to engage
with your enemy the Torah promises
unison oh Hashem Aloka club yadava God
will deliver the enemy into your hands
this is a war that you can win there may
be defeats there may be battles that you
lose but even when you lose the battle
if you persevere you will be victorious
right so Nike that's the first buttock
Keisei Salem el shamah away avec la una
Sano Hashem Aloka Fabia deca when you go
out to war against that enemy Hashem
will deliver that enemy into your hands
you know in the Tonia the first part of
Tonia which is the first relate a lot
much the largest part of Tonia the first
52 program is called say fresh shall be
known in the book of the middle of the
rotors some say the book of the mediocre
but actually Arizonans definition of
Bane Ernie is not very very far from
mediocre day no-name means a person who
lives in the world of struggle you can
be a 100% righteous person but you're
struggling and that's what a Ben Oni is
and if sneers almond rights
that as long as the beta niece struggles
he is considered to be victorious even
when there are occasional failures so
bad as is saying the battle is the
victory that's actually we think if you
think about that saying that's really a
gorgeous statement a beautiful statement
the battle is the victory it's not the
winning of the battle that we're not
always going to do in the short term but
that I remain engaged I remain committed
I'm going to keep on fighting I'm not
going to get discouraged with the fact
that last year I fell into the same
traps as the year before every year
every day every minute there's a new
opportunity to make a new decision and
the decision I make this minute doesn't
have to be limited by the decision I
made a minute ago things can change
things can be different so that's the
first bus again
if you truly engage this enemy in war
you will be victorious it then goes on
you see in captivity this beautiful
woman
so allegorically once again this refers
to you see your beautiful neshama that
seems to be imprisoned it's not able to
express its radiance its holiness its
closeness to God but you want to marry
her meaning you want to be connected to
it you want to be connected to your true
self to your better self so what do you
do there's a protocol that takes a
number of steps first step is shave off
her hair so what does that mean
allegorical again this is not this is
certainly not pursuit Oh show me grab
this is a homiletic Oh
allegorical interpretation so here comes
out of the skull now it looks like it's
coming out of the brain although
obviously it's not but a hair can
represent the wild and immoral ideas
that we have incorporated over the years
some of these may be intellectual ideas
that are simply
not valid some of them maybe priorities
in life some of them maybe grudges
feelings misunderstandings so shaping up
the hair means disabuse yourself of
those ideas and those mental and
emotional constructs that are simply
putting impediments in your ability to
achieve communion with your true essence
cutting off their meaning getting rid of
the ideas in this connection I'll tell
you a little story that I once heard
from a ripe a soft Crone and I don't
know if this is in his book so this
might be the Toraja bellperre the oral
teachings over pace for another bite now
it's probably in a book I heard it many
years ago and he talked about a certain
person that he knew who became a cozy
bed chuva a person who became a
religious and this person had been a
competitive bicyclist so he was in Tour
de France he was in all of these 200
kilometer bike bicycle races and the
like and when he became shomer Shabbos
he had to give it up because these races
are over Shabbos so people asked him was
it difficult to give up the passion of
competitive bicycling so he said he
found that when he became a shomer
Shabbos it was very much like
competitive bicycling why was that so
what's the comparison so he said you
know when you're doing anything on a
very high competitive level the
difference between first place and
second place is not like a half an hour
you're talking about sometimes fractions
of seconds like on an Olympic swimming I
mean the difference between a gold medal
and a silver medal might literally be
hundreds of a second that's why they
have to have special timers and the like
now when you're dealing with such a
small margin every little thing can make
a difference that's why swimmers will
shave off body hair because a little
hair on the arm a little hair on the
chest that could throw up the whole
thing
you'll lose a minuscule amount of time
but you lose two hundredths of a second
Silver's that are gold so the same thing
with the bicycle race you know you're
right you're riding your bicycle and
this guy is like behind you
tiny little bit so you start getting rid
of all sorts of unnecessary baggage get
rid of your hat get rid of your app get
rid of your scarf because all of these
little things even if in normal life the
amount of time they they they would
impede you is by a minuscule amount but
when you're dealing with those small
margins every little thing that's not
necessary
get rid of so he said competitive
cycling taught me the importance of
getting rid of unnecessary superfluous
baggage and now I become a Jew and
that's exactly what Judaism teaches me
as well get rid of the baggage you don't
need now unnecessary baggage takes a lot
of forms it can take the form of
physical clutter in your living space
for sure I'm familiar with that one it
can take place it can take the form of
emotional baggage resentments angers but
all that's doing is holding it back
stopping you get rid of it
guiltless Rocha cutting off the hair get
rid of all that stuff in your mind that
you don't need that's step number one
again this is the allegory step number
two let her fingernails grow long now we
know people have hands and hands are a
symbol of grasping things I want more
and more materialism when the
fingernails are long it's more difficult
to grasp
so the second lesson here is to become
less of a materialistic person be less
involved with acquisition now the Tori
doesn't want us to be ascetic the Tori
does not want us to suffer because I'll
talk about a beautiful home and
beautiful things as giving a person a
certain contentment a relaxation a
serenity that's an important aspect of
spiritual life as well the realm of even
writes that this is the utility of
looking at beautiful arts the Rambam
writes in the hectometer
Pirkei avos that arts relaxes the mind
it makes the emotions more tranquil and
that in turn allows a person to me to be
more open to Rukia but nevertheless we
know that if a person is grasping
grasping grasping for materialism and
the like that ultimately takes a person
away from us um as well so shaving off
the hair disabusing ourselves of the
negative ideas that take us away from
God letting the fingernails grow to
simplify our life and become less
materialistic remember this is the
process of how you get married to your
neshama and then your neshama cries over
her father and her mother her father is
God because when we sin were not just
hurting ourselves we're bringing in
infinite pain to our colors Parco hashem
suffers when we said not because he
suffers but because he suffers when we
suffer when again the analogy would be a
parent sees a child just going in the
wrong way the pain that the parent feels
is even greater than the pain that the
child feels because the parents love for
the child is so great in a shams
infinite pain is much much greater than
the pain we've caused ourselves so cry
over what you've done to your father and
if father is God mother is the Jewish
people and cry over what you've done to
the Jewish people because when we do in
a Vera we're not we're not just hurting
ourselves we are hurting all of Ami's
realm because cause I'll tell us Kolya
Israel I Raven Zelizer every Jew is
responsible for each other we're all in
the same boat and the Sanwa Duchamp me
uses the boat example in a very literal
way let's imagine everybody's in a boat
and the boat springs a leak under
somebody's seat I'm sitting over a hole
and the water is coming in and people
want to repair the hole
and I say get out of here this is my
seat there's a hole under my seat it's
my business well the short answer is if
the water enters under your seat the
whole ship is going to sink coleus Rael
I Ravens elbows in so we have these four
steps so far we have shaving the hair we
have letting the fingernails grow long
we have crying over the father of what
you've done to your father Hashem and
what you've done number four what you've
done to your mother
I'm Israel and it says how long do you
cry yeah hmm a month of days says they
are a I am that is the month of L oh
that is set aside for this process of
chuhwa and introspection and if you do
that you then are entitled to be married
connected mr. ha bear till your neshama
and to your holiness so it's a very
beautiful allegory in which the Asian
chief Attila is seen as a much all for
the reclamation of your soul and to be
connected to your inner self to your
true self to your real self as it were
but now I want to raise a question about
this you know in the laws of war now I'm
going to switch to a heretic idea in the
laws of war there are two types of wars
that the tower legitimates
if a war is illegitimate it's treated as
murder you understand this in other
words any conduct of war has to be
legitimated by the TOA because war
intrinsically is a sinful act you're
killing people you're destroying
property war is a sin unless it is
legitimated
within at least for Jews within the
confines of halakhah so the question
becomes what wars are considered to be
legitimate in the eyes of halakhah so
there are two categories of war that how
local recognizes
category one is called no comets mitzvah
wars that are commanded Wars they're
obligatory Wars and here we have three
examples of Muhammad Mitzvah
two of them are no longer applicable the
third one unfortunately still applies
today category one is the war to destroy
Amalek it's a mitzvah we're obligated to
destroy your Moloch number two the war
to destroy the seven indigenous nations
then inhabited Kanaan again they are
considered to be extinct today there are
no Hittites around but that was a
mitzvah war so the first two we don't
have today
the third category we do have today and
that is a defensive war to protect the
Jewish people and the Jewish lands from
an enemy that wants to destroy us so
that would mean that all of the
defensive wars that the State of Israel
has fought since 1948 would generally
fall under the category of milk I met
mitzvot because they are defensive in
nature now luckily things are not always
so simple what do we mean by a defensive
war certainly if the enemy has invaded
my territory that is now a defensive war
but what about things like preemptive
strikes what about when Israel will bomb
a nuclear reactor before there's been an
attack is that defensive or is that
offensive again the post can talk about
this again not that these really
government asks any questions over
button although sometimes because of
election coalition's they they they
might but again many posts can say that
if the enemy clearly intends to attack
you you don't have to wait till they
cross over your boundary it is
fundamentally a defensive act it is an
act to prevent an attack therefore it
falls under defense now one thing about
Mohamed mitzvah that's very interesting
is you may recall a few weeks ago we
read about people who are exempt from
going to war a person who be trust a
woman
did not yet consummate the marriage a
person that planted a vineyard did not
yet enjoy and did not yet enjoy the
fruit a person who built a house or
bought a house they've not yet live in
it so the Torah says they are exempt
from military activity the Mishnah in
Soto says that only applies to optional
warrants which I didn't define yet but
when it comes to mitzvot Wars there are
no exemptions and everybody must fight
if needed if needed
yeah you don't need 100% combat
recruitment but if needed there was no
exemptions so I don't want to talk about
this topic but again since I am touching
a pallet I'll just mention it that you
understand that this raises some very
very interesting Harwick issues
regarding the draft exemption for
yeshiva students from military service
because here is the thing and one end
the argument among arrayed them is that
full-time people who learn Torah should
not have to go into the army well the
counter-argument is well wait a second
here if the war is that the State of
Israel fights are not optional Wars if
they are Mohamed mitzvot because they
are defensive in nature
and the mission in SOTA says that no
crime at mitzvot has no exceptions you
even take the collar from under the
chuppah and the carton you know from the
from the bridal room and alike then the
whole idea of any type of exemption
seems to be inconsistent with the notion
of milk I met Mitzvah okay good question
interesting question I'll leave it for
discussion but let me just know matter
is that in virtually all countries that
have a draft there has always been an
exemption for clerical students of the
United States I remember very well DJ's
are Vietnam which was the high point of
his Shiva attendance in the United
States
the Kiva's were filled with people and
we registered for the draft and I had I
think I still have my my draft card I
didn't burn it and there was an
exemption for rabbinical and Esther's
relatives but any students of clergy
even world war two which was certainly a
kind of a national emergency there was
such an exemption so even if it's true
how logically so to speak that everybody
is eligible on the other hand as you
know there's still room there's still
room for an exemption and indeed many
have argued that nothing to do with
religion that Israel should not have a
draft at all that's that actually is a
controversial issue they should move to
an all-volunteer army so I know again
I'm bringing up a lot of things that I'm
not gonna be fully addressing but that's
category one that's Mohammad so that's
that's another very very excellent
question no comments Mitzvah means if
we're fighting a war everybody can be
drafted everybody now the question
becomes okay beside a no exemptions but
what if we're not fighting a war why do
I have to be drafted to basic service
and the like we're not yet in the MILCON
miss mitzvah situation so the question
becomes it's a very difficult question
the question gone well yeah but you
can't fight an army with untrained
people so mamimi if in anticipation of
the possibility of defensive wars we
need to have a cadre of people who know
what to do so that might be included but
that's a very good question I mean that
is a very good question because we are
not in an everyday brush M we're not in
a day today today today state of war and
the other hand that we do need to be in
a state of readiness so as you know this
issue about Toula and drafting and of
course spiritually we believe that
learning tour is also one of the met
ways that God blesses the Jewish people
with success as you know it's a major
major focus in Israeli society not only
between religious and secular but even
within religious and one hand you have
the her ad world that fights very much a
foreign foreign exemption
that that may be part of the reason why
Netanyahu couldn't form a government
after the first election in April
because Lieberman refused to have any
type of coalition with committee parties
over this over this precise issue and
then the other hand you have the dirty
leo me world Rivera in Liechtenstein
rava Mattel Citroen Amla bracha who very
much supported the idea of the Hester
yeshiva in which the person is committed
to learning Torah and will also be
involved in Hagen autumn Medina again
I'm not here to tell anybody what to
think everyone has their own day of
their own opinion their own rather
spiritual authority but as they say I
have maybe a bad habit that when I touch
upon something I like to mention
something I'm not going to talk about
just to throw it out as further food for
thought now that is called Mohammed
Mitzvah what would they want well we
don't have a tremendous history I mean
listen we don't have a record exactly I
mean I can tell you though that when
loads going back to the Kailash when
lote was captured by the four kings so
it was a problem of Inu himself who led
the military mission to save well so
there at least there was not such an
exemption now there is another category
for it though that seems a little bit
inexplicable that's called milks I met
Richards optional Wars
what's an optional war a non defensive
war of expansion huh that sounds mighty
peculiar
are you telling me that if Israel
decides one day it would like to invade
Turkey or Cyprus or any of those kind
they can just do it they have permission
how can you talk about a permissible
what non defensive war of expansion so
this term is very misleading and this is
what you have to understand in order to
fight the Mohammed we should there are
numerous kin
dishes number one it must be authorized
by a Sun Hedren but most importantly it
must be authorized by God through the
medium of the Orion Batum the or
inverter liam is the calling goggles
breastplate and through the lighting up
of the jewels and the names of the
tribes that were inscribed in the jewels
this was a medium of prophecy which
means no comet vicious doesn't just mean
Eric just Rogers can decide to
aggressively conquer a country they have
to be given explicit divine
authorization which means for all
practical intents and purposes there is
no such thing as a halakha flee
legitimate aggressive war this man has a
the only possible war that the Jewish
nation is permitted to fight really any
nation is a war of defense a war of
aggression must be sanctioned by God in
the specific medium or in Vitoria which
we do not have today by the way for
those of you that are interested the
motto of Yale University is actually the
Hebrew words that spell or remove its
whom in most most people who are not
that Jewish
wouldn't read that wouldn't be aware of
it and even if they read it they
wouldn't know what it means but or in
the children that which enlightens and
that which communicates and you know in
colonial times it was standard
university education that a college
students would know three classical
languages three classical languages were
Greek Latin and Hebrew Hebrew was a
classical language and Harvard
University I they may still do it I'm
not sure but certainly until pretty
recently they had a valid valedictory to
address in Harvard College give somebody
gave it in Hebrew they still were
keeping up the old classical languages
thing
yeah yeah you could be anti-semitic that
was a separate thing yeah they didn't
hear that Hebrew Hebrew thing yeah
when Thomas Jefferson had at least a
rudimentary knowledge of Hebrew we had
Hebrew books and his in his library in
Monticello okay so I baby doesn't made
therefore so we have these two types of
wars no crime at the Mitzvah no climate
for sure now once we have that dichotomy
Rashi raises the question which type of
war is the Torah talking about in Asia
ki Fateh OA is Asian Shikata we are
talking about no-comment Mitzvah or is
Asia too fat so we're talking about
Mohammed Rashid so Rashi says it has to
be talking about optional Wars because
in Mitzvah wars like a Moloch and the
seven nations there are no captives when
you're fighting on Moloch of the seven
nations you must kill men women child so
if there's any possibility of a captive
it could only be optional war not
Mitzvah war and therefore Rashi says the
whole parsha
of Asia you fight o'er is talking about
optional Wars not Mitzvah wars that's
Russia so that's my question so that's
so that's my question right so that's
exactly my question my question is that
if we were to ask ourselves is the
struggle against the HR Haram a mitzvah
war or an optional war we would
certainly answer there is no Mitzvah
greater than that that is the purpose of
our life that is why we were put in this
world so it's a very funny thing why
would the Torah allude to the struggle
against the eight sir Hara in a parsha
that is specifically talking about
optional wars since this particular war
is an obligatory war in other words
there's a mismatch between the marshal
the the example and the inner meaning
the much all is describing an OP
and you're giving me an inner meaning of
the struggle against the HRA but the
struggle against the HRA is not an
optional war it is a mandatory war so
why is the tire of Aramis the fight
against the 8th Sahara in the parsha of
the optional war so the answer here is a
very deep answer the answer is that the
tire is teaching me that even though the
war of against the 8th Sahara is a
mitzvah war you have to fight it like an
optional war and not like a mitzvah war
meaning tactically the Mohammed I ate
there which is a McClement Mitzvah must
be fought as a no chemistry shirts and
not as a Mohammad Mitzvah what do I mean
let's look at it this way a person lived
a certain life away from a sham for many
many years 10 years 20 years 30 years 40
years a person finally comes back the
person finally does chuhwa god forgives
that's reconciliation there's connection
but how am i Mitya says how do I relate
to all of those years of estrangement of
separation there are two modalities of
chuva one might be called the amputation
modality I just cut off that part of my
life that's not me anymore
I'm a different person that part of my
life is gone over I make believe it
doesn't exist
now just as it is sometimes necessarily
necessary to amputate a physical limb
because of gangrene and a person could
die without amputation so it may be the
case that some past relationships some
past behaviors were so toxic so evil
negative that the only choice might be
amputation sometimes that is necessary
but just as amputation of a physical
limb is always a last resort and not a
first resort spiritual amputation has to
be dealt with the same way because there
are a lot of disadvantages and
detriments to spiritual amputation first
is the phenomenon of phantom pain when
you amputate a limb there could be
tremendous tremendous pain that you
still have as if the limb is still there
and as people like Hillary Clinton
discovered when you try to amputate or
delete complex programs in the computer
there will always be something that's
floating around there and up in the
cloud where we're in the cloud and in
the machine whatever it is the stuff
that you want the stuff that you want
may be gone but the stuff that you don't
want we're still going to it's still
going to hang around and the other
problem with the amputation is simply
this okay I've erased my sins
I've purified myself I was had a deficit
of you know ten trillion deficits and I
erased it but that still leaves me with
a big zero what is what do I do about my
10 20 30 40 years there are just a
nothing but there's a different modality
of chuhwa it is not a chuhwa based on
amputation
it's a chuhwa based on reclamation of
your past your past including those
experiences that were not following
God's law can become the source of your
strength and your creativity and the
uniqueness of your relationship to God
and
things you can do based on that past
with accomplishments you would not have
been able to do had you not had those
very experiences this is not the true
ver of amputation this is the true ver
of recapture of sublimation of
transformation of redefining your past
as the source of your strength and the
source of the uniqueness of your
relationship to God
you know people come to you shall I
people come to you shall I am and you
meet great great people you meet you
show me that have been here for a
hundred generations or ten generations
full of Torah full of avodah full of
mitzvahs and you come from Montana North
Dakota wherever you come from and
brush-up a person there's a total life
but a person says to himself how will I
ever catch up to what these people do on
a good day my Hebrew will be as good as
this fifth-grader you know I'll know as
much Gomorrah as the fourth grader or
whatever it would be
and the person feels you know broken
crushed a person feels that I'll never
really be part of this but here is the
interesting little secret if it is true
that the tenth generation you shall me
has many many gifts that we will never
have it's also true that the person from
Montana North Dakota has precious gifts
that the tenth generation Shami doesn't
have because here's the thing you did
not decide we did not decide in which
family we would be born we did not
decide where we would be born we did not
decide most of those decisions in the
early part of our lives certainly were
not functions of our bashira of our free
will God put us there and if God put us
there
the decision was made this is what our
nationís needed our souls needed that
journey and that journey is part of our
Micajah to Hashem and even though that
journey may have been negative in some
ways that journey may have not been seen
to be a spiritual experience in fact
those experiences are the building
blocks of our identity so when a person
becomes about troub and just makes
believe that path doesn't exist in
effect they're spitting in God's face
they're basically telling God you made a
mistake you put me in the wrong place
and now I have to believe I was never
there to some degree this chuhwa of
amputation which means forget about your
relationships to disassociate yourself
with your parents it takes different
forms if you have certain talents like
music or arts get rid of them they're
not you see Bishop to some degree this
is why you do find in the Shiva world
and again I I know this from from
first-hand knowledge a certain low level
depression sometimes a higher level but
but certainly a low level whether you
call it subclinical or not I'll leave
I'll leave it to the psychologists but
there is a certain sadness because a
person feels they have to cut themselves
away and pretend to be something and
someone that is not really them because
they're taught that the only way they
connect to a Shem is by leaving behind
their history their families their
connections their talents
now it's tricky it's tricky I don't mean
to suggest that you know everything from
the past can be safely imported if a
person was a nude topless dancer or
whatever it would be you know you have
to find ways to adapt and
and incorporate but a simple example
would be if a person was a drug addict
on cocaine and British AM they managed
to get away from it so one way is to
make believe there was no addiction
meaning to say I have no connection with
that world but that means there twenty
years of addiction was a total waste the
other way is if a person becomes a drug
counseling it's precisely his experience
with cocaine that gives him the insight
and ability to deal he's using his this
is the meaning of an enigmatic statement
in the Gemara
that says when a person does shuva out
of love the ave rows are not only erased
the Aveiro s-- themselves become mitzvos
now the question is obvious I understand
that God forgives me even that is an
amazing thing that's quite amazing but
okay forgiveness I have a lot of a
various Dadi races than when I'm sincere
God forgives me
okay brush em but forgiveness alone just
brings me to a zero it takes me from a
negative billion to a zero but you're
telling me a million or a billion of
Eros become mitzvahs they tell the
prediction of Libya to get ready Jeff
Telles one of the town retiree says I'm
so jealous of you all you have to do is
choose out of love and you'll be a much
bigger subject than me of so many of
Eros they'll all get converted but the
meaning of how in our favor can become a
mitzvah is that when you draw even upon
the negatives to build your unique
foundation in our voters ahem God retro
actively looks at your sins as the
training route for your mitzvahs in
other words using the addiction example
the 20 years of cocaine addiction was
your training to be the drug counselor
right this was your education right some
people get educated in school some
people get educated on the streets the
street was Richard
okay I'll give you credit this enabled
you to do what you watch what you're
doing you know many people remember the
receive of mirror of lessons V Finkel
and a great great man a person who died
a few years ago relatively young and for
many years he suffered from MS and with
great great courage she continued to
persevere to teach Torah to travel as
difficult as that was to raise money and
he made Mir a huge huge yeshiva and many
people also know that he has a very
unusual background he was not a Kosair
but Ruby came from a very much of a
family but he lived in a modern orthodox
life in Chicago he went to a co-ed High
School and he was on the basketball team
he was on the debating team and he
became where Shiva Mir so when he was
niftier very suddenly so all of the
hispid have made the similar point and
they said look at what a person can
become in spite of his worthless
degenerate backgrounds he came from
dirty non-religious Tommy backgrounds
and he is able to go beyond its and
become the great person that he became I
myself came from roughly similar
background so I'm hearing these Hispanic
yeah I don't I don't feel you know my
Hartford Connecticut background in that
way I see this as very positive in some
ways and here is where I think that has
paid him were income incomplete I'm not
saying they're wrong because there was
something about that as well that he had
a commitment for Torah that went far
beyond the environment but here's the
thing part of the Russia Shiva's
greatness was not that he became great
in spite of the environment he came from
part of his greatness was he took many
many positive things from that
environment you know one of the great
talents the receiver had was he was able
to relate to every type of American
teenager you had American teenagers who
visited Israel and they had never seen
he achieve of intensive learning this
was a totally even if they were shomer
Shabbos this was a totally unfamiliar
concept factor of finkl used to say his
same thing when he came to meet her and
they were learning in the morning from
nine to one he was like totally
exhausted nine to one you know four
hours it's so that his cover ISA okay
what do you guys do in the afternoon he
do this again he couldn't you know he
couldn't there you said he couldn't so
here you have these American kids and
they come to Israel and they see all of
this intensive learning and they don't
know how to process it and then they're
gonna see this Russia Shiva dressed in
black long beard and you know they have
no connection to him and all of a sudden
he starts talking to them about jump
shots and various things about sports
and debate and he says yeah I was on the
basketball team and he talked their
language and they saw that you could be
a great Thomas haha and still live in
the world he did not repudiate his
environment he took from the Chicago
experience some very important lessons
tolerance understanding different types
of Jews the patience to deal with people
based on where they are not artificially
imposing something these are things he
got from that world yeah there may have
been aspects of that world that he had
to move away from but he didn't amputate
he took the good and that was his
foundation I mean I'll tell you myself
that when I went to day school in
Hartford Connecticut so in those days
long time ago the conservative movement
did not have day schools there were no
cell Manchester day schools so as a
result any parents who wanted their kid
to have a good Jewish education even if
they were not Orthodox they all sent
themselves to the same day school so in
my Orthodox day school we had I would
say 75% were not sure which office we
had was co-ed number one and number two
we had conservative reform and and the
like and
even though that would not necessarily
be the scenic that I might choose today
although that we can talk about that
that would be a difficult thing but I
have to say that there are things you
learn from that environment you learn
how to get along you learn that you can
work with all Jews you can be friends
with altars and I remember walking to
bar mitzvahs and even bas Mitzvah that
were in a reformed temple again I'm not
getting into the halacha with just that
idea fact I have a whole story about
that a little digression I was walking
like five miles it was 12 years old I
was walking five miles to some reformed
synagogue and there was no area of so I
had no water it was the summer so one of
my teachers my one of my English
teachers drives by and offers me a ride
so I say well I can't go into the car so
she says why not so I said yes I said
well you know and Shabbos you're not
allowed to do work and you know going
into the car increases the gasoline
consumption and that's you know doing
work so she says so let me see if I
understand this you go into the car
it'll take two minutes no to get to the
synagogue air conditioned car but you
can't do that because you're not allowed
to work on Chavez
so instead you're gonna walk five miles
without water because that's not working
so I don't know this is when you think
about of course that's not our topic
tonight but the question is the
definition of work obviously the
definition of Malacca and Shabbos is not
labor because rest assured walking five
miles without water is a lot more
laborious than sitting in the car
Malacca has a different definition be it
is ignite but what I'm saying is I
myself have taken from that environment
and I think about it with a great deal
of fondness and very very good memories
of what out this is because as
unfortunately as we sometimes progress
into more religious communities and you
know indeed those are good movements to
a large degree but sometimes that Octus
and that tolerance and that friendship
and that accept
is something that recedes in the past
and great people like with lessons free
like the Russia Shiva's Ekron Oliv raha
were able to keep the good of that
environment and bring it into their
lives I'll leave you with one final
story along the same lines there's a
friend I have in mayishan I think I
probably said the story before but it's
worthwhile to repeat and he grew up in
Falls Church Virginia and not not only
he was not reformed he was totally
unaffiliated totally secular and after
he graduated college he did his trip
through Asia and Israel was a stop he
was nothing to do with religion but as
often as is often the case he became a
religious Jew became a shomer Shabbos
well he was never Giselle but he didn't
just become the or Sameach aja Torah Bal
Juba he became a Garrett Hudson scribe
on that astragalus Puttock that's a
vertical straw
kneesocks pea speared long coats
yiddish-speaking even quite amazing not
too many people become ballet children
in that particular form and amazingly
enough he got married to the only other
person who must have done the same thing
some woman who did the same thing became
a casino woman how does it happen
doesn't happen that often so they get
married so I'm invited to the continent
and the fashion it was Emmaus RM and
forget about Makita the women were in
another building the building was like
half a block away the man here the woman
there and I was wearing a black hat dark
suit but I was 11 I was you know a tiny
bit uncomfortable it wasn't my usual
venue a Yiddish speaking and like but I
remember his parents his parents were
there from Virginia they had not seen
their son since his transformation and I
can only use the world shell-shocked I
mean their mouth was a gape their eyes
were staring if you know the old show
the twilight zone it was mama mama
they couldn't even put into words they
were so confused they were so
disoriented yes it didn't make sense to
them what is going on here
is this like a play is this a TV show
that summer you know it's going to be
candid camera you know we're fooling you
you know whatever it is so so at the end
of the cosna they bring the caller they
had to wait they have to bring the
caller from a block away and I went for
Shepherd Broncos they bring the college
and then the cousin gives it to our tour
in Yiddish amazingly enough and then he
speaks in English to his parents and he
says you know mom and dad I just want to
say a few words he says I know that the
person I seem to be is very different
that the person you thought I would
become and the life that I'm living is
very different than the life you thought
I would live but I want you to know that
90% of what I am is from you and the 10%
that is not is because you gave me the
courage and the intellectual integrity
to find the path in life that I needed
to find so I just want to express my
gratitude to you that all that I'm able
to accomplish came from you now I was
sitting next to a a Ksyusha guy who
seemingly didn't know English although
maybe he was also an American who went
through this and he stopped puffing away
and he's nodding away you know and he
didn't understand a word but everyone
had a sense as because I'll say devar
him hi Yotes him in a life when words
come from the heart and it's nuts in
Malay they enter that I think everyone
there sensed that whatever these words
were they were very very powerful and I
still knew English then so I also saw it
as a very very powerful and beautiful
statement because what it's saying is
yeah my environment may not have been at
our environment but I'm going to take
the good from that environment and I'm
gonna build a foundation so now let me
go back to you if I were just to be sure
that I'm not sure if I made the point
explicitly the difference between a
mitzvah war and an optional war is in a
mitzvah war you owe glitter
destroy in an optional water you can
capture the enemy and subjugate it so
here is the thing is the war against the
eight Zara a mitzvah war surely it is a
mitzvah but it's placed in the parsha of
an optional war because it's teaching
you a profound idea that the way you
deal with your life and your personality
is not by obliterating it but by
capturing it transforming it and using
it as the foundation of your identity so
the idea here the finish here is this is
the one you'll come at mitzvah that you
have to fight like a Muhammad Rashad's
capture utilize don't just reject
because again you were put in a world
with certain experiences those
experiences are what your neshama needed
it's a great great mystery that how
could how could that be true even with a
virus and it's a hard it's a hard issue
because in one hand and I Vera is not
following that on the other hand in
retrospect everything is part of a Shems
plan as well we needed to go through
certain darkness in order to reach
certain light and we need to connect
even to that darkness in order to
experience the light that comes after
the darkness right so this is something
that we can think about in Arvada
Tsukuba that our Yiddish guide should
try to create a sense of wholeness a
sense of integration a sense of bringing
all the different pieces together what
do I learn from it how do I grow from it
what does it say to me to have a Yiddish
light that builds bridges instead of
erecting barriers and repeats us now as
I said before sometimes it is the case
that amputation is medically
necessary and sometimes it is the case
that amputation is spiritual say I'm not
denying the need for an extreme remedy
but it should be the exception by the
ways in this connection I just came
across something it's a little bit
connected to this a year score prayer
for a parent who abused you some of you
somebody about B I don't even think was
an Orthodox rabbi but it was this is an
issue that sometimes people face a
person has an abusive parent they cut
off all connection the parent dies
there's your skir they're Scottish and
some kids some children understandably
have a great deal of difficulty in
memorializing a parent that abused them
in a deeply a profound and painful way
so somebody wrote a prayer that was
really quite quite really quite
beautiful I was quite quite moved by it
in which this child the adult child on
one is talking to God and talking about
the pain that they suffered but they
also pray that their parent can be
relieved of the pain that made them
become the people that they were and
that in God's justice and mercy may the
parents also find some relief from the
reasons that made them sin I mean it's a
very very beautiful thing because it's
not a denial of your suffering but it's
trying to understand it's a much broader
perspective and even acknowledging that
my parents did give me life and for that
I have to be grateful in spite of
everything so you're not really going to
be successful in true until you can kind
of go back to your life and bring all of
those pieces together
so may I coach probably help us all to
try to engage in that process and
hopefully we should achieve some
successes as James promised if you fight
the war Hashem will give you the needs
ahum
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