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[Music]
okay so uh you are the uh the few
tonight but we think be based on quality
rather than quantity so thank thank you
very much for coming and uh tonight's
Sher is sponsored for a rafu schma for
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we are still looking for partners to
complete the payment for this to risk
role uh once again as I've said a number
of times already uh this will be used as
part of a learner minion uh for weekday
services not just for shabas uh which is
something a need that is simply not uh
not not being met yet
um you can contribute to commemorate the
memory of a loved one or to Simply share
your love of Torah and your AK with Kali
donations can be made either on the
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description box uh in addition uh the
peser having is filling up uh so here
too you can get information uh on the
YouTube uh description box or on the uh
on the website who's who's who's running
it this year um I'll be I'll be I'll
have the privilege of of I I don't want
to say running it but I'll be uh reading
reading the hag uh for people and uh you
know uh unless you're scared I sometimes
go a little long but I'll try to be a
little more a little more disciplined
and I think overall people who come have
a very very positive experience okay uh
we have brem porm coming up before porm
though we have Tanis eser so uh and we
have parat Z so there actually a few
different things that are coming up in
connection with with puim and I'm going
to talk briefly on each of those things
and culminating with porm porm itself uh
first of all on Thursday we have what is
called the fast of
Esther and uh there are two different
opinions in the ronm what is the origin
of the fast of Esther it's important to
know that the fast of Esther is not even
mentioned in the
gamorra it is actually a post talmudical
fast that dates from the time of the
gim in fact in the time of
kazal the 13th of Adar which is the
normal date for Tanis sester was
actually a yum in and of itself not a y
connected to porm a y connected to khaka
it was nic's day nicar was a Greek
General who was defeated in a major war
around the Kaneka Revolution and because
of that y gim was Y nikn where you
weren't allowed to
fast later for various reasons that kind
of dropped out and Le uh it got replaced
by Tinus Esther where you're supposed to
fast but either way whatever the
historical time frame is what is the
origin of the idea of Tinus Esther so
most people assume and this is the
simple shot that Tanis Esther is because
of the three-day fast that is recorded
in migil Esther that when Esther got
word of hamon's decree she instructed
Mori to go and gather all of the Jews
they should fast for three days and then
she will go to the king and to
commemorate that fast we have timeus
sester but instead of doing it for three
days we do it for one day three days
would be too rough now let me just point
out
chronologically the three-day fast of
Esther was not in the month of Ador at
all it was almost a year early it was
during Nissan the fast was 13th
14th
15th day of Nissan and that is the day
that Esther went into
AOS and hon got hung the next day hamon
got hung on the second day of pesak the
war was almost a year later 11 months
later in fact the gamar points the Yami
points
out that uh the 15th of Nissan is of
course the first day of
pesak and they were fasting on the first
day of pesak they did fulfill matah
because they would eat at night so they
ate the night of pesak they ate matah
but they fasted
onum so if the tenus of Esther
commemorates the three-day fast of
Esther it's a very imperfect
commemoration because number one
Esther's fast was three days and we only
fast one day number two Esther's fast
was Nissan but we fast adjacent to Pora
but okay that's still logical it is
connected to the porm miracle we don't
like to fast in Nissan so we push it
before porm but there's actually a whole
other reason that we shown him give for
Tinus Esther that it represents an
unrecorded
fast uh and that is the day that Jews go
to war or went to war they would fast to
be Z to the ra of hasem now we would
think not that way we we would think
when a person goes to battle they BFA
want to have a good breakfast either
because they think it may be their last
meal or they just need to be healthy and
energetic and yet Yen who realized that
their ultimate Victory is from
aades they would actually fast on the
day they went to war so the Tanis Esther
was an actual fast of the Jewish people
who were fighting their enemies on the
13th of Adar so it's not connected and
why why is it called the fast of eser
really it's not really the fast of
Esther it is the fast connected to the
miracle that Esther effected but it is a
fast of Y so we have two
different Origins for the fast of Esther
one is it is a z for the three-day fast
that's recorded in the Milla the other
is it was a fast of the before they went
to mil one way or the other though we do
have this fast called the fast of Esther
as you would imagine it's
extraordinarily lenient so if people
don't feel well you know we're very very
lenient in fact in some circles uh women
are automatically Exempted from the fast
of Esther and I believe I don't want to
say for sure I believe that in the brisk
Yesa uh the boys are told they shouldn't
fast on the fast of Esther because uh
they're weak and it would affect their
learning and the like I don't want to
say for sure but uh I I believe that
that is the case but still if you're
able to fast you should fast now what's
interesting is
this this
year we're not fasting on the 13th of V
because what is it the 14th of V is
Saturday night Sunday right J porm is
Sunday night Monday which is the 15th
but the 14th of Adar is Sunday so the
13th of Adar would be
chabas we of course don't fast on
chabas so you would think so let's fast
on
Friday right if we don't fast on chabas
which is 13 let's fast on Friday so the
answer is there too with some exceptions
we gen generally do not want there to be
a fast on Friday because we don't want
you to enter chabas not feeling that
well because if you were to fast on
Friday now the truth is the 10th of T is
an exception but we don't like fasting
on Friday because you're not going to
feel well when chabas begins so
therefore when the 14th of Adar is on
Sunday or on shabas Tinus Esther is
pushed to
Thursday now here's an interesting
question when the n of falls out on
chabas okay yipper we fast on chabas
that's a separate thing but even the
ninth of a when it falls out on chabas
we don't fast on chabas so when do we
fast we fast after chabas we fast
Saturday night and Sunday and the gamor
says because you don't want to bring
sadness
early so how come interesting question
every other fast that you don't fast on
chabus when it would fall out on chabas
or Friday you push it
off Tinus Esther when it would fall out
on chabas or Friday you fast on Thursday
you bring it on early why is Tinus EST
different than the ninth of of so the
shame mm says a wonderful answer it's
like it's one of those answers that once
you hear it you wonder how could you
even ask the question it's such a simple
answer he says the following why is it
the case that when we fast for the ninth
of I push off the fast right Tish is on
chabis I don't fast on Thursday I fast
on Sunday so the gar gives a
reasona we don't want to bring tragedies
on earlier than we have to the fast of
the ninth of a is a fast of tragedy
it is a fast of Avance a fast of
mourning a fast of Calamity it is a sad
day of the year why should we bring it
on earlier than we have to so if we
can't observe it in the proper day kazal
said don't do it early push it off as
much as you
can the fast of
Esther is exactly the
opposite whether you look at it as
Esther's three-day fast or whether you
look at it as theim
fasting it is a fast that brought us
Redemption and Yeshua it was a fast that
is not mourning a
tragedy it's
commemorating a Salvation that the
almighty brought upon us it was a fast
that prevented
tragedy rather than a fast that
commemorates tragedy as a result there's
nothing wrong with bringing it on early
Bring It On meaning the mood of Tinus
Esther is not sad at
all right normally we associate every
Tinus with a certain sadness whether
it's Tish whether it's the 17th of Tas
where the luos were smashed whether it's
the tenth of Taves when nadra began his
Siege against Jerusalem whether it's
some Galia where the great Galia was
assassinated after theb B mikdash these
are days of sadness these of days of
tragedy days of grieving days of
mourning what's Tinus Ester Tinus Esther
is the reminder to us that when we turn
to Hashem with prayer and
sincerity and purity of heart he will
answer our prayers it's actually a Tinus
that should give you great joy and and
therefore the shamm says there is no
with bringing it on early it's not
included in the principle of not
bringing on tragedies before you have to
again so it's really such a simple
answer in effect that it really answers
the question in a wonderful in a
wonderful way so that's the idea of
Tinus sester now this year everybody
gets the benefit because you know uh
when you keep porm on the
14th and you have a regular Tinus sester
on the 13th that means you're not
allowed to eat until you hear mcgilla
even though it's dark maybe you can have
water or something so that actually
means that people sometimes have to
suffer through a long mcgilla reading
before they can eat this year we don't
have that problem because the fast is
going to be over Thursday night there's
no McGill eting until later in yush
however we never have that problem right
that's another reason to live in yam
because even in a regular year where we
keep Tinus Esther on the
13th when the fast is over you're
entering the 14th but we don't read
Millan the 14th we read Millan the 15th
so as a result Tinus Esther does not go
directly into porm in Yim there will
always be a day off so that makes it a
little easier meaning to say you can
break the fast at night you don't have
to wait till after the after the Milla
so among many many reasons to live in
yam maybe it's a minor reason but this
is a a a benefit that you get
uh based on based on shushan for okay so
that's Tanis Esther which we're going to
have this year on Thursday uh obviously
as you know it's uh a day fast it is not
the night before it begins
Dawn and everything has many many
opinions but the standard opinion is it
is 72 fixed minutes before Sunrise so
whenever Sunrise is go back 72 minutes
that's where the fast begins and
therefore if you get up before the amod
Shak point you are still allowed to eat
and a drink so that's always the big
question people have to raise H what's
more important sleep or coffee that's
going to be the one of the major
questions of Life uh that people have to
determine okay so we then go from
Thursday we go to chabas and chabas in
addition to the regular Torah reading
which is part
we have special
ma z which reminds us hasem says
remember what Amal did to you when you
were in the desert they encountered you
and they attacked those who were weak
and straggling and they did not fear God
and it shall be that when God gives you
rest among your
enemies you shall erase the memory of
amalik low tishk
so there's actually
three
MIT connected to the nation of
Amal one is a positive Mitzvah to
physically destroy them by eradicating
their
memory eradicate their memory that
actually means it's a funny thing
remember remember to obliterate their
memory interesting remember
to utterly forget them but okay but
basically this is the Mitzvah of M
eradication as a matter of
strict we don't have that Mitzvah today
simply because amalik is not around
again I know people sayas is but amik is
also a very specific nation that is
descended from a certain source and
Kamas may have the ideology of amik and
I'm willing to agree with that but
technically they're not the amik of the
Torah so there's a Mis with to destroy
amalik number one number two there is a
positive Mitzvah to remember amalik
verbally verbally to declare that we
remember the evil of
amalik and there's a negative
commandment which is expressed in the
negative never forget so
eradicate
remember never
forget so even though we don't have Mia
today because they're not around or we
can't identify them we do have
a now the question is how often do you
have to
remember the pus is you have to remember
all the time every
day so if you look at uh an a sitter you
will find after shakas in many sedur
something called the six
the six
remembrances or in some s there are 10
remembrances and some s there are four
remembrances they different things that
are counted or not counted but one of
the remembrances is to
remember and the people that say these
six zos or these four zos or these 10
zos will say this verse every single
day the question is though most of us
don't do that and most of us fulfill Our
obligation to remember a once a
year the shabas before purin and that's
called
par so question number one is where do
you get the once a year thing if the
Tyra says you shall remember amalik what
amalik did to you why do you do it once
a year so the gamar says a reason the
gamar says that it takes a whole year 12
months before you really forget
something a memory can remain relatively
fresh I think thear seems to be assuming
better memories than most of us have but
it says a memory can remain relatively
fresh for up to a year so if you hear
par once that'll carry you for 12
months after the 12 months it gets
weaker and you need a booster shot so
the goal of par Z once a year is to keep
a memory in your mind the entire year
because it takes 12 months for a memory
to fade that's the Assumption So based
on this
theer points out the following
normally there's 12 months or less
between par one par another
par but sometimes they'll be 13 months
like now last year was a non-leap
year this year is a leap year last year
there was one Adar this year there are
two adars from last year's
par to this year's
par is 13 months not 12
months so theer says how could we 12
months without a par to remind us to
revive our memory So based on this he
was mades a very
fascinating he said the it's too late to
do it now the year before AIP year when
they reach par that's where the par
thing is and that is read before rashash
shortly before rashash you should have
kavana in the par of the
week to be M the Mitzvah
of of course the B has to have kabana as
well and that way you get your par
booster shop without a hepi without an
interruption of more than 12 months and
even though obviously that Kaa is not
the shabas before porm but but keep in
mind they're two different things the in
other words the DOA says you have to
verb
or hear somebody
verbalize once a year yeah that's true
that's but the T doesn't say it has to
be before porm that's what the sages
said to connect it to ham the Torah
doesn't even say it has to be from a
safer Torah so consequently theer says
the do imperative of not going 12 months
without verbally remembering amik that
you could be m in Paras say say before
rashash and then by the
time comes around you'll fulfill the
rabic requirement of mentioning it or
having it mentioned the shabas right
before porm very very interesting ofam
sare um I I I usually talk about it but
you know I always talk about it too late
I talk about it like before the the
relevant par uh we've missed it already
we should talk about it before rashash
we should talk about
the
par okay uh so this is why par is is is
once Year
and that that once a year should be the
shabas before por because H comes from
am and therefore we want to connect the
destruction of H with the destruction of
amalik now it does not say beish in the
Milla that hamon is from amalik but it
does call him hamon the AAG ham the aagi
and we know from the book of shmuel AAG
was the king of Amal that sha
spared and even though Shmo finished a
gag off but in the small amount of time
between sha letting him go and Shmo
killing him AAG impregnated a woman and
that woman was the ancestor of
hamon you see in a very very powerful
way which may be relevant to what's
going on today the severe cost of
misplaced
Mercy sha did not kill
AAG out of compassion it's very clear
whatever the was maybe because he's a
fellow King sha had
ra he said listen I did the job
99.9% let this guy live looks like rah
out of that
Rim came hamon Generations later hamon
almost wiped
out the entire Jewish people and it
wasn't just he had a bad thought the
gumar actually says for reasons maybe
we'll get to that the Jewish nation in
that
generation was deserving of
Destruction had we not done shuva
through the fasting and everything else
Hon's plan would have been carried out
it could have been carried out which
means the
raim that sha showed
one almost
resulted in the total
Destruction of the Jewish
people when galad Shalit was released
and of course I mean we're all very
grateful and he should she'd be healthy
got got for I don't want to cast any
aspersion but just to note the empirical
fact he was released in exchange for a
thousand
terrorists one of those terrorists was
sinir who was the architect of who was
serving a life sentence not only that we
also gave him brain surgery I mean we
did a lot of lot of Tas for him uh but
he was serving a life sentence in an
Israeli jail he was released as part of
a Exchange
program and a few years later he is The
Mastermind or was The
Mastermind of October
7 that killed at the time on that day
1,200 people including rape and torture
maming hostage taking and people who are
still being victimized as well as theim
whose lives are at risk as they go into
war so an act of
Mercy but you see what an act of Mercy
can cause when it's not a proper Act of
mercy and this was sha soal
wanted to be connected to
Esther because millat eser is about the
destruction of Amal and it's so
interesting that morai and Esther are
descendants of sha and therefore they
rectifi they fixed that which sha failed
failed to fix again I want to point out
that in so far far as the torah's
Commandment of par is concerned it
didn't have to be on that particular
shabas it could be any could be any
doesn't have to be on chabas it doesn't
have to be in a minion it doesn't have
to be in a safer Torah you just it does
have to be verbalized you
verbalize uh you can e use the P or your
own words but if you use the P you
say you are M the
mitvah of
Z the need for a Torah the need for a
minion and the need for a z which is the
shabas before porm those are rabic
requirements they are not Torah
requirements that's why the common
statement that we always make that par Z
is a Torah obligation you know needs to
be qualified a little bit uh remembering
a Malik once a year is a Torah
obligation but it didn't have to take
the form bka
of
par so now let's go back a little bit
and let's talk about amalik you know
amalik is an actual or was an actual
person right the Tyra mentions am like
before attacking us in the desert before
there were a nation it mentions
ASA had a son
elifas and it describes elifas as many
wives and it describes alas had a
concubine p wasn't even a wife a
mistress a concubine whose name was
timna and it says that timna had a boy
from
alas who his name was
amalik so amalik is the grandson of Asa
the son of
elifas from his PES from his concubine
timna why is that important now the
Torah does spend a lot of time if you
look at par
tah giv spends quite a lot of time on
giving as's family tree as's descendants
yes's descendants it's quite a big it's
quite a big deal in the Torah at least
relatively
speaking said there's some very very
important lessons here that are may be a
little bit
disheartening the medish gives us a very
interesting backstory to the alifa timna
relationship timna came from Egypt and
she was actually of the royal house just
like Hagar actually came from the paros
timna was in the royal family and
timna had a great
yearning to be connected to the family
of
Abraham and she wanted to be accepted as
a gorus etc and they rejected her they
thought she was not righteous
enough so Tim's attitude was
she so much wanted to be
connected to Zarah
aam that she said if I cannot connect to
the good
side I'll connect to the bad side to the
ASF side and if I can't connect as a
wife with the Dignity of a wife I will
be a p leish I'll be a
nobody so her motives were actually very
good she was so again misplaced I mean
you don't say if I can't marry the sadik
of the family I'll marry the Rish of the
family that's that's not logical
thinking but
emotionally it stemmed from her desire
to be connected to
kadua so why did amalik turn out so
bad if timna had the noblest
motivations of connecting to
kadha why did timna why did timna give
birth to amalik the Hitler
Russia used to say you see from
here how powerful and destructive
rejection is timna was a rejected
woman even alifa rejected her in a sense
Al Al alas didn't make her a wife she
was a
pish she could take it she was righteous
enough that she could take
it but her son little amalik
somehow absorbed rejection rejection
rejection every day of his
life and
says the product of rejection produces
aik now we have to understand this he's
not giving amalik a pass he's not saying
oh we should have mercy in amalik
because they were rejected as a child
you know it is true I mean even Hitler
right Hitler was rejected his paintings
were rejected but you know many people
go through
rejection and they don't grow up and
murder 6 million
people so we're not negating
responsibility we're not saying oh the
amols of the world are not responsible
of course they're
responsible but at the same time from
our
perspective we have to realize the
devastating
cost that rebounds to us when we reject
when we're
Marik applied this practically it was
very well known that he was extremely
reluctant to ever ask a boy to leave the
Mir Yeshiva even if the guy wasn't
learning the guy wasn't doing very much
so people would ask him theal other R
would ask him you know why don't you get
rid of the guy andit's standard line
was I don't want the responsib
ility for possibly creating more amalik
in the world this is the K of
rejection you know we we can we can
debate this as a policy and this okay
maybe I I don't I don't need to be
skeptical I me one could argue well
you're actually doing the guy of favor
by putting him in a place where he's
more productive oh okay that's fine but
I I don't want to debate you know his
educational policy and the like but it
was predicated on the idea
that
rejection can create such a rage in a
person that he becomes a force of
Destruction a force of violence a force
of hate so in a sense we have a certain
responsibility for creating the amols of
the world it does not take away a one
iota from their
responsibility but we need to be aware
of our responsibility as well this is
what used to say again a very very
powerful idea well am eventually became
a nation kind of a ban nation that
wandered around in the desert and they
were the very first nation that attacked
us when we left
MIM so here's the point I want to make
if you look at
tanak you see there are three
times that the
amalekites aggressively attacked us I'm
not counting when we attack
them the first time is when shortly
after we left
mitan amalik was the first nation that
attacked
us
racal the first of the
Nations the second time amalik attacked
us
is also in the Kish but it's a hidden
it's a hidden reference 40 years
later when Aron haken
died and the Clouds Of Glory that
enveloped us scattered because those
Clouds Of Glory were in the Merit of Aon
remember the man came in the Merit of
Moshe the traveling water of well was in
the Merit of
Miriam the clouds of Glory
Aon the Merit of Aon when Aon died in
the 40th year the Clouds Of Glory
dispersed we were vulnerable so it
mentions in
thees we were attacked by
Canaanites and Moshe prayed and the
Jewish people were able to defeat their
enemies this is recorded in
Paras but if you look in rashi rashi
brings a kazal that says we were not
attacked by Canaanites
we were attacked by amalekites amalik
tried to attack us but since amalik
remembered from the first time around
that MOS renu's prayers were
effective they wanted to disguise
themselves as Canaanites so that when
Moshe says save us from the Canaanites
the prayer is not going to work because
they're really amalekites in other words
they dressed by cananim so that Moshe
would pray for salvation from cananim
and and supposedly that would help the
amalekites M Abu
suspected a disguise he didn't know for
sure and that's why the Torah says mosha
renu's prayer was God should deliver
this nation whoever they are let them be
cananim let them be aalim and the like
but this is the second time amalik
attacked us in the
desert now the next time amalik is
prominent is in the story of sha when
sha is commanded to kill but but but
again there that was we attacked amalik
it doesn't say amalik attacked us but
the third time when amalik was the
aggressor is the story of Miguel aester
where it wasn't the nation of amalik
but made a gazer against am is right so
we have three places in
tanak where a m tries to destroy us one
right after you
see two 40 years later when Aon died and
we lost the unnown a covero three in the
time of
hum so keep those three things in mind
and now let's look at the reasons why we
are vulnerable to
amalik amalik is a demonic evil
force that seeks our utter
obliteration but it's very clear from
the Kash that amalik is not only hating
the
Jews amalik hates
God amalik is Waging War against the
almighty amalik is trying to defeat the
idea of God in the
world amalik stands for mikra
coincidence happen stance amalik stands
for power you know it's interesting the
closest to Amal even more than Hamas
that we've seen in recent centuries is
Nazi Germany that that's the closest
Paradigm to amalik and if you read mine
I've never read M for say but if you
read Hitler's own
book uh you
know I hate to say this I can get in
very big trouble for saying it uh it is
an insane book it's it's written by a
crazy person but it's remarkably
insightful Hitler IM
Mo had a very good understanding of
Judaism and he hated it because of
that Hitler said Judaism brought
conscience into the
world Judaism brought morality into the
world Judaism limited the ability of the
strong to control the weak now that
sounds like a commercial for judan he
was saying and that's what's so bad
about it because what matters in the
world is power and might and
dominion and it was the Judaism and the
Torah that put all of those
limits what what is remarkable is that
in his insane evil he understood
exactly what the Torah was
doing but as an amalik he hated it he
wanted to destroy
it right but at the same time he
understood what it was and this is what
the Torah says aik wages war against
God not just Jewish people it's a m
against the morality of the Torah it's a
m against the notion that human power
should have limits it's a m against the
notion that the strong must take care of
the
weak all of this amalik is
against so so what makes us vulnerable
to
amalik so theim tell
us that amalik has power over
us only if there's some aspect of
amalik that exists within our
personalities and as a result in cabala
andas the Mitzvah of eradicating
Amal is not only a reference to the
eradication of the amalik outside of
me but it's also a reference to the
eradication of the amalik that is within
me so what is the amalik within me that
makes me
vulnerable so what's interesting is
let's compare the first desert
attack with the second desert attack and
you can identify two weaknesses
that make us vulnerable to
amalik weakness number one is the very
first time they attacked us and they
attacked us in a
place that is called
ridim that's the name of the place
right but kazal say ridum is not only a
place but ridum is an acronym for
certain
attitude ra
ra now translated literally this is an
idiomatic expression that doesn't really
have an English counterpart it literally
means R their hands were
weak towards the Torah what is the IDI
mean let's imagine you're crossing the
street you're crossing a busy street
you're Crossing King George
and you have to hold your
baby well God forbid you don't want to
drop your baby so you something you care
about a lot you hold very
tight when you don't care so much let's
assume you're you're you're holding a
tissue in your hand you blew your nose
and you have a tissue now even if you're
not a litterer unfortunately too many
people do litter but let's assume you
don't intentionally litter but if it
blew out of your hand you know it
wouldn't be the biggest tragedy in the
world so you hold something loose so
this is an idiom when we talk about your
hands are loose your hands are
weak that means you don't care so much
about
it a mik attacks
us when our attitude towards Torah
learning and Torah
mitzvas we lack
passion we lack
excitement we lack
gmach we're complacent even if we're fir
we do the
Mitzvah but we do so without a brand
Without fire without
enthusiasm complacency
boredom coldness of the
spirits because after all amalik
represents coldness now kazal see this
in the
word the first Achilles heel that makes
us vulnerable to
Amal is the
indifference and lack of
passion we have
for and this is a problem not only for
those who don't keep
Mitzvah it might be a greater problem
for those who do keep Mitzvah we do
things out of habit we go through the
motions sometimes we even resent you
know cleaning up for PES or whatever
whatever it will
be right we don't have a in
our that's
a
and when there's that
coldness that's the root that makes us
vulnerable to
aik now see that in the
word sees it in a different
word now the word
K is a very very interesting word
because there's a lot of different
amalik ideas in that word one of K is
they encountered you
in the way and encounter mikra is a word
that means
coincidence accident and that goes to
amalik lives in the world of mikra
things are just coincidence there's no
hash there's no Divine Providence so
that's one lesson of the
K Rashi gives another lesson of the K
again from the medish that K means they
made you cold K made you C so she says
the famous mushel that when the Jewish
people left mitam they were like a
boiling hot bath a scalding hot bath
everybody was afraid to touch them they
had the 10 plagues and the splitting of
the Red Sea I'm not going to touch these
people
amalik was the very first one who jumped
into the boiling hot
bath you jump into a boiling hot bath
you're going to get burnt Amal got
defeated to be sure but you know what
happens the bath is not as hot for the
next
guy meaning amalik created the
precedent that you could try to fight
the Jews yeah we lost but maybe the next
guy will win that's how Rashi
understands K they made you cold they
cooled off the
bath R
sadok goes with the same meaning of
coldness but he goes in a different
aspect he says Amal
represents coldness of the
heart coldness of the heart vers n to
feel warmth and
passion right it's very interesting in
some ways this is a little bit
autobiographical now R sadok was
actually born in mate was not born into
a
family and he became in his
20s and he was a genius he was a genius
from a very young age uh know sh poim he
knew
everything uh but he became Aid a little
bit
older and The Story Goes that yeah he
was wandering around Europe meeting
different G different
rim and uh he walked into the iser the
ish bitzer who is his Rabbi the
M
sud and the iser was talking and uh know
were listening not
listening you they're used to it they
were they were not necessarily so moved
but if saduk was
transfixed he was frozen in
place and all of a sudden he started
screaming The Story Goes he says my
heart is on fire my heart is on fire and
then he grabbed his head he says until
now all I was was a
brain I wasn't a person but I want to be
a yid I want to be a
person I want to have a
heart again very very interesting red
did have a very acute
awareness even though if there's any who
could be a bonafied intellectualized
approach it is
R was acutely
aware that you have to combine as they
said about the classic biography
Mo the
mind and the heart and when the heart is
not there
says that's
kirus when there's
Kus that's
amalik seemed to make the same point
through the
word so that's a heal number one the
ofal was R for and I tell you
or
kirus the
coldness of the
heart we then come 40 years later iron
aen
dies
theot
leave am via disguise at least attacks
us the mforum say this is a second
Achilles heal
AR Ain
represents as Pavo says the spiritual
dimension of oh
sh shom a lover of
Peace A pursuer of Peace one who was
proactive in trying to make Shalom
o he loved the's
creations and the way the saer explains
it quite logically through the love that
he had for everyone he brought them to T
very important he didn't you don't bring
somebody to Terror by denigrating them
by insulting them by pushing them
away you bring them to T by
love it's not two things it's
notos number one Marvin L Tor number two
rather it's all connected oh
so Aon is the height of and unity and
shom and
love when he
died there was a weakness there was a
diun in the AK and the love in Claus and
that is Achilles heel number two perod
divisiveness polarization within the
Jewish people
make us vulnerable to amalik and the
reason is the following because amalik
is really from our brother
ASF How could a brother hate a
brother right ASA is our brother the
answer is me the mid if we hate our
brother or at least we don't have Ava
for our brother you know our fellow Jew
then we're going to suffer the hatred of
someone who should have been our brother
in a much more intensive way I mean
obviously no Jew behaves like a mik I
mean but but the concept is if we don't
show the Ava that we're supposed to show
then on the other side it gets
magnified into the sin the violent
hatred of
amalik so you see these are the
two
the
the is the reason for the first
attack and the sin and lack
of is the reason for the second
attack so now let's go to the story of
porm story of porm is the final attempt
in
tanak of amalik or a representative of
amalik to destroy us what's interesting
is in the time of
purm we actually see both factors
at
work we
see well they're they're a bit subtle
but let's take the sin first you can see
a remember when H is talking
to and H is trying to convince that the
Jews are worthless get rid of him and
you know they don't contribute anything
he says they're scattered and they're
Etc they're not unified together so
remember the important teaching of The
Zo hashem's name is not mentioned in
Miguel
AER true but whenever it says
H it refers both to a on a lower level
of
meaning and to Hashem on a higher level
of
meaning so when it says hamon said to
the m about the Jews a b c and d that
sentence has two meanings
in the human said to the
human and indeed you know you don't
discard the hon is talking
to but a higher mytical meaning is the
spiritual
of is Prosecuting the Jews speaking to
God and saying they're not
worthy right double meaning you got to
read everything higher meaning lower
meaning
meaning cabalistic meaning so to speak
so the very first thing that H said
is there is a
nation that is scattered and divided
among your
Nations so let's first look at lower
meaning
then we'll look at higher meaning lower
meaning is human
ham is speaking to
human and is simply making the point
that the Jews are not concentrated in
one place you have a few here a few here
a few here therefore again Pat they're
not able to organize an army it'll be
very easy to kill them because you don't
have a large concentration of Jews in
any one place that's lower
meaning higher and deeper meaning is
the is saying to Hashem the Jews are
undeserving because they're divided
amongst themselves Moser M the very
pagam that made us vulnerable when Aron
died existed in the porm story itself
the sin that existed now it is true that
usually speak of
sinam in connection with the destruction
of the second
temple uh Mori is right before the
construction of the second temple but
nevertheless the roots of that sin were
already there the Moser maor now we also
see it's Milla sester the first
weakness complacency indifference
and lack of
passion for the Torah now where do you
see that so again this is a little
subtle the gar Milla
says that rabi Shimon barai was
asked why are the Jewish people why were
the Jewish people worthy of being
destroyed because we actually were on
the verge of being
destroyed so R sh sh initial answer was
because they were n when aish made a
party in
shushan many Jews went and they enjoyed
the
party and they deserve to die because of
that now the then asked well that's only
the Jews in shushan what about other
Jews so he had to come up with other
aaras but the very first thing that he
said was they were of
Misa because they
enjoyed the party
of so the question is
obvious what sin did they
commit they ate
trafe they drank wine that non-jews
handled those are AAS to be sure do you
get the death penalty for it if I eat TR
I don't get killed I'm not of for it so
how can you say they're of
Mis because they ate and drank at the
party
so say
the a wonderful
Terrance it does not say they're K of
Misa because they ate at the
party you're not K of Misa for eating
TR they're of Mis because they enjoyed
the
party well what does that mean if you
enjoy the food you're just eating tra so
here you have to have to remember
something why did Ros make the
party at the time that he made that
party so there's a complicated gamarra
we don't have time to go through all of
the numbers but essentially aash knew
that the Jewish people are supposed to
be in exile for only 70
years and he miscalculated where do you
start the 70 years from he was wrong but
based on his calculation the 70 years
were over
and God did not redeem the Jewish
people so the conclusion would be either
God changed his mind and is never going
to redeem them or God doesn't have the
power or there is no God or whatever it
is so this was a party
celebrating the fact that the Jews will
not be
redeemed so says theas emus when it says
the Jews enjoyed the
party n it does not refer to the fact
that they enjoyed the food and the wine
that's not a but they enjoy the idea of
why there was a party who needs a
mikdash who needs GA who
needs we're happy here we're fine
here what is that called
complacency
indifference lack of passion lack of
Yearning lack of growth we're fine where
we are and we're fine as we
are so it turns out that that's the
first pagam the first defect R
foram so it's fascinating if the first
time amalik attacked us was rough T and
the second time amalik attacked us
was and lack of
Isel the POR story combines both
the
and and this explains
why when we finally had the Yeshua and
the
GAA and kazal
enacted that we observe a holiday of
porm to give thanks and to
celebrate they built into the
holiday mitzvos and Rich
rituals that address the
defects that made us vulnerable to
amalik in the first
place if porm is a
celebration of the downfall of
amalik we have to eradicate that within
us that makes us vulnerable to
amalik the ton of
divisiveness and
polarization is obvious in the mitzah of
give food to
people
speciala to take down the or to build
Bridges to remove barriers to be friend
to
connect in fact that's why it's brought
down many say that you should get a to
give because you want to get more people
involved called maros increasing
friendship that's the tikon that's the
rectification
for by the way that's why Esther when
Esther proclaimed to fast she her first
words
were come and gather everybody if the
problem
is the ton
is now p is also a
t for the lack of passion
in and this is again in a bit of a
subtle
way at the end of the mcgilla
when it talks about the holiday of porim
it
mentions they fulfilled what they had
accepted so K have it's an awkward
language they recepted God's
Torah that they had accepted at
Sinai at Sinai they accepted God's Torah
under
duress
compulsion we'll have to save this
another time to try to explain that but
it says God held a mountain over their
heads and said if you accept the Torah
that's good if not I'll Crush
you so
Shas is cabala sa out of fear
trepidation a certain degree of coercion
and
duress and porim we accept it out of
love and
gratitude that which he had previously
accepted out of fear
so porm
isal with
love what is the difference between
doing something out of
love and doing something out of
fear well there are many differences but
one of the differences is the passion
and excitement you have when you do it
when you do something out of
fear you do as much as you need to not
to get hurt but you don't have
enthusiasm you don't have
gak when you do it out of
love you love what you're
doing
M if a attacks us because we're
complacent we have lack of
passion
Maya is a ton for the coldness of the
heart and
the so it's
fascinating that we became vulnerable on
because we have the two weaknesses of
amalik and when we celebrate purm we
have to address both of those weaknesses
so again
beem may be a of G of Yeshua uh we say
in shakov you know the the song that we
sing after Milla it's part of a longer
really
that that you are their salvation in
every
generation and you have made known to us
that those who trust in you and those
who seek refuge in you will not be
ashamed will not be
humiliated forever and beem may the
words of
that be m so I'm good to get
[Music]
sh