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>> Yeah, everybody. Thank you for coming.
Uh today as always we pray for the
protection of AmIrael the lasting unity
of the people of Israel which will lead
to victory and for all of those whose
health has been affected by terror theim
hashem's protection for Israel and for
the gulma
rafu
is surah Mosha ben rael ben may they
have a rau is alias nama memory of the
father of Esther Schnitzer, William
Foyer Nakman A Ben Shimon. He was born
in Vienna and after the ancelus came to
America alone, he joined the army,
became a decorated war hero, jumped into
Normandy on D-Day and was one of the
famous Richie boys. Again, we we're very
grateful for his uh service and
sacrifice. in memory of Zerel's Latas
barrel by her daughters
uh TLC Anita Rao with the following
message. This should be an aliyah for
her precious nishama on her 46th yard
site the 27th of Tamos. And finally the
late mother of Jeremy Bernstein a friend
of Ibana friend of mine whose yard site
the 26th of Tamos Lash Shabas Sas Elazar
Halevi. May all of the shamas have an
aliyah in these of the Torah that we're
learning. uh one of the uh may possibly
I don't want to say
as you know suddenly passed away Senator
Lindsey Graham he was a Christian so
whether that counts is that's another
makus but in terms of somebody who
really cared about Israel at a time when
so many people in Congress and elsewhere
do not care about Israel uh is really a
loss to the Jewish people. He really
really was very very committed and uh
his sudden death is something that might
scare all of us but once again
we don't like to think about this but
remembering the day of death uh is a
very important aspect in a hashem not
because it's supposed to make you sad or
depressed that's hopefully not what it
does but it makes you realize the
importance of every day of life every
moment is important you got to use every
moment
because you can't automatically assume
that you'll have all those moments later
on. Things can happen. Uh, in fact, um,
apparently in Europe, I I've never seen
such a thing, but I I heard it
described, they have like buildings or
catacombs constructed of human bones,
which would not allow, but there's like
a Latin inscription in top of the
catacomb that says, "What you are is
what I once was, and what I am now is
what you will be."
It's kind of a message message to the
reader. And uh even though once again
halaka would absolutely not permit the
desecration of human remains under those
circumstances but the underlying message
is something we think about and I think
uh senator Graham Petira kind of reminds
us a little bit a little bit of that and
he was tak very very good friend uh to
Israel at a time when as I say we don't
have that many friends uh that that's
the way the world is moving in that in
that direction.
So uh this is kodes. So on one hand you
know do you wish somebody a kesh to a
good kesh is it a day of sa
the great rev of Washington heights used
to say that the way kazal describe the
month of a is they say
that's what the mishna says when the
month of a begins we diminish our simra
so was it doesn't say we eliminate sra
but rather We have a little bit of less
meaning
you increase the sim
you reduce the sim but there has to be
all the time there is never a time in
which there's not sim in fact the the
a little more than a year ago used to
point out a very interesting observation
say that ruesh cannot rest on a prophet
unless Unless the prophet is bas
meaning every prophecy is bas
gives prophecies of destruction of of
all the bad things that are going to
happen but he wouldn't have been able to
have that prophecy unless he was how can
that be and the answer is that somehow
even with adversity that breaks your
heart
you still have the joy that you're
connected to Hashem And therefore side
by side in a way that maybe we don't
understand
a person can have joy in a person's
heart can be broken at the same time.
And that's the only way ruesh could
possibly exist when you're dealing with
soros and and and so many great great
tragedies. So the month of highlights
this kind of dichotomy
of sim and at the same time it's the
kesh of
but at the same time the will become the
gul this is what kazal say that when
msiah comes not only will these days not
be fast days that's obvious but they
will actually become days of joy and the
moral says the meaning of the famous
statement mashiach
is born on tishbuff.
Famous famous famous statement. I'm not
sure what kabad's going to do with that.
The rebi was born before before pes. Uh
but well act but according to the moral
there's a good terret. The moral says it
doesn't mean the flesh and blood
mashiach
is going to be born on tishab. The flesh
and blood mashiach can be born any day
of the year. But it means the thing that
brings the messianic power into the
world
are the tears that we shed on. The
yearning that we have to be connected to
Hashem is what brings Mashiach in the
world. So when you say Mashiach is born,
you're not referring to the person who's
Mashiach when he's going to be born.
That could be anywhere, anytime. But it
refers to the idea that what brings him
into the world is how much do you want
him? And as a result, it is that
mourning and that yearning that shows
how much we care. And that in turn
brings Mashiach in the world. So it
turns out that the mourning is the
reason for the gula. We're not just
mourning over something in the past. The
morning m o u r n i n g will bring the
morning m o r n i n g right the morning
will bring the will bring the morning
and that's idea that's through uh the
ais of tishabuff now there's a beautiful
minhug actually today we have a little
bit I mentioned to somebody uh our yonet
calendar is a little peculiar uh this
week because uh paraim
this week's para is always read the
shabas before tishaban
is shabas is always read the shabas
after tish. So is already a theme of but
because is so late in the week our ye
next week on paran
is going to be before tishov.
So I'm kind of going crazy over what am
I going to talk about next week. Uh so y
you know you got to have of course if
the basis will be rebuilt I will have I
will have an answer there'll be no
there'll be no no particular problem uh
but still there is a given on tishabove
strangely enough that there are joyous
markers even on tish as strange as it is
we don't say on tishab you normally
don't say tan on festive occasions
so not saying tak so we're not you know
dancing on the on the table but we don't
say taklan is this is a day of
redemption and you know uh there was an
old min that is no longer followed by
ashkenazim but but it was an old ash
very old ashkenazic min you know in the
morning we say a lot of kinos kinos are
poems of lamentations
they're sad they're tragic very hard to
translate but now you have art school
and other translations of salvic so Now
you can actually follow the keynotes a
little bit. Uh but they're all very sad.
They're dures and most of them were
written by one person most Rabbi Lazar
who's the most famous of the Jewish
lurggical poets of the early middle
ages. Rabbi Lazar
but side by side with the lamentations
and by the way in our kinos book there's
a total of 45 kinos. So he wrote around
30 of them but in truth he wrote 80
kinos meaning only a a fraction of his
total kinos or even in the book we you
know people know them from manuscripts
or or whatever it is he wrote many many
many many kinos in fact everything
everything that we have from him comes
in duplicates triplicates quadruplicates
in other words alternative versions that
some made it some didn't make it but one
of the things he did was in addition to
the kinos which are poems of
lamentations
He wrote poems of triumph and joy and
sim to be recited on tishabuff. And the
breakdown was kinos in the morning and
at min time we read
songs of joy
comfort and the like. And this was part
of his tishabove service. What happened
was that for whatever the reason it got
dropped out of the Ashkanazic ritual. So
we don't have those poems of I mean I
mean we have I mean you could find them
although it's not so easy to find them.
You can find them but they're not as
they're not part of any prayer
uh service today. Nevertheless, there
are some strange customs that indicate
that even on tishabove there is this
feeling of sim
uh it's brought down that some women had
a min
of tishabove.
Now the postkim were extremely
ambivalent about this custom. They said
wash your hair and tissue. I mean even
during the nine days you're generally
not supposed to uh bathe or shampoo nav
you're not even allowed to to wash a
finger unless it's dirty or or the like.
So the postkum said this is not a proper
minute so please do not do it. But the
postum also had a certain admiration
because it expressed the amuna shalma
that this is going to be a day of
redemption
that in the afternoon they would wash
their hair. Now there is a that is still
followed today by old shi people and
maybe some of you might have taken it up
that tish of afternoon they sweep their
house in honor of welcoming Mashiach.
Now, and that is a that is a permissible
medic. And some people actually still do
that
because they say they they want the
house to be clean for when Mashiach
comes. So that's a symbolic way of of
that type of of affirmation, you know.
Um what are the just very quickly just
for basic information what are the five
soros
that the Mishna identifies as occurring
on the 9th of A. So the first of them
all is this is when the decree of the
moraglin right the moraglin came back
after their 40-day mission on the 8th of
A they gave their reports and most of
the nation other than the women cried
and said they didn't believe in Hashem's
promise uh all night that was the night
of the night of said you have cried a
cry for no reason this day shall be
eternal morning and that's the raglin
Uh the second aa or the second uh the
second tragedy was the destruction of
the first basikdash by the Babylonians.
The second tragedy 4 and 90 years later
was the destruction of the second
basikdash on the same day by the Romans
490 years later. Uh the fourth tragedy
was more than 60 years later the Barba
revolt which Rabi Akiva was the
spiritual head of and when Barwa's
revolt was mercilessly crushed with
casualties that were far greater than
the basikt itself far greater and by the
way even on religious life it was far
worse because after the Romans destroyed
the temple that's an awful thing of
course it's an awful thing but they
didn't care if Jews were keeping mitzvah
They took away the bas you want to put
on and you want to learn to you want to
keep shabas we don't really care but
after the bar revolt had attitude was no
more Mr. nice guy as if he ever was a
nice guy. And all of the anti-religious
laws, no Torah learning, Rabi Yativa's
flesh being uh taken away by hooks. All
of that is not after the is after Barra
revolt. Uh so that was the fourth
tragedy and that is the fall of Betar,
the destruction of the Barok revolt. And
the fifth was Hadrien's decision to plow
Shalam in salt to destroy his fertility.
And to some degree to some degree to
this very day uh the soil is suffering
uh from that. Now I want to point out
that when Hadrien destroyed the Barba
revolt and he plowed
he also had another rule. He barred Jews
from living in Jerusalem. He turned
Jerusalem into a shrine to Jupiter.
Jupiter is the head Roman god, small G.
And the city was renamed Alia Capalina.
Capalina was a reference to Jupiter, the
city of Jupiter. And it became a pagan
city and no Jew was allowed to live in
Jerusalem for almost 200 years. Other
Roman emperors continued that. That was
the longest continuous time that Jews
were barred from Jerusalem. Much longer
than 1948 to 1967. And there are still
remnants of Elia Capatulina in the area
of the old city that's known as the
Cardo. I think now the Cardo is a
shopping kind of a shopping mall or
whatever. But that is part of the road.
The city was much lower then and that
was uh Alia Capitulina. Now, so Jews
were not and in fact the whole term
Palestine was introduced then that that
that Hadrien wanted to kind of separate
any Jewish identification
to Erit Israel. So instead of it being
called the land of Judah, Yehuda,
he named it Philistina, which means the
land of the Philistines. There were no
Philistines. They were long gone. But he
somehow resuscitated that extinct people
and he called it the land of the
Philistines and that was a psychological
device so that Jews should not feel they
have any connection to Eric Israel. They
were barred from Jerusalem. But once a
year
the Romans permitted the Jewish people
to walk around the old city the walls of
New Jerusalem to mourn the fact that the
city was taken away from them. And that
became a custom for hundreds and
hundreds of years that Jews on the ninth
of A would walk around the walls of the
old city. Now I don't know if you I
don't know if you can do it now, but you
can you can you still walk on top of the
wall? Yeah. Um I don't know if it goes
all the way around, but the men was laba
on top. I mean just even on ground level
to walk around the walls of Yusayim and
that became that became also an old Yusi
men to encircle uh the city and that
brought uh a sense of comfort and that I
mean just like when you go to the Kaiso
like people feel comforted. I mean the
truth is why do I feel comforted? The
kosul is not the bas mikdash. The kosul
is not even a wall of the basa mikdash.
It is simply the retaining wall of the
temple mount.
So I should feel comforted when I go to
the coil. I mean if anything it should
make it more bitter. That's why
halically technically you have to rip.
All right. So if you live in Jerusalem
the minute is you don't do it. But if
you're visiting from America whatever it
is you visit the hotel you're supposed
to rip a garment. Can't go to it's
Friday afternoon. Okay. There are
different ways that people try to get
out of it. The question is should you
try to get out of it? Okay. And there's
also a a a practice that people who live
in Jerusalem do not do it. But whatever
it is, but obviously the underlying
emotion is I see the coel and I'm
heartbroken.
And yet people still get comfort because
it's a remnant. So the same thing when
when the Jews in Alia capina times
walked around
the walls,
this was a bitter reminder. They weren't
even allowed to enter the city. But at
least at least they could look at the
walls and that gave them a certain
little bit of comfort as well as it
would do as it would even do even do
today. So tishabove is a complicated day
because it is a day of sadness and a day
of tragedy. It is also a day of
redemption and a day of hope. And in
many many ways, as I think Shakespeare
coined the phrase, absence makes the
heart grow foundonder.
As we remember how far we are from
Hashem,
we actually feel very close to Hashem.
There's a certain yearning that wells up
in our heart for that closeness and that
creates a beautiful closeness.
There are people who say, you might
think they're crazy, but they say that
they enjoy, I don't know if enjoy is the
right word, they enjoy tishabove more
than purim
because it's a different type of joy.
It's a it's a quiet joy. It's a
withdrawn joy. It's an introspective
joy.
It's a joy in which I look at how much I
need to do in my life to merit gula but
also how much Hashem is yearning for
that gula to take place. So it's a
different type of joy. It's not the joy
of dancing around
but it's the joy of knowing that we have
a job to do and Hashem is with us in
that job and if we do that job good
things are going to come. Good things
are going to come. So there there could
be a great simka. It's like you know
they give you a a secular a person has a
good cry
they kind of feel better they had a good
cry they got out those emotions. Tishab
is a time when you can have a good cry
and that's worth that's worth quite a
lot. That's worth quite a lot. Okay. So
I want to start off with uh an
interesting observation
from Rav Salvage.
uh he points out that the aus the
mourning that we observe for the
destruction of the temple is very
different than the mourning we observe
for private losses. Let's say a person
loses, God forbid, a relative, a father,
a mother, a child, Rahman, a spouse,
whatever, a brother, a sister. So if you
look at generally, you see that it moves
in a very definite direction. It starts
off extremely strict
and then it gets progressively more
lenient with the passage of time. So
first there's Shiva. So you don't even
leave the house. You sit on a low bench.
You don't wear shoes. And then after
Shiva, we beginsh.
In other words, the next 23 days, you go
out already, but you don't go to to
weddings. You don't buy new clothing.
And for every other relative but a
father and mother, after there's no more
morning, you're finished aftershim. For
a parent, you would go for a whole year.
But even then the morning restrictions
for the remainder of the year are more
lenient than even schloan etc. So a
moves from the from the more severe to
the less kamur till eventually you come
out of it. When we talk about the public
mourning
that we observe for the destruction of
the basa mikdash you see that we start
in an opposite direction. We start with
the three weeks.
Not too many restrictions. Don't get
haircuts.
Um don't listen to music. And even that
is really min according to strict
there's nothing that's really forbidden
during the three weeks. And in fact
manyards
don't really have anything that's also
around the three weeks. They can get
married many not all. They can get
married. They can listen to music. In
other words, there's not that much
that's forbidden. And then we get
starting tonight roeshav
where things are much stricter. Don't
get haircuts. I'm sorry, but don't don't
do laundry. Don't wash or shower. Things
get more and more severe. And then you
have the week of tishab which will start
mo shabas. The week of tishbuff is even
stronger than the nine days. It's
stricter. For example, many would say
that a sem fleshik is only the nine days
before the week of tishab not once
during the week of tish. And then we
have tishab which is stricter and then
we have tishabove itself which is the
zenith the epitome of pure mourning. So
the interesting thing is that with
private mourning we go from the kamur to
the c. With public mourning, we go from
more cow to the kamur. We're going from
down to up. We're going from A to Z.
When it comes to p well, yeah, we're
going from A to Z. Z is the highest. Uh
with private morning is the other way
around. We're going from high. I'm
sorry. Yeah. From high to low. So, Svich
explains that the reason why there's a
difference is the purpose of the morning
is actually opposite. When a person
loses a loved one, their lives are often
shattered. They don't know what to do.
They're paralyzed. They see no hope.
They're devastated.
So, one of the purposes of hilosis, one
of the purposes is to provide a system
that allows a person to grieve who's
overcome with grief and to eventually
re-enter society
and continue to live. That's a big deal.
It's a re-entry procedure. So, initially
you're devastated. You're closeted at
home and people come to you and they're
not even supposed to talk to you until
you begin to talk to them.
And hopefully the person is healed and
then they're ready to take baby steps to
enter the world a little bit at a time
during
and then after Schllo. Meaning the
reason ais goes from to kal is because
the end goal of ais is to take away some
of the grief that a person feels so they
will be able to continue with their
life. That doesn't mean you forget your
loved one. But what happens
psychologically is a form of
compartmentalization.
Meaning instead of the grief being all
consuming, all overwhelming in which
there's no room for anything else,
you have a part of your mind and a part
of your heart.
That is grieving. That's a reality of
life. But life goes on because as long
as Hashem has given us life,
we have to be positive. We have to make
something positive from it. That's why
Hashem has given us life. That's what
ais is ais and it's remarkable many
non-Jews have remarked upon this that
the Jewish rituals of Shiva shloshim
laws of ais are a remarkable
psychological procedure mechanism to
heal broken souls I'm not saying that's
the only purpose but that is one of the
purposes and that is why by the way
people who get a curtail shiva sometimes
feel very deprived you know you know the
that if somebody let's say is buried on
air of yung
Let's say
Shiva is cancelled with the onset of Yam
there is no Shiva
and people say afterwards that they felt
they didn't have the opportunity to be
healed by people coming and by sharing
memories. So what we sometimes tell them
is although it's technically a fake
Shiva is you know after YT why don't you
have a night or two nights where people
can just come you don't have to sit on a
low bench but people can come and share
memories and share stories to give what
you might call the the healing aspect of
Shiva even though it's not a mandatory
Shiva uh this is the same piece of
advice I would give too for someone who
is a g who lost a non-Jewish
Technically, if a non-Jewish parent dies
or even if you're Jewish but your father
is not Jewish, technically there is no
Shiva that needs to be sat for a
non-Jewish parent. Shiva is not a a
requirement in such a case.
Nevertheless, a child lost his father or
lost his parents and there may be a
great deal of love there as there
properly should be. So we again
recommend kind of a night or two nights
where people can come and you can share
memories. Again this goes back to the
idea that Jewish morning rituals are a
way of enabling us to re-enter
normal life and not be consumed by pain.
I remember, you know, I became a rabbi
of Vash uh in 1988 and before I even
began the job, meaning I was going to
begin in Elo before Rash and this
occurred in the summer, I believe in the
month of AB itself. So I was not I was
officially not a rabbi of a show, but
one of the members of my show who who
would become a member of my or I would
become his rabbi uh tragically lost
their 10-year-old child.
a 10-year-old boy like died suddenly.
Sometimes these things are not
explained. Now, this was a complicated
situation because the 10-year-old boy
was born from a non-Jewish spouse. In
other words, this Jewish guy had
intermarried a non-Jew, had a kid. The
kid underwent a conversion. The mother
did not. And they were divorced. They
were divorced. So there's a picture in
my mind that I still have and I have to
admit I still feel very guilty over to
this day. Here you had a whole Jewish
community coming to give the father
encouragement
strength
and the mother who is the mother of this
child and she's divorced. She's not
married to this guy and she's a guy. She
kind of came to the funeral as of course
she would come to the funeral but she
was by herself.
She was just by herself. The mother who
had lost
her 10-year-old
was by herself. Nobody was paying any
particular I mean people I mean
preuncterarily people said something but
you know nobody was really holding her.
Nobody was really holding her hand or
giving her strength and the like.
And I feel bad about it to this day. I
mean the truth is I didn't know anybody.
Again I was not even the rabbi of the
shell yet. But that picture did imprint
itself on my mind.
And one of the things it taught me is
how important Jewish morning rituals
are. That here you had a woman who lost
her son and she didn't have the benefit
of all of these rituals.
So she didn't get the
that these rituals give. Okay? We should
be grateful to Hashem for what he gave
us in the Torah. remarkable
psychological. Of course, God made the
psychology. So, God yelled or gave us
the tools to deal with it. All of this
is one side of the coin. That's mourning
over private loss. Ah, so here's Rafik's
point. When it comes to mourning over
the BA mikdash, we got the opposite
problem. How many of us are so
heartbroken that we can't go on with our
lives and we need a re-entry procedure?
That would be a new excuse to get out of
going to show whatever I sometimes tell
the guys in you know if you don't like
going to minion to get up late I'll tell
you a real great great thing to say tell
your rebi that you really wanted to get
up go to sh but you were so devastated
when you contemplated the loss of the
bas mikdash you were not able to get out
of bed
I can't do it it's too hard I walk into
sh and there's no ba mikdash I can't do
it. I said it's not likely your rebi is
going to accept that as an excuse, but
you could try it. That's not our
problem. And again, I'm including
myself. I'm not putting myself on a
pedestal. Do we mourn? Do we grieve? Do
we feel sad? Do we even know what it is
that we're supposed to be mourning
about?
You know, how do you explain music
to somebody who was born deaf?
Apparently, Helen Keller had some
understanding. It's still a mystery to
me exactly how that works. How do you
explain color
to somebody who was born blind?
The generation that experienced
the destruction of the temple,
they could appreciate it. They knew.
They knew what they lost.
But it's been so long,
so many hundreds of years, almost 2,000
years.
How do we even know? What is it that
we're missing?
Right? So, the purpose of mourning over
the beta mikdash is not to get out of
our grief
because we're not in the grief to begin
with.
The purpose of mourning over the BA
mikdash is to get into the grief in the
hope and it may not happen that by
externalized manifestations of grief
that puts us in a frame of mind where we
could feel the pain of the so that's why
says you got to move in the opposite
direction. If private mourning is to
take a devastated broken person and give
him the tools to function in ordinary
society,
the purpose of mourning rituals for the
BA mikdash is to take a complacent,
happy, welladjusted person and make them
realize how much we have lost. And
that's why it moves Rav Solivik said it
moves in the opposite in the opposite
direction. The hope would be the
externalities would somehow affect our
emotion. That doesn't always work
either. You know, far too often
we might go through the motions and it
still doesn't genu genuinely
trigger feelings with us. You know the
Gomorrah gives I'm sorry not the Gmorra
the med
gives a story
that when
one of the
Israel this was many years after the
would recount the basikt he had received
traditions he could recount hundreds of
tragedies that happened.
So the medish asks how could he recount
hundreds of tragedies? Earlier
generations that were much closer to the
only recounted 50 and he recounts
several hundred. So the Gmorrah says
here's the difference. The generations
who experienced the or were closer to
the
were so devastated by these tragedies
that they broke down after 50. They
couldn't go on anymore.
as opposed to of Yokohan, he was distant
enough that he could talk about all the
tragedies. Again, I mean, in our modern
times, you can actually see this with
Holocaust, Holocaust. Those of you that
have um family members, whether it's
parents, grandparents, uncles, great
uncles, aunts, whatever it will be, who
went through the Holocaust, you know,
it's it's for some that Holocaust
survivors very rarely for many, many
years did not want to talk about what
they went through. later, sometimes in
later years, they were willing to talk
more about it. But for many years, I
mean, the typical story of a kid who was
raised by Holocaust survivors is my
parents never talked about it because if
they started talking about it, they
couldn't go on. They couldn't go on. But
we can talk about, you know, what
happened in Ashwitz and what happened in
Trebinka and you know, you know, we're
horrified by it to be sure, but we can
talk about it. you know, we're not going
to break down because it didn't happen
to us and we're distant from it and
although we feel of course we feel the
pain but it's going to be attenuated. So
the so the med says that's exactly the
way it was for the and that is the
generations that were close to the they
couldn't even speak about the sufferings
of the those who were further away were
able to speak about it but they still
cried. we I would have to say are a new
level where we can speak about it not
even not even cry necessarily because of
it. So that's rough solo matrix point
that the trajectory of a veas is is very
different you know um maybe it's not
something to joke about but I'll tell
you
two interesting stories that kind of
illustrate this one from either the 19th
century or the early 20th century and
one is more contemporary.
Um there were some very from German
university students at the end of the
night. They wrote memoirs I don't
remember their name but they wrote
memoirs of their experience in a German
university keeping mitzvah keeping Torah
and mitzvah and these are two roommates
two from roommates
and it was tishabove and the semester
wasn't over yet the German university
didn't really have summer vacation that
much and tish was a long hot day. There
was no air conditioning in the
dormatory, whatever it is. So the boys,
the two men uh who were kind of just 18
or 19 in those days said, "Well, we just
had a few more hours till the fast was
over, so we decided to play a game of
chess." Again, nothing particularly
sinister. So they were sitting, they're
playing chess because they're just
waiting for the fast of the nth of a to
be over. As they're playing chess,
there's a knock at their door. They
don't know who's coming to visit them on
the 9th of A. They open the door and
there's a a tall, lanky
professor of theirs, a Protestant who's
dressed all in black and he says with a
great deal of sadness on his face, he
says, "I've come to offer my condolences
on the day of your great tragedy, a day
that must be unimaginably sad for you.
and may God bless you and your people
with redemption. And the man was
virtually crying and then he went away.
So the the boy's right, we were so
ashamed. We were so ashamed because
we're playing chess and the our only
thought is we're keeping tishab. We're
keeping tishab but we just want you know
when is it going to be over? And here
you have this non-Jewish guy who really
really he was a you know he read the
Bible. He knew the Bible. He really
really understood the tragic nature of
the day. And the and the boys said or
the men said, "We learned what tishabove
was from that professor. He taught us
what tishabove really really is." A more
contemporary story. A rabbi in Queens
tells this story that uh in the few days
before Tishb um he went into a pizza
place to get milk for his family and he
sees some congregants of his show who
seem very very sad very unhappy and he
goes over to them and he says this is a
very sad time of year but we have to be
muniach
have hope.
So the congregant said to the rabbi,
"Rabbi, we're not sad about that. We're
sad." Apparently, it was during the
World Series. I'm not sure about the
timing. He says, "You know, the Yankees
lost game six, whatever it was."
So once again, the point was,
okay, that's a negotiable. Yankees not
winning. I'm not sure if my timing is
right. I may have the sports association
incorrect. Um but um I stopped watching
baseball. I tell you exactly in 1964
it was Yankees versus Cardinals in World
Series and the Yankees lost and I just
was turned off for baseball from 1964.
So I haven't really been following it
since, but I used to in those years I
actually did did follow it. So I I don't
know when the World Series is or
anything like that but the story makes
the point once again people have this
sadness over the World Series
and they don't think about the BA
mikdash. Now again I am not saying this
to be self-righteous. I'm talking to
myself as well. We just don't know what
it is. We don't know what it is.
uh you know the famous story when
Shaim
was liberated or the old city and the
temple mount was liberated in 1967
during the six- day war. So some of the
first students who were there first that
were there were the Hezer Bakim from uh
Meras from Ravuk Shashiba they were like
the first and Cook and Ravgorin you know
they kind of showed up Ravgarin took
Ravgarin was the military Rav and uh
Yehuda Cook was an older Rasha Ravk's
son and he gave special permission to
take Rav Cook all the way to the Kotel
and uh the boys and Ravgorin and and and
and uh Revuk
they were sobbing and crying and a short
distance there was a non-religious
soldier
soldier who was also sobbing and crying
so his friend said to him what are you
crying about you don't know what this is
you don't care about this you don't keep
shabas you don't keep kosher you don't
keep to what I mean these were fellow
what are you crying about and he said
I'm crying because I don't know why
they're crying
And if I don't know why they're crying,
there's something missing in my life
that I'm crying over.
So the sad news is this very very
perceptive remark
of the soldier is something that applies
to virtually all of us.
And that the suggests is a solution.
Someone said to the
what do I do? I can't cry over the
destruction of the temple.
And the answer is mameish this line cry
over your nishama
that cannot cry over the destruction of
the bish.
That's what it is. That's that's where
we at. So what is our ravodish? Is it
just to be sad? No. There is
an idea
as I said before that our mourning over
the basa mikdash is actually a process
of rebuilding the basikt.
We rebuild the basikt not by bricks and
mortar. Although some people take that
position but most say that our
obligation is not to physically build
the temple. That's the job of mashiach
or the third temple will come in. No,
that's a will the third temple be built
by man or will it come down from heaven.
But either way it's a messianic
undertaking. I know that some argue with
that. Some actually say we need to
aggressively build the base of mikdash.
But hakally that is not what the postkim
have said and they have said it is not
our job until mashiach comes to
physically build the ba mikdash. So if
it's not our job to physically build the
ba mikdash, what is our job? Our job is
to make our own hearts and souls
a dwelling place for God. Make a bikash
in your heart. And if enough of us truly
make our heart and our soul a place for
the shina then the ba mikdash will come
down. So making yourself a mishkan what
does mishkan mean? a dwelling place.
making yourself a dwelling place for
Hashem
is how you rebuild
the BA mik
right that's the uh you know it's it's
it's a beautiful niggan but these are
words that are taken from safer who was
a great makubel in the time of the but
it's a it's already a famous niggan
bilvi mishkna
that means in my heart
I will build a dwelling place for God,
right? Uh it's also a famous series of
Sariman spiritual growth
books was it's also a niggan. In fact, I
was the niggan that um my wife and I
walked down to our our mishkn
uh but the words are much older than the
niggan. words come come from the 16th
century the time of the Ariza
and that's our job our job is to build
the BA mikdash by making our heart and
soul a dwelling place for the
part of that is by correcting
the aos
that caused the destruction of the
basikash
because if the bas mikash was destroyed
because of certain causes
It cannot be rebuilt until those causes
are fixed.
Now, everyone knows the garuma. So,
actually, I'm not going to elaborate on
that too much other than to remind you
of the garamar. The garamarian yuma says
that there's a difference in the first
temple and the second temple. The first
temple was destroyed because of the
worst sins of idolatry of bodhisara
gilarayas
sexual immorality
and actual murder. These are the three
aas that you have to give up your life
before you commit and those aas were
rampant and that's what the talk about.
But the second bas
the Jewish population was largely
observant. They were from they were
keeping the mitzvah. So why was the bas
mikdash destroyed? So everyone knows the
famous observation of the garra. It was
because of the sasam the hatred
polarization
and dissension
that existed among the Jews and that
caused the destruction of the second
temple. And then the garra goes on and
makes an observation.
Hey,
come and see the first basikdesh that
was destroyed because of the worst of
aos ofim.
How long was it destroyed? For only 70
years and then it got rebuilt after the
Babylonian exile.
But the second ba mikdash that was
destroyed because of sin
still not built. It was destroyed in the
secular year between 68 and 70. Let's go
with 70. Now it's 2026
almost 2,000 years. This is
now I'm not going to talk about this
now. I I may talk about it more next
week. All I can say is you don't need a
lot of investigation
or sophistication
to detect the sinum that exists within
clo Israel at really all all levels.
I've already said many times so I I I
want to just repeat what I've said many
many times already that in some ways
this was the initial silver lining
of the tragedy of October 7. October 7
was an awful, awful tragedy for the
Jewish people, but it did have a silver
lining that for a short while it did
create a great sense of unity among the
Jewish people, religious, secular, all
the different types, we understood we
have to be together and it created a
shared community. It shared it created a
caring. If you remember before October
7, I don't know if people remember the
country was being torn apart by some
controversy involving judicial reform
which has actually resurfaced but this
and people were talking about leaving
the country. Businesses were talking
about pulling out capital
or reservists were saying they weren't
going to report to me. Now bashem when
there was a need they all reported but
who knows if that emboldened kamas if
kamas is hearing over and over again
we're not going to show up for elim
you know who knows what effect that has
even if at the end of the day people did
show up so people don't remember the
country was on the brink
not so far from even being literal of
civil war
and then comes
October 7 October 7 all of a sudden
We love each other. We care about each
other. We want to work with each other,
right? Uh we make fill in for who want
to wear fill in.
It was very beautiful in the middle of
that tragedy.
But then like an elastic band, you
stretch an elastic band and then you let
go and it kind of goes back to where it
is. Old habits die very hard and
unfortunately we're back to our sin
and without commenting on the political
issue of in the army yeshiva boys in the
army demonstrations
again this deserves a whole class of its
own more than one class of its own but
that's certainly not helping the
part of the equation and that's really
what I just want to allude to in which
there is so much hate hatred there's so
much polarization now I don't want to
say that's the only thing there is also
a lot of love there is a lot of
sacrifice we can't you know unless you
see the good in the picture you're also
looking at a distorted view there is
a lot of good there is a lot of caring
I'm not going to describe Jewish life as
an unmitigated failure in that that
would be unfair and that would be untrue
But
a lot a lot a lot needs to be done on
the sasum front. Now Mark Twain said
about the weather everybody talks about
the weather but nobody ever does
anything about it. I'll say the same
thing about and I include myself as
everybody talks about.
What are we doing about it?
Yeah. I asked myself the question, what
are we doing about it?
So that's actually not what I want to
talk about in our final moments. I want
to talk about a different thought. So
everyone knows the famous Gumar and Yuma
first temple,
second temple. We know that. But there's
another passage that's a little less
known. And this is a gamorra in Nadarim.
And the Gmorra in Masadorim
says, You know why Jerusalem was
destroyed?
Because they didn't say blessings over
the Torah.
>> They learned Torah, but they didn't
recite blessings over the Torah. Now,
this is a little peculiar. First of all,
whether or not there's a Torah
requirement to recite a blessing over
the Torah is a big mlo. Most reonim say
it's only a rabbitic obligation. The
Ramban actually says it is a Torah
obligation. But okay, it's not uh the
most strict Torah obligation. Moreover,
the problem is that it's very clear from
the Gomorrah and I I we don't have time
to go over the proofs that the Gomorrah
is talking about the first temple that
the first temple was destroyed because
they didn't say blessings over the
Torah. Is that why the first temple was
destroyed? They did a lot worse than
that. a vodor.
So why are you coming up with they
didn't make blessings over the Torah and
the Gmorra even says the prophets
couldn't figure it out. Why was you
shalam destroyed? And they couldn't
figure it out till Hashem told them it's
because they didn't make blessings over
the Torah. What do you mean they
couldn't figure it out? The Naveim are
talking about these aas all the time. So
they know.
So there's a beautiful wonderful
explanation
by Rallia Lapan who was one of the great
great great bal Muser of the 20th
century very very great man he was
nifter around uh 25 or 30 years ago may
maybe even more and rellia says the
following when the Gammor says the
prophets couldn't figure out why there
was a
and hashem had to tell them. They didn't
make the blessings over the Torah. The
prophets are not asking what sins caused
the destruction. They know what sins
cause the destruction.
They're not asking why in the sense of
what you might call proximate cause for
those who have legal background. The
proximate cause is certainly a
but they're asking a meta question. a
question beyond that. And they're
saying, "Well, wait a second here. The
Jews were learning Torah.
Shouldn't the Torah develop their
character? Should a person who learns
Torah be capable of murder, idolatry,
and incest, and adultery?" In other
words, they're not asking what sins were
committed. They know what sins were
committed, but they're asking, "How
could that be? Doesn't Torah do anything
to a person? Imagine a situation where
somebody's in yeshiva and he
conscientiously has a good morning
learning session. He learns with a lot
of husmada from 9:30 to 1. Then he has a
2-hour break. And in the two-hour break,
he goes to town and he rapes, murders,
and steals and then makes it back to
yeshiva in time for afternoon seder.
There's something wrong. There are such
people by the way. I mean books are very
rare but in the world generally as yeah
uh you would figure doesn't Torah change
a person? Doesn't Torah elevate a
person? Doesn't Torah protect a person
from these aos? That's their problem.
And the answer is they didn't say
blessings over the Torah. It's the
answer of that. Meaning it's not that
God is punishing them because they
didn't say blessings. God is punishing
them forever,
but the Torah didn't work on them
because they didn't say the blessings.
Now, why is that significant? So, do you
remember at the beginning of the book of
Malikim, the book of kings,
David is towards the end of his life and
he is shivering. He is very very cold
and he's being covered with blankets and
he gets no warmth from the blankets.
So kazal say that this was a divine
punishment because David Hamelik treated
garments
with disrespect.
What's the disrespect? That when Sha is
pursuing him to kill him before David
was king at one point Shaul went into a
cave to relieve himself and he left his
cloak at the entrance of the cave so
nobody would enter. And David snaked up
and cut off a piece of the garment. And
later when Shaul is back in the camp,
David is on a on a hill and David says
waves this piece of garment and says,
"You see how close I was to you? I could
have killed you. Why do you view me as
an enemy?"
And Shaul briefly made up with David. It
lasted around a day, but uh Sha started
crying and said, "Dove, I love you and
you, you know, etc." Okay. But Kazal say
shouldn't have done that not because it
was disrespect to show. That's so
fascinating. Gamar doesn't say it was
diseased
clothing. You don't coat clothing.
And say anyone who shows disrespect to
clothing
that clothing will not give you warmth
at the end.
Now it's interesting. It's not the same
clothing. So apparently clothes talk to
each other. In other words, uh, he cut
Shaul's cloak and the blankets didn't
give him warmth. But be it as it may,
putting aside communication.
By the way, crows communicate. Uh, you
know, uh, if you miss mistreat a crow,
he'll get his friends to kind of come
after you. Okay. But what do you see?
What do you see from that lesson? You
see from that lesson, when you don't
treat something with respect,
it doesn't help you. even inanimate
objects. Hashem made it kind of a rule
of nature. That which you disparage
does not give you help.
So says Revelia,
the same way,
if you treat clothes with a lack of
respect,
the clothing doesn't help you.
If you treat Torah with a lack of
respect,
the Torah will not elevate you. Making a
braha over Torah
symbolically means I regard it as
precious. I regard it as a gift. I
regard it as a privilege. If I don't
bother to make the braha even if I'm
learning it, I look at it like a burden
and an imposition.
So, Revelia says
is equivalent to
treat it with disrespect.
Doesn't help you.
The Torah doesn't help you. And
therefore, the Gmorra does not mean the
temple was destroyed because of the sin
of not making Torah blessings. But their
lack or their disdain for Torah meant
the Torah didn't protect them from the
worst of. So this is something to think
about in terms of our general approach
in a hashm you know a person could go
through the motions of doing the mitzvah
properly and that is a good thing. But
if their attitude is one that this is a
burden this is an imposition this is
something I'd rather not have to do but
I'll be obedient to do it. Although that
that is has positivities as well, but
the Torah is not going to elevate you
the way it's supposed to elevate you.
It's the joy and the enthusiasm and the
passion that you have in your sashem
that will enable the Torah to do its job
to do its work. So this is a as I say
this is a little bit of a less familiar
gamorra than the famous aodor
but it's also something very much to
consider. What is our avodus hashem? Do
we approach it with joy and passion and
excitement or do we look at it like a
burden and like an imposition?
you know it's like uh you know Monday
and Thursday in Schul there's a longer a
longer
>> right
so uh everybody and again I include
myself if there's a bris or there's a
and we get out of saying the long
there's always a little bit of a sense
of relief
again I include myself you know what's
going on or I remember hearing once this
is actually very sweet It it it moved me
a lot. Um an older woman had died and
her grandson I didn't know the woman uh
but the grandson gave a eulogy for his
grandmother and he said one of the
things Safa never understood is when she
would offer us food we would often say
we don't want to wash.
Now the reason people say they don't
want to wash is not because they have
gluten intolerance or they don't want to
eat bread. They don't want to wash
because they don't want to bench. I mean
that that's frankly frankly what it is
because benching is long. So Safa used
to say I don't understand why a
religious Jew wouldn't want to bench.
Why don't you want to say thank you to
Hashem for what he's given you. But this
is kind of our attitudes. We we we don't
always get joy in the mitzvos that we're
supposed to get. Now, of course, of
course, of course, better to do mitzvah
without the joy than not to do the
mitzvah. Of course, that's the case.
Right? One shouldn't say, "Oh, I don't
get joy, so I'm not going to do it." But
still, if we want the Torah to elevate
us, to purify us, to make us better
people, we have to have the enthusiasm
that we bring uh to those to those
mitzvah. Uh the Balatana brings a zohor.
The zoar says the passionate feelings of
love of hashem and reverence for God are
wings
that bring your mitzvah to shamayim.
Meaning you got to do the mitzvah no
matter what. But they don't soar and you
don't soar
without the passion and without the
excitement. In fact, tell a a story that
in the early years of when there was a
lot of debate between the and the
misnagim the bal once came into a misn
uh the sh was half empty but the baltov
says oh yay the shaw is so crowded with
Torah and mitzvos that I can't move. So
everybody in the sh thought that was a
great compliment. They said, "Oh yes,
yes, this is a place where we have so
much Torah and mitzvah." He says, "No, I
didn't mean that. I meant there's no
passion. There's no
so the mitzvah are on the ground.
They're not carried up to shayam. So
it's so crowded I can't even can't even
move around." And that's malatanya
brings from the zaw that these are the
wings that bring the mitzvah up to
heaven. So these are some things we can
think about in terms of how we can build
a basa mikdash of the heart and as we
build a bas mikdash of the heart we will
be za to have the mikdash of
come down to earth. So thank you
You see your
mother