Transcript
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My birthday
tomorrow
Okay. Hi everybody. Thank you for coming
and I hope uh uh your was uh
inspirational and joyous and hashem
we're za to accept hashem's Torah with
love and enthusiasm and uh it should
hopefully carry through uh the entire
the entire year. Uh as always uh we're
praying for the protection of ami
Israel, the lasting unity of the people
of Israel which will lead to victory and
we pray for all of those whose health
has been affected by terror. Uh rafu for
leash bas is lassur and haravana.
May they have
I also want to add uh a special braha uh
for a friend of our family uh Dvorra
Dvorra Rael Basa Gamra who is notam not
sick but is going through a very very
difficult time in many many ways and uh
I also want to dedicate the debate Torah
for her uh and aliatama
in memory of Esther Hollander's father
Navali bin Alhan Hakohain
And in memory of Evelyn Regler Regler
Kava Bas Hosa Gabriel by Leakov and
sorry Yvid Regler and a good friend of
ours for Le Yakov's mother's ninth y
site which is Tessai in so again the
dritory should be leo
nisham you know whenever the um whenever
init the second day of yum is shabas you
understand that there's going to be a
para a disconnect between Laur and Erit
Israel because last shabas
uh in Erit Israel was the day after
Shabbos. So we read the para of the week
parao and this coming week is going to
be parasal which is the third para in
however last Shabbat was the second day
of and a yumpt you never read the para
of the week. So this week in there's
going to be no they're going to be one
para behind uh for quite a while. I've
always wondered why can't you just fix
it the next week two parts but for
various reasons we're not going to fix
it till almost the end of
Bidbbor. So that does create certain
problems with travelers during this time
because you might wind up missing
missing a week. In other words, you
might go to America hear a para twice
and then you come back here there one
ahead. Uh so talk to your local rabbi
about how you manage the double para but
I'm saying this by reason of an excuse
and my excuse is that the vort I want to
share with you tonight is largely not
exclusively based on para.
So if somebody's going to say to me hey
that's that was last week's para well I
say well it's this coming week's paraets
and we uh with YouTube we have an
audience init too. So, as a result, I'm
giving myself permission to straddle a
little bit. Okay, that's kind of a
long-winded way of explaining why I
might be a little off this week. Now, I
I I do promise again that I'm not going
to do this all the time, meaning I will
try to stay with the para verit is but
this week will be maybe a little bit of
an exception, although I'll mention
something about Baloska as well. Um and
that is in paraso
uh we have the organizational details.
Oh by the way the kadish says before I
start the kadish makes a point that
paraso
is the largest para in the Torah
and he says the following. It is almost
always read the Shabbat after
as it was last week and there's so much
Torah in the air that it even gets
concretized in the number of verses in
the para it's like all of this Torah is
in the air so then it kind of condenses
into these into these pukin but in
paraso we read about the organization of
the camps
and you'll recall Well, basically, and
I'm summarizing what Rashi explains,
there are three camps
as it were, three concentric circles. In
the middle is called the Mahesh Shakina,
the camp of the divine presence.
What is it? What is Mahesh? The Mishkan
and the courtyard around the Mishkan
which contains the Msbayak, the altar.
Okay, that is called Maheshina.
Surrounding Mahina
are the Levim.
Uh, and that's called as you would
expect Mach Levia. And remember that
Shvet Levy is divided into three
subgroups because Ley had three sons,
Gearon,
Tahass,
and Marari.
And uh they had different jobs in the
assembly and reassembly
or the disassembly and the reassembly
and the transport of the Mishkan. Uh
Gearon
was in charge of what you might call the
cloth materials. The tapestries, the
skins, and they were transported on
wagons. Two wagons uh were given to
Geron to transport uh the uh the riots
and the the orot and the like. Uh then
we had Marari which did the very very
heavy lifting of the very heavy beams
and sockets and they were given four
wagons to transport. And the third group
is kahhat and kahhat were in charge of
carrying the oracodes and the shulhan
and the misbeak and the minora. But here
the Torah says they do not use the
wagons.
They have to carry it on their
shoulders. Okay. A voda bakasa because
this is so sacred that only the person
himself can handle it. Not animals and
not the wagons and the like. So around
the mishkun on three sides. One side is
gear kahas marari.
Uh and so that covered uh south, west
and north. And to the east, which is
actually the side where you enter the
Mishkan was the tents of Moshe and
Daron. Okay, so you get the idea that in
the middle is Mahina.
Uh then surrounding them is Mach Levia,
Geron, Kahas, and Marari with Moshe and
Aon being to the east. And then
surrounding Machina Levia on all four
sides is Mah Israel, the 12 tribes. And
the Torah goes into great detail. So it
is significant. You know, sometimes you
think ah what's the difference? But
obviously the Torah considered the exact
placement of the tribes to be very
important. To the uh east, in other
words, right in front of Moshe and Aaron
to the east uh is Mah Ye Yehuda.
And um right, so people think, "Oh, gee,
that's so nice. The Torah names uh names
the that Machina after the shook in."
Well, no, you know, it's the it's the
opposite idea. Mak Yehuda has three
tribes. Uh that is Yehuda is a
but Yehuda is the dominant. That's to
the east. To the south is the Mah of Ruv
which is Ruain Shimon God. Although
that's a little difficult to figure out
what is God doing there. And to the west
is Mah Ephraim which is Ephraim.
Now that actually makes sense because
those are
progyny. Ephraimas from Yose and then to
the north is Makan
which is Dan Asheri.
So again if you visualize this it's
really quite a beautiful site. You have
the Machina in the middle and it's
surrounded by the Mach of Levim and then
you have Mach Yehuda and Mak Ruven and
Machim and Mach
and this is how they camped. Now how
they traveled that's a makus in the
Gmorra really did they travel in that
same formation
or did they simply form a line
straight line so that that's a big mlo
rashi seems to indicate throughout his
commentary that they did not travel in
their formation they traveled in a line
and the line was Yehuda Ruain Ephraim
and Dun so Dun would be at the end of
the line. There was another opinion
though that they did travel in in
formation. Uh the point was it wasn't
tekker. You couldn't like say if if
you're from shitar you couldn't just say
well I like to live near my best friend
in uh shv ruin. You couldn't you were
assigned where you need where you need
to be. These are the mach of course
during the day I mean you could smoo
with somebody that wouldn't be a problem
but basically uh where you stayed was
determined by a kadesh and each tribe
had a flag each tribe had a nasi
etc. So this was a big deal and and we
talked about uh this I think before the
notion that Hashem doesn't want I'm not
going to repeat that Hashem doesn't want
the undifferentiated
homogene homogeneity of a community. He
wants every tribe to have its vibrancy
have its color have its unique nature.
This is the unity not of the melting pot
but the unity of the salad bowl. That
was we talked about last time. But today
I want to talk about something that
starts off a bit technical, but I think
there's an important message there as
well. And that is after the Torah
commands how the maka notes are set up,
it then gives us a mitzvah of expelling
tuma, expelling certain impurity from
the mah. And it mentions three
categories
of impure
people who have to be sent out of the
camps. One is a mitsura.
That's the leprosy that comes from
loshinhara. Not to be confused with the
modern illness of leprosy. One is the
mitsora. One is the zav. The zav is a
person that has gorrheal discharge
uh know sexually transmitted disease.
And the third is a tame met a person who
has come in contact with a dead body.
They must be expelled from the camps.
Again we'll explain this until they
undergo the requisite purification
process.
Now what is the requisite purification
process does depends on the tumor that
you have. In the case of mitsora uh
there's a complicated double body
shaving followed by many corbanos.
In the case of av
depending on how many discharges they
may be a corbin or maybe not. It may
just be seven days and mikvah. In the
case of a tame mace there is no corbin.
There is no carbon but there is the
sprinkling of the ashes of paradum
uh followed by going to the mikvah in
seven days. So so the Torah says you
expel from the camp people that are tame
until they undergo the requisite
purification. Now parasu does not tell
us what that purification is.
Purification rituals are mainly
described in vayikra
and uh the paraduma ritual is going to
be described in parasukas a few weeks
from now. In fact, it is interesting. I
mean, keep in mind that, and this is an
interesting literary question to think
about, the Torah presupposes
a lot of things that it hasn't yet told
us until later in the Torah. The Torah
is presupposing.
And in fact, it's not just this. In
parasala the levim are to be purified
with meatas the water of the para even
though we haven't been given a
description of that yet right so
obviously even things that are not
written down until later were already
part of the oral law refresh points out
the that this is a proof that the oral
Torah is earlier than the written Torah
because things that are written later
were obviously being observed in some
type of practice. Okay, so now things
get a little complicated and uh bear
with me a little bit and hopefully uh
we'll get to explain this. Rashi
understands based on a Gomorrah that
different levels of tame are expelled
from different camps.
Meaning the notion expel the three tim
from all of the camps is not quite
accurate. We have to differentiate
between the mitsra,
between the zav and between the tat. And
here's how it works. A mitsur is the
mostamur
of all of the tumos. So a mits is
expelled from the entire camp. Not only
from the mishkan machina,
not only from machna, but even from
machnel.
is
now that doesn't mean you can't visit
him. He's not quarantined. There's
people people sometimes say the mitsra
is quarantined.
It's not really a quarantine because
people can visit him. His wife and
family can go to him, but he lives
until the goes away and he undergoes
purification. So the mitsyra is expelled
from three camps.
The zav
is expelled from two camps. The zv is
expelled from shikina.
And if he's a ley, he's expelled from
ley for the duration. But a zv is
permitted to reside in the Israelite
camp.
Okay. Now the third category to metat is
actually the most lenient. A tame is
only expelled from the Mishkan and the
courtyard of the Mishkan. A tame is
permitted not only in Mak is
but is even permitted in Machivia. And
effect says not only is a tame met
permitted to be in Machivia, a dead body
itself can be in Machivia because the
raya is that Mosher Rabenu had custody
of the bones of Yoseph and Mosher Rabenu
lived in the Levite camp and he actually
kept the corpse of Yoseph with him.
Now this gets into an interesting halak
controversy which I I got into a little
trouble this week. But uh then the amino
rebi came and took it off my shoulders.
So they're not bothering me anymore.
Somebody bigger got involved. U you know
I I I I mentioned the idea and again I
wasn't trying to make a big statement
that somehow people take it make a big
statement with it. I talked about the
the controversy of going on the temple
mount going on the harabayat and it's no
accident that more and more people are
going on the harabayats including you
know what you call and the like and in
terms of things are greatly greatly
improved I mean there was a time in
which the police would not even let you
make a braha if you were drinking a
glass of water you had to pretend you
were reading a newspaper and they would
arrest you if you said any a word of on
amazing tragic
things have changed a tremendous amount
and that is they now have minanim and
they now have prayer services now there
are times they won't let you in if the
Arabs are doing something but but by and
large people can go to the mk shakras
every day and it's a bit unique I myself
have not gone and I I'll discuss the
issue but just in terms of the
uniqueness of the place uh that when
they bow down in the Amida instead of
just bending your knee and bowing from
the uh from the uh waist there's full
body frustration which is even more than
we do on yum kipper even on yum kipper
we may get on our knees but this is
literally stretching out the whole body
you can see on YouTube you can actually
see pictures of what that looks like so
haras has become kind of a popular issue
so let me just explain what the what the
controversy is all of us all of us today
are considered to be tame mets because
if we've ever been in a cemetery we've
come in because tame met is not only if
you touch a dead body uh just if you're
under the same roof cemetery so all of
us are tame met now for most purposes
being tame met is not a disability I can
davin I count for a minion you know I I
I I lead my life however a tame is not
allowed to go in what is called Mahina.
Now a T is allowed to go in Mach
right that's what he said but a T cannot
go into Machina. Now how do those
categories translate in the temple mount
in the desert? This is fairly simple.
Mach levia is where the leies lived.
Machina is where the Mishkan was. How
does this translate
into harabite? So the short answer is
and I'll start with
the definition of
is where the temple building called the
was located and that was surrounded by a
courtyard that is called the azara.
So for a to match to enter the area of
the azor or the heal even though the
temple is destroyed is an isisa
and the punishment is very severe. If
you did it on purpose your means death
in the hands of heaven and if you did it
inadvertently you bring a kba. So a to
me is 1,000% not allowed to enter
makina. And the problem is because we
don't have the paradum
there's no way we can be purified of
tumasm until the paraduma gets
reestablished. So even if the last time
you were in a cemetery was 50 years ago
it makes no difference. You are to until
para aduma. Now
the problem is this. The outer part of
the harabayat however
is not
it is
the kotel the kotto maravi
the western wall of the kotel is not the
wall of the basikdash that's for sure
and it's not even the wall of the temple
courtyard
which would have been an inner wall it
is a retaining all of the temple mount.
So there is no question whatsoever
that a tet is permitted to go.
Now I'm going to leave a vague term in
the outer
uh reaches of the haray because at most
that is
it is not mahina
but a tame would not be allowed to go
into the area that's mina.
So the question becomes how do you map
it out? So this is where the controversy
is a little a little uh complicated.
Many many opinions say see once you know
where the keshak dashim is the keshak
dashim is at the western end of the basa
mikdash
and once you know that we have from the
mishna the different dimensions going
east west north south in which you can
reconstruct the temple and the temple
quite all you need is one starting point
I mean the starting point could be
anything it could be the misb other
words once you have a point we're able
to measure
from that point and reconstruct
hypothetically where the basikt and the
courtyard would be situated. So many
opinions take the rule that the dome of
the rock
is the site of the kodesakashim
or it was the site of the keshak dashim
and the rock upon which the mosque is
built is the evan shia the foundation
stone which was in the kotesakashim.
Now once you make that assumption and
you then take the measurements of how
many amots in all directions, you can
reconstruct
where the heel was and you can
reconstruct where the Azor was and then
you could mark out a route where
you would be able to go even if your
tummy met. So the various religious
groups
that uh sponsor tourists to the
Harabayat are very conscientious. Uh
they have mapped out a route where
although as a tourist you know you can
go wherever you want. I mean there they
uh I mean the the government only only
prosecutes religious activity not
non-religious activity. So if you're a
tourist you can wander around but if
you're going with a group they will
specifically tell you only in this area.
So in truth, this is perfectly fine. But
there is a bit of a controversy. Some
some actually say that the Dome of the
Rock is not the Keshak Dashim. They have
a different location and that's going to
change the configuration.
Now that is a a a very very important
consideration because that would throw
off some of the routes that were
prepared because it would turn them into
the Azor. So I'm not going to give you
any practical because this depends on
the location of the kotes dashim. But
the one thing I can tell you for sure is
that the outer rim of the harabayat is
mach
and it is mutra for a m but there may be
some uncertainty when does it turn into
so there is controversy and there's a
reason to be mak but the statement that
the rabbut puts out as you enter the
harabayat entering the harabayat is
forbidden under Torah law uh is a false
statement it's it's just it's Not it's
not a true statement. Uh now now let me
point out though that even if it's true
that the outer rim of the harabayat is
machna. So a t can go in but a nida
could not go in and a man that had a
seinal emission cannot go in uh until he
goes to the mikvah and until she counts
her seven days and goes to the mikvah.
So there are still going to be
restrictions
but the fact that we're all met is not
itself a problem. So whatever I mean I I
I again I'm not going to give my sh on
the there's another point I want to make
but I I mentioned this and all of a
sudden I get sent something in orva
rabbi you know gives up uh that people
can go to the temple mount and I even
get lauded for my courage and in which
is not a it's not a f these articles are
not a favor for me you know uh because
when you get praised by one side you get
you're going to get knocked by the other
side. So it's better not to uh not to be
praised but I was praised for my moral
my exceptional moral courage. I mean it
really was very very funny because I was
not trying to make any statements. I was
probably talking to 10 people in a room
and just learning and going over this.
So I was a little worried but then I see
the next day that the said the same
thing. So now people are bothering him
and not me. So
I'm happy about happy about that. The
point that I do want but again I I I do
not retract anything. uh it is
absolutely clear that there are portions
of the Harabayat that aame is allowed to
go to but but once again I don't go
because part of it is until you
definitively identify the keshakim
you don't know how to superimpose a
model of the bas mikdash on the
harabayat and until you're able to
superimpose the model of the mikdash you
don't know where the courtyard begins
meaning we have numbers once once we
know where something is. We know how
many amounts to this and how many ammo
to that. But you got to know where
something is in order to start your
measuring. And that I think is is the
problem. So it's not the problem people
say it is. Uh but it's a different
problem. The problem is not being able
to know exactly. Now the temple mount
folks they they are absolutely certain
that Dome of the Rock is the Keshakum
and therefore all of their calculations
are based on that assumption and they
say they claim that is pushut and
undisputed
unfortunately maybe it's pushet but it
is disputed. I mean there are other
views about the keshakim and that throws
something off that doesn't invalidate
the whole route but it invalidates some
of the root. You'd have to recalibrate
the route. So I'm just thinking I mean
I'm not involved in this. I'm just
thinking uh why they couldn't devise a a
route that would take into account all
of the views because even if you take
all of the use together there will be
areas that you should you should go. So
it seems that it makes a lot more sense
to make a route that is the diver mutra
for me instead of taking a route that is
only good if you make a certain
assumption regarding the kesh judgment.
So again I don't know the details. I
don't know why they didn't do that. That
seems to be the most logical point. Uh
but there's absolutely no reason why the
outer mamm outer part of the harabay
would be would be any problem
whatsoever. Okay. On the other hand, you
know, you can also say, well, is there a
mitzvah to go there? I mean, listen, uh,
given the fact that the only reason
you're allowed to go is because it's not
the basa mikdash,
right? I'm allowed to go because it's
not the basa mikdash. So, the question
is, so why should I go? Meaning, what am
I gaining by going if it's not the basa
mikdash? That that's an interesting
question. Meaning I guess if people go
to the cotel so this is closer to the
beta mikdash that might be a spiritual
mila but you can't have it both ways
meaning some of the proponents say davin
at the sight of the basa mikdash well
wait a second if you're dabing at the
sight of the bas mikdash you wouldn't be
allowed to go you're a tame mace the
whole of going is you're not dvening on
the sight of the bas right so in a way
the advocates are kind
speaking two opposite things uh at the
same time. Okay. But the thought I I
really wanted to share with you is is
this thought and that is what is the
basis of the differentiation. The
mitsyra gets sent out of all three
camps.
The zav which includes nida as well and
seinal emission gets sent out of the
levite camp and the shrina and the tame
is even permitted in the levia and
israel and is only expelled from mahina.
Why do we have these gradations? So here
is what saddak of says a very very nice
thought. He says that all of these
sources of tuma are symptomatic of
certain character flaws. You know uh
peravo says
the world is built on three pillars.
The famous statement of Shiman Hatsadic
that the world is built on three
pillars. The pillar of Torah study, the
pillar of divine service by sacrifice
and prayer and loving kindness. And it's
a well-known idea that each of the A of
us exemplified one of these
characteristics. Aram exemplified loving
kindness and Yitzk represented prayer
and Yakov who spent 14 years in the
yeshiva of Sheaman A represented lima
Torah. But the same way that there are
three positive factors that sustain the
world. There are also three negative
factors
that destroy holiness in the world. And
this is a statement of rabbi hakapor and
that is hakina
kina is jealousy.
Vhativa
lust for hedenistic pleasure.
The desire for glory and ego
gratification.
They take a person out of the world.
They destroy his life. They destroy his
life in Habah for sure. And they destroy
his life in this world as well.
Destroy
holiness in life. Destroy the goodness
in life. When you're jealous, you don't
enjoy what you have. When you're lusting
for more and more once again you can't
see any seatbook and kavode you'll never
a person who seeks kavod will never have
enough kavod kav may be the worst of all
because you want more kav more covet
more covet so here's r saddak says each
of the three tim
represents
a physical manifestation
of these bad negative destructive midot
the mitsah Ra
represents jealousy.
The negativity of jealousy. Why is that
so? Because we know that the primary sin
for which Saras comes is lashenhara
saying negative things about people. If
we then psychoanalyze it a little bit,
what is one of the primary motivations
why we want to put people down?
Why do we enjoy
lush and horror? Part of it is jealousy.
That's why specifically we love gossip
about people who are distinguished.
Whether it's politicians, whether it's
athletes, uh whether it's rabbis or
gdole Torah, we love to pull people down
because that's a way of overcoming a
sense of inferiority that we have. as
her first points out uh if you're not
comfortable that somebody's on a higher
level than you, there are two ways you
can redress the imbalance. One is by
lifting yourself up and the other is by
tearing the other guy down and gravity
is an easier force to work with. It's
easier to drag somebody down than to
lift yourself up. So the shyish the
roots of lash andhara could be said to
be jealousy.
So saras is a surrogate for the negative
aspect of kina.
Again I'll come back and explain why
that gets expelled from everything. Now
the zav
is a garal discharge sexually
transmitted disease.
It obviously is connected to an
overabundance
of lust and tya.
So the mitsyra is expelled because of
kina.
The zav is expelled because of tya.
Now tame mace the association is a
little less obvious but here is the
idea. Originally
Adam and Kava should have lived forever.
Death came into the world because they
ate
from the eight sadas.
And Kava initially was convinced to eat
from the eight sadas through the
enticement of the snake the
what was the snake's primary selling
point. So saddak wants to say the snake
said to kaba the day you will eat from
this fruit you will be like god
in total possession of knowledge
of good and evil. The sadas was marketed
as a god pill whatever that means. Take
this and you'll be like god. So really
the appeal was not the taste and not the
smell and not the color. It was the
egotism
of wanting to be godlike. Now in truth
this is a bit of a difficulty because
human beings are made in the image of
God. We're
now that doesn't mean in a physical way
God does not have a nose or whatever.
But in terms of autonomy, intelligence,
free will, actually power to manipulate
nature.
We have many many powers that God gave
us. We can destroy things. We can build
things, destroy things, create things.
So we are godlike
and precisely because of our
intelligence and our godly qualities.
We are sometimes prone to hubris and
arrogance and ga and thinking that we
can replace God.
This is the perpetual challenge of man
going back to the well goes back to the
das and certainly the tower of babel.
We don't need god. We have technology.
Revit says the tower of babel was a
rocket. It was a launching pad for a
rocket that would go in outer space. He
writes this uh 300 years ago about
something that happened thousands of
years before that.
So death came into the world says Raf
Saddok not so much as a punishment
but as a reminder
that we are not God that God is
immortal.
We are not. And there's a an irreducible
or an unbridgegable gap a chasm
between creator
and created.
So when you come in contact with death
that is a reminder of the cavote and the
ubris and the arrogance
that brought death into the world. Now
we'll talk later about paraduma not
tonight but that's why paraduma is
ashes. Ashes is humility. That's how you
get purified from death. Okay, we'll
talk about that later. But you see Rab
Sodok's basic idea here and that is
the mitsira represents jealousy.
The zav represents tava
themes represents cavote
and therefore they are banished from the
machut.
So with this Rav Saddak then proceeds
to explain why each level of tuma is is
expelled from a different level of mak.
The mitsra is expelled from all three
camps.
And what that is teaching me is the mid
ra that the mitsay represents
is so negative and destructive and
degenerate
that it has no place at all in any part
of Jewish society. Not just the mikdash
and not just the leies even regular
life. Get it out. Jealousy is
destructive.
Again, easier said than done, of course,
but jealousy has no positive feature.
Jealousy is negative and that is why it
is expelled from all three camps. Not
only the camp of the temple, but not
only the camp of the Levim, but even the
ordinary life ordinary life of Mah
Israel. Now you might ask me well is it
is it totally true that jealousy is a
totally negative trait? There is a
famous statement in the Gmorrah that
says kinas sofim the jealousy of Torah
students
increases wisdom.
Meaning I see you learning you know an
extra hour every day. I don't want you
to be better than me. So I learn an
extra hour every day. And the Gomorrah
actually says that competition
in Torah learning can actually increase
wisdom. So how can I say that jealousy
is totally bad? But the short answer is
there are really two types of
jealousies. I mean in English we're
using the same word but there are two
very different types of feelings. If the
shot is I see you accomplishing and that
encourages me to keep on going, then
that might be a positive motivator.
But if I see you accomplishing and I
want you to fail,
there's nothing positive in that. The
jealousy which hopes that somebody fails
is totally negative. Again, we sometimes
have that even subconsciously. Uh they
say this is an issue with diets. You
know, let's imagine that you have a
group of people. They want to lose
weight and you know, most of the time
the diets don't work and they get off
the diets and etc etc etc. So they sit
and they commiscerate how difficult it
is. So let's imagine one of the group is
actually being successful.
So there's a whole dynamic. It's more
with women than men but it can happen
with men too. Uh in which the other
group will say to the woman, you are so
thin, you're emaciated, you look like a
scarecrow.
Come on, have some chocolate cake
already. I mean, you you have anorexia.
What is actually going on, and maybe
it's even a subconscious thing, is
they're jealous that somebody is
succeeding here. Come back to us, fail
like us, and then we can be friends and
enjoy each other's company. Again, this
is a foil of human nature, and I'm not
here to judge or be critical of people
who succumb to that. I mean, you know,
it's it's it's but but but spiritually
that is not a positive attribute. You
never want somebody to fail and the
jealousy that manifests in people
failing at what they're doing is so bad
that it gets expelled from all three
mut. Okay. Now we come to zav which
represents tya physical pleasure.
Now, our relationship to physical
pleasure is a bit more equivocal and
maybe a little more complex than our
relationship to jealousy.
Now, jealousy is a very hard meter, but
at least in theory, I could say jealousy
totally bad.
Yeah, easier said than done, of course,
but at least in terms of labeling
jealousy bad.
Tya is not so simple. I can't
automatically say physical indulgence is
bad.
You have to eat. You have to sleep.
There's a mitzvah to get married and
including in that mitzvah is sexual
relations.
And indeed, if you remember, the nazer
is considered to be a sinner because the
nazer is abstaining from wine.
And God says, "If I gave you a
legitimate pleasure, why are you
rejecting the pleasures that I gave
you?" So jealousy, I could say, is all
bad in theory. I can't really say
physical taiba is all bad. It has a muck
in life.
But the only thing is as you get
spiritually more sensitive you kind of
naturally distance yourself from
physical because it's like toys just
like uh you know when do you stop
playing with toys children's toys of
course some people say adults have their
own toys but so it's not like you make a
decision when you're 15 I'm not going to
play with it just you know it just
happens automatically.
So in maturation, as a person gets more
connected to Torah, to mitzvah, to
spirituality, there's automatically less
of a connection to the physical
pleasures. So it's not a self-conscious
strategy of renunciation.
It's just a natural maturation
of where you focus your priorities.
Hopefully hopefully as you get
spiritually more sensitive. So here's
what Soduk says.
The zv which represents tya
does have a place in the Israelite camp
because the Israelite camp we'll call
normal everyday life. In normal everyday
life there's eating and drinking and
sexual relations and having a nice
house. So the ZV not granted it's an
excess for sure but the idea that he
represents Tiba has a m
in mach is but as you graduate like the
ley focuses totally on a vodashem and
the mishkan which is the connection to
the you kind of graduate away from that
and that's why the z is expelled from
shina and levia but is allowed in mah
Israel. Okay. So that's kind of what
Rebuk is saying that Tya has a mcome in
life unlike kina which in theory does
not have a legitimate mcome in life
although obviously it's a difficult
meter that we struggle with but it does
not have a legitimate mum in life. Now
when we come to tame
which is the idea of kite
this is even more complex.
Not only is the tame permitted in the
Israelite camp, the tame is even
permitted in the ley camp. And what this
teaches us is the following. Covote
on one hand is a very bad mida. Right?
I'll give you a paradox.
It is bad being a balgiva, being
conceited, being arrogant, having ubris,
very very bad. In fact, the Gomorrah
says, Hashem says about the bala,
the world is not big enough for me and
him to live in this world. Agiva is
dolashina.
Agiva pushes as it were God's legs out
of the world.
Mosher Rabainu was praised of all of his
qualities as humble. managed to bring in
something from Balosra that puss in this
week's uh para and yet and yet there's a
certain paradox
that a sense of self-esteem
a sense that I matter
that I make a difference that I'm not
insignificant
is one of the most important midos
that a person can have
so cavode exists
Not only as something that is evil and
bad and negative,
it exists as something that is
absolutely necessary
for spiritual growth.
Because if I have a sense like what is
humility? Oh, I'm nothing. I'm dirt. I'm
worthless. Well, if I'm worthless, then
why would my mitzvah matter? Why would
my Torah matter? Why would my prayers
matter? Why should I do anything?
You see, that's humility coming from the
harara.
The har tells us, ah, you're no good.
You're worthless. You don't count. But
that becomes an excuse
not to do all of the good that we're
capable
of doing in the world.
So if a tom mace represents cavote,
self-esteem, pride,
not only does it belong in everyday life
of mach is,
but even in the spiritual world of the
ley,
you need it.
The only thing is once you're attached
to Hashem, the then you can throw it
away. In other words, cavote
is like the propulsion of a jet of a of
a space spaceship. Meaning, you need
this initial tremendous power to get it
out of the atmosphere. And then when
there's no gravity or zero gravity, it
can kind of go by itself. Once I'm with
God, I don't need ego.
But until
I have achieved that connection, and
maybe in this life, we don't even
achieve it. I need to have a healthy
self-esteem.
Meaning da is bad. Self-esteem is
essential.
Right? So that's the that's the very
very important idea
that there's bad cavotees
and there's good cavotees.
And this is encapsulated in the very
very famous mimer
of a very fascinating jerbi ravunim of
pashiska
who was uh the tom of the katskarbi
and rabun ra was an interesting person.
I mean part of his private life was very
interesting. He was actually a
pharmacist.
Uh and um some say for cababalistic
reasons he would sometimes frequent
frequent casinos and do gambling but but
again they there are all sorts of
cababalistic interpretations that he was
trying to gather the rashim you know so
we don't know but but again he was very
very incisive very interesting and
raunim says and a lot of people think
this is a gari it's not this is raunima
the 19th century that a person has to
have two ideas in his pockets at all
times
in one pocket
of vafer.
I am dirt and ashes.
In one pocket, the message is I am
nothing
without Hashem.
But in the other pocket you have to have
the idea
because of me
the whole universe was created. This is
now this is from the Mishna but but's
idea of putting the two ideas together
that's his point. What is Bishi?
The Mishna says, "Hashem made many cows
and many horses and many dogs and many
cats."
But he only made one man and one woman.
Why didn't he make a lot of people? Why
did he make only one man, one woman? So,
one of the reasons is, well, one reason
is nobody should say I come from a
better family than you because we all
we're all from
Noah. But there is reasonaba. But the
other reason that's given is
that each person must realize that the
whole universe was worthwhile just for
one person. Now you see that doesn't
create arrogance because the same way
that I should feel the world was created
just for me, I should feel the world was
created just for you. In other words,
that's not going to give me arrogance,
but that will show me how important and
esteemed I am
in the eyes of God. I think I don't know
if anyone's birthday is is this week,
but um Oh, okay. So, I have a nice
birthday message for you. Uh Brel said,
"Why are birthdays important?" He says
that is the day that Hashem decided that
the world could not exist without you.
That you were needed for the world.
That's a lovely a lovely thought. How
needed everybody is how important
everybody is because you understand if
you just take the modesty thing if all
you have is
then why are you going to why are you
going to get out of bed in the morning?
Why are you going to learn? why you're
going to dive in um every time you you
have some project you'd like to start
you're going to say I can't do it. So
you have to know
on the other hand if you only had
then it's arrogance and conceit. So you
have to know you have to balance you
have to carry this balance all the time.
I'm a nobody
but I'm a great nobody. there's a lot
that I can do and if I can do it I must
do it right that creates
responsibilities
that which you're able to do in the good
way you have an obligation to do in a
good way right so that's a wonderful
thing so that's why the tame mess which
is kot even has admission in the
spiritual world once you're with God you
can throw away all of that you don't
need anything you're with hashem but as
I say maybe only the greatest sadi can
achieve that level. Most people may
never get to that level, but what we can
hope to is to kind of graduate into the
Levite class of devoting our lives to
ourem. And we still need that cover. The
great Balmus, the great Mashk of the
Mirhiva in Europe, Rabim Lavitz was one
of the great great great Bal Muser. He
was a student of the altar of Kelum who
was the student of Ri Salanter. In fact,
Raulba
of Raha uh was one of the last students
of Ravim. Ravim died shortly after
Raulba came to died before World War II
in the 30s and Rev. Rula used to tell
over the story when he first came to Mir
uh an a with a beard a black beard
introduced himself to Raulba and said
how old do you think I am?
So Rovelba who's just like a teenager
said I don't know you look you look like
you're 29. So he says no I'm only two
years old. He says how can you be two
years old? He says it's been 2 years
since I met Raim
and he gave me a new life. born again
born again Jew he gave me a new he gave
me a new life and I'm so was very great
at building people
used to say the person who is not aware
of his faults
is a fool if I think I'm perfect I'm
just stupid uh obviously we have flaws
we have faults but the person who is not
aware of his greatness
is a tragic person
because he'll never have the awareness
of what he is supposed to accomplish in
the world. And that's the great tragedy.
The life not lived,
the road not taken.
I mean to some degree all of us will
will face that because none of us have
been perfect.
But the less we have to face of that,
the much better. The more that we can
live the life that we're supposed to
live and be the people we're supposed to
be, the better it will be. And that's
why cavote is so important. Uh they have
a story with Rebesler, another great
bomb master. Leo Destler.
Um Rebesler
came from Lithuania, but he spent many
many years in England.
uh a man of amazing energy and then his
last years were in Erit Israel.
So uh at the Leva of the Khaz the Khaz
died in Kashin I believe in 1953
and at the Khaz Leva in Benbra Panovich
is in Benra. So the holy yeshiva went to
Levaya. So there was a bakr who was
crying
at the cemetery for the loss of the
kazinish.
Saves went over to the bakar and said
why are you crying
over the rav the ga and the sadik who's
buried in the ground.
He then pointed to the boy, "You should
cry over the rav the goon and the sadik
that's buried within you
because the rav the goon and the sadik
that's buried in the ground became the
rav the goon and the sadik that he was
supposed to become." But how many of us
are carrying this hidden treasure
and we never really tap into it? we
never really open it up. So the idea of
inodm
again said it perfectly. Of course there
has to be humility. Of course there has
to be a recognition that whatever we
accomplish is from
but at the same time a person has to
recognize their greatness and potential.
And that is why Saddok says the T me is
not only in Machel
but is even in Machnia which is the
world of spiritual
uh spiritual uh aspiration. You know the
idea that I mentioned before that as you
get spiritually mature your attachment
to tya kind of just lessens simply
because it's more childish. It reminds
me of a story you know one of the famous
famous gaonim in Lithuania in the time
of the vil nagon. He was a little older
than the vil nagon was the shagasar. You
may have heard of leutensburg
one of the great great great in fact the
vil nagon said that he felt the
shagasari was greater. What did he say?
He says in cabala
it's me and him and in nigla it's him
and me. I mean, he he actually
considered the Shagasari great, but you
know, who knows if that's true and
whatever. Um, but the Shagasar
uh, legend has it, this may be a legend,
that he died because the bookcase fell
upon him and all of the like broke his
back, broke his spine. And legend has it
it's because he argued on them and he
was very independent. So, he would argue
with the Rambam and argue. So, the Sarim
took their revenge. All right. This is a
story that they tell. But as he was
dying in his last moments, he asked
somebody to hold the Gomorrah over his
head and just turn the pages very
rapidly so he could learn shas
one more time before he died. Like just
really just turn the pages. So in
Lithuania they were pretty tough. You
know, the litaks are, you know, very
tough. So one of them said to him, "You
know, you're about to die. Now is the
time to do vidoy. Confess your sins.
What are you learning Gammorra now? Says
no do vidi. So the sagasar he said it's
not that I'm so righteous I didn't do
aos. He said I just didn't have time. I
was too busy with other things. So I
didn't have time for a I don't he felt I
don't have to do voy which is an
interesting idea that when you're
involved in good things so you're
involved you're not involved in bad
things you know it's not like I'm a
sadic and I'm not going to do bad things
you just fill your day with worthwhile
activities
and that fills up the time fills up the
time you know you don't have that much
time for for the other stuff and that's
the idea that uh tya is legitim it but
you become less connected to it as you
grow spiritually. So
again I apologize for uh doing paraso
uh but at least our brethren invar
brethren and sisters invar will hear
something on the para of the week. Thank
you very much.
My name
is
Oh my n