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[music]
[singing]
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[music and singing]
[singing]
>> Hey, everybody thank God for coming. Um
I always debate uh for some reason that
lately I've been getting a lot of a lot
of colds.
Uh
So, on one hand
I want to I want to teach and on the
other hand I don't want to I don't want
to give anybody anything. So, it's
always a difficult
It's always a difficult balance what to
do. So, please be mokh with me ahead of
time if God forbid I spread anything
to you. But I I I think I I mean I have
a routine cold. This uh
It's not not comfortable, but baruch
Hashem I don't think it's anything
serious.
Um as always
we are praying for the lasting unity of
Am Yisrael
which will lead to victory and for all
of those whose health has been affected
by terror.
Uh refuah shleimah for Avraham Mendel
ben Sarah Hudel
and for Chaya Nechama Malka bas Rivka
Miriam and Chaya Reitza bas Chava Sarah,
Yisrael ben Adina by Brandy and Jeffrey
Gissal who's been a very very good
friend of me and YU in general.
Uh everyone should have a refuah
shleimah.
Aliyat neshama Avraham ben Sender by
Fran Hissler, also a friend from
Maryland with the following message.
Uh Fran's beloved father whose 24th
yahrtzeit is 22 Tevet
uh 5762
and his uncle Binyamin
ben Avraham who along with his wife
uh Suri Wachter and children Rivka,
Avraham Yosef, and Gittel Miriam were
killed in the
in the Holocaust.
And again Hashem yinkom uh damam.
[snorts]
And uh leilui nishmat
uh David
J. Ben Noach, father of Naomi Goldberg.
Uh finally the Weintraub and the Lowy
families are helping dedicate this class
for the refuah shleimah of Rabbi Achia
ben Simcha, a very great teacher and
inspiration to many and most worthy of
zechut avot and specifically the zechut
of the revered Rabbi Yitzchak Deloya uh
who was the 16th century av bet din of
Marrakesh. That's in in Morocco.
Uh
Again, he Chaki Chaki is a very very
well-known
and the chashuv rav going back to that
time.
And uh a dedication
in memory of Harav
Eliyahu Yehuda ben Harav Yaakov Rabbi
Eli Schochet who was a long-time rabbi
in the Los Angeles area.
Uh great great scholar. Uh he actually
wrote a number of of interesting books.
One was a book about the Vilna Gaon and
the Hasidic movement
which was quite interesting. And the
other, a little bit controversial was a
very
biography of Rabbi Saul Lieberman of the
Jewish Theological Seminary. I I don't
think I have time to go into that. Uh
Rabbi Lieberman was a big big talmid
chacham who had learned in Slabodka
the great European yeshivas.
But for various reasons, although he
remained He was the Chazon Ish's cousin.
Uh and he corresponded with the Chazon
Ish quite a lot. And although he
remained religious all of his life, but
his whole professional career
was in the Jewish Theological Seminary.
So, you can imagine that Rabbi Lieberman
is a bit of a controversial
uh person. Uh and uh Rabbi Schochet
wrote a very very ex- yet together with
another uh with a collaborator wrote a
very very excellent uh biography of
Rabbi Saul Lieberman. So, he's a chashuv
baruch and uh
his grandson uh is an attorney in Los
Angeles, but he was a long-time talmid
of Or Sameach and baruch Hashem also
someone
I'm uh very close to.
Uh finally an anonymous contribution
was made for the nitzachon of all of our
chayalim Hashem's protection for all of
Klal Yisrael and for the geulah shleimah
uh soon. Amen.
You know, what can I say? I mean, all of
us uh can see that the world is falling
apart in a million different ways. Uh
the war in Eretz Yisrael was only one
part of a thing that is spreading in
every single part of every single
system.
Uh and uh in many many ways, as Maharal
reminds us
uh before Mashiach comes we have to be
like a seed and a seed totally
disintegrates in the ground
before it begins to regenerate. So, we
have to realize that all of the systems
>> [snorts]
>> that we depend on, whether it be
science, economics, politics, whatever
it would be, the systems all fall apart.
Now, what's your reaction when all of
the convenient systems that you relied
upon fall apart?
Some people go crazy and commit suicide.
I mean, there's nothing to hold on to.
But a Jewish understanding is everything
falls apart because all you have is God
and all you need is God.
So, uh the American coin is very
instructive. In God we trust. Now, some
people interpret it to mean in God as
he's referring to the money, to the
coin. In God This is the God. But, you
know, we don't look at it that way. We
look at In God we trust as the statement
that ultimately we have to trust in
Hashem. So, precisely when we're most
helpless and most vulnerable and there's
like nothing we can really do to fix
things
that's when we're ready for geulah
because that's when we realize ein lanu
lehischaen ela Alavinu sheba shamayim.
We have no one to rely upon except
Hakadosh Baruch Hu and that's a very
important lesson.
And sometimes we learn that lesson in a
painful way. We don't learn it in an
easy way.
We learn it in a painful way, but out of
that pain comes the birth of Mashiach.
So, there there are two metaphors,
right? There is the labor pains of
Mashiach looking at geulah as a birth
process.
And then there is the seed metaphor of
the seed disintegrating. But both
metaphors kind of come out the same way.
Uh that it's going to be a difficult
time. But out of that difficulty will
come great great light and great great
redemption. So, be ezrat Hashem may we
be zocheh
>> [snorts]
>> just as we've experienced so much of the
dislocations and so much of the
difficulties, may we be zocheh to
experience the the redemption and uh and
the light of Hashem.
So,
we are beginning um the second Chumash.
It's a big thing. Uh we're leaving
Chumash Bereishit at least for now.
We're entering the world of Shemot.
>> [snorts]
>> And the Netziv in his introduction to
the book of Shemot
has a very interesting thing. He points
out
that rabbinically the rabbis gave a
nickname to every Chumash.
Uh so, uh Bereishit
is called Sefer Hayashar
the book of the upright
because it describes the lives of
Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov who are
paradigms of being upright.
The book of Shemot I'll get to in a
minute. The book of Vayikra
is called Torat Kohanim, the laws of the
Kohain because Vayikra contains
>> [snorts]
>> all of the korbanot. And by the way,
Leviticus actually means that the laws
of the Levi.
Uh we then come to Bamidbar
and that is called Chumash Hapekudim,
the Chumash of censuses, the Chumash of
counting. So, actually the English The
English name Numbers corresponds to the
rabbinic name because Bamidbar begins
with a census and it ends with a census.
And Sefer Devarim
is called Mishneh Torah
uh the same name that the Rambam later
gave to his compendium. Mishneh Torah, a
repetition of the Torah because a lot of
the book of Devarim is Moshe Rabbeinu
reviewing
>> [snorts]
>> with different additions and
augmentations, mitzvot that were given
earlier and history that was uh that had
occurred earlier. Right? So, we have
Sefer Hayashar, we have Torat Kohanim,
we have Chumash Hapekudim, we have
Mishneh Torah.
What is the name of the book of Shemot?
So, the Bahag, the Baal Halachot Gedolot
is one of the Gaonim who says, "Ah, the
name of Shemot is Chumash Hasheni."
The second Chumash.
>> [clears throat]
>> You know, listen, you you you could have
come up with something better than that.
I mean, that that's not really uh that's
not really saying much. Chumash Hasheni?
Why why why is that How is that a
description?
So, the Netziv explains the Bahag in a
very nice way.
Chumash Hasheni doesn't mean the second
Chumash. I mean, that's obvious.
It means Bereishit part two.
In other words, this nickname is
actually teaching us
that Shemot is an integral
uh second act
of Bereishit. Because Bereishit
establishes
that God created the world.
Shemot tells us why God created the
world. There is the how
and there is the why. I walk away from
Bereishit, God is the creator. By the
way, I I don't want to get into uh
peripheral issues.
But fundamentally, although there's a
lot that we'd have to talk about to
flesh this out
that is why Judaism fundamentally
does not have much of a problem with
evolution or age of the earth or any
type of scientific cosmological theory
simply because the Chumash is not
designed to teach me
the scientific order of creation.
The primary lesson of Bereishit is that
there is a creator and there is a
creation and things are not a product of
randomness
or chaos.
>> [snorts]
>> Indeed, Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch
said at the time that Darwin's theory of
evolution was first published, The
Origin of Species, so Hirsch Rav Hirsch
was asked whether a Torah Jew could
accept the theory of evolution.
Um so Rav Hirsch gave two of two points.
Point number one is the theory is a
theory, it hasn't been proven, and by
the way, that's still true to this very
day.
But he then said,
"Even if it could be proven to a 100%
degree of certainty,
even if we were absolutely clear
that this is the way God created the
world, as long as you believe that it's
God that did it.
We can accept any type of theory because
God is infinite,
>> [snorts]
>> and God has infinite tools
in his toolbox.
So let it be evolution. Now Now granted,
you're going to have to explain
different particular verses, but you
know, there are explanations to all of
those things. But philosophically,
as long as you believe that God created
the world, how he did it, when he did
it, is even not even it's not
fundamentally important.
So Bereishit
establishes the notion
that God is creator.
But Bereishit does not yet tell you why
God created the world.
And Shemot tells us because of the role
of the Jewish people
in saying as Rashi himself brings
uh in Bereishit, but it's but this is
shown in Shemot,
that it's the creation of the Jewish
people
that is the hashlamah, that is the
completion
and the purpose and the justification
for the world that God has created. And
therefore, then the Netziv says,
"Chumash Hashani doesn't just mean
second Chumash, Chumash Hashani means
part two of Bereishit to understand that
Shemot is a continuation
of the creation
narrative." Now, in truth, however,
>> [snorts]
>> although the Bahag
uh uses Chumash Hashani, the Ramban in
his Hakdamah gives another name for
Shemot. Gives a very good name for
Shemot. He calls Shemot Sefer Hageulah,
the the book
of redemption. The book of redemption.
And he points out that [snorts] all of
Shemot
is an uphill ascent
to higher and higher levels with
unfortunately a few U-turns in the wrong
direction. We are liberated from the
slavery of Egypt.
We are then positioned to receive God's
Torah.
And then we build a tabernacle, we build
a Mishkan that brings the divine
presence
into the world and into our hearts and
souls.
It is about the creation of a Jewish
people with a purpose
and a commitment, leaving the slavery of
Egypt, which we'll talk about, and
culminating in building the Mishkan.
>> [snorts]
>> Now granted, as I say, there are some
wrong turns like the Cheit Ha'Egel,
etc., but in a sense, they are
diversions
from the path that the book of Shemot is
laying out. So So we have a machlokes.
In other words, I mean, it's not a
contradiction. The Bahag
calls Shemot
Chumash Hashani.
The Ramban calls Shemot
Sefer Hageulah.
Now there's no question
>> [snorts]
>> that Yitziat Mitzrayim, of course, this
parsha
talks about the enslavement of the
Jewish people. The truth is, Yitziat
Mitzrayim covers
either the first three or the first four
parshas of Shemot, meaning we don't
leave Mitzrayim until Parshas Bo,
and we don't have the splitting of the
Red Sea until Parshas Beshalach.
So this is a long story that will unfold
over several parshas,
but I think I can use Shemot, the first
parsha, to talk a little bit about the
central importance of the Exodus
in the formation of the Jewish
experience.
Remembering that God took us out of
Egypt,
remembering that we were slaves,
is so fundamental
>> [snorts]
>> that not only do we have
a special mitzvah once a year
to get together and recount the story at
length,
that of course is the mitzvah of
Haggadah, and technically that is called
Sipur
Yitziat Mitzrayim, and that's an annual
mitzvah. Again, in Chutz La'Aretz, it's
for two days because of the calendrical
doubt, but it's one day, one night a
year,
you got to tell the long story.
But in point of fact, there is a mitzvah
every single day
to at least mention and remember,
verbally mention and remember
that God took us out of Egypt.
Uh it is in our tefillin, but we also
have to mention it. So thus in the
Shema,
the Shema has three paragraphs, but the
truth of the matter is, the first two
paragraphs are Shema, the third
paragraph about tzitzit
is not really part of K'riat Shema.
But one of the reasons why we say it
in the morning and at night
is because of the verse, "Ani Hashem
Elokeichem, I am the Lord your God,
asher hotzeisi etchem me'eretz
Mitzrayim, who took you out of the land
of Egypt." And if you look at your
trusty ArtScroll Siddur, you will see
there's a little asterisk that says,
"Have intention to fulfill
the Torah's commandment
to remember the Exodus."
And this is called Zechirat Yitziat
Mitzrayim. In other words, these are two
different names. The elaborate narrative
that we have Pesach night
is called Sipur Yitziat Mitzrayim.
The cursory abbreviated narrative, or
not a narrative, just a statement, that
we have morning and night
>> [snorts]
>> uh is called Zechirat Yitziat Mitzrayim,
and it's based on the pasuk, and you may
remember this from the Haggadah itself,
"L'maan tizkor et yom tzeis'cha me'eretz
Mitzrayim, you shall remember the day
that you left Egypt kol y'mei chayyecha,
all
the days of your night of your life,
rather. Uh now this is in the Haggadah,
but it's actually taken
from a Mishnah
at the [snorts] end of the first perek
of Brachot.
And again, uh the Mishnah really gives
us a machlokes that maybe people are
more familiar with from the Haggadah,
but the Haggadah got it from the
Mishnah.
The The word all the days of your life.
The word all is a superfluous word.
The Torah could have said,
"You shall remember the Exodus the days
of your life."
What is the meaning of all the days of
your life?
So we have a machlokes
>> [snorts]
>> between two rabbis, Ben Zoma
and the Sages.
Ben Zoma says,
"If it just would have said the days of
your life,
you would have thought you only have to
mention the Exodus during the day
because that's when we actually left."
So the call all the days
tells me you're even much liable to do
it at night.
Now [snorts] the Sages disagree with
that.
The Sages actually say you don't have to
do it at night.
Only in the day.
And kol is teaching me another thing,
that even when Mashiach comes
and the later redemption seems to be so
much more greater than the earlier
redemption,
so why would I bother mentioning Yitziat
Mitzrayim? I still have to mention it
even with the Mashiach. [clears throat]
So again, let's keep in mind
that
the simple meaning of this machlokes
is these are two mutually
exclusive possibilities.
If you do it at night,
you don't do it when Mashiach comes.
Now this Ben Zoma is of the opinion,
and the Gemara says this explicitly,
that we are not going to mention Yitziat
Mitzrayim
when Mashiach comes.
You see, because he's not using kol
to be marbeh y'mot ha'Mashiach. He's
using kol to be marbeh night.
>> [snorts]
>> The Chachamim, on the other hand,
who use kol
to be marbeh y'mot ha'Mashiach, they
would not do it at night. Meaning, you
either do it at night and won't do it
when Mashiach comes,
or you do it even when Mashiach comes,
but you're not going to do it at night.
And those are the two possibilities the
Gemara is setting up.
>> [snorts]
>> Now I do want to point out a little bit
of an anomaly, which I'm not going to
answer tonight,
and that is,
countless people make a big mistake
here.
And they think
that this is a machlokes about the
Seder. Now, that's impossible.
If If So Ben Zoma says you do it at
night. Okay, fine. But the Chachamim say
you don't do it at night.
So what does that mean? They didn't have
a Seder?
So So again, you have to be sure to
understand this. The machlokes between
Ben Zoma and the Chachamim
is pertaining to the mitzvah of the
whole year.
Yes, according to the Chachamim, the
whole year you only mention the Exodus
in the day,
and you don't mention the Exodus at
night.
But Leil Pesach,
the actual anniversary of the plague of
the firstborn,
everybody's modeh. In other words,
there's no machlokes. Uh in fact, one
can even ask a question,
just a question, I'm not going to answer
this either.
>> [snorts]
>> Why is this
even brought in the Haggadah at all?
Like the standard answer somebody will
give you is an incorrect answer. They'll
say, "Well, we need to establish that
you have to mention the Exodus at night
to explain why we're having a seder."
I mean, that would be the answer the
average person might say.
We're establishing why we're making a
seder at night.
That is 100% incorrect.
Because even if you follow the view that
there's no daily mitzvah of the
nighttime, only the day,
Lail Seder is 100% at night, derived
from other verses.
If that's so, I'll leave you with yet
another
question or two questions. Number one,
if the
Ben Zoma and the Hachamim is about the
daily mitzvah, and it has no relevance
to Lail Seder,
so why is it in the Haggadah?
The Haggadah is focusing on the annual
mitzvah.
Number two
is maybe the bit of an anomaly, and that
is
if the
say you don't do it at night during the
year,
it's only day and not night,
then why Lail Seder is only night and
not day?
I mean, you're you're reversing it.
At least Ben Zoma,
during the year, it's night and day,
Lail Seder it's night. Okay, at least
you're picking up something. But like
the Hachamim,
it's quite literally a reversal.
During the year,
only day and not night,
according to them,
and on Lail Pesach, only night and not
day.
Okay, question to think about. We got a
long time till Pesach.
Uh I don't want to answer it, but I just
want to bring out the point.
And uh I urge if any of you any of you
have uh children learning in yeshivas,
that they should know these things, ask
them this question, and be sure that
they can come up with the correct
answer. And that is or some answer, and
that is what is this doing in the
Haggadah? It's from a mission in
Brachot, but it has no it has no
connection to the narrative of the
Haggadah per se. Okay.
But be it as it may, uh this was a
digression. The main point here simply
is
that
Mitzrayim is so pivotal
to our identity as Jews
that we have to remember it
every single day.
And we actually pass it like Ben Zoma,
so it's every day and every every night.
Night as well.
>> [snorts]
>> Now,
on a simple level,
it's important
because that establishes God's claim
on us, so to speak. He liberated us
from slavery,
so we become the slaves of
Baruch.
What do the Ten Commandments say?
I know he has no power. [clears throat]
I am the Lord your God, and it doesn't
say who created heaven and earth.
It says I would say so.
>> [snorts]
>> I took you out from the land of
Mitzrayim,
the land of slavery.
Okay, so in the sense it establishes
God's claim over us.
He liberated us.
>> [snorts]
>> But I want to point out
another aspect of the Exodus.
And this too is in the Haggadah,
and this too is taken
from the Mishna. Actually, you have to
understand almost everything in the
Haggadah is taken from another
source.
Right, the Haggadah is an anthology. It
is a compilation
of passages from the Mishna, the Gemara,
the Midrash.
And of course, the songs are added later
from the Middle Ages. They're not even
part of the original
Haggadah anyway.
And there's a line in the Haggadah that
is taken from the Mishna.
I have a lot of them.
Let me ask that to me.
Every person must regard themselves
to you yet some in Mitzrayim
as if they themselves
were liberated from Egypt.
We're not just remembering
what Hashem did
for [snorts] our ancestors.
We are
to feel
as if Hashem himself liberated me.
I have a lot of them. Let me ask that to
me.
To you yet
who yet some in Mitzrayim.
>> [snorts]
>> Now, that's a very extreme claim.
It's one thing to say,
I'm grateful for what God did to my
ancestors,
cuz that's why I'm here. Okay.
But that's not quite the same thing as
saying it's as if I was personally
redeemed.
And yet, that's what the Haggadah says.
So, how do you understand that? How do
we understand a person must regard
himself
as if they themselves
were liberated
from Egypt. So,
the Rambam
actually makes it much easier
by the addition of one letter to the
sentence.
Hebrew and English,
not so much modern Hebrew.
Actually, modern Hebrew is a fairly
verbose language, but but but
English and English
is a very very concise
and exact language,
and sometimes a single letter changes
the whole meaning.
>> [clears throat]
>> The Rambam scares us.
>> [snorts]
>> In English and English, let me ask that
to me.
He changes the word English
to English.
He adds a hey.
What's the difference?
English would mean I have to look at
myself
as if I was taken out of Egypt.
That's a mitzvah of emotion and feeling.
How do I get there?
English
means I must demonstrate an act
as if I'm being liberated. So, that's
the ritual of reclining, four cups. So,
according to the Rambam, it's not so
difficult. I have a lot of them. Let me
ask that to me.
is a behavioral commandment, not an
emotional experience.
So, the Rambam does make it a lot
easier.
But most we show them,
their
is
I have a lot of them.
English and English.
So, how is that so?
Meaning,
even if I could achieve it, what's the
point? Because because here here's the
problem.
I was not in Egypt.
I certainly was not a slave in Egypt.
So, in what way
am I supposed to fake it? What in what
way am I supposed to imagine that I was
a slave in Egypt?
What's the point of that? Meaning, it's
not just it's hard to do.
What's the point of something that's not
true?
>> [snorts]
>> So,
one explanation is actually based on
although the Rambam doesn't need it
because of his but based on another
thought the Rambam expressed,
uh you'd have an explanation for the
English
And as the Rambam says,
>> [cough]
>> that
it is the nature of a person
that we don't have
we don't have gratitude
for things that we didn't directly
experience. So, for example,
>> [sighs]
>> a person can have a being healthy,
but they may not appreciate it until
they have
sickness,
and they get better,
and then they appreciate the gift of
health.
A person born into wealth or comfort
does not have the same appreciation
as somebody who is struggling in poverty
and got into a better situation. Even
though as the
argues,
in some ways the
should be larger. Meaning, if I was born
into comfort, I should be more grateful
to God.
That's not the way it is.
Those of you that may have parents or
grandparents
who came from persecuted environments,
either survivors of the Holocaust
or from the former Soviet Union,
or if you're surviving from Arab
countries,
and suffered a tremendous amount,
they appreciate so much being in a free
country, whether it's the United States,
and especially whether it's Israel.
>> [snorts]
>> It's the nature of a person
that we don't appreciate
the good in our lives
unless we've also experienced the
difficulties.
So, the Rambam writes
that
it is useful to harness the power of
imagination
to imagine what it is like to be a
slave.
It's similar, if I could use a modern
analogy, it's similar to what actors
called method acting.
If you know Marlon Brando and Lee
Strasberg, uh this idea of
>> [snorts]
>> putting yourself in a role.
You literally imagine that you're the
person that you're playing.
And sometimes it's even dangerous. I
mean, they say
that I I I don't know. I have no idea,
but um
there was an actor who was playing
a notorious villain, the Joker, in the
Batman movie. Heath Ledger,
and he committed suicide.
So, the says, I have no idea if it's
true, the says that he was so into
penetrating the evil of this character
that it literally took him over, and his
life became unbearable.
I mean, it's an interesting theory, and
you know, I wonder if such a thing can
in fact be so. But the Rambam does write
that the power of imagination
is very potent,
and we can use the power of imagination
to generate feelings of gratitude.
Meaning, you literally try to picture
what it's like to be a slave.
The humiliation,
the hardship, the whippings,
the lack of privacy, the lack of
autonomy, the separation of families.
And think what it would be like for you
to experience that.
And that generates gratitude. So,
according to this,
>> [snorts]
>> Haya Adam Lirot Etzmo K'ilu Yatzah
Mimitzrayim
is not a true statement. It's a false
statement,
but it's the harnessing
of the power of imagination
to generate feelings of gratitude.
Okay, so that would be one explanation
for Haya Adam Lirot. So, I mentioned the
Rambam, Maharal, it's behavioral.
And I mentioned this explanation, which
is also based on another thought of the
Rambam,
that harnessing the power of method
acting or imagination
to put yourself in the situation.
And what's the purpose?
That way you feel the gratitude you're
supposed to feel.
But there's a third explanation
that is offered by the Baal HaTanya.
A very powerful explanation, although it
does not necessarily comport
>> [snorts]
>> with the literal meaning of the
statement.
And he says,
Mitzrayim doesn't have to be Egypt.
We translated the statement,
"Each person must regard themselves
as if they were taken out of Egypt."
And the question was, "I was never in
Egypt."
So, I wasn't taken out of Egypt.
Says the Baal HaTanya,
Mitzrayim is both a country,
and it's also a certain
attitude or ideology.
Mitzrayim comes from borders,
boundaries,
blockages,
restrictions.
>> [snorts]
>> David Hamelech, when he describes
a state of utter despair,
this is from Hallel.
Min Hametzar
Karasi Kah. Metzar Mitzrayim, from the
narrow confining places
I call out to God.
Anani [clears throat] Bamerchav Kah. God
has answered me with expansiveness.
Mitzrayim.
And says the Baal HaTanya,
based on this understanding,
it makes no difference if you were in
Egypt or not in Egypt.
Every person
has their own Mitzrayim.
Every person has their blockage.
Every person has their enslaver.
And the enslaver that is within you
is much, much more powerful
than the enslaver that is outside of me.
The enslaver within me,
my arrogance,
my selfishness,
my egotism,
or my depression, my lack of
self-confidence,
my inability to have compassion for
others or for myself.
These are blockages.
These are things that prevent me from
really connecting to my neshama,
>> [cough]
>> and they prevent [clears throat] me from
becoming the person
>> [snorts]
>> that I was intended to become.
And they prevent me from fulfilling my
tafkid.
That's my Mitzrayim.
And as the saying goes, based on an old
cigarette commercial,
it's easier to take the Jew out of
Mitzrayim
than it is to take Mitzrayim
out of the Jew.
For the people who are really old, this
is an old Salem one. You can take Salem
out of the country, but you can't take
the country out of Salem. But that's
that's ancient. That's really, really
ancient. Okay.
Uh whatever. Okay, [laughter] I see some
people remember. Okay, but back with
Mitzrayim, it's a good it's a good it's
a very good thought.
So, says the Baal HaTanya,
when Hakadosh Baruch Hu
took the Jews out of Mitzrayim,
>> [cough and clears throat]
>> he puts
a spiritual force in the world
that allows each and every one of us
to latch on
to Yetziat Mitzrayim,
to become liberated
from the Mitzrayims that enslave us.
>> [snorts]
>> And the meaning
that each person must regard themselves
>> [gasps]
>> as if they were taken out of Mitzrayim
means each person
must recognize their inner Mitzrayim
and have emunah in Hashem and in
themselves
that by connecting
to the spiritual aura and power
of Yetziat Mitzrayim,
I can be liberated
from my own Mitzrayims.
Now,
in its fullest intensity,
this is what happens around Pesach time.
That's why Pesach is called
Zman
Cheiruteinu,
the season
of our freedom.
See what the Baal HaTanya is saying? Our
freedom doesn't just mean the Jewish
people were liberated from Mitzrayim.
We become liberated
from our own inner Mitzrayims. Zman
Cheiruteinu.
So, that happens during Pesach.
>> [clears throat]
>> But [snorts] these Sefarim Hakadoshim
tell us
that in a smaller degree, in a
microcosm,
when we read the parshiot of Yetziat
Mitzrayim,
that light is shining as well. Shemot,
Va'eira. As you know, uh these weeks
actually go by an abbreviation, Shemot,
Va'eira,
Bo, Beshalach, Yitro, Mishpatim. But
Shemot, Va'eira is an abbreviation,
Shemot,
Va'eira,
Bo, Beshalach,
Yitro, Mishpatim.
And the taat is Terumah, Tetzaveh,
building a Mishkan, which to some degree
is the culmination of Yetziat Mitzrayim.
The word Shemot [clears throat] itself
means wayward
children.
So, these weeks are said to be very
mesugal
for doing teshuvah in different areas of
life. Many people emphasize
I'm sorry.
Many people emphasize the laws of
niddah, the laws of tznius, but this is
a time for purification
and coming back to God. Why?
Because the light of Yetziat Mitzrayim
is here,
which allows us to be liberated
from the Mitzrayim that enslaves us.
>> [snorts]
>> So, what that means is,
when you go through the story of the
Exodus, whether in the Chumash
or whether in the Haggadah later,
there's really a double narrative that's
going on.
There is, of course, the great
historical experience
of the Jewish people being liberated by
God from Egypt,
culminating in Matan Torah and the
building of a Mishkan with the Egel as
an unfortunate side trip.
And that is the great national story of
Am Yisrael. That is the story of us as a
nation
that we have to remember every day, and
especially we pass down to our children
lovingly every year.
And of course, we don't deny that
historical narrative.
But there's another aspect to this story
that is much more private,
intimate,
idiosyncratic.
Maybe you share it, and maybe you don't
share it.
And that is the Mitzrayims that we go
through in our own lives,
which are also capable of being
liberated from
through this process.
So, there are like multiple things going
on
in the story of Yetziat Mitzrayim.
Now, people often ask, you know,
sometimes in more progressive movements,
they like to
make many things in the Torah
non-historical, but they like to make it
metaphors.
You know, the Avot are archetypes.
Yetziat Mitzrayim didn't really happen.
Right? You'll hear this.
And people will often ask the question,
"Well,
is the Torah history,
or is the Torah metaphor?"
And my answer is, "Yes."
Uh metaphor and history are not
contradictory.
We certainly believe in the historical
historicity of the Torah.
There was an Avraham, there was a
Yitzchak, there was a Yaakov.
We were slaves in Egypt, and there were
10 plagues, and there was creation of
the world.
We don't say it's a mashal, we don't say
it's a metaphor.
It happened.
But at the same time,
history itself is a metaphor
for deeper spiritual forces
>> [clears throat and snorts]
>> that are going around.
Okay? So, it is the metaphor for the
liberation
of the inner Mitzrayims
that are within every single
human being that Pesach and these
parshiot in microcosm
>> [snorts]
>> offer a means to become liberated.
Right? So, it's important to understand
this. History and metaphor are not
contradictory. History itself is a
metaphor.
I mean, this is mainstream Kabbalah, so
to speak, in which every single event is
always an archetype
of a much larger structure. I mean, that
that's exactly the way Kabbalah
approaches the entire Torah
in a metaphorical way without denying
the is
accuracy
of the events that that took place.
So now
therefore I want to take one halakhic
aspect of how the Haggadah is structured
the narrative of Mizraim and show how it
may have that double meaning.
>> [snorts]
>> Again, in order to understand this, let
me just make make the point that the
Torah does obligate
that once a year
we have an extended narrative about the
story of the Exodus. That is a mitzvah
in the Torah.
But at the same time, it's important to
know
that the Torah does not prescribe a
particular text.
Meaning as far as the Torah is concerned
you tell the story in your own words.
And it can differ from year to year.
There is no liturgical text
>> [cough]
>> that the Torah requires.
The Haggadah itself is a bit of a
mystery who who who exactly put together
the Haggadah, but the simplest
understanding is it's a product, like
much of our liturgy, of the Anshei
Knesset Haggedolah. I don't mean the
songs that came later, but the Haggadah
structure
uh they put it together.
Maybe it's even later than that.
Uh but under Torah law there was no
prescribed liturgical text.
Nevertheless, there were certain
halakhic requirements
that even if you're telling your own
story, you got to do it in a certain
way.
And the Haggadah in many ways is
reflecting those halakhic requirements.
So I want to mention one halakhic
requirement that that's very
interesting.
It says when you do the mitzvah
of recounting the Exodus, not during the
year, but Leil Pesach
you have to begin with the negative
and move to the positive. You can't just
talk about redemption.
You got to talk about the negatives.
This is called in the Mishna
>> [snorts]
>> in Arvei Psachim, this is not mentioned
in the Haggadah, but it says maskhil
bignus
you begin with the degradation and shame
um mesayem bishvach and you conclude
with praise
>> [snorts]
>> for the redemption.
Meaning you can't just do the good
stuff.
You got to start with the bad stuff.
There's actually a machlokes in the
Gemara
what bad stuff are you supposed to start
off with? One says slavery
and the other says idolatry. We were
spiritually idolaters and that's why the
Haggadah has two story lines. It has a
story line that we were slaves to
Pharaoh
and it also has a story line we were
idol worshipers.
Uh Terach was was really not what cuz
it's incorporating both both story
lines. Okay.
Now once again we can ask the question,
why is it so important to begin with the
bad?
So one answer might be exactly the
Rambam that I mentioned before, same
idea
that we only appreciate good when we
remember the bad. If we don't think
about the bad, we don't appreciate the
good.
But
that's a perfectly valid argument.
We know that from human experience.
But here is a certain problem here.
The problem is
that God gave me the bad. God told Avram
your children
are going to be enslaved
in a land that is not theirs
for 400 years
and they will be persecuted and
eventually they will leave.
So
>> [cough]
>> it's hard to say
that by remembering the bad
I'll be so grateful to God for taking me
out.
Cuz my reaction might be why did you put
me in?
Well, God says, well, I took you out 190
years earlier. You should have been
there 400 years. I took you out after
210 years. Be grateful.
Well, I mean let's imagine
somebody threw me into a jail cell.
I mean I can say it's I mean
I have
gazillion infinite
I mean that's what that was
Hamas expected somehow
that the hostages should be grateful,
grateful to the great chesed that we let
you go.
And we even gave you a bag of goodies,
whatever they gave in in those in those
bags. Where is the hakaras hatov? I mean
that's absurd. That's crazy.
So God decreed
that we would be slaves.
So how can remembering that slavery
kind of bring me to a higher level
of hakaras hatov?
Why did you put me in?
>> [snorts]
>> So as a result there's a deeper meaning
here.
The idea
of remembering the bad
isn't only a before and after
comparison. Remember the bad so you
appreciate the good.
But on a deeper level
the bad
itself
is part of God's redemption.
You see it's not that
we went through total bad stuff
so now I'm grateful for the good stuff.
But there's an understanding
>> [snorts]
>> that the slavery itself
was part of the redemption. We meaning
the following.
How do you understand freedom? I was
free
Am Yisrael was free, Bnei Yaakov were
free
we became slaves
we became liberated.
If you understood
that the consequence of liberation was
simply putting us back
to where we were
then indeed I'm not going to be
grateful.
You made me a slave and then you just
put me back to where I was in the first
place.
But if we understand
that the slavery, not just freedom
the slavery itself
created
transformations within us
gifts
realization of personality traits
and kochos
that would not have been realized
without that experience
then you understand
we are grateful not only for
the slavery but for the freedom.
We are grateful even for the slavery. So
so what does this mean practically?
Meaning I'm now making the point
maskhil bignus umesayem bishvach means
we're grateful to God not only for the
freedom, we are grateful to God that we
were slaves.
Why would I be grateful to God that we
were slaves? So I'm going to mention two
things. There are different avenues you
can talk about.
I [snorts] want to mention two
particular things.
I mentioned last week
uh the Gemara inside that
that the Jewish people after 210 years
in Egypt
>> [cough]
>> were at a very very low level.
They were in the 49th level of tumah
and had they remained even another
minute
>> [snorts]
>> they would have hit level 50.
But they had certain zechuyos
which is essentially means they didn't
assimilate.
They didn't change their language. They
didn't change their Jewish names. They
didn't change their Jewish clothing.
They didn't intermarry. Now these were
not because they were from
they were idol worshipers and they
weren't doing bris milah. You can't get
worse than that.
But they had a certain ethnic
identification as Jews.
And [snorts] although that is not the
ultimate purpose of redemption
but that's a necessary condition for
redemption.
Identification
with the Jewish people
sharing their pain
rejoicing
in their happiness.
Now
so the bottom line seems to be that the
Gemara says that even though they
reached the 49th level of tumah, they
didn't assimilate ethnically.
Question is
this seems to be contradicted
by a midrashic text
uh the Beis Halevi brings that says that
when
the tribes died
>> [cough]
>> and Yosef in particular died
so the survivors said
if we were so successful in Egypt
when we were living separately
how much more so will we be successful
if we assimilate and become like the
Egyptians.
And therefore after Yosef died
the Jewish people decided we want to be
like the Egyptians.
So God put hatred
in the hearts of Pharaoh
that the more the Jewish people wanted
to become close to Mizraim
the more they were driven away.
This was God's gift. It gave us a sense
of being different. So the Beis Halevi
simply points out, well, which is it?
On one hand you tell me we didn't
assimilate
on the other hand you tell me we did
assimilate.
Says the Beis Halevi very pashut
before slavery we were in the process of
assimilation.
As a result of the slavery we realized
we have to be different. The gift of
slavery
was
>> [snorts]
>> it made the Jew realize
that they have to be separate.
They have to be different. Now now again
uh Jews
contribute to every society they're in
unlike other groups which I I'm not
going to mention.
Uh Jews are invariably a positive
influence in society.
United States, Europe, whatever it is.
But at the same time
we have to realize that we have to be
different, we have to be separated.
As
Rav Soloveitchik pointed out
>> [snorts]
>> this is what Avraham Avinu said
to Ephron HaChiti
when he was buying the Me'aras
Hamachpelah for Sarah
so he described himself as ger
vetoshav
anochi imakhem.
I am a stranger
and a resident
among you.
Says Rav Soloveitchik,
this is the contradictory dual identity
of a Jew
in a non-Jewish world.
>> [snorts]
>> We are a resident.
We contribute.
We
try to be productive members of society.
We are a toshav.
But we also have to have a sense
of being a
You're not convert, but being stranger
in that way.
So, if we ask, going back, what is the
positivity of this?
Answer,
it made us realize
we have to be separate. This is actually
in some ways you might describe this as
the hidden blessing of anti-Semitism.
The hidden blessing of anti-Semitism is
it makes the Jew realize
that we have to have
our separateness.
Or as the mayor Shapiro once put it,
>> [snorts]
>> if a Jew doesn't make kiddush,
the will make havdalah. Havdalah
means separation. Meaning, a Jew is
supposed to sanctify his life, you don't
make kiddush, they'll make havdalah for
you.
That's one aspect.
>> [snorts]
>> But but surprisingly,
there's another aspect of slavery,
slavery, not freedom, slavery,
that actually moves in the opposite
direction.
It moves in the direction of
universalism.
The Torah says very very often,
when it talks about
protecting the convert or the the widow,
the orphan, the poor, the vulnerable,
the oppressed in society,
what is the Torah's narrative over and
over again?
Remember that you were slaves
in Mitzrayim.
Meaning,
even though
we might achieve affluence,
>> [snorts]
>> the memory of the Exodus is emblazoned
in our consciousness
to remind us to be sensitive
to those who suffer,
to those in need, to those who are
vulnerable, Jewish or non-Jewish.
Remember,
when you're sitting high and mighty in
your land,
don't forget the people
at the bottom of the totem pole,
because you were once there. And by
remembering that experience,
that generates the empathy
that gives rise to compassion.
Kind of the opposite. In other words,
the first message was
slavery teaches me got to be separate
from them.
But the second lesson is
I have to have compassion for those who
are suffering. So, as a result,
>> [snorts]
>> I mean, again, people take
wrong turns all the time, but this is
why so many Jews were involved
in the civil rights movement
both in the United States and in South
Africa,
in the apartheid.
Um this is even why this is going to be
a little controversial, so don't pillory
me. But you know, obviously the um
a lot of the Jews who, you know, call
Israel guilty of genocide, God forbid,
and and and protest,
you know, they're crazy or not informed
or or making,
you know, self-hating statements.
But I can't help but think
that there is something in that even
misplaced
compassion
that comes from an authentic Jewish
source.
We suffer
even when our enemies suffer.
We suffer. We do what we have to do
because that's for the greater need, the
greater good.
But it hurts. It hurts.
It hurts if children are getting killed.
It hurts.
Unfortunately,
in life, [snorts]
you sometimes have to make decisions
that hurt.
Sometimes a child may have to have his
leg amputated.
Does that hurt the parents?
For sure it does. It hurts the parents
probably more than it hurts the child.
But it may be necessary for the child's
survival.
>> [clears throat]
>> But you see,
if it doesn't hurt,
there is something wrong.
We're supposed to feel.
We're supposed to feel that pain.
And these are the two gifts, so to
speak, if I could use the word gifts.
>> [snorts]
>> These are the two gifts
that not yet see us Mitzrayim gave us,
not the Exodus,
but the slavery itself gave us.
One,
the imperative of not trying to just
become like the nations of the world,
>> [snorts]
[cough]
>> but to recognize
our independence.
But number two,
the commiseration and compassion
for all who suffer in the world,
because we remember what it's like. You
know, it's an amazing thing.
>> [snorts]
>> A lot of people
have what you might call narratives of
victimization, whether it's Me Too
movement, sexual abuse, emotional abuse.
You know, everybody has, not everybody,
but many people have stories.
And, you know, obviously, we need to
respect those stories and
offer whatever help we can.
This is also going to be something that
may be a little bit painful.
Uh little controversial, but I want to
say this.
Sometimes,
>> [snorts]
>> the way a person responds to trauma,
they've been traumatized,
is they build a protective shell around
themselves,
in which their whole life is devoted to
no one's ever going to hurt me again.
And sometimes that's necessary.
But the Torah is suggesting kind of a
different approach.
The Torah is saying
not to deny your victimization,
not to cover it up,
not to build a shell around you so you
no longer feel that pain,
but rather
feel the pain,
experience the pain,
but use it
as the basis for the empathy that you
have for others
who are going through that suffering,
and then your pain
gets transmuted
into a positive force
that brings light to the world. Now,
again, this is a little controversial
sometimes when people talk about these
points, they say, "Oh, you're blaming
the victim." I'm I'm not blaming the
victim. I I I don't mean that at all.
People who have suffered of course
deserve
compassion
and emotional support. That's not
what I'm negating.
But I am suggesting that there is a next
step in this. There's a next step beyond
the [snorts] pain
that is utilizing the pain
as a source of how you help others
in the world. And that is a lesson that
once again, we didn't get that from
the liberation,
we got that from the slavery.
>> [snorts]
>> And therefore, the matxil biginut
umesayem beshvach
doesn't doesn't mean
remember the bad so you'll appreciate
the good,
but the bad itself
is part of the redemptive experience.
And therefore, I make her toes to her
sham. So,
this is a lesson that applies to life.
That's why I say everything about the
Exodus is universal to our particular
Mitzrayim.
That even the negative experiences in
life
are opportunities for growth
and transformation.
Some of you might have read the book um
All for the Boss.
Uh this is the biography
of Rav Yaakov Yosef Herman,
the father of Ruchama Shain, who
authored the book Memory of Her Father.
Uh Ruchama Shain and Rebbetzin
Scheinberg were sisters. So, Rav
Scheinberg was a son-in-law
of Rav Yaakov Yosef Herman. Rav Yaakov
Yosef Herman was an interesting person.
Uh he came with his family
as a child below bar mitzvah
uh to America.
And um well, the story goes that his
family came to America. He was, I don't
have the exact numbers, but he was like
11 or 12.
And his parents couldn't make it in
America.
So, they went back. They went back to
Europe.
And they left him alone
in this country
to fend for himself. There was no child
labor laws then. This was uh
1920 or even earlier.
And they set up an arrangement
where he rented a room or half a room
for $5 a week or a month, I don't
remember.
And that was something he could manage
with his job.
And as soon as his parents left,
the landlord doubled the rent.
It became $10.
This little kid could not afford that.
So, he was evicted
Friday afternoon.
And he spent a Shabbos
in Central Park
all alone,
having only a little bag
of two rolls. He couldn't even move with
them because there was no air with them.
I mean, but basically he just was
stuck where he was.
>> [snorts]
>> And he was cold,
and he was frightened,
and he didn't really know how things
would ever get better, because it wasn't
just that one Shabbos. Like, what is he
going to do after Shabbos?
And in those days,
there was no protection
for Shabbos Shabbos workers.
So, if you worked,
you got Sunday off. Yeah, but if you
worked Monday to Friday, you didn't come
in on Saturday.
You had to find a new job on Monday.
So,
he's looking at his life. He has no
parents that with him,
no family,
no job,
no place to live.
And what's going to happen after
Shabbat?
And he prayed to Hashem that night.
He told his daughter many years later.
And the one thing he asked Hashem was
this. Listen to what he said. He was not
even by mitzvah.
>> [snorts]
>> He said,
"I have bitachon
that you are going to help me.
I have bitachon
that things will be okay.
But my prayer to you, Hashem,
is please don't let me forget
what it's like to be lonely and scared,
frightened, and poor.
So that when I become successful,
I will remember these feelings.
And they will give me the koach
to help other people
that are going through these things
because I went through them.
If I forget what that was like,
then I don't have that type of
compassion.
And if you read the book, you know
that indeed he eventually, you know, got
married, baruch Hashem, he had to have
many children.
Uh he became quite successful in the fur
business.
He lost it all in the depression. Okay,
then he came to Eretz Yisrael, but but
for a number of years,
he was very successful.
Um all the good because he was so
meticulous in halacha,
which was very, very rare at the time in
America.
When gedolim visited America, he was the
one house.
There were a few places, but this was
one of the main houses they stayed in.
But you have to know, if you read the
book,
that it wasn't just gedolim who came to
his house.
Typical Shabbos meal may have had 50, 60
people.
And many of them were not the type of
people we would enjoy
as Shabbos guests.
Many were mentally ill.
Many were aggressive. Many would scream.
If they didn't like the cholent, they
would dump it on Reb Furman's head.
Or whatever it would be.
And some of these Shabbos guests
stayed in his house for 6 months at a
time.
They kind of just moved in.
>> [snorts]
>> And somebody asked him,
"How could you take this?
How can you have these crazy people who
like take away your home?"
And he said,
"I know what they're going through.
I know what it's like.
And if you would have known what it's
like, you would you would not be angry.
Your heart would be opened
with mercy and compassion.
So, you see from a story like that
that it can sometimes be the very
darkest moments
of a person's life
that can be their greatest teachers,
>> [snorts]
>> their greatest illumination.
And that I would suggest is the inner
meaning
of why you begin with the bad.
Because the bad itself,
so to speak,
is part
of Hashem's redemption.
So, wish you all a wonderful Shabbos and
take care.
>> [snorts]
[music and singing]
[music]
[singing]
[music]
[music and singing]