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Rejuvenation: Exile as a Positive Experience?
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Eve and Rabbi Francis Nataf discuss, among other things, his newest book, Redeeming Relevance on Leviticus/Vayikra. What does it mean to be a nation of priests, and for priests to be joyful? Details are important as a means to the end- which is connecting to Hashem. Israel as a light unto the nations- a very big challenge which can be realized now that we’re home again. There’s work to do as individuals and collectively as the exiles in-gather and we each find our specialty, sometimes with a price to pay for leadership.
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[Music]
by everybody
in Harrow rejuvenation on the land of
Israel
Network it is the one beautiful day that
we're gonna have apparently this week in
Jerusalem the shows being pre-taped when
beautiful sunny day amidst all the much
appreciated rain and it's really my
honor to be sitting with Rabbi Francis
not tough and talking about his last
book in the series and we're talking
about why it's came in the middle
redeeming relevance in the Book of
Leviticus for those of you have been
listening to me for a long time so you
know that I've interviewed him before as
the other books came out so first of all
rabbi the top congratulations on
Leviticus thank you very much appreciate
it and as everybody as it or as most of
my listeners you know Leviticus is the
third book by geek rough for those of us
who speak Hebrew so you did it out of
order so can you tell us why that's
right well anybody who knows the Bible
and anybody who knows the first five
books of the Bible know that Leviticus
is the hard book so much so that a lot
of people just avoid it
in fact some my colleagues they do a
wonderful job on Genesis they get to
Exodus and they're pumped up and they're
excited and then they get to Leviticus
and they stop and they don't even get to
the next books because there's they're
stumped and stop so I had that same
syndrome and when I finished Exodus I
was slowing down and not sure what to do
when I said you know there's more than
one ways to skin a cat I'm gonna go on
and I'll get back to it and that's what
worked for me I continued on as as you
know I continued on to the next books to
numbers and to Deuteronomy and by that
time I had more going for me in terms of
understanding momentum and people
writing yeah you have to tell something
about Leviticus so it came as the end of
the series but I think the strategy
worked out well and I think there's
something to be gained from that just in
general in life when you come up to
something that's a challenge there's
there's other ways about going about it
and
you know go on to the next thing come
back to it so you know what for me so
one of the interesting things that I've
heard of bellavita Kiss is that I mean
it's got all these details and all this
like it's like boring stuff and we've
had all these stories and you know and
families and intrigue and drama that's
credible and then we get into all these
little details so one of the things that
I've heard that that I find it
interesting is that the message is that
Judaism doesn't have secrets
okay the Bible I should say more
correctly right it doesn't have secrets
and so we're going to know it's not
going to be I mean at the time that it's
written worship of God a lot of it is
like you have a few priests and they
know and just trust me and give me your
money or give me or whatever and then
I'll make it all right with God I'm like
the interlocutor with God and and what
this is saying is even in the places
that we're not going to be most of us
not being Levites
or priests not living even one of the
time there's a temple even with the high
priest is doing all by himself and the
Holy of Holies just on one day a year
yom kippur we're gonna know there's no
who who stuff here what do you feel
about that yeah it makes sense
I think the axis between priests and
Israelites is meant to be open but even
more than not keeping it a secret unless
the very basic element which you I think
you're absolutely right about what I
present my book is that the priestly
orders really a model in other words
wouldn't we tend to not be interested in
this right and not understand it but the
Torah and in the the middle book of the
Torah in Jewish tradition is called
taught Kohanim which means the the law
of the of the priests right so the
question is so if the law of the priests
let the priests read it that way you
don't have to get bored right but their
handbooks so fine you take it you know
you're in you got you got the five
credits of AP priesthood and leave the
rest of us alone right so my
understanding after working on it is
that really it's presenting a model for
what the Jewish people is all about as
you know in another book of the Torah in
Exodus the Jews are referred to as
nation of priests now sometimes that's
mentioned often times and nicer monix
and synagogues but very few people
really think about what that means if we
take that seriously as I think we should
then we have to ask what is a priest
what does he do what's what's the
meaning of a priest because Jews are
supposed to be priests
you know there's supposed to be this
class of people I mean I'm giving a very
brief on one foot definition of what how
I see the role of priests there's this
class of people it's supposed to help
other people their spirituality and
again the question is well how do you do
that many people have tried different
things as you mentioned some ancient
cults so it's you know take your money
and and going to the temple do all sorts
of hocus-pocus and and then you know the
person is somehow affected maybe but the
Jews or the Torah sees it differently
and wants to expose that whole plan as a
model for taking that one notch lower
taking the idea of priesthood bring it
down one notch lower inside K now Jews
you understand now priests are what
priests do do it yourselves and as you
guys are priests for everybody else you
see how your own priests operate pay
attention to that because you're gonna
you know it's like when you eat you have
someone you tutors someone in in a
practical art so what are you telling to
say pay careful attention because you're
gonna have to do this too and that's how
I understand the Book of Leviticus it's
not about the priests really it's about
the rest of us and it's about that
relationship that exists between the
priests and the people which is
translated into the Jews and the rest of
humanity that's the way I see it so we
shouldn't get so hung up on take the
ashes and sprinkle this and sprinkle
that and wear this this way and more on
the general idea of what it means to
bring God or spirituality and and
hopefully spirituality into our
day-to-day life so I think that's true
with a caveat I think that part of the
message is that details are important
the specific details are less important
than understanding that you're supposed
to care about little details tedious
details I think that's a message in
other words sometimes there's an over
message like an inchoate for example
Ecclesiastes one of the hardest books I
mean if you ever spent much time with
Ecclesiastes and the feeling I got from
reading is this is going around in
circles
this is extremely frustrating then I
realized that's the point that's exactly
what he's trying to communicate not just
by words but by general feeling in other
words you're supposed to that's exactly
what the author is trying to do he's
supposed to make you feel like it's not
going anywhere
the training is an integral part of
where you're going like I mean I have a
gun license for example and anybody and
other people who ever have will say to
you unless you're going to train all the
times that it's second nature when you
have to use it don't take it out so is
this what Judaism is training us to
certain behaviors so that it's right
there what seems tedious is really part
of changing us who we are so it becomes
an integral part of us yeah I would say
training and the details was when you
learn how to shoot a gun I actually I
took sigh I don't I in my duty as home
guard so I also learned how to shoot a
gun but I haven't you know God protect
us if I ever had to actually do it but
in any case you know those details
learning every step of the way
is important you know why because
there's something real going on if you
shoot the wrong way or you know that the
gun explodes you're in trouble and I
think real life is that way also so that
the metaphor you bring is actually a
really good metaphor so I think one is
the training that yeah you have to do
this over and over again and know what
you're doing but the point that I want
to make is not only is the training
important but the details every step you
know when you're operating anything all
the more so human life which is so much
more complicated than a piece of
machinery the details are important
we know that from the rest of Judaism
but I think Leviticus brings it to a
focus and I was saying that yeah where
the details seem to almost not matter
this almost confounds us by presenting
details and we say you know what
differences this animal or that animal
if the blood goes on before after and
the answer is that you may not
understand every little piece but each
piece matters and if you want to be a
priest if you want to be a priest the
nation nations then you have to take
care of details you have to be a refined
person refinement expertise comes with
being a master of something and same way
as the actual priests as a master of his
right the Jew is supposed to be a master
of spirituality and he comes that partly
by knowing details of what to do how to
live his life so it seems to me that
we've lost some of that if you know also
I do believe and I'd love to hear what
you think that there were elements that
we don't understand anymore that there
were certain hidden messages hidden
meanings both to to a lot of the things
that had to do with the temple or I was
just in sheilo
with a group this week and we were
discussing the Mishkan the tabernacle of
course the weekly portions that were in
right now or a lot of discussions about
the tabernacle that there is much more
now someone would say like oh you know
she's getting into all this weird stuff
and powers but that the stones of the of
the breastplate each stone wasn't just a
stone it had deeper meanings connected
to nature connected to God that the
animals that all those things that we
now say are all just like rituals
there's so many things in Judaism we
don't understand even like getting to
Kush roots like not eating certain foods
may not just be because they'll give you
digestive problems or you know meat and
milk together don't go down well there's
something bigger here on a level that we
don't understand even with all the
science that we know so is it possible
the Leviticus is a book of a lot of
these things that we're learning it but
we're really learning it as best as we
can superficially because some of this
knowledge of the ancient world was lost
whether it was because the physical
buildings were lost
that you know or the center that the
temple the first the tabernacle and
later on the temples or because when we
left our land we lost it like we are we
are thousands of years after when all of
this has written something did get lost
like and just I'll ask you're not
throwing a lot of questions you at once
can we get it back that's interesting
question whether we can get it back well
let me let me backtrack first the
beginning of the question the there's no
but there's no question that no matter
how good a tradition is it's never gonna
be foolproof and it's never gonna be
such so accurate that you're gonna
remember and keep every detail of
information part of that it's
interesting is because we assume a lot
of things there's a lot of things we
don't tell each other because we assume
them to be correct we assume them to be
knowledge you know I'm just thinking
about the dial phone I know if you're
old enough to remember dial phones but
you know we know what it is but we don't
think of explaining how a dial phone
works to our children because it's
obvious right everybody knows that but
you know there's a cute phone I said
cute picture I saw the other day of
someone holding up the receiver of a
dial phone up to take a picture with
because that's what a phone does right
it takes pictures so you know that
there's the in if and this is one thing
from just you know a short period of
time we're living obviously over
hundreds and thousands of years there's
all sorts of information gonna be lost
all the more so when something's not
practiced so this sacrificial Rite is
hasn't been practice for 2,000 years
basically so obviously there are going
to be things that are gonna fall away
and be less understood can we get it
back well experience will help some but
come back I don't you know it it's funny
because we have in history all sorts of
things
that are referred to as Renaissance 'iz
or what's a Renaissance Renaissance is
bringing back something that used to be
is it the same it's never the same but
one can go back to earlier periods and
bring back some of what was held before
just one thing I wanted to point out
that I think that the the most critical
thing that we've lost is not so much
knowledge but feeling I think the sense
of what it is and why it's meaningful to
give a sacrifice I think that's where
we're completely lost in the first
chapter I try to reconnect to what's the
essence of sacrifice and and again not
to focus on the details so much of their
focus on some of the details but
primarily on on the idea of sacrifice is
man's attempt to give something to God
which is really a very difficult and
profound concept in others the giving is
very connected to persons relationship
with another person and if we want to
have a close relationship with God we
model it on the best relationship we
know about which is between humans some
things transfer easily and other things
don't one of them is giving sacrifice is
an attempt to take that aspect of the
inter human relationship and transfer it
to the relationship relationship between
man and God so the relationship though
could be based this is a big thing for
me as my as my listeners know on fear or
on love I mean you could give something
to somebody because you love them and
that's why you want to show your love or
you can give it because they have some
kind of power over you which definitely
fits in where we're dealing with God and
it's like I kind of it's more of a
placating kind of thing like I and in a
lot of religions you do see that we're
you know or even like I've been to
Thailand in other places where you still
see people putting the Buddhist putting
food down next to you know the statue
now is that out of love I want to give
something they think the statues
actually eating it or if it's just like
I want to make sure that I'm okay and so
I'm gonna do that so how does Leviticus
or how does or Judaism deal with that
aspect of our relationship with God
right so the sort of buying off God is
what we don't want to have and certainly
what we try with the Torah in Judaism
tries to distance us from the idea of
you know God can be bribed that I've
given a fat enough cow that I'm okay for
the day so that not on the other hand
the Torah and Judaism in general I think
it's very realistic and it's
understanding of human personality and
it says yes there are there's an ideal
relationship with God which is based
almost exclusively on love but there's
also other aspects too even a good
relationship I heard someone say that
was a cute idea I don't remember who but
that you know fearing a spouse
ultimately comes from from love meaning
you're afraid of their reaction because
you care about their reaction and you
know the same thing applies to God that
there's a fear aspect which is in order
and appropriate and can even be part of
a healthy ideal relationship so in the
Torah in the Book of Leviticus you have
different types of sacrifices that
appropriately relate to different
situations different states of minds if
for example you have the Corbin toda
which is saying thank you God
you have sacrifices that are needed for
their free will offerings that are a
result of just wanting to give pure and
simple out of love but then you have sin
offerings and there's an idea again a
relationship I you know I made a mistake
I want to fix things up therefore I'm
gonna do something not as a bribe but as
an expression of the importance the
relationship has in my life I think
that's how we have to look at and I
think the way that it's presented in in
in Leviticus I mean I it's clear to me
that this is not because God needs it
Hashem doesn't need the sacrifice
whatever we're doing is
change us you know and that's and that's
the whole point of this that in some way
we need to be where we need to be and
these kinds of actions ultimately change
us to be the best that we can be sure
hundred percent right I mean in general
and that's the one of the questions it's
raised
god this neither house you know temple
he doesn't he sacrifices but the bottom
line is doesn't need anything on some
level yeah that makes some a very
difficult body the character personality
too for us to connect to him that's why
he creates all these avenues even the
Torah itself you know is a difficult
construction meaning that for God to
speak in any language no matter how
perfect we want to say Hebrew is and
some people you know go to extreme
levels about that it's limiting language
human speech is necessarily limiting God
limits himself in the same way as the
Jewish mystics speak about seem film
which means God contracts himself in
order to release some of the perfection
that he always constantly contains and
makes space for something less than
perfection to create the world when he
writes the toll when he speaks out the
Torah on some level by using words he is
also being involved and seems some
contracting himself to language which
again the language of Torah as beautiful
has so many possibilities we spoken
about that before and the idea of
seventy approaches in the Torah and and
they're all correct in spite of that
they're you know Khan's book about the
Dingaan Z the the essence of something
essence can't be fully comprehended in
language and that's the bottom line that
you know that we're dealing with God
making room for mankind in all sorts of
different ways well in the very
beginning of creation he speaks the
world into existence
which is like maybe the ultimate in not
the essence of it it's just like the
physical part I guess the essence was
already there maybe and these goes you
know to the more mystical discussions so
look I know that and some of my
christian listeners and whom I've met
and guided and one of the things that
they said to me when the conversation
gets very honest and open is Judaism is
just so legalistic it's just all about
do this and do that and not so much the
essence and I believe there's a bit of
truth in to anything that somebody says
I don't think I hold all the truth I
don't think Judaism holds all the truth
and I think sometimes it may be because
we didn't have the sacrifices or didn't
have the temple that we got focused on
the Torah and not on the essence meaning
the Torah was given to us to learn in
order to get closer to God and some
people got they didn't get to the end
they've started they focused they
stopped at the means and so Torah study
became study for this for the purpose of
studying Torah and what happened to
where we were supposed to go and using
it as a vessel to get close to God like
what would you say to that right and I
think I think the observation is 100
percent correct that Judaism when it
moved out of a living country and a
living people and and went into the
ghetto and was reduced to Anna's very
urban type of life divorced from nature
divorced from various types of work the
force from governing itself so it
definitely became may ceated and if that
put its mark on contemporary Judaism so
that we ended up over focusing on the
details the the ideal is that the
details are means to an end but the
point of this Book of Leviticus in the
Torah more generally is that you really
want to perfect the ends then you need
to do the details right so essentially
you know one-foot Judaism is saying yes
the the the the most important thing is
the bigger ideas
but the best way to get to the big ideas
is to figure out all the details if you
do one without the other
well you've got one without the other
you're doing something good but you're
not perfecting what you know you're not
being the best you can and again I think
the idea that we're trying to understand
in Leviticus is that yeah not everybody
has to do everything there's
specialization and priests have to do
certain things that Israelites don't and
the same division is do I understand the
difference between Jews and Gentiles
that the Jew is supposed to be that
conduit for the rest of mankind that is
able to transmit the message based on
the very specific acts and ritual that
he does which is supposed to lead to the
bigger ideas so you know ideally I hope
that were somehow moving back towards
that certainly I think conversations
like this which I have with more than
just you move us in the right direction
and I think also that the challenge when
it's positive and constructive between
Jews and Christians and Jews and Muslims
you know it's it's not that critique is
is not leveled only from Christians from
others as well as like what's with the
details I think it's positive because I
think it challenges us you know for some
Jews they they don't know what to do
with that criticism either get you know
very defensive or say oh you're right so
I'm just gonna leave the details because
you're right near those are so helpful
but I think the you know what when Jews
who are very involved in knowledgeable
and you know there are many more and
Jews like that these days
are engaged in conversations with others
of this type I think it's productive
conversation and say well you know we're
both trying to do similar things let's
see how that works together and and you
know I have this critique about what
you're doing you have this critique
about what I'm doing and let's talk
about it you know it sometimes there's
nothing there's
we can't get anywhere but many times we
can I think it's a good example so you
and I are having this conversation at
your home in Jerusalem and against all
odds
although the prophets would say it
differently we're back now we're back to
an Israel we're back as a people closing
fast on the majority at least they're an
absolute more than 50% of the Jewish
people are who people who identify as
Jewish now living in in our you know
we're back as the indigenous people back
into our homeland not somewhere else how
do you see that as affecting Judaism now
like what can we I know you're also and
I want to tell this to my students
you're also a very devoted to rabbi
Nathan Lopez cordosa someone who I was
honored to have on the show and whose
ideas about maybe certain changes that
we should be making now now that we're
back home again are very very important
to me so like where do you see that so
that's a big question first of all right
there's and I don't agree about
everything on this table kudos that he
doesn't be with himself about everything
and he's open enough to be kids who say
that was just part of his greatness
right so I think coming back to Israel
clearly creates a tremendous opportunity
to live a fully Jewish life and create a
bigger Judaism a more ambitious Judaism
that's the opportunity the idea of
Israel as a light for the nations
interestingly as an aside you know
sometimes we are in Israel say that
we're being judged unfairly because
we're judged by a double standard you
know whenever X ination you know has
refugees or has issues so they get away
with it when Israel you know smallest
thing happens and we're Oliver you know
the media people don't never seen it
true in their life read in their front
page that you know the Jews injured the
nose of someone and
so well I agree that it can really go
too far by the by the same token I
welcome that double standard because I
think that's exactly what we understand
our identity to be to be a light unto
the nations if you're gonna be a light
you have to be better than everybody
else and I think on some level it's a
backhanded compliment this double
standard expect more from the Jews again
there it's a complicated topic and some
of it comes from anti-semitism and so on
and so forth but there's there's some
truth to be taken from that so we have a
new new opportunity living back in
Israel like you said the majority the
Jews absolutely are we making use of it
I think time will tell
certainly some interesting things have
happened
rough cook who Rabbi Abraham Isaac cook
who actually lives before the creation
of the state but was really a mystic
visionary who saw what Judaism should be
one of the Jews come back to Israel and
some of the was very messianic so he had
a vision which has you know caught the
fancy of so many Jews here in Israel and
yet we fall so far short of his great
ideas that he had and it's it's sort of
a paradox that here is there was this
visionary who had these tremendous ideas
that that really spoke exactly to what
you're talking about to being that light
light to the nations of impacting of
creating something new and exciting and
and you know bringing the rivers back to
to Israel and and the end the stream of
spirituality that that comes out of Zion
and so on so forth so it's a bit of a
paradox that here was this great
visionary speaking about that before the
State of Israel he died in 1933 and
there's never been someone like that
since and there's a lot of smaller
voices with some interesting ideas you
mentioned record ozone there and there
are many others some in in in
the diasporas well rabbi sacks of
England also an interesting thinker but
yet no one has you know since this rebek
no one has taken off his his vision I
think is that this he was going to be
one of you know a forerunner of many
people that are gonna be speaking like
this and and having this type of vision
and it's true that again people speak
his ideas means his his works are
everywhere and he's obviously one of the
most famous rabbis and the influences
and all sorts of rabbis and religious
Jews and not religious Jews in Israel
be that as it may somehow it never
really took off and it's not clear that
it is taking off you know again there
are different streams there rise and
fall and and you know there was a book
that I reviewed recently by another
rabbi who made some waves who was
interesting that he was really sort of a
someone really took ruth Cook's model
and went with it further than anybody
that I know this rough cigar was
probably a near neighbor of yours and so
there was a there was a different way of
thinking a new way of thinking it's not
clear to me that that's going anywhere
fast either so as I said you know we
live within history it's hard to know
what's gonna be fifty years from now
it's hard to know it's gonna be hundreds
from now it's clear that we have a
tremendous opportunity and it's clear
that there's something going on exactly
what it is and how to what extent will
fulfill the potential that being back is
is affording us it's hard to know well I
think it's also important that for
people to realize that the Torah is not
just for religious people or people call
themselves religious right or into more
of the details shall we say it's one of
the things that we see here in Israel
and there's a whole peoplehood aspect
here and you have now people getting
interested in the text one of the nicest
things that I'll ever hear when I'm
guiding is after a day of guiding with
people who wouldn't call themselves
religious when they'll say well I'm
gonna go look at the Tanakh now because
well you're showing me today makes me
understand that there's messages in this
town off that I never thought related to
me
and ideas here that are exciting way
beyond pulling it out pulling a scroll
out on Saturday and reading it and that
kind of thing just really doesn't do it
for me I'd rather be somewhere else but
it's interesting that you mentioned a
few minutes ago that the nature aspect
of it because one of the things that I
see and again I'm privileged to be able
to go around the country is what an
agrarian people we are not just our
calendar and how it's all around the
cycle of holidays but for example Isaiah
is famous you know I shall beat my
Spears into plowshares you think about
that it's not I shall beat my Spears
into a bench and sit there and just
watch I want to work it's a plowshare
now pleasure is only gonna do it's
supposed to do if somebody's using it
right and it's a beautiful vision of
peace isn't just hanging out peace means
being able to work and no one bothers me
which isn't you know I don't think I
don't know if people listen to that and
read that and understand or even I mean
I was up on Mount cruising a mount for a
high yesterday with a group school of
girls and one of the things that wasn't
sure about by the way you're listening
to some Sunday so that's what I'm saying
this is pre-taped okay I was I would
never gosh I but but one of the things
that I was talking some of that is the
parable of your tongue you know this
like crazy story from the book of Judges
at right after get on if you guys don't
know it go look it up and the parable is
also all about nature right asking the
olive tree if it'll take over the fig
tree if it'll take over or the vine and
then say okay well you guys are stuck
with a thorn bush but all of this the
image that is being drawn here is not
just a nature image but it's the nature
of the land of Israel and you actually
cannot understand forget the message
behind the parable you can't understand
the broad strokes the picture that
they're painting if you don't understand
Israel and here we're back now and I
stood up there and I thought well for
the gazillion time Rashi and the great
commentators of the Bible didn't really
get to see this they didn't get to
understand right absolutely I think
there's that and there's the the
connections nature which which people in
the cold Eastern Europe villages and
sums I you know in fact some Jews in
in Germany and in Eastern Europe did
work the land but bias land oh yeah by
and large we were disconnected from any
land which is and two steps removed and
specifically from this land which you
know I go out and and and walk in the
forest and and orchards and wherever in
Israel and there's a specific connection
you're right every land has you know its
own images as you mentioned that they're
brought out in the Bible but these
images are relating something very real
that is beyond ideas and beyond words
you know I mentioned before you can
never get the essence of a thing but if
you don't see it and feel it and smell
it you don't even get to its external
shell as I said you're two steps removed
so certainly this allows the possibility
of coming closer to what the Jewish
tradition is all about and as you said
one of the nice things about the return
to the Land of Israel is that everybody
living in Israel and all the Jews living
in Israel have this connection with the
land of hiking going and and you know
it's it's different than the Boy Scouts
in the United States or a Sierra Club
it's part of the culture that has an
effect and people are more connected
even if they're not totally connected
here in Israel again all that being said
we're living at the beginning of this
renewal and it's hard to know words
going you know I see two steps forward
and one step back and so it's the
opposite and it's hard to know you know
yeah I'm nonprofit and one hopes that
one is living in the trajectory that's
moving way up you know if you have if
you own stocks and on the market yeah
sometimes it goes up and sometimes goes
down but you hope that the you know
ideally it should soar that's and we
live in
situation when this positive bull market
if you want and we're hoping that's just
gonna soar but but it's hard to know I
guess the the main things to do our part
you know that's what I'm trying to do in
my writing and my teaching and so on and
so forth
and I know it's what you're doing
awesome what you do do you think that
your what you do would be different if
you weren't here in Israel could you
even do this if you weren't here in
Israel I could but I wouldn't have part
of the reason I'm doing it is the way my
career evolved and it would have clearly
evolved in a different way and in the
United States was very involved in
educational administration and I was
good at it and there's there's no reason
why you know I would have thought to do
a lot of writing I wouldn't have had the
time or speaking outside to whatever
response to beliefs I had directly or
indirectly within it within a community
so I wouldn't have you know I I it's
interesting because on some level I am
positively influenced by my living here
in Israel in terms the connections the
land being a part of this renewal and
all these lovely things that we feel
that's on the one hand on the other hand
I see that people that are coming from
experience and diaspora bring a certain
wealth of tolerance and knowledge and
there's there's all sorts of things that
they bring which aren't necessarily here
with people that are born here grew up
here from a young age so you know I can
mention this in one of our talks that
exile is is definitely part of the
Jewish experience that in as much of as
being Israel's part of the experience we
spent more time outside than inside and
that's not by accident
so I think that you know just like
sadness
or challenge makes us into better people
exile and not being our home also has
its role and as it can be painful it can
be difficult we can be disconnected but
all of that is part of creating a more
rich and meaningful experience so I feel
doubly blessed and that I experienced
exile and it was in my case it was a
pleasant exile you know the United
States and even my tent in Western
Europe was was you know pleasant was you
know people for the most part and almost
everybody I met like Jews or like me at
least and you know almost never I mean a
couple cases here and there but almost
never encountered anti-semitism so you
know it's hard for me to say
I've suffered and exiled but be that as
it may you know there are issues and
there are hardships and you're running
against the current and and all that and
in spite the difficulties I'm thankful
that I experienced that because for me
personally it made me better
so like any challenge and difficulty I
don't wish it on my children but on the
other hand that's what makes the Torah
so rich makes Jewish experience so rich
is not just looking for flowers and
candy and and and living at home and lit
and taking it easy but welcoming the
difficulties that God throws our way
with the understanding that it makes us
people that are fit to be priests that
you know you when you when you join the
Marines you know the elite corps in the
army so you have to work really hard you
know it's it's not just well I'm gonna
take it easy and I think I'd rather be
in the Marines than in the army
and that's what Jewish life is about so
yes it's great being Israel and yes it's
enhanced Who I am and what I'm writing
and what I'm teaching but that's not to
say that my experience outside of Israel
hasn't also done that in very different
ways well just as the people like we
don't even get the Torah at Sinai until
we've been eggs
for hundreds of years and in a very
difficult situation so it's clear that
you know because Abraham could have
stayed a promise' Jacob then you have
your kids here in the twelve tribes and
then I don't know somewhere near Tel
Aviv we get the Torah and it's all good
there's a there's a huge message here
that it we're coming in from the Exile
and bringing this in with us into the
land and so I think this you know just
sits on all of what we're doing here but
your books your series in particular are
called redeeming relevance which is I
love alliteration so that's great but
that it's not just this book out there
that like the things that the messages
which is why I enjoy them so much
because just gets more relevant for me
all the time that there's messages here
that the Torah giving us that are not
for another time in place that were just
kind of because of tradition and
whatever we're kinda used to it just
bringing here but that what's at what
the Torah gave us is for today as well
as it was for three thousand years ago
but I think it's the way from the very
first book I pointed out that's the way
Jews have studied her all the time not
just rabbis giving this you know sermons
which are relevant but disconnected to
our text and not learning our texts and
disconnected away one of the most
beautiful things about the Jewish
tradition is you have you know really
erudite rabbis like Rashi mentioned or
enough mana DS run bond or relational
full version and up to her own time who
could have written their commentaries in
such a way that it's disconnected and no
one would read him but that wasn't the
point the point wasn't study for its own
sake the point was what this this
supposed to mean to me now and to my
congregation that's the way Jews have
always read the Torah and I think that's
the eternality of the Torah is to look
at it and say well okay so here the
stories and here the patterns here are
all these wonderful things what if
anything does it have to say to me and
you know one of the quips that I got
when I started the series or in the
middle of series is how you gonna make
Leviticus relevant right so and the
truth is it wasn't that hard
it really wasn't once you start working
on it and once you move beyond your
prejudices it's there I look for it I
mean I just came from visiting a friend
who lost her husband and he and her two
sons are priests they're cloning so she
was telling me for example and this is
one of the what's left over I suppose
from the priesthood still for today that
going to their father's funeral for her
sons was the first time and they're well
into their twenties was the first time
in their lives had ever been to a
cemetery like they had no idea what was
going on because one of the prohibitions
is for priests even until today to go
into a cemetery yeah it's interesting I
heard uh you know a cute idea
um Hasidic idea and I apologize I don't
remember who said it that the priests
well the first part is not a Hasidic
idea the first idea is that in order to
give the Priestly Blessing it has to
come from joy person instead of joy or
at least not of sadness
so priests are kept away from things
that make one sad that's the reason some
people most people in the Ashkenazi
world don't give the priestly blessings
outside of Israel except on holidays and
here in Israel everybody gives it we're
happier it's interesting you know just
uh a detail which is the embodiment of
something bigger of something that
speaks to our returns the land but the
the idea that I heard is that when you
confront death even if you can
understand it philosophically it's still
hard to connect to God it's hard to be
happy and it creates all sorts of
stumbling blocks between the person and
God and one's state of happiness which
comes from a healthy connection with God
therefore the priests are a toll it's
not your job and as everybody has as I
mentioned before special thieves you
have folks
you have to focus on and let you know
this type of mourning situation and and
connect interaction with the dead let
someone else do it and and you know I
think this is the idea of specialization
didn't come around just with the
Industrial Revolution it's something
that is innate to the human condition as
were communities we we live not as
individuals everybody has a mountain and
doing everything for himself or herself
we're here to share in our religious
experience and work together and priests
are not to be involved with that role
except very special circumstances such
as you know a father or in this case the
son should mourn for the father even if
their priest has that override so to
speak interestingly enough as I'm sure
you know but not maybe all of your
listeners is that the high priests would
not do that even if it was you know his
father or his son he would not you know
go and follow and go to the cemetery
there's a cute mission that speaks
around about how he would follow the
funeral procession for a distance right
because there was some connection but it
had to be very limited and in his case
he really had to be connected to God
almost to the exclusivity of you know
concern with with his own family see
that also like with Moses with Moshe
Rabbeinu where he has also like major
restrictions
that's right and and we see that he has
issues in terms of his family life the
the there's an illusion in the Bible
that his sons at least one of them
didn't turn out so well and and and so
on and so forth but they even without
that we see this is very and I wrote
about that in another book there's very
little connection between Moses and his
wife and his children because that
wasn't his job and as I explained why it
was important for him to get married and
have children but he wasn't
you know he was a monastic father and a
monastic husband he really had to turn
away from that and said well maybe I and
if you figured out God told them but
essentially you know it's not my role
someone else is gonna have to do this
and take care of my children and the
truth is you know nobody can be perfect
at everything and that takes its cost
and a person might say well that's
tragic how could God allow Moses not to
take care of his children but the bottom
line is you know as human beings in a
zero-sum world we can't be perfect at
everything and we always you know a
person who's real has to make hard
choices you're always cutting corners
somewhere and for some people it's gonna
be in one place and for other people
it's going to be another place and again
that's part of the Jewish tradition that
I see one of the more esoteric stories I
don't know if esoteric is the word also
that I was when I guide is pestle mija
especially when you're up new sheilo and
there's this kind of alternate altar
that's pretty much across the street or
right in the same area and and the Rashi
I believe saying that actually the
priest that is brought up to be with
mija is the grandson of Moshe that it's
written Menasha but the noon is very
small as so not to embarrass him but
this is how far his grandson falls you
know Jacob's grandsons are frying and
Menashe the room other Menasha right who
come out of Egypt with us and really
join the Jewish people we bless our
children and their names our sons and
their names let's say on Friday night
for those of us who do that in here you
know Moses as grandson is like basically
and you know an idol worshiper and and
how absolutely tragic that is but I
think that would resonate with a lot of
people listening is those priorities a
lot of a lot of leaders that we know a
lot of big leaders are not great family
men they're not great fathers or
husbands even because they are focused
on on their community and or really the
extreme because the Torah tells you to
try and have children at least that's
the biggest like Jeremiah who was so
caught up with his people as the Prophet
and so concerned rightly so as it turns
out that we're going to get exiled and
the first temple would be destroyed that
he himself doesn't
build a family right in you know it's
true in the in the secular world as well
a lot of the major philosophers never
got married
for obvious reasons you only have a
certain amount of hours in the day and
and years and and days in the year if
you want to become really great at
something it's hard to do other things
most people aren't that great and need
to focus on living a balanced life which
involves a little bit of this and a
little bit of that but there are some
people that need to choose that for
themselves in some some people are
guided by God into that role I was
thinking of the lubavitcher rebbe who
didn't got married but didn't have
children
well that that saved him a trance amount
of time means it's it's a terrible way
to look at it but on a real level you
may not have been a little bother to
read but you're saying had he had
children even though it was a personal
person listen he would have been a great
person but as great I don't know I don't
know and certainly not as available to
his to his followers it's a you know it
occurs can sometimes be a blessing and
and it's a question of how to frame and
how to understand it and you know that's
one of the difficulties of life when
we're talking about death as well as is
that we're limited in how we frame
things we don't understand why certain
things happens as sometimes we were able
to reframe things and see the blessing
in the curves by the times we're not
we're just we just see the curse that's
all we see and I think that's a matter
of faith to understand that yeah in the
same way that there are times when we do
see it that famous story about excuse me
about rebbi akiva when he has you know
he's walking on the way traveling and he
has a rooster a donkey and I have a
candle because it's good to have a
candle whatever so he wants to lodge in
a town they don't let him see us to
lodge in the forest and
you know the the in the meantime his
donkey gets eaten and and his rooster
gets eaten and even his light and it
blows away so it's like miserable right
but in the end there's brigands that
comes to town destroyed the town and
they were destroyed him as well had they
known he was around by noise the camel
out of a donkey by noise of the rooster
by light so Rubik Eve actually had a
very tragic and difficult life so what
why does the Talmud tell us that story
it's like everything is like a
sugar-coated
it's not the point the point of the
Talmud do I understand it that's of that
story of relating that story is to tell
us here's an example we can see the
blessing and the curse just realize
that's always the case and that's what
we cos receive exactly says I always say
it's for the good you know in this
particular case I actually saw it most
of the time I didn't and that's you know
especially people living in difficult
times difficult situations we all have
difficult situations that being said
again we're in a blessed time whereas
Jews living in Israel and even for all
mankind certainly economically it's a
tremendous blessing in the world in
terms of what we have to eat of what we
had available to us of all sorts of
opportunities that are available to us
mentioned communication between Jews and
Christians I know the type of
communication that's going on is such a
different more positive level than you
know we've lived together as twin
religions for you know 2,000 years and
you know most of the time wasn't so so
nice but we're living in a time that
there's tremendous blessing so you know
sometimes when I feel challenged or I
see other people being challenged I
think of how babyish we are in
comparison to the challenges that Jews
certainly but mankind more generally
faced throughout almost all of history
compared to
we're facing now you know we here in
Israel are concerned and rightly so
better security but when you you know
think about the numbers and you think
about the situation of you know how much
safer Jews are in general and in Israel
in particular today than we've almost
ever been then it I think it's an
important perspective to appreciate and
as they and people some Jews somehow
trusted God throughout all these
terrible difficulties that they had for
us to bring questions now seems you know
a little bit weak it's all a matter of
faith of even if we don't understand and
a lot of things we don't understand or
as Esther Waxman said many years ago
when her son Knox Ron was was killed she
said and people said but you prayed and
there was a whole thing at the Kotel and
thousands of people came and she said
well you still have to ask but sometimes
Hashem says no and it doesn't mean that
you don't try and connect there's a
bigger picture that we don't see that he
does and and that's what we have to go
with so rabbi friends persona tov thank
you so much if people want to get the
book of course to add to the collection
of the rest of your books they already
have or if they want to I know that you
sometimes go out on speaking engagements
and they can have you in person how do
they get in contact so you know I like
people speaking to be in person but
easiest to get my gmail account going on
a limb putting out on the radio but it's
Francis not to have fr ANC is na ta F at
Google like everybody else that I'm
sorry at gmail not like everybody else
yeah
at gmail.com and I welcome any
correspondence of any type certainly
Amazon is gonna be a place to buy books
that may not be available on Amazon
right away though the other four volumes
are you can google my name and you'll
find what's available it's available
from the publishers who again are
neighbors of yours or in public
nations which is actually based in
Jerusalem but the the director lives not
far from Eve any case I welcome
everybody to continue the conversation
with me it's the last book but the
conversation continues where do you go
from here now that you finished the five
big ones no I knew you were gonna ask
that question I want to keep
interviewing years.i you can't drop it
here for sure so I am as we speak
working on another book which is
something totally different than this
series it's about the Jewish political
tradition and what can offer to the
world in terms of breaking the impasse
between the more traditional folk and
the more liberal universalistic
progressive whatever label so I think
there's a real impasse I think that
what's been dubbed the culture wars is
something deeper and more lasting than
anything we've experienced for the last
150 200 years I think that society is
coming to a difficult situation and it
requires no answers I hope that I'll I
mean I have some answers that I don't
know if they're right answers but I have
some suggestions based on Jewish
tradition and I hope you will listen
well you know if you want to interview
me about those answers you have to at
least to share some of these ideas we're
gonna get a preview of that we'll come
back before the book is published okay
thank you so much rabbi at a tough I
really appreciate you taking the time
and I'm sure my listeners do this okay
everybody you know you can write to me
Eve at the land of yours Oh calm website
new website is finally up so Eve Harrow
ENCOM and you'll see where I'm gonna be
next month actually just in a couple of
weeks and all my goings on and of course
catch up on some of the old shows
so take care everybody once again thank
you for listening thanks his tablet bent
bent and to everybody at the land of
this one network take care of you and
goodbye for now
for Rosh Chodesh Aadhaar bet this coming
new moon we are doing the Land of Israel
Network sabaton at the Dead Sea called
the Israel inspired retreats where
there's going to be Torah study and
connection and meditation and prayer and
we're going to be able to connect and to
talk about everything that's going on in
Israel today on spiritual levels it's
going to be a really special weekend you
can find out about it on the Land of
Israel dot travel that's the Land of
Israel dot to travel you can see all the
details there we'd love to have you join
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