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Remembering Rabbi Avigdor Miller ZT"L | CHAZAQ
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Good evening and welcome to this very
special yard site event remembering of
our Victor Miller
such a great God all Rabbi who
influenced tens of thousands of people
not only in his lifetime but of course
so many years later after after his his
betira
we his influence his farm his sheer are
being inspired inspiring thousands of
people around around the world and
that's what we're here some some remarks
of course from some some students some
some some rabbis who were who were who
were close to the rabbis a personal
story some some reflections that we can
and and lessons that we can take to our
lives of course we're going to hear from
from Mosha Mayor Weiss and Dova Wasser
and by Gladstone Rabbi Wollhandler and
by Brog and by Markowitz.
These are very very powerful speakers
and of course we know that Rabbi
Wollhandler and Rabbi Markowitz are part
of Torah sub Victor which is
a tremendous revolution of spreading
Rabbi Victor Miller's messages every
single week thousands of people get get
the the Torah sub Victor booklets and
pamphlets in in in cities everywhere and
of course everyone should go on Torah
sub Victor's website and and of course
when you get share we have to keep on
sharing the messages of Rabbi Miller to
continue his tremendous legacy and of
course we thank our friend Michael
Farrah for who was instrumental behind
the scenes of this event was a dear
friend of Khazak
and and Torah sub Victor and and Khazak
shows
we thank Michael Farrah and of course
everyone should share the link out
torahanytime.com/khazaklive
so you your friends everyone can get
inspired by this very special program
torahanytime.com/khazaklive
is our now is our great great honor to
start tonight's program.
What
a great school city is that throughout
the entire world on virtually every
continent we are all united gathered
together throughout the world on the
yard side of high Gavra Rabba the 25th
yard side of Marana Rabba Victor Miller
Zechor Tzadik Kodesh Livracha.
To think about the greatness of Rab
Miller the impact that he had on this
world and continues to have most of a
highlight more and more with each
passing year his trushas his words his
farin the articles they continue to go
out each and every week throughout the
entire world every day is something that
is amazing the haspa the influence the
greatness of Rab Miller is felt each and
every day.
It is fascinating that we learn that the
passing of a tzadik is even more
difficult than the Beit Hamikdash than
the destruction of the Beit Hamikdash.
The Chasam Sofer says why? Churban Beit
Hamikdash the destruction of the Beit
Hamikdash was catastrophic.
What about the greatness of the passing
the impact that it makes the passing of
an Adam Gadol? He answers the following
that the aveilus over the Beit Hamikdash
is an aveilus but it's yeshana. It is
something that is old. It is something
that we have to date ourselves back in
time. However by the tzadik every single
year it's an aveilus chadasha it's a new
aveilus it's a new morning. When we want
to know who do we ask the shaila to?
He's not here anymore. When we want an
eitza he's not here anymore. When we
want a das Torah on which way should we
go to the right to the left to the
center the great tzadik isn't here
anymore so the aveilus is renewed each
and every single day.
I want to tell you
that the greatness of Rab Miller was
that everybody felt as he was their
rebbe
their father their guide their mentor
the one that you could tell all of your
most hidden thoughts to
the one that would always have the
answer would always have the eitza but
yet as much as everybody was very close
to him everybody felt a certain eima
v'yirah in awe of fear of the godliness
of the greatness of Rab Miller.
When I was a bochur yeshiva
I used to check shatnez.
People would come to me every so often
and I would be able to make a few
pennies checking shatnez.
One time
Marana Rabba Victor Miller in his flat
push
came with his coat to check for shatnez.
He left the coat a shliach brought it to
me.
I want you to know
when I put the coat in my hands I began
to shake.
I thought to myself this is the beged of
an Adam Gadol.
How am I supposed to check it? I'm
afraid I'm afraid to look I'm afraid
what will happen if
the cut is a little bit bigger than I
need to make.
It took me a long time to check that
coat
because even the beged of such an Adam
Gadol made me shake.
We understand that Rab Miller gave to us
all the teachings of Slabodka was able
to give to the younger generation the
derech Yisrael Saba the way that our
fathers and grandfathers and great
grandfathers and great grandmothers
lived and he gave us over the derech. He
was able to impress upon us in a special
way that nobody else was able to do. He
addressed the needs of the time. He
never stopped no matter what was the
issue no matter how controversial it was
Rabbi Victor Miller would always address
it head on. We would always leave the
sheer whether it was leil Shabbos or
Thursday night or Shabbos or even during
the day we would always leave that sheer
so moved. We would be influenced we
would walk away clarifying das Torah in
our own minds especially at a time when
there were a lot of contradictions there
were a lot of things that were happening
in society a lot of ideologies that were
foreign to Torah that needed a clear
presentation of where does a Torah Yid
stand.
I'll never forget Rabbi Victor one time
clarified something in a sheer
and one of the people that were in the
sheer came over to him at the end and
said Rabbi I think what you're doing is
brainwashing.
Rab Miller looked at him and says yes
sometimes our brains do need a bit of
washing.
That is really what Rab Miller did for
us. He was able to clarify
the Torah's ideology
what the Torah what Hashem expected from
each and every one of us.
Many times when I would sit together
with my chaveirim in the sheer we would
look at each other we would laugh
sometimes we were startled sometimes it
happened to be that we would learn
something completely new maybe different
from what others were saying. Rab Miller
took the time to make sure that
everybody was clear and when he used to
give a Gemara sheer on Shabbos morning
and you would sit in the sheer older men
younger men boys bochurim didn't matter
who it was Rab Miller would ask you to
repeat the sheer at various times during
the sheer repeat the first few lines of
the Gemara. Anybody could be called on
anybody could volunteer and Rab Miller
would listen as a very very special
rebbe to each of us and when we needed
to have a little help he would help us
along. When it needed correcting he
would correct it.
One time there was a rosh kollel that
came from Manchester from England. He
came to me and he asked for help. He
wanted to know about a certain bochur
that had left the yeshiva. How does he
keep him close to Yiddishkeit?
I told him
why don't we go to Rabba Victor Miller?
Rabba Victor Miller's only a block away.
I'll try to get an appointment that I
can take you there. The rosh kollel was
so thank you. He was very very thankful.
He came to Rab Miller
and he told Rab Miller that he feels
like Rab Miller's his rebbe because he
had listened at that time I think to a
thousand sheer of Miller. Rab Miller
laughed and said
I'm not your rebbe I'm your chavruta.
And then began to explain exactly how to
handle the bochur which was a completely
different way than this menahel this
rosh kollel was going to handle him.
He was the one that was able to discern
and to understand exactly how to get the
right approach to each individual. I'll
never forget I was asked to meet with an
anti-Semite, somebody who was very big
politically, and they asked me to be
part of the delegation to go to meet
him.
Certainly, I was not going to go
without asking the asked title.
As a young man, I went to Rev Miller.
Rev Miller listen, and I told him about
the meeting.
He looked up at me through his glasses
and he said,
"Do you have to go?"
I said, "No, Rebbe.
I don't."
That was the end of the conversation.
Once I knew what Rev Miller's feelings
were,
he didn't have to tell me, "Don't go,
it's forbidden." He didn't say one word
about it. All he said was, "Do you have
to go?"
Many times,
people would come to Rev Miller
and they would ask for a das Torah.
And he was able to answer them, each
person on their own level.
The navi Eliyahu navi said, "Va'anino
sarti navi levad Hashem, I was the only
navi that was left to Hashem. I was the
only one." But the Kotzker Rebbe asked
the question, "What do you mean that he
was the only one? Ovadia hid over a
hundred nevi'im.
So, how could it be he was the only
one?" The Kotzker Rebbe said, "Because
Eliyahu navi, he knew the language, he
knew the lingo, he knew how to get the
point across, he knew how to deliver the
dvar Hashem over to each and every
person. That was
Moreinu Rav
Rabbi Avigdor Miller. Zecher tzaddik
kadosh livracha.
He knew how to give the dvar Hashem over
to each and every person in this world.
And that is the reason why I think his
words are now more heard than ever. Even
people that years ago used to say, "Rev
Miller, isn't a little bit extreme?"
"Rev [clears throat] Miller, isn't that
a radical position?" Now they're
running. Now they want to know, "What
did he have to say about this issue?" or
about that issue. What was his das
Torah? Why is there such a thirst?
Because he was the navi. He was the one
that was able to deliver the dvar Hashem
to you and to me and to our generation.
May his neshama have an aliyah in
shamayim. May he be a meilitz yosher for
each and every one of us, for all of
Klal Yisrael.
And may we soon have Mashiach Tzidkeinu
and techiyas hameisim when we will see
the great Rebbe once again.
The chazzak asked me
to say a
a few milui de haspada
for the very great
Rev Avigdor
Miller
ben Yisrael HaKohen.
Zecher tzaddik livracha zechuso yagein
aleinu.
It is indeed
a privilege
because every word that we say about
this great man
is a lesson for the ages.
Just like Esther said, "Kasvuni
ledoros."
Write me for all generations.
She knew that
the lessons of the megillah were for all
generations.
So too, Rev Miller's words, his actions,
his teachings,
are for all ages.
We see the proliferation
of his works,
pamphlets in almost every shul,
books with Q&A's,
Hebrew and English books of his
philosophy.
When I think of Rev Miller,
I think of the pasuk
Mishlei HaMelech
Sof davar hakol nishma.
Es HaElokim yera ve'es mitzvotav yishmor
ki zeh kol ha'adam.
At the end, when everything is
tabulated,
and all the different
possibilities of life are examined,
fear God
and keep His mitzvot, for that is
the whole man.
And
the Gemara tells us, "Kol ha'olam lo
nivra ela bishvil zeh." The whole world
was created for such a man.
This pasuk describes Rev Miller
perfectly.
Es HaElokim yera.
As he would say, "Yera is from the root
of rei. See God.
See God in everything that you do.
And keep His mitzvot."
That's who he was.
He taught us first and foremost
that our job in this life
is
to be aware of Hashem.
As the pasuk says,
Moshe Rabbeinu told us, "Mah Hashem
Elokecha sho'el me'imach ki im leyira."
What does He ask from you but that you
should see Him?
And he taught us
how to see Hashem from a seed.
Take a dead brittle seed, put it in the
ground. It's not like a battery whether
you put it in one way or another way,
the plant comes up, the roots go down.
From one seed, this one little lifeless
seed
comes a tree
with
fruits with thousands of seeds
for many, many, many years.
It's it's stupendous.
Wherever you go, you see "Mah rabu
ma'asecha Hashem, kulam bechochma
asisa."
Wherever you see, you see that
everything is invested with wisdom.
He used to challenge us when you were in
school and they taught you "Nature did
this, nature did that." He said, "Either
nature is accident or nature is Hashem."
So, they don't want to acknowledge God,
so they created a
a word nature, but that's Hashem.
And the plan and purpose cries out to
Hashem.
The the the
intricacies of the human eye,
the complexity of the equilibrium in the
inner ear,
the the incredible incredible
brilliance
of every creature
being prepared for what they need
in order to survive in the place that
they were in,
even matching
the skin color matching the fauna around
them for camouflage. I mean, Rev Miller
challenged us. See Hashem
wherever you look.
He was the ultimate
yirei shamayim. "Hein yiras Hashem hi
chochma, reishis chochma yiras Hashem."
Rev Miller
taught us by example.
To hear him speak about tzaddikim,
to hear him say about Rev Moshe
Feinstein, "I love that man."
How he
ran away from any type of
uh divisiveness.
He was asked a question about the
Lubavitcher Rebbe and Rev Schach.
He said, "The Lubavitcher Rebbe was a
great man and had great followers, and
Rev Schach was a great man and had great
followers, and if you hear anything, you
should stay away from it."
He taught us
that the Ribbono shel Olam loves shalom.
Oh, did he teach us.
He said, "You don't have to be
a great philosopher
to know that
the other religions are not true."
In his sefer Awake My Glory, he has a
chapter parallels
where he said, "You don't have to study
uh Catholicism and Christianity to know
what it is.
All you have to look at the blood
libel."
He said, "There are churches still now
studded across the European continent
like
uh a big church named after St.
Bartholomew.
St. Bartholomew was allegedly a child
killed
killed by the Jews, and they still go to
that church. They still have midnight
masses. Big church that holds a thousand
people. Another church, St. Theodorus.
You think about what they did in the
name of the cross by the Crusaders.
They raped and pillaged and killed. He
said, "All you have to see is those
things and you know that the whole thing
is false."
And and and he said, "The same thing is
true with the other religions."
Oh, how he taught us
that we should
prepare for the next world.
He was always talking that he was
getting ready for the final beginner.
At the end of his life, he was reviewing
a section, a difficult section of
Ketzos,
that he would
tell over to Hashem when Hashem would
give him a fire here in the next world.
By him, the next world was such a
reality.
His diligence,
his use of every moment. You know,
that
in in Yiddishkeit,
we cherish our moments.
We cherish our minutes.
Right?
Even by his own children's
weddings, he would leave early and he
would tell them, "I have guests." And
they would say,
"Well Well, Tati, everybody that's
important is here." He says, "No, I got
to go. Abaye and Rava are waiting for
me.
Rebbi Yochanan and Reish Lakish are
waiting for me. Ravina and Rav Ashi are
waiting for me."
He would He would teach us
that
we should
do everything meaningfully.
That's what he wanted from us.
He didn't want us just have cholent and
chicken soup on Shabbos.
He wanted us to eat to celebrate that
the world wasn't always here.
It didn't come about from a Big Bang. It
didn't evolve over millions of years.
Hashem made it in six days and rested on
the seventh day. And that's what we
celebrate Shabbos. He said, "Shabbos is
one of the greatest of the eidus of the
testimonials." He said, "Eidus is the
same letters as deios because eidus
gives us knowledge."
So, he would say, "Use the knowledge.
Use the yarmulke, yirei malkah, to
realize that there's a king that on top
of you that you are afraid of and that
you fear. Utilize the tzitzis. Put the
fillin and bind your heart and your mind
to Hashem." He would He would tell us
and how he would tell us
to
not waste our davening.
He would tell us
that you want to make your davening
worthwhile.
Before every davening, think about
something to say thank you in modeh ani
since the last davening.
He said, "It doesn't have to be a big
thing.
You found a quarter for the meter?
You found a parking spot in Borough
Park?
It could be a big thing.
In the morning when you say modeh ani,
you could say you had a very pleasant
night with your spouse.
There were no fighting.
Not many people can say that.
Had a pleasant night?
Say modeh ani.
Everything's working in your body? Say
modeh ani.
And how he would teach us
to pray in anticipation.
He would say that the friends of Iyov
asked him when they had trouble when he
had trouble, "Haya rosh u'shua choshech
lo vatzar?"
Did you arrange your prayers before you
had trouble? So, he would tell us,
"Although nobody thinks to do this,
but pray
lo oilam yispor lo adam shelo yachla.
Pray not to get sick."
He says, "Karov Hashem l'chol karov
l'chol asher yikra'uhu v'emes. Hashem is
close to those that call in truth, not
in need. Of course, if you're in need,
you could call. Hashem listens.
But the best thing is to pray before you
need. Please, Hashem, help me not get
sick. Please, Hashem, help me not be
depressed. Please, Hashem, help my mind
and the mind of my loved ones always
work."
Personally, I have so much gratitude to
Rav Miller
who opened my eyes
to learning to living my life
thinking about Hashem.
Like he said, it says, "Es Hashem
Elokecha tira."
Whenever you are uh faced with a
decision
and you say, "Would Hashem want me to do
this or not?" You're fulfilling the
mitzvas asei of "Es Hashem Elokecha
tira."
May he go from sha'ar to sha'ar
in Gan Eden.
May he be a meilitz yosher for the
entire world
that he benefited.
And may we see soon
the techiyas hameisim
and the beas Hamikdash tzedek bimheira
v'yameinu. There's a question that I get
asked fairly often,
and that question is, "What's the
chiddush of Rav Miller?"
And the answer to that question is, his
chiddush was that there was no
chiddushin. There was no
He didn't try to be creative and say
something different every time.
His chiddush was no chiddushin.
Somebody once asked him, "What made you
Rav Miller?"
And he said, "Since I left Slabodka, I
haven't missed a day of Chovos
Halevavos. I haven't missed a day of
Chovos Halevavos. The same thing every
single day."
So, he told Rav Miller said that
somebody once wrote him a letter.
Somebody in Toronto wrote him a letter.
He said, "Rav Miller, I listened to 100
of your tapes, and I have your shnit."
And shnit means your style. "I got the
style. I understand you. You approach
this a certain way. You approach a pasuk
a certain way. You approach a ma'amar
Chazal. I know the topics that you
discuss. This is what you cover. I have
it. I got your style."
So, Rav Miller said, "He's right. You
listened to 100 tapes, you have the
style.
But
what you're missing is, it's true that I
am very repetitive and I talk about the
same things every time.
But every time, this it goes a little
bit deeper. That's what this person is
missing. It's true, he has the style
already. But every time, it goes a
little bit deeper."
And I think that 90% of people watching
now
also have the style. If you're into Rav
Miller a little bit, you read the Torah
Civic every week,
you got it. You got the style.
The difference is that Rav Miller didn't
get it.
He didn't get the style.
He kept taking it, and he kept working
on it, and he kept doing it over and
over again.
He had a brilliant mind. It's You could
hear in in the way he speaks.
And um
in Torah, he gave shiurim in Kollel
Torah Kollel.
He knew the Sefer Chovos Halevavos
perek. Chovos Halevavos was difficult
sefer.
He could have wrote brilliant chiddushin
in Halacha.
He could have wrote svarim.
But l'maiseh, every single day, Chovos
Halevavos. And you listen to the tapes.
That's all he did. Chovos Halevavos,
Mesillas Yesharim, Sha'arei Teshuvah
Rabbenu Yonah, the Rambam, over and over
and over again. That was his life.
Rav Miller told a story
that in Slabodka, he once heard two
talmidim. And one talmid said to the
other,
"That the mussar of this yeshiva, this
was this the mussar style of Slabodka,
it's coming [snorts] out of my ears
already."
Cuz he heard it over and over again.
He's there for many years, and this is
all he's hearing.
So, the other talmid said to him, "If
it's coming out of your ears, it means
that it never went into your ears.
If it goes into your ears, it would stay
in your brain. If it's coming out of the
other ear, it never went in."
So, that's what Rav Miller did. It went
in, and it stuck there. He didn't get
the style. He got the style, and he
utilized it. He employed it. He kept He
took the style, and he made the style
work for him.
And that's why today, now the yahrtzeit
is here,
and everybody wants to take on a
kabbalah l'iluy nishmas Rav Miller, Rav
Avigdor ben Yisrael HaKohen.
And he said, "What What's the kabbalah
going to be?" So, we all know that Rav
Miller said, "When you walk in the
street, think about yetzias Mitzrayim.
Picture it happening. Think about them.
Think about Sefiras HaOmer." But do we
do it?
Maybe that should be the kabbalah for
once. Don't just think about Don't just
know about it. Do it.
He said, "To walk in the street and say,
'I'm an eved Hashem. Hashem, I'm your
servant. I'm your servant.'" You know
that Rav Miller said you should do it.
But are you ready to do it?
And that's what we have to think about
now. If we want to connect with the
legacy of Rav Miller, the legacy was not
to say over a chiddush, but to actually
practice something that's not a
chiddush. To learn the mussar and to
internalize the mussar and to practice
it and to live with it.
And like the Gemara says, "Mah hu
b'chayei nofzerah b'chayei." When a
tzaddik
uh influences the next generation and he
causes them to practice his deeds, it
means that his deeds are still alive.
The tzaddik is still alive as long as we
continue um practicing his teachings.
And uh it's beautiful to see after 25
years that his legacy is still alive,
and there's so many tens of thousands of
Yidden all over the world who were
inspired to change the way they lived
their life based on the way he changed
the way he lived his life, not just his
teachings, the way he lived.
And may Hashem we should be zocheh to
emulate him and to come close to Hashem.
Chaf Zayin Nissan, the yahrtzeit
of HaGaon HaTzaddik HaRav Avigdor
HaKohen Miller, zechuso tzaddik
livracha.
One of the great gifts HaKadosh Baruch
Hu gave me
is that when I came back from learning
in Eretz Yisrael and I came back to
America,
HaKadosh Baruch Hu stirred me
to try to find someone to connect with
uh gadol
that I could learn from and grow from
outside of the regular Yeshiva program.
And the idea that somehow came to my
mind is I need to go to Ocean Parkway
near the Mir Yeshiva
and
listen and learn from Rav Avigdor Miller
ZT"L.
It was not close to my house. It was
about a 45-minute walk from Avenue N
31st to Ocean Parkway near the Mir and
for about 3 years
uh the last 3 years of Rav Miller's life
I had this zechus to go on most
Shabbosim
to uh walk
many times with my father, Zev Wolfson,
and sometimes with my brother,
and we would go to Rav Miller before
Mincha to hear his Ein Yaakov shiur,
to eat Shalosh Seudos with him,
and to hear
his Gemara shiur,
then to daven Maariv together and hear
Rav Miller make Havdalah.
Also heard many, many of his uh recorded
shiurim,
and the influence of Rav Miller
continues to reverberate in my soul
until this very day.
And when I mentioned that this is
something that we have to thank Hakadosh
Baruch Hu for,
this was a lesson that Rav Miller
taught.
In Tehillim, in the perek Ledavid
Beshanoso es ta'amo lifnei Avimelech
vayegareshuhu vayelach, avarecha es
Hashem bechol eis.
And Rav Miller explained as follows.
This is talking about when David
Hamelech was captured by Avimelech, and
David Hamelech didn't know how's he
going to get out of the palace. He's in
the clutches of Avimelech Melech
Plishtim. So, David Hamelech feigned
insanity. David Hamelech says, "I have a
great idea.
I'm going to
behave as if I'm
crazy,
and Avimelech is going to say, 'Uh what?
I have no need for him.'"
That's what David did. Ledavid Beshanoso
es ta'amo, he changed his sanity. He
acted insane. Lifnei Avimelech
vayegareshuhu, Avimelech chased him out.
Vayelach, and David left.
How often when we have a great idea, we
say, "Thank you, Hashem, that the idea
was successful, but it was my idea.
It was my insight. It was my
brilliant chap."
No, David Hamelech did not
fool himself. David Hamelech did not
convince himself that he's to credit for
the idea. Ledavid Beshanoso es ta'amo,
when David Hamelech came up with this
ingenious plan, what did he say?
"Avarecha es Hashem bechol eis."
I will bless Hashem always. I will even
bless him
for the good idea in the first place.
So, it's appropriate for me
to say, "Thank you, Hakadosh Baruch Hu,
that Hashem gave me
the
hisa'arus. Hashem stirred me. Hashem
gave me the idea
to try to connect with Harav Avigdor
Miller ZT"L.
>> [snorts]
>> I even have a notebook
of
his teachings that particularly
resonated with me, and in the back
I recorded questions that I personally
asked Rav Miller during the course of
those 3 years.
I want to focus on a few of the great
contributions of Rav Miller.
Again, it's only bigeda
katzehu sera vechulai lo sera, it's only
a small semblance of what appears to us
as the greatness of Harav Miller ZT"L.
Rav Miller emphasized the importance of
not wasting one's mind and the
importance of
utilizing one's thoughts
at all opportunities for Avodas Hashem.
Here's one
very interesting example. Rav Miller
quoted the Gemara in Yoma ayin alef, as
halech lifnei Hashem be'artzei hachaim,
"I will walk before Hashem in the land
of the living." Amar Rav Yehuda, "Zeh
makom shvakim."
That David Hamelech
davened to Hashem, "If only once again I
can merit to walk in the marketplace."
Why did David want to walk in the
marketplace? Did he need to go shopping?
Did he need to buy different goods?
Says Rav Miller, "No, the marketplace
provided a unique opportunity of Avodas
Hashem."
When you look at a bakery,
you should think only Hashem could make
the grain that the bread comes from. One
should think, "Hashem is hamotzi lechem
min ha'aretz."
Hashem
is borei minei mezanos.
When you see a fruit stand, you should
think,
"Look at all the vivid colors that
Hashem painted
these delicious items."
Hashem is trying to attract our
attention, cuz Hashem wants us to be
happy. Hashem wants our happiness.
We're going to come back to that idea.
When one passes a clothing store,
one should think, "Where does the wool
come from?" The wool comes from a sheep.
Sheep? It's a miraculous machine.
Imagine if you could take grass. Imagine
if you had a lawnmower. It takes in the
grass and it spits out wool.
You'd become a billionaire.
Well, that's what a sheep is. It eats
grass and it produces wool.
So, to Rav Miller, the the marketplace,
the shvakim, was artzei hachaim.
It was a beis hamedrash.
>> [snorts]
>> Rav Miller emphasized the importance
of being happy in this world.
He taught, "Why does it say in Bereishis
perek alef pasuk lamed alef, 'Vayar
Elokim es kol asher asa vihinei tov
me'od.'"
Why does the Torah record that Hashem
commented that the world is very good?
Says Rav Miller, "The Torah wants us to
emulate Hashem, that just like Hashem
said the world is good, we should say
the world is good.
Stop complaining."
Rav Miller taught from the Rambam in the
Moreh Nevuchim
that almost everything in this world is
very, very good.
Even someone
who suffered
>> [snorts]
>> most of his life,
he was happy and successful,
and even during the suffering, most of
the things were very good.
And if the Torah records that Hashem
said, "Everything is very good." Kol
asher asa vihinei tov me'od, the Torah
wants us to emulate the ways of Hashem.
We too should comment, "It's very, very
good."
Rav Miller explained
the very difficult episode
in Parshas Beha'aloscha,
that when Klal Yisrael complained about
the manna,
it was einayim ke'ein habedolach, it was
crystal, it was white. There was no
color, and the Jewish people
were tortured by that. Vaya'anchu
vayarevu, they said, "God, you afflicted
us. You starved us."
And Moshe Rabbeinu said the harshest
thing he ever said to the Ribbono Shel
Olam.
He said, "Lama hare'osa avdecha? Why did
you do so bad to me?
Lama lo matzasi chein be'einecha?
Ve'im kacha at oisali, hargeini na
harog."
"If this is what you're going to do,
kill me now."
Why did Moshe have such a strong
reaction?
Says Rav Miller, "Moshe was emulating
Hashem.
Hashem's
primary goal for us
is that we should be happy.
Like Mesillas Yesharim says, "Ha'adam lo
nivra ela lehisaneig."
Man was only created to enjoy.
The prime joy is in the afterlife.
Lehisaneig al Hashem, but in Slabodka
they put a comma after the word
lehisaneig to indicate "Ha'adam lo nivra
ela lehisaneig."
Hashem created us for happiness.
If Klal Yisrael was in a state of
unhappiness, to Moshe Rabbeinu this was
the greatest desire possible.
So, Hashem says to Moshe, "Esfa li
shiv'im ish miziknei Yisrael." Gather
for me 70 men.
So, Rav Miller asked,
"If the Jewish people are unhappy, how
are 70 rabbis going to remedy the
situation?"
Moshe had a question. "Me'ayin uli basar
la'asos lechol ha'am hazeh?" Where is he
going to get the food from?
Rav Miller taught that the 70 zekeinim
were going to teach the Bnei Yisrael
how to recognize
how fortunate they were in every detail
in life.
that for the ordinary mind,
it's not easy to learn how to be happy.
One has to be trained to be happy.
The ordinary mind naturally will be in a
state of dissatisfaction.
You need a great mind to impart
happiness. The Chovos Halvavos says it
is the job of the chachamim to teach
people how to be happy.
If Hakadosh Baruchu
has appointed in our great history a
chacham
who excelled in the role
that the Chovos Halvavos describes
that it's the job of a Torah sage to
teach man how to be happy
that shluchei d'Rachmana
was certainly Harav Avigdor HaKohen
Miller, zichron tzaddik l'vracha.
He taught the Jewish people how to be
happy.
He taught us how to enjoy a cup of water
how to get pleasure from a cup of water.
He taught us
how to enjoy breathing air.
How to walk down the street
and appreciate how to breathe.
He taught
how to appreciate sunlight. That when
the sun shines on your skin, you should
think it's producing vitamin D and it's
killing bacteria on your skin and to
sing toivei me'orei hashabbos Elokeinu.
>> [snorts]
>> Rav Miller taught how to enjoy the wind
how to appreciate the buttons on your
shirt, how to appreciate the stitching
on the button holes, how to appreciate a
hat
clothing
Baruch atah Hashem malbish arumim.
Rav Miller
was the quintessential
Torah sage of whom the Chovos Halvavos
describes that it's their function to
teach the Jewish people how to be happy.
And with all
of Rav Miller's
excellence
in the realm
of machshava, mussar, and Chovos
Halvavos
who was mishtabeach to Talmud Bavli
greater than Rav Miller
I remember at the levaya of Rav Miller
and I was zocheh to be there
on that Sunday morning
on Ocean Parkway.
I was zocheh to cry at the levaya of Rav
Miller
and I am sure
that whatever bechiya I was zocheh to
was one of
the most elevating moments in my life.
Rav Miller
said
that when he was younger, he chazered,
he reviewed Chulin 40 times. Rav Simcha
Bunim Cohen said at his levaya
he learned Shas 60 to 70 times. In his
final day in the hospital, he reviewed
Bechoros for an hour and a half baal
peh.
On his walks, he had 40 different
siddurim.
He wrote a sefer at 91 and a half years
old.
Avarcha es Hashem b'chol eis.
We have to always bless Hashem.
And one of the great gifts Hakadosh
Baruchu gave me personally
and gave our generation and gave Klal
Yisrael
was the zchus
to see
and to talk to and to learn from Harav
Avigdor HaKohen Miller.
Z'chusoi yagein aleinu v'al Klal
Yisrael. share with you a story and I
had a zchus to be in the hospital the
night before the rabbi passed away.
We had the rotation, so I was the He
passed away Friday, so I was there
Wednesday night.
And um
there was [clears throat] nothing to do
just in case he needed something, so he
had to be available. So around 3:00 in
the morning
I hear some rustling, shuffling.
So I I see that my Rav Miller was going
to the bathroom.
Got out of bed and he's going to the
bathroom.
And he comes back I don't know about
you, but I know if you go to the
bathroom in the middle of the night, you
come back, make asher yatzar, and you go
back to sleep.
So he was sitting up in his bed and he
made asher yatzar.
Then he starts to talk.
I am talking to I said, "What a
a battlan
What a battlan like me? Battlan means
that someone who is a
not not a not a person who can do much.
That's an English it's an expression. A
battlan is someone who has two left
hands, you call him a battlan.
So what a battlan like me? How did I do
such good shidduchim for my daughters?
That's what he said. A good shidduch for
my daughters. I'm thinking to myself
good shidduch for your daughters? This
is 40 years ago, this is not from today.
You're talking about a story from 40
years ago.
And he's a very he's thanking Hakadosh
Baruchu now the night before he's
passing away. What's on his mind?
It's on his mind is how can I thank
Hashem for the kindness that Hashem did
for me that he gave me such wonderful
marriages for my daughters. That's what
he said.
Rav Miller I I I have a recollection
that
a person has
I'm not sure if it was a question, but I
remember hearing from Rav Miller the
following idea. How does a person know
if he's getting anywhere in life?
That's a good question. We try to
advance. So how do we know if we're
getting anywhere?
So he the expe- the the what I what I
remember was that if a person lo aleinu,
heaven forbid, a person comes down with
bad news. Somebody gets, let's say, a
diagnosis of sort of sorts.
So he can't sleep.
His world is shattered.
He gets a diagnosis, he lost his job.
And he has expenses. He gets a diagnosis
that his wife is leaving him.
Or his So whatever it might be. His
child is not well.
Or
you think the worst thing.
His life is upside down.
He can't sleep at night.
But
when a person can't sleep at night
because he's bothered by the question
mah ashiv la Hashem
kol tagmulohi alai.
How can I repay Hashem for all the good
he did for me?
And that question is keeping him up at
night.
Ooh, now you know you're getting
someplace.
Dovid Hamelech had that problem. Dovid
Hamelech said, mah ashiv la Hashem? How
can I repay Hashem for all the good he's
doing for me?
Today
we don't ask this question.
Because what's the first question a
person asks when bad news hits?
First question he asks is, "Why me?
I'm such a good man. Why am I getting
this?"
But if chas v'shalom
bad news comes, he doesn't ask this
question. But if good news comes
what's the last question anybody asks?
"Why me?" That's the last question. "Who
else if not me?"
But Dovid Hamelech had this problem. Mah
ashiv la Hashem? How can I thank Hashem
for all the good he's doing for me?
And that's how Rav Miller lived his
life. He lived his life always thanking
Hashem, always thanking Hashem for all
the good Hashem was doing for him.
And what is Hashem not doing for us?
That's he lived in his My grandmother
once told my grandfather, Rebbetzin
Miller told Rav Miller, "You're always
talking to Hashem."
Cuz he was always thanking Hashem. He
sat down to eat thanking Hashem for
eating.
Everything everything he says. In fact,
in his tzava'ah, he left his tzava'ah.
In his tzava'ah he wrote as follows.
He said, Hakadosh Baruchu
b'rov chasdo
Hakadosh Baruchu with tremendous
kindness
beirach oisi bakol mamash. Hashem
blessed me with literally everything.
Ilu kasavti sefer gadol
had I written a [clears throat]
tremendous book
lo yacholti ligmor sippur shvachav. I
would It would be impossible to end
relating the praises of Hashem
shechanan oisi
kol orech yom yomai v'chayei. What
Hashem graced me
all the days of my life.
Y'hi shem Hashem m'vorach.
The name of Hashem should be blessed.
Me'atah from now v'ad olam and forever.
Al alfei alafim on the thousands upon
thousands of chasdei
Hashem of kindnesses imadi that he did
with me.
So now this is what This was Rav
Miller's
idea, his focus of life, always thanking
Hashem for everything that Hashem did
for him.
And then in his tzava'ah, he left as
follows. He left v'atem and you
people who are reading this tzava'ah
teilchu b'derech zu you should also go.
You should go in this way. Which way?
B'hakaros chasdav imachem
of recognizing the the chesed his chesed
that Hashem is doing with you.
V'chasdav
b'rov chasdav imadi.
And also thank Hashem not only for the
chesed that Hashem is doing for me
individually, but we should thank Hashem
for the chesed that Hashem did with our
grandfather Rav Miller.
So that's the life. This is what his
Savoy left.
And he did it. The table of orders not
sham coming.
You should increase to thank Hashem
always. Tommy means always.
And the Tommy to you to he always Hashem
and always the praise of Hashem should
be should go over here him.
It caught very
frequently in your mouth.
I'll have sold of him already.
On the Hashem that Hashem did with me.
The gamma show is in more him and also
what he's doing with you.
So now you know how Rabbi Miller lived
his life. This is a lesson. This was his
Savoy that he left for
his family.
And he expressed it all the time. He was
always thanking Hashem. He lived with
Hashem. That's why he never had a bad
day.
Because it was always a gift from
Hashem.
I remember that.
I'm thanking God as well.
One of the things that you'll hear many
times from people.
People People have One of the benefits
that Hashem gave mankind is to get
married. A spouse. A spouse is a gift
from Hashem.
It's a code It's a Pesach Tikvah. It's
our gate of
hope. Why is that? How would the world
just from a a way of perfecting
ourselves?
How in the world is would we take Is
there anybody that could give us musar
that we would accept it willingly or
maybe even unwillingly
and not firing them if our if our
employee told us off, you think we'd
keep them as a hired employee?
Most probably not. But our spouse is
there 24/7 to give us strict put us on
the straight narrow path. And he's
always thanking God as well
for the gift of having a spouse.
People think a spouse is that No, a
spouse is a gift from Hashem. And he was
always thanking God as well for him. For
his wife.
In fact, when he was at the end of his
time, he did an operation a year before
it two years a year I mean two years
before he passed away on a valve valve
job. He needed a valve job. And he
didn't want to do it. He said he didn't
need it. But the reason why he did it
was because his wife wanted him to do
it.
He was ready to do it as a kindness of
life. The fact that his wife did what
what his wife did for him.
So this is the lessons that we One of
the lessons that
that Rabbi Miller imparted is constantly
to be aware of what Hashem is doing for
us.
If you're not constantly aware of what
Hashem is doing for us, guess what?
You're going to have nothing to think
about.
If you have a cup If you have a cup
and you have a hole in the bottom of the
cup, you think your cup is ever going to
run over?
Definitely not cuz there's a hole on the
bottom. And that's what we're saying in
in in Ashrei. We're saying Zacher rav
tuvcha. The remembrance of your multiple
kindnesses.
Yabbi'u.
Zacher rav tuvcha yabbi'u. Yabbi'u means
they'll flow over. Also means they'll
talk about it.
If it's happen to flow over because
there's no hole on the bottom.
Cuz you're always adding more chesed and
more chesed and remembering all the
chesed that Hashem did for us.
Even the fact that we have
an organization like Hatzalah
who's spreading good messages. So thank
Hashem for such a wonderful gift.
You have many many venues today of
spreading the word of Hashem. All of
these things we have to be thankful for.
In fact, if you focus on English mon
history, when you make brochos,
everything is thanking Hashem for
something. Atah chonein l'adam da'as.
You're thanking Hashem for your
that you're not in worldly things all
the time.
Refa'einu Hashem v'neirafe. You're
thanking Hashem that you're healthy.
Healthy. You know, I'm not sick. You
know, he heals us Hashem. No,
Hashem didn't heal us. You know how many
germs are out here all the time Hashem
is protecting us?
And that's our job. This is the message.
If there's one message that Rabbi Miller
lived by, it was this message of always
being aware of the chesed that Hashem is
doing for him.
And always not just aware of it,
thanking him verbally for it. Always
talking to Hashem, repeating the
kindnesses that Hashem did for us.
It's It's a good idea.
It's a good idea that you should keep a
notebook
and you should write in if you can most
things that Hashem did for us. They
don't have to be earth-shattering. The
fact that you woke up in the morning,
you're saying modeh ani, you're getting
out of bed with excitement. You could
get out of bed. You feel you're working.
Mobility. You can see. You have clothing
to wear. And every one of those brochos
is something to focus on. Another gift
of what Hashem is doing for us. And not
only for us, including that is what he's
doing for our spouse, our children, or
anybody that's dependent on us or we're
dependent on them. If chas v'shalom
something happened to one of our close
relatives, what would our life be? It
would be terrible. We'd have Suddenly it
would change. So we have so much to
think about all the time.
And
and the more person's focused on giving
thanks to God as well for what he did
for us,
then he'll be a very happy person.
He'll never have a sad day in his life.
The most important thing is
it's We have You're going to People hear
and read a lot of things from Rabbi
Miller. The difference what his success
was is that it wasn't just hearing it
and saying, "Well, that's nice." But he
implemented. Implemented. So if there's
one thing we could take away from this,
it's not it would be to start a program
of thanking God as well. And if we're
doing that, guess what? Let's do it some
more.
Cuz there's no there's no shortage of
what we should think about.
Keep a cookie jar in your house and
every night if you're married, you and
your wife should put in a piece of paper
with a gift that Hashem gave you that
day.
And you'll see you'll be one within a
short period of time, you'll be you'll
amass so many gifts that Hashem did for
you. And you'll be very happy.
That's the key. Key to success is always
think about the good that Hashem is
doing for you.
Cuz Hashem is our father and that's what
bitachon is all about. Whatever good
that you have is only from Hashem.
It's nothing because you're so smart or
so bright. It's not because your
parents. It's all God as well. Hashem is
instilling all these things in people to
do for us. Our customers, our employees,
our employers, all God as well.
And keep remembering that. And Hashem
wants to do good for us. And everything
Hashem is good.
And our job is to talk to him.
If you talk to him like you talk to your
father. Say, "Dad, Papa, Abba."
Like you say, "I need help.
I got to pay my mortgage today. I'm a
little short. Maybe you can give me a
Can you give me a gift?" Same thing as
you talk to God as well. He's for real.
And that's what is Hashem. Rabbi Miller
lived with Hashem. What does that mean
lived with Hashem? Hashem was real to
him.
And
if it's real to you, then your life will
be different. That's how the
automatically you'll have bitachon.
Everybody's running for bitachon.
I'll tell you a little anecdote that
the Yeshiva publishes Rabbi Miller's
Yeshiva database. So so he published uh
the forum of the Or Avigdor series on
Chovos Halevavos on the Siddur Sheshon.
And when the program started many years
ago, so it was a question what safer we
should put out first.
So I was thinking it was my idea to
publish a a it's a
safer on Shaar Bitachon. Cuz everybody
says have issues and they're
they're struggling and they're reaching
out for bitachon.
So there's another fellow, his name was
Reb Shiya Graeber alav hashalom. He
worked with us in Yeshiva, very fine
man. And he pushed and he said, "No, we
have to start from the beginning. We
have to start from Shaar Habechina."
Why? Because Chovos Halevavos is built
like a ladder. And you got to climb the
ladder first with Shaar Habechina. Why
is that? Because if a person goes to
Shaar Bitachon without Shaar Habechina,
then he's he has his ladder up against
the wrong tree cuz he doesn't realize
all what Hashem is doing for us. All the
good that Hashem can do for us and what
he is constantly doing for us. Only
after you see what Hashem does for us,
then you can come to real bitachon.
So as someone once asked Rabbi Miller,
"What did you do to become Rabbi
Miller?" And he said that since I went
to Slabodka Yeshiva, a day hasn't passed
that he hasn't learned Chovos Halevavos.
So this is a message parting message we
should take upon ourselves. Also plug
ourselves into the
to the Chovos Halevavos program
and steig [clears throat]
and steig and thanks to God as well
gaining a great awareness of Hashem
and that'll bring us to tremendous
happiness in everything we do. 23 years
ago when the rub the day that the rub
was nifter
was the worst day in my life I would
think.
I found that after davening
Friday morning in shul,
uh my wife called me and told me and I
I did keriah there in the back of the
shul.
>> [snorts]
>> And uh
why do I say it was the worst day? I I
lost my rebbe.
And from then, little by little his
influence waned.
There were no more shiurim to go to from
the rub.
No more Friday afternoon Erev Shabbos
walks that I would take with him.
>> [snorts]
>> And uh even though I had the tapes
to listen to, but little by little not
having him around
his influence on myself and my family
waned.
About 7 years ago I was transcribing for
myself. I was writing out one of the his
Pesach shuir before Yom Tov.
I used to do that every Yom Tov. I would
transcribe a few lectures on paper. That
way I could use them I could read them
on Yom Tov.
And I noticed that in one lecture one
Pesach shuir he was he had clarified an
important point that I
that he had touched on many years before
many years before in a different lecture
that I had written out.
And I began to think about organizing it
to try to have some of the shuirim
from the early years combined with the
later shuirim and try to put things
together in a in a orderly fashion that
should make it more easy more easy for
me to use on Yom Tov.
And after I did that
I began to think that why should I keep
it for myself? All the work I'm putting
in I would sit there with a pen and
listen to the tape and write it out word
for word. Why shouldn't I share it with
others?
The the Rav's Torah had such a deep
influence on my life and my family's
life
the life of my children too.
And
why should why shouldn't I share it?
And from there Torah So Vigder grew.
Torah So Vigder was born
on that day and since then it's been
it's been growing.
>> [sighs]
>> The fact is that Rav Miller today still
lives on because of
Torah So Vigder.
And that has nothing to do with me in
particular. It has to do with the Klal
Yisrael coming together on a whole
and bring him back to life.
Because my papers that I worked and I
always had I kept for myself and I used
them every Yom Tov and every Shabbos and
I would review them.
But then
Klal Yisrael came together and joined in
in wanting to spread the Rav's Torah.
To spread it in an authentic way the way
he said it
even though sometimes it might grate
people's nerves.
Everybody has different nerves and
people's nerves are grated in different
ways.
But at the end of the day it's a Torah
it's a Torah that touches everyone.
Uh people who are new to Yiddishkeit and
people who are
been involved
with serving Hashem for 80 years they
they appreciate it the same way. They
read it and they enjoy it and they gain
from it.
And Rav Miller lives today not because
of Torah So Vigder as an organization
but because people like you who are
willing to participate in helping Klal
Yisrael
live successfully.
From the beginning it was a
collaborative effort. I myself
only did the only did the organizing
and the editing and the rearranging
listening to different tapes and trying
to put them together
trying to organize it on the parsha
trying to make it
short enough that people can read it
over Shabbos and gain from it to
organize in a way that it's entertaining
and enjoyable for all ages.
But as the truth is that was only the
first step of the work. It's only
because
many people got involved
in wanting to help spread the Torah to
other people
that's how Torah So Vigder became
a successful organization
and maybe maybe
one of the biggest Torah So Vigder
organizations in in the world.
Now it's hard for an individual who's
reading a 24-page kuntres on Shabbos
just a little pamphlet in the on Shabbos
in the shul in the home it's hard for a
person to understand how costly it is
to distri to print and distribute almost
100,000 booklets every week.
Not in one area to distribute it to a 10
to more than 10 countries and to
hundreds of communities every single
week
is a very very costly endeavor.
And it's only because of you that we're
able to do it.
And therefore I'm asking you
this is your chance to help participate
in keeping Rav Miller alive.
People always talk about achdus about
the Am Yisrael being one unit
but this is really your chance to bring
that idea to life. Your contribution
means that you're sending life-changing
Torah to Jews in Australia and in Eretz
Yisrael and across America and in Mexico
and in Berlin and in London
to little to towns all over that I I
never heard of before.
And I'm asking you to take part.
I'm trying to do what I can. I spend
many hours organizing and writing
cutting and pasting.
But that doesn't mean anything for Klal
Yisrael without you.
And therefore on the Rav's yahrtzeit I'm
asking you to open your heart open your
wallet your pocketbook or whatever it is
and help us keep Rav Miller alive.
>> everyone for joining us on tonight's
very special program. Of course we thank
the numerous rabbis and students who
inspired us tonight. And of course it's
very important that we take the lessons
that of course we heard these powerful
remarks tonight but of course we should
take the lessons share it on your on
your share on your Shabbos table spread
spread the light the messages that that
that Rav Miller
inspired us all all with. I heard one
teaching of Rav Miller he said that
there's a famous question that a person
asked um it you have a you have a glass
of water and it's filled up halfway. Is
it is it is it so you say is it half is
is the person looking at it is it half
empty or half full? And Rav Miller said
the the the cup is completely full half
with water and half with air. We have to
take that's just one lesson. We have to
take the messages of of these close
students of of Rav Miller. Rav Miller of
course was such a one of the one of the
greatest rabbis of our generation and we
have to continue his legacy by by by
spreading his teaching spreading his
wisdom
um and that will of course be a great
great merit for all of us and we should
only hear of only good things. Amen.
Thank you everyone.