Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Welcome to
Welcome to our special uh
travel ban snow day state of emergency
live stream.
This is for all those people who are uh
locked down, stuck at home.
Can't go out, but you have
miracles of modern technology and we are
connected
through the live stream. Baruch Hashem.
Want to welcome everyone from the
regular Monday Tanya class.
The uh
Monday
weekly women's Tanya Shiur in
the Five Towns.
We meet at the Levi Yitzchok Library on
Central Avenue.
Every week we've been learning for
years. We've gone through Tanya a few
times.
And uh
we're in the middle of Perek Mem Aleph,
chapter 41 right now.
So, I want to welcome
primarily
the members of that class because
really I'm doing this as a uh
consolation prize to those people. I I
was actually seriously considering
having the class. Uh I don't live that
far from the library. It's really
probably
a block away.
Um
but it's really hard to walk even a
block. Uh this morning I went to Chabad
for Shacharis. I was actually there for
both minyanim for the 6:20 and the 7:30.
And just to get to Chabad, which is
not even a block away, um yeah, took me
took me 10 minutes to push through the
knee-high snow.
So, I would have also given the the
class, the Tanya class today at the
library, but
um even if I would push through the snow
and get there, I don't think anyone else
would show up. So, instead I said, "You
know what? Let me go live on YouTube."
And then
people will have it much easier to join
and then also other people can join as
well, people beyond the regular Tanya
Shiur.
Anyways,
if you're from the regular Tanya Shiur,
by the way, just drop a little hello in
the in the chat just so I can see that
you're here.
>> [clears throat]
>> That would be nice.
You can tell other people to join, also.
Okay. Um
what are we going to do? I have I have a
hard stop at 12:00 Eastern. Actually, I
should stop a few minutes before 12:00
Eastern.
I have a very interesting interview with
German TV.
Um a woman from German TV contacted me
and asked if
we could have a chat about some of the
stuff that I'm doing.
So,
oh, I see in the chat.
Thank you, Rabbi. Hello.
Okay.
Hello.
I just see people's um
>> [clears throat]
>> YouTube usernames, so forgive me if I
don't recognize
who you are.
Okay.
Well, when your user you when your
YouTube username is Devorah Ro-
Rosensweig, then I know who you are.
Yes, that's Devorah Rosensweig. Hi.
And thank you, uh Devorah Rosensweig,
because um yesterday your husband helped
helped us make a minyan yesterday at the
Solwertz's house. I was in Skokie,
Illinois for a Shabbaton
um for Shabbos, and I took the 6:00 a.m.
flight out of O'Hare.
Thank God I got out of there before all
the East Coast flights were grounded.
I landed at LaGuardia at 9:00 and my son
Yisroel picked me up straight from
LaGuardia, drove me straight to the
Solwertz's house, just a half a block
from the Ohel. We had a beautiful little
minyan over there.
Um and then we learned our weekly
Likutei Sichos Shiur. Everyone's invited
to that as well. That's we have men and
women. We have
seating for uh
men and women. Sometimes I say there's a
women's section, but actually sometimes
there's a men's section, meaning to say
sometimes there's more women than men
and then the women just sit in the main
area and the men sit off on the side.
But at any rate, uh 10:30's on Sunday
at the Solwertz's house, just a half a
block from the Ohel,
we have a Likutei Sichos Shiur.
Okay, so here's what we're going to do.
All right, and I'm assuming Lonnie
Burger Where is Lonnie Burger? Okay,
it's interesting people's Oh, Tanya
Weisman. Okay, so it's interesting
people's
um
YouTube usernames. Sometimes they're
their actual names, and then sometimes
they're like
um
my virtual
AL. Like I don't know what that is.
Right? Okay.
>> [laughter]
>> Okay.
Um
All right. And anyway, what are we going
to do? And like I said, I have a hard
stop at
um 12:00 cuz I'm
speaking to a German reporter. I I told
her I don't speak German, but she said
it's fine, we can speak in English.
Okay. Um we're going to what we're going
to do, just for fun, is we're going to
learn
>> [clears throat]
>> the
uh Hayom Yom the daily Tanya and the
Sefer Hamitzvos.
Okay? So, I wish I could share screen,
but I'm going to chabad.org daily study.
I'll share it in the
in the in the um
chat. I'm sharing it in the chat right
here. We'll you can keep multiple tabs
open.
Okay?
So, sharing it in the chat.
Um
Oh, Tanya Yala. Okay, very good. See,
some people's usernames are their real
names. Yeah.
Okay, now I recognize their names. Okay.
Um let's do
Tanya for today. All right. So, this is
today's Tanya, if you are following the
Hittas, going through the entire Tanya
in the course of a year.
And I just got a WhatsApp.
It's
Sippy, I think, saying
"I'm on, but can't seem to type hello.
LOL."
Okay. Glad you got back safe and had a
minyan. Baruch Hashem. Yes. Yeah, that's
definitely that's that's Sippy. Okay,
fine.
All right. So, let's do today's Tanya.
It's in the middle of Perek Lamed Aleph,
chapter 31.
And um
we're talking about
merirus.
Uh merirus is bitterness.
Like viyamareru es chayeihem, like we
say in the Haggadah. Trigger warning,
Pesach is in 2 months.
Um
not even. It's in like 6 weeks.
Um
bitterness. So, we said that
bitterness is not depression. Depression
incapacitates you.
But bitterness, although it's not joy,
uh it is a negative experience, but it's
a negative experience that kind of
>> [snorts]
>> leads to positivity because it it has
energy to it. Depression is the opposite
of energy. It saps you of energy. It
depletes you. But but bitterness can
actually spur you on. Okay, so let's do
today's
Tanya Hittas. Va'achar kach yavi'u lidei
simcha mitzvah. Now, after
you experience the bitterness, you get
frustrated with yourself, but then you
emerge from that and you feel true joy.
Dehaynu.
What does that mean?
That this is what you're going to put on
your heart, meaning this is what you're
going to contemplate, which will give
you double comfort
after um contemplating what we just said
before regarding the the frustration
that we feel about
being in a body with an animal soul
that's
making it hard for us to serve Hashem.
Okay, leima el libi. Libi. You're going
to say to your heart. What does it mean
say to your heart? This is a an an
internal monologue. This is what you say
to yourself.
Okay, here's your script. Ready? Here's
the script.
Emes hu kein bli safek.
It is undoubtedly true.
She'ani rachok me'At Hashem
betachlis hamushkach me'At Hashem chulu.
That I am very far from Hashem.
And I'm disgusting and abominable.
And everyone from 2026 is saying, "Oh,
no, don't. You're beating yourself up.
Don't speak negative to yourself." It's
okay. It's okay. Don't worry about this.
Okay?
Don't worry.
Ach kol zeh hu ani levadi.
But all of that, you know what? Maybe
I'm going to back up to yesterday just
to
give more context cuz we have time.
I'm going to actually back up to the
beginning of Perek Lamed Aleph. I'm
going to do yesterday's as well. Okay?
It just gives a little bit more context.
We have time. We're not rushing. Got at
least 20 minutes here.
All right. So, I'm I'm going to the
beginning I'm going to yesterday's
Hittas, the beginning of Perek Lamed
Aleph. Vehinei af im kishya rachav el
ha'am minyonam ani shkulam el kashosh
u'shtayim le'eis bein mechasru ach
ve'eilev nishbar yavi'u lidei atzvus
gedolah leyo'chush. Even if you'll think
about your deficiencies at length and
it'll cause you
to be very perturbed,
uh don't worry about it.
Va'af shatzos as him mitzad klipas nogah
ve'eilev mitzad kedushah. Even though
this like perturbed state is not
kedushah, it is rather klipas nogah
That's not good. because Because only
joy only joy is kedusha. is kedushah.
When
you're speaking about kedusha, then it's
only joy.
The Shekinah only dwells amid joy.
And also in order
to
arrive at the right halacha is only
through joy.
So then why are we saying it's okay to
have this little stickle atzvus?
But if it's the right type of um
upsetness, meaning it's frustration over
your spiritual failings,
it may not be kedusha, it isn't kedusha.
It is klipa, but it's klipa sitra achra.
And it's tov shebe sitra achra.
Brackets
cos
shafilu daigas al avinus ein ra ki im
besha'as vidui.
That's
why the Arizal said that even worrying
about serious sins should not be done
except during the confession prayers,
not during the rest of your prayer, not
while you're learning Torah, because
that has to be done in a state of
holiness, which is joy.
Nevertheless,
there is a special method for subduing
negativity with its own kind.
Little little like a little homeopathic
remedy here. Like like treats like.
That's what he's going to say.
From it itself comes the
the the the the the handle
for the axe that fells the tree.
And
or like a similar thing, he met up with
his own kind. He got a taste of his own
medicine. V'im masah.
Okay, so what does it mean to give
negativity a taste of its own medicine?
It means to counter
negative depression with
frustration, merirus, which is not holy,
cuz only joy is holiness, but it's not
exactly useless, either. It's like
sometimes when you're feeling negative
emotions, you counter it with a
productive version of negative emotions,
which is
merirus, frustration, bitterness.
And as we're going to explain that after
this state of frustration, you
experience joy.
And anyway, says the Alter Rebbe
it's not really called atzvus.
Atzvus is when your heart is plugged up
like a stone. Av merirus, but this is
merirus, bitterness. V'lev nishbar, a
broken heart. Ad rabba, that's the
opposite. How do yesh chayus belibo
l'hispollel l'smacheah? Then you have
actual life in your heart.
The only difference is happiness is from
chesed and this merirus is from gevurah,
but the heart has both. It has chesed
and gevurah.
Now, sometimes you have to arouse these
holy gevurahs to sweeten the judgments.
Like we said, a taste of its own
medicine. You use gevurah to treat
gevurah. The negative gevurah is the
depression, but the the positive gevurah
is the frustration. So you use the the
gevurah itself to to to treat itself.
Because
dinim, which means harsh judgments,
which is a product of gevurah, can only
be sweetened in their source. Meaning
you have to take it back to its own
source.
And
that's why our sages say you should
always incite your yetzer tov to rage
against your yetzer hara
anytime that you need to.
The best time for it is when
when you're when you're anyways upset
over material matters
or when you're stam as I just for no
reason, randomly, you're upset. Then he
what you should do is be a master of
accounts. That means to take a very
fearless
thorough moral inventory.
What happens is you get frustrated over
your
your negative spiritual state and that
alleviates your depression over your
lacking in your material state. Okay, so
that was yesterday. Now, let's go to
today.
Going to today.
Okay.
Oh, there's the person who always says
always trust the beard. So Renewstruck,
I have a question for you. You always
comment always trust the beard on all my
videos. So my question is
I'm saying this not to be funny. I'm
saying this completely seriously.
Um first of all, do you write that on
anyone else's
videos? Because there's a lot of rabbis
with beards who put out content. So I
just want to know, do you only write it
on mine or do you write it on all
content of rabbis that you like to watch
who have beards? So that's my first
question. My second question is is it a
form of
I don't know what it's called in the
written form, but like if you do it
verbally, it's called echolalia,
which means like there's a certain thing
you like to say and you just say it a
lot. You don't even like to say it, you
just end up saying it.
Um there's certain phrases that I walk
around the house saying. You can ask my
kids, they all know the certain phrases
I say. Some of them are nonsensical and
they're certainly often non sequiturs
because they're out of context. They
just say them a lot, kind of like almost
a reflex. I'm just wondering, is the
always trust the beard like sort of like
a written echolalia?
Okay.
Uh Yureh De'ah Letzeis Chulia is also
Pesach.
>> [snorts]
>> Uh
Tomorrow, what is this? Yitzy7505,
maybe?
Happy morning from Southern California.
Hi.
Okay.
Thank you, Rabbi, for hospital help.
What hospital help? Did I help somebody
in the hospital?
I can't remember that.
Oh my goodness.
Okay, that So anyways, we have the
context now. Let's do today's Tanya
Chitas.
Up I'm going to put in the link in again
for the for the the daily
study. Put it right in the chat. All
right.
Uh yeah. All right. There. All right.
So now let's do today's.
Um
Okay, so we said before what are we
going to do? We're going to say our
little internal script. This is our
monologue that we're going to say to
ourselves. Quote,
I'm speaking to myself right now.
It
is undoubtedly true.
I am so far from Hashem and I am
disgusting and I am abominable.
Ah, however, however,
kol zeh hu ani l'vadi. All of that,
that's just me.
Just my body and its animating soul.
But nevertheless, yesh be kirbi chelek
Hashem mamash, there is a portion of God
in me.
And
what is that portion of God? It is the
godly spark that is in every Jew, even
the lowest ones.
And it is enlivened it is in it is it is
the godly spark that is invested within
me to enliven me, to give me life,
but it is in a state of exile, meaning
it's not in control, cuz it's caught up
inside of the body and the animating
soul.
And [snorts] if this is the case, and it
is the case, ad rabba, to the contrary,
the more abominable and lowly and
disgusting I am,
that means that my beautiful, sweet,
awesome godly soul is even more in a
worse state of exile.
And it's even a greater rachmanus. You
understand? First I'm starting off and
I'm like, oh, heartbroken. Oh my gosh,
I'm so abominable. But hold on, that's
just me. Meaning my my my body, my
animal soul, which I call it me because
that's what I relate to, right?
But inside of me, the real real me,
is the
godly soul and it is experiencing a a
condition of galus, of exile.
And so the worst state I'm in
physically,
you know, being drawn after my my
temptations and desires and distractions
of this world, then the greater the
rachmanus I have to have, the greater
the compassion, the pity, the mercy that
we have to have for this pure, sweet
little godly soul who's trapped in this
whole situation.
Okay, rachmanus al ach gadol me'od.
>> [snorts]
>> and therefore I will devote my entire
being my whole life to this lady Sia to
take her out. Who's her? Little pure
little princess, the godly soul.
La'aleisa and to bring her out to
elevate her migalut zeh from this state
of exile la'ashiva el beis aviha
k'neura'ah and to bring her back to her
father's palace as in her youth.
Isn't this a beautiful little parable?
This little princess, she's trapped in
this yucky swamp. I don't know if it's a
swamp, but in a yucky situation and I'm
going to bring her back to her father's
palace
just as she was
before she was invested in my body. She
I said that over there she was
she was subsumed within the light
of Hashem. She was one with him in the
ultimate sense. The gam
but even now I can make that be again.
I can make her
again be absorbed within Hashem and
united with Hashem. How? How can I do
it? Pray tell. When
I exert my entire being toward Torah and
mitzvahs when I apply all of my 10 soul
powers into
Torah and mitzvahs but mitzvahs too
especially the mitzvah of prayer
to cry out to God but
when I cry out to Hashem specifically
over the pain that I feel on behalf of
my pure little godly soul being tortured
in galus la'atzi'ah
to bring her out of her imprisonment
to cleave to Hashem.
That's what I'm going to say. That's my
little monologue, my soliloquy.
And
this
is teshuvah u'ma'asim tovim. Teshuvah
u'ma'asim tovim is a
common
of our sages. Teshuvah return, u'ma'asim
tovim good deeds. But listen how the
Alter Rebbe explains it teshuvah
u'ma'asim tovim that u'ma'asim tovim are
teshuvah.
When you do good deeds
you're doing teshuvah meaning you're
returning. Teshuvah means return. So by
doing good deeds you're returning the
princess to her castle, to her father's
home.
That
means you do good deeds to return the
portion of God within you to its source.
Beautiful.
Want to check in with the chat see how
everyone's doing.
Um
I missed my yesterday so I'm glad I got
to hear you go over that first.
Blessings from Chaim in Highland Park.
Oh great.
You know I was in Highland Park
uh a little less than two months ago for
uh
first couple days of shiva for my
mother.
Abominable snowman today.
Yeah.
Sasquatch, abominable snowman.
You know about my brother David and I
went to the cryptozoology museum in
Venice, California probably about 30
years ago.
Close to 30 years ago. Anyways, we went
there and we asked the curator we said
um have you ever seen the Yeti? Has
anyone ever seen the Yeti?
And he said the Yeti has Yeti to be
discovered.
Okay.
Let's continue here.
Okay, I'm going to pull up the where is
it?
I'm just grabbing the
>> [snorts]
>> the link. Okay, I'm pasting it into the
chat. All right, let's go take a look at
the Hayom Yom.
Hayom Yom Vov Adar Rishon. We're going
to do the Hayom Yom for the Adar Rishon
and Adar Beis
even though this year there's only one
Adar.
Hayom Yom Vov Adar Rishon. Sichos
Adoneinu Ovi Melech Ha'olam. The sichos
of my father. This is the Frierdiker
Rebbe speaking about his father meaning
the Rebbe Rashab.
>> [clears throat]
>> It is a magnificent gift
of Hashem to merit that a person merits
an innate sense, a feel for doing
kindness to another
to derive pleasure from it.
Until
the other becomes more precious to him
than himself.
Because for himself he could find
excuses why
not necessarily does he deserve
everything good. Like for yourself yeah,
you know what? It's a kaparah, it's an
atonement. I know I'm not perfect, you
know I I
I'm certainly not entitled to to
I know my deficiencies.
But for the other person he cannot
possibly find any excuses why the other
should have to suffer. For me, for my
suffering I could always find reasons
why. Okay, yeah I get it, you know I
don't want to suffer but I get it why I
have to go through this. But for
somebody else no no no no can never come
up with a explanation for it. It's a
tragedy, it's a travesty.
That has to be the attitude.
You understand? I can always look at
myself and see how I'm coming up short
and then
sort of make peace with
the difficulties in my life in that
context. But I can never look into
somebody else's moral inventory and see
how they're coming up short and
therefore they don't deserve everything
good. No, God forbid we don't do that.
Never never never.
Okay.
Um
Vov Adar Sheini. Hayom Yom for Vov Adar
Sheini. Mekubal etzel ziknei Anash
it is accepted, a tradition among the
elders of the Chassidic brotherhood
that what? A little history here.
Tanya is a compilation essentially of
conversations that were had in yechidus
in one-on-one audiences between the
Alter Rebbe and the Chassidim
in the years
um
1780 through 1790.
Then a couple years later in the summer
of 1792 the Alter Rebbe started to
arrange
these conversations into the form of
Tanya that we as we know it today.
And then the following year, 1793
uh
there were already many many versions
like copies of Tanya.
Handwritten manuscripts. This is before
the
printing.
But then
there were falsified corruptions some
some unintentional some intentional.
Um
Yeah,
there were counterfeit versions of
Tanya. My time for that very reason
that's why the Alter Rebbe handed over
to be printed at
have a an official printing of it.
There's another version of this history
that the Alter Rebbe spent 20 years
writing or
compiling Tanya and he was precise in
every single letter, word. Shnas
Hey Adar Rishon
was refined by Shnas
Hey
1795 it was already refined, the text
was already refined.
Then he gave permission to copy it. But
then when there were corruptions of the
text that's when he gave it over to be
printed.
The Tzemach Tzedek said in the first
Rosh Hashanah of his life meaning when
he was a baby
the
Alter Rebbe said a ma'amar it starts
with the words uh mashpi'a tzedek which
we all know is from the first line of
Tanya.
shall Seder Tanya and that ma'amar
was the basis for the first three
chapters of Tanya.
Okay.
And let me just go look in the chat see
if I'm missing anything.
Uh Uh, boo boo boo boo boo boo boo boo
boo, boo, boo, boo, boo, boo, boo,
boo boo boo boo, boo, boo, boo, boo,
Yeah, oh, warm regards from the Holy
Land. Thank you.
Mhm.
Can you tell us a story? I don't have
time. I we're in a I have to go on a
German TV in like 3 minutes.
I'm going to be interviewed by German
television.
Um,
so I'm going to do now the Rambam safer
mitzvahs and then we're going to be
done.
I'm sorry. We could do this again later.
Maybe we'll do it again later today.
I'm going to put it in the chat. Hi from
the Chicago burbs.
Hi, which burb are you from?
All right, let's do the safer mitzvahs.
Um,
yeah.
A mitzvah, I see this the 10th mitzvah
the commandment we were commanded that
means a positive commandment. Lekri
krishma bakhol yam. Arvit v'shacharit,
to recite the shma every day, twice a
day indeed. Night and morning. Like it
says
when you lie down and when you get up.
A mitzvah chamishis,
the fifth mitzvah. You're going to say
why are you going jumping around? The
10th and the fifth cuz we're not going
in order of how it's written in safer
mitzvahs. We're going in order of which
mitzvahs correspond to the halachas that
are being studied in the three chapters
a day of Mishneh Torah. And right now in
Mishneh Torah, three chapters a day of
Mishneh Torah, we just started Hilchos
Keriat Shema, the laws of Shema.
Okay.
Um,
a mitzvah chamishis.
La'avdei Yisrael, the mitzvah to serve
Hashem.
Va'avadetem es Hashem Elokeichem, you
should serve the Lord your God.
What does it mean to serve him?
Means a lot of things, but
says the Rambam, Harei yesh ba'yichud ki
hu tzivah al tefillah.
Specifically it's talking about
davening.
It's a mitzvah to daven. La'avdei zu
tefillah, to serve Hashem that means to
uh, to daven.
Okay.
Those are the mitzvahs today.
Please livestream Tanya weekly.
Um, maybe.
Maybe. Maybe we will.
Were you the one who called the Igros
the Tanya of the Rebbe?
I mentioned that the Igros are the Tanya
of the Rebbe. I'm not the one who made
that up. Uh, Shalom Ber Levin, the one
who
compiled the Igros,
works in the library and he compiled the
Igros. He said that and then actually
the Rebbe told him to include it in the
introduction to I think it was volume 11
of Igros.
So it is
it's not me that made that up. But yeah,
it is a thing. The the Igros is like the
Alter
like the Alter Rebbe's Yechidus
is on paper is through Tanya, so too the
Rebbe
through the Igros.
Okay, I got to jump
because like I said, I got this
appointment. This lady from Germany. I
forgot which city
she's from, but anyways,
I got to go to that.
It's been amazing. It's been so fun. Got
to do it again. Yeah, if we're snowed
in, I'll go I'll go live again. Maybe
I'll go live again later today.