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The Rebbe's Campaign for Family Purity (Mikvah) | Mivtza Taharas Hamishpacha
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The mitzvah of Taharas HaMishpacha (literally "family purity") is the core of Jewish life. It governs the intimate life of Jewish spouses and preserves the sanctity of that relationship. Fifth in a series of classes on the mitzvah campaigns ("Mivtzaim") of the Rebbe and part of the "Every Home a Sanctuary" initiative at Chabad of the Five Towns. Dedicated in memory of Dina Leah Rosenzweig OB"M.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
okay so this is a series a uh
a series on the mitzvah
campaigns and
here we are we're doing nivta
the campaign to promote
the mitzvah of what we we translate
literally as family purity taras
bacha means family purity
sometimes we refer to it as the laws of
needha
or sometimes it's referred to as the
laws of mikvah
all of those are terms that are we use
synonymously
is probably the most general term for it
collectively
neither really describes the specific
state the biological
state of that that a woman enters
um with a spiritual and biological state
and mikvah is the the pool of immersion
that uh
through which uh a woman or anyone for
that matter but
specifically in this context a woman
achieves
tahara or ritual purity
so uh let's begin like this
i was thinking to myself
how are we going to do this how are we
going to do this
what do i mean
every jewish person who gets married
by a competent orthodox rabbi
and who is prepared according to halacha
for marriage is going to get
a class more than a class a thorough
course in paris bacha
slash the loss of nida slash laws of
mikvah
before they get married this is not
something
that children
learn how to practice or even
young adults who are single
because very simply
it is not applicable until a person is
married
so here we are
we're giving this class this is open to
the public this is open to everyone
um this is going to go online and
anyone can watch it and the question is
you know
first of all you know propriety is this
uh is this something we want to be
talking about
and the answer is absolutely
this is something that we want to be
talking about absolutely without
a doubt without question
and i will tell you how i know that i
will tell you where i take my lead from
there is a magazine
a children's magazine called meshiach
times meshiach times
is for cives hashem which is the name of
an organization in fact it's the world's
largest jewish youth club
and the meshech times is a magazine that
serves the constituents the children who
are members of this group
it's a physician now
i actually heard this story directly
from the editor
of meshech times rabbi david shalom pape
may he be well and
he told me like this they wanted to do
an
issue about the ten minutes
about the the mitzvah campaigns similar
to what you know we've been doing
uh this year and uh
as uh robertson wallowak said before we
began that this entire series of classes
is in honor of uh rosensweig
and all of the mitzvahs that will come
from this these classes is in her merit
so um similar to the way we've been
promoting
these campaigns the
meshiach times magazine wanted to do a
an issue promoting these uh these
campaigns
the problem is that it's a children's
magazine
so rabbi pape instructed the
illustrator and i'm not sure who exactly
was the illustrator of this particular
cover
for some reason i think it was dave berg
of mad magazine
i believe it was actually
or maybe it was al jaffe i think it
actually was al jaffe and i'll tell you
why
because i think the cover had the
character called der spy
there's a character called the spy and
um and he's an el jeff he's also one of
the
mad magazine artist it's interesting
that's a whole other story how did the
mad magazine staff come to write for uh
to or illustrate and write for
uh michelle times but at any rate so the
cover of the magazine
and this was in 1984
this was the shvat issue interesting
this month is shot
coming up uh well actually no tonight
became
um wow yeah tonight is shot
so the
issue of tough shin mem hey that means
uh
1985 winter of 85.
they had a cover and on the cover it had
um the spy this character
and he was planting trees
and the yatzahara who's the villain in
this comic strip
the it's hard is the villain in real
life too it's the evil inclination
it was trying to stop them and they're
planting trees and each of the trees oh
and why are they trees
because schwa the hebrew month of
schwart is associated with
the 15th of schwab which many people
refer to as tu
bishvat tu beshvat doesn't mean the
number two like in english two is
uh tess valve which is nine plus six
which is 15.
don't ask why that's a discussion for
another time but at any rate
uh hamish al-sabishvat the 15th day of
schwab tuber new year for trees
so for the shavat issue
of uh times they had this
illustration the
this character the spy and the planting
different trees and each tree
had a mifsa on it i had one of the
different
mythology so filling shabbos candles
mesoza
tora study tsudaka all of the
the the campaigns but
um rabbi pape didn't want to put
tares back because it's a children's
magazine so he felt it was you know like
inappropriate so he wanted to figure out
you know how to substitute with
something else he was thinking well you
know what's important
that abba had said to children whether
it ever spoke about the importance of
telling the truth
it's an interesting syria where the
rebbe is describing
how a child uh comes downstairs and he
sees his children or
his his siblings are the other children
his siblings are eating uh this cake and
he wants a piece of cake but he didn't
wash his hands yet
and uh you know he's tempted to lie and
it's a very interesting circle where
they never really gets into the
psychology of a child
and then it was the point of the sichu
of the talk is about
the importance of telling the truth so
rabbi pape decided since the rabbi had
spoken
about the importance of telling the
truth so he could sort of include that
as a substitute mitzvah campaign oh
telling the truth was not one of the
mitzvah campaigns but rabbit paper
wanted to take out
tadasana family purity because he felt
it was inappropriate for children so
you take that out you got to put
something in so he put in telling the
truth
so you see the cover has all the
different uh trees marked with the
different mitzvah campaigns except for
the the
the one that should be taras bacha it
says
telling the truth well
they used to always hand in the cover of
the magazine
to the rabbit for review before they
would go to print
amazing thing with all of his
responsibilities would
uh look through this children's magazine
just that itself is
wild but they they handed in the the
magazine
before they went to print and they got
one note back
that ever wrote whoever wrote it in
hebrew but
uh that ever wrote one of them if
soyum is missing and then you put in
one that's not that doesn't belong
so uh rabbit paper gets this answer it
was clear
to him that ever wants
that when you teach the ten mitzvah
campaigns
even to small children you tell them
what the campaigns are
even if it's small children so i'm
taking my lesson
and so they they corrected it they
corrected the the um
the cover and it came out with uh taras
mashbach
family purity on it so i'm taking my
lesson from that
story and uh it clearly means
that we are supposed to talk about this
with all types of
audiences and obviously
uh we should do so tastefully we are
i think somewhat restricted i mean we're
not going to get into the
technical observance of the mitzvah
that would uh not really be possible
that's something that people are taught
as preparation for marriage
but to talk about the general history of
the campaign
and then about the mitzvah itself i
think uh
not only is uh permissible but an
incredibly important
uh topic to promote
maybe in a certain way even more than
any of the other topics that we've
we've discussed and maybe by the end of
uh tonight's class you'll understand why
i say that
so uh maybe let's let's start like this
let's start with
the origins of the mitzvah
that we said is called taras mishpacha
or nida
or mikvah where does it come from
it is a biblical mitzvah it's a biblic
it's one of the 613 commandments
and
it is a mitzvah
that governs the private life
of a jewish husband and wife
and it is regarded
as so important so essential
that
a jewish community that does not have a
mikvah
is not considered a community
you could say well there's a you know we
drive and go to the mikvah you know in
the next town over
okay fine so wherever you're living
that's not called a jewish community
you're living outside of the community
you can have
thousands of jews living somewhere but
if they don't have a mikvah it's not
called a jewish community
now you're going to say there are other
things also you know if you don't have a
shul it's not called the jewish
community that's true
but let me explain to you why a mikveh
is even greater than a shul
according to halakha you're not allowed
to sell a show
like let's say your community needs
funds they they they want money they
want to liquidate assets so they say
they have a nice piece of property they
so they sell their shul so they can get
some money not allowed to do that
however
when it comes to a mikvah you're allowed
to sell the shul
you're allowed to sell the seafrey
toyota torah scrolls
in order to have the funds to build the
mikveh
so we see here that a priority is given
to the mikvah beyond
any other aspect of jewish life
which is i think um
a reminder that the core of jewish life
is only supported in the synagogue the
core of jewish life really takes place
in each and every jewish home and
the center of the home is the
husband-wife relationship
and the center of the husband-wife
relationship is their intimate life
which is made wholly
through the practice of the laws of
mikvah
so it's it's no great wonder that
having a mikvah would take such
precedence even over
other aspects of jewish communal life
let me put it to you in a historical
perspective maybe this will help bring
it out
maybe even more clearly
anyone who's been to israel who took a
trip you know
a guided tour almost everybody has been
to masada
right that's one of the the places all
the tourists always always visit
and uh one of the things you see up
there
up on masada up on that mountain where
those uh
jews were living uh they were resisting
the the the roman occupation and they
they went up to masada
and uh you see there's there there are
mikvahs there
there are mikvasan masada now
how long was the
siege in masada
it was half a year
how long did the jews live up on masada
you know and how long did they plan to
live on masada
it wasn't like they were setting up a
permanent community it was they were
fleeing
they were fleeing so you're talking
about
jews who are living in what was a very
temporary situation
and on top of that they had incredible
literal life and death
threats that they were facing
and with all of that you see that jews
built mikvahs like that was considered
such a basic part of the rhythm
of jewish life that even if you're
hiding out
as a band of resistance a
and and you're fleeing for your very
lives
uh you still wouldn't think to spend any
amount of time somewhere
without a mikveh and it just
it it's absolutely uh
astounding when you think about it the
jews in that type of situation
felt that mikva was that important
and of course there are many many many
stories through the ages
where jews who were living under
terrible oppression
and had no stability in their lives
and everything they did was at you know
was was was was only with great peril
and they always preserved this mitzvah
of mikvah
in fact even when the persecution was
specifically against
the observance of mikvah itself they
were building and keeping and using
mikvas i mean
we know that you know the the story the
of lubavitch
in the soviet union the times of of of
of communist russia
is characterized by you know great
uh resistance and one of the
maybe perhaps even the primary form of
resistance
was that the previous
had a network okay they were the
underground uh
kadarim the the schools for for for
torah study
but one of the the primary if not the
primary
uh services for which people
literally risked and at risk gave up
their lives
four was to maintain
mikvas and and and to
through secret networks allow jewish
women to know where the mikva was and
where a new one had opened when the kgb
closed one in one location
they opened one in another location it
wasn't child's play when they closed up
a
a mix in one location it was very often
that whoever they found there was sent
to siberia
to build a mikvah have a mix in your
home
was a capital offense
and and yet mikva
was considered to be so important so
cherished so central
that uh even when there was
like i said literal risk of life and
limb
there was something that jews wouldn't
live without
so we we get a we get a a glimpse i
think a taste
of an appreciation of how powerful how
important that that mitzvah is
let's talk a little bit about
the history or the background of the
rebbe's
campaign we're speaking about this uh
in the context of the ten million the
ten
mitzvah campaigns so let's talk about
that briefly
um the first of the time of time we've
said this before in other classes in
this series but it's
it's worth repeating so i'll just repeat
it again very briefly
a little historical sketch here uh
1967 on the eve of the six-day war
that ebba started the fill-in campaign
and that was that for a while that was
the only campaign
so it wasn't under the banner of
mithsilium it was just a thing
that was nothing and then uh
seven years later in fact i think we
spoke about last week
that the the filling campaign started on
the eve of the six day war
and the first group of other campaigns
started
after the yom kippur war like the year
following the yom kippur war so it's
interesting that the
these campaigns were sort of tied in
with
major events in in in jewish
uh history that were going on at the
time
so in 1974 i think in cable war was 73
so the next year 74
they uh there was the the institution
of uh myths dhaka
by smalling swarm that's what we did i
think last time and nashik
right so in in plain english uh zoza
hari samus
in english
charity uh house full of torah books
and uh shabbos candles
so that those were instituted in 1974.
then in the following year toshin
lamedhay which is 1975
that ever instituted
and kashrus so family purity which is
the mitzvot we're speaking about tonight
along with uh a campaign to promote
the uh the the uh keeping of kosher laws
and then by the way there's a connection
between taras mishpacha and
kashulus very strong connection
they are both mitzvahs
that affect men and women but
women are primarily responsible for
keeping them
obviously men and women are bound by
these laws equally
but the practical fact of the matter
is who's the one who typically in the
jewish home
overseas and makes sure that these laws
are
here adhered to properly is the mainstay
of the jewish home the the jewish woman
so she is the one who oversees both of
those mitzvahs
um
so during that period of time
1975 when it ever came out with this uh
this campaign
there were many talks many public
addresses where that ever spoke about
tara and
one of the things that eva spoke about
was what we mentioned earlier
the mesidis nephesh the great sacrifice
that uh lobovich had in russia to build
mikvahs when it was very dangerous to do
so
and that ever spoke about now you know
living in a free society nothing's
stopping us
and uh we have to build
we have to build mikvas that we're
speaking about building mix
and uh and not to delay not to delay
because
every single couple
who who has the benefit of a mikvo when
they conceive
this is this is such a powerful light
i'm going to speak about that
in in a moment but
such a powerful light in the world and
it's not to be delayed it's not to be
put off
it it's i'm i'm guarding the way that
i'm speaking because i i don't want to
make
it sound like see i'm i'm sort of torn
here because on one hand
i don't want anyone to be
to take it in the wrong way
if i say
i don't want to say that it's something
that you can you have one chance to do
it right
because people will say well well i
didn't know or i
i made a mistake and i didn't do it
right and now you know my child is born
so on the but on the other hand i don't
want to say
oh it's not a big deal so what am i
supposed to say
what i'll tell you is this there
of course this is a question that people
ask now i'm
taking a parenthetical detour right now
because i feel like it's just
important to address but of course there
are many people who have asked this
question well what do you do
when you realize after your children are
born
so in that case what the rebel would
recommend is that
you should start keeping those laws now
and teshuva is very very powerful
toshiba can have a transformative effect
so i i would say
that if you're still
having children um obviously it's
it's a no-brainer to
observe the laws of mikvah and to
observe them meticulously and to take a
refresher course even if you've already
learned it
and if you haven't learned it learn it
for the first time but even if you're
you're not having children anymore but
it would be
valuable at least uh one time
to have that experience and what the
heck you know at the very least you
could write it off as a jewish cultural
experience right
but yeah it has a powerful effect even
if it's
even if it's after the fact
at any rate uh let me go back to where i
diverted from that i was speaking about
how
the urgency basically the urgency and
not to
delay and not to um
allow a situation to happen where you
know basically uh
every every single day um
matters every hour matters uh
and and and during in during these talks
that i've also spoke about the
importance of making the buildings
the actual physical structure and the
decor and the design
of the of the buildings and where in
which the mikvah is housed the mikvah
itself is the actual pools the immersion
pool
um but uh you know there's a house i
mean now
nowadays we have we have a building in
the olden days
you know sometimes it was uh
you know you just jump in the ocean but
we have beautiful houses so that i've
encouraged that
they should make these
structures as beautiful as attractive as
pleasant as possible
and that this is all part of beautifying
the mitzvah and it's all part of
attracting women to want to observe this
mitzvah
in other words it's not a mitzvah that
that a woman should have to feel of
course women have had sacrifice
to keep this mitzvah but it's not one
that they should have to
feel that they're sacrificing if if you
can make it so nice that it feels
almost like indulgent if it feels like a
spa then then we should try to do so um
so so just so that it'll be uh
done more and and in fact that ever even
like acknowledges this in the sikhs
whatever says there
and maybe you'll argue that even if it's
not such an attractive experience
she's still obligated it's still a
mitzvah right it's still a mitzvah and
it really shouldn't bother her
whether it's nice whether it's not nice
what do you think it's a mitzvah so who
cares if the building is
is pretty or not that eva said that's
not what you should be thinking that's
not
a germain argument the fact of the
matter is
that if the building is nice and the
experience is nice and the attendant is
nice and everything is done in a very
luxurious way the fact of the matter is
it will
promote more women using mikva more
often
which has this incredibly powerful
effect
on the the spiritual uh
advantages that they give to their
children
that are conceived from from from that
from that uh going to the mikvah
so uh
you know you can you can argue all you
want that it's not so important
it is important it is important it's and
it may be more important than anything
like we were saying before
um let's talk a little bit oh
i mentioned let me talk about this
i mentioned that
mikva provides an advantage
to the to the children spiritual
advantage to the children
who are born who are conceived uh in a
state of of spiritual purity
so let me just talk about that a little
bit um
when a soul comes down to a body
look all souls are holier than angels
what i mean what's greater a soul or an
angel soul no question
but a soul has to come down to a body
and when it comes down to a body there's
certain wear and tear that it
experiences as it comes down from heaven
actually heavens plural and eventually
comes into this world you know just like
after
a person passes they leave the body and
they go to heaven so
before they were born they were in
heaven they left heaven and they came to
a body
and embodiment can uh put a damper on
your spirituality
to say the least right and and what
happens is
um the body can sort of buffer out
filter out
the soul's spiritual sensitivity
and what really is going to determine
not the soul the soul is is pristine
but the interface that the soul is going
to have here in this world
the the filter through which the soul is
going
going to experience things while in a
body that
that's all determined by the
circumstances of the conception
of the body that the soul is going to
inhabit when it comes down and there's
nothing
more conducive to the
[Music]
the situation of the body
being a good vessel for the soul is
nothing more conducive
than than being conceived in ritual
purity which is
the result of immersing in the mikvah
and what this does is allows the soul to
shine through
so of course there are lofty souls
beautiful pure souls that were born
without the advantage of their parents
going to mikvah you know that's
that's that's the fact but
with mikvah it's giving that soul
the ability to have it a little bit
easier in life
in other words you know let me put it
like this
your child's intelligence is not
something that you
can cause you know you don't make you
don't get to pick how smart your child
is
but you can choose what schools to send
your child to
right and and jewish parents do this all
the time we make great sacrifices to
send their kids to the right schools
so that our child should have every
advantage in life right
okay so same thing you don't choose
how smart your kid is but you choose
what schools to give them to send them
to or send her to
to give them every advantage in life the
same thing
that their their inner spirituality
isn't determined by anything you did or
didn't do
that that's that that's beyond your
ability to help or hurt
but the circumstances that that soul is
going to come into
yeah of course you do have an influence
and there's nothing more influential
that you as a parent can do than allow
your child the benefit of being
being conceived while uh
the the the mother is in a state of
virtual purity that was
uh was was brought about through
immersion
in a kosher mikvah so
in that sense we see that
the mikvah is a as a
mitzvah that's more powerful than any
other i'll tell you why
there's a saying it's actually it's from
king solomon's sayings you know he has
proverbs michelle
near mitzvah he says that
uh a mitzvah is a candle and torah is
light
so a mitzvah is a candle every time you
do a mitzvah you're lighting a candle
not just lighting shabbos candles or
candles which is literally a candle
but you put on filling you're lighting a
candle right you eat kosher you're
lighting a candle
you give tzedakah you're you're lighting
a candle
uh you shake lulla van sukkas you hear
the shayfer on rosh hashanah
these are all lighting a candle so to
speak
and every candle brings light into the
world
but we all know that no matter how
bright a candle is
or how many candles you like in a room
they can never compare to the intensity
of the sunlight when it comes streaming
into the room through a window
you can't compare the two you could
light thousands of candles in the room
but it's nothing compared to just
opening up the window and let the sun
shine through and it's just incomparably
brighter
well all mitzvahs are like candles
except for one all mitzvahs are like
candles
but mikvah is like
letting in the sunshine
through the window
because what is mikva mikfa is
providing the circumstances which allow
the purity and the power
of a soul to come into the world
with no obstruction so that it can come
into a body
and shine and the light from the soul
the soul is like it says in tanya kela
killa kami mal it's a piece of god
so a mitzvah is a candle yeah it's a
nice light
but the light that emits from an
unobstructed soul when a soul is born
into a body with the benefit of purity
that's like the sun shining through the
window
so in that sense the the mitzvah that we
do
that makes the most light is this this
mitzvah
like the difference between lighting a
candle and opening up the window so that
the sun
can shine through
maybe i'll just very briefly
speak about the observance of the
mitzvah
i as i said earlier i don't want to get
into it
uh in detail and i can't for obvious
reasons i can't
but maybe we'll just close up by just
speaking about it very
in very general terms
part of marriage
i'm not saying all of marriage but a
part of it is
love a husband and wife are meant to
love each other
and there are different kinds of love
you think there's one kind of love
it's like you know what do you want for
dessert ice cream what flavor ice cream
oh whatever
ice cream then you don't know ice cream
if you don't know how many flavors of
ice cream there are you don't understand
ice cream
go ask the poets the poets know
there are many times many types of love
but let's talk about right now
the difference between a husband and
wife
love and other kinds of love like for
instance
a brother and sister
a brother and sister have a love
that is constant in fact their love
began before
they even really understood what love
was because they grew up with each other
and they're comfortable with each other
and even when they fight they still love
each other because that love is just
this
baseline uh you know it's just normal
it's like the air that you breathe
and in that sense it's also very
neutral meaning it's not wow
it's not like it hits you like a ton of
bricks
no it's constant
it's steady it's normal it's so normal
you don't even notice it
right like an old pair of shoes a
brother and sister's love for each other
is like that old pair of shoes you don't
want to throw it away because when you
put on that old pair of shoes
it feels like you're not even wearing
shoes it's so comfortable it's so
just normal right okay
that's beautiful it is beautiful but
that is
not the kind of love the husband and
wife are supposed to have for each other
a husband and wife's love for each other
should not be like
that awesomely comfortable pair of old
shoes
no the love a husband and wife had have
for each other
should be wow it's hitting me like a ton
of bricks
now you're going to say that's
infatuation that happens at the
beginning of a relationship
and then afterwards the honeymoon is
over and you get used to each other
god forbid god forbid
why should that happen
if a husband and wife love becomes
like a brother-sister love
that is not good for a marriage which
means by extension it's not good for a
jewish family
or anybody living under that roof which
by extension means it's not good for the
jewish community
which by extension means it's not good
for the world when a husband and wife
become blase
even in a good way not in a contemptuous
way no in a very sweet way
that is um
doesn't bode well for the entire world
has negative repercussions
on all of reality
the core of the jewish home is the
intimate life of husband and wife
and a husband and wife's love have to be
has to be passionate
has to be exciting has to be
wow this is not my sister that i grew up
with and i knew
before i even knew how to speak right
this is someone i didn't know i had my
own life i discovered her
i discovered her the first time i laid
eyes on you
right that's why we speak about husband
and wife
romance in that way because the novelty
of it
is it it's all about novelty a brother
and sister love is the opposite of
novelty which is beautiful in its own
way
husband and wife love is all about
novelty
well how do you keep novelty when you're
married for a year
10 years 20 years 30 years
40 years where's the novelty
so our creator did an an amazing thing
he built into us a rhythm
of approach disengagement
reunion it's part of the biological
cycle
i mean biology itself is telling us this
spiritual truth
that there's a time for backing away you
know people say i need my space
it's true you do need your space why
because a husband and wife love has to
be about reapproaching
reunion not constant union
if it's constant it becomes like a
brother and sister
so we have built into our system
this this rhythm this pattern which
always
ensures that there will be like i said
approach disengagement reunion
and then the love between husband and
wife is always
kept new as it is intended to be
and and all we have to do is respect the
cycle of biology
which is embedded in nature and then
take our guidance from
torah law which tells us how to respect
this this natural cycle
and not that we do mitzvahs because of
how it benefits us
no i mean we don't do mitzvahs because
it benefits us we do mixes because
hashem said to however this one's such a
no-brainer
this mitzvah so clearly benefits us
at any rate i want to encourage
everybody
um to
do what you can for this mitzvah
whether it is to be involved in the
building of a mikvah
you know to donate to a mikvah
to educate others or encourage others to
practice
the laws of mikvah or to take a
refresher course
in the laws of mikvah or if you've
haven't observed the mitzvah before to
look into it
and and to see about at least maybe one
time at least to have that experience
and uh to remember that this isn't
uh this isn't like any other mitzvah
this is the core
this is the essence this is the
epicenter of jewish life
and when the core is strong everything
else is strong
okay thank you very much blessings to
you all and again
i want to remind you that this class
as well as all of the classes in this
series is uh
in honor of dyna layer rosenstein
shalom made this class and all the mixes
that come from
it be in her merit