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The Yeshiva.net
Today, we're going to uh
look at Vayishlach, the first ma'amar of
Vayishlach,
which is page 47
of Chaf Daled Amud Alef.
Chaf Daled column one, page 47.
Vayishlach Yaakov malachim lefanav el
Eisav achiv.
Now, the truth is
that this discourse,
sicha of Daled Amud Alef, the column on
the bottom, the the first column closer
to the bottom.
The truth is that this uh this ma'amar
is a
very deeply connected to the one that we
learned in Toldos, Re'eh Re'ay achiv ben
Yitzchak Re'ay.
Sod Asher Berach Yaakov There he
discussed Eisav
getting the brachos or trying to get the
brachos and then Yaakov taking them.
And here, the story continues after 20
years of Yaakov's separation from his
brother, he now comes back and he wants
to reconcile with his brother and he
sends messengers and he says,
"I want to in your eyes."
And the messengers come back and say,
"Your brother is advancing with 400
troops to to fight." Yaakov is
frightened, he's afraid.
Rashi says he's afraid to be killed.
He's also afraid to kill.
And war is never simple. Even if you
win, it's not simple.
Golda Meir said, "Yummy."
I think Jews took it to a an extreme
that was unhealthy.
But uh
but uh the the idea is a sensitive one.
The idea is that even if you win, you
won the war, but it's not simple. It's
not There's a celebration for victory,
but there's also sadness that this is
what victory means.
Cuz Jews went to the other extreme
because, you know,
we're Jews.
That answers it, right? You're right.
So, Yaakov is frightened and he does
three things, right? He splits up the
camp in strategy to prepare for war. He
prays to Hashem.
And he also does what what you got to
do, he sends a lavish bribe to his
brother to appease him.
At the end, of course, we know the
confrontation he expected never
never happens. When Eisav sees him, he
actually unexpectedly, without even the
bribe, he hugs him, he kisses him, he
falls on his neck, they both cry.
And it's a moment of tender uh
of tender reconciliation between two
brothers who have been estranged for so
long.
That's in the p'shat of the story. And
then Eisav wants to even live together
with Yaakov and Yaakov says, "Thank you,
but no thank you." And they part ways.
So, the Alter Rebbe, the Baal HaTanya,
who starts with Vayishlach Yaakov
malachim lefanav el Eisav achiv, and he
says, "Hinei Yadua
she'Yaakov shorsho hu mibchinat Shem Mah
de'Olam HaTikkun ve'shorsho shel Eisav
mibchinat Olam HaTohu.
He right away directs it to the
spiritual energies of Yaakov and Eisav,
what they represent, which, of course,
it's not only about the figures, the two
brothers, it's it's a timeless
It's a timeless energy that lives on in
the world. There's Yaakov today and
there's Eisav today and as they were
always.
The source of Yaakov is what we call the
name of Mem Hey of the world of Tikkun
and the source of Eisav is Olam HaTohu.
So, just for
uh you know, clarification of
terminology, Shem Mah in Kabbalistic
literature is very well known. It means
the name of 45. What's the name of 45?
The name of 45 is basically the name of
Hashem. When you take Hashem's name, Yud
Can you should If you could remember
this, it would be helpful. Yud Kay Vav
Kay.
So, this We write it a Yud and a Hey and
a Vav and a Hey, but really when you say
it, you have to spell out every word
every letter.
Yud. Yud here is this It's not like how
you write it. I just write a Yud.
Just the letter. When I say Yud, I have
to say Yud. I just said Yud Vav Daled.
Yud. Hey. Hey is Hey Alef.
Vav. Vav is Vav Vav. And Hey again is
Hey Alef.
This is called the milui of Shem Havaya,
the filling, the filler, which in
writing you lose cuz in writing you just
have a Yud, but when you pronounce it,
I cannot say I could say Ya, I could say
Ha, I could say Ve, but if I want to
explain pronounce the letter, I have to
say Yud and Hey and then Vav and then
finally the last Hey. If you put that
together, you'll have 45. Yud Vav Daled
will end up to be 20.
Right? Cuz Yud Vav Daled is 20. Hey Alef
will be six.
Right? Vav Vav will be 12. So, what do
we have? We have 20 and 12 is 32 and six
would be 38. And then you have the last
six.
So, you have Vav Vav Alef Vav. Vav Vav
Alef Vav. Right? So, you have 13, six
and 20. So, you have 39. And then you
have the last Hey is another six. So,
you have Mem Hey you have 45. That's
called Shem Mah. So, this is the classic
name of Hashem, Yud Kay Vav Kay.
If you remember, we learned before that
Rivka said to Yaakov, "Your father wants
to bless Yaakov Eisav lifnei Hashem.
Va'avarechacha lifnei Hashem." And he
explained lifnei Hashem means we got to
go before Yud Kay Vav Kay. So, he says,
"Because Yaakov comes from Olam
HaTikkun, Eisav comes from Olam HaTohu."
Olam HaTikkun and Olam HaTohu literally
mean the world of fixing, the world of
uh of I would say of wholesomeness. And
Olam HaTohu is the world of chaos. Tohu
means Eretz Hayesa Tohu, it was chaos.
Now, when you look at Eisav and Yaakov,
you can't compare the two. Yaakov we
call the tzaddik and Eisav we call the
rasha. Yaakov is the good boy and Eisav
is the rotten apple.
But here he says, "You have to remember
how ohr is de'Tohu heim gedolim me'od.
The lights of Tohu are enormously
powerful.
And therefore, they couldn't become
manifested in their containers. Not
because there was no light, too much
light. V'nistalku me'ha'keilim. So,
these ohris left their vessels. They
cannot be contained by vessels. Ve'hein
b'chinat makifin.
What happens to these lights? They have
no choice but to remain in a state of
makif, which means they
makif, they circumference, they hover
over the vessel, but they can't be
contained by the vessel. They refuse
containment. They can't be established.
So, they are makif. Makif literally
means surrounds. So, in spatial terms,
it means I can't get into the cup, so I
remain over the cup, right? I remain a
makif. In spiritual terms, of course, he
doesn't mean it in spatial terms. He
means the concept that it remains in a
state that is far, far above what the
keilim could contain, which in spiritual
terms doesn't mean physically I have too
much water to put into a 7-oz cup. So,
when I pour, the water just goes all
over the place.
What it What it would mean spiritually,
you always have to understand things
with subtlety. What it would mean is my
keili can't grasp it. That means my
consciousness cannot be aware of it.
Because if my consciousness is aware of
it, then it's not it.
It will not tailor itself to my state of
consciousness. It will always remain far
above my consciousness. But it's an
energy and it's very real, so it impacts
me. Makif impacts you. It just impacts
you in a way that you can't fully
integrate it and make sense of it and
define it and articulate it cuz it's not
easily articulated in keilim. Keilim is
always articulation. Keilim means
there's a container, there's a vessel.
Ohris and keilim is the energy and the
containment of the energy. Ve'hein
b'chinat makifin. Now, what happened to
the keilim? Here's the second effect.
Ve'ha'keilim nishberu. And the keilim
broke. Why did they break? From the
contact with the ohr.
The contact with the ohr was such that
the keilim broke because, again, the
vessel was too uh delicate for such
intense light. So, when the light comes
into the vessel, not only does the
vessel not contain it, the vessel can't
contain it, the vessel actually smashes
and splinters.
V'naflu le'mata. And all the vessels
fell down because they That's what it
means, they broke, they fell.
Lachein haya Eisav she'le'mata rasha.
So, that's why Eisav below, if you look
at him, he's a rasha.
But if you could see Eisav from the
source of his source, it doesn't just
say shoresh, shoresh, shoresh, you have
to go back. You have to go up a few
roots, you have to go to the roots.
The root of the tree. So, the root of
the tree is called the shoresh ha'ilan.
Now, the shoreshim by the trees are at
the bottom, it's it's in the earth.
I'm saying above, again, comes
conceptually, I mean above in the terms
that it's, so to speak, closer to his
original essence. So, you could look at
the shoresh of the shoresh of Eisav
in makifin de'Tohu. What's makifin
de'Tohu? We now understand what it
means. It's the light of Eisav, which
had to remain makif because it departed
from the keilim, it's not in the keilim.
The keilim broke, but the ohr left to
makif, it didn't break.
Harei ha'ohris de'Tohu heim le'ma'ala
me'ohris de'Tikkun. The ohr of Tohu is
higher than the ohr of Tikkun, it means
the ohr of Eisav,
as hard as it sounds, is higher than the
ohr of Yaakov.
U'k'mo she'yesh be'er le'kaman be'ezrat
Hashem, al pasuk va'yikach min haba
b'yado mincha,
that's why
why Yaakov wants to give this gift to
Esau.
Over there he didn't articulate it so
clearly. I mean I said it in the sheer
that the market is higher than the earth
beneath me. Which is why Yitzchak is so
enamored
by Esau.
Esau couldn't grasp his own light.
because it wasn't contained. Right. It's
It's market. It's always greater.
The tragedy is it's not translated in
Kaylum at all. On the contrary, the
Kaylum
they're smashed. They break. They break.
Now they have the sparks of those
lights, but the sparks of those lights
in the Kaylum are very absorbed. That
was the first level he discussed, the
number 10, where it's in galus. The tohu
is the number 11. The market, which is
actually the link to gusha. That's the
levona zakav of the toyris.
And that's why Yitzchak spoke about the
smell of his son, the aroma, the rayach.
Rayach, as he said, is something that is
always market. It envelops the person.
It's not like food that you digest. So
what are our Kaylum? What would be for
us? Is all because I know they say in
Kabbalah the Kaylum are broken, but do
we have Kaylum which we could contain?
Right. So that's what we're going to see
here.
So Yaakov and and and Esau really
represent two cosmic I two cosmic forces
that play themselves out through
history.
And those are known as the world of tohu
and the world of tikkun.
So let's let's understand. I mean this
was this theme was mentioned a few times
in Shisha Shiyum Tiychu Matzos about why
we eat food from animals and and tzemach
why the human is superior and yet also
inferior. Animals would do very well
without us. In fact, they would
appreciate if
if our species was endangered so that
their species don't have to be
endangered.
And uh many of the
bot the you know the the world of
botany, the world of tzemach
has done very well without uh
without humanity, especially if we want
to destroy all of the forests, etc.
We're not going to get into global
warming discussion at the moment, even
though it's important.
And uh
so but yeah, we can't live without any
of them, right? We can't live without
doimem, we can't live without water, we
can't live without tzemach, we can't
live without without chai on in one way
or another. Whether you're a vegetarian,
you're not a vegetarian, we need the
earth. And we need the produce of the
earth and we can't survive. So he spoke
over there at length that it has to do
with tikkun olam. That was one area and
a few times that he mentions it. Here he
mentions it in terms of Yaakov Yaakov
and Esau. Yaakov and Esau represent two
paradigms here.
And that is that
Kabbalah teaches
it's a very famous doctrine in the
writings of the Ariza.
So in Shisha Shiyum Tiychu Matzos,
you're just talking about the six days
of creation and Kabbalah's talking about
two worlds.
There was a world that ultimately is
called Olam HaTohu, the world of chaos.
The world of chaos was built and it got
destroyed and that's why it's called
chaos. It's a world of chaos.
And the destruction happened not because
there was no energy there. There was
divine energy and the divine energy was
too powerful to be married into a
vessel. It would be like a genius whose
light is so powerful and the vessels
cannot contain the light and he has a
breakdown.
It would be like too much electricity,
too much voltage that infuses the wire
and the wires cannot contain and what
happens to them? They don't say, "Oh,
let me readjust." They
they melt. They literally melt.
And the machine that's attached to them
is I don't know if you're ever lucky it
happened to you, right? Computer or tape
recorder or whatever. Today they already
adjusted it, but
I remember when it happened to me once.
And boom, you hear that you know, the
spark goes off and like, "Oh, you're
excited." But that's it. It's all over.
It's done.
And the reason is not because there was
no electricity. There was too much
electricity and you didn't have the
Kaylum for it.
Everything in the world is a marriage
between Ohr and Kaylum as we've spoken
numerous times.
What do you think?
What is the question?
Time's going.
Constantly dancing. Since you've said
that it wasn't a matter of time before
in time but in concept, there's no
reason to think that it's not a
continuous
Right.
It's a mistake or is it a factual thing?
No, obviously it's not a mistake. It's
not a mistake. In fact, in halacha you
have what's called soisur amonus livnus.
In halacha, the only you're not allowed
to demolish on Shabbos, but when is it
biblically prohibited to demolish on
Shabbos? If the demolishing is with the
intent of construction, rebuilding.
Spiritually it means is because the
first demolition in history was with the
intent of rebuilding.
The first demolition of history was
what's known as the shviras hakaylum of
Olam HaTohu.
Over there, the divine light was so
powerful and so intense that the vessels
could not contain them. So two things
happened. Number one, the vessels
smashed and broke because the weight was
too heavy.
Number two,
the vessels crashed with each other
because each one had too much light and
therefore was not limited and not
limiting like what we learned about the
world of nekudim versus the world of
brudim.
For chesed and gevurah to coexist, they
both have to mitigate themselves. They
have to dilute their intensity.
Like a husband and a wife, if everyone
allows their nature to take on its full
splendor to an extreme without
compromise, there's no way you can
coexist. In the world of tohu where the
light, the energy was so infinite and it
senses its infinity, there's no room for
anything else. So they crash against
each other, what we would call a head-on
head collision, plus they crash in
themselves because the Kaylum can't
contain them. So therefore,
huh?
It's like a person who has dreams and
creative forces and they have nobody to
contain it. And sometimes they go crazy
in their own mind because there's so
much going on. They're like a Chofetz
Chaim once said that Shabbos is the
hardest day for him in the week.
Why? Because he can't write.
He can't write. He used to write and
write and write and write and write.
He said he can't write. He would
sometimes write hundreds of letters a
day. He can't write on Shabbos,
obviously, cuz it's Shabbos. So what is
he what is he doing with all of the
ideas?
He didn't have anybody to say it to.
So when he wrote it, the paper is always
a good Kaylum, you know? At least the
journal understands you.
But uh the Chofetz Chaim didn't have
somebody to talk to on his level.
And therefore he said it's the hardest
day for him because his head was uh you
know, like exploding. You know sometimes
you feel your head is exploding. There's
so much Ohr and there's no Kaylum.
So in Olam HaTohu, there was an
explosion. There was shviras hakaylum.
The Kaylum broke. What happened to these
Kaylum?
The Kaylum so to speak fell. What do we
mean fell again? We don't mean
physically they fell down. Fell means
you don't recognize who they really are.
They don't recognize who they are
anymore. When you say you had an nefela,
nefela doesn't mean you fell down
physically. I mean that's also one
nefela. Nefela means you fall down
spiritually. You don't recognize who you
are, but you're still that same person.
The Kaylum still have the sparks of that
Ohr, but they don't recognize them
anymore. They can't put them in context.
So they have the energy, but it's
completely manipulated and misused and
the real energy remains market, remains
above.
So he says that's Esau. On one level, in
terms of morality and ethics, Esau is
broken. He's fragmented. He's fragmented
from himself. He's broken from himself.
On another level, his real Ohr is higher
than Yaakov's Ohr.
But it remains market because the Ohr
was too heavy, not too little. It was
too much. And since it was too much, it
didn't it did doesn't have the Kaylum.
Now this is a very profound idea cuz
sometimes you'll have it in certain
people.
Right? Sometimes there are artists,
artists
who are very very deep people
and the structures
the structures
that we created for them could not
contain their light.
Not because they didn't want to fit in.
They couldn't fit in and remain true to
themselves.
Sometimes you can't fit in and remain
true to yourself. You can't.
So if
if you want to sell your soul, you can
do that. But some people don't want to
sell their soul.
So you almost force the light to leave.
And what happens to the Kaylum?
The Kaylum now, from the intensity of
the light, the Kaylum becomes very
convoluted and sometimes fragmented.
But the Kaylum still has those sparks,
but those sparks are not recognizable
anymore. And the light remains on a
level in the person's life which may not
even be so conscious. Or it may be
conscious, but they're not conscious of
what it is. Or it may be and it's
usually driving very deep forces in them
and that's what it's driving is very
holy. The driving force, the fuel may be
very holy, but the way it's processed,
it has no connection with godliness
because it's not in Kaylum. I cannot
translate. I don't even know what it is.
So sometimes I'm completely confused
myself what it is. But we we we don't
like to live with cognitive dissonance.
We don't like to live with
fragmentation. So I make up new stories
to explain what my idealism is about.
Diluted. Diluted to fit in.
Or I don't dilute it, but I may I create
a story, a narrative that so it should
make sense.
So you'll hear people say things
and it's like
it's intense stuff, yeah? Isn't it Esau
had
a abundant amount of or more than Jacob
had and that he chose not to really
accept it or is it he had a normal
amount but since he kept on pushing it
out became a bigger amount?
No, no, his shyness was different. It's
a different neshama. It's more
in more than So it's his choice really
to make it a mark
was yearning for that to create
integration for Esau. But it was
yearning
it was he who decided to make it a mark
of him because of his actions because of
what he is mindset.
So to speak.
Cuz what how does one person be take as
a mark of another person would actually
make
his or was higher. The or was higher.
wasn't possible to put it in.
So that's did that drive him to
become
now. So Jacob and Esau are opposites.
But really Jacob and Esau desperately
need each other.
So the fact it was a mark of made him
Esau a rasha or he he could have still
been a tzaddik
but he decided different.
The problem is you're thinking about
this in terms of
a regular shiyur.
You're asking questions.
You understand? You're You're trying to
fit this into a shul shul this type.
It's not.
Right. That's to sit with you. It's not
Don't try to figure everything.
Yeah. You said Jacob and Esau need each
other. Like you said with Rachel and
Leah with the contrasting each other.
Need each other what for each one to be
able to show the other what he's really
all about? Is that what you mean?
Number one, number two, Esau needs Jacob
for integration, for healing, for
sublimation.
But Jacob needs Esau
for a certain
intensity.
For a certain depth, for a certain the
sense of infinity that Esau has.
Right? And that Esau can give Jacob.
That's why they're two brothers. They're
twin brothers.
There's a beautiful vort
in the Vilna Gaon that Cook brings it
from the Vilna Gaon even though I didn't
see it in the writings of the Vilna
Gaon.
It says in Malachi
we say in Haftarah Haftarah told us "How
ach Esau and Jacob?"
But I have this Jacob, right?
But Esau I hate.
Jacob is a brother to Esau and I love
Jacob and I hate Esau.
So we just read it, okay?
So God makes two brothers and he hates
one and he loves one.
What do you say about such a mother?
Or such a father? It's something is off,
like
you hate him, don't make him. And what
what's this? Like you make someone and
you hate him. It's like almost like I
have two kids and I always know from day
one am I like am I hate? You have
families like that.
A mother just anybody, right? They cast
their eyes on one child, a boy named it,
a boy called it.
Huh?
This whole story about that.
But he was called it, right? And the
mother is just like you're you're you're
you're you're you're you're the horrible
one. And you just play and just plays
itself out.
So the Vilna Gaon says
the Esau I hate, not Esau, Esau.
The Gemara often discusses that Esau
whenever it says Esau like
Esau sorry by my Esau a tofful of sorry.
It's a what? It's a regular word.
Yeah.
Esau includes that which is subservient.
So you should bathe, you should put into
the mikveh for your flesh. Esau sorry,
what about my hair? Could my hair be out
of the mikveh? No. Esau sorry, even that
which is subservient to my flesh also
has to go into the water.
Copy Esau
the rabbi said but even the derivative
of my father, which is my older brother,
it's not my father. Esau, right? Esau
and Esau it's Rashi says not heaven and
earth, even that which is connected to
heaven.
The galaxies, the stars, Esau that which
is connected to earth. Esau is the
tofful.
So he says but I have but
Esau I hate. Esau has two dimensions.
There's Esau in his core and then
there's the tofful to Esau. There's what
Esau grows into.
He says the Esau of Esau I despise.
By Jacob the kiddush is that even the
Esau
is part of him.
By Esau there's a fragmentation between
the two.
So the Esau of Esau I hate. So therefore
in the world of tohu the light is very
very powerful. So sometimes you'll have
it in a person.
You'll have generally it's it's true
with young versus older people.
But the Rebbe writes somewhere that
young older people are more meyushev.
Younger people are very idealistic.
Right? There's an old joke that a
conservative is a liberal who was mugged
many times.
You know, in the 1960s America was
was you know, the youth revolut were
revolutionizing America, you know,
anti-war
and free intimacy and un-inhibition.
Hey, huh? Anti-establishment.
Anti-establishment.
So on one level you looked at it and you
said here are young chutzpahnyaks who
just want to destroy society and and
their fathers would say just go graduate
high school and stay off drugs for 10
years and and get your doctorate
get your doctorate.
So it was one year Purim
the year of Woodstock was what the 1969.
Yes. So I think the next Purim or that
Purim so the Rebbe should have been at
Purim for bringing and was analyzing the
situation.
So he said that the parents don't
realize that really they're searching
for infinity in life, for meaning in
life. And then they're asking their
father why what why do you do what you
do? And the only reason the father gives
is cuz if you graduate, he said that
you'll graduate, you'll be able to buy a
house,
you'll be able to have a three car
a three a three car garage, then it was
a Cadillac, you'll be able to have a
Cadillac, you'll have a Hollywood
kitchen, a wall-to-wall carpet, you'll
be able to retire in dignity, and you'll
be able to be an honoree at dinner.
And he says and for their soul that
means nothing. It means absolutely
nothing.
So you could look at them and say
they're destroying everything including
themselves. And that may be true.
Sometimes people do that. But if you
just say that, you missed the point.
You missed the point and that it is an
or that you're not containing. Your your
structure has nothing to say for this
light. Absolutely nothing to say for
this light.
And this is true also in your disk light
today for example. Sometimes a father
and a son will have a discussion in
front of a rabbi or a therapist or
whoever and the son will turn to the
father and say what motivates you?
Why do you wake up 6:00 in the morning?
Why do you learn daf yomi? Why do you
don't miss a mincha and ma'ariv? What
motivates you? I want to know.
I mean I've seen this intimately. What
motivates you?
And the father looks first of all he
thinks his son is crazy. Who asks such
stupid questions?
But finally what motivates you? What?
What gets you out of bed? I want to
know. You're telling me to get out of
bed. I shouldn't sleep till 3:00 in the
afternoon. Right? Which is a good thing
not to sleep till 3:00 in the night.
But what motivates you?
And the answer the father will give may
be
a zoy
This is this is the mesorah. What do you
mean? This is This is This is the This
is the tradition. Or sometimes he'll say
"Siddur gehenim. You know, siddur
gehenim. I want to have olam haba."
Right? And and and the son looks and he
he doesn't argue. It's just like
I don't know what this guy is about.
Like your life is not my life.
And what happens here is they don't
understand each other.
Because what's the issue? The issue is
what's the structure you're creating
to house my light, to house my energy.
So you're telling me I should be afraid
of a future world where there is
punishment that I don't see and I don't
know about. So first of all
he may not understand what that is or
may not even know that it is, may not
believe. But maybe even if he does
he may be saying something much more and
that is
is that all there is? That's the reason
it is.
Why doesn't it resonate? Maybe he needs
a much deeper relationship.
What if he feels a urge in himself to
change the world?
What if he feels a deep urge in himself
to make a real difference?
What if he has to be challenged
to be as creative as possible and he
doesn't see in the construct here an
ability for his infinite creativity?
So what happens now? So often the kaylim
smash, they break. There's no kaylim
anymore. There's no structure.
And the or is there but it departs and
the person can't live with the or
in an integrated way cuz they don't have
kaylim for it. So this is a very
difficult and painful situation.
I can't answer that question.
He's been doing it for so long. It's
already in him. You can't answer that
question. Maybe the Moshe Zev wants to
answer that question. Culturally it's
doctrine. He's not The guy's not
thinking anymore. Maybe he's just become
a robot. He's been doing it for so long.
He wants to be a thinking person. Now
what happens is that sometimes these
kids become fathers and zaydes and then
when their kids come to them, they look
at them like they're crazy even though
they did the same thing to their
parents.
That's another situation. So therefore
you have here a maiseh that Jacob is
is now going to meet up with Esau. Now
Jacob and Esau parted ways and after 20
years Jacob asks himself
can now can I come back to Esau?
That's the plot here. Now
this also highlights a whole other
brings us into a whole other point that
I want to mention and that is
you all know the Rashi in Vayeitzei that
Leah used to cry a lot. Einei Leah
rakos. Why? Cuz everybody said that
she's going to marry Esau
and Rachel is going to marry Jacob. So
Leah used to cry.
And because she used to cry, her eyes
became weak.
And the question is they used to say
they used to say what it was it's called
mikvah night.
So people in the mikvah used to say I
have a shidduch for Leah. People met
Leah and then people do it always. They
meet somebody and say oh I have a
shidduch for you.
It's usually not a nice thing to do if
you don't mean it especially to other
people, but fine that's what people do.
Yentas or male yentas or female yentas,
it's a Jewish thing to do I have a
shidduch for you.
So they said there's a Gemara in Sinas
Isha L'Mi Da'atei only marry a woman who
she wants to marry. What's Leah worried
about?
Is that the pshat
that Leah understood something very
deep?
And that is
he said to my mother Rachel when he was
in Toldos Vayeitzei the Lavan Shnei
Banos and here's Vayishlach.
Leah and Esau had a very deep kinship.
They both understood and had a
relationship with Makif
in a very profound way. Because Leah as
we learned really had this similarity.
Leah's light was much higher than
Rachel's light.
Much higher. In fact, it says V'Esau
Soneisi. God says I hate Esau and on
Leah it says exactly the same words.
Vayar Hashem Ki Snu'ah
Leah.
She Ki Snu'ah Leah.
So one second, Esau is hated and Leah is
hated. Exactly. We hate what we don't
understand as he said in the Ma'amar of
Tof Kof Yud Beis.
We don't understand Leah, we hate her.
She's not familiar, she's not my
familiar wife. She's not the wife that
fits into my package. She's not the wife
that I was supposed to marry. She's not
the wife of the resume.
Right? She's a different wife.
Esau I also hate. Esau I also don't
understand. Esau also challenges me.
Esau also doesn't fit into my box and
Esau is also rebellious and Esau also
defies all systems.
So who could actually understand Esau?
Leah. Leah can understand Esau. So when
they were saying that Leah is a shidduch
for Esau, it wasn't stupidity, it was
profound ideas.
To put it in to put it in the Isis of
the Ma'amar
Leah understood Makif.
She understood energy
that is not integrated. She understood
subconscious energy. She understood that
it would be Makif. Makif by definition
the person doesn't understand.
Right. The word I shouldn't say
understands Leah had to make peace with
it.
Leah had to learn to live with it. That
was Leah's greatness. That was Leah's
greatness. Where did Leah and Esau go
apart? They went apart particularly in
this issue. Leah did not break.
On the contrary, Leah's
Makif became a source of very deep
wholesomeness on a different level of
alma d'iskasya.
But in a way
Leah and Esau have a very deep common
denominator because their deep common
denominator is that Esau's Makif
could be experienced and understood only
by somebody who understands Makif, not
by somebody who doesn't understand
Makif.
So in in in an ideal world Leah and Esau
would have been a very good shidduch
just like Jacob and Rachel would have
been a very good shidduch.
Because Rachel is alma d'isgalya, Rachel
is Yefas To'ar, Yefas Mar'eh. Yefas
To'ar, Yefas Mar'eh is the world of
Tikkun. Tikkun the Ohr and the Keili are
married in a perfect marriage. The
energy and the vessel complement each
other. The energy is more limited, but
the vessel facilitates the energy.
Of course it didn't work out that way
because Esau went in a different
direction
and Leah went in a different direction.
And ultimately Leah
has a whole different path than Esau
ultimately. We don't say we say Esau
L'Matah is a rasha.
Leah L'Matah was a tzadekes. She was not
like Esau.
But you have here the tension of the two
the two dimensions very powerfully. So
when he goes off to Rachel and Leah in
the next Ma'amar Vayeitzei, it's not
disconnected from the story of Toldos
with Jacob and Esau.
It's just a different story.
Now here I'll tell you a vort from the
Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek
and the Sfas Emes
and it's all the same vort, but they
they didn't articulate they they
articulate the way they used to
articulate it.
The Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek writes
the Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek has a
sefer called Avodas Yisrael.
Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek was a
contemporary and a colleague of the Baal
Shem Tov. They were both students of the
Maggid of Mezritch.
Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek passed away
two years after him Tof Kof Yud Hey
1815.
And in Kotsk is a city in Poland.
He has a sefer Avodas Yisrael one sefer.
He says over there there's a Midrash
actually Midrash Rabbah in Parshas
Vayeitzei. It's also brought in Targum
Yonasan ben Uziel
that when Leah
married Jacob and Jacob was deceived, so
it says Vayarba Boker in the morning
Jacob woke up
and he sees Leah V'Hinei Leah and he
goes running to Lavan
and he says Lavan Emi Soni why did you
deceive me?
So what happens is
the question is did Jacob say anything
to Leah or he just went straight to
Lavan?
Pasuk doesn't say he said anything to
Leah, but you and I I think would guess
that he probably said something to Leah
when he saw what happened. What did he
say? You got to figure it out on your
own.
Torah Shebiksav is full of gaps and it
leaves it up to your imagination.
And it wants it that way. It wants you
to you your creative imagination. Torah
Sheba'al Peh sometimes fills in the gap,
sometimes not.
Here it happens to fill in the gap. So
the Midrash Rabbah says and the Targum
Yonasan ben Uziel brings it, so this is
a very ancient tradition that Jacob
actually looked at Leah
and he said as we would say in English
the apple doesn't fall far from the
tree.
Your father is a quintessential crook
and you're also.
Why did you lie to me?
Leah as a good Jewish wife would do
does not remain quiet.
She responds.
And her response is also the response of
a real Jewish wife.
She says to Jacob
every trade in the world requires
mentorship.
You can't become a doctor without a
teacher. You can't become even a barber
without a teacher. There's no sapper,
there's no barber who doesn't have a
teacher. To be a lawyer, you also need a
teacher.
My father and I had a great mentor. I'm
going to tell you about him. There was
an old man who couldn't see.
He summoned his oldest son to give him
the blessings. The younger boy dressed
up like the older boy, lied to his
father said I am the older brother and
stole the blessings. He is the one who
taught us how to lie.
This is before COVID.
Still in the media. This is a Midrash
Rabbah Targum Yonasan Midrash Rabbah
says Bereishis Rabbah Parsha Ayin says
this story. Okay?
Now you understand why Jacob went
running to Lavan. Yeah.
So
on one level this is like a classic
Jewish marriage, right?
You said I said he says something to
Leah and Leah says you want to you want
to go that direction? My mouth is a
little better than yours.
And she gives it to him and his kishkes
turn over and he learns his lesson.
Behave. In this house you're going to
behave. Okay? On one level.
But on another level it's
incomprehensible. What does what does
Leah say?
I lied to you lied to me in a business
deal and I ask you why do you lie? So
you tell me because I lied to somebody
else. Let's say to my father. One
second. So if somebody lied in the world
whenever I deal with them I'm allowed to
lie because he lied to somebody else.
Jacob asked the good question. Why do
you lie? Why do you say you're Rachel
you're not?
So Leah said oh you lied to your father.
It's not a mature response. It's not a
worked out it's not an ethical response.
It's more of an anger response. IT'S
LIKE OH
REALLY? I'M THE LIAR YOU'RE THE LIAR AND
I BRING UP A STORY FROM your childhood
or from your youth. What?
So anyone
in a therapy session you understand that
they're they're they're in a certain
space. They're not talking to each
other. They're not having a conversation
with each other. They're in a space.
They're in a zone. A zone of anger, a
zone of of of hate, a zone of fear,
whatever it is.
There's no communication here.
It's just who's going to give a better
shtech in Yiddish. You know what a
shtech is, yeah? You give a better stab.
That's what it's about. And it happens
to be in this case Leah won.
The Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek writes
Avodas Yisrael he says this quote.
He says I'll tell you the pshat. It's
very deep he says.
Leah was not running away from the
question. She was answering the
question. What was the answer to the
question?
Answer was this.
Jacob said why did you lie? Why do you
say you're Rachel?
So Leah said
you told your father you're Esau.
My shidduch is Esau.
The moment you told your father that
you're Esau, automatically
you turned me into Rachel.
Automatically you made me your wife.
That's all.
Sfas Emes who lives 100 years later
second Gerer Rebbe
writes
Kotsker Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek
concealed what he wanted to say.
Or the writer didn't hear it right. So
Sfas Emes says he calls says either he
he stirred up the water he didn't say
what he wanted to say
or the writer didn't get it. So Sfas
Emes says I'm going to tell you what he
wanted to say. Actually he says the
pshat and then he says that maybe this
is what he wanted to say cuz he
concealed what he wanted to say or the
writer didn't get it. What does Sfas
Emes say? Sfas Emes says Leah is
connected to Esau. Jacob is connected to
Rachel.
When Jacob got dressed up in the
garments of Esau, it wasn't just
external.
He was taking in the soul of Esau.
The moment he was taking in the soul of
Esau, part of him became Esau.
The part of him BECAME ESAU, THAT PART
of him now had to get married to Leah.
So, Yaakov of Yaakov had to marry
Rachel, and the Leah of Yaakov had to
marry and the Esau of Yaakov had to
marry Leah.
And the Sfas Emes is very short, very
brief, very cryptic, very concise, as
many of the Chassidic works.
Now, you read this Kuntres you read this
Sfas Emes, quite interesting,
quite original, quite creative.
Fascinating explanation to the Medrash.
Leah was actually saying something very
profound. Yaakov,
you're the one who established this
entire issue.
Destiny created me for Esau, and
therefore when you became Esau, I come I
am your shidduch.
But I don't find So, it's all
interesting, but what does it mean?
What's the point?
So, generally in the world of Chassidus,
there were two streams of Chassidus, as
we once discussed at length,
and that is what's known as
the various students of the Mezritcher
Maggid, who all wrote one or two books
at most, and they
everything were pointers, powerful,
inspiring pointers,
whether it's about stories of Chomer and
Ruach, about a Neshamah, about Hashem
and a Jew.
But the Tanya's shittah was that things
have to be explained and explained
elaborately, which is why he named it
Chabad, which is Chochmah, Binah, Daas.
That's why you see, for example, he
himself has around 40 works, most of his
colleagues have one or two.
And his Maamar are very long and
explained and everything.
So, when you learn this, these Maamarim,
and then you read that, you understand
here that there's really a profound
story being conveyed.
Esau belongs to Leah, Leah belongs to
Esau, not stamps of mazal,
it's because Esau and Leah's Neshamahs
are deeply connected. In fact, Leah
comes from a similar source, a concealed
world, a higher world, a sublime and
they're both hated, both cannot be
understood.
Leah is the shidduch for Esau, not
Rachel. You put Rachel with Esau, it's
not happening. You put Yaakov with with
with Leah.
What Rivkah was telling Yaakov was, it
would be awesome, but your brother
your brother's Keilim broke.
Your father wants to bring down the
Makif, but his Keilim broke. So, either
the energy of your father, Yitzchak, is
going to be swallowed up, or there won't
be an Esau anymore, he'll become a a
zombie, a robot, it'll just burn him up,
the light will burn him up, there won't
be an Esau.
So, therefore you have to take the
blessings for Esau.
So, in other words, you have to find
your own Esau.
If you cannot find your own Esau, you
will not be able to take his blessings,
you won't be able to help him. That's
why you have to get dressed up like him.
It's not a costume, it's not a Purim
costume.
A costume, generally in this context, is
a costume means a way of expressing
yourself.
To put on the Levushim of Esau means to
relate to Esau.
It doesn't mean you become Esau
completely, but it means there's
something in you that's relatable to
Esau. I can put on your garments means I
could see things from your perspective.
I could put on your glasses, I can I can
wear your shoes, I could put on your
pants, I could wear your shirt, I could
walk your life somewhat.
So, in other words, Yaakov has to have a
shtickel Esau, he will ultimately have
to be mevarer
tohu.
So, if that happens, Leah says, "Okay,
Yaakov, so now you have two wives.
The Yaakov in you has Rachel, and the
Leah the Esau in you has Leah.
But after 20 years, Yaakov now wonders
whether
his brother is ready to give the to give
him over what he was holding on to.
It's really his brother's, so let him
give it over.
So, that's the context of this Maamar
Vayishlach, that after this whole story,
okay, I took it.
But now,
let me tell you where I've been,
and let's let's come back together. I
worked very hard for 20 years.
What were you doing for 20 years, Esau?
That's the question that he poses here.
Okay, so we'll be
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