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Tisha B'Av On Fire- What Side Of The Border Are You On?
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I'm going to Korea soon. Let me tell you what it has to do with Tisha B'Av
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
I want to share with you a small idea
about tishabove. In a few days, I'm
going to the country of Korea. Not the
north, but the south. South Korea is a
country of lights and freedom and
innovation. A player, a place where you
can dream and move and build, where
there's Wi-Fi in the subways and there's
5G in the mountains and there's robots
running around doing things for people.
But just above South Korea, just a
couple miles in the distance, there's
another Korea. North Korea. A place
completely locked in time. A country
completely frozen in darkness. There's
no normal cell phones. There's no
internet. There's no access to truth or
to history or the outside world. There's
just lies and silence. But the people
that go that live there go about their
lives like everything is normal. In
fact, the North Korean government
convinced them that they are living in
utopia while the rest of the world is
decaying and crumbling. They are
convinced that they are a model society.
The citizens of North Korea walk around
completely, entirely unaware that the
objective quality of their lives is
about a quarter of the rest of the
world. They have absolutely no idea that
their reality is about a quarter of what
it could be. Now imagine if someone one
person sneaks across the North Korean
border and whispers into the ear of a
regular obedient family and he says to
them, "You know that there's a whole
another world out there. A world where
people live freely. Where ideas are
born. Where beauty thrives. Where you
can say what you think. Where you can
know what actually happened in history.
where there's music and color and
laughter and connection and technology
and modern medicine and a glorious
wondrous world.
That family, they would sit there
stunned, completely frozen, because for
the first time they'd realize that
they've been living inside of a lie,
that they're living in a prison that
they never knew they were in. And they
would cry, not because their lives
changed, but because for the first time
they realized what they were missing out
on.
Tishabove is that whisper to us.
Tishabove is a whisper from across the
border that tells you there was once a
world, a world infinitely greater than
this one, and you've never known it. You
were born in exile. You've never tasted
it. You've never smelled it. You don't
even realize what you've lost. We sit on
the floor every year trying to cry. But
how do you cry for something you've
never seen? Something that doesn't exist
in your memory? How do you cry when life
is pretty good? So, let me whisper it to
you. There was once a world where the
sky felt closer, where the fruits were
sweeter, where the air was purer, where
the land gave you everything you needed,
where there was no such thing as
spiritual confusion. You didn't wonder
if you were connecting to Hashem. You
felt him in your bones. There was no
hustle to survive. There was no drowning
in bills. There were no plagues or
pandemics or cancer or fear. There was
no silence from heaven. There was
dignity. There was clarity. There was
beauty. The Jewish people walked tall.
We were respected. We were admired.
Nations all over the world poured into
our cities, bringing us gifts out of
honor. We lived in peace. We lived with
meaning. And most of all, we lived with
truth. You didn't need to guess if you
were d if your dominating was enough or
if your learning counted. If your heart
was heard. You knew Hashem was close. He
was real. He was palpable. You didn't
believe in him. You knew him. And we
lost that that whole world. Tishab is
not about mourning a building. It's
about mourning a reality, a life, a
level of being we've never known, a
quality of life that is 10,000 times
better than what we have right now. So
when people say, "How can I mourn the B
mikdash when my life's pretty good?" I
have one simple question to ask it. Is
it really good? Or are you just living
in North Korea? Are we living in a world
so cut off, so broken, so spiritually
limited that we don't even realize what
we're missing? Do we really think this
is it? This life of spiritual fog, of
uncertainty, of exile, of inner
struggle. This is the dream. Yeah, we
get used to this world where the world
we're handed. We adjust. We adapt. We
convince ourselves it's normal, that
this is good enough. But what if it's
not? What if this life is only a
fraction of what we're created for? What
have we been living with the spiritual
amnesia, mistaking exile for home and
darkness for light? Are we walking
through life unaware of the unfathomably
wondrous world Hashem wants us to be
living in? Not because we're blind, but
because we've forgotten how to look.
Is not about sadness, per se. It's about
waking up. It's the day we dare to say,
"This isn't the world we were meant
for." The Jewish people were built for
more, for clarity, for peace, for
closeness to Hashem. So real you can
feel it in your bones of our souls.
Remember, even if our minds have
forgotten, deep down there's a quiet
cry, an ache, a longing for a world
we've never seen, but we're always meant
to live in. So let the whisper rise. Let
it open your heart. Let it shake you.
Not with despair, but with hope. Because
when the yearning becomes real, the the
redemption gets closer. This tishabove
asks yourself, "Will I hope? Will I cry?
Will I plead for a world better in every
which way? Or will I foolishly walk
right back into North Korea?