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Urchatz - Dr Abraham J Twersky With Prisoners
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A Torah anytime original series.
Right after Kaddish, we have Urchatz.
Kaddish, we declare ourselves holy. We
say "Yiskadal v'yiskadash shmei raba
b'alma d'vara chirutei." Hashem
sanctified us through mitzvahs, through
being chosen and guided. We remind
ourselves our holiness is not
self-generated, it comes from
connection, from alignment, from
following Hashem's word. And then
immediately comes Urchatz, washing your
hands. What's striking is that it
doesn't feel like a new stage. It feels
connected to Kaddish. The vav in Urchatz
is telling you don't separate these two.
There's Kaddish and then immediately
Urchatz.
Why are they connected? Holiness and
cleansing are part of the same movement,
but why?
So, there's a powerful idea told over
from Dr. Abraham Twerski.
He would often speak to people who had
completely lost faith in themselves,
people from both broken homes and prison
backgrounds, people who felt written off
by life. And he was once speaking in a
jail. And one man comes up to him and
says bluntly, "You don't know me.
Everything you're saying is nonsense. I
grew up in abuse. I was in and out of
jail. I'm not someone who can change."
Rabbi Twerski looked at him and said
something simple.
He said, "Have you ever seen a diamond?"
And the man replied, "Of course. I've
even stolen a few diamonds."
Rabbi Twerski said, "Do you know where
diamonds come from?
They come from the deepest, dirtiest,
most pressurized places on Earth. In
fact, the majority of diamonds are mined
in places like Botswana. And to extract
a single carat, you often have to move
hundreds of thousands of pounds of dirt.
But when you remove the dirt,
what you are left with is one of the
strongest, most valuable substances in
existence. That is a human being. And
more specifically, that's a Jew. A soul
is not fragile. It's not broken beyond
repair. It's a diamond buried underneath
layers of life and confusion and noise.
And sometimes the first step isn't
transformation. It's just washing.
Sometimes the first step to Kodesh is
Orchos. Not becoming someone new, just
uncovering who you really are. That is
exactly the bridge from Kodesh to
Orchos. Kodesh tells you that you are
meant to be holy, chosen, connected to
Hashem. Orchos tells you how to get
there. Not by becoming something else,
by cleansing off what is covering you.
First wash off the dirt, then the
diamond can shine. And that is why there
is a vav between them, because they are
not two ideas. They are one single
journey.