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Women's Chanukah 5786 Lecture - Why the Chanukah Struggle Continues: Choosing Experience over Reason
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Has Judaism Been Hijacked by the Greeks? All Validation in the World Is Worthless When You Experience Your Own Spiritual Energy To sponsor or dedicate an upcoming class click here: https://www.theyeshiva.net/donate To watch more classes & to read Rabbi YY's articles visit: https://www.theyeshiva.net Follow Rabbi YY Jacobson: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RabbiYYJacobson Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheYeshiva Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yyjacobson Twitter: https://twitter.com/YYJacobson Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yyjacobson/ Telegram: https://t.me/RabbiYY
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
begin with a chapter of Tahillim for our
brothers and sisters in Sydney,
Australia and especially all those who
need a recovery of the dozens wounded in
the horrific massacre the first night of
Kaneka in Sydney. So let's say a cap tom
for them and for our brothers and
sisters in
Israel in the holy land.
So we'll say capital
which is 124d
124 and which is 125
for.
And the next
125 125
Shave.
[snorts]
So Kaneka, happy Kaneka to everybody and
welcome. I know it wasn't so easy today
with the weather and the big snow that
we had. So thank you for braving the
weather and gracing us with your
presence. Everybody be blessed with a
bright kaneka and a happy Kaneka for you
and your loved ones among all of our
people.
Next week, please remember there's no
class. I'm away next Tuesday but the
week afterwards Ber Hashem we will
resume. Today's class is dedicated by
some very very special people.
The class is dedicated in honor of the
marriage of Ephraim Wolf to Batva Fox
from their friends and families from
Sydney Australia.
Rabbi [snorts] Ley Wolf was one of the
great rabbis of Sydney of Central
Synagogue. married off his son Ephraim,
[snorts] two foxes from South Africa. So
maztov maztov and an amazing life and a
day also dedicated by the cups and
lefawitz family celebrating today the
pion of their greatgrandson
named after his grandfather Stanley Paul
cops.
May the beas
and may he grow
with all abundant blessings and joy and
tranquility and and all of the blessings
materially and spiritually. Today's
class is also dedicated by Michael
Yardin in honor of her son Mal Mardin
Mazav in honor of her son Yehuda Ben
Mal's 25th birthday
which is connected to Kaneka which is on
the 25th day of
>> and that's when he was born. Wow. Okay.
Amazing. And forim good for her family.
Amen.
>> Amen. Easy, smooth,
yes
and happy. [snorts]
Today's class is dedicated in honor of
the nth wedding anniversary of Kani and
Kakay Kaplan on the 11th day of Kisv
Maztov. Happy anniversary in a day.
[snorts] And finally, today's class is
dedicated by the Turnour family in honor
of their wedding anniversary. Maztov may
their wife and mother gi continue to be
a steadfast pillar and guiding light
bringing joy, warmth and love into their
home. Amen. Thank you
and maz to everybody and thank you very
very much. We always be able to
celebrate together with open hearts and
joyous hearts
and [snorts] experience the ultimate joy
and the ultimate victory and the
ultimate redemption when we will light
again the minor in the baashi
not just in our homes. Amen. So
there's always this terrible paradox
that I think all of us feel on a Kaneka
like this as we welcomed the festival of
lights, a time of gratitude, a time of
joy, a time of celebration, a time of
[snorts] family unity, a time of Jewish
unity, and a time of light dispelling
darkness. Everybody was horrified
and really shaken at our course to hear
of such a uh horrific horrific massive
massacre
of Jews whose only crime was that they
came together to celebrate Kaneka in
[snorts] Bondi Beach in Sydney,
Australia.
what was organized each year by Rabbi
Ali Schlanganger, the Kabach there, who
was murdered in cold blood together with
uh many other Jews, including two
Holocaust survivors and a child and
another rabbi, another Schlakh there,
Hashem Yin Kim, may God avenge their
blood and so many dozens wounded.
What they have there is Kanek at the
Sea. I've visited the community of
Sydney. It's one of the most uh
beautiful gorgeous communities in the
world physically [snorts] and
spiritually especially the Bondi area
simply stunning and marvelous and each
year Rabbi Schlanganger [snorts]
organized Kanek at the sea for all types
of Jews even less affiliated and more
secular and more traditional to bring
them together close to a thousand or
2,000 people there. And when we hear
this, it's very hard. It's very
devastating. And then we go to light the
candles and sing and eat lotkas and
celebrate together. You know that
paradox, that challenge emotionally. You
know, what do we tell ourselves? What do
we tell our children? As you know, I'm
not the person uh who has answers for
any of this. This is way way above my
grade my pay grade and probably all of
our pay grades. But I was I was thinking
about the Shia this week, the class this
week for Kaneka. It's really a
conversation also with myself. Not just
a conversation with you, but a
conversation with myself that doesn't
really answer big questions, but I just
think help maybe can help. At least it
helps me navigate some of this
internally to be able to help us show up
the way we could and should and are
empowered to show up during such times,
during such paradoxical times, during
such elevating and yet challenging and
difficult times.
>> [snorts]
>> So that's what I want to I want to
address but take it back to the context
of Kaneka itself of understanding what
Kaneka itself is really all about.
You should always understand how in
Jewish history there is a very deep
pattern that is a very comforting
pattern and that is whenever Jews face
serious crisis from without they go
deeper within. That's always the rule.
Not because anyone is trying to escape.
That's never an option to escape. Jews
must fight back in every possible way.
Must protect themselves in every
possible way. Must be secure in every
possible way simply physically.
Yet we also know that in such
circumstances and when you see such
darkness, you need to fortify yourself
and your loved ones from within.
So we go much much deeper inward
and it's the deep depth inward that
allows a person then to be able to
fortify themselves also outwardly
externally on every level physically
emotionally psychologically and
spiritually.
In the source sheet I prepared today we
have the origin of the Kaneka story in
Gmorra Shabas. This is the Talmudic
source for what happened on Kaneka. It's
a very brief description of our sages
and it became immortalized in Jewish
consciousness and Jewish history. And I
want to note to you a very interesting
way of how they describe the main part
of the story which would seem
counterintuitive and even difficult to
understand. So you can take a look in
your first first source. We have the
original which is in Hebrew and then an
English translation. Shabas
that's fract Shabas page 21 the second
chapter of Shabas which is the source
for the laws of Kaneka and the laws of
Shabas candles as well but and the way
the Gmorra introduces it with an
interesting question of my Kaneka which
means what is Kaneka now assuming
everybody knew what Kaneka was we know
what Kaneka is and we're living 2500
years after the story of Kaneka when the
Gomorrah wrote this there was only a few
hundred years after the story of Kaneka
Kaneka has become
Not just a Jewish household name, but
it's become entrenched into Jewish life.
Just like everybody knows what Shabas is
and what Trishan is and what Yamiper is.
People knew what Kaneka is. So when the
Gmor is asking my Kaneka and especially
the question is not in the beginning of
the discussion after many laws of
Kaneka. It's like what is Kaneka? Well,
you just discussed all these laws. So
why you asking now? Ask it in the
beginning. So it's obviously a deeper
question. My Kaneka not just technically
what is Kaneka?
What is Khan means? What is its inner
theme? What is its inner method? And
that's also a question. Why are you
asking the question? Everybody comes
together to celebrate each year. They
probably know what it is. The Greeks and
the Syrians and the Jews and the oil and
the but obviously wants to tell us
something and maybe negate something
else. What is that? So he answers
our rabbis have taught, the sages have
taught. I'll read it in the original but
you also see the translation
on the 25th day of begins the days of
which number eight eight days and one
made doesn't make eulogies then one
doesn't fast because it's a time of joy
what is the reason for this
when the Syrian Greeks
the reason I'm saying Syrian Greeks even
though it says yanim is because
essentially what happened was Alexander
the great conquered much of the world.
He was from Macedonia, from Greece. But
then when he died,
those who took over couldn't hold on to
the empire. So the empire of Alexander
the Great split into four four parts.
And ultimately it was the Syrian the
Syrian Greeks which was but it was
following the Greek tradition of
Alexander the Great that created the
whole Kaneka story their fight against
the Kashm and against the Bamed and
against the Jews. That's why we usually
say Syrian Greeks even though Sedivanim
Greeks because technically Dantis wasn't
Syria. the north of Israel. So he says
when the Syrian Greeks entered the what
is the is the inner chamber of the
basikt the Bik stood on the temple mount
on Harabas in your Shalim. Of course
this is the second basikt and you had
many sections to the basikt. It went on
a slope. It's a mountain. Later the
Romans flattened the mountain. I think
they lowered it by a thousand feet and
they flattened it. That's why Temple
Mount doesn't look like what it looked
like then was a har is a mountain. Today
it just looks like a flat plaza, an
elevated plaza where the mosque is. So
the basikdash was on a slope and you
went up higher and higher and higher. So
there was the outer part of the
mountain. There was the courtyard which
was surrounded by a wall. And then there
was that but that was without a roof.
And then there was the heel. The heckl
was the inner chamber of the basikt
which was its holy space where nobody
almost almost nobody entered besides the
kayan. And over there you had the minra.
You had an inner altar where they burnt
incense, no animals. And over there you
also had a shulan a table where they had
bread 12 loaves of bread that the would
exchange every shabas and eat the old
ones and bring in the new ones. That's
what you had. Then later inside of that
you had the holy of holies where only
the so is the inner roofed chamber of
the mik when the went into it. What's
what did they do?
They defiled they contaminated all the
oils that were in the sanctuary. The
oils that were designated to light them
in because we light them in every night
in the Bik with olive oil as the Tory
clearly says they contaminated the oil.
So what happens
when the
monarchy when the monarchy of the
overcame and emerged victorious
they came and they searched
they find only one cruise of oil that
was placed with a seal of the high
priest meaning it was untouched and
unsoiled as Rashi says from the seal
they could see that nobody opened it
wasn't touched says it was hidden in the
earth. It was obviously nobody had
contact with it. So there was no tum.
There was only one jug, one jug of oil,
one p, one cruise of oil that had this
status that still had a seal. Everything
else was defiled and contaminated. The
problem was
it only has enough oil to light for one
day.
The great miracle occurs and they lit
from this jug eight days.
The next year, that year was amazing.
The next year
The sages instituted these days
and they turned them into holidays,
festivities,
good days, a time to say halal, praise,
and a time to give gratitude. This is
the way the garra summarizes the entire
[snorts] experience to answer the
question. What is Kaneka? What is
curious about this? Look how they
mention the victory of the war almost in
passing, right? You say,
When theashim
prevailed over them and were victorious,
they went into the Ba Mikdash, they
searched and they couldn't find any oil
that was uncontaminated and only one
cruise of oil. So the victory is almost
like in passing. Yeah, they had to win
the war in order to reclaim the
basikash. But that's not like the real
story. The real story is they search and
they can't find anything and finally
they find one jug and now they're still
stuck because there's insufficient oil
for what they need. they only have for
one day and they didn't have more oil
and the miracle happens. Now what's
curious is it seems like the victory on
the battlefield that's the main story
because let's imagine for examp let's
say just for argument sake that they
didn't find a jug of oil they came to
the bdash they search and search and
search and all the oil is contaminated
and there's no pure oil. So what do you
think would have happened? What would
have they done?
>> [laughter]
>> They would have to make new oil and they
would have to wait another few days
right till they light the man inra. So
for those days they wouldn't light them
in just like they didn't light the mana
before because the whole bame mikt was
ransacked and conquered by the Greeks.
Now they also wouldn't. So what would
have happened? There wouldn't be for
another few days. But what happens if
they would have lost the war? What do
you think would have happened if they
would have lost the war?
>> Huh?
a slave.
>> It would be the end, right? If if if the
if the Jewish people would be helized,
there would be no Judaism. There would
be no Jewish people. They would be
assimilated. So, it seems like the main
story is not the oil. The main story is
what? The victory. That's the main
story. Without the victory, there would
be no Jews in Judaism left. Without the
oil, the bino wouldn't be lit for
another few days.
Yet, what do they make the main story?
All about the jug of oil. The victory is
almost impassing. It's very interesting
when that's the main story. Imagine,
okay, in 1967,
there were seven armies. Seven armies
that wanted to destroy Israel. And as
the Nasser said, we'll throw them into
the sea. And they planning another Awitz
20 years after the first Awitz, another
Awitz in 1967.
Six days there was a miraculous victory.
Israel tripled or almost quadrupled its
size. Defeated all of the armies,
liberated the old city of Jerusalem,
[cough and clears throat]
Yehuda and Shamron and Aza, the golden
heights including Kev [snorts] and
Crabas.
All of these things they wanted another
Awitz and yet there were eight or 900
Jewish casualties, more than 800
casualties. But the Jewish people were
saved. There were 3 million Jews then in
Israel. Now imagine if afterwards there
was a flame in one of the sh in your
that burned for 8 days. Very beautiful.
A beautiful icing on the cake. But is
that the story? I mean let's face it.
And if it wouldn't burn for 8 days it
wouldn't burn for 8 days. You see my
point? And yet the victory is mentioned
in passing. The real story is somehow
this oil. The question becomes even
stronger. The P Yeshua asks the is
which means you're not allowed to use
impure oil for the minor but that's only
when most of the people are pure
and you have pure items but when you
have the is in a state of tum and you
don't have oil that's so the is under
these circumstances you're allowed to do
it with impure oil of course it's better
with pure oil but when you don't have
anything else and in that situation all
coming from war everybody was soil
contaminated. You're allowed to light
the manure under these circumstances.
That means they could have even lit it
with impure oil technically. So the says
it doesn't even look like it was a
necessary miracle which is very
interesting. So not only don't they
focus on the war and they focus on the
oil which doesn't seem so significant in
the oil itself. It seems [snorts] like
like this was just an extra thing that's
very nice. It's very gishmak. It's very
beautiful but how essential was it?
So that's number one what we need to
understand. Another very interesting
thing is to see it from the perspective
of the Greeks.
The Gmorrah says when you want to
understand what Kaneka is when they came
into the what's the first thing they
did?
They contaminated all the oil in the it
seems like this was their now it's
interesting when an enemy comes and
conquers the defeated what's the first
thing they focus on? They want the
booty. They want your treasures. They
want your silver. They want your gold.
They want your diamonds. The B mikdash
had a lot of treasures even though it
wasn't as expensive as later. Whereas
the first B mikd
but it's what did they come? They came
in and what do they do? They contaminate
the oil. Now contamination is not even
something tangible. You can't go you
can't go to the bank with tum when they
came recently into the Louv museum. If
you saw burglars came to the Louv museum
in Paris you saw the story and they
stole in eight or nine minutes the crown
jewels of Napoleon and his wife. $100
million. $100 million of crown jewels.
They figned themselves. They imagined
they they they looked like construction
workers. They went up with a little
cherry picker from their pickup truck,
construction truck. They took the $100
million worth of crown jewels and they
ran away.
They can't even sell them as they are.
So, they have to melt them. Whatever
they're going to do with them, or I
don't know if they found them. I don't
think they found them yet. They dropped
one of them. So, they uh that that was
they didn't find them yet. Crazy story.
Here the Ivan come in timu they
contaminated the oil. What do you have
from contaminated oil? Well, they were
experts in they were experts in and it's
like come in do your thing. It looks
like this was their agenda to come and
contaminate the oil.
But this explains why the sages were so
focused on the oil. If they were focused
on the oil, so therefore the Jews were
also focused on the oil. But what's this
fascination and obsession with oil when
the real issue is who's going to win
politically, militarily, who's going to
own the state, who's going to have
sovereignty, whose culture and identity
is going to prevail.
If you look at the prayers of Alanism
where we do focus on the victory over
there we do focus on the victory and the
exceptional miracle of the victory
itself because it was we say in the that
you have delivered the strong into the
hands of the weak the many into the
hands of the few. So this was an
exceptional victory because the powers
were not balanced. The Jewish army, the
guerilla army of the Kashmayam was very,
very small. At most, it was a few
thousand Jews. The Greeks had then the
Syrian Greeks had one of the most
powerful armies in the world. You're
talking about probably between 50,000 or
100,000 troops. So, it's like having an
arm wrestle, like having a wrestle,
having one person being wrestled by 200
people. It's impossible even if you're
strong and mighty, like an ant trying to
fight a person. And yet, the Kashm
proved victorious. They drove out the
Syrian Greeks. They liberated Yuralim.
They reconquered the Bam Mikdash and
they dedicated it. Which is why it's
called Kaneka rededication. So it's not
like the victory on the battlefield was
a small victory. It was an exceptional
story. This makes it even more
perplexing that the sages don't zoom in
on it. And it's like this is the story.
My Kaneka they won the war. After that
they also let them which is very fine.
But as you see here that that became my
this is what they want you to remember.
This is what they want you to focus on.
Not God forbid that they're minimizing
the amazing quality of the war victory.
And we mentioned it in Alhanim, but in
the story of the Gmoran,
that's like the that's the foyer. That's
the intro to be able to get to the crux
of the story, to the meat and potato, I
should say, to the oil of the story, pun
intended, which is the lighting of the
manura with the pure oil,
right?
Now if you look in Alhanim in the second
source, how does it start? We say this
in all of the dvening and the benching
of
in the times of Matau the son of he was
the high priest. He was called and his
children. He had his five sons famous
Yehuda Makabe and the other brothers.
the the kingdom the monarchy of the
Syrian Greeks which was wicked stood up
on the Jewish people and they had an
agenda
to make them forget your we're saying
this in Davin so we're talking to Hashem
they made us they wanted to make us
forget your
to take them away
from the laws of of your will I want you
to focus the sages wrote this prayer
and every word is meticulous they don't
say
to make them forget the
mitzvah to remove the Jewish people from
the mitzvah
rather they say
they wanted to make them forget your and
they don't say all mitzvah
there's different types of mitzvah
mishb are mitzvah that are very logical
any civil society needs them like a
prohibition against theft or against
murderus
are more cultural eneral testimonial
mitzvah like they remember like like
every nation you have thanksgiving in
America. So we have things like shabas
like like pes remembering the exodus
remembering different events and
milestones like pur these are called
adus they testify to cultural
historic events of a people and then you
have what's called
are super rational mitzvah here he
focuses on
and not just
the laws of your will so he doesn't just
>> [snorts]
>> In this precision, in this choice of
words, we have conveyed a very very
profound message which gives us a whole
deeper perspective on the story of
Khanek and its relevance.
You see,
people sometimes make the mistake
[snorts] thinking that the Syrian Greeks
wanted to abolish and obliterate all of
Jewish thought, all of Jewish culture,
all of Jewish religion, all of Jewish
practice.
But it's much more complex than that.
It's much more nuanced. It's much more
nu nuanced than that. And here just to
convey it I'm going to quote a few lines
in the next source
[snorts] as you could see
in the previous lab the sixth lab I'm
actually named after him his name was he
passed away 1950 so he has a discourse
December 1940 middle of the second world
war he escaped from the Nazis he came to
New York
and in this discourse he characterizes
in a very powerful way what The battle
was a few lines here. Listen to this.
As a brilliant intellectual exercise
with profound wisdom, the Syrian Greeks
can agree to that. They can embrace it.
Furthermore,
furthermore, because they were
philosophers and many of them very
brilliant, they were even moved, many of
them were even impressed, mesmerized
by the deep wisdom in
no beautiful. So what's the problem? So
what do you want?
Their position was that it's God's. It's
Hashem's.
What do we mean that it's Hashem's?
The sanctity of
[snorts] it's his wisdom. It's God's
wisdom. We'll explain what that means.
The Medish says, the Greek said,
They asked the Jews to ride on the horn
of an axe which was then used often
write on the horn of that you don't have
a part you don't have a portion the god
of Israel meaning
the war was against godliness divinity
and he says in learn
they didn't mind learn it's fine
you can even do mitzvah
Don't mention, don't experience as a
divine experience as his will. Don't
mention, don't experience
means divinity, godliness.
Thus the agenda was the first thing
contaminate the oil in the sanctuary.
You can use oil. We're not getting rid
OF THE OIL. LIGHT contaminated oil. We
don't mind if there's oil. Oil light. Do
whatever you want.
But the contaminated oil.
What is the Reb teaching us here?
something very very profound which will
show us why
when we say that the Greeks won that we
won the Greeks on Kaneka [snorts]
it's a little more nuanced than that and
that's why we still celebrate say my
Kaneka because it's a good question my
Khan it's a question even today what is
really Kaneka
what are we learning here what is he
really sharing here you see historically
The Greeks posed a challenge to the Jews
like no other tribes and nations before.
They dealt with they dealt with a lot of
enemies during the course of the first
Bamikash. If you read the Tanakh, there
were constant constant confrontations
with their neighbors and enemies from
the Egyptians to the Assyrians to the
Philistines to the Phoenicians to the
Assyrians to the Babylonians. Of course,
the Greeks was the first culture that
managed to helanize the Jewish people.
The most of the Jews then were known as
Msavnim. Msnim means Jews who joined
Yavan. What was the enticement here?
Because they weren't coming just as
barbarians with a territorial
conflict or simply violence. I want to
destroy you. But there was something
much more subtle, much more
sophisticated.
In fact, it's the Greeks who are
credited with developing what later
would be known today as Western thought.
Mahamarave thought of the western world
was deeply deeply impacted, crafted,
molded by the tremendous influence of
the Greeks. The Greeks were a highly
sophisticated people educated,
enlightened, cultured. They cherished
yes some of the greatest they introduced
history, philosophy. Some of the
greatest philosophers till the modern
age names like Socrates, like Aristotle,
[snorts] like Plato,
Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, three
generations. And Aristotle was the tutor
of Alexander the Great. When he was a
child, his father Philip had him had
Aristotle tutor Alexander the Great.
They introduced philosophy, literature,
Greek literature.
art. [clears throat]
You're talking about people who
cherished science and athletics and
beauty and human development and human
prowess and Olympics and competition.
So you're talking about a a nation that
cherished ideas and cherished human
development and cherished reason and
therefore they were not this mimer is
telling us they were not so perturbed by
the brilliant intellectual gymnastics of
Judaism.
Anybody who sits in yeshiva for many
years and takes it seriously knows that
there's a method methodology. When you
learn Mishna, you learn Gimmorra and all
of its commentators, there's nuance,
brilliance there. There's foundations,
paradigms, how to think, how to develop
an idea.
The paradigms of which the Tyra is based
on and how things are developed and how
you think about things and how you
compare things and analyze and dissect
and question and respond. It's a
universe of intellectual creativity and
brilliance. People could sit if they had
the ability centuries and millennia to
learn that
the analysis, scrutiny
and methodical thinking that later
develops in Yiddish in such a powerful
way in the Talmud and Gmorra Talmud and
all of its commentators for hundreds and
thousands of years till this very day.
This on its own does not drive them
crazy. They even have respect for it. As
the mimer says, the brilliant ones among
them could even be mesmerized by it and
enjoy it. They'll even sponsor
this in their university. You can have a
section for this, make a chair, and you
could learn it and you can get a degree
in it.
Reason, methodology
is something they respected. It's
something they cherished.
Even rituals, mitzvah, every tribe has
its rituals. This is your myth. They
call it a myth. It's your tradition.
It's your culture. It's your history.
You do it. They're fine. That's what he
says. That doesn't bother them. You have
a culture. You have a tradition. It's
part of your family history. It's part
of your systems. It's fine.
So, what is the war?
And that's where the oil comes in.
As he puts it, they wanted to make us
forget your
what drives them mad about Jews and
Judaism more than anything else is that
Judaism is not philosophy.
The essential revelation of Judaism is
nava. What do we mean?
It's the intimate embodied experience of
the divine
in a person's heart, in a person's
nervous system, in a person's body.
It's the personal love, the intimate
relationship, the ability to surrender
my ego and go into flow where I become a
channel for divine consciousness. Each
person according to their capacity. Of
course, the prophets embodied that
fully. That's what avi is. But as the
says in when we talk about the gula,
what's the ga?
Every boy, every girl is going to become
a prophet. When Yeshua told you we have
competition, elder are prophesizing.
Arrest them, incarcerate them. What's
Mosha's response? You're jealous for me.
My agenda is everybody should be a
prophet.
What is he really saying here at Mat?
Everybody was a prophet.
What's the idea of prophecy? The idea of
prophecy doesn't just mean, you know,
somebody who has a crystal and they look
and they say, "I'll tell you when it's
going to snow
or which stock market you should invest
or what's going to be the news tomorrow
or what Trump is going to text
tomorrow."
That's part of NAVO. But the essential
idea of nava is that the divine presence
could be embodied in your own
biological,
psychological,
physiological, and spiritual system.
That you're a channel. You're an
embodiment of the divine presence. That
the inner energy of Hashem, the reality
of the world is channeled through you,
through your mind, through your heart,
through your body. This takes a lot of
work, a lot of inner refinement to be
able to uh clarify to be able to to
fine-tune and purify the antennas of my
soul. But essentially, the soul is an
ant has an antenna that channels cosmic
intelligence and cosmic love. To quote
the words of the we always quote,
you have a soul that is a piece of
Hashem. What does mean a piece of
Hashem? Hashem has pieces or is like a
birthday cake that you put up into
pieces.
God doesn't have parts.
The word is actually the the uniqueness
of a soul because what it means is that
every single soul just like a child is
part of a parent. When you say your
child is part of you doesn't mean god
forbid you split it into pieces. It
means that even as a child is a separate
person, what are they embodying? Even
physiologically, this is an embodiment
of the seed and the egg and the genes of
Tati and mommy and of the soul. So
even as my soul is in my body, it's
embodying it's channeling the divine
reality. It's like a piece of Hashem
like the ray of the sun that manifests
the sun and the sun is big enough that
one ray doesn't compete with another
ray. But every ray channels the light of
the sun in its own unique way. The sun
that shines into my house and gives me
vitamin D and warmth is the same sun
that shines into your house through its
unique ray.
This is the prophetic experience of
Judaism. It's not an intellectual thing.
I could prove that there's a god or I
can argue against being a god. I can
prove this. I can prove that. I can
explain this method, that method. Those
are intellectual tools. But that's not
the essence of Judaism. The essence of
Judaism is the embodied experience of
Hashem's reality in my bones, in my
body, in my nervous system. It's not
about words, even though I'm talking
about it.
Cuz at the moment, people are still not
understanding my silence. But very soon,
I'll just get up and I'll be silent and
you'll have the most beautiful class in
the world.
But since we still live in a world where
we're using words, I'm also going to be
using some words, whatever.
Unfortunately, my wife sometimes tells
me, "What do you talk about so much?
What do you talk and talk and talk and
talk? Just be quiet." [snorts] Amen.
Rabbi Jonathan Saxs Allam was the former
British chief rabbi. So he said, "What's
the difference between a sermon, a
party, and a fabangan?" So he said, "At
a party, everybody talks and nobody
listens. At a sermon, a rabbi sermon,
one person speaks and nobody listens. At
a fabbran, nobody speaks and everybody
listens.
An embodied experience is not about
words. You may say words, you may not
say words, but your internal nervous
system is aware of it.
[snorts]
That's an intimate relationship. It's
something you don't describe
through definitions and descriptions
because it's your entire being. You you
are it. You don't describe it.
The essence of Judaism is not reason and
rationality. This is not to say Judaism
is against reason and rationality. Not
the Tyra says
this is your wisdom.
There was a Jewish leader who once said
ah hopefully one day if the
if this
intelligent people will only have a
little we're not against reason and
rationality Judaism is full of reason
full of full of ideas full of wisdom and
when we learn we need to we want to
understand I want to understand
so what is it reason and rationality are
tools tools are amazing a hammer is an
incredible tool. An incredible tool. A
screwdriver is a very important tool. A
knife is an important tool. [panting]
All of these are tools. The mind,
rationality is an incredible tool to
help us navigate the experience of the
spirit. The mind, you know what the mind
is like? It's like a map. If you go to
Hawaii or you go to Miami or you visit
Australia or you visit another country
in the world, you have a map and the map
says, "Ooh, you see, oh, now we're here.
Now we're here. Now we're here." And the
map helps you. The map describes what it
is. The map will tell you the history of
it. The map will tell you when it was
built, and you have to make believe
you're interested. You know, when the
tour guides do that, it was built in
1761. Yeah. And they got a fight and
everybody's like, "Sure." And then
they're sleeping and on their phones.
And there's one person who's asking
questions. Yeah, you know those tours
tours, right? It's like anybody's when
are we going to eat, right?
A map is helpful in the sense it
describes, it gives definition, it gives
context, it gives history, right? It can
tell you what it is.
But let's understand something.
It can't replace the experience of being
present.
Never. You can't experience a visit to
Italy or a visit to Greece or a visit to
Moscow or a visit to your Shallay or a
visit to New York. That doesn't sound so
interesting.
You can't experience a visit by studying
the map. Why don't you sit on your
couch, take a globe AND SAY, "OH, HERE
IS GREECE. HERE'S Hong Kong. Here's
Nepal."
The map is not the territory. It sounds
simple, but it's not so simple. The map
is not the territory. The map describes
the territory at best. If you want to
see that Italy looks like a boot, you
have to look at a map because if you go
to Italy, you won't see a boot. But if
you want to touch the soil, you need to
go there. The map is not going to give
me the experience of it. The map is not
the territory, although it has
tremendous value. When you come home and
you want to explain to somebody where
you were, you point on the map. If
you're there and you want to know
where's a right, where's a left, you use
the map. If you want some history, some
context, some description, but that's
not the territory. The Greeks crave to
substitute reality with a map of
reality.
And that made all the difference. And
that's what western thought is based on.
Reality is substituted with a map of
reality. And in many ways, it seems so
tempting because with a map, you know
the value of a map, you could control
it. You have it in your hand. It's under
your domain. You see where everything
is. Nothing surprises you on a map. So
it's very comfortable to substitute
reality with a map of reality. So for
the Greeks, what is reality? Whatever
you could measure with your mind,
whatever you can understand, whatever
your reason can control
instead of surrender to reality. You're
a channel of reality. You become the
source of reality. Your brain measures
reality. Whatever could be measured
exists. Whatever can't fit into my brain
does not exist
because it's not on my map. It doesn't
exist. There's something very tempting
to it. This is where human being
substitutes God. What's the problem with
that? The problem with that is reality
is infinite.
Reality is an reality is divine.
[snorts] Reality is infinite oneness.
When we reduce reality to reason, we are
severed from the prophet inside of us.
We don't know the prophet inside of us
anymore. We're not connected to the
spirit of reality, to the energy of
reality. All we have is the mind
grappling to figure things out. I need
control. I need the map.
[snorts]
And that's what so many of us do. In
fact, that's what we often praise in
life. The more in control, I stay safe,
small, in control. I get at everything.
I define everything. Some of us do it
philosophically and some of us do
exactly the same thing emotionally.
[snorts]
In this sense, the Greeks were actually
trying to go away somewhat from paganism
even though they didn't completely go
away from paganism. The zara that the
warns about that the Egyptians were so
entrenched in that many Jews were
entrenched in in the first Bikash. The
garra says in the beginning of the
second B mikdash it was obliterated.
They obliterated desor the for idolatry.
It's very hard to understand today why
are people why do people worship statues
like what's selling all these statues
and breaks them and then has them
burned. Like what? Like I have other
temptations
like you have this temptation Lord to
take a stone and then worship it and
then look at a fish and say this fish is
God and then turn a cow into a holy cow
and start worshiping a cow and then this
one is worshiping the sun and the moon
and the star and this one what is this
and you're sacrificing children like
what is this about and yet you see that
Mosha does not stop warning the Jewish
people and in the second bas they don't
have this temptation anymore this is the
Greek challenge it's a different type of
challenge So I want to understand I want
you to understand paganism in many ways
has in it something of the flavor of
Judaism. Judaism was a protest against
paganism. You know why? Because
essentially what is paganism? Paganism
is saying everything is God. Everything
is spirit. You see this rack? It's not a
rock. It's a god.
Is that true or a lie? It's a lie and
it's true. Of course the rock is a
manifestation of Hashem. But it's a
manifestation of Hashem. Everything has
divine energy. Recreates the world. Isel
says even a pebble, a drop of water, a
flake of snow has a soul in it. Nothing
is devoid of a divine soul. That's what
gives it life. But it's all one. It's
cosmic oneness. There's no competition
of forces. As the pagans said, this god
and that god and that god. They have
thousands of gods. It's all oneness.
But everything is alive. Everything is
alive. The world is a living organism.
Just like a body is a small living
organism. The world is called in the
medish gvgu. It's a macro of the micro.
It's a ggud. It's a large organ. It's
one body. [snorts] Where do I end? And
where do you begin? Really? Do you know
that the oxygen that is now in your
brain? You know where it was a few
seconds ago?
In my brain. Do you know that? And you
didn't even ASK ME PERMISSION. YOU STOLE
MY OXYGEN LITERALLY. AND YOU'RE DOING IT
TO her right now.
>> [laughter]
>> THAT'S REALLY WHAT HAPPENS. It was
inside of me. I exhaled. Thank God
[snorts]
somebody else inhales it. And the truth
is the entire ecosystem is so balanced.
Everybody is giving. Everybody is
taking. It's one unified reality. This
is true with our planet. And you could
see it visibly. And if somebody quits,
we're all kaput. If the wind decides I'm
going on vacation, it's Khan time.
I'm going We would like if the wind go
on vacation a little bit. Oh, I'm going.
You know what would happen? It's great.
The sun could suction out all the like a
like a like a like a suction cup. The
sun could get all the vaporized water
into clouds. The problem is when it
rains, it comes right back into the
oceans and the whole earth dies. THE
WINDS SPREAD THE CLOUDS. So when it
rains,
there is something fertile. There's
fertility. The snow protects the plants
like a blanket. People don't realize the
snow is a blanket.
Besides enjoyable for kids not to have
to go to school and for the children
inside of us who love to see the world
in white. And the [snorts] same is true
with every force in nature. Every worm
contributes to the toiling of the earth
making it fertile for growth. Every
single worm. So it's all spirit. It's
all alive. And your body it's all
energy. It's divine energy that speaks
to us constantly. The pagans
turned it into fragmented
gods. What did the Greeks do? They went
to the other extreme. The pagans saw
spirituality in everything physical and
it became a god. The Greeks went you
don't see anything spiritual in the
physical. It's just what you can measure
with your own mind and process and be in
control of. And that's how you describe.
So it's essentially it's a dead
universe. Even the word God is not a
Jewish word. It's a Greek word. Because
in Judaism, God is not a reality. It's
not a noun. It's an interactive
experience. If you look in Hashem,
what's the name for Hashem and utk
is,
is will be, it's creation from the word
mahav creates. Every other word in kabal
is called infinity. It's the infinite
presence of all reality. We're all
channeling Hashem. Everyone is part of
Hashem. Everything is part of Hashem.
But you're not fragmented. It's all
Hashem. It's all oneness.
[snorts] So there's alive. There's a
living dynamic. You're alive. That's
what it means to be alive.
Alive means that the spirit of infinity
is being channeled through you every
single moment. Now the question is how
clear I am, how transparent I am because
Hashem also creates kipo which are
coverups and shells and blockages. that
block all of that and try to take us out
of reality into the map of reality.
The most torturous way of living is
living in a map and not living in
reality. The map is good. You come home
and it's good to have a description.
It's good to have a definition. But when
the map becomes the only place where I
live instead of going anywhere, I just
go there on the map.
Before Corona, people used to come to
classes. You remember today? Yeah. I've
we sometimes women they say I used to
come to you before Corona. After Corona,
you don't go anywhere. You do the map,
you sit at home and it comes to your
screen and that's it. So everybody has
to do what's good for them. I'm just
saying in life I'm not going to go visit
anywhere. I'm just going to look at the
map. It's devoid of the experience of
it. So now
[snorts]
when we reduce reality into reason, we
sever ourselves from the flow inside of
us from the prophet inside of us. The
divine soul and the body which when
cleared up can channel the infinite
consciousness and intelligence of the
universe. The PK says in
from my flesh I shall perceive Hashem.
So the bal said in Yiddish
one needs to sand, crystallize, refine
the flesh until you'll see their you'll
see godliness there. It's an embodied
intimate experience. It's a
relationship.
If there's some things we understand,
beautiful understanding is a tool, but
it's a tool at best and it only
describes that which the mind can
describe. The truth of reality, it can't
describe. It could just be experienced
the way it's experienced by each person
according to the way Hashem wants them
to experience the light of infinity
through their body, through their mind,
through their soul, through the system.
[panting and sighs]
And here is really where the saying
the battle of the Greeks against the
Jews was deeper than just we want the
territory and we want to destroy your
religion. In many ways, it's more subtle
and therefore could sometimes be more
lethal. Or to put it differently, in
some ways the Greeks actually were
victorious even though they were not
victorious on the battlefield, but they
were victorious in the soul. Why?
Because for many people, Judaism is an
intellectually rich, engaging, and even
inspiring mental experience. You learn.
I could learn my whole life and I have
information and I have thoughts and I
have ideas and at the Shabas table I
even have ver beautiful ver and insights
and perspectives and some of them are
nice they're nice they're all nice
actually
I [snorts] mean some are mgishmak
different people different flavors and
so on and so forth but it could be all
of that
[snorts]
and there's information and more
information and more some of the
information could be inspiring and can
be enthusiastic and certainly could be
intellectual ually rich and diverse.
[snorts]
But here's the question. Can you feel
the bliss of intimacy with the divine in
your heart?
Can your nervous system experience what
the Tanya calls from the Zoya Rusa Liba?
Rusa Liba is the deep rapture. Rapture.
You know what rapture is? Uh,
>> huh?
>> Yeah. The rapture of the heart.
That's [snorts] not something I could
tell somebody to do and it's not an
idea. I experience it in my heart, in my
spine, in my body, in my nervous system.
The very question, let's face it, seems
unJewish to many people. When sometimes
asked this question, they want to know
which Far Eastern religion are you
bringing us or what did somebody put
into your Kool-Aid this morning? This is
not part of the process.
This is where the Greeks were
victorious.
That's what the mimer is saying. I don't
care if you learn Tyra, but don't
experience the divine in Tyra. It's a
beautiful experience. It's another thing
to study. I don't even care if you do
mitzvah. You just show up and you do
mitzvah because of reward, because
you're scared of punishment, because
your grandmother did it, because it's
culture, because it's tradition, there's
some nice things. BUT THE RELATIONSHIP
NOT the
even the intellectual wisdom of is not
intellect. It's a divine flow of
consciousness
that is often enclosed in the intellect.
That it's your will that you love this
that there's a real relationship here
that intimate relationship. Imagine in a
marriage or any relationship of two
close people where the nature of the
relationship is just understanding
intellect.
Basically we could sit and argue about
ideas.
Okay. When I was dating I remember my
sister said
you're not marrying a you're looking for
a wife not a go to yeshiva and find
yourself a kusa and sit for hours and
kill each other debating. You're right
you're wrong. You're right. You're
wrong. You're right. You're almost
right. You don't know what you're
talking about. You know, some guys come
out of yeshiva and they think that's the
way you connect, right? So everything
his wife says,
[panting]
I don't know why so many people are
laughing, but okay.
And the guy's like, "What? That's how
you're supposed to connect, man. I just
proved that you were wrong. You should
just tell me I'm the most brilliant man
that you ever met in your life. You
know, I proved the Russian Shiva wrong.
I proved the maj wrong. I prove all my
friends wrong." And you got to tell
them, you know, marriage is like it's
not a Greek experience.
Now, we cherish reason and reason
sometimes protects us. It protects us
from cults. It protects us from
stupidity. It protects us from being
blindfolded. It protects us from being
manipulated and exploited.
That's why in many ways, reason is a
gift, but only when it's a channel for
God, not a substitute for God. The map,
we like maps. It's good to have a map,
but not as a substitute for reality.
Just like you cannot eat cake or lattkas
or donuts with your brain.
I've tried many years. Doesn't work. If
and if I wouldn't eat it, I only eat my
brain. I would have looked better. But
unfortunately, I don't only eat it with
my brain. Cuz to eat a donut or a lotka,
you need to use your taste buds.
You can't live life. If that's true with
donuts, how much more so is it true with
life? You can't live life with your
brain. I can't walk around like that's
artificial intelligence. So the Greeks
wanted to make everybody artificially
intelligent. It's amazing because
artificial intelligence is more
brilliant than any genius rabbi in the
world.
The information they have unbelievable
within 10 seconds. What 10 seconds?
Within a second and a half you say give
me a kaneka sermon right style of Rabbi
Y. Yeah. Within a second and a half.
Yeah.
Takes me time. They're much better than
the original. Much better. They know me
better than I know myself. They know
everything I ever said that's ever on
the internet that anybody ever put any
clip. I don't remember. I don't remember
what I said yesterday. [laughter]
[panting]
I remember once I saw a video there was
a painting. He made a painting of the
labavatureba and he came to the rebba
for dollars and he presented it to him
without skipping a hardb says ah better
than the original [laughter]
better.
But what's it missing? It's missing a
soul an embodied experience the embodied
relationship. The words will be nicer.
They'll be fluffy. They'll be eloquent.
There won't be mistakes. They don't make
a single spelling mistake. God bless
them. these guys.
So reason is a beautiful tool. It's a
beautiful tool. If somebody feels
they're being brainwashed or
indoctrinated, but when reason becomes
the beginning and middle and end of
reality, it's a tragedy. So understand
what happened in first Bd second bas in
the era of a desributed
every spirit, every physical reality
became a spiritual reality became a god.
So the Greeks completely divorced the
spiritual from the physical and all
reality is what I could measure with my
mind what I could define with my
understanding and that's reality.
So went now to the other extreme and as
a result of that the victory of the
Greeks is whenever we approach life that
way
it's approaching life from the place
where I want to remain safe small and in
control. I substitute reality with the
map of reality on every single level
emotionally, intellectually,
psychologically.
So that's why they don't want to make
you forget or
as long as Judaism is a cerebral
religion. Cerebral is the word, I have
no problem. It's fine. You can agree,
you cannot agree. And that's why the
word God is like a noun. It's a
philosophical noun. Does God exist? Does
he not exist? Okay, maybe you'll prove
that he does exist. That's not the God
of the Tanakh. God of Tanakh is not
something you prove exists, doesn't
exist. IT'S A GOOD ARGUMENT. Can
somebody who's an atheist is there prove
that God exists? It's a discussion, but
that's not the experience of Hashem.
That's a philosophical
piece of information that could be
debated this way, that way, that way.
Richard Dawkins, who was one of the
famous atheists, said that the pagans
believed in thousands of gods. The Jews
reduced it to one god. So, they got
better. And now we'll get rid of that
one god. and will finally reach
completion. It's his understanding.
The real term is it's infinity.
Everything is we're all part of.
Hashem is something you channel. It's
not an existence that exists in heaven,
exists there. I please him. I don't
please him. He's this. He's that type.
Those aren't philosophical constructs
that divorced us from experience to the
point that people don't even understand
this language. That's how deeply the
Greeks were victorious. The entire
language seems alien to many Jews.
And that's why the kazal did not focus
on the war victory. They focused on the
story of the oil. Oil that's
contaminated versus oil that's not
contaminated is not something you could
see in a laboratory.
Kosher versus is not something that's
going to show up. The chicken was this
way or that way. A married woman versus
an unmarried woman. Biologically the
Greeks, what's the difference? All these
Shabas Friday, Thursday, Wednesday, just
another day of the week in the lab.
You're not going to see it. Oil that's t
or what's the difference? The same oil.
I don't care if you like your minor.
The difference of t and t oil is an
experiential difference. It's an it's an
a difference of energy. It's Yeah.
Hindi.
>> Yeah.
>> [snorts]
[snorts]
>> Great. Great question.
>> Excellent. Yes. Beautiful.
Beautiful. You can have a relationship.
>> Nice. Beautiful.
>> Beautiful question. So if we talk about
the relationship, what does a
relationship then mean? If someone is a
relationship, it's separate. So you
really nailed it. A relationship with
Hashem real means really that we learn
that we're not separate. It's like
ultimately the most beautiful marriage
in the world like the Zara says, it's
two halves of the same soul. So what the
reason we call it a relationship is
because there is the experience of
separateness. We live in a world where
there is concealment a lot of
concealment. So that's what I need to
work through. I want to work through the
concealment and lean back into a place
of trust and to a place of faith and to
a place of wholeness. So there is a
relationship because it's something we
need to create. It's not just when we're
created we experience ourselves as
channels of infinity. We don't we grow
up and we have what the Tanya calls an
animal consciousness which is a survival
template that focuses on the ego and
survival
and it takes work to work through the
shells and the husks and the kipos and
touch the inner space of divinity which
when cleared up I am channeling the
cosmic love and intelligence and that's
why there's an inner knowing where you
are a prophet everybody is a prophet the
question is only how much it's revealed
how much it's manifested to be a Jew is
that you're essentially a prophet and
ultimately it says
even the rock will be a prophet the
comes if you come to a tree it's going
to be shabas and you want to harvest a
fig the tree is going to scream shabas
not because thetoria trained them shabas
is shabas it means that the energy of
the tree the energy of the tree is going
to show you who it is so even the tree
so to speak is going to be prophetic
says everybody will seem
everything is the divine energy. So we
call it a relationship. Great question.
Hindi asks always visionary questions
you ask. Thank you
because because
[applause] for Hindi Marowitz yes I
always say she provides our class with
vision and perspective.
True vision right oil. The oil the oil.
So it's a relationship because it's
something I need to create. I need to
bring I need to bring myself in. There
is an autonomy. There's it's it's done
by choice. We do it by choice. It's not
it doesn't happen automatically. There's
in this world. So I'm choosing the
connection even though what am I
choosing? I'm choosing not just a
connection of two separate things. I'm
choosing to reveal an experience of
oneness. So this is the experience of
complete fusion. My soul becomes a
channel for infinite consciousness.
What's the what's the way to get here?
Always through openness and surrender.
It's surrendering the need to be in the
map, the need to describe, the need to
understand, the need to control, the
need to figure out. Sometimes I need to
figure out things, right? If I'm looking
at a bill and I want to figure it out or
I'm learning something, I need to figure
it out. Or there's a math question, you
need to figure it out. That's where the
mind is a brilliant tool. But don't try
to figure out infinity. Because when I
try to figure out infinity, all I'm
doing is I'm cutting myself off from
infinity. I'm just turning it into some
intellectual construct that I simply
cannot cannot experience anymore. Yeah.
>> A scientist astronomer once told me
sense of God. So they took God out of
the equation.
>> Nice. Scientists can't make sense out of
God. So they took him out of the
equation. Very powerful.
>> Yeah. Very powerful. Yeah.
Now what is really? And when we say the
word God, where is really? So the word
God, I'm telling you, is a Greek
convention. It's Hashem as a noun like
some form, some picture, some reality.
There's a stone, there's a cup of water,
you have your iPhone, you have your
smartphone, you have your computer, you
have your car, right? I have my jacket.
I have my tie. And there's also God. I
have him. I don't have him. I like him.
Am I this? I agree with him. I don't
agree with him. He likes me.
But what does that do? That creates a
philosophical construct. And now we can
argue about it. Even if I prove to you
that he does exist, it's a Greek
concept. It's a Greek reality. Not
because the conversation doesn't have
value. It has value as an intellectual
experience, as an intellectual gymnastic
exercise. And when somebody is
completely completely alien, that's
sometimes the introduction. The
introduction is let's talk about it
logically and see you when you look at
the world you somebody asked me the
other day he says he feels that atheism
why am [snorts] I not an atheist he says
you seem somewhat intelligent so I told
him I told him I said I'll be honest
with you from I'm not a scientist or
physicist or cosmologist from the little
I read and I know and I see a little bit
I'll [snorts] tell you that today I
think to be an atheist you have to have
much more amuna than to be a believer
and I said I don't have so much blind
faith to be an atheist.
Because even if you study DNA or you
study the construction of the mechanism
of the makeup of one cell,
it is so infinitely mind-boggling
complex that you probably should have to
have a lot of blind faith to say it
happened all randomly. I don't have that
blind faith. I don't I'll be honest with
you. You need to have much more amuna
today to be an atheist. So yeah, of
course you could talk about it
reasonably and intellectually and it's
it's very very valuable,
but that only takes us to a certain
space and then it gets stuck. It gets
stuck because we're not alive. Hashem is
the energy that flows in you, through
you, through everything, through
everybody and is also beyond everything
and everybody. The garra says he
constitutes the place of the world. The
world doesn't constitute his space.
And that's the idea.
The once said, "Got is out and out is
got." That's an experience. Gut is out
and outs is got. Now you'll say, "But
right now, I'm angry. I'm resentful. I'm
overwhelmed. I'm anxious. I'm sad. What
does that look like?" Right? These these
are this is real energy. This is what
this is what we're contending with. This
is where the search for Hashem comes in.
This is where a person has to realize
there's a lot of darkness in the world.
There's a lot of concealment in the
world. There's constantly things that
can take me out of this. This is the
reason I want to become a Greek and just
systemize everything so I can be in
control because it's very very hard to
keep on surrendering again and again and
again. Now here you have to understand
something. So when the fight of the
Greeks is about the oil, the oil is so
key for them. And here it's tapa oil.
What's the what's the what's the
uniqueness of the oil?
Everybody knows with oil, olive oil,
really all oil, but we're talking here
about olive oil. [snorts] Olive oil is
very, very oil is a very fatty food.
We all know that. That's why people like
to put oil. It's very rich, rich in
calories. Olive oil is healthier than
many other oils. I mean, you shouldn't I
don't know what I'm not I'm not going to
go on a rampage,
but certain oils that are really toxic.
Olive oils has quite a few health
benefits etc. But oil is fat. Oil is
rich, extremely extremely rich.
Their war is on the oil of Judaism.
What's the oil of Judaism? The oil of
Judaism is the richness, the gishmak,
the fatkite, the fattiness, the zkite,
the oiliness of it. What does that
represent? It's not the robotic
intellectual experience. It's the
richness of it. I want you to take a
look again in this source sheet here
that we paid. If you take a look in the
second paragraph, the last last to the
second to last paragraph of the page,
the first thing the animal soul
contaminates your oil, which is your
bliss, your rapture, your ecstasy, your
delight, your pleasure, your
He takes away your bliss from the divine
and now I substitute it with emotions
that will give you a little comfort or
thoughts that will give you so to speak
comfort or words that will give you
comfort. I hijacked your oil. That's
what the Ivanam want. What does this
mean? What this means is every moment of
life I have a choice. Do I remain with
holy oil? Do I remain with unholy oil?
Everybody needs pleasure in life. We
need passion. Everybody needs what to
wake up for, right? Somebody once said
those hes Poland in the tunnels would
say they said he would say those who
have a why can deal with almost any how.
Everybody needs an egg something that
drives me. The question is is it holy
oil or unholy oil? Shead through which
you light the is the oil that creates
divine light, divine warmth.
The
says it's the symbol of the divine
presence. It's the fattiness. It's the
richness oil here. I'm talking about in
a spiritual emotional sense. I'm not
telling you to eat extra donuts tonight.
But the spiritual oil that you should
take extra of. You know, somebody once
said, "Why do Jews have so many Latkas
and donuts on Kaneka?" Right. So the
answer is the oil. You know the oil, the
miracle of the oil. But somebody once
said because the Greeks were very into
looks and athletics and exercise and
Olympics and Kaneka we won the Greeks.
So we make sure to eat foods that will
ensure that we will never look like
them. [laughter]
So I don't think that's a good idea. Eat
less and and and and then Jews should be
powerful physically and emotionally and
spiritually.
What's the inner oil? The inner oil is
the richness, the fattiness.
When you experience the bliss of your
inner soul, the bliss of pymius, you're
not attracted to other forms of it's too
good. It's too authentic. It's too be
too real. Think in a marriage where a
husband and a wife are filling each
other in a deep way. Each of them has to
be out of their freaking normal mind to
go cheat, even to go flirt. Why? It's
like if I come to a beautiful wedding,
there's a smogus board with the most
delicious food. I don't go to the
garbage and look for a bone that was
left over after a duk ate and I take the
bone and start licking over it. Why
would I do that? Why would I substitute
a gourmet healthy delicious meal with
garbage with junk? In life the same
thing. So look what happens. The first
thing the animal soul needs to do is
contaminate my oil. When I'm not in
touch with my inner divine holy oil, now
I need other oil. So now it'll find all
types of emotions or thoughts or words
that can keep me satisfied at least a
little bit. So for example, the M says
people flatter each other. What does
flattery do? It thinks for the next few
minutes I'll be safe. You're going to
like me. I'll get the favor I need.
Gossip, slander, talks of self
aggradisment. These are all fake
pleasures that give me the impression
that I have some pleasure but it's
torturous because I'm divorced from my
inner pleasure. I'm not in touch with my
energy. Some people who become obsessed,
food becomes my pleasure. Drinks become
my pleasure. My phone, this distraction,
that distraction. Even thoughts of
anxiety and fear and resentment and
hatred and competition and
judgmentalism. All of these are giving
people something to hold on to and
something to breathe by and all of my
different obsessions. But what is it?
It's constantly allowing me to lose my
touch with my inner oils. He says, "The
first thing the animal soul wants to do
is hijack your holy oil." Because when
I'm present with my inner divine energy,
I may have struggles. I may have
challenges, but I bring it back in. I
know I'm not going to go to the garbage
dump to substitute an authentic real
presence. My thoughts, my words, my
emotions. I want them to be channeling
my divine soul. Now, often I'm
overwhelmed with stuff. I'm overwhelmed
with other stuff. These are the kipos.
These are the shells. This is my
opportunity to be able to trust to be
able to choose the holy oil. But that is
why that oil becomes so symbolic because
it's the question about the inner
spirit. Where is your richness? Where's
your fattiness? Where's your egg? If you
have with your soul and everybody is
capable of that, then automatically I'm
in a different space because nothing
will come close to that. Nothing will
come close to it.
Somebody once told me a mentor of mine
said you know right why you can have for
example you can feed off energies of
millions of people you could let's say
get validation from millions of people
let's say theoretically you have a video
that has I don't know 4 million views
and 900,000 comments of how you changed
their life and it doesn't come close to
what it is to experience your own
spiritual energy and it's so true I need
validation from others when I don't have
my own spiritual energy. I'm not in
touch with it. My oil was hijacked. So
now, could you give me oil? Could you
give me oil? And everybody looks for
their distractions that's going to make
them feel better. And sometimes it could
be using religion and God and holiness,
but it's really oil that was
contaminated. The oil that is pure is
very internal. Nobody even knows about
it necessarily. It's your own going back
into the place where you're openhearted,
you're in trust, you feel in a safety.
Why not? Because you understand. You
don't understand. You don't have to
understand. Sometimes you can
understand. Most times, let's face it,
we don't understand what's going on. I
don't understand. But I could channel.
I'm channeling. That's what it means to
be alive. But be alive doesn't mean I
understand.
We live in a world where very few things
are understood. If anybody understands a
couple of things, it's a miracle. The
fact that we could understand a few
things is unique. Life means I'm showing
up to life. I'm channeling the divine
energy through me. the love, the light,
the truth, the authenticity, and even
the struggle that I'm dealing with, that
is also part of it. When I bring that
into the relationship, I realize this is
something I need to work through. This
is something that's allowing me to grow.
This is something that's allowing me to
flex my muscles. It's not here to break
me and to crush me and to destroy me.
Now, look at the last few lines. He says
happens the 25th day of the first
is 25 letters
if you don't believe me you can do it on
your own
is 25 letters
is
and as a result of that essentially is
when they find this oil. What is
it's really the daily exercise of going
back into oneness that there's a oneness
in the Bria. The world is one. There's a
cosmic one is that every one of us is a
channel. Not a channel because I control
it and I understand it. A channel
because we're all part of infinity.
That's the that's going back into the
pure oil. And it's sometimes one little
jug of oil. The little jug of oil you
can't destroy. They contaminated
everything. But there's a jug that they
couldn't contaminate that's sealed with
the kangal seal. And that has enough oil
to create a fire to create a passion in
your life. It looks very small, but it's
anything but that. And you have to
understand here something happened with
Judaism also. This is a very subtle
idea. And that is for Judaism to be able
to be transmitted. The sages made a very
dearing and profound decision. They hid
the jug of oil of Judaism. The physical
jug of oil is a metaphor for the
spiritual jug of oil. The Greeks and the
Romans
watched Judaism continue. And yet its
essence went under the radar. They
didn't see the radar. They hid the
essence of Judaism so that they would
not fight it because the more external
part they hated but not as much
this is called and that's the reason the
whole all the teachings of
which is the the oil of it's the it's
the intimate bliss it's not intellectual
ideas or even rituals or technicalities
when the Greeks and the Romans if you
would ask them what Judaism is they
would say What many Jews say, endless
debates about tedious laws to no end.
Like somebody wrote a joke. He says,
"Imagine the go would have all the halas
with their candle [snorts] with their
lights that we have with Armena. Do you
write it from the right side to the left
side? And what if you have only two and
but it's already three, right? And what
happens? Are you allowed to use the
light or you're not allowed to use the
light? And what happens if you put it in
the wrong place? And what if you put it
on the right side of the door? And what
if it gets extinguished before 30
minutes? And what if you don't sit
there? And what if there's two people?
And what if there's a mana? And what if
their two flames are touching? Leave me
alone.
Those are normal people. JUST LIGHT YOUR
MANA AND GO EAT.
And this is true in every literally in
every it seems like endless debates and
everything is so technical, tedious,
tedious. This is what it looks like. So
that Judaism, the real Judaism went
under the radar. It went under the
radar. They said, "Okay, we're fine.
formulas, methods, the jug of oil went
under the radar, but it was always
transmitted. It's always transmitted. If
you look around today, what's the
generation searching for? They're
searching for the jug of oil. Learning
is exceptional and it's it's really all
the learning has it. It's not like it's
two separate Judaisms. Every technical
detail of is a channel for divinity.
That's what he says. It's
it's his wisdom. It's a flow of divine
consciousness. I CAN GET STUCK in the
logic but really it's not logic. It's
divine wisdom that goes through logic.
So that was transmitted in a very hidden
way but it's here it's present in last
in the recent generations there's an
explosion of it the balm and all these
great masters because as you get closer
to gulah this is really the essence of
it this is really what every piece of
gimmar is what every mission is what
every is it's a channel it's a ki it's a
vessel for the jug of oil for the
and
Huh?
[snorts]
>> Well, [snorts]
>> let's say for women, but also for
[snorts]
>> I thought you would ask a question the
other way around. Could you get to it
through learning? [laughter]
>> Thank you.
Because you get to it through learning
because sometimes the learning could
completely eclipse this. That's the
whole point.
>> Sometimes the learning could completely
eclipse it,
>> right? Yeah. Now, this is not just we're
not just talking here about um you know
the the there's the simple faith of the
Jew that is at the core of it and it's
also a very embodied experience. There's
an embodied experience of oneness that
is full of rapture. It's full of en
there's a deep joy. There's a light.
There's a fattiness. There's a richness
there. There's a she in there. So every
single every single person could get to
it. Isra that men learn the women learn.
Everybody belongs to everybody.
There may be different focuses of what
people learn and how much they learn.
Everybody according to their capacity.
>> Yeah. But but is is the is the divine
blueprint for life that contains this
wisdom. Now everybody has a connection
to it. And it belongs to everybody. Of
course, everybody according to their
capacity, to their their time, their
energy, and their ability. But it's not
doesn't belong to an elite few. That's
the biggest mistake. The divine
relationship is equally connected to
everybody. There's no hierarchy in this.
You understand? So every single child
and a female in their way, a male in
their way, and every person individually
in their own way. But and it's not just
it's the whole experience of Judaism,
every aspect. It's really this is a 247
relationship is the blueprint for it.
But it's in all your ways you know him.
You have intimacy with him.
So as a result of all of this we can now
understand
what the issue was. They wanted to
contaminate that oil take away that that
and now it becomes an issue of how I'm
going to survive in a world. This one
philosophically and this one through
controlling other things and this one
through distracting themselves this way
and that way. And what was the victory?
The victory was that they found the jug
of oil. It was there. They found it. And
not only that, they used it to kindle
the mana. What does that mean in a
person's life? Every single time that I
know that in the essence of my body and
my soul and my nervous system, there is
an unsoiled contaminated jug of oil.
It's the hidden the hidden oil of
Judaism. It's the frequency of intimacy
with divine oneness. It's a place where
I'm safe, where I'm secure, where I'm
loved infinitely. It reflects literally
the cosmic love and intelligence. And I
let go of my need to control. And I lean
into faith, surrender, trust, joy,
rapture bliss. This is experiencing the
Kaneka miracle. My Kaneka. This is the
experience. It's not a story that
happened and they liter and it's
beautiful and they won the war. Of
course, that's the story, the the
historical story, but it's a really an
internal story because the happiness
that I'm looking for is often on the
other side of the control that I'm not
willing to let go of.
Think about that. And the life I'm
looking for is offer often on the other
side of the life I don't want to let go
of. I want that Greek inside of me often
to win. I want to be able to be in
control. I want to only live with the
map. It's very hard to live with the
reality. All anger, all resentment, all
anxiety is trying to put me in control.
I'm angry at you. You're here. I'm here.
I'm righteous. I'm resentful. I'm
righteous. You're this. Even anxiety.
anxiety is I need to figure it out and
I'm not figuring it out and my brain is
going crazy. What's going to happen? Oh
my god, your life is being destroyed.
Your family is being destroyed. OH MY
GOD. WHOA. WHOA.
[laughter]
OKAY, GREEK. You need a little hug.
Okay. You're not God. You're not a
statue. You didn't create this. Lean in.
Lean into trust. It's hard. It's
difficult. But this is really what it
means. Pierce through the kipa. And when
I could surrender to that, I opened
myself up to the real oil, to the
authentic oil. And the authentic oil has
no substitute. There's no competition
even. I'm not going to sell that. I'm
not going to sell a relationship with my
true energy for fake energy. It's just
simply too nauseating. It's literally
like a great relationship. I'm going to
give up for a few minutes of fake
pleasure that will only satisfy the most
external part of me. And even that will
be fake news. Whenever you live a life
in which you're feeling and in touch
with your own inner divine spiritual
energy, there's no substitute for it in
the world. I've tried. I've tried
things. I tried. We try, right? The
yvanim did not do that. They wanted to
replace Hashem, but there's no
substitute for that because it's nothing
else is real. Everything else is fake
news. It's fake oil. It's contaminated
oil. It looks fatty. It looks rich, but
it's not. It's like if my pleasure in
life is going to a restaurant and
ordering this type of steak. I may be
hungry and I want to eat a piece of
food. But if that becomes my ecstasy in
life, everybody knows it lasts for 25
minutes and I'm back to my emptiness.
The only way you can experience real
richness and fatness in life, it's a
pleasure that exists before you have it,
while you have it, and after you have
it, and even a year later, you can look
back and you know that you touch
something real. And the only thing
that's real that you could really touch
real is divinity, infinity
because that is everything. That is
reality. And that's what I constantly
choose. Is the oven in me going to win
or is the or not the in me is going to
win. And you and therefore and I want to
say this I began when we talk about you
know such a massacre and such a tragedy.
I'm just take taking from my own
experience. There's no way the mind can
make sense out of these things. Of
course, Jews have to learn all the
lessons that we have to learn for Israel
and the rest of the world about who we
are and what people want to do to Jews
and how much hatred and evil exists in
our world. And it teaches you the
holiness of the Jewish people. Why are
people targeting 2,000 Jews who come to
light? What do they see in this
gathering that you could just shoot and
shoot and shoot and kill kill young,
innocent, beautiful people? I mean it
teaches you so much and it gives Jews so
many lessons especially in terms of
protection and strength and confidence
and unity and all of that. In addition
to all that, we speak about the personal
experience. There's no way the brain
could make sense out of these things.
These horrors, this darkness, it's very,
very difficult. It's very, very
challenging. And then you're going into
Kaneka and you want to celebrate Kaneka
and almost feels like selfish. We're
celebrating Kaneka when such a thing
happens and so many people including us
are reeling and so many families
affected and a community you know and
shock and and and so much concern and so
much anxiety and fear and and main thing
is sadness and pain.
But when we try to try to control these
things with our brain, we automatically
fail. There's only one way to be able to
live life and that is surrender.
Surrender doesn't mean you're weak and
you're stupid and you're naive and you
don't learn lessons. Surrender means I
cannot live life through my brain trying
to understand. It's impossible. It's too
big. It's too gigantic. And this was
really the feminine touch what Jewish
women always knew. They knew it in
Egypt. They knew it throughout all the
generations that life is experienced
through a relationship.
I show up. I show up with my heart. We
show up with our soul. We show up with
our presence. We show up with our
courage. We show up with song. We show
up with supporting each other. We show
up with love towards each other. We show
up with inner confidence. We show up
with knowing that there's a jug of oil
that is always present and it never ever
could be extinguished. We don't
understand the process. We don't know
why it has to happen, why there's so
much pain, why children have to s nobody
understands these things. And if I go
there with my brain, it's just a dead
end. It's literally it's just a stuck
end. It's literally there a dead end
literally
and there's no answers for and I don't
have an intellectual answer. I'm not a
Greek and I'm not even looking for
intellectual answers because I don't
think we could answer it. I don't think
we need to answer it. I don't even think
we want to answer it. Even if somebody
comes up with brilliant explanations,
who cares? So, you have another
brilliant mathematical explanation. The
only answer to this is just a real
experience. The real experience is that
we're here. We're here in the world and
each of us is a channel. It's a channel
for truth. There's a channel for love.
It's a channel for wisdom. There's a
channel for unity. There's a channel for
healing. It's a channel for redemptive
consciousness. You're looking for the
kanaka miracle. It's inside of you. My
kanaka. The garra says don't go to the
battlefield. It's you want the kanaka
miracle. Look inside of you. Find the
jug of oil that nobody contaminated that
was not soiled that doesn't have to
understand. There's an inner knowing
where you're in touch with the frequency
of all the intelligence and the love and
you can channel it. So I want to wish
you all an amazing Kaneka, a bright and
luminescent Kaneka. Each and every one
of you, I want to bless myself and you.
You should be able to find your inner
jug of oil. Maybe you found it already,
but if you haven't yet to be able to
find it, cuz know it's there. And the
the the lights will burn very very
brightly for you, your loved ones, and
all of our people.