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Yigdal Elokim Chai | Rabbi Dr. Aaron Adler | July 2 2025
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
But let's just pick up where we were. I
was talking about that very interesting
theory of Rabbi Shiman Schwab Zan who
was the successor of Rabbi Joseph Buera
at the Ber's community in Washington
Heights. Um and I mentioned that he was
u elected as associate rabbi when he was
34 years old thinking that Rabbi Buer is
now 75 and uh you know it's a visa he'll
be a chief rabbi there soon except
nobody told him that Rabbi Buer was
going on till age 99 and to serve as the
rabbi. So when he became the chief rabbi
of the community he was already
collecting social security for two
years. He was 67 years old. But anyway,
there was a Jubilee dinner. There was a
Jubilee dinner and book that was put out
and Rabbi Schwab wrote this very
fascinating article comparative calendar
in which he he contrasted the what we
might call the Jewish calendar using
Tanakh as the basis and then whatever
was known about the second beta mikdash
era because Tanakh takes us to the
destruction of the first beta mdash and
just a little bit into the beginning of
the second beta mdash and then we're
we're just uh out in the And that there
are different discrepancies in what
happened exactly in the second beta
mcdash era. So we know that in general
history the first beta mikdash was
recorded its destruction in the year 586
before the common era which means 70
years later we have the beginning of the
second beta mdash which would put it at
about 516 B.CE which would make the
second bet mikdash until its destruction
in the year 70 of the common era
something that lasted 586 years. 55
years 56 years but that's that doesn't
jive with what khazal say that the
second big madash stood for 420 years
and the theory of of Raf Schwab while on
the one hand not negating the general
historic record and the other hand not
contradicting what our Kazal said was to
propose a type of in between view of
some sort and he claimed and this was a
dramatic uh suggestion that Khazal hid
deliberately hid hid 165 years from the
second bet mikdash era because they felt
that there was a possibility of
discovering by interpretation of sukim
in the book of Daniel when exactly Msiah
would come and they wanted the kazal
wanted to mess this up it's a phenomenal
theory but if it's correct then it turns
out that today we are in tian pihei
which is 5785
tack on another 165 years to that And we
are actually in the year 5,940
which means we're we're just 60 years
away from the magic number 6000 which
according to one opinion in the and I'll
tell you right away the Rambam doesn't
even make record mention of it but
there's such an opinion that by the year
6000 Msiah comes whether we deserve it
or not. That's like the endgame and as
we move towards it we're going to sense
that we're actually moving towards that
era which to a certain degree in the
last uh 120 years we do have that
feeling uh with so many things happening
with AmI and specifically here in Erit
Israel um so 60 years that's that's that
you know we're we're all uh most of us
here sitting here across the age of 40
already and so so 60 years is a a little
bit off, but it's not way off when we
talk about our grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. Not way off at all.
And and that means that we're almost
there. So again, I I don't know if Rabbi
Schwab was correct or not. I guess
history will tell and time will tell,
but it was a phenomenal suggestion. But
yeah,
the Rambam recommends not to do it.
recom Ram bomb recommends not to do it,
not to forecast because he says you're
going to fall into the trap of being
wrong more often than not. And I can
tell you that Ararbanel who's living at
the time of the expulsion from Spain in
1492 is a is a real Rambamist. He's
really in line with Rambam's thoughts
and yet in 1492 he sticks his neck out,
makes a prediction that in 1506 Messiah
is coming. And you know what happened in
15 1506 and Msiah didn't come. He said
he was wrong because the calculation is
really 1521. And what he was actually
doing was buying time. He he felt that
AmI is in such dire straits that if they
didn't have an immediate type of
prediction of coming of Messiah, they
would have just let go. They would have
let go completely. And uh by 1521, the
situation, you know, somehow eased up
and uh we were able to move on. Um look
the the the Satma Rebba was of the
opinion that the whole Zionist
enterprise was just an extension of
Shaitvi and Shapiti came around as a
result of the 1648 pumrums the Kmanka
pgrams where Amisel really needed
something to hang on to and the feeling
of some was that after the Shawah you
know we needed something to hang on to
except that um things are very different
very very different today.
Yeah, right. We have certainly hung on
and the Quran saw this if you read his
ko do of yasm speech of 1956 how he saw
the uh the spiritual connection between
the aftermath of the shawah and the kum
dinina. But anyway, let we we we got off
the tangent there three weeks ago, four
weeks ago, whenever it was. Um and and
we were talking a little bit about
Mashiach in uh uh topics which will
pertain to Yigdal. Let me just go
through the Yigdal again. The whole
thing we'll see all the 13 principles of
the Rambam as poetically rendered by
Rabi Daniel bin Yehuda Hadayan of Italy
of the 16th century. A lot of people
don't know that this is uh the 13
principles of the Rambam, but they are
in his poetic way. Um
it was pointed out by some scholars of
Rambam that the cither actually contains
contradictory philosophical ideas
because the Rambam says what he says
about many many important and very
fundamental ideas of Judaism about the
nature of God for example and yet there
were others who had slightly different
takes on some of the things that the
Rambam believe was very dogmatic. So the
fact that the Rambam said it didn't mean
that everybody just dropped what they
had in mind and they went along. Some
did, but many didn't. Uh and even though
some will say, "Yeah, yeah, yeah. I I I
swear by every line of the igdal, you
know, I'm I'm in there for sure." Yet
there are things in the cider itself
later on that actually consider
cababalistic ideas that differ somewhat
from what the Rambam had in mind. Um the
idea that there is no divisibility in
the word
means that there is no divisibility. So
if you just take a look at the first two
lines of sod
you know name will be great and
what does the word means he's existing
he's his existence and there is no time
framework for his existence which means
is eternal right he was is and will be
and I believe I mentioned last year that
the ra tells us in his to the perplexed
theim that the word
which we don't pronounce is really a
contraction of those three words
and he goes even further and says that
if heard by the birkanimdash
you would sense eternity there is
there's a word what is called anamanopia
that sometimes you have a word bakbuk
bakbuk bakbuk and you hear the bakbuk
right yeah so he said The Ram believes
that the the articulation of the shame
havaya generated a sensation of of
eternity. Okay. So I I I just giving
over what the Ram says. I don't think he
heard it either, but it was a suggestion
on his part and and this is clear
that's not challenged by any Jewish
theologian.
What is challenged is by Greek
philosophers who believed about the
eternity of the world, the eternity of
even those who did believe in a divine
believed um well you know the the world
was also eternal and went side by side.
So the kadesh bahul wasn't there alone
uh at the time of briata. That's
challenged by Greek philosophers and
obviously the raam takes them to task on
this. But then in the second line
He's one but not the same one that we
are used to because when you say one
it's it's against the system of numbers.
It's not two, it's not three, it's not
four, it's not five. There's no two,
three, four, five about God. The the
number one with regard to means unique.
There's something very singular and
unique about
he's like gone. In Hebrew, they can
translate means gone, but it doesn't
mean gone. It means he's just not
apparent. You you can't touch him. You
can't see him. You can't smell him. The
senses are not there.
Yeah.
Unknown. Okay. He is unknown. He's
unknown because you can't use your
physical senses to grasp that he's
around. He's even here. How do we know
that something exists? Because either we
see it, we smell it, we hear it, we
touch it, and and all this is you can't
do that. So, how do you know that he's
even around? It's just unknown.
there's no end to his oneness, which
means there's no there's no possibility
of thinking of the oneness of
um that they're going to be altered in
any way or manner. You the Ram is taking
a little bit of a stab at Christianity
that believed that Kadosh Bahu revealed
himself through a human being called
Yeshu.
So I briefly mentioned that when my
daughter was in 12th grade, my daughter
Hannah, she wrote a Jew a paper for
Jewish uh thought Israel course and it
was basically to take the 13 principles
of the Rambam and divide them into four
categories of challenges. Rambam had a
challenge against Greek philosophy. He
was challenged by Christianity. He was
challenged by Islam. And he was
challenged by the Kites which was a
Jewish sect that deviated from some of
the basic norms. Um and just recently
within the last year I discovered that
the very very important Tam Rashiva of
Malim Ravidakil
came up with the same idea and my only
question is who came first right
who came first so I looked at the date
of the publication of Raf Shilat's uh
hakdamote of the Rambam and it was 1996
and I asked my daughter when did you
write that paper? I think she said 1997.
So I said, "So you stole it." So she so
she told me, she reminded me that that I
told her this
and she wrote it up and she actually has
it. She was going to give me the paper.
I said, "I'd like to see it." What what
she wrote, but I was very happy to see
that we were barking up the right tree
that Rafilat also understood it as such.
And we'll see another idea that Rafilot
said in a moment. So this idea of
if and then then I'm just going to go on
there is no figure there is no human
figure animal figure any type of figure
of the of of what we call corporality of
God that you know God is something of a
of of corpus of a of a of of a of a
figure of a shape none of that none of
that now here the Rama of got into a
little trouble because there were not
only are there mam kazal that seem to
indicate that you know we are small but
maybe our kadu is so large but we don't
see him because he's so large and and
and the pro proof is that Torah says
that we were born
there that some type of reflection of a
kadosh in mortal human beings. So the
Rambam says Salem comes to the word sale
which means shadow and it doesn't mean
when you see a shadow. So yeah you know
you can take a light source and put your
hand there and you see a shadow of your
palm of your hand with five fingers. So
that's what you're going to see the
outer imprint of the palm and the five
fingers. But there's no skin there.
There's no muscle. There's no nerve.
There's no blood vessels and there's no
anything. There's no life to that
shadow. So all it is is just a basic
external figure of what your fingers
look like. So the Ram says human beings
are just a a slight shadow of what a
kadu is. And he defines what that is and
he says it's human intellect. that the
human intellect which is
but others have suggested that because
in Tanakh there are so many figures that
are associated with Goddah
and so on finger of God great hand of
God and so on
and so on right there's just infinite
number so the
one swipe answer to all of that is
the Torah speaks in human language,
human figure. So we can just get a gist
of what's going on but we have to
explain all of them where one it means
power one means uh
you know being connected and so on.
Yeah.
Right. That that's how the Rambam
understands in he spends a many many
chapters explaining all of these
figures. Yet in the in the of the riv
says one second you can't call these all
these people up a kim who had different
opinions on this matter about goof body
of shape because there were some greats
out there who actually thought so and
you're really going to call them all
apicorum I mean so it's not that the
rivid rabam disagrees with the raam all
he says was when the raam starts calling
them names and saying if you don't
believe this, you don't believe that,
you're an apicy, you know, and you don't
have and and and the rivet reminds us
that there are some great people out
there who now the Rambam is putting into
this category of kofim of of heretics
and the rivet doesn't want to do that.
Yeah,
it's implied that God had a figure
that be something. So Timsum is a
cabalistic idea that you will not find
in the Rambam. Timsum means contraction
and it means if we try to describe this
that is
is is everywhere that we in kindergarten
they taught this in America. Hashem is
here, Hashem is there, Hashem is
everywhere. Right? Okay.
So all there is is a kadoshu. But then
according to the cabalist a kadosh bahu
retreats
from wherever his existence is and opens
up a hole and that hole is the creation
of the world where voluntarily
is gave up on that hole but and expands
that hole. That whole becomes the
created universe but is interested to be
invited back into the whole and that's
really according to the cabalists the
job of bringing kadusha into this world.
Every time you say abra you bring a
kadosh back into this world. So that's
the concept ofum
raam doesn't have that doesn't have that
at all. So there there are things that
you have for example with regard to you
know the in the so we have coming up in
but the big time in the month of before
I mean does a great piece on
and basically it's calling on the angels
to take our trilot and bring them to a
bou you know Vgoyne said, "Do not dare
say that section
because it's uh it it goes against the
grain of of what the Rambam is saying
here of any type of intervention between
you and a bulah
and uh you know it almost sounds
Christian where you have to have the
church to get you can't work between you
and God in Christianity. You have to
work through the church and the priest
becomes the the medium to do that. We
don't have that. We don't need that. And
and the Ram even goes on to tell us that
the whole issue of Corbonote was
something that Israel coming out of
Egypt, they didn't know anything better
or anything else. So Kadoshbu, you know,
lets us have it, you know, Corbonote as
well. But in theory, is a higher order
of connecting with a kadoshu. So in the
same sid you're going to have the
Rambam's um directive here about how to
believe in God and and we're going to
have other things there that actually
contradict it. I'll give you some
examples later. But let's go a little
further on the line
was before everything that was created.
He's the first and the type of first
that doesn't have any equal. There's no
other first that it that it comes close
to the concept of the first of God
[Music]
is the master of the world over all
created things which means because he
was the one who created everything else
as he is now the master
and and and therefore he is instructing
us of his greatness and his monarchy.
Now, that's a poetic way, nice poetic
way of saying something that we actually
can't snuff it out from this line um of
heam. So, let me just say a word about
adonam. We have a a a song that we sing
on Shabbat.
The um the idea that is the
he owns everything and everything. Um,
ownership in ala,
how is ownership created? You go into a
store and you buy something, right? To
take it off the shelf. So, at what point
do you u do you own it? I remember
stores that had uh signs if you broke
it, you bought it, right? If you dropped
a dozen eggs before you came to the
checkout, you're you might actually have
to pay for the dozen eggs or not. I mean
the store is basically telling you
you're responsible for damage. If you
dropped it, if you broke it, you bought
it. But that's not the way the Gmorra
talks about it. So at what point do you
become the owner? So what's the answer?
If you learn bats,
what you paid money, that's one opinion.
So the answer is it's a what? Of course.
Pick it up, right? So pick it up is
called Mik, right? You take hold of it.
So let's assume you you have it in your
your you know your agalad you know your
wagon in the supermarket. So for all
purposes you know you took it. If
somebody comes to your wagon and pulls
it out you're going to yell. You're
going to yell. You're going to say I
it's mine you know because you it might
actually be yours already. You actually
owe money like a loan. The fact they
didn't pay it. So it's like a halva.
It's a loan. So you have to pay up.
Fine. But in terms of who owns it, the
store can't really tell you uh sorry um
we're not selling this today, take it
out. It might be yours already. On the
other hand, there is an opinion that
says until you pay, it's not yours. And
it makes a world of a difference to know
when does an object the the ownership
when does it come transferred from point
of view in terms of responsibility for
that object for geneva for stealing and
so on is very important to know. So you
have fine. So like everyone so you know
there has to be some decision and
basically the decision is that it's the
mash the the great grabbing it or
picking it up or if it's an animal
pulling it you pull it you're not going
to pick up the animal but you have to
pull it. You have to do some
demonstrative act to show that it's
yours and then then it becomes yours.
The fact that you owe money fine you owe
money you have to pay for it. There's no
question about that. That's how you
transfer ownership. But how does
ownership begin? If a carpenter makes a
chair and a table so it's his he can
keep it he can sell it. So selling
what's called the whole process of
kenyan or transfer by kenyan is the
mechanism that says you can transfer
ownership doesn't create ownership what
you're buying is something that was
owned by somebody else. So the store
owned it before the store got it the
wholesaler owned it. And before the
wholesaler owned it, some manufacturer,
some some some uh factory that made the
product owns it. Somebody's got to own
it at a certain point at an original
moment. So the rough said when somebody
creates something new, he's the owner.
So if you draw a painting, that's yours
because before there was no painting.
Now you're the artist. And if you make a
chair or a table, so you wasn't there
was no chair or table before. So you're
now the owner because creation creates
ownership. And that is adonamu created
the world. So he's the owner of the
world. Now he can transfer ownership if
he likes to. And he does it. He does it.
This the famous it says on the
owns the world. Owns the world. And then
in
it says
gave it over. So what's the mechanism of
transfer of ownership right says yes you
can have it when can you have it says
after the food is not yours belongs to
God but if you just acknowledge
says okay now it's yours go ahead enjoy
it enjoy it so this transfer of
ownership by acknowledging that a kadosh
was the original creator
And that's what the says. So there's a
mechanism of transfer of ownership and
it becomes yours and you can do whatever
you want with it as long as it's within
reason. So
is the sole boss if you may. But if you
take a look now at the anima means that
I have down below on the same page which
is a different poem. We don't know the
author of but it's the same again the
Ram didn't author these words but this
is what's found in the at the end of
he created and he leads he directs all
the creations
again he's made it all he's was and will
be of all human of all action all
created action
He's alone.
There's nothing like him. No oneness
like him.
Was is and will be. And
is not a body
in your thoughts. You can't fathom
anything that relates to human figure.
You you can't fantasize anything about
what God looks like.
He's first. He's eternal. Which means
there's no there's no there's eternity
of God. There is no eternity of the
created world. And then five. Hey
to him.
That's standard
to him
worthy to.
And there's no worthiness to pray to
anybody else to anybody else. So this
number five matches the line above.
What's missing in the you don't hear
anything of that has some of that it's
the one who's worthy for us to pray to.
So where did the author get this from?
So now I'm going to ask you to keep
turning the next page but it's going to
be
so on source number five that's the
Rambam now no poet here but I'm if you I
bold letters it says
next paragraph
you might be on the next page or in the
third page and then it says
are you with me where it says
the fifth fundamental
who he is God above
to serve is the one only the only one
fitting to serve
to exalt him and to publicize his
greatness and his significance
anything under God you don't do
There is nothing that you serve in any
way anything below the status of not
angels, not constellations,
not anything.
[Music]
Everything about all the things you just
described now, angels, stars,
constellations on the fundamentals that
the world was created with have no free
choice and no will whatsoever except
that wills their existence.
You can't use them as mediums.
love. You can't use them as mediums to
arrive at au
only towards au alone.
Your thoughts should be directed.
Just blot out of your memory any other
intermediary possible intermediary.
This is the fifth.
This is the warning of
idolatry.
The majority of the Torah came to warn
about this. Again, in the I didn't see a
word about Abu Dhab.
In the min he said something about where
it's worthy to daven who's worthy to but
the Rambam goes further and explains
why he's telling us that the only one to
daven is to do any other intermediary is
idolatrous practice
including the ke of
wowam
idolatry
And there were so many PKIM who knew
this Rambam well and were very
acquainted with the prevalent customs of
going to Sadikim Kadikim and turning to
them that they should intercede and so
on that theim said what you're allowed
to do is stand there and
that he should tap into the overdraft
merits of the sadic. You figure that
saddak has got whole load of of excess
bonus
merits. So you want to ask a kadu if I
am not meritorious and I don't have in
my file what's good enough for a kadu to
deliver the goods of what I'm asking for
maybe he'd be so kind as to tap into the
the reserve sources of by the
we don't know but this was a type of
limut where knew darn well that this is
very problematic custom very problematic
so much so that the vilgoyan went even
further and you might say this was an
anti-asedic step most probably the case
he said no grave visitations after the
funeral not even for parents
can you imagine
no grave visitations not even parents
and he says this is the root of why
Mishraenu's grave was never known. So
people shouldn't make an aliel out of
going up to the grave of Mosher Rabenu.
It's exactly what the Vil Nagoy was
worried about. It's exactly what
happened in the world of
Yeah.
With regard to Raasha Feinstein, I
cannot comment. With regard to the RV, I
can say the following. My great reb Rav
Hershel Shaka wrote in the first book
that came out a year after the Ruv's
passing in 1994 about things of the RV's
life and he wrote there categorically
that the RV had the opinion of the
vulnery not to go to cemeteries. I
approached my dear Rebby and I love him
greatly and I said, "Rebby, you know, we
all know, you know, I know that after
the Rebbitson passed away in 1967, he
went to his wife's Kev every single
Friday. Every single Friday. And he
never stopped saying cottage for her.
Never stop saying cottage for his wife."
Now that you know maybe a psychologist
would be able to write a book about
about this very very close intimate
relationship that the rel
um he was interviewed there if you saw
the 2007 movie that was made about the
RV's life it was called lonely a man of
faith so somebody was interviewed and
and and who asked the rv about this how
does this jive with the with the min you
know so on he says um I can't help it I
can't help myself other he realized that
the family did it differently and it's
in the spirit of the vagoy he just felt
I can't help myself and he went every
week but furthermore in the days that I
was the rough's driver so on one gimlmat
when he had the yardite for his father
in 1975 now the exact date so it was
tough lammed hey the ruff asked me in
the morning it was a Wednesday morning
if I can take him to a Brooklyn cemetery
to his father's grave and I took him and
and I write about it in my book on the
conversations of the RV where it was the
most I called it uh litfisher ascora I
ever saw saw in my life who was the most
uh unemotional as you can be he just
stood there said a perkillum and that
was it the kadisha was called ane brisk
which meant made sense. There was a from
those who had you know uh came from the
brisk town of Bris where his family came
from and it was in it was in East New
York if you know where the Brooklyn
neighborhood is where you don't want to
walk there in the daytime the um so then
afterwards DV takes my hand like a
grandfather and he starts giving me the
grand tour of other mat vote there and
introduces me to this guy and to that
guy and he says and this fellow was a
real Tom and then he says this and he
was a joker and then and he goes telling
me all times it was so funny it was so
it was so entertaining entertaining and
then at one point I um I told the ro I
said Reb you know we're 10 minutes away
from 770 you want to drop in by the
rebba unannounced and he stood there for
10 minutes and thinking about it and
then he said no let's go back to the and
I told him I said by the time you decide
we could have been there already but he
didn't want to goal he thought about it
he actually thought about it but I told
this Rasha. So the Rasha says apparently
after the reb rabbitson passed away he
changed his hanhaga his his character in
this one his behavior. So so he said he
said that u he said that he will correct
it in a subsequent book or add on to it
and if not he said I should do it. So I
did it and I got his blessings and
that's it. So that's the r's opinion
with fine I don't know one way or
another. Yeah.
The Rabbam believes to turn directly to
a person who passed away and ask for his
intervention is is is is idolatrous
practice because the Torah calls it
elameim. You know what do means? Turning
to the dead and ask for a favor. It's
it's clear. Yeah.
No comment.
It's to to daven for autim
to work in our favor. We even have the
famous story of Almanbach who was asked
if somebody can recommend a real kev
sadic in Europe and he said why go to
Europe we have kvit sadikim here init is
he said fine so suggest where I should
go here and he said to go to harzel to
thearim of the soldiers because he says
they are real koshim yeah
right so going
That's correct. That's correct. So the
villagy had a problem with all that and
he felt that it can lead to behavior
that's inconsistent with the Rambam.
Okay. But I agree with you. You have the
medish on.
Okay. It doesn't say that in the it says
that's all it says. But Rashi as the
taught us we somehow mixed with Rashi as
all one big you know.
says that he went to the
so this concept of
something that has basis it has basis
there's no doubt it has basis and in the
world of there there is even of going to
on
talks about it but never to address the
person who's buried there never to
directly address the person who's buried
there because that would be a problem of
data alim speaking to the asking
requesting from the dead and worse yet
asking as an intermediary. The Ram
believed that this is a a problem of of
avoid. It's very serious. But the fact
that a lot of people say ydal every
morning and so on may most probably not
be aware of the significance of every
line. And that's why I'm pointing out
what the Ram actually wrote in the
fifth, the fifth fundamental idea or the
fifth is that the reason that the only
being to dive into is only and not to
split it and so on. You know, it's not
to say that uh you know there are other
powers out there and just to be on the
safe side. So I'll I'll I'll turn to
this one. I'll turn to that one and turn
to that one and I'll also dive into
that's called Abuazar.
means I believe in God but I also
believe in ba and right a friend of ours
Dr. Brian
tells tells me always that
because she says I I'm into
baseball and she said she says it's BA
right.
You said all right there's something to
that also.
Yeah.
Okay. Okay. So, let me tell you where
Kla started. The the idea of the baltov
the balto of let's let's try to put this
in perspective because I also come from
stock and we're from the sansza stock of
uh of my great-grandfather was aid of
the the son of the of the reb of sons of
halbashtam. His name was Shra Halbasham
the reb of the reb of Shenev. Some of
you were on the trip with me. We
actually went there to the Kev of the
Reb of Shenev and we actually went once
to the Kev of the Vilago and I stood
there and I asked Ma I said I know I'm I
know I'm not supposed to be here
but but you can see by the Kev of the
Vilago
people don't realize and by the Kev of
Rime from Brisk and and the from you
know they never received a
Whoa, that's an old thing already.
That's an old thing, right? They'll tell
you about that. No. So, what did you ask
again? I want to get back. I was about
the fiddle, right? So, let's go back to
the u let's back backtrack to the balmto
300 years ago. So Baltov comes up with
an idea and this is what really where
modernday kasidut takes off that the
galut itself the hardships of galut
basically is a barrier are barriers to
the between ourselves and a kadosh
there's a blockade we can't get through
and that's not something that the balm
of invents it's a puk in the third
chapter of migillat
that the destruction and the galut
myote are barricaded are blocked and the
question is so if the are barricaded why
bother davin or you can say well keep it
writing keep it going so one day the
barricade will fall and the tilot will
get there so that's one way of handling
it the other way is to b basically say
and this is what the balm of believed
that Every generation had one and one
and only sadik.
Absolute sadik. Absolute sadik. And he
had the spiritual ability to rise over
the barricade. He can get his filot to
the khakavote to the throne of god. And
all we have to do is do you remember we
used to have uh if you're called here
from Israel you had to do you had
operator dial you didn't have direct
dial so the Rama believes that is direct
dial and the baltov said for everybody
else it's operator assisted and the
sadic is the operator so all you have to
do is get your request to the saddic so
that when he davins with hisot
are going to piggyback on the tilot of
the saddak that's how it starts that
right he's alive the saddak is alive so
when the bashtov is alive and when he
dies his prime student who's dove do
bear the mag from mezich is the next and
when he dies it now goes over to here's
a who's the third generation the second
generation is no everybody knows it's
the it's the mag so if you're it's
clearly the founder of Kabad Schne from
Leadi the founder of Kabad the author of
data but he moves to right to Russia
Russia but in Poland it now moves to one
or two personalities
the most famous was elim
and the less famous but contemporary was
Mendel from Rimmanov both places are
visitable today and ultimately it's the
noalik who becomes more domin minant
because he had more and they branched
out more. So Polish in the third
generation of aftermto and bees now hits
Polish soil and it spreads out from
there. What happened was
takes over Poland and it begins really
to proliferate in the fourth generation
of Polish of of ofut in the city of
Lublin. You have to realize Lublin
wasn't a it was a it was actually the
capital of Poland at that time. And when
when it makes it to the fourth
generation and that was the from Lublin
who makes it to there then it's here to
stay. But so many people couldn't see
the Reb personally. So what was
developed already in the days of the
write your request on a piece of paper
and have a courier get it over to the
Reb. So then the Reb is going to read it
before he davs and he knows what he's
supposed to daven for. That's how
started because they couldn't meet up
with the Reb every time they had a to
get to a bul but he would be the of the
generation. What happened was
started proliferating
to different towns and each town had its
own today we call it reba but they still
call them sadik. So they became regional
sadikim. But the v the the balmtov never
believed in regional sadikim. He
believed in one and only in any
generation and not no such thing as
regional.
He was the only one the bashtov and the
bag from medish was the only one. But
already in the days of the melik there
already two. There was the medal of
ribbon. Yeah. So the finishes and and
and and other places started having
their own and what became common was
each one who had their own sadic whether
it was in Bob and whether it was in the
vision later and so on that one was the
only one and until the show
of a particular brand or we call it a
never recognized the saddic status. They
may have been great people but they
weren't the sadic. The sadic was my
rebba to the exclusion of every other
rebar
part of this. Yeahbi
like this. Why? Because they were lying.
This was the big problem that the
vilgoyan anticipated and was trying to
ward off before it even happened. But he
lost the battle. He lost the battle
because became the way to go in Poland.
The question was why didn't it what what
did you ask again? Why the question
again? Ask the question again. Why are
they not considered why aren't they
considered intermediaries? According to
the Rambam they are intermediaries. The
Rambam would say and that's all the
litfox all the misnagim said you don't
have to go to a sadic. Right? So the
idea of the cottel by the way of putting
a pekk in the cottell that already is
not it may or may have to do I don't
know exactly what generation that
started but kasid comes to Israel about
250 years ago the one who brings it over
is actually my great great great great
great great grandfather 10 I'm 10
generations from gerin kit rag kit who
was the brother-in-law of bashtov
sends terrael to spread
So maybe maybe I'm not even sure about
this. Maybe that's where it starts. But
there's a chuva from Rabosha Feinstein.
You asked you mentioned Ramosa. There's
a cha from Russia Feinstein who says
that they heard from the name of the
RV's uncle whose name was Rabbit Zev
known as Relv
the R from Bris that you can't put a
quiddle in the cottell because your
finger is going to go into the cracks of
the cottel and maybe your because we're
to maybe the kaduca of harabay begins in
the outer side of the cotel so while you
might be able to touch the walls of the
cotel. You shouldn't put your fingers in
the crevices of the cotel. So rainstein
takes the task. This is the task and he
says there's no such thing because
there's a min to put kitl in the kotel
generations and generations and it shows
that there is no kadusha in the outer
side of the kotel and therefore you can
still do it. So this issue of the
makes a showing makes a showing in the
of
so here you have and then when the
your of the rebba and the b of reba dies
so it doesn't stop you go to the kev and
you start putting your on the kev of the
rebba if the raam would have and or the
vnagoy would see this he would rip ka he
said this is zara
How can you do this? You go to the kev
of
it's piled up piled up with with I mean
there
right it's no different than but by the
way no is a is is is an important
station for by the way there are people
who go from
there just what
same
Right. So I was at the airport here. I
was at the airport here before leading a
group and boarding a plane and there was
a guy and he was collecting money and I
asked these guys, "What are you
collecting for?" He says, "I'll tell you
the truth. I I need a braha and somebody
so makub said that I can only get the
braha by melik and I didn't have money
for the flight and this makubul said go
to the airport and a kadu will be with
you and you'll stick out your hand and
you know I looked at this guy and I said
you know I I appreciate your honesty and
integrity here's $50. I don't know if
this is going to pay for the whole
ticket, but at least it's something. And
and you see that the Makub was right.
I said, I I was so happy that he leveled
with me and he told me what he was
doing, but
the ticket so you can go to the and give
a and with all that, one of my daughters
um got married a little later than some
of the other daughters. Won't go into
the details. And I was at the kev of the
no and and I'm a ramba mist but I
believe in bahu and I told the kadu you
know where I'm standing
you know if you can just put in a good
word you know about a good shak and so
on and within months
there was already a successful positive
resolution to that so I'm not going to
tell people not to dash
But I was very careful with my language.
I was very careful. I said, "You know
where I'm standing, right?" You know,
take it from there.
Right.
All right. So, you have this um and and
one more point on that last phrase
ra actually talking about the
prohibitions against idolatry and all
forms of idolatry. And this led the RV
to suggest that when you read the wrote
in the second.
So here you have different descriptions
of idolatry the the celestial bodies and
so on. Celestial bodies those are
examples. The fundamental idea of aod is
the first verse.
him
alan there should be no other deity
before me mean there's no toleration of
any type of deity other than a kadoshu
the RV said that's a concept that's a
concept so something has got to be the
most important thing in your life it
could be an avoid a a physical you know
a statue it could be celestial bodies it
could be a concept it could be an ism
used to talk about communism democracy,
even Zionism. He says if the most
important thing that you woke up in the
morning is for something other than a
kadu, it's a it could be yourself a
person and the and the always said that
doesn't believe in atheism. You have to
believe that something is the most
important thing in your life. If it's
not a it's a it's idolatry. So it's not
practice of idolatry. That's another
thing. And idolatry comes in many
different packages. When the rabb
writes, so under the headline of any he
tells us how many mitzvot or a wrote are
he's going to talk about in that unit.
The gold medal goes to
53 and a 613 mitzvot six 53 mitzvot
which are 51 don'ts and two dos are
factors in the world of and there are
some that the Rambam philosophically
also believes a part of and doesn't
write them there so it's even more than
53 like the Ram believed that the
cooking of the goat's meat in the
mother's milk is fundamentally pagan and
we have the older the laws of meat and
milk where he writes about it in the
laws of forbidden foods.
But the Ram believed that its source was
in the pagan days and Ram figured that
he gave it as a hypothesis. He was
absolutely right because there was a
stone that was ar that was excavated in
Syria in 1920 written in an ancient
Semitic language called Ugaritic.
Ugaritic and we can we scholars know how
to read it today and it actually said as
a fertility right ri ceremony to promote
the the fertility of the land take a
goat's meat and cook it in its mother's
milk exactly what the Torah says
which means when the Torah gave that
people knew what it meant it's not like
today what does that mean I don't know
take out your you know And yeah and wait
six hours. Really that's what it says.
Exactly. We take it literally. So So
there is that's the And the one paran
who really really really
hit it was the Ezra. You got it right.
You got it right. Everybody else has
just all kinds of things around and
around and around. But the rabb
suggested it as a hypothesis. And it was
confirmed in 1920 that this indeed is
the
mo. There was such a and and also
furthermore there the rabbenezra got
right the second point you know where
that p is found twice in once in parish
once in as the second half of a
you should bring to the mdash what in
the world does that have to do with not
cooking meat and milk so the
understanding is the per the idea of
bikurim was our mitzvah to promote the
fert fertility of the land and says do
it my way don't do it their way
that's our way
their way if not for this understanding
we'd never in a million years understand
why in one you've got two ideas that
have nothing to do with each other I
mean to could have given us puk and then
start another poke
and then we'd have to ask why in the
world is there and some of the postkim
say you know instead because it's yum
the talks about you cook a lot you know
so so you cook a lot so you have to have
the laws there really I mean there's a
third time where it says
for a where there's talking about and
that's where it belongs and that's where
it's supposed to be but all right the so
this phrase of
means that the majority of the thrust of
is to get us out of the mode of
idolatrous practices and thinking. Yeah.
So in Judeaica Jewish Judeaica art so in
Judeaic art there are two schools of
thought some say there's no such thing
as Jewish art it's goish art with a kipa
this mode you take and there's something
to this because Jewish art and music
sometimes you can see local themes that
you might even see in churches and you
might even see elsewhere in the our
world of arts. and Jews gave it Jewish
themes to it but it's the style of
others. Rafuk didn't believe this. Rafuk
believed that there's a thing called
Jewish art and begins with paratuma and
tit the building of the Mishkan and the
big and if you study carefully the the
artistic messages and sensations that
radiate from parot
you then can cultivate Jewish art. And
there are Jewish artists from the Bate
Madrash of America Zarafkot that try to
try to develop this kind of Jewish art.
The idea of figures in Shul. I can tell
you that some communities forbade it.
Forbate it. I you may be familiar with
the famous uh illuminated Hebrew
manuscript of the Hagada where you have
human beings but would have rooster
heads. Right? It's something that was
done because human figures were not
going to have because of so some shs and
some communities had it allowed it were
more lenient and some were more strict
and what what can be discovered is that
those communities lived in those
generations where there was an issue of
of oda then you see the pkim are more
harsh and more strict and those
communities where it's just not an issue
any longer so they let up a little bit
and they allowed for some human figures
and so on. You can see at the Israel
Museum here and you can see it in the
Polish museum if you've been to Warsaw
beautiful reconstructed shulles from uh
which were originals in Poland that did
have figures even human figures. So this
something had a lot to do with um what
was current in those days whether there
was a really a soft emphasis against any
type of idolatrous practice and they
said no even in in shulles and some
places it was less so and and and it
becomes interesting to see it. Yeah,
people who are obviously
those who are saying no you can't have
pictures of human beings or animals or
whatever but lead to idolat.
Right. Right. Okay. These were messages.
They were messages to the greater
community. I mean you have many shs
today that have a luot with lions on the
side because of guru that may remind you
a little bit of
that's why they have lions. It's not
because you know the mayor of usim his
name is Leon
or um or or because uh that why is sign
symbol lion because of guru and for sure
we know that um you have uh all kinds of
figurative interpretations of the birkot
yakov and mohe in shagal windows and uh
and so on and that's in a shul in uh in
in hadasa you know it's it's there and
you can see it. And if you don't want to
pay money to see it as a tourist, go for
Mina.
Min. They don't charge you. You're
allowed to go in there and have Mina and
then you get to see them for free. Okay.
All right. Uh I am going to highly
recommend you to hand back the papers
because we're not through with these.
We're not through with these pages and I
don't want to print them up each week.
So I will be