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Yigdal Elokim Chai | Rabbi Dr. Aaron Adler | June 11th 2025
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of the share as usual is sponsored by
the first family in memory of Alisha.
Um, we're going to do a poem today
that's in every sitter. It's almost uh
page two of every sid right after adonal
lam.
And uh I'll just mention at the outset
that
once asked the question why do many
shuls on Shabbat conclude with adonolam
and Friday night with yigdal.
Thank thank
So what's the significance of uh you
know it appears at the beginning of the
sid so some people who before they get
rolling with or even so you have all
these preliminaries and it includes
anddal so why in Shabbat are we singing
adonam and jigdal what does this have to
do with the end of dvening says
precisely because it's at the beginning
of the sitter he said there is a It says
that um you know we we have we're
anchored in our in our clock you know
the
um but the theory that perhaps we should
be engaged in 247 round the clock every
moment but that's obviously impossible
so what we symbolically do at the end of
dvening on Shabbat which in itself is a
long davening we flip the page flip the
sid back to page two and say let's start
all over again. It's a it's a symbolic
gesture of saying you know we re really
never finish we never complete dining.
So um as if to say we're going back to
the beginning and explained the concept
of saying boru at the end of ding the
same manner whether it's in the morning
here in so we have that minute at the
end of shak the end of my the kazin or
the person who's saying kadesh will say
boru and boru is at the beginning of the
dening and it's the the very same idea
that it's as if we don't want to leave I
know that there are some people most
it's in the German Jewish community the
ekis before they walk out of shul
they're all standing because of aleno
Shab and everything they sit down and
then they walk out. That symbolic
gesture of sitting down is as if to say
we really don't want to leave. I mean we
have to leave because it's the end of
ding. We have things to do and so on. As
opposed to the um the the flip side is
to give Alen Shabayak a nickname
because it's usually said with one foot
out the door, you know, and so on. So
okay. So you have different attitudes
and so on. Now Jiggdal we know when it
was written and who wrote it. His name
was probably Daniel bin Yehudahan
Italian from the end of the 15th
century. Um and basically it has 13
lines and each line corresponds to one
of the 13 principles dictated or wrote
written by the Rambam. Now when did the
Rambam write his 13 principles? Well,
it's actually it's a it's a integral
part of his Mishna commentary Pusha
Mishna and that we know he wrote between
age 23 and 30. So it's part and parcel
of the Perua Mishna and we're going to
see on the pages where this come from.
But u there's even another poem that was
written about 200 years after the
Rambam's life. We don't know who wrote
it, but we do know the poem and it's
also in the it's at the end of in
practically every it's the listing of
the
I believe with firm belief that and
there 13 paragraphs.
So if you just look a look at the page.
So under the
first page it says
right
and it goes down.
So if you look at towards the bottom of
the page it's most probably the most
famous.
Right. You believe with firm faith in
the coming of Mashiach and even though
he may be delayed
I'm on the first page on the bottom of
the first page where it says you bet
even though he may be delayed. Delayed
is an understatement
delayed. My uh my grandfather of Shel
used to say it's a shame that there's a
tradition that Mashiach is coming on a
dunkey if it would have been in a m
Mercedes you know it would be a little
bit faster than in a dunkey right the
Maharali Prague 16th century Maharali
Prague 17th century says that theore
mentioned
anamor
as a as from Tanakh as being a reference
to Meliach arriving that kamar comes to
the word which means the material world
that there's no absolute tradition at
all that the Msiah will come through the
uh agency of miracles that there'll be
some supernatural event that will bring
the coming usher in the coming of Msiah
but it's going to be a very natural type
of progression of historic events and
that's based on the Rambam and we'll see
that as well so therefore the kamur
means yeah out that the streets are so
narrow in Jerusalem, a donkey is the
only thing that will get you. There you
go. That's if that's if Mashia's going
to come in what we call a sima in an
alleyway in a sima. But you know, we
also have the bean highway and a few
other things here that probably
that bicycle pass. There you go. He's
going to come on a bicycle
today, right? Okay,
we'll have to be patient. We'll have to
be patient and see, you know, what's
going to happen. But if you flip the
page to the s before we get to the
yigdal and just look at what I have here
as source number one, right? It's on the
second side of the first page.
It says Mishna Sanin Mishna Sanin
perigude Mishna Alif. This Mishna is
also very famous because it made it to
the siddh and any Mishna that makes it
to the sidd is by definition famous.
Like I always ask people what was the
first Mishna that they've studied in
their lives and many people say pavote
because that made it to the mishnaote
and so on. So is this Mishna as an
introduction to Perkyote Israel.
Every Jew is born with a reserved
portion in olaba. We're going to have to
see what is. We're going to try to see
it through the the 13 principles of the
Rambam as envisioned by these poets. So
you have um this introductory Mishna
that the tradition has it that we say it
before priote. And one of the reasons is
because it's a little shocking to learn
that there are some people who forfeit
and lose their right to.
So it's nice to know that up front we
actually have a reserved portion in as
it says
[Music]
that is a nation who the bottom line is
at least potentially
but even the Mishna admits
and there are those who have lost their
section of and the whole par continues
continues with a long list a celebrated
list of individuals and groupings of
people who have lost their ola. And I'll
just say about uh non-Jews, gentile
world, the goyam of the world, they're
not born with oolaba, but the ra
believes that they can earn it. A a
non-Jew can earn a section of maba and
that is by accepting the seven mitzvot
of Ben Noah. And one of them is the um
acceptance of monotheism of one god. the
re the re, you know, complete rejection
of idolatry and every phase of idolatry
and living a decent moral life um you
know against uh feed against stealing
and um against adultery and living a
moral decent life and uh and and
believing that this is all from the
non-Jew will receive also a portion of
but a Jew is is is born into it.
And because this Mishna talks about and
talks about somebody who denies uh
various things about Torah to the Ram
feels obliged at this juncture in his
Mishna commentary which is as the same
the name says Mishna commentary to
sometimes be expansive and digress from
the purpose of the book and include into
his Mishna commentary what I call a book
within a book. He does it several times
over in his explanation of his
commentary to
he but writes a book as an introduction
called the eight chapters.
So you do have introductory material in
the Mishna commentary that he apologizes
and he says I'm going to digress at this
point because I feel this is very
important. And if you look at source
number two, here's the the the the
digression.
I saw fit at this juncture in the book
to write about
to write about fundamentals of our
belief and this will have great value.
In other words, the ra I'm saying,
"Look, I I know I'm writing the
commentary of the Mishna, and I know you
want to move on to the next Mishna, the
next Mishna, but just be patient. I have
a few things of great importance to
write, and it wouldn't hurt if you would
read it." and and he goes on before he
even gets to the 13 principles to tell
us things about about Yamote Mashiach
about
the era when people are going to rise
from the grave and what all this means
and so on and then he finally gets to
the point and he says
what's fitting and appropriate that I
should mention here
the Ram is ramming home the point that I
I just trust me. I think this is just a
great opportunity to talk about this. So
bear with me and I'm going to be very
expansive.
The most fundamentals of our pure Torah
vod and its foundations.
There are 13 such fundamental ideas and
he's going to go on to enumerate them
and we'll get to them in just a moment.
But I have here a quote from Rabitak
Shilat Ravis Shilat. Um I have a great
of being acquainted with him. I actually
taught one of his sons in my yeshiva. He
is um today currently one of the Rashiva
at the Hezer Yeshiva in Mala Dumim. It's
known as Birkat Moshe. Those of you
going turning the clock back to
Flatbush, remember Flatbush? That's a
neighborhood in Brooklyn, right? A lot
of Jews live there. Uh in the early
1970s,
there was a tragic car accident on Ocean
Parkway. We're on a Shabbat afternoon.
Remember this? That's right. Gersium
bombs of things that there was a a
husband and a wife. Three people of the
family were killed. One was her name was
Bra that was a Hebrew name and the man's
name was Moshe Mars. Mars Gersonenbomb.
Anyway, the Flatbush Mazrai took upon
itself a project to uh underwrite
the new yeshivate there that had just
opened up in Malay and they called it
Birkat Moshe. The Birkat was the Braha
and the Moshe was Moshe and um and this
yeshiva was named after
was named by the Flapush branch of the
Misrai of of New York Moshe. So the
founders were Rafim Sabato and Ravitak
Shilat. They founded the yeshiva. They
then brought in an illustrious rashiva
Rabenowitz who had at the time been the
president of the Jews college of London
before having been a Rav and Rashiva in
Toronto and before that in Virginia.
Don't ask. But um Ra was a towering
towering individual. I we call him a
great physically what also physically he
was a very tall and very his presence
was known known when you were around
him. U he was a very humble person very
humble person and he was one of the
greatest and we call him Rambam Mistim.
One of the great Rambam scholars of our
generation. He actually publishes an
entire version of the Mishnet of the
Rambam with his own perouch called Yadut
and the version of the Rambam is based
on the latest that we have in
manuscripts. Um and it's it's a
phenomenal work. uh and when he passed
away the two original uh founders of the
yeshiva assumed the mount mantle of
rashiva and they are Rafim Sabat and
Ravit Shilat no small Rambamist in his
own right who also publishes his own
edition of Mishnetto after Rambam and he
also publishes Rambam's introductions
and Rambam's letters and and he's just
uh he's out there with uh being
phenomenally important
So in his book called Hakdam to the
Rambam and one of the reasons that I
have it at home is because Rafilat gave
it to me as a gift when he asked me for
a copy of my doctoral dissertation on
the Rambam. So it was a hamliff parab
you know he's and and and he was the
stronger one not me believe me. So in in
in the um of the Rambam to Mishna he
talks about the three introductions of
part of Mishna. One is the general
introduction to Shas of the Rambam. One
is the introduction to the eight
chapters and one is the introduction to
the chapter is
so it's called the pericle and that's
what we're going to do and see the poems
of the and the poem of Yigdal and how
they follow the Rambam's 13
ikronote that is his principles of
Jewish foundation foundations and Rashid
Vlad writes as follows. He divides the
three the 13 rather into three different
categories.
The first grouping which is from one to
five
with the existence of God and his unity.
That's going to be the first five. The
second
uh the second grouping
is going to be to 10 that is number six
to number nine
with the notion of Torah being revealed
from
and the third grouping
from number 10 to number 13
providence divine providence and um
reward and punishment. So he's got here
basically 13 which breaks down really to
three groupings or I'd say it the other
way around three groupings which expand
to uh 13 and and and the truth is Rafel
didn't have to think a lot in terms of
the grouping of the three groupings that
he headings that he has here for all 13
because there was a book that was
written um about 200 also 200 years
after the Rambam his name was Rabi
Yoseseph elbow from uh Spain and he has
a book called Sepha Haikarim. This book
talks about the basics of Judaism and
guess what it divides into three
chapters. The first, the second, the
third are exactly what Rafilot writes
here that if we can somehow summarize
the Rams 13, we can break it down to
three units. So the three units are
precisely the Rambam's Ravioseph Elbow's
division. So Ravios elbow is not
challenging the Rambam by saying they're
only three and not 13. It's just that
the Rambam expands the three into 13.
And if you take a look of source number
four and this is a thought that I saw by
Rafilat as well. The Rambam in the laws
of Israia pericualid where here the
Rambam is talking about conversion. How
does a convert come to become Jewish? So
there's a process and there's a teaching
syllabus the syllabus of what you teach
a potential or candidate for conversion.
And it's not.
You can't teach a convert the entire
Torah and then test them and say, "You
know what? Study all of Torah and come
back when you're finished and then I'm
going to uh give you an examination,
give you a test because then no convert
would ever be ready to take the test.
How can you do that? C can you sincerely
ask a to study
which in all likelihood hardly a Jew has
ever covered the syllabus and here
you're going to have a learn kola so
the Ram understands that and he says
this is what you have to um teach a
non-Jew after you do a certain
preliminary and the Ramom says the
preliminary is a crash course in Jewish
history because if he's joining the the
the jumping on the bandwagon of being
part and parcel of am well he should
know what where am
where we've been in the course of Jewish
history and and and therefore very very
important that you teach him the the the
the main junctures of Jewish history and
then he saysare
you teach him the most important part of
what our religion is all about
that there's one God
the negation of any form of idolatry.
Fine.
You you know spend some time on this
because this is really really important.
And then when you see that this
potential convert he's with us on
monotheism the negation of of idolatry
You inform him about some of the let's
call it lightweighted mitzvot and
heavyduty mitzvot. Now there are 613
mitzvot. The ram doesn't he doesn't
think that we'll ever get make any
progress with this uh potential convert
if we're going to have to teach him 613
commandments. So what we do is we give
him a a type of um yeah little a little
bit of this a little a sprinkling of
mitzvot. You know some of the mitzvot
are defined by kazal as mitzvot
easygoing mitzvot and some are defined
as mitzvot more heavyduty mitzvot. So
the Rambam himself in his Mishna
commentary to
say have a
you should be as careful of the easy
lightweighted mitzvot as you are in the
more heavyduty mitzvot. So before the
rabb even goes on to explain what that
why that's so why we should take we
should be careful and of the details of
even what we call the lightweight. Ram
says I have to define what is a
lightweight mitzvot and what is a
heavyduty mitzvah. How do we how do we
come to terms with that that there are
some lightweighted and heavyduty
mitzvot? What are they? So so he gives
um some type of um indications what
might be lightweight what might be easy
weight. Says one of the indications
would be the schedule of punishments of
the don'ts of the lotas. So if you see
something carries with it a capital
punishment offense, you know this is
pretty heavy. And if you if you see that
something has the loss of that's pretty
heavy. But if it's only uh malot lashing
in bet that's already lightweight and if
it's a type of a that doesn't even have
any punishment written in Torah that's
even more lightweight. Okay. So it's
some it's some gauge some table of of of
gauge of of how to figure out what might
be lightweight and what might be
heavyweight. And then the Ram says if
the said that a particular mitzvah is
equivalent to the entire Torah, that's
heavy weight. That's for sure heavy
weight. And you know how many times say
that? Anybody want to guess how many
times used the phrase
or
equivalent to all of the or equivalent
to all the Torah? That puts it into a
heavyduty category. How many times? One.
A guess. One. More than one. 13. Not 13,
but not even far. Okay. It's seven for
sure. Maybe eight. Maybe eight. It's
seven for sure. And one of them happens
to be living in Israel.
Israel.
So it's it's a heavyduty mitzvah. Right.
I I talk about this when I'm in. It's a
lot. Right. Right. Then I find out why
they don't invite me back to the same
place. That's what I say. That's why
it's so hard for us. It's a heavy duty
mitzvah. It's a heavy duty mitzvah.
Right. It's look
it's very tragic that sometimes we pay a
bitter price and and for for but it's a
heavy duty mitzvah. The mitzvah of
Shabbat is a heavy duty mitzvah. Brit is
a heavy duty mitzvah. is a heavy duty
mitzvah
of all things. It seems to be
categorically a easy mitzvah both in
terms of its performance and how much do
you have to pay for a pair of sits. If
it's it's it's within realm of
everybody's financial
budget and and it doesn't you know
you're wearing you don't even know that
you're wearing tit why should that be
even the heavy duty because the garra
says
is called reminds me of all the mitzvah.
So Ram has different ideas of what might
be heavy duty, what might be light duty.
You know what the Ram calls a a
lightweight mitzvah? He says studying
Hebrew.
Don't tell that to the pan students,
right?
So
is not so simple that that's easy
because it carries with it a very very
big of
and it's linked to and that's not an
easy mitzvah either. Yeah.
So is not a mitzvah. Mitzvah is
marriage. Marriage is a mitzvah. would
be what's called mitzvah preparation for
a mitzvah and I think the reason that
the Ram wrote studying Hebrew where do
you see a mitzvah in the Torah to study
Hebrew the answer is that there are some
mitzvot that can only be practiced in
Hebrew like if you're a cohen you can't
get up and say
in the vernacular it must necessarily be
in Hebrew and there are other things
there's a
Torah study by the way can be done in
all languages as you can see we are and
uh and
can be in all languages but there are
certain things that can only be in
Hebrew and therefore with the absence of
Hebrew you know you're really not able
to perform some mitzvot and even and
Torah study it's preferable in Hebrew so
there's no question that study of Hebrew
is in preparation for upgrading other
mitzvot so you have um you have the idea
of giving the the potential convert a a
little bit of a tasting of some of the
mitzvot
which and then the Rama says
don't spend a lot of time on this
because you're going to turn him off
when he's going to start hearing how
many mitzvot there are this is going to
be very discouraging but then he says
you teach about the sin of
these have to do with mitzvot of giving.
Mitzvot of giving. And then he says you
teach them about the punishment the the
which means as Rafilad points out what
you teach the g the potential g is
exactly this triangular
breakdown of what the principles of
Judaism are all about the the big three
and that is the existence of God and the
fact that God is one and so on. you
teach him about the essence of Torah and
that can be accomplished through a
sprinkling of certain of the mitzvot and
then you teach him about the um that
responsibility uh and that has to do
with reward and punishment and so on. So
Rah says it's really these three ideas
that that break out that pan out to 13
principles is what we teach a gear in we
accompanied a gear to the final exam.
Okay. And one of the things they asked
among others was does she know the 13
principles? And she knew them. She knew
them. Yeah. And we did. I said, "Good
that we were born Jewish." Okay. So I I
had a of teaching uh um Russian olim uh
Jews from sub former Soviet Union who
were studying at the Amuna College and
we helped them you know be brought to
full Gear and I remember I almost
fainted when one of the converts was
asked a question about Nagelvasa that I
I and she didn't know all the details
and they told her come back in 6 months.
It was horrible. It was horrible. There
was a there's a bait in then in Ashtto.
I don't know if it exists today that
prided itself by saying we're not going
to have one g pass our bet. And it's
terrible. Absolutely terrible that to
it's called Inu Hadin. The idea that uh
that that that you know potential G
studies and you know you don't you're
not there to trip them up. You're not
there to trip them up. Yeah. To to
encourage them and guide them and so on.
I thought we discouraged them. What? I
thought you discouraged. No, the
discouraging happens at the very
beginning of the process by trying to
scare the wits out of the person saying,
"Look, have you ever heard Jew studied
Jewish history? You must probably not
interested in this." And and you talk
about certain of the difficulties that
we've gone through in history. But then
when the potential g says I nevertheless
I would like to continue at that point
you encourage you don't discourage. In
other words only at the very very
initial stage just to try to
um weed out uh people who want to jump
on the bandwagon for reasons that are
not sincere. You you try to scare the
wits out of the people and suggest that
uh maybe this is not for you. But once
you're convinced that the person is
sincere, then you encourage the person.
Yeah. My granddaughter served in the
unit which does uh guim go uh in the
army for for soldiers who were not born
in the process, right? And and they
decide that they want to go through the
process of New York, right? And she told
me that at least 50% of those who start
drop out. Okay. Okay. they drop out for
whatever reasons they drop out. But I
can tell you the framework in the army
what's the name of the word native nativ
program is was most probably the most
encouraging program possibility for a
gear in this country and we know that
many of the khadesim who came in the '9s
and you know some with small families
and now their kids are army age and they
finding out that they're not Jewish
because for whatever reasons the mother
wasn't Jewish or and so and they were
able to come into the country because of
the law of return. But uh it's uh it's a
wonderful program that they try to get
the kids to uh to become hakically
Jewish. Right? Okay. So with this brief
introduction, let's just look at source
number five and then we'll go back to
ydal. So source number five is
the first fundamental
and in parenthesis I have the word
and I'll tell you in a moment why I have
that in parenthesis and that parenthesis
word
brought about the poem the second poem.
The all 13 as found in the sid after
alenu the 13 principles of the Rambam
which the Rambam never wrote the anim
it's an unknown authorship we don't know
who wrote it but we know that it's about
200 years after the Rambam an
so whenever we're talking about the
Rambam's Mishna commentary we have to be
aware of the fact that the Ramom didn't
write it in Hebrew
Ram wrote the Mishna Torah, the codes in
Hebrew, in the language of the Mishna,
but the most of his other writings are
written in Judeo-Arabic.
Now, Judeo-Arabic is not the Arabic that
you'd hear today on the street in
Misraim.
Judeo-Arabic is a literary language just
as we have in many languages. You have
the language that people speak on the
street and then there's the more formal
language. You go to Switzerland on the
street you're gonna hear Swiss. That's a
dialect of German. That's not uh proper
German, but it's a dialect and that's
the language of the street. Swiss. When
I was there, I never wanted to learn
that language, Swiss Dutch. But German
is the official language and of the
media when people make speeches. So,
they speak German. So you even have in
English you have a more literary um and
then you have the spoken. Somebody asked
me um are you planning to translate your
book on the conversations with the RV? I
said it's already in translation. I said
really I wrote it in Brooklyn and Rabbi
David Shapiro translated it to Brooklyn
English. That's a different language.
Brooklyn Boston English is a much higher
level of English than what I grew up in
Brooklyn. Right. Brooklyn, Brooklyn uh
has morphed into a new language called
Yeshivish,
which is the language of many Yeshivot
in America, which is
bad English with Yiddishisms
thrown in, Gumarra language integrated,
and then somebody's supposed to
understand it. And then some people
write books in Yiddish. Some in Shivish.
Somebody actually wrote a dictionary for
Yeshivish and I have home a um a
authentic translation of Lincoln's
Gettysburg address to yesish and it's an
absolute panic because do you remember
the um the last lines of the
Gettysburg's address where Lincoln says
for the people of the people and by the
people. So it's translated into
yeshivish as by the by the and by the
by. Yeah. By the
translation of the constitution. Yeah.
Yeah. Inhibition
into Yiddish. Okay. Fine. That could be
funny also. But yeshivish is even better
because they think it's English. That's
the thing. They think it's also have a
bit of an accent. Okay. Many American
boys. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Have an accent.
when I was asked once by Wu many years
ago to speak before the SMA students
about possibilities
professional possibilities here in
Israel in the rabbinet and in Jewish
education. So I me I sat with Rabbi Lamb
afterwards the president of the yeshiva
and he asked me what did you tell them?
I said I told them for first and
foremost they should learn Hebrew
because this is their so lamb said did
you tell them they should also learn
some English?
Never, never, gone are the days of the
orators, right? Gone are the days. So,
you have you have um um the idea of
Judeo-Arabic. Judeo-Arabic was actually
the Rambam's quote unquote Yiddish. What
does that mean? So when we say Yiddish,
we mean a dialect of German that Jews
have used in from the 15th 16th century
until today.
You can very clearly detect from
somebody's Yiddish if the person's
background was Germany, Hungary, Poland
or Lithuania. Just listen to their
Yiddish and you can hear it first of all
in the intonation
in some of the words that some local
words and idioms that infiltrate into
the local Yiddish. That simply means
that we didn't want to speak goes. We
didn't want to speak the language of the
of the land. And this goes back to the
midrash of
they didn't change their language. So
they didn't speak local Egyptian. They
still spoke. They spoke Hebrew. And and
although people since the days of Bay
Cheney haven't spoken Hebrew, but
they've spoken they don't want to speak
Goyish either. They don't want to speak
the language. So Aramaic kicked in.
Aramaic is simply the the local language
of the Middle East, Aramaic, but it's
with alphabet. It's with Hebrew letters
with Hebrew words mixed in. So it gives
it a little bit Jewish flavoring to it.
So that's Aramaic and there's a
difference between the Aramaic of the
Talmudi the Babylonian Talmud and the
Aramaic of the Israel Talmud the Talmudi
just like there's a difference between
the Yiddish of the Polish Jew and the
Leish of the Lithuanian Jew. So you have
differences sometimes in the spelling
sometimes in the word and so on. So this
is something which was natural and it's
known and after we finished with Aramaic
and we've been speaking Aramaic by the
way from the days of the end of Tanakh.
You have the book of Daniel is
practically all of it written in
Aramaic. You have parts of Ezra and
written in Aramaic and this is Aramaic.
And this will take us until the fifth
sixth century. And all of a sudden you
see that Jews are now speaking
Judeo-Arabic. So Rafad Goon is writing
in Judeo-Arabic. Ravudy is writing in
Judeo-Arabic. Rajon is the end of the
9th to 10th century. Rudy is the 11th
century. The Rambams are 12th century
and they're writing in Judeo-Arabic.
Most of the Rambam's works are in
Judeo-Arabic. So what is it? It's Arabic
with alfet with Hebrew words thrown in
to make it a little bit Jewish
flavoring. And this was the Yiddish of
the of North Africa and Yemen. It was
their Yiddish. So that's called
Judeo-Arabic. So we we we lost contact
with Judeo-Arabic certainly in uh in in
European circles. But the Yemenite
Jewish community never lost contact with
Judeo-Arabic. Rafak Zatal, the famous
Dian who passed away not long ago here
in Eritus, bringing the tradition of the
Yemenite Jewish community. He himself
says, "I studied the Mishna commentary
in its original 40 times before I set
out to translate it again." And indeed
from 1963 to 1967 we have Raf Kapak's
great contribution to Torah learning
because he re-ransates the Mishna
commentary and he re-ransates the
mitzvot the book of mitzvot he
re-ransates the he re-ransates many of
the letters and and it's a phenomenal
phenomenal contribution. Now why is
there a need for a re-ransation? Because
the Ibent Tibon family in the days of
the Rambam already started translating
the Rambam's material from Judeo-Arabic
to Hebrew. But the there's a history of
the text and things moved from from one
text to the other. There's a lot of
corruption in the text in the copying
and in the translation itself. in Ibon
he saw these as amuna and he translated
lamin
but anybody today who's a expert in
Judeo Arabic first and foremost kapak
but others as well believe that the ra
never used the word amuna he used the
word dea and there's a big difference
between amuna and dea means faith blind
faith and dea means knowledge intellect
So are these principles principles of
faith as we somehow see them in the
right
am
actually write amuna did he believe that
these are based on faith you grew up
your grandmother you know in inculcated
into you got it in school and that's it
and now he came to mitzvah mitzvah I
believe I believe I believe in all this
and fine that's it we believe and and
and you You don't have to do anything
but believe it. The Raman believed that
believed that if you just believe in all
these things, you've fallen short and
you are in a very low level of
commitment to
you have to use your noodles, use to
activate your brain and become a
philosopher and try to figure out why
all of these things are true to the best
of your intellectual ability. And that's
what the Ram believes is the mitzvah of
which seems to be just a declaration in
the de I am God. Ram counts it as one of
the 613 mitzvot and he says it's a
mitzvah to figure it out that a kadosh
actually exists. And therefore what I
have here in source number five
the Rambam actually began by saying
the first fundamental is the awareness
of the existence of a kadosh the
existence of the creator. Okay. So how
does that show up in the anim? So let's
go back to the first page. What do you
mean by awareness?
awareness that you are just like you are
aware that you're sitting here in a
room, you are aware that there are
people around you uh and you're aware
that now is daytime. Human beings have
awareness, cognitive awareness. You have
to be aware of a kadoshu existence. And
how do you do that when a kadoshu is
invisible? You can't touch him. There's
no connection to any of our five senses
which basically guide us to becoming
aware of things. You know that something
exists because you see it, you hear it,
you smell it, you feel it and you touch
it and so on. So all this doesn't exist
with regard to but the Ram says you can
achieve it by thinking and the question
is how to cultivate that thought process
to arrive at the conclusion that a kadu
actually exists and Ram says that's the
mitzvah and do you do it can you fulfill
it overnight? No, it's a lifetime. It's
a lifetime's worth of of effort to to
achieve that. But the Ram did not write
the word.
But nevertheless, in the Iben Tibon
original translation, that's what it
says.
So too for
if you just look at scale down as I'm
reading, looking at source number five,
it says
the oneness one, the oneness of Hashem.
the purpose it's all it's one and in the
third
he uses the word other places but all
right if you just go back now to the
poems on page number one
Nimsa vain.
Let's translate this
is we should make God great.
What does that mean? We're declaring.
It's not that we have to make God great.
God is great. He doesn't need us to make
him great. But we are extolling a virtue
of a kadosh of his greatness. He is the
He is here. He is to be found.
There's no time framework
that is to be associated with his
existence. Elit
8 means time.
There is no time framework. It's not
like
exists now as opposed to yesterday as
opposed to a billion years ago.
always existed and predates time and
postdates time and that's what we have
in in
a matter of fact the Ram tells us in the
guide to the perlex the
shame yud and that we not dare even
utter it was used in the context of beta
mikdash when the kuanim did bat kuanim
So, Hashem's name wasn't the way the
kanim do it today as if it reads
but it was read as it says yud and so
the raom says when the shame the this
perfect name of was pronounced it
sounded like eternity. It sounded like
Yeah, you got the picture. You got the
feeling, the sensation of eternity
because the shame havaya yud is nothing
but three words sandwiched together.
That's what the shame havaya is. It's
those three words sandwiched together in
one. It it is a kadu
forever, but forever before and forever
after. So much so, so much so that the
belief in the created world which is
going to be one of the u ecronote one of
the y isod the belief in the created
world where the ram is taking a real
stab against those philosophers Greek
philosophers who believed in the
eternity of the universe
um which means that god and the world
existed simultaneously and there was no
real creator leader uh at a certain time
the kazal was so adamant and they were
so pmical against the Greek philosophers
not only did the world have a beginning
but we can even believe that the world
could have an end and that's why there's
actually an opinion this is not
something that's what's called Moshe Mai
ironclad uh belief in in a Jewish value
but it's a thought thrown account by one
of the found in the last chapter of
Masadin that says that the world is
6,000 years and the 7,000th year is
going to be the epic of Messiah
and then
God pushes the delete button and it all
comes to an end. Now, why would we even
have such a belief? Is this something we
really have to believe in? The answer is
no. We don't have to believe that. It's
an opinion by one of the that the Msiah
era must necessarily come by the end of
the 6,000 years. It can come earlier. It
can definitely come before the end of
6,000 years. But if it doesn't come by
the end of 6,000 years, it's going to
happen automatically. It's going to
happen and it's going to last for a
thousand years and then poof, it ends.
Why poof and it ends? So I once heard
from one of my great teachers at Wu,
Rabbi, Professor Mayor Hershkowit.
He said this was Kazal's attempt to
undermine the Greek philosophers who
believe that the world is eternal
concurrent with God. And we wanted to
say not only is the world not concurrent
at the beginning, but it's not
concurrent with God even at the end. It
can have an end. it can potentially have
an end. And you know that there are all
kinds of uh traditions mentioned in the
Zohor that we are the seventh world that
there was a first world and a second
world and a third world and we're the
sixth world. We're the seventh world
which means God put an end to worlds
which according to the cabalists it's
already happened. The push the delete
button it has happened already and and
God can start all over should he choose
to start all over. So again, that's how
I'm placing it in should he choose to
start all over. He could. He could. That
doesn't mean he's going to do it. That
does not mean that he's going to do it.
Let's say the Ramban
who is a cabalist also looked at the six
days of creation and said that the word,
what is? It's a battle plan of 6,000
years of the existence of the world
where each day of creation reflects a
millennium. And then he goes on to
explain it. What you see in day one of
creation, what the first thousand years
was all about and the second millennium
and so on. And the end of the sixth
millennium is going to be Shabbat. and
Shabbat is going to be
and the Ramban knowing fully well that
he's living in the beginning of the
sixth uh millennium and it's going to be
another few hundred years until he sees
Msiach.
So he he does something very very
interesting that kind of whips out a of
you know people not mean from but on the
seventh day of Shiva people don't
complete the day of Shiva but the Shiva
culminates in the morning after the
first hour right the Shiva people get up
from Shiva because of
the part of the day is like tantamount
the whole day and the Rabans says he
thinks that he may see Yamote Mashiach
even though he knows he's not going to
live 750 800 years he knows that but the
6,000th year you know can end early can
be shortened can be abbreviated.
That's uh you know very very wishful
thinking uh on his part and it didn't
happen. He died a long time ago but uh
nevertheless the idea that 6,000 years
so how many years are we to the end of
the 6,000 years? Let's let's bring this
up. How many years are we
right? So we are
I mean why do we have to think? You
don't have to think anymore. You have uh
okay so today is 5,78
and 85 tin pay and we subtract it and
you get 215 years. So we have Einstein
is sitting right here. Look at that. You
don't even need a calculator. I have to
tell you I said I read Einstein. Okay.
He wrote a book about God disappearing
at the end. There you go. Okay. See,
it's not Pakyus.
There you go. God disappearing. Okay.
So, it's a nice book, isn't it? Right.
So, 215 years. How many of us are going
to be around in 215 years?
I expect to live. You expect to live.
See, we have an optimist here. Okay.
Good. So, I'm going to make this very
optimistic. again quoting um Raf
Professor Mayor Hershitz who Ira who I
actually learned so much from
um he brought to our attention an
article by Rabbi Shimon Schwab. So do
you remember you know Rabbi Shimon
Schwab? Those of you grew up in the
Washington Heights neighborhood, he was
the successor to Rabbi Yseph Buer
of the Beru, famous Buer's community,
transplanted Frankfurt upon Bennett
Avenue in where they still speak German,
right? Okay. So Rav Bruer
turned 65 which in the United States
that's like retirement age but he wasn't
planning to retire but they felt that
there was a need to bring in an
associate rabbi which some schuls will
do and they invited a young ro he was 34
years old from Baltimore who had gone
back before the war to me and studied in
Mir in the town of Mir in Bellerus which
becomes the Mir yeshiva later. So, u and
he comes back to the states. This is all
pre pre-show. So, he's invited to become
Rabbi Buer's associate rabbi and he
makes amen. He makes a calculation. How
long is Rabbi Buer going to be the rabbi
there? Another five years. At 70, he's
going to be before 40 years old. The
Rabina, the grand Rabina of this great
gam, this great community called the
community. Except that nobody told Rabbi
Schwab that Rabbi Buer is going on to
live to age 99 and function till age 99
as the Rabina, the chief rabbi of the
community. And the time Ra Schwab
becomes the official rabbi, he's already
collecting social security by two years.
He's 67 years old. He stayed here. He
stayed for a few more years. Yeah. Yeah.
He became the finally. Finally. But uh
okay, I heard Rabbi Buer say a shir
Mishnay between M and my grandfather
took me there once in a weekday. He was
98 years old and he spoke German. Gave
the Shir and the Mishna Gitten in
German. I couldn't understand what he
was saying but because he he didn't have
a voice you know power any longer but it
was still to hear Rav Royer and I heard
him. So uh Rav Schwab was honored to
write an article in a festri fest means
a safer hay a type of jubiley volume in
honor of Rav Bruer's 75th birthday. So
of course Rav Schwab thought that Robuya
was going to announce his retirement at
that time which he didn't and uh but
nevertheless the article is called the
comparative calendar very very important
article where he discusses the problem
of the bay sheni era second temple era
where we're a little bit at a loss we're
a little bit at a loss because we have
historic data that cannot be challenged
when was the end of the Babylonian era,
when was the destruction of first beta
mikdash, when was the Persian era, when
was the Greek era, and when was the
Roman era? There you can't ignore. It's
not just opening up the Britannica. I
mean, there there is archaeological
evidence. There's historic data of of
how long each one existed. And if you
open up a general history book, you see
that the first beta mdash was destroyed
in the year 586 before the common era.
And then you have to take 70 years
between the first and second beta
mikdash. That means the second beta
mdash already gets going in the year 516
of the for the common era. It's also
common knowledge that the second beta
mikdash was destroyed in the year 70
maybe 68. Little bit of a two-year
discrepancy but that's already small
change 70 of the common era. That means
if that's true then the second bet
midash stood for 516
plus 70 years which is 586 years maybe
55 years okay 585 years but you know the
gimmar tells us that the second mdash
stood for 420 years not 585 years the
first mdash was 410 that you can just go
through tanakh and plot it out you don't
need a va going For this one, you can
see how long the first B mdash existed.
But the second mikdash, we don't know
what happened because there's a
tradition and it contradicts the
historic data. So Raf Schwab says you
have three options. You can say Khazal
knew what they were talking about. All
the historians are liars. They don't
know what they're talking about. Fine.
You can say that the historians know
what they're talking about and Kazal
weren't historians. So they made a
mistake. That was the second option.
says, "I reject the first and I reject
the second." There's got to be a third
path here. And his third path is that
the building of beta mikdash stood for
586 years. It functioned as a beta
mcdash for only 420 years. and that
there's some sources to show that Beth
Mikdash was out of commission here and
there
and that there were dark ages in the
Persian era that Khazal deliberately
blotted out from our history books. It's
a phenomenal charge to suggest this. And
he says that they did it because
if you um if and and and he says exactly
how many years were blotted out? 65
years of the Greek era and it was done
in order to protect the book of Danielle
from allowing us to um perhaps figure
out when Msiah is going to come to
distort some of the numbers there in the
book of Daniel. It's phenomenal
phenomenal thing because if you take Rav
uh Schwab's uh answer
resolution then if you take today um the
if you take today 57 85
and you 5785 and you add on you add on
um the 215 years that are missing but
now take off. You're going to have to
add 165 years. These blank years, this
is going to bring you to about 50 years.
We are 50 years from the year 6000.
That's all it is. Not 215 years.
That means maybe some of us here may not
make it, but our grandchildren, our
great grandchildren are going to make
it. And that's within grasp. So think
about that. Think about that. About
this. So we got on to this because of
this was important. This was important
because of Msiah. Because of Mashiach.
Continue this. Please bring these pages
next week. And if you don't, hand them
back to me and I'm going to bring them
next week. And I think that