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Yom Kippur | Rabbi Yitzchak Breitowitz | September 30th 2025
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Obviously a big day is coming up on uh
Wednesday, Tuesday I'm sorry what Yeah,
Yom Kippur Wednesday night to Thursday.
And uh let me just point out an
interesting thing.
Obviously a cottage borough who gave us
a tremendous gift
that is called chuva. Chuva is a
protocol. It is a process
by which God forgives sins together with
Yom Kippur.
And what greater gift is that? You know,
sometimes people get depressed. I
I tell my wife that Yom Kippur and Rosh
Hashanah
I not only have to deal with my nervous
breakdowns, but like everyone else in
the world's nervous breakdowns.
Everybody is anxious. Everybody is
worried. Everybody is obsessive
compulsive.
I would suggest that anxiety is exactly
the wrong emotion
to have during this time of year.
I would even say that the base hakoves
and the yeshivas have ruined
Elul, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur.
Because these are not times of anxiety.
Although there is some element of it,
I'm not denying that. These are not
times of fear.
These are times of opportunity. These
are times of hope.
These are times of renewal. These are
times of great closeness to Hakadosh
Baruchu.
And the gift of chuva says
that no matter what I've done and all
the mistakes that I've made
there is always hope for a new
beginning.
And what I am today is not limited by
what I was yesterday.
And what I can be tomorrow is not
limited by what I am today.
And Rav Kook in particular emphasizes
over and over again
that the dominant emotion of chuva
should be one of simcha.
Now, I remember
uh when I was a child I have a memory
one Yom Kippur only it was only one Yom
Kippur in North Connecticut.
Uh my parents and I and my Shalom and I
went to a Yekke show German show. I was
told I'm not supposed to say Yekke. I I
didn't I didn't realize that some people
are offended. But you know, a a show
that followed the minhag of Berlin.
And I had a recollection I I must have
been five or six. I just learned about
Yom Kippur
that when they said the Al Chet
Shagatanu
they said it to a jaunty niggun.
Not just the Ashamnu which almost
everybody sings Al Chet Shagatanu.
And as I grew older and as I learned
about um Yom Kippur more
I thought to myself my memory must have
been inaccurate. Sometimes you remember
things as a kid, but you figure it's not
right.
But then I read in Rav Soloveitchik's
Rav Pinchas Peli's adaptation of Rav
Soloveitchik's shiurim Al Hatzuva
that Rav Soloveitchik who was in Berlin
uh he went to University of Berlin
uh
recalls that the minhag in Berlin was
they would sing the Al Chet. So I felt
very validated. Oh, my memory is
correct.
And he explains how can you have how can
you have In fact, not even a sad
plaintive niggun, it's a jaunty lebedik
niggun.
And he explains
that you know, when you clean out the
garbage
and you're dealing with filth and you're
dealing with schmutz and you're dealing
with all sorts of unpleasant things.
But one way of looking at it is every
single shovel full
that you are removing, you're making it
more beautiful. You're making it more a
better place.
So yeah, we say to God I did this and I
did this and I did this and all this.
But you're cleaning yourself out.
And when you're cleaning yourself out
there can be simcha even in that video
itself. Now, um
this apparently was meyuches to Berlin
because in the Frankfurt minhag the
Frankfurt minhag which of course uh
Kehal Adas Yeshurun Washington Heights
is is based on on that. They do not sing
the Al Chet. But say again?
In Zurich they do also. Okay. Okay.
Okay. So there is such a minhag and the
minhag makes a lot of sense.
Um
you know
in Chabad Chassidus it says that we we
read about the rebbeim the different
rebbes and the emotional mood that they
had. So Rosh Hashanah
was a mood of trepidation and certain
elements of fear
uh crying bechios. It's mentioned that
the rebbeim would have bechios on Rosh
Hashanah.
But Yom Kippur was said to be a day of
tanug. Tanug is pleasure. A day of
pleasure in basking
in the presence of Hashem.
Now again, obviously Yom Kippur is also
the final day of judgment.
Because most people are inscribed
there's a writing a preliminary judgment
on Rosh Hashanah
and a final judgment on Yom Kippur.
But Yom Kippur was more kind of being in
sync with the Almighty. In fact, even
the deprivations the inuyim
the not eating, the not drinking
even though we might describe that as
deprivation and suffering
in fact, it could be understood as
transcendence. Meaning we try to go
beyond the physical.
That we're we're like angels. We we
don't we're not pulled down by our
physicality.
In fact, it's very interesting that the
Rambam
and of course our course is about the
Rambam so although we're not going to be
looking at a letter today
but we will be looking at some teachings
of the Rambam.
And the Rambam was so exact in his
writing
that you can even draw conclusions from
his titles, not just his halachos but
even his titles. Now the Rambam does
have a section in the Mishneh Torah
called Hilchos Taniyot
the laws of fasting and that's where the
Rambam discusses fast days
uh Tisha B'Av etc.
But when it comes to Yom Kippur, the
Rambam has actually two separate
sections about Yom Kippur interestingly
enough.
One section is called Hilchos Avodas Yom
HaKippurim which is about the korbanos
and the Kodesh Hakodashim. Right? That's
about the sacrifices of Yom Kippur.
But then the other part of Yom Kippur
that's the halacha l'maaseh
for us today
goes by a very peculiar name that the
Rambam invented.
And the Rambam invented it
Hilchos
Shevisas
Asor.
The laws
of resting
on the 10th day of Tishrei.
The laws of resting of cessation.
And in
Hilchos Shevisas Asor
the Rambam includes both the laws of
fasting on Yom Kippur
and the laws of not doing melacha on Yom
Kippur.
In other words, the Rambam basically
says both the taanis
and the issur melacha
are given a common designation.
They are actions or inactions of
shevisa.
Cessation.
Rest.
This is an amazing thing. What the
Rambam is telling us is
that the concept of fasting on Yom
Kippur
is very different
than the concept of fasting let us say
on the 9th of Av.
On the 9th of Av, the idea of fasting is
to deprive ourselves
to feel pain to suffer
as we commemorate the Churban Beis
Hamikdash.
The idea of fasting on Yom Kippur
according to the Rambam
is not about suffering. Although I'll
I'll go to the Lashon HaTorah about
that. It is not about suffering.
It is about transcending. It is about
resting. It's It is about refraining.
It's about being liberated
from physicality.
That's why you know, people always
debate do you wish somebody before a
fast day
tzom kal.
Have an easy fast. Right? We even have
those pills tzom kal.
So some say well, you don't wish
somebody a tzom kal. That tzom is
supposed to suffer. What do you mean
tzom kal?
But it could be maybe there's a
difference
between Yom Kippur and Tisha B'Av.
Maybe Tisha B'Av I shouldn't wish you a
tzom kal. We should suffer.
Yom Kippur bedafka we don't suffer. By
Yom Kippur we want to be liberated from
eating
and from drinking from physicality
because we're like angels. We're with
God. That's the taanis. That's the
pleasure. The pleasure is being with
Hakadosh Baruchu on that on that day.
Some have even compared Yom Kippur
to death in a positive in a positive way
that you're kind of liberated from
physicality and you become a pure
a pure neshama.
Now, all of this is beautiful, but you
may ask me a kasha
from the lashon of the Torah itself.
Um
the Torah says taanu
es nafshoseichem. Now the word taanu is
afflict
your soul. Afflict your soul. Meaning to
say there is the element of Yom Kippur
that one suffers.
So again, I'll give you an answer. The
answer is a bit dochek I admit. But but
the answer that's given is that the word
nefesh
has a very specific connotation and it
refers to the animalistic part of
yourself. Meaning you have the neshama
which is the godly soul and the nefesh
is the animal soul. So when it says
taanu es nafshoseichem
it doesn't mean you should suffer, but
it means you afflict your animal aspect
by shutting it out, by excluding it, by
not focusing on it. And that is
considered to be uh the inui. So, in
this way, Yom Kippur, the Mishnah says
"be fairish". The Mishnah in Taanis says
that Yom Kippur, together with the 15th
of Av for other reasons,
were was the happiest day of the year.
Happiest day of the year.
And the Chazal say that it never pushes
by itself. The 15th of Av, the Gemara
has to go through a whole complicated
thing. But for Yom Kippur, it says very
pushit, Yom Machilo Slicha.
A day of forgiveness, a day of
connection to Hashem.
What could be a happier time
than than Yom Kippur?
So, again, it should be something we
should daven, of course, with kavana. We
should have vidui, but even in our
vidui,
there should be a a sense of simcha that
Hashem is granting us a tremendous
tremendous gift of forgiveness.
But what's interesting is, and this may
sound
kind of crazy or counterintuitive.
Okay, teshuvah is a gift. Teshuvah is an
opportunity.
Teshuvah is a way to gain forgiveness.
But is teshuvah an obligation?
Let's say a person
I'll make up a number. A person has a
million aveiros.
Now, obviously,
they would be very foolish not to do
teshuvah, because if they don't do
teshuvah,
they're stuck with a million aveiros.
So, of course, teshuvah makes sense. But
here's the question.
If I decide I'm not going to do
teshuvah,
do I have a million and one aveiros, or
am I simply stuck with the million that
I did? Meaning, is there is teshuvah a
gift and an opportunity, or is it
actually an obligation?
Surprisingly,
there are shitos that say
there is no mitzvah of teshuvah.
It's up to you.
Now, obviously,
even if there's no mitzvah of teshuvah,
I'm not allowed to continue sinning. I
mean I mean the same Torah that said
"Don't eat chazer before you ate the
chazer",
is also going to tell you "Don't eat
chazer after you ate the chazer". So,
stopping the aveira, that's obvious, you
have to stop the aveira.
But teshuvah is a process, confessing to
Hashem, regret, you know, it's not just
stopping the aveira.
So, is there a mitzvah of teshuvah?
So, some Rishonim actually say there's
no mitzvah of teshuvah, it's up to you.
Of course, you'd be an idiot not to take
advantage of it, because then you're
stuck with a million sins.
But it's there's no separate mitzvah of
teshuvah. So, I just want to point out
the kitzur
that both the Rambam
and the Ramban
disagree with this.
Both the Rambam and the Ramban take the
position that teshuvah is not only an
opportunity, but it is an absolute
obligation. It is a chiyuv.
Uh and not only on Yom Kippur, not only
I mean the whole the whole year. There's
a chiyuv to do teshuvah.
Uh both Rambam and Ramban
say this,
but they differ as to the makor. They
differ as to what is the source
of the mitzvah of teshuvah.
Uh the Ramban, I'll mention him first,
has a very straightforward source.
Uh actually in last week's parsha,
uh when Hashem describes the Jewish
people sinning,
and they'll be in exile, all of the
future predictions,
so it says the in the middle of your
suffering, v'shafta ad Hashem Elokecha,
you will return to God,
v'shamata b'kolo,
and you will listen to His voice.
According to Ramban,
this is one of the 613 mitzvos
that when a person sins,
they are obligated
to try to undergo
the process of teshuvah.
V'shafta ad
Hashem Elokecha,
v'shamata b'kolo. And in fact, when the
Chumash then goes on and says "Lo
ba'shamayim hi, the Torah is not in
heaven, the Torah is not far away from
you, it's near to you, it's accessible
to you, b'ficha uv'livavcha la'asoso",
it's in your mouth, the ability to
articulate it, in your heart, the Ramban
says it's not just talking about the
Torah generally.
It's specifically talking about the
mitzvah of teshuvah.
Now, this seems to be
pretty clear and pretty obvious.
V'shafta ad Hashem Elokecha seems to be
a really good source
for the mitzvah of teshuvah.
And yet the Rambam,
who also maintains there's a mitzvah of
teshuvah,
does not use the pasuk v'shafta.
Uh he uses another pasuk, which I'll
mention in a moment.
But why doesn't he use v'shafta? So, the
emes is, because in another place,
the Rambam uses the pasuk in a very very
different way.
The Rambam mentions
that geulah, Mashiach,
can only come
if the Jewish people do teshuvah.
Without teshuvah, there will not be
redemption.
But Hashem promises
that at the end of days,
the Jewish people will do teshuvah, she
ne'emar,
v'shafta
ad Hashem Elokecha,
v'shamata b'kolo.
What that means is that according to the
Rambam,
v'shafta ad Hashem Elokecha is not a
mitzvah,
it is a messianic prediction.
So, based on the Rambam's own
interpretation of v'shafta ad Hashem
Elokecha, it's understandable why he did
not use that
as the source of the mitzvah of
teshuvah.
Okay, so what is the Rambam's source
of the mitzvah of teshuvah?
So, it's very very odd. It's from a very
isolated corner of the Torah,
in parshas Naso.
And it's talking about the following
halacha.
We know that when you steal something,
the Torah obligates you to make
restitution.
You got to give back what you stole, in
addition to fines or whatever it will
be.
Uh what if I stole from somebody, and
the person died?
Well, that's not a problem. I return the
stolen property
to his yorshim, to his heirs.
If he has children, children, but even
if he doesn't have any children,
brothers, parents, cousins, every Jewish
people, every Jewish person
has some heir, even if it's a 20th
cousin, 15 levels removed.
Ah.
But halachically,
there is only one person, one Jewish
person,
who if he dies,
there may possibly be nobody to inherit.
And that is a ger.
If a non-Jew
becomes Jewish,
and the non-Jew didn't marry, so he
doesn't have children or the like,
since halachically he is no longer
related
to his father, mother, brothers,
whether they're Jewish, even if they
became Jewish, and certainly if they're
not Jewish, halachically he's not
related.
So, if he dies
and doesn't have Jewish children from
his Jewish wife,
he has no heirs.
In fact, the Gemara tells us
the property of such a ger is hefker.
Meaning,
you can go and take it. Nobody owns it.
He dies, nobody owns it. There's no
yoresh.
So, here's the problem.
I stole from a ger,
and a ger died.
How do I make restitution?
So, the Torah basically says in such a
situation
that you make restitution by paying the
Kohanim. They kind of act as the
surrogate. And you bring a special
korban,
and on that korban, you recite a
confession, v'hisvadu es chatasam.
And the Rambam says, since a confession
to God is not valid unless it is
sincere,
in the mitzvah of vidui
must exist a mitzvah of teshuvah. There
can't be a mitzvah of vidui,
verbal confession, independent of
sincere repentance,
because that would be a joke.
So, in a sense, according to the Rambam,
there is a mitzvah of teshuvah,
but the mitzvah of teshuvah is derived
inferentially
from the mitzvah of vidui, v'hisvadu es
chatasam. And even though that is
talking about
a limited sin
of stealing from a ger,
but the Rambam understands that the
Torah is generalizing it
to all aveiros, that there's a mitzvah
that is called that is called teshuvah.
So, be it as it may, therefore we have
three different views
among commentators.
View number one, which is very strange,
but there is such a view, there is no
mitzvah of teshuvah.
Meaning, if I don't do teshuvah,
there's no extra aveira that I have,
other than being saddled with all the
aveiros, which were not forgiven.
View number two is Ramban.
V'shafta ad Hashem Elokecha
is the mitzvah d'oraisa of teshuvah.
And then we have Rambam
who derives the mitzvah of teshuvah
from the mitzvah of confessing to
Hashem, not to other people, to Hashem
when you bring the korban
for gezel hager, stealing from a ger,
and that is generalized to refer to
every mitzvah. Now, Rabbeinu Yonah
who was uh a nephew of the Ramban.
Rabbeinu Yonah was
uh wrote a great great book
one of the classic books on repentance
called Shaarei Teshuvah.
It's a safer that
one could one should look at uh during
uh this season, really the whole year.
And Rabbeinu Yonah makes a fascinating
point. He agrees with Ramban that
there's a mitzvah d'Oraisa of teshuvah.
But then he makes the point. He says
that the sin of not doing teshuvah
may actually be much greater
than all of the sins for which you had
to do teshuvah. So, if you had a million
aveiros
and you don't do teshuvah on the million
aveiros
then not doing teshuvah may be equal to
2 million aveiros.
And the reason is
because if a melech gave you a precious
gift
and you simply turn it down
and you spit in his face
there is no greater denigration of the
melech that you can have
than not accepting the opportunity that
he's offering.
>> Yeah.
Hakadosh Baruchu gives us
a phenomenally great opportunity
and we say, "I don't need it. Who needs
you? Who needs it?"
So, it's a fascinating point. So, if you
don't do teshuvah, according to Rabbeinu
Yonah, you're not simply stuck with the
million aveiros that are unforgiven.
You might have another 2 million added
to the scale
because not doing teshuvah is even worse
than the aveiros for which you have to
do teshuvah.
Um and uh Rabbeinu Yonah adds another
point.
He says
which the Rambam and the Ramban don't
explicitly address
he says that not only is there a
year-round mitzvah of teshuvah
but there's a special mitzvah d'Oraisa
d'Oraisa
to do teshuvah
on Yom Kippur. Now, let me explain this.
I I I know when you hear this this may
sound so obvious that you're wondering
what the point is. Th- There actually is
a point and let me explain this.
It is clear
that
the forgiveness of Yom Kippur depends on
teshuvah.
Absolutely.
If I just go through a Yom Kippur and I
don't try to do teshuvah
I don't get the forgiveness of Yom
Kippur. That that is clear. I don't need
Rabbeinu Yonah
to tell me that.
So, of course I'm I'm going to try to do
teshuvah on Yom Kippur
because I want
the gift
of God's forgiveness.
Okay? That's not what Rabbeinu Yonah is
adding
to the discussion here.
But once again
that doesn't make teshuvah an
obligation. That just says if I want the
gift of Yom Kippur, I got to do
teshuvah.
Okay.
And if I wouldn't want that gift, I'm an
idiot, for sure.
But is there a chiyuv to do teshuvah on
Yom Kippur? Rabbeinu Yonah says it's a
chiyuv.
And where do you get the chiyuv? Where
does the Torah say thou shalt do
teshuvah on Yom Kippur?
So, Rabbeinu Yonah reads it in the
famous verse
ki vaYom hazeh
y'chaper aleichem
on that day Hashem will give you
atonement
l'taher eschem to purify you mikol
chatoseichem
from all of your sin
lifnei Hashem tit'haru
in front of God
you shall be purified.
So, most commentaries understand that as
God's promise. God is promising
you will be purified.
Rabbeinu Yonah says, "No, it's an
imperative sentence.
In front of God, you shall purify
yourself."
i.e.
doing
teshuvah.
Rabbeinu Yonah says there's a chiyuv
d'Oraisa
to do teshuvah. Actually, it's a
machlokes how I learn Rabbeinu Yonah.
He's either saying there's a chiyuv
d'Oraisa to do teshuvah on Yom Kippur
or he might be saying there's a chiyuv
d'Oraisa to enter Yom Kippur
in a state of teshuvah
and that might be part of the reason why
in the mincha before Yom Kippur
we say the long vidui, so we enter Yom
Kippur
in the state of teshuvah lifnei Hashem
tit'haru, in front of God
you shall, you must, you are obligated
to purify purify yourselves.
You know, it it is interesting in some
ways
that you can even ask the question
do we have time on Yom Kippur
to do teshuvah? Now, yes, we have a
liturgy, we have
davening
and we say a lot of al cheits.
teshuvah.
That's a liturgical thing that you say
over and over again.
But when do I have time
to think about me, think about what I
need to fix, my cheta'im, my
responsibilities?
And how do I do that? So, isn't it kind
of a paradox
that precisely on the day of atonement
is the day that we don't necessarily
have a lot of time
to think about our own cheshbon
hanefesh?
And that's why we have the 10 days of
repentance, aseres yemei teshuvah. That
is why we have
uh the month of Elul, actually uh for
that type of cheshbon hanefesh. You
actually need the time because once
you're
in the trial, so to speak, uh there's
not that much time for the personal
introspection. Yeah, Yom Kippur there's
a break, most shuls have a break, but
you know, the break people
people are too tired to do teshuvah
during the break, you know, they they
they need a little bit of need need a
little bit of rest as as well. Um I
remember when I was in Eretz Yisrael, we
had a you know, yeshivah was a very long
davening.
So, uh as a just as a teenager, you
know, 14, 15-year-old you know, as we
waited every Yom Kippur after mussaf
some weeks, some years we had a break
before mincha
and some years we were running late, so
we went straight. So, I remember with
bated breath there would always be this
consultation between the Rosh Yeshiva
and Rabbi Neuwirth uh
about is there going to be a break or
not? And we were all like staring and
waiting, you know. Uh with that
with that hope.
Some some years we had some years we
took it we took it didn't have, but
okay.
Um yeah. But be it as it may, this is
what Rabbeinu Yonah says. Now, I want to
mention another aspect.
Rabbeinu Yonah just the Rabbeinu Yonah
just mentioned
uh said lifnei Hashem tit'haru
in front of God you shall be purified is
actually a commandment. We are obligated
to try to purify ourselves uh for God.
But let me just remind you there's
another famous drasha
that the Mishnah says in Maseches Yoma
the famous idea that everybody knows
Yom Kippur with your teshuvah
only gives you atonement
for the aveiros bein adam l'Makom
the aveiros between man and God.
I didn't keep Shabbos, I do teshuvah,
God forgives me.
But aveiros bein adam l'chavero
the aveiros hurting another person
so even with your teshuvah and even with
Yom Kippur
there is no kaparah, there is no
atonement
until you seek the forgiveness of the
person.
Mechilah, you ask for forgiveness of the
person.
And yeah, there's a protocol if you're
very sincere and the person is not
mochel you, so God will forgive you, but
you have to at least go through
the process of sincerely requesting
mechilah. Now, the source of that is
actually from the very same pasuk. It
says
y'chaper aleichem al hachat l'taher
eschem, God will give you atonement
to purify you
mikol chatoseichem from all of your
sins. Now, in the Chumash
there's an esnachta, that's the
semicolon, and lifnei Hashem tit'haru,
in front of God you'll be pure, is the
next part of the phrase.
But the Mishnah punctuates it
differently.
Hashem will give you atonement mikol
chatoseichem lifnei Hashem.
See, it it it moves lifnei Hashem
to the first part of the pasuk. You will
get atonement
for the sins that you committed to God.
But bein adam l'chavero
you have to ask mechilah. Now, there's
an interesting machlokes in the
acharonim because they point out that in
every sin bein adam l'chavero
you're also sinning against God.
There's a bein adam l'Makom and a bein
adam l'chavero.
When we say you don't get forgiveness
until you ask mechilah of the person
does that mean you don't even get
forgiveness on the bein adam l'Makom
component? Or no, the bein adam l'Makom
component you get mechilah, but you're
still saddled with bein adam l'chavero.
So, that that that's a machlokes. But
what I want to share with you
is a very very fascinating other
machlokes
between Rabbi Yisrael Salanter and the
Chofetz Chaim.
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter was much older.
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter, um,
when he was in his 70s,
Rabbi Yisrael Meir HaCohen was a young
man in his early 30s.
And he had written his first sefer
anonymously,
which was the sefer that's called
Chofetz Chaim.
That's why he became known as the
Chofetz Chaim.
And the Chofetz Chaim wrote his sefer
based on the pasuk
me in Tehillim mi ha'ish haChofetz Chaim
Who is the person who desires life? Ohev
yamim liros
tov, netzor leshoncha mera.
Guard your tongue from evil. So, the
Chofetz Chaim actually wrote a book. He
wrote the book
on the laws, the halachos
of lashon hara.
Right, this is still, to this day,
considered to be the definitive text.
There've been many adaptations, but the
but even the original book has been
translated, uh, more recently, actually.
Most of the years they were going with
adaptations and the like.
So, the Chofetz Chaim did write it
anonymously. In fact, we have even
humorous stories about this. Uh,
we have a story with them One story was
the Chofetz Chaim used to go
to different cities to sell his sefer.
He said it himself.
So, he's sitting next to somebody on a
train and
there's a pile of Chofetz Chaim's books.
So, the man says, "Ah,
this Chofetz Chaim, great rabbi, great
talmid chacham, great tzaddik. I can see
from the sefer
what a righteous, great person he is."
So, the Chofetz Chaim said, "Well,
I know him. He's nobody special."
Regular guy.
So, the man got so incensed that he
slapped him in the face.
He says, "How dare
you impugn such a righteous and holy
person?" Okay. This is the seder. So,
they get to Warsaw and apparently the
Chofetz Chaim was already known in some
circles.
So, as he's selling his seforim, people
are gathering around and they're
they're mit'yachestin with a lot of
respect.
So, the man that slapped him was getting
a little uneasy. He doesn't know who he
hit.
So, he says to somebody,
"Can you tell me who that man is who's
selling those seforim?"
And he said, "Oh, you don't know?
He's the Chofetz Chaim."
So, the man now felt totally, totally,
uh, ashamed that he slapped the Chofetz
Chaim. So, he went to the Chofetz Chaim.
He asked mechila of the Chofetz Chaim.
He said, "Rebbi, I did it out of your
kavod. I hit you because I thought you
were insulting, uh, our tzaddik. You
know,
I consider you a tzaddik."
So, the Chofetz Chaim said, "Please,
don't worry about this. From you I
learned a very important halacha that I
have to put in my second edition, that
the same way you shouldn't say lashon
hara about other people,
you also shouldn't say lashon hara about
yourself." He says, "And that was my
aveira,
that I said lashon hara about myself."
Now, the truth of the matter is, there
actually is a profound psychological
insight
in this, uh, simple story.
And that is, very often, the impetus
within our personalities
that leads us to want to put other
people down
is that we have a lack of an inner
self-esteem. We think we're not good.
So, the way I don't feel so bad about it
is when I say, "Well, maybe I'm a bum,
but he's a bum, too.
He's no better."
Or maybe he's worse.
If a person has
a good sense of who they are in a
positive way,
they're not going to have a a desire to
go put down and be mevaza other people.
So, in a sense, when you don't say
lashon hara about yourself,
uh, you actually won't say lashon hara
or think lashon hara. You won't say
lashon hara about other people. Yeah.
I was just going to say that
one of the confusions that comes up in
all these discussions
is that teshuvah
isn't a moment.
And the only thing teshuvah
that teshuvah is a process. And even the
Sefardim mention
that certain halachos Well.
It doesn't mean that this is only
happening
I think what they're saying is
the shaf hamussar and it will be
shalem. Yeah. I think the relation to
the color is not that
and again, they
may be clean.
Right. But you have to do this
in an ongoing way.
Yeah. Yeah, it's a very good It's a very
good point, I and you're right. And I I
will, in fact, uh, talk about this.
Um, by the way, excuse me. I I have to
interrupt in the middle. Uh, I didn't
announce the dedications. I do want to
announce the dedications.
Um,
No, these seems to be
No, these are all last week. I don't
know why why they were given to me.
Yeah, these are not These are not
current. Okay, I'm
sorry for that. Okay. Uh, anyway, uh,
it's a very good point. I I will
actually try try to address that before
it before the end of the the end of the
show. But be that as it may, the
machlokes was the following. When the
when the sefer Chofetz Chaim came out
and the Chofetz Chaim was in his early
30s, Rabbi Yisrael Salanter was towards
the end of his life, in his 70s.
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter was very, very
happy. Rabbi Yisrael Salanter devoted
his life
to raising mussar, ethical
consciousness, middos.
And he was so happy to see a sefer that
was concerned with, uh, this problem of
moral character. And he said, "Baruch
Hashem, Hashem has prepared a spiritual
leader for the new generation."
But it is brought down there was one
halacha in sefer Chofetz Chaim
that Rabbi Yisrael Salanter disagreed
with.
And that is, asking mechila when you
said lashon hara about somebody and the
person doesn't know what you said or
that you said it. Example, the Chofetz
Chaim writes,
"If I said lashon hara about you," and
that's even if it's true, it's lashon
hara.
"I said, 'This person is the biggest
idiot I ever met.'
Or 'This person has the moral values of
a criminal.'
And now I wanted to teshuvah. So, the
Chofetz Chaim says, 'That's bein adam
lechavero. I have to go over to you.
I have to say, "Please, forgive me for
what I did."
And you have the right to ask me,
"What did you do?"
And I'm going to say, "Well, you really
don't want to know."
Well, no, I have to tell you if I want
your mechila.
So, what's going to happen?
You got to do that. You're not going to
get forgiveness without asking mechila.
And you don't have to get necessarily
mechila unless you say what it is. This
is what the Chofetz Chaim writes.
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter says,
or said,
he very strongly disagrees.
You don't ask mechila
if in the process of asking mechila,
you are going to cause more pain
and suffering.
You don't In fact, this is Rabbi Yisrael
Salanter's general philosophy
exemplified in the famous saying,
that you don't become a tzaddik on
somebody else's cheshbon.
"I want to be a tzaddik, so I'm going to
tell you all the things I I said about
you, so you can be mochel me."
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter said, "In such a
situation,
the Torah absolves you
of asking mechila. You do teshuvah. You
try to do your best. You engage in the
process and God will forgive you because
he does not expect you. He does not
desire that you ask mechila if that's
going to create pain and suffering." And
this comes up in a lot of consequences.
So, you have to think about this very
carefully. I mean, I'll give you one
example, which is not not about lashon
hara.
I mean, I I get questions like this
sometimes. Uh, let's assume that
people had a relationship.
They were dating.
A shidduch.
And they broke off in a very, very
painful
way, meaning one party
did something that was very, very
humiliating and embarrassing
to the other party.
But, baruch Hashem,
in many cases, not in all cases, life
goes on.
The person that was hurt got married.
Everything's good, etc.
So, the question I sometimes get, I
guess other rabbis get it as well, is,
"I really, really feel bad what I did,
let's say, to that young woman.
Should I make contact with her
and ask forgiveness, get forgiveness?"
So, this is a very, very difficult
question.
Uh, it might be
that your asking forgiveness might be
the greatest possible thing you can do.
She would be liberated. She would feel
free. She would have the weight off her
chest.
Or or
it might be
that she's forgotten about you. You
know, who
Don't think you're so great that you
you've been in her mind for so many
years.
And life goes on and life is good.
And you're reopening
a bad part of her life, her or him,
whoever it is.
So, I'm not giving you a psak on this,
but this would be an example where you'd
have to take into account
the idea,
is asking mechila going to make things
better
or is it going to make things worse? And
Rabbi Yisrael Salanter says you are
mechuyav to deal
with that perspective.
And even though I myself am not in a
position
to tell you do we pasken like Rabbi
Yisrael Salanter or the Chofetz Chaim,
but we have a mesorah
from Rabbi Aaron Kotler,
who actually says that in all inyanim of
mussar and middos, Rabbi Yisrael
Salanter is considered to be
the definitive authority even over the
Chofetz Chaim. So, that's something you
need you need to think about. Now, the
final point I want to mention is um and
I highly recommend uh, uh if you can get
books or tapes or even videos. There was
a uh therapist in Eretz Yisrael who was
nifter with a talmid chacham also,
uh Rav [ __ ] Hoffman,
uh zechuto livracha,
uh
who was very, very close to the gedolei
hador, to Rav Shach, and they trusted
him. He He was They trusted him. They
would send their
bnei Torah who had uh struggles
uh to him. A very, very sensitive
individual,
uh
very perceptive uh in many, many, many,
many areas.
And they now have vadim. They have uh
talks that he gave and and I don't know
if they have videos of him, but people
are giving shiurim on these talks and
the like.
And he tells a story about himself
that's a very, very interesting,
a very, very interesting story.
He was a talmid in the in the early
1950s.
He was a talmid in the Chevron Yeshiva,
which was already in Yerushalayim. They
moved during 1928 after the massacre.
And the rosh yeshiva of Chevron at the
time
was Rav Yechezkel Sarna,
one of the gedolei hador of the past
generation.
And Rav Yechezkel Sarna walked by uh
[ __ ] Hoffman, the bochur who was only
15 years old,
during Elul before Rosh Hashanah,
and said to him,
"Why are you so sad? You look unhappy.
You look overly serious."
Of course,
in a Litvish Yeshiva, I'm not sure why
that would be a question. Everybody
Everybody is
sad and depressed during Elul.
So, [ __ ] Hoffman said, "I am depressed
because I'm reading something in the
Rambam.
The Rambam says,
'What is the definition of teshuvah?'
Teshuvah is
your change is so sincere
that God can testify,
God who knows the future,
can testify
you will never go back to this sin
again.
Meaning, if you read the Rambam
literally,
if I do teshuvah on an aveirah, but I do
the aveirah again,
that actually means my teshuvah was not
really sincere.
So, not only am I stuck with the new
aveirah, I'm stuck with the old aveirah.
Rav [ __ ] Hoffman said, "Given the fact
that virtually every aveirah,
lashon hara or whatever it would be, we
do over and over and over and over and
over again,
that means
none of us
have ever done
teshuvah. Our teshuvah is worthless.
Of course I'm depressed."
Now, the truth is there are many ways of
interpreting the Rambam, which I'm not
going to go into.
But Rav [ __ ] Hoffman says says that
Rav Sarna gave him a different answer.
Rav Sarna says,
"Who says we pasken like the Rambam?
Okay. That's what the Rambam says. Who
says we follow the Rambam? Rabbeinu
Yonah in Shaarei Teshuvah
gives a different definition of
teshuvah.
And Rav Yisrael Salanter in his letters
seems to follow this.
It is a commitment
to a pathway.
It is a commitment
to a process.
Doing teshuvah in the Rambam sense, that
I'm permanently
free from that aveirah,
at best that may take years.
And it may very well be we'll never
really achieve it totally.
What God is looking for is not, "Oh,
yesterday I did this and today from now
on I'm never going to do that again."
Hashem is not expecting that.
But Hashem is expecting
you've committed yourself to a road,
the road of improvement,
the road of trying to be better.
And in that road,
there will sometimes be two steps
forward and one step back.
And there may sometimes be only one step
forward and two steps back.
And in that road, you stumble. And in
that road, you fall. And in that road,
you fail.
But you get up
and you don't leave the road. You stick
to the road.
And Rav Sarna says, "That is attainable
for us."
Kind of the instantaneous perfection,
okay, realistically, again, it's really
the point that you made, realistically,
we're not going to get there,
at least right away.
But to make a commitment
that this is the road I want to go on.
And you know, the old story, the old
T-shirt saying,
uh life is a journey, not a destination,
is very true for the pathway of
teshuvah.
I'm on a journey
and I want to go on this road.
Sometimes faster, sometimes slower.
Sometimes I stop, sometimes I even go
backwards, get lost a little bit.
But overall,
this is my direction.
That's why it's called derech teshuvah,
the pathway of teshuvah.
Think about it as a road.
There is a destination that's way, way,
way far off.
But you're committed to stay on that
road.
And that, he says, is much more
reassuring for a person because there
you can really have a sense
that I'm I'm going to try. I'm going to
try. I'm going to This is the road I
want to go.
And you know, I'm going to try to make
improvements.
That's what Hashem looks at.
Not so much where you are, but where
you're going.
Now, he gave a mashal. Rav Sarna gave a
mashal.
Back to the 1950s. Let's say you wanted
to take a cab, a monit,
from Yerushalayim to Bnei Brak.
So, you know, uh usually it's under an
hour.
Sometimes traffic, but under an hour.
So, let's assume you go into the cab
and you're traveling 1 hour, 2 hours, 3
hours, you know, it's getting long,
long, long, long, and it's dark already,
and you don't really know where you're
going,
but it doesn't seem to be Bnei Brak. And
all of a sudden, like you see signs for
Eilat or something,
you know, now, which means you're
obviously
going the wrong way.
And instead of being 1 hour from Bnei
Brak, you're now 4 or 5 hours
from Bnei Brak.
So, if you're smart, you're not going to
keep on going.
You'll get off, get out of the cab,
and try to find a cab going in your
direction.
Now, in truth, when you first take the
cab that's going in your direction,
you're still in a very bad place. You
had started off 1 hour from Bnei Brak,
and now you're 5 hours from Bnei Brak.
But once you've gotten on the right
road,
you've made a lot of progress.
You've made a lot of progress by simply
switching roads,
even though you're very, very far
from your destination. And he says,
"That's what teshuvah is.
Teshuvah is
get off the wrong road.
Get on the right road.
And it may take a very, very long time
to get where you need to get.
But you're on the road,
and that is what counts."
Uh
I believe I've heard, if I'm not
mistaken,
that
embarrassing somebody in public
is
worse
than
murder
because I mean you don't get olam haba
because
when you murder, it's judged
and and
you still
uh
get olam haba. But but if you would
embarrass a person, then they they would
not after and everybody heard it lives
with that after and all the feathers,
you know, can't be picked up again and
everything else. Can you just elaborate
on that if that's even Well, well, it is
very true. It is very true that our
chachamim say
that uh malbin pnei chaveiro berabim,
humiliating somebody publicly,
uh is murder and in some ways it's worse
than murder.
And uh you don't have a share in olam
haba. But but but, it is important to
know
that the Rambam says even on that,
if a person does teshuvah,
they are forgiven by Hashem and they
will have olam haba. Meaning, all of
those statements, you don't get olam
haba for this or for that or for that,
the Rambam writes that is only if you do
not do teshuvah.
If a person does teshuvah
uh
it sincerely, uh they will be forgiven.
So, one shouldn't despair.
Um
you know, again, it's it's hard to
imagine. You know, one of the thing,
again, going back to Rav [ __ ] Hoffman,
you know, one of the things he did in
his career was he was a uh psychologist
for prisoners. He would go to prisons.
And you know, some people in prison are
dangerous. I mean, they're not just
taxing you know, income tax evaders. Uh
they you know, they're murderers, you
know, they're you know, whatever.
And uh the rules the rules of every
prison are, if you're a therapist seeing
a dangerous patient,
the patient has to be restrained. He has
to be in handcuffs or chains
or whatever because you're alone with
him in a room and he could he could kill
you.
Rabbi Hoffman insisted
that every person he sees
be unchained. Sit there, like he says,
"I am trying to build this person up as
a human being.
I am trying to enable this person to see
that even he is in the image of God.
Because the only way he will ever become
a better person
is if he is convinced
that there's a godly spark within him.
So he told he told the prison guard he
says I will take the risk. I will you
know whatever risk there is I will take
it I will sign whatever paper you want
me to sign. I insist that the person be
unchained.
And the point is that it's hard for us
to believe this maybe and I know in
emotionally it's hard for me to believe
it.
But even if I'm not dealing with Hitlers
that's a separate category but even
people who God forbid murder
commit the worst crimes of course
there's Gehenna of course there's
accountability. I'm not saying there's
no accountability.
But on some spiritual level
there can still be forgiveness and you
need to or not you but the person needs
to make his life matter.
You can't say because of the awful thing
I did
the rest of my life
should just be worthless.
You salvage what you can salvage. And
therefore even by mouth and they have
error which is like murder you still do
chuva try to become better. Yeah.
Yes.
The question is Somebody hurts you or
your child and they don't think that
they hurt you.
And you know this according to letter of
the Rambam himself rather you go to them
and they deny they going to say no no no
[Music]
I didn't really do it you with your
fault whatever. How do you get rid of
this feeling
on Yom Kippur am I punished for our
shame because I can't forgive them?
So here's the thing. Um
>> What's the question? Yeah the question
is if somebody hurt you but they don't
think they did and they didn't even ask
your forgiveness
and you have anger and resentment
towards them
is Hashem going to hold that against you
because you did not forgive them? Yeah
so the short answer is if they do not
ask your mechila
and they do not even know they did
something wrong there is no obligation
on you
to forgive them.
And the result you will not be punished.
Nevertheless nevertheless
there is still an inyan
to be mochel even those who did not ask
mechila in the sense that this gives you
extra mercy in shamayim. So it's not a
sin
but it's a way of getting rachamim. Now
in the time the Gemara mentions
that if people are not aware that they
wronged me
it actually is appropriate for me
to tell them
to give them a chance
to ask mechila. But but I would say it
all depends on the scenario. Meaning
sometimes a person is genuinely unaware
and if they would be aware
they would want to make amends.
So in such a situation there's actually
a mitzvah for you
to tell them.
If on the other hand what's going to
happen is they will deny it they will be
angry they will be resentful so then
we're back to the thing that you know
why bring it up. Now I want to make an
obvious point that's is both a
religious point and a psychological
point generally.
The idea of forgiveness
is not only of benefit
to the person who did the bad thing.
Right I'm forgiving the guy that did a
bad thing so baruch Hashem that guy gets
a bracha.
Forgiveness is a great blessing
to the forgiver.
Because when we're filled with anger
we're filled with resentment
we're filled with hurt
we become immobilized we become like
there's a like a two two ton weight
on us.
We can't open ourselves up to the simcha
of life.
And it really destroys us it's a poison
that destroys us and uh
the psychological expression is you're
letting this person live in your brain
rent free
not even paying you rent.
So you have to think about forgiveness
not in the sense of
they're my best friend I love them I'm
going to hang around with them all the
time.
Yeah okay that maybe you're not expected
to do
but in the sense
of not letting the angers or resentments
consume you.
So you have to know you're not only
helping them you're really really really
helping
again I'm talking to myself still
helping ourselves as well
when we can let go
of resentments because ultimately
resentments don't take you anywhere.
Where do they take you? Where do you go
with them?
Right?
It just it just paralyzes you in your in
your in your life journey.
So we try to get try to get rid of it to
whatever possible. So in that sense
Yom Kippur is also once again a great
cleaner it cleans out the averas but it
can also clean out the resentments. And
that's why you know uh many people say
before Kol Nidre
they say tfilat zakah.
Some people say some people don't but in
tfilat zakah there actually is a
paragraph where you declare that you're
mochel everybody whether whether they
ask or not but of course Jews are very
practical and they make the point except
for money that is owing to me that I
could get in a basin.
Cuz we want to be sure that the guy that
owes you a thousand dollars is not going
to say oh you were mochel. That's so so
even on Yom Kippur we want to preserve
our monetary rights but we want to get
rid of the resentments. Okay wish you
all a gmar chatima tova and be well and
be well and be well.