Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Liver or Beef- Parshat Vaiera 2021 5782

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

December 31st 2021 -Volume 11 Issue 14 27th Tevet 5782

 

Parshat Va’eira

Liver or Beef?

 

So I’ve been feeling a bit tired lately. I’ve been hitting the sack pretty early, and just not feeling energized as I used to. I thought perhaps because I was suffering from Chulent deficiency syndrome that I can’t eat as many bowls as I used to. Perhaps it’s just depression from having lost all of my tourists for the end of this month. Maybe it’s because it was my birthday this week and I have completed the first year of my second half century of life and I think that means I’m getting old. It probably was all of the above, but the problem was that if that was the case there was really no one I could blame in my family for it, so what good was that? That made it even more depressing. Baruch Hashem though, that didn’t last for long.

 

It turns out that when I went for some blood work test- the first since my surgery, that despite the fact that I have been taking my daily multi-vitamins, it seems that I was short on iron. Iron, it turns out is important because it makes hemoglobin that carry oxygen to the entire body. When you’re low on Iron you’re low on energy and feel fatigued. Why was low on Iron if I was taking multi-vitamins, you ask? Because the new “healthier” “organic” “non-preservatives” vitamins my wife switched me to because she believes in all of that stuff didn’t have iron in them. Boom! Someone to blame. Isn’t Hashem good?

 

Now wanting to immediately remedy this situation I quickly asked what foods I can eat that are high in Iron. I want energy. I’m skinny now. I should feel lighter, healthier and more energetic, right? A quick google search told me that Broccoli and Spinach we’re really iron heavy. It’s amazing how much fake news there is out there… Give me something tachlisdik please. Well, the next on the list was legumes or what goyim call Baked Beans. Unzereh Yidden though know it by it’s Jewish name of course Chulent! Ha… And I’ve been saying this for years. Yet fascinatingly enough and much to my excitement the best food that’s hi in iron and that I’m currently noshing on feeling more energized is none other than that old Jewish classic chopped liver! Time to make a Pâté Party…

 

Now that I know what my medication should consist of- and I guess my wife has rubbed off on me a bit, I don’t want to take anymore unnatural vitamins for my health. I’ll just get that essential Iron that I need naturally from those finely slaughtered natural donors that Hashem created for us to eat on a cracker or melba toast. The next question though is what type of liver is better for you? Chicken or beef? Now personally I’m fine with both of them, but I was just curious. Well, it turns out that chicken has almost twice as much iron as beef liver, about 7.62 mg of iron in 3 oz serving as opposed to 4.15 in beef. Incidentally that would be double that in a 6 oz serving which is the minimal Jewish size serving. Google just gives you goyish size portions. It’s like those recommended serving size on the side of cereal boxes in that way. Goyish portions.

 

Now, you may be wondering what this topic has to do with our weekly Parsha? But then in general you wonder where I’m going with whatever topic, anecdote or musing I begin this weekly E-Mail with. It’s half the fun of reading it; and writing it, for that matter as well. Well would you believe that the entire secret message and idea behind our Exodus from Egypt, and more specifically the plagues inflicted upon Pharaoh and the Egyptians revolve around one question. Liver or Beef? Really. Let me show you.

 

One of the central and basic philosophical questions that revolve around the story is that it doesn’t really seem that Pharaoh has free-will. Hashem pretty much tells Moshe from the beginning that He will harden Pharaoh’s heart. He will not let us go. Hashem will pretty much not allow him to do so. There is a game-plan and an eternal revelation that needs to take place and Pharaoh’s role in it is that he will go down eternally as the symbol of the man that will not give in. He will bury his head deeper and deeper in the sand. He will always try to find a loophole why this is not from Hashem. Why he doesn’t have to give in. Why he can continue in his blind recalcitrance. But the truth is, if Hashem really pulls the plug on his ability to have free-will then why in fact is he culpable?

 

You know, today there is a tendency to really explain away every one’s bad or even criminal behavior with placing the blame on someone else. It was their society, their upbringing, their parents, their race. They were never really understood. If only they had a good therapist. If only they had gotten help sooner. If only, if only, if only… Whether that is a legitimate outlook or not is debatable. But certainly when the Torah tells us quite clearly that Hashem tells Moshe that He will harden Pharaoh’s heart from the get-go the question really begs itself. Then why is he to blame. He didn’t have a choice.

 

The answer my father-in-law Rabbi Yosef Sorotzkin writes in his monumental work Meged Yosef in his Ma’amarim (just scored some points with the shvigger!) is that it really comes down to understanding the difference between Beef and liver. Pharaoh it seems chose liver and that really was the essence of his downfall.

 

There is a fantastic Midrash that tells us that Reish Lakish teaches us that Hashem will warn a person a few times and if he does not repent, he locks their heart from repentance in order to punish them from their sin. The proof he brings to this idea is Pharaoh, whom Hashem warned for the first five plagues. When he didn’t listen, Hashem said to him

 

Shemos Rabba (13:3) You stiffened your neck and hardened your heart I will add Tuma on the Tuma you have made. As it says Ki Ani hichbadati es libo- I have hardened his heart. That Hashem has made his heart like a Kaved- liver that the more that you cook it the harder it becomes. So to Pharaoh’s heart was like liver that it didn’t accept the word of Hashem.

 

In case you didn’t get the Midrash’s double entendre the word kaveid which means heavy as in Pharaoh’s heart was heavy, also can be translated as liver. Yup Pharaoh had a liver heart. What is the difference between a liver heart or a beef heart? So, he explains, liver the more that you boil it or cook it the harder and harder it becomes. Beef on the other hand become softer and softer until it finally dissolves. It’s why we have beef soup but never liver soup. Hashem warns and urges all of us to follow his ways. He sends us personal messages. He sends us signs. He exposes us to the people and the ideas in life that are meant inspire us. We all have Moses’s sent to us in our lives that are there to give us direction and guide us on the proper paths. The path of redemption and goodness. The question is what do we do with all of those signs.

 

If we choose to have a beef heart, if we allow that little bit of cooking, and warmth and heat to start to transform us then it will naturally start to melt away all of those impurities. It will open us up more and more and dissolve all of the fat that prevents us from becoming better and stronger and holier. If on the other hand we don’t open ourselves up to that and harden ourselves, then we are choosing to have a liver heart. A heart that will just get harder and harder with each new sign, with each new Mussar schmooze. Our free will is to decide what type of heart we want. Do we want to dig in deeper and deeper? If so, then are hearts will only get harder and harder. That’s what liver hearts do. If on the other hand, we know that we are not perfect. We know that we have flaws and challenges. We know that we do things sometimes or maybe even most times that we shouldn’t be doing, but we are open to change. We are open to hearing. We want those signs and those Moshe’s to soften us up more and more, then ultimately that beef heart of ours will melt. It will cook. We will have an incredible stew at the end.

The Degel Machane Ephraim teaches us from the Baal Shem Tov that the story and miracles that Hashem preformed in Egypt upon which it says the purpose was to teach the Egyptians and Pharaoh this lesson of what happens when they don’t listen, isn’t really about Egypt and Pharaoh in as much as it is about the Pharaoh and Egyptian in each of us. We all have that piece of us that just wants to bury our heads in the sand. That doesn’t want to see the overwhelming damage we cause ourselves by ignoring the signs in front of us of the dangerous paths we sometimes are treading upon. There’s part of us that just wants to go back to sleep and hope that Moses is not there in the morning again. But Hashem is not letting up on that easy He is telling us in this story of Pharaoh. He will be keep sending us more and more messages. He’ll give us more signs and more wonders that He really is in control. That he won’t let us be enslaved anymore. That are hearts are made of beef, there is no iron deficiency that we will ever need to fill by turning towards liver.

 

The redemption is around the corner. I know this because we are living in a world that is full of liver hearts. The world is woke. It’s a world that doesn’t want to be confused with the facts or reality. ( I know that the anti-Vaxxers think I’m referring to the Vaxxers as much as the Vaxxers think I’m referring to the Antis- when in fact I’m not really referring to either, or maybe I’m referring to both). Everyone has their minds made up. Everyone thinks they know what’s right. Who’s wrong. What should be happening and what should be done. How we can and need to fix things. What the world should think. There’s no room for any cooking of any ideas. The hearts just get harder and harder. It’s Pharaoh all over again. And thus it’s time to be redeemed from all of this. But to make that happen we need to exercise just a bit more humility. We need to open our hearts and our ears to Hashem’s call to us. We need to tell that Pharaoh inside of us to finally let us go. Let us become. Let us be redeemed. Miracles await us, and the menu is in our hand. Order the beef, it may have less iron, but it will get us out of the Iron Curtain of Exile.

 

Have a liverating Shabbos  (excuse the pun) and a fruitful Chodesh Tov of Shevat

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

 

This week's Insights and Inspiration has been dedicated by my special readers of Ramat Beit Shemesh Alef, Yonatan and Michal Frankel in appreciation of the weekly Inspiration and Insights we receive each week from this wonderful Torah E-Mail

Thank You!

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RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“Gehakteh leber iz besser vi gehakteh tsores...” - Chopped liver is better than miserable troubles.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

9) A deciduous tree in the region of Gvaot Alonim is: _________

The cause for the falling of the leaves phenomenon is related to:         

a) Excess water

b) Lack of water

c) Seasons of the year and climate

d) Parasites     

 RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZE77h6ZveSU  - This was going around the groups this week… A Yiddish Sheva Brachos badchan… do you find this funny?

 

https://youtu.be/PU4JvCcUUFE  – It seems like every week I’ve got a new Nissim Black Video- he keeps banging them out. This one with the New York Boys Choir is an anti-bullying song. What a collaboration!

 

https://youtu.be/cGdankJdnPs - I’m loving this Joey Newcomb medley by the Amudim Time to Heal a thon this week

https://youtu.be/1idRnfnjADg    – Lipa in this strange video Gevaldig Shebegevaldig Ok..?

 

https://youtu.be/ZaErtI83fNU  – Anybody remember this Rechnitzer Rejects Classic “Cold Chopped Liver”

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/SHABBOS CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

 

The Beginning of Redemption-Parshat Va’eira- Perhaps the most exciting Parsha and certainly the most dramatized and known by everyone is the story of these Parshiyot of the Ten plagues and our Exodus from Mitzrayim. It’s a great story; the most important one in all of Judaism. Every holiday, every Shabbos and almost every mitzva connects in someway to this narrative. Hashem pulled out all His cards and put them on the table. It’s not something He does often if ever and thus it behooves us to really really pay attention, because its lessons are so central to our faith.

 

Yet we see that the great Rebbi Yehuda from our Pesach Haggadah knocks it all down to an acronym of three words. De’tza’ch A’da’sh B’a’ch av- That correspond to the ten plagues. The idea isn’t merely just putting into short easy catch phrase that makes it simple to remember, rather what Rebbi Yehuda is doing is categorizing the plagues for us into three different groups and our sages throughout the generations offer many ideas to explain the categories.

 

The first idea is that the first three were done by Aharon the 2nd three by Moshe, three by Hashem and the plague of boils was done by all three together. Others note how the first three are below the earth from the river and sand. The next three of animals, pestilence and boils were from and afflicted those on the earth while the last three were all from the sky and above. On a more mystical level the ten plagues correspond to the ten sefiros the top ones begin those of the mind the middle ones of the heart and the last ones those of the lower spheres and parts of the body.

 

But in a nutshell, they are all about faith and how deep that faith is meant to penetrate our lives. It’s not just something we understand intellectually or even emotionally with our hearts. It’s meant to get into the Kishkas of a person. Deep in our bones we have to understand that Hashem is controlling everything in the world and there really is nothing else besides Him. It’s something we need to internalize in our hearts and our minds as well.

 

Shabbos is the prelude to the redemption because it provides us with all of that and more- the more being chulent of course. It is the most dramatic break from the weekday. All  of what happens in the world that we work in, that we slave in, that we are perhaps even a bit enslaved by-certainly the technology in our era, they all disappear. We’re free. We’re free to realize that the lower physical demanding world is not in control of us. We’re able to elevate our souls and our spirits to the highest of height. We sing, we rejoice and throughout it all we recall the Exodus from Egypt. Shabbos touches us on all levels, just as the plagues struck down the Egyptians on all levels. We became free and each Shabbos again and again we experience the glory of that expression.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S ERA’S AND THEIR PLACES AND PEOPLE IN ISRAEL OF THE WEEK

 

The building of the Temple II- 827 BC-  The moment the entire world since it’s creation had been waiting for had finally arrived. The Temple had been completed being built afte 7 years and Shlomo in the month of Cheshvan and Shlomo waited another 11 months until the following Tishrei to dedicate the building. The entire Jewish nation arrived in Jerusalem. This was it. It was finally happening. The Ark of the covenant is brought up from the City of David down below the Temple Mount by the Kohanim and Levi’im. Everyone had their sacrifices ready to go. I like to stand at the Southern Wall of the Temple Mount near the Davidson center and ask my tourists to picture the scene. It’s awesome.

 

When Shlomo arrives and goes to open up those gates, lo and behold they refuse to open. Can you imagine the scene and the panic. Shlomo begins reciting Psalms. That famous Psalm that we recite each time during the week when we return the Sefer Torah to the Ark. Se’u Shearim Rasheichem- open up your gates and let the King of glory enter. Finally when Shlomo invokes the merit of his Father Dovid the gates open easily. This was to let the Jewish people know that David had been forgiven for his sin and that this house would always be connected and named with him; The house of Dovid. The clouds of glory descend into the holy of Holies. The flowers and trees all over begin to sprout. The world has achieved it’s purpose in building a dwelling place for Hashem down here.

 

Shlomo then turns to the people and gives one of the most powerful speeches in Tanach. He declares that this is the house where all prayers would forever go through. Prayers of thanks, in times of need, it would be the place to come to for national crisis and for personal challenges. It would be the place where Jews will eternally be able to connect with their Creator. In person. Yet, it is not only Jews that Shlomo says this house is for but it will be a house of prayer for all the nations of the world as well. They will come, they will understand and get blessing through the God of Israel. He is their Father and Creator as well and here is where they can bask in His light.

 

As well he notes that this is the place where sinners can fine atonement, where judgement can be carried out, from where we will pray and find salvation for the battles and from the enemies that will seek to destroy us. He blessed the Jewish people that they follow Hashem’s mitzvos and be worthy of having this building in our midst. He concludes his drasha with the prayer that we recite after we conclude our Hoshanas on Sukkos and May it be Your will that the words that I have prayed before Hashem our God day and night to fulfill the needs of his people Israel the proper thing for each day on that day.

 

L’maan Daas Kol Amei Ha’aretz Ki Hashem hu ha’elokim ein od- In order that all the peoples of the world will know that Hashem is the God and there is none other besides Him.

After the speech the offerings begin, and we will cover next week the exciting ands startling aftermath of this Temple inauguration

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE THERAPY JOKES OF THE WEEK

A British doctor says: "In Britain, medicine is so advanced that we cut off a man's liver, put it in another man, and in 6 weeks, he was looking for a job."

The German doctor replies: "That's nothing. In Germany, we took part of a brain, put it in another man, and in 4 weeks he was looking for a job."
The Russian doctor replies: "Well, we took half a heart from a man, put it in another's chest, and in 2 weeks he was looking for a job."
The American doctor laughs: "You are all behind us. A few years ago, we took a man with no brain, no heart, and no liver, and made him President. Now, the whole country is looking for a job!"

 Vodka with ice damages kidneys, rum with ice damages liver, gin with ice damages heart and whisky with ice damages brain. Why is Ice so dangerous?

 A John a white goy, Tyrone his black friend , and Yankel were applying for the same job......

The boss looks over their resumes, sees they are all equally qualified, and can't decide who to hire. He decides to give them a test.

Boss: Fellas, I can't decide who gets the job, you are all equal in every way. So here's a question, whoever gives me the best answer gets the job. Give me your best sentence using thewords liver and cheese.

John said : ...... Well, golly. I like liver but I dont like cheese.
Boss:... ok, not bad.
Tyrone said  .... aight, I like cheese, but I dont like liver.
Boss:... well, ok, thats not bad.
Yankel got the job when he said : Liver alone, cheese mine.

 Why do your heart, liver and lungs all fit in your body? Because they are well organ-ized

 My brother once promised to donate me his liver. Turned out he was only kidneying me.

 What do you call it when a yellow jacket has inflammation of the liver? Hepatitis Bee

 Where did the heart, liver, and kidney go on a road trip for vacation? Oregon

 I wanted to order food from a fancy restaurant. I didn't want to leave the house, though, so I had them bring the food to me. I ordered a medium rare steak and foie gras, but when the food arrived my foie gras was missing! Furious, I drove over to the restaurant and demanded they give me my full order. They did, and before I left I asked them why they did not provide me what I asked for.

The chef said, "Well sir, you said you wanted your meal de-livered."

 What do you call a person who delivers chopped liver in his car? A livery driver.

Harry was walking down Regent Street and stepped into a posh gourmet food shop. 
An impressive salesperson in a smart morning coat with tails approached him and politely asked, "Can I help you, Sir?" 
"Yes,"
replied Harry, "I would like to buy a pound of lox." 
"No. No,"
responded the dignified salesperson, "You mean smoked salmon." 
"OK, a pound of smoked salmon, then." 
"Anything else?" 
"Yes, a dozen blintzes." 
"No. No. You mean crepes." 
"Okay, a dozen crepes." 
"Anything else?" 
"Yes. A pound of chopped liver." 
"No. No. You mean pate." 
"Okay,"
said Harry, "A pound of pate then and I'd like you to deliver all of this to my house on Saturday." 
"Look,"
retorted the indignant salesperson, "we don't schlep on Shabbos!"

 Medical experts from London have published a paper that concludes that Seder participants should not eat both chopped liver and choroses. Their research shows that if they do, it can lead to Charoses of the Liver

  An old Jewish man was dying in the hospital. His family - wife, children, grandchildren - came to see him, but only one was allowed in the room at a time. Grandson Ben went in first. "Hello, Grampa Moishe. Can I do something for you?"

"Yes," said Grampa Moishe. Go tell Gramma Sadie I want some of her delicious chopped liver that she made yesterday.

Ben went out and told Gramma Sadie, who said, "Go tell Grampa Moishe he can't have any chopped liver. It would kill him."

Ben went back in and reported what she'd said. "You tell Gramma Sadie I want the chopped liver. I'm dying anyway and it won't make any difference."

Ben went and told Gramma Sadie, who said, "Go tell Grampa Moishe he can't have any. The chopped liver is for the Shiva."

 My doctor said I should stop thinking so much, it's bad for my health and could damage my liver He also say's I'm half deaf

 When I promise to come up with an organ transplant pun...I de-liver.

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Answer is C – So I’m not sure what if I would’ve gotten this right or not. I wasn’t really sure where Givat Alonim was although I was pretty sure it was in the lower Galile area. So for the full in the blank section I just wrote Oak tree which is an alon. It is technichally correct, but I imagine they were looking for the specific type of Oak tree, because after all Givat Alonim already tells you that it’s an Oak. So I imagine the answer they wanted was the Alon Tavor which is the Oak Tree in the area that grows in this largest forest of Israel near there. So I’ll take off a half a point for that. Now I wasn’t really sure what deciduous means. It’s one of those words I know in Hebrew but not in English. So I definitely would’ve skipped this one. I guessed lack of water. But the real answer is climateI believe, as a deciduous tree is one that loses it’s leaves. In Hebrew they are called Noshrim- which I would’ve in fact known what they were. Trees leave their leaves by the seasons to conserve nutrients in the seasons when it is more cold and there is less sun.  So this one was wrong. Botany was never my strong subject and the score is now Schwartz 6.5 and 2.5 for MOT (Ministry of Tourism) on this exam. .

Friday, December 24, 2021

Self- Conscious- Parshat Shemot 2021 /5782

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

December 24th 2021 -Volume 11 Issue 13 20th Tevet 5782

 

Parshat Shemos

Self-Conscious

 

We’re gonna get deep this week, I’m warning you in advance. That’s what happens when I come back from an appointment with my new therapist. We dig deep. We get to the core. I’m actually kind of enjoying it a bit. Truth is, I was never much a therapist type of person- unlike some people who I am married to, who shall remain nameless. I’ve always been very healthy and well adjusted without any real issues in life. The people that told me that I wasn’t, such as above spouses and probably children as well, certainly had issues of their own that they needed to work out in order to deal with and appreciate “perfect” me. I was even fine with me paying for those sessions for them. Who I was I to withhold help for those most important to me in life to become as healthy and well-adjusted as I was?

 

Yet, now it seems I have started to go as well. See, one of the prerequisites for them approving me to have my stomach bypass surgery was that I see a therapist prior to the surgery who would approve me. At first, they said all I had to do was to meet with a dietician to prepare for the surgery and what my new eating habits- or lack thereof would be. But after three months of our zoom sessions with her and me putting on about 20 pounds in the time frame when I was supposed to being losing weight to prepare for the surgery, they escalated me to requiring mental evaluation to be able to be approved. In all fairness to me, though I didn’t really think they were serious that I would have to lose weight to be eligible to be approved for a surgery that would pretty much prevent me from eating to much for the rest of my life. So, with no choice I went off to meet Netta my new personal psychological guru.

 

She started off wanting to understand my core issues at why I eat so much. Seemingly the answer I like food, was insufficient for her. The subsequent corollary that I liked food “ALOT” didn’t really clarify it for her either. She wanted me to tell her my life story and understand me. I asked her how much time she had on her hands. Generally, it takes my tourists a good two-hour drive from Jerusalem to Tzfat to get about half of my life story. But she was patient and wanted it all. So I stuck in the tape and hit the play button on my nose that I usually press when I’m telling my story to my tourists and a few hours later she sat in front of me with her eyes glazing over. A response I’m generally used to, although she was the first one to really take notes the whole time. Something incidentally that I thing would be helpful to many people.

 

She then told me that she figured me out. Not bad, I thought. I sat back and waited to hear her new deep insight into me. Her diagnosis, quite brilliantly, to my surprise went something like this.

 

From what I see, you want the entire world to be part of you. You want to teach everyone. You want to tour everyone. You want to speak to everyone and know them. You want to be mekarev everyone and inspire them. You pretty much want them all to be part of you. In other words you want to eat them all. You in fact want to eat and taste everything and you pretty much want everything in the world to be part of you.”

 

To put it in Breslav terms. It’s kind of like Ein Od Milvadi- everyone is part of Me. Cute. Insightful. I really couldn’t disagree much. She thus explained that’s why I can’t leave food on the table, just like I can’t leave one Jew behind. It’s all gotta be part of me. And there you have it. Insight number one. I don’t think that really changed anything though, but she approved me for my surgery and I was good to go.

 

Now part of my post-surgery regimen and maintenance is that I continue to see Netta. I actually spoke to quite a few friends that did the surgery and the ones that successfully were able to keep it off told me that it’s because these sessions and discussions revolving around them help. I’m game and have lots of free time on my hand thanks to the wonderful new gezeiros here in the Holy Land that seem determined to starve all tour guides to death anyways. So I go. I go to her and I go to the gym a lot also for the first time in my life. Which I hate. Which I told her I don’t know how anybody likes it. Why would someone subject themselves to picking up heavy weights and shlepping and walking on a silly machine for 10’s of minutes -that’s all I’m up to- again and again and again. It’s annoying. It’s strenuous. It’s exhausting. I do it because I want my flab to turn to muscle, now that I don’t have any chulent to fill that old skin up anymore. But I hate it. And yet I see people there that really seem to be enjoying the whole thing and I just don’t get it.

 

Well, Netta once again gave me a fascinating insight that shed light not only into my relationship with myself, my body, but fascinatingly enough into this week’s Parsha. Because after-all in case you forgot this is a Torah E-Mail, right? What she said was that pretty much in our frum world and in my yeshiva upbringing, much focus, if not all my focus has been on the development of my mind. Reading, learning, studying, writing and even teaching and speaking are all really just gyms and workouts for my brains and hopefully for my soul; my neshoma and my connection with Hashem. I liked all of that. I thrived in those intellectual health clubs because I was developing myself. Who was I? My brain. My heart. My Neshoma. My spiritual essence and core. What I didn’t really care much about though was my body. In fact, I kind of disdained that fat, fleshy, mortal side of me that really just slowed me down. I didn’t want to deal with it and frankly didn’t lend much importance on every really taking care and certainly not developing it. It wasn’t really me anyways.

 

Those people that like gyms. Those people that love jogging every morning. Those people that are pumping, lifting, sweating and smiling fulfilled next to me on the elliptical while I keep watching that very slow second-hand count numbers thinking about the shvitz and jacuzzi at the end, are enjoying so much what they are doing in the same way they I get fulfillment out of learning a page of gemara or preparing a good sermon or writing a good E-Mail. Because they identify themselves with their body in the same way that I identify myself with my mind and soul. They are making it stronger and healthier and themselves in the process. And the truth is they’re right. Because as much as I could never see or say it before- probably because I avoided mirrors a lot-we are body and soul. We’re not just a mind and a neshoma.

 

The reason why I could even start going to a gym is because for the first time I was becoming capable of really being able to accept and even embrace that part of who I am, as weird and strange as that feels. And the truth is that really is essence of becoming the most of who we are meant to become. It’s why we were put down here on this world, it’s why we were sent down to that really terrible health club called Egypt and it’s what eventually brought us out and made us into the nation that was ready to become the nation of Hashem.

 

The word galus in Hebrew which is translated as exile really comes from the root word as gilui- to reveal. When Hashem sends us into exile it’s not just a punishment because we had misbehaved and are therefore docked from all the important and fun activities of living in Eretz Yisrael. Rather we are in galus because we are missing something very essential about ourselves that we are meant to reveal. When we finally uncover that then we will be nig’al- we can be redeemed. We have reacquired and taken repossession of our essence.

 

Our sages tell us that the Jewish people were redeemed from Egypt because of the merit that we did not change three things; our names, our language and our clothing. I never really understood that Midrash, more recently the clothes thing by the way. I mean weren’t their pants falling down all the time after working out in the pyramid sweathouses for 200 or so years? Mine are, after just 75 pounds down and two months or so in a gym. But jokes aside, my question always was that if they had their Jewish names, clothes and language before hand as well and Hashem liked that about us so then what was the point of sending us down there in the first place?

 

The answer though is pretty much the same idea that Netta revealed to me. They may have had Jewish names, clothing and language before but they never really identified it as part of who they really were. Why do people change their name, language and clothing when they come off the boat to a new country? Why did Yankel become Jake when he landed at Ellis Island, why did Moshe become Manuel when he came to Spain? Why did Dovid become Dudu when he landed Ben Gurion? (Interesting aside my Uncle Gedalia just pointed out to me that the Yiddish name Yenta was a Jewish changed name of Juanita from Jews that had come from Spain). The answer is because we never really saw our name as identifying who I really am. The same is true with our clothes and the same is true with our language. We lose them and we assimilate because we don’t really feel they identify our essence. But the truth is that they really do. In fact they hit the core of who we really are.

 

I was privileged to be given the honor this week of reciting the blessings and giving the name to a newborn baby by his bris of the child of one of our congregants. He’s a bit of a Breslaver, the baby was named Noson, as he was born on the yartzeit of Rebbi Noson the student of Rebbi Nachman and as I spoke I shared with them an insight by Rebbi Noson on the concept of a Bris. He writes that a Bris is referred to by our sages as a mitzva that symbolizes sasson- rejoicing. It is joy because it reveals to us the essence of who and what we are. In the blessing I recited by the Bris we refer to it with three titles. Os Bris Kodesh- Os- a sign, Bris- a covenant and Kodesh- holy. What are these three things?

 

An Os means that we bear a sign upon our body that we are special. That Hashem has marked me. That He is close to me and He has given me a unique and specific purpose. To a large degree it is like our Hebrew name. It identifies me as special and unique from everyone else with my own personal special title. The word bris, on the other hand, is a covenant which is something that separates us from everyone else. From all the other nations. We as a nation have something that we share with one another that differentiates and is meant to remind us that we have a unique national connection with one another that is different than the rest of the world. That my friends, is of course symbolized back in Egypt as our language. The common holy bond that only Jews and all Jews share and that unites us.

 

Finally, we have Kodesh- holiness. We are meant to look at our lives and realize that we have a higher purpose with our bodies. We are meant to restrain our physical desires and our bodily lusts and passions. We need to elevate them to holiness and to direct them to our higher purpose. That’s the message of our circumcision. That’s what the simplicity and the modesty of what Jewish clothing are meant to reflect. It’s not about showing off the body, showing of my clothes. It’s not about what some pathetic and immoral fashion designer in Paris, in Italy or on the streets of the Bronx decides this morning is “in” or “cool” or not. It’s about understanding that clothing makes the man and what I wear defines who I am and that there is no way in the world that would I let some fashion maven or Hollywood star that I wouldn’t allow to be alone with my child for five minutes in a room with determine what I should be wearing or who I should be in my clothes today.

 

We needed to go down to Egypt, because while we were living in our father Yaakov’s house in Israel in our own little ghetto, we took for granted what our core essence was. Who we really were. The truth is we were just a family at that point. When we left Egypt 210 years later, we had spent two centuries working out in what my gym slang they call working on our “core”. We understood what our roots were. We knew we each had a name that had defined our unique God-given purpose that only we could reveal. We knew we had a shared national mandate that our Lashon Hakodesh- our holy language and the way that we only we were meant to relate to one another and join together with would transform the world with. And finally we all had our special Jewish gym suits. We knew that the clothing that the world would see us in must be different than theirs. They need to see holiness coming from us. They need to see humility and modesty. They need to see a nation that restrains itself. That doesn’t wear things that say “check me out” or “I’m all dat”, rather they direct those that gaze upon us to look upwards and say

 

Mi goy gadol- who is this great nation

Asher lo Elokim krovim elav k’Hashem elokeinu bakol koreinu eilav”- that Hashem is close to them whenever they call to Him.

We had achieved our Os Bris Kodesh and now we could really fully rejoice and be happy with who we are completely. Because for the first time we were really shaleim.

 

The prelude to our redemption at the end of the parsha is Moshe’s son getting his Os Bris Kodesh on his way down to Egypt. Gershom, that son born in Midian, didn’t undergo the galus, the exile of the rest of the Jewish nation. Yet he also needs to be redeemed. He also needs a revelation that will give him the core identity that will guide him throughout his life. And the Torah shares that final story before the beginning of the redemption in next week’s Torah portion to tell us that we each need that as well.

 

We’ve suffered through 2000 years in this gym called Exile. Sadly, too many of our brothers and sisters have given up their membership. Yet at the same time we have seen so many of them in that gym coming back again for that workout after perhaps generations of sitting on the couch. After generations of never really looking in that spiritual Jewish mirror because they’re really not happy with who they might see there. But it’s not only them. We’re all in Exile because there is some part of us as well, perhaps as individuals, perhaps as a nation, that we haven’t accepted and identified and worked out yet. We still have some core exercises to do. If we had finished already, then the heavens wouldn’t be closed still. We’d be home. We’d be healed. We’d be fit. We’d be redeemed. Our workout is almost over though. I feel the holy waters of Hashem’s Jacuzzi calling to me. Are you ready to jump in together with me?

 

Have an exhilarating Shabbos

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

 

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RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“In shpigel zet itlecher zein besten freind..” - In the mirror everybody sees his best friend.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

8)The most distinct historian of the Great Revolt against the Romans is: ___________

 His acquaintance with the preparations for the revolt stemmed from his being:

a) One of the leaders of the Zealots in Jerusalem

b) One of the commanders of the revolt in the North

c) Commander of the revolt in the region of Qumran and the northern Dead Sea

d) The commander of the revolt in Jerusalem  

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evLYJFCmHXo  - My song of the week… Avraham Rosenblum Hafachta Mispedi from the classic Diaspora at their HASC reunion

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bw3JHVExpbk     – Check out my brother from another mother Nissim Black’s latest video Adored!

 

https://youtu.be/Nme1I3H16aI   – Shulem Lemmer and brother Yanky singing the classic Abie Rottenberg Man from Vilna

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRkpblJzAb8 – Parshat Shemos needs Ha’sneh bo’eir of Aharon Razel of course…

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/SHABBOS CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

 

The Beginning of Redemption-Parshat Shemos- Every Shabbos in our morning prayer we begin the Shabbos part of the Amida with the words Yismach Moshe B’Matnas Chelko- That Moshe should rejoice with the gift he was given of his portion. That portion is the day of Shabbos that Moshe conceived was going to be the secret of the redemption of the Jewish people from Egypt. It is as well the secret of our redemption today.

 

When Moshe first got the job of overseeing the Jewish people by Pharaoh before he had to flee for his life, his first act was to advise Pharaoh to give the Jews a day off in order for them to be more productive. Now Moshe’s intent was of course to give us this extra merit of being able to observe the Shabbos, but Pharaoh bought the pitch hook, line and sinker and thus even in Egypt the Jews were able to observe the Shabbos.

 

Why is Shabbos so essential to our redemption, more so than other mitzvos? The Divrei Shmuel explains it is because the essence of Shabbos is being able to remove one’s self from the balagan of the entire week and focus once again on the source of all that we have and whom we truly are. Our galus in Egypt and Pharaoh’s diabolical plot was all about distracting us from that. It was about giving us too much work where we didn’t have time think. To renew. To get back to our roots. The observance of Shabbos in of itself is already a partial redemption because we are in fact leaving that weekday galus life and entering the spiritual world of Hashem. That’s what redemption really is about.

 

When Moshe argued with Hashem about whether he was the right one to take the Jews out of Egypt or not, Hashem tells Moshe that if he will not redeem them than no one else can. With this understanding we can explain that idea. For Moshe revealed to us the power we have each Shabbos to leave Galus. Without that idea, sadly we will forever be enslaved. For a yid has to appreciate that we can be saved. We can leave. Our lives can and should be different. Shabbos is that special gift of Moshe that allows us to do that.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S ERA’S AND THEIR PLACES AND PEOPLE IN ISRAEL OF THE WEEK

 

The building of the Temple II- 833 BC-  Having taken care of the wood from Lebanon the next big piece of building material was obviously the stones which served as the foundations and the walls of the Temple upon where the cedar and cypress beams rested. There seems to be a bit of mystery as to where the stones came from. Although the Navi does mention the workers Of Shlomo and Chiram the Gibalites that cut the rocks, seemingly they didn’t shlep them from Lebanon to Israel. There are no shortage of mountains here. But where?

 

In the late 1800’s the archeologist Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau discovered an inscription that resembled some winged creature which he estimated came from the time of Shlomo in Me’arat Tzidkiyahu. The cave is located right outside Sha’ar Shechem and was definitely used as a quarry for the 2nd Temple and the period of Herod. It’s location is right as it is the largest cave of its kind about 9000 meters deep under the Muslim quarter. It actually ends not far from the Temple mount. There are of course others that disagree and say this was only a 2nd Temple quarry and rather suggest that perhaps it came from the Ramat Shlomo area. Maybe? That’s not why it’s called that by the way. The neighborhood right outside of Ramot is named after Reb Shlomo Zalman Auerbach.

 

Now the main challenge of the stone cutting besides the transport, which I will never figure out. Is the cutting of the stone. The Navi tells us that no sounds or metal was heard of construction on the Temple and thus the Talmud tells us of the mysterious Shamir worm that was used to cut the stones. This was some type of mystical creature that Hashem created in the beginning of Creation that Shlomo was able to get his hands on by capturing the demon king Ashmodai. Now halachically one could use metal to cut the rocks of the Temple, only the altar was prohibited from being cut with metal, but Shlomo wanted to go above and beyond for his Temple. In fact, the Midrash tells us that those stones were actually taken by angels before the Babylonians came and removed and replaced with the stones and they will be restored by the third Temple. This would seem to be that Jews did the cutting. As only Jewish labor could be eternal. If this was the case then the work of the non-Jews would be the carving out of the rocks afterwards and primarily the transport.

 

Hashem tells Shlomo that this building will stand not because of the great construction but rather because of what we do in the Temple. It’s about observing the commandments, both those between Hashem and Man and between our fellow men. Only then will Hashem reside among the Jewish people. Only then will it be His eternal home. Those words still hold true today. It’s something to think about every time we stand by the Kotel and stare at that “Golden Pimple” that still defiles, the mountain of Hashem.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE THERAPY JOKES OF THE WEEK

Gravity is such a disappointment. It always lets me down.

I planned to go to a class on how to deal with disappointments. But it was cancelled.

I’m broke, sad and a disappointment to my parents. But at least I’m not in debt. That’s the one thing I’m given credit for

Me: I’m terrified of random letters!

Therapist: U R?

Me: Aaarrgghhh…

Therapist: I C….

 

On the way to the therapist, I said to my wife, “You’re going to bring up my obsession with predicting the future, aren’t you?”

She said, “Yeah.”

I said, “I knew it!”

 

The therapist said I can get over my fear of buffets…

But first, I’ve got to want to help myself .

 

A man is talking with his therapist.

The therapist says, “It seems you have a severe phobia of marriage. Do you understand the symptoms?”

The man replies, “Can’t say I do.”

The therapist says, “Yeah, that’s the main one.”

Why did the Latino man go to the therapist? To talk about Hispanic attacks.

Patient: I’m afraid of the vertical axis.

Therapist: Why?

Patient: Yes!

 

The therapist said to me, “Your wife has complained that you never buy her flowers, what do you say to that?”

I said, “To be honest, I had no idea my wife even sold flowers.”

 

My therapist refused to help me with my fear of backing up my car. She said she would under no circumstances perform reverse psychology.

 

Studies show regular patients of chiropractors are less likely to need to see therapists due to being so well adjusted.

 

What did the therapist say to the depressed dog? Life is ruff.

 

My girlfriend was born without her little toe and the sight of her foot makes me physically ill. My therapist said I’m lack toes intolerant.

 

My dad is a Star Wars fan and my parents are in couples therapy over it.

Therapist: So why do you want to end your marriage?

Mom: I’m sick of all of the Star Wars puns.

Dad: Divorce is strong with this one.

 

My new therapist is British; the first thing he asked me was…

UK?

 

 "Doctor," said the receptionist over the phone, "there's a patient here who thinks he's invisible." "Well, tell him I can't see him right now."

THERAPIST: What's the problem with your marriage? WIFE: He replaces words with animal names just to annoy me.

ME: I don't do it on porpoise

Why should you never try to start an argument with your child on picture day? They are not in the right frame of mind.

My therapist recommended that I write in a diary to help my low self-esteem.

Dear Diary, Sorry to bother you again.

 

Therapist: So what brings the two of you here today?

My wife: It's impossible to live with him. He's too literal.
Me: My car

 

Blind Man: "Please help me, everyone keeps making nasty jokes about how my disability means I'm somehow inferior to them. I'm constantly hearing thoughtless, heartless reminders about how I'm different from other people, and lacking a sense they have."

World's Worst Therapist: "I see."

 

 

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Answer is B – This one was pretty easy. I mean everyone know Josephus right? ; Or Yosef ben Matisyahu as he is known in Israel. Josephus was one of the commanders in the North of Israel where the revolt against Rome in 67 CE began. After Vespasian came down with his son Titus to put down the Jewish revolution, Josephus according to his own testimony after having his whole brigade commit suicide at Yodefat was the only survivor and he joined up with the Romans in order to give a historical account of the Jews. We never know what to trust from Josephus or not, as he is writing HISstory- an account that is meant to be favorable to the Jews but politically correct enough for the Romans, but it is his writings that serve as the basic source to begin any exploration of the period. So another one right and the score is now Schwartz 6.5 and 1.5 for MOT (Ministry of Tourism) on this exam. .

 

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