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Thursday, April 29, 2021

Eternal Blessings- Parshat Emor/ Lag Ba'Omer 2021

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

 "Your friend in Karmiel"

April 30th 2021 -Volume 11 Issue 29 18th Iyar 5781

 

Parshat Emor/ Lag Ba'Omer

Eternal Blessings

There was nothing in his Rabbinic training that could prepare him for this. He had learned in the great yeshivos of Ponivizh, Kelm, and Slobodka where he later received his semicha. But in 1941 when the Nazis invaded Lithuania the 27-year-old Reb Ephraim Oshry found himself in the  Kovna Ghetto with his wife and children who were murdered shortly afterwards. He served as the assistant Rabbi and ultimately become the address that people came to with their questions and for guidance in the most incomprehensible of times. The Ghetto conditions were terrible and the Jewish population that began with a population of 30,000 within 3 years had been reduced to a little over 6,000 Jews. Over 10,000 were murdered in the "Great Aktzia" in 1941 in one day when the 9th fort was annihilated. In the Aktzia of 1944 as well 2,500 of children under the age of 12 or elderly over the age of 55 were hunted down and killed. Reb Ephraim ultimately survived the war, remarried and rebuilt out of the ashes; starting schools and communities to help the children of survivors in their new countries. Yet the memories and horrors he witnessed remained with him forever and the halachic questions he had to answer that he recorded during the war remain a testimony to the eternal connection our nation has with our Creator and His Torah.

Now probably the mitzva that I and most Jews fulfill the most often every day is the mitzva to make brachos. We are meant to make 100 a day, and for those that daven three times a day this is not too difficult a task. Certainly if you eat a few good meals a day on top of that you should be covered.  Yet in Corona this has become a bit more challenging for me, as I pretty much make a blessing in the morning for breakfast and not having anywhere to really go just sit on my couch and continue throughout the day. But somehow I think I'm still managing it. Maybe the asher yatzar's make up for it. (Did I really just write that?!)  The problem though with my bracha making practice though, is that I'm really not thinking much about Hashem when I eat. I think about the delicious food, nosh, or plate, or beer in my hand that I'm about to digest. I mumble my blessings. They're kind of like those hinneni muchan u'mezuman, or l'sheim yichud prayers that one says before preforming a mitzva, which truthfully I probably have more kavana for than the shehakol before I eat my ice cream sundae.

Now if at this point you're wondering what the connection between the past two paragraphs of this E-Mail are, I'll tell you. I was sitting this morning in Shul and picked up a sefer called the Holocaust and Halacha. It seemed like interesting reading while I waited for the Chazan to start the repetition of Shemona Esrei, and I didn't put it down. I guess I have a few more brachos to make up for. For as I read about the Brachos questions that were posed to Reb Oshry  My eyes began to tear and my heart felt like it was breaking. How could I just spit out brachos from my mouth anymore? Look at your holy nation Hashem. Listen to the questions they had about how to properly praise you.

The first question I read was a story he shared was about an incident that took place during morning prayer services in the Ghetto. It seems that there were a group of men that were forced to go to the Labor camps of Kaunus each day. There, they were made to do backbreaking work under the worst of conditions. It was Egypt all over again. Except this time the orders came in German rather than Egyptian and the whip was replaced with a pistol and a bullet in the head for those that floundered. Yet, each day before going off to work these man would gather and daven the morning prayers. On this particular morning, Reb Avraham Yosef, the chazzan got up to lead the morning services and when he reached the blessing we say each morning thanking Hashem Shelo asani eved- for not making me a slave. He stopped and refused to go on.

"How can I recite this lie when we bear the yoke of slavery on our backs? How can a slave thank God when he is enchained and sated with a diet of gall and wormwood? Don't we have to mean what we say when we pray? I cannot recite this bracha. I don't believe it."

There were murmurs in the Shul. Others joined in the fray. Rav Oshry was approached with the question that he was never prepared for. Can and should one still bless Hashem for not making us a slave, while we are beaten, tortured and forced to work worse than any slave had ever been treated?

After much research with the limited library but vast knowledge that he had of Jewish texts and traditions, Reb Ephraim gave light to the questioners by showing them that this particular blessing as well as the other ones we make at that time in the morning of shelo asani goy or isha-not having made us a gentile or a woman, are not blessings about our genetic, gender or racial makeup. It's about our ability to perform mitzvos. In his words

"on the contrary especially at this time, more than any, are we obligated to recite this blessing; in order that our oppressors recognize that in spite of the fact that we are in their power to do with us what their evil will dictates, we will not see ourselves as slaves, but as free men temporarily in captivity whose redemption will soon be revealed."

The next question that was posed was after that horrific 'Great Aktion' of 1941 when the largest amount of Lithuanian Jews were murdered in one day. On the 8th of Cheshvan of that year the Jews were herded into the ghetto square where 2000 men and 3,000 women and 4,200 children were selected and marched out of camp. They were then forced to dig mass graves and were machine gunned down by the Einsatzkommando Unit. The ones that did not die from the bullets were all then buried alive with the very earth that they themselves dug.

The Jews that had managed to survive and hide from the selektzia had a bracha question as well for the Rav. The halacha states is that when a Jew is saved from a life threatening danger he is obligated to "bentch gomel". To recite a blessing of thanksgiving to Hashem for the rescuing and preforming good for him. Would those that were spared from this massacre, perhaps even miraculously, obligated to recite this blessing as well. Or was the fact that they were still in daily peril and danger mean that they still have not reached the category of those obligated to bless for being saved. Once again Reb Oshry needed to review our history and precedents to find the answer for their holy brachos question. {What do you think the halacha should be? Discuss.}

After an extensive explanation of the sources for the circumstances when this blessing is made Reb Oshry's conclusion is that until one has fully experienced the salvation he should not make the bracha. And then he adds.

"It is quite possible that the cruel murderers have already condemned to death those that have escaped that Aktion. The reason they are still alive is because this is their way; allowing some Jews to live, deluding them with false hopes, so that their despair will be even greater when they kill them.

Therefore, they should certainly not recite the blessing, for the unfortunate ones may begin to imagine that the threat of death is truly over. In this fashion we would be helping the murderers in their foul plot and making it easier for them to annihilate our brothers and sisters. Consequently, I rule that as long as they remain in the Ghetto the blessing should not be recited (even without the name of Hashem)".

Although there are hundreds of responsa in his 5 volume work, aptly called Mi'maakim- from the depths- that he buried in cans in the Ghetto and ultimately retrieved and published after the war. The final bracha question I want to share with you is based on the mitzva that we read in this week's Torah portion. It is a mitzva that we read each year during this period of mourning for the students of Rabbi Akiva who died during the period of the Bar Kochva revolt against the brutal Romans. It is the period of time of year as well when the Crusaders swept through Europe and brutally wiped out 1/3 of our ancestors in Europe. It was after those Crusades that the customs of not listening to music, getting haircuts and not getting married were first introduced.

This week's parsha as well generally falls out the week of Lag Ba'Omer when we celebrate the life of Rebbi Shimon Bar Yochai, who rose out of the ashes of the destruction of the students of Rabbi Akiva. Reb who refused to allow his oppressors to silence him. He was hunted for 12 years and he reached the greatest of heights. He revealed the hidden eternal spark of every Jew that can never be extinguished. It is this week's parsha and commandment that teaches us how Hashem's light is revealed in the mitzva of Kiddush Hashem, when a Jew is martyred sanctifying Hashem's name.

In what is perhaps he "holiest" verse in the entire Torah our parsha tells us

Vayikra (22:32) V'Lo Sichalilu es sheim kodshi- You shall not desecrate My Holy Name.

V'nikdashti b'toch Bnai Yisrael-. I shall be sanctified amidst the children of Israel.

Ani Hashem mikadishchem- I am the Hashem Who sanctifies you

Three times in one verse our parsha uses the word kadosh. "Kadosh Kadosh Kadosh" is what the angels sing to Hashem. It is that level of holiness that we declare to Hashem that we wish to achieve when we recite kedusha that. A Jew achieves this exalted state when he gives up his life and reveals Hashem in the darkest moments.

The question Reb Oshry was posed on the day of that Great Aktion in the when the Jews were herded into the ironically named, Demokratia Platz before being marched to their deaths. He was approached by Reb Elyah, who had escaped from Poland, only now to be facing his death in the Kovna Ghetto. He sidled over to Reb Oshry and asked on behalf of the thousands in the square who understood the future boded for them, what was the proper blessing to make upon this mitzva of Kiddush Hashem. The mitzva of being killed and martyred merely for the fact that we were the nation of Hashem. Merely because our enemy understood that our soul was holy and they felt that by wiping us out they could destroy Hashem's presence in this world. What was the proper form for the blessing? Was it

Baruch ata Hashem…-Blessed are you Hashem, our God King of the world Who sanctified with His commandments and commanded us al Kiddush Hashem- on (the mitzva of) sanctifying His name

Or was the conclusion

Who commanded us- L'Kadesh es Hashem- to sanctify His name.

Different brachos have different conclusions. We say l'hadlik ner shel Chanuka, or shel Shabbos and Yom Tov, leishev ba'sukka, or l'haniach teffilin. These are blessings on the act one is doing On the other hand there are other brachos where the correct way to recite them is on the action preformed; such al ha'mila by bris or al kriyat Megilla when we read the megilla or al netilat yadayim upon washing hands, al achilat matza which of course is on Matza. What are the rules and which category does the blessing of Kiddush Hashem fit in?

Rav Oshry responded that he felt the proper blessing was l'kadesh shemo ba'rabim- to sanctify Hashem's name in publicly. Although Reb Oshry suggests this is because one only makes the blessing of "al" on mitzvos that one can fulfill with a proxy, such as circumcision or reading the Megilla. Or mitzvos that are recited after one does the mitzva such as washing the hands or Mikva. Mitzvos that one can't do through an agent though require that the bracha begins with the "l". (Seemingly matza would be one of the exceptions to this rule-discuss)

Yet there is another opinion of Rabbeinu Tam that explains the differing nusach of our bracha conclusions. He explains that when the mitzva continues on after it is preformed then the "L' " prefix is used. If, on the other hand the mitzva is finished with the act, then the "al" form is used. That would then explain al netilat yadayim, al ha'mila or matza where the mitzva is completed with the act. On the other hand, Sukka, candles, tefillin or talis where the mitzva continues for a period of time, then the blessing is on the act that brings this continuing fulfillment into the world and the "L" prefixed is used.

If that is the case, it is quite remarkable and a revealing perspective on the mitzva of sanctifying Hashem's name. This is not a mitzva that concludes with the act of giving one's life up. Our Kedoshim have become eternal. They have sanctified Hashem's name forever. They have a brought Hashem's holiness into this world and that can never be removed. They have shown the world that a Jew believes in chayei olam and an eternal world that is so much more valuable than the limited chayei sha'ah- temporary existence in this world. Rabbi Shimon taught us this as well when he came out of the cave and saw Jews working their fields rather than learning. It is what makes us eternal. Netzach Yisrael- the eternality of Israel, our holiness, the glory of Hashem that is within us, lo yishaker- will not deceive, will not avoid the truth. We will always testify to the one God of this world.

On Lag Ba'Omer our custom is to dance around a bonfire with festive joy. Reb Elimelech of Lizensk in his Tzeitel Katan explains this custom in the holiest of ways. He suggests that when we dance around the fire one should feel precisely that sense of be willing to even jump into a fire and martyr oneself for Hashem with joy. Don't try this at home. But one has that elevated and extreme state of holiness where we feel that our neshomos just want to explode and become eternal. Where we feel that holiness of Hashem inside of us burning to bring that kedusha in the world. There are those that use old clothing to begin their bonfire because they symbolize that our bodies are merely clothing for that soul and the fire burning deep within us.

That holiest pasuk that says the word kadosh three times correspond to the three aspects of holiness that we find in these holy brachos of Reb Oshry. We should not desecrate Hashem's name Holy name- do not let them think they have won by making us their slaves. Thank Hashem and rejoice that our spirit is eternal. As well do not give thanksgiving for not being killed before that ultimate salvation shall come for -I am Hashem. My holiness is still in you. You will be entirely liberated. And finally know that I am Hashem who sanctifies you. We are one. They cannot destroy me and they will never destroy the soul and spark that is eternal that our nation is. We are Kadosh. The sefarim tell us that word kadosh is a composite of the two words yukad-eish- a fire is ignited and burning. It is the bonfire of our souls.

As we dance around our holy bonfires tonight, as we make our blessings on our food this Shabbos. Let us remember the Kedoshim who lit those eternal fires. Who blessed and thanked Hashem for all of his goodness. In who's merit our flame will ultimately shine out to the entire world.

Have a blazing Shabbos,

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

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 RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

" Ven me zol Got danken far guts, volt nit zein kain tseit tsu baklogen zikh oif shlechts." – If we thanked God for the good things, there wouldn’t be time to weep over the bad.

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

26) Remnants of a Roman triumphal arch in Jerusalem can be seen at:

A) Mount Zion

B) David Citadel

C) Davidson Center

D) Via Dolorosa

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO  OF THE WEEK

https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/rebbi-shimon-bar-yochaiMy amazing Reb Shimon Bar Yochai Lag Ba'Omer composition enjoy!! Sung and arranged by the amazing Dovid Lowy!

https://youtu.be/yHF1RbbfB5U  Tatty My King- Benny Friedman Acapella still…

 https://youtu.be/GPmpnkrCbDc   - Hakol Mishamayim- Mordechai Shapiro's classic by Israeli Boy choir Mishalot

 https://youtu.be/VCcbAuCZQSM   – Yishai Ribo acapella playlist

 https://youtu.be/67PfvexxeNU   -Pey Dalid Acapella Esa Einai

 RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/ ERETZ YISRAEL CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

Our Land – Parshat Emor – In the midst of this week's Parsha that tells us about all of the laws of the sacrifices that are brought on the holidays the parsha throws in what seems to be a random mitzva that has no connection to anything. We are told right after the holiday of Shavuot that

 Vayikra (23:22) U'vikutzrechem- when you (plural) reap the harvest of artzechem- your (plural) Land, you shall not completely remove the corner of sadcha-your (singular) field during ketzircha-your (singular) harvesting, and you (singular) shall not gather up the gleanings of ketzircha-your (singular) harvest. [Rather,] ta'azov- you (singular) shall leave these for the poor person and for the stranger. I am the Lord, Elokeichem- your (plural) God.

 The Torah feels it is necessary for us to know about the laws of charity, that the gleanings that we drop or forget and the corners of the field should be left for the poor. Rashi notes the Midrash here that explains the placement of these laws here to teach us that he who leaves these gifts for the poor it is as if he built the Temple and brought sacrifices there. Yet it still seems strange why does this particular mitzva have to do with sacrifices. As well what does this have to do with the holiday sacrifices specifically.

 Even more perplexing is the grammatically incorrect way I noted above the verse is written. It starts off in the plural form. When we are reaping in our land and then it shifts to the singular. A person should not fail to leave the gifts in his field, when he reaps, when he gathers. It then concludes once again with the plural of Hashem, our God.  Much like many of my weekly E-Mails it reads like it needs a good editor!

 The Techelet Mordechai shares an incredible idea.  He notes that generally the mitzva of tzedaka is one which is natural to a person. I see a needy person, I feel bad, I want to give to the community, I want to support a cause. That’s natural for our people which are a nation of Rachmanim- merciful and compassionate people. Yet imagine if a person comes into our office and demands part of my business, he wants a piece of the computer program I've worked on. He wants shares in my company that I built in the IPO, I'm releasing. He's following me around all day and taking things from the shelves of my store that I drop or that I left in the corner. That's rough.

 The only way that a person can do that is if he recognizes that the shnorrers that is doing this is the son of the guy that gave me the initial loan to start the business. He was the one that seeded me the start-up money that I needed. If that were the case then I would be grateful to show my appreciation and tell him that everything that he wants is really all his. That is what matnos aniyim is teaching us. When we reap and recognize that it is not my land rather it is our land. It is the poor person's just as much as it is mine. Then when I approach my field, I shouldn't hold back, because it's not my field. It's ours. It's not my gatherings, or my corners, it's ours. Hashem our God gave it to us.

This portion is stuck in right by the holidays laws when we are told about bringing the sacrifices to Hashem. We come to Hashem on the holidays and we bring him our sacrifices it's not to thank you or to just come bearing gifts, like the candy or the bottle of wine that those seminary girls bring me when they come for Shabbos. Rather we are bringing these sacrifices to make the statement that all the bounty we have is really Hashem's. When we eat from those sacrifices that we bring- which we do- it's not that we are bringing part to Hashem and part for us. Rather even the portion that we eat is m'shulchan gavoha ka'zachu- we are eating it from the table of Hashem. It is His land, it is His bounty, all that we have is from His table. That is the incredible experience of the Beit Ha'Mikdash. That is the incredible identical feeling that we can have even when there is no Beit Hamikdash when we appreciate the incredible miraculous land Hashem has given us. We are told that a sign of the redemption is when those barren fields once again sprout forth fruits. They are, we just need to remember that the land is not mine, it's not yours. It's ours. It's our Father's table.

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

Dovid and Batsheva; The Prophet- 865 BC – A year had passed since Dovid had married Batsheva. She had a baby boy. Mazel Tov and it seems that Dovid had "gotten away" with his cover-up. He had not done teshuva for the sin of arranging for the death of her husband Uriah. Perhaps he had felt that he had done the right thing as Uriah was technically deserving of death for not heeding Dovid's bidding to him. Perhaps it was the divine intuition that he had Batsheva was always meant to be his wife. But it was still considered a sin. And Hashem was not going to let Dovid sit with that sin. So he send his prophet Nathan to tell Dovid a story.

 There is a tremendous Torah from Rebbi Nachman, perhaps even all of his teachings come from this story. For Rebbi Nachman notes that Hashem's way of deciding someone's punishment or judgement. He allows us to judge ourselves. His method of doing so is telling us a story, a parable presenting us with a situation and allowing us to pass judgement on ourselves. Rebbi Nachman is the storyteller of Rebbis and this was certainly his style as well.

So Nathan gives Dovid a parable about a rich man who had many sheep and a poor man that had only one sheep that he cared for. Now the midrash notes an interesting nuance in the next part of the story. It tells us how a traveller came to the rich man, the rich man didn't want to use any of his own sheep to feed him so he stole the one from the poor person. He then prepared it for his guest and then gave it to the man that came to him. The Midrash notes that the guest is really the Yetzer Hara or evil inclination. First it appears as a traveler. An idea pops into our head that really isn't from where we are spiritually. The next step is it becomes a guest of ours. It's there regularly. And then ultimately it is the man that comes to us. We can't get rid of him.

 When Dovid hears this story he tells Nathan that the man should not only pay twice the usual four times the sheep that is typical fine, but that he should be put to death as well. This selfishness is not a Jewish trait. Dovid was angry and aghast. And then Nathan tells Dovid "You are the man". Those are the words Hashem will tell us when we come up to Him for our Judgement day. It is our own signature and judgement that we pass on others that will condemn us. Dovid immediately confesses and even composes Psalm 51 "On the day that Noson comes to him in regards to him coming to Batsheva" that expresses his anguish that will haunt him to his death over this sin. Hashem will forgive Dovid for his sin and accept his repentance, however as Noson explains there are divine consequences which will include the death of his own children, the taking of his own wives and life full of bloodshed and familial strife. Yet from that union of David and Batsheva the kingdom of Solomon will rise up and because of Dovid's repentance the Temple will always be called the house of Dovid.

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S  TERRIBLE LUMBERJACK JOKES  OF THE WEEK

Two Middle East mothers are sitting in the cafe strip chatting over a pint of goat's milk. The older of the mothers pulls her bag out and starts flipping through pictures and they start reminiscing.

"This is my oldest son Mohammed. He's 24 years old now"
"Yes, I remember him as a baby" 
says the other mother cheerfully.
"He's a martyr now though"
mum confides.
"Oh so sad dear"
says the other.
"And this is my second son Kalid. He's 21"
"Oh, I remember him
," says the other happily, "he had such curly hair when he was born".
"He's a martyr too "
says mum quietly.
"Oh gracious me ...."
says the other.
"And this is my third son. My baby. My beautiful Ahmed. He's 18",
she whispers.
"Yes"
says the friend enthusiastically, "I remember when he first started school"
"He's a martyr also," says mum, with tears in her eyes.After a pause and a deep sigh, the second muslim mother looks wistfully at the photographs and says... "They blow up so fast, don't they?"

 How was Yoshka at being a martyr? Nailed to a t.

I would die for shopping. I’m a Walmartyr.

 A man in Paris saw a pit bull attacking a toddler. He killed the pit bull and saved the girl's life. Reporters swarmed the fellow to cover the story...."Tell us! What's your name? All Paris will love you! Tomorrow's headline will be: "Paris Hero Saves Girl from Vicious Dog!'"

The guy says, "But I'm not from Paris."

Reporters: "That's OK. Then the whole of France will love you and 
tomorrow's headline will read: "French Hero Saves Girl from Vicious Dog!"

The guy says, "I'm not from France, either."

Reporters: "That's OK also. All Europe will love you. Tomorrow's 
headlines will shout: "Europe's Hero Saves Girl from Vicious Dog!'"

The guy says, "I'm not from Europe, either."

Reporters: "So, where ARE you from?"

The guy says, "I'm from Israel."

Reporters: "Oh. OK.....Then tomorrow's headlines will proclaim to the world: 
"Jew Kills Girl's Dog!"

Now you understand the media......

 Why did the terrorist's wife leave him? She didn't know what jihad.

 What's a difference between a crusade and a homicide? In one, you murder for a book and in other you are booked for a murder.

 A man walks into a confession booth.

He says, "Bless me father, for I have sinned."
The priest there says to him, "Speak my child."
The man says, "Well father I lived in Hamburg during the Second World War. The Gestapo was searching for Jews to send to concentration camps, and I hid a Jewish family up in my attic."
The priest is pleased. This is a rather happy confession. He says, "That is a very noble deed my son. Why would you tell me this in confession though?"
The man continues, "Well Father, I also took a lot of rent from them for living in my attic."
The priest is a little taken aback but still happy that the man chose to protect the family. He says, "That was not right on your part. Whenever you do a good deed, you should do it for the happiness it brings others and not your personal gain. The intent was still noble though so you have not sinned."
The man continues, "If that's the case, I feel much better now. I would like to ask for some guidance though."
The priest says, "Ask and I shall answer to the best of my ability."
The man says, "It's about that Jewish family. Should I tell them the war is over?"

 During world war II, a British clock found its way into German hands. The strange thing about this clock was it went tick-tick-tick-tick, instead of tick-tock-tick-tock. The Germans could not figure this out.

Finally, it went to the gestapo. Their chief interrogator softly whispered to the clock " We haff ways to make you tock" (OYYY I'm really getting desperate here…)

What did the condemned prisoner say when he was informed that the hangman forgot the rope? No noose is good noose.

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Answer is D- The MOT puts a lot of emphasis on Christian sites in Israel. As much as it doesn't interest me at all, I understand where they're coming from as perhaps- sadly- the majority of tourists here are not Jews. The Via Dolorosa, Yoshkas last walk to crucifiction is probably the most important part for most Christians and thus we had to know it pretty well. The Ecco Home stop in the Sisters of Zion church right next to where we come out from the Kotel Tunnel tours is where part of that arch that Hadrian constructed after putting down the Bar Kochva revolt.  So I got this one right too and the score is now 19 for Rabbi Schwartz and 7 for the Ministry of Tourism on this exam.

 

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