Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile

Thursday, October 28, 2021

A Marriage Letter- Parshat Chayei Sarah 5782/ 2021

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

October 29th 2021 -Volume 11 Issue 5 23rd Cheshvan 5782

Parshat Chayei Sarah

A Marriage Letter

He was a good friend of mine back in our single days in Lakewood Yeshiva. Eli and I had a lot in common. We were both "out of towners", enjoyed food, a good laugh and had pretty large personalities that matched our waistlines. After our mandatory 3-month freezer period in which a new bachur to the yeshiva is not allowed to begin dating to get married had concluded, we were both anxious to find our bashert and begin the next stage in our lives. It was time.

I'll never forget that evening that Eli came home from a first date with a girl that he had gone out with and he had this glowing look on his face. After a few months and quite a few girls that he had met that had led nowhere, I could tell that this time something different was going on. When I asked him what the scoop was, he told me with this bewildered look on his face.

"I don't know, Ephraim. This girl is not like all of the other girls I had met before. Y'know how most of the girls that we're meeting seem pretty subtle, pretty agreeable? It's the same old-same old conversation again and again. Where she went to school…, how much she liked her teachers… her classes, her friends, her family. Almost  all of the girls just seem to be repeating and echoing the same hashkafos and values that feels like they were indoctrinated with. It's as if I've been dating and its just the same recording I'm listening to on repeat-mode.

Well, this girl tonight, Mindy was different. From pretty much the moment that we got into the car we seemed to be arguing and debating about everything. Where to go, what she thought about things, how the dating process should work. It was weird. To be honest, it was kind of intense but it felt very cool and real. It was like being in the Bais Midrash almost and arguing over a piece of Talmud with a chavrusa. To be honest, I kind of dug it. (yes that's a phrase we old timers still use). In fact it was awesome and stimulating. She's definitely not your typical Bais Yaakov girl."

And so it continued date after date with Mindy. Every date it seemed they were fighting and arguing more and more and each time he would be more enthralled with her spirit and her "refreshing" –his word- combative nature.  When they got engaged a few weeks after they started seeing one another- which is pretty common in our circles, I wasn't surprised at all. Eli had been in La La Land since see he had started seeing her. I had heard all of the details of all of their heated conversations. He kept boasting about how he couldn't just marry these little "lemmeleh" typical girls out of Seminary. He needed someone with personality; with a mind of her own. Somebody that didn't just accept everything that was taught or told to her, but rather was well-thought out and took everything apart and would stand up for her own beliefs. Mindy was the girl for him.

It was about a year after their wedding that I bumped into Eli. They had moved out of Lakewood and we met one day in the Supermarket. "Nuuu…?" I asked him. How's married life? Eli looked at me and gave me a bit of a tightened smile.

"Thank God, everything's going great, Mindy's fine. She's expecting in fact any day. But you know…" he continued. "I was thinking maybe you could help me out with something. I was trying to remember but for the life of me, it's not coming back to me. What exactly was I thinking? Why did I want someone that would argue with me about everything? That had strong opinions and that wouldn't give in? What was wrong with a nice sweet good Bais Yackov girl that would just smile and say yes all the time. I know there was some logic there. We had all of these discussions. Maybe you can refresh my memory..."

I don't think I was successful in conveying any rationale to him at the time, but Baruch Hashem they're still happily married.

I think back to that conversation often, particularly as my children enter the shidduch parsha. (PS Rivka has officially entered, so any suggestions for amazing boys… that might want to support their father-in-law in Kollel for a few years feel free to contact me...:)) How do you know if this is the right one? Who the right one is? There are so many people out there, so many girls, so many boys. So many singles. How do I know which one is the bashert or who they should date?

I can tell you that generally speaking the "shidduch resume" is not going to be a big help. Even if they have those modeled pictures that some people demand to accompany them. As if that's the way she's going to look when you woke up the next morning for the rest of your life. It won't be from the references that are given and generally it won't even be the ones you dug up from your cousins brother's sisters chavrusa that knows him or her. I'll tell you even a more startling secret, it won't even be what you think you're looking for or what you think you need when you start dating the person. It won't even be what you think you need or is right for you when you propose or marry them. More often than not, almost everybody wakes up one morning with that "Eli" question. What was I thinking again? Maybe you can remind me…

I remember when I was in yeshiva one of my Rebbeim had one of the most insightful lines that I would share with many of the young men that I counseled while they were dating, who had doubts whether she was "the one" or not. My Rebbi would discuss their dilemmas with them, the pluses and the minuses and then he would pose his question to them. If a letter came down from heaven addressed to you, he would ask. And that letter was from Hashem and it stated that forty days before you were born this girl was destined for you. She was the other half of your neshoma; your bashert. Do you think if you received that letter right now, that you could make it work; that you could be happy together with her?  Inevitably, after a short pause or so the boy would respond that of course if he received such a letter that he would have no problem saying yes and proposing and marrying her. She was his Bashert after-all, of course he would be happy with her. My Rebbi would then turn to him and say

"So what….? Are you waiting for a letter? If you could make it work then make it work. A letter isn't coming, but what do you need one for? You already said that you could make it work and be happy. Why would you then need a letter?"

And there you have it. A happy and successful marriage isn't as much about the person who you marry. It's about understanding that we have to work-to make it work. In fact, the more work that it takes and the more work that one puts into it, the better and better the marriage is and will be. That being the case, fascinatingly enough, the bashert that we are seeking and the criterion that we should be looking for are generally quite the opposite of what we think we need. Meaning, most people look for people in which they have as much in common as possible. Similar families, similar outlooks, values, tastes, experiences and even personalities. If we have all of those things, we figure it will be smooth sailing. After all we're so similar. We have so much in common. We want and like same the things. Our families are so alike. What could there be to fight about? The problem with that, theoretically of course, is that the function of marriage is quite the opposite. It's to have someone different than you and through the working out of the differences, love and marriage are made. If there's no work, then you're doing it wrong.

Now I said that it's only theoretical- of course, because despite our best efforts to find someone as similar to as us possible, Hashem, who is the ultimate Shadchan, is making sure that we get the person who has just the right amount of differences from us and that will be the challenge to us to work on ourselves until we became one and really achieve shalom. If we understand this we can really understand, perhaps for the first time, the incredible challenge Eliezer the servant of Avraham had in finding the right shidduch for Yitzchak Avinu in the story of this week's parsha of the first Jewish match.

I'm sure y'all know the famous story how Eliezer was sent on this mission to find a wife for Yitzchak. Now it would seem at first glance that this would be the easiest job for a shadchan. Here you have a great tzadik of a boy, from a super family, who also is not only coming from money but is in fact independently wealthy, as his father Avraham had already written him over all of his wealth. There's no competition for inheritance as Yishmael is already out of the picture. It should be easy to find a match for him. He was probably being inundated by shidduch resumes and lists as soon as he entered the market. (I can't imagine he would be worse than half the guys that get off the plane from their year in Israel who barely know how to talk a straight sentence in English or tuck in their shirt and yet supposedly have lists and lists waiting for them.) Yet Eliezer is nervous and he prays tearfully to Hashem to help him in what he describes to be a momentous task. He prays for kindness and grace from Hashem that he be successful and have siyata d'shmaya. What's he so nervous about?

Even more perplexing is that he comes up with what should seem like a preposterous test. Who ever heard of feeding a herd of camels? That's a heck of a lot of trips back and forth to the trough. Imagine if someone had an expectation on his date that his prospective spouse be someone who randomly meets someone on the street and automatically offers to feed a busload full of hungry yeshiva guys on the spot. Well, camels eat and drink a lot more than yeshiva guys. Someone would need to talk to that boy and tell him to calm down a bit and lower their expectations. Yet Eliezer sets the bar outrageously high. Why?

The answer I had always assumed to these questions was that since kindness and hospitality the centerpiece of Avraham's family and values, Eliezer wanted to make sure that she would fit into the family and be ready for the task at hand. The Chasam Sofer though takes almost the opposite approach. It wasn't because of the incredible chesed of Avraham that Rivka needed to have that attribute in its highest form, but rather it was the opposite. It was because Yitzchak was the paradigm of the middas Ha'gevura- of strength and Din- harsh judgement that he knew that he needed to find someone that was the mirror opposite to balance him and that would be over-the-top in Chesed to counter him and challenge him.

See, whereas Avraham exemplified chesed, Yitzchak, was the perfect sacrifice to Hashem. Yitzchak accepted Hashem's judgment that he should be offered as a sacrifice without flinching. It will be Yitzchak in next week's parsha that wants to give the blessings to Esau, and according to the Tiferes Shlomo or Radomsk this was because with his harsh pure din, he didn't feel that Yaakov the Torah scholar should require any of the material blessings of this world. It would distract him from his spiritual role. Someone this intense, this pure and this strong would require someone at the entire opposite extreme to be able to counter that force and nature and to reign it in. That's not an easy task to find. That requires a lot of prayer and a test that would take super-human kindness. That was what made the first Jewish marriage in the Torah. Two opposites in every single way that become unified when they each undertake to work together to build that perfect home. And so it needs to be in every healthy Jewish marriage since then.

We live in a world today where we hear a lot about the 'shidduch crisis'. Far be it for me to tackle that parsha with all it's different nuances, prognosis and solutions. It's above my paygrade. In recent years tragically as well the divorce rate has soared and is growing. Shalom bayis problems and issues are greater and greater. Each story, each marriage, has its own scenarios and it would be foolish of me to gloss over or try to stereotype any of them. But one thing that I think is clear for even those of us that manage to remain married-even happily- is that despite all of the chasan and kallah schmoozes we may have received, and no matter how well we thought we knew our spouses before we got married or even ourselves- real life doesn't start until we have that first clash and realize how different we are and how much work we need to do and how much we have to change. It's all about the work. And at that point already we don't need a letter from Hashem to tell us to do that work.

It has always been my opinion that the average yeshiva guy and average bais Yaakov should be able to get married to one another easily. After-all we're all pretty much the same. We share values, beliefs, lifestyles and frankly most men and women are easily attracted to one another, certainly when we're all made up for a date. If a Buddhist from India can manage to marry some Muslim from New Zealand, or a Catholic from Oklahoma can marry an African American Muslim from the Bronx marry and make it work, than why shouldn't two children of Torahdikeh families. So what then do Chazal mean when they say that Hashem busy with all day making shidduchim? It should be an easy job.

 The answer the Chasam Sofer says is He is busy finding the person with the right amount of opposite characteristics that will challenge in what we need to do in life, to break our natural character traits and push us to become more balanced. We need to become more like her- she needs to become more like me. That's the difficult job Hashem has in making shidduchim all day. He is subverting our efforts to find the person most like us and instead making sure we end up with the one that is the most different who will make us grow and become who we need to become.

If we keep that letter-that we never received- from Hashem in front of us while we are dating, while we are beginning our marriage, while we may even be celebrating our 25th or 50th anniversary, then our lives and marriages would be different. They would be better. They would be worked upon. We get frustrated with that most important person in our lives sometimes perhaps precisely for the reason why they are the most important person in our lives. They were never our Bashert because we would always agree or see things the same way. Rather it's because I needed to learn how to be the other way…more like her… more like him… together. As one. It is by Yitzchak and Rivkah that first Jewish couple that the Torah for the first time uses the expression of a husband loving a wife. May each of find our beloved, our spouse and together build a bayis ne'eman B'Yisrael.      

Have a lovely loving Shabbos,

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

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 RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 " Az got vil shtrofn an apikoyres git er im a frum vayb.."- When God wants to punish an unbeliever, He gives him a pious wife.         

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 50) The map drawn during Napoleon’s campaign to the Middle East:

a) Peutinger’s Table

b) Jacotin

c) Bünting

d) Wilson

 RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO  OF THE WEEK

 https://youtu.be/GX1XGmT43BI   - Mordechai Shapiro's latest song/video Abba- the man is back…

https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/rivkah In honor of this week's Parsha and the marriage of Rivka to Eliezer- the song I composed in honor of my sister Rivky's wedding to Luzzy two years ago. Achoseinu Rivkah!

 https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/avinu-malkeinu i composed this song Avinu Malkeinu on the way home from paying a shiva call to the Kupinsky's 7 years ago this week after the murder of their son , my friend in horrific Har Nof massacre. May our Father, our King avenge his death.

 https://youtu.be/jwocwsgg5LoNissim Black's new and exciting inspirational video Higher…

 RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/SHABBOS CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

Eishes Chayil- Parshat Chayei Sarah- It's a song that we sing each Shabbos after we welcome in the angels that escort us home and receive their holy blessing before we send them off. The words of Eishes Chayil come from the book of Mishlei written by Shlomo Ha'Melech and is probably the longest and most known of his writings throughout all of Klal Yisrael. Yet the Midrash tells us fascinatingly enough that the words of Eishes Chayil were in fact the eulogy that Avraham gave for his wife Sarah upon her passing in this week's parsha.

 The Midrash points out how many of the verses allude to stories in Sarah's life.

Batach la lev Ba'ala- her husband trusted her- this is when he asked her to say she was his sister

Darsha tzemer upishtim- she sought out the difference between cotton and flax that refers to the difference between Yitzchak and Yishmael

Va'takam b'od layla- she arises when it is still night this is in the house of Avimelech.

 And it continues. It's a fascinating midrash and worth the look-up particularly this week. Interestingly enough the Nesivos Shalom points out that a few of the allusions in the Midrash really seem to have nothing to do with her, but rather with Avraham. The midrash repeatedly mentions the purchase of the field and cave of Machpela- zamima sadeh- va'tikacheyhu- she thought about the field and acquired it. Noda Ba' she'arim Ba'alah- her husband was known in the gates- when Avraham went to purchase in front of the Bnai Cheis. Why are these considered praise of Sarah?

 Even more puzzling is that much of the Midrash refers to mitzva of circumcision that Avraham underwent. Ki Kol Beysa levush Shanim- Her household possessed garments- and playing on the word Shanim as shanyim- two it says two merits Shabbos and circumcision. As well Sadin asisa- she made linen garments, again the midrash says sadin is like the word sod- secret which is the secret of Hashem that the covenant of circumcision Avraham underwent. What does this have to do with Sarah's eulogy?

 He answers that the power of Sarah is that the woman of the home is the source of all of the blessing that comes into the home. She brings in the Shabbos each week and Shabbos is the mekor ha'bracha- the source of all blessing for the coming week. It is through Shabbos which is also compared to a bride in the song we sing of Lecha Dodi, that we recharge our spiritual batteries. It is what gives us the spiritual energy and inspiration to fulfill and pursue all of the mitzvos in the coming week. The husband draws that energy of Shabbos from their wives. That special energy of Sarah's tent is what gave Avraham the strength to preform his Bris. It continued after Sarah's death even when he purchased the cave of Machpela. It was her inspiration that gave us this eternal resting place of our Patriarchs and Matriarchs. In fact the Midrash notes that when Avraham remarries Hagar/Ketura the pasuk tells us that 'Vayosef Avraham Vayikach Isha'- Avraham added and took a wife. That despite the fact that Sarah was dead physically her spirit was still living and Avraham's second wife was an addition to her spirit that still inspired him.

 Each Shabbos when we sing Eishes Chayil as we begin our holy day, we remember Sarah and the power of Shabbos to bring us bracha and inspiration for the coming week. There is no better song with which to introduce the special blessing of Shabbos that we received from the angels than recognizing that it is the source of all blessings that we have.

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

 Shlomo's reign begins- 837 BC- When Dovid heard from his wife Batsheva and from Noson Ha'Navi of Adoniyahu's attempted power grab to establish himself as heir apparent to Dovid together with Yoav and Evyasar the Kohen. Dovid realized that the only option to prevent this from happening and any ensuing civil war that would result, would be to immediately establish Shlomo as king. He thus ordered Noson to take Benayahu and Tzadok the Kohen and to put Shlomo on the King's mule and to ride over to the Gichon spring- which is at the bottom of the Ir Dovid- right when you come out of the great underground tunnel water hike of Chizkiyahu's tunnel. There they would anoint him with the special oil that Moshe made by Hashem's command and establish him as king.

 The Gichon spring is a natural spring that was a constant water flow that would shoot water every 15 minutes or so, like a geyser. In later years it was a few times daily in the winter and less in the summer and autumn. It doesn't do that anymore but it is the largest spring in the hills of Yehudah and it really is the secret to the survival of Yerushalayim as it was the major source of the water for the city. It produces over 600,000 cubic meters of water annually and it flows into the Shiloah pool where the ancient Oleh Regel- pilgrims to Yerushalayim would immerse themselves before going up to the Temple Mount.

 When Shlomo was anointed there at age 12 (!!) the people all gathered and they cheered, sang and danced playing flutes and blowing shofars. Long live King Shlomo was the cheer and they escorted him back to the palace of Dovid where he took his place on Dovid's throne. Word obviously made its way back to Adoniyahu who immediately and perhaps rightfully so feared for his life. He grabbed onto the corners of the Mizbayach and pleaded for his life and Shlomo mercifully pardoned him on the condition that he shouldn't try to step out of his place anymore. As we'll see soon that really didn't work out that well for him though. So thus begins the reign of Shlomo and next we will say good-bye to the Dovid Ha'Melech as we begin the next chapter in the Book of Kings.

 RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE SHALOM BAYIS JOKES  OF THE WEEK

 My wife sat down on the couch next to me as I was flipping channels. She asked, 'What's on TV?'I said, 'Dust.' And that's how the fight started....

 My wife and I were sitting at a table at my high school reunion, and I kept staring at a drunken lady swigging her drink as she sat alone at a nearby table.

My wife asked, “Do you know her?”

“Yes, ” I sighed, “She’s my old girlfriend. I understand she took to drinking after we split up those many years ago, and I hear she hasn’t been sober since.”

“My God!” says my wife, “Who would think that a person could go on celebrating that long?”

And that’s when the fight started.

A wife wants a fancy Porsche for her fiftieth birthday. She drops hints to her husband:"You know we've had a really good year, heck, good decade, fiscally. For my birthday, I'm really hoping for something sleek, maybe baby blue. Something you can really step on and it'll go from 0 to 200 in like .2 seconds..."The husband nods knowingly. So for her birthday, he buys her a scale.And that's when the fight started...

My wife told me she wants to give her clothes away to starving children, I  told her that if they fit them they aren't starving. That is when the fight began

I tried to talk my wife into buying a case of Miller Light for $14.95. Instead, she bought a jar of face cream for $7.95. I told her the beer would make her look better at night than the face cream. And that’s when the fight started.

 A woman is standing in her room looking in the bedroom mirror. She is not happy with what she sees and says to her husband, “I feel horrible; I look old, fat and ugly. I really need you to pay me a compliment.”

The husband replies, “Your eyesight’s near perfect.” And that’s when the fight started.

 For his birthday, I gave my son an iPhone. My daughter received an iPod for hers. For my birthday, I was pleased to receive an iPad. My mother was given an iMac for her birthday. Thinking along the same lines, I got my wife an iRon. And that's when the fight started…

 Esther was throwing darts at her husband's picture on a dart board and not even a single one hitting the target. When he entered, saw and asked, Honey! What are you doing?Esther said " Missing you…".And that's when the fight started…

 A man walks into a bar,looking all bummed out, and orders a drink. After a few minutes he orders another. About thirty minutes later he orders a few more drinks. The bartenders asks," Dude you look really depressed. Is everything okay? "The man explains," My wife and I got into big fight. She says she won't speak to me for 31 days."The bartender asks," Well isn't that a good thing." The man replies," Sadly, tonight's the last night."

My Dentist friend just divorced his wife who is a manicurist. All they did was fight tooth and nail

A married couple are having a fight. Finally the wife screams at the husband to get out of the house. She throws his suitcases at him and he packs his things. On his way out, the woman says, "I hope you die the slowest, most miserable, most agonizing death imaginable." So he turns and says, " What, so now you want me to stay?"

 "Got in a fight with my wife last night" says one guy to his friend.

"Again", said the friend, "How did it end this time?"
"Well, she ended up on her knees, practically begging"
"Really, what did she say?"
"Get out from under the bed you coward"

 A married couple were fighting when they drove past a farm full of pigs. The husband then asked his wife, "Family of yours?" The wife looked at the pigs, then replied, "Yea, in-laws."

 Husband says: When I get mad at you, you never fight back. How do you control your anger?Wife says: I clean the toilet...Husband says: How does that help?Wife says: I use your Toothbrush.....

 The entire 15 years of marriage my wife and  I have only had one fight. And it's still not over…

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Answer is B – Surprisingly I got this one right. It was really process of elimination and a good guess. Jacotin is the most French sounding name, so that was my knee jerk answer. Then upon thinking about it I figured Wilson is Charles Wilson who was an archeologist in Israel in the 1800's after Napoleon. Bunting sounded German so I ruled him out. Peutinger's Map I remembered was of the Roman empires roads, so that ruled that out also. So I felt comfortable going with the French sounding Jacotin and I was right on this last question of this Winter 2019 exam. That makes my final score is  Schwartz 37and 13 for MOT (Ministry of Tourism) on this exam.

 Technically speaking this part of the exam is worth only 30 points on the exam. The part two which asked to make an itinerary for two days for a group and have a talking point on some place on the itinerary is the bulk of the exam and worth the remaining 70 points.

They give you a choice of three groups.

A) Israelis interested in Crusader period with 1/2 day only in Jerusalem covering at least 6 sites in three geographical areas.

B) European hikers in the Golan, Chermon and Eastern Galil, including a 1/2 day hike and topics covering nature, archeology, Geology, and religions

C) Tourists in Beer Sheva, Negev, Judean Plains, half day in each and cover topics of Archeology, agriculture, history and produce.

 I'd probably pick B for that one definitely not A)

But if we gave me a score solely on the first part of the exam at 2 points a question I would have gotten a 74% based on all of them. But the truth is you only area allowed to answer 45 of the questions so If you detract 5 questions from the wrong side (which is fair because I probably would've skipped the ones I didn't know and guessed wrong on then my score is 82%! Not bad. When I did my real exam I got an 87 so I haven't lost that much of my touch I guess.

Next week we start a new exam. They switched the style of questions in 2020 the questions now have a fill in the blank section and an associated multiple choice question together. As well there is only 33 questions from which you have to answer 30. I'm curious how I'll do on this exam. Let's see next week for the most recent Summer 2021 Exam!

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