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Friday, May 6, 2022

The Miracle, the Refugee and our Home- Parshat Emor / Yom Ha'atzmaut

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

May 6th 2022 -Volume 11 Issue 31 5th Iyar 5782


Parshat Emor- Yom Ha’Atzmaut


The Miracle, the Refuge and our Home

 

Do you know how many refugees there are in the world? How many people have had to flee their countries, leave everything behind and find asylum in a foreign country? According to The United Nations there are about 20 million or so. The main countries where people have fled are Syria (6.7 million), Ukraine (5.7 million), Venezuela (4 million) and Afghanistan (with 2.6 million). That’s just the people who had to flee their countries. Internally displaced people, families that have been forced to leave their homes and belongings more likely than not never to see them again, and escape to another city in their own country number around 42 million; with Ukraine alone having over 6 million people that are homeless and on the run. That’s a pretty crazy and historic number for Ukraine. Does the number 6 Million ring a Jewish bell for you? I guess what goes around comes around in Hashem’s Divinely managed just world.

 

Now of those tens of millions of refugees, homeless people, nations without a country or home to call their own anymore, do you know how many of them are Jewish? Take a guess. Did you get it? The answer I’m sure you know is Zero. There is not one Jewish refugee in the entire world. Every single Jew in the world regardless of his country and situation has a home here in Eretz Yisrael. Not only are the automatically granted citizenship, but they are assisted financially with an absorption basket, they receive benefits that regular native-born citizens don’t receive and they are integrated into the country with subsidized job and skills training and Ulpan language development. We even take in many halachic non-Jews with Jewish lineage so as not to err on the side of leaving someone with Jewish blood without a place to call home. Take this idea in and absorb it. It’s mind-blowing.

 

For over 2000 years the Jewish nation was probably the most exiled in nation in the world. We didn’t last most places for more than a century or two. We wandered, we left behind everything and perhaps most terrifying we had no where to go. We were the losers scorned by the world. Our boats were turned away and sunk, our visas denied, and our families were many times divided and lost. But in the past 74 years that all changed. The 2000-year homeless aspect of our Exile ended on the 5th of Iyar 1948. Never again will a Jew have to suffer that fear that he has nowhere to go to or settle in when they get thrown out of their host country as we always did. ALWAYS. ALWAYS. ALWAYS…. I’m just sayin…

 

But now it’s different. The land which had been sealed to our people for millennia opened its arms to embrace and welcome back her children. There are no more British turning away our boats. No Muslims that have any authority over when and where we could live. There are no Romans that deny us entry to our holiest city. No Crusaders that pillage and plunder us and no Babylonians that are trying to Exile us. Our only real problem is the Jews in charge of the country. But that’s family. It’s a whole different type of problem. It’s internal. It’s amongst ourselves and yes there’s no fights like family fights. But we still have to thank our lucky stars that we have a family and we are not out on the streets, in the forests, or in the camps looking for them. We have a home and we’re with our family, finally.

 

Now if you would ask me, it would seem that a day when the history of our people changed so dramatically like that would be worthy of establishing it as a holiday. I mean yes, Chanukah we got back the Bais Ha’Mikdash and we killed off the Greeks (and Hellenist Jews) that were trying to destroy us spiritually and physically when we wouldn’t comply. But that entire saga lasted only about 40- 50 years. The state of Israel is around almost twice as long as the Chasmonai dynasty was religious and that the temple was pure and sacred. All of the grandchildren of the Maccabees were Hellenists. The Romans were brought into Israel at the behest of the Jews to settle the civil religious and political wars that were going on. A century or two later most of Israel was murdered and exiled. And yet we eat latkas every year, spin a dreidel and most importantly recite Hallel on that great victory. Shouldn’t Yom Ha’Atzmaut at least get a TYH (thank you Hashem) as well?

 

Now I know that some of my readers do celebrate the holiday. The ones in Israel that are not so Chareidi make barbeques. The more Daati ones even say Hallel at davening. And some of you guys in America that are more modern orthodox probably do as well and even have some falafel. But you lakewooders, Boro Parkers and out of towners whom have had Lakewood and Boro Park Rebbeim and Rabbis in your shuls and communities certainly don’t. Fuggetabout Villiamsburgh and Munroe…And I guess I just have to ask if you don’t recite Hallel-which I happen not to as well…shhh…- why not? Would you recite it the day you got thrown out of your country and had nowhere else to go and got turned away and away and away and then found yourself welcomed into the one place Hashem promised you was yours. The place where not only did all your ancient ancestors live, but the place where for 2000 years your Bubby’s and Zaidy’s couldn’t live but they went to sleep dreaming that they could. Would you recite Hallel then? Would you kiss the land and thank Hashem every day that you were finally home?

 

Don’t knee jerk me with the “ehhh… Mashiach isn’t here yet…” or the “Zionists are not religious” or the “they persecute Yeshiva students and are trying to destroy religion” lines you may have been fed or used your entire life. I’m not denying those claims or rebutting them. I just want you to think for a few minutes of what it would feel like to be a refugee. What it feels like to be what tens if not hundreds of your great great grandparents at different times went through whenever they were exiled. And the fact and the knowledge that you will never ever have to experience that sense of not having a place to come home to. That nobody in the world wants you.

 

I remember hearing a holocaust survivor tell me once that the worst moment for him was at the end of the war when the American soldiers were trying to place the Holocaust survivors in the DP camp and they asked him where his home was and where he wanted to go or where he might have a relative that he could find asylum by, and he didn’t have an answer. They were all dead. No country wanted him.  You know how a child feels when no school wants to accept them? Imagine if it wasn’t just a school but it was every country in the world. That’s what we will never have to go through again. And shouldn’t that be something we thank Hashem for on this day every year?

 

This week’s Parsha of Emor interestingly enough is the parsha that contains all of the Jewish holidays and its laws. The Shulchan Aruch tells us a cute way to remember what day of the week every Jewish holiday falls out on. See all our holidays have their basis in our first holiday of redemption, Pesach, that we just celebrated. And if we utilize a method known as At Bash where the first letter Aleph or day one corresponds to the last letter of the Aleph Beis, taf, and count them we can find all of the holidays and when they will fall out. So alef or the first day of Pesach, which this year was Shabbos, corresponds to the letter taf which stands for Tisha B’Av which will fall out on Shabbos! Beis the 2nd day of Pesach, Sunday, corresponds to the letter Shin which is when Shavuos falls out. Gimmel, the third day of Pesach corresponds to reish which is Rosh Hashana on Tuesday this year. Daled, day four corresponds to kof which is keriyat ha’torah on Simchat Torah, Hei is tzadik which is tzom- fast days of Yom Kippur and Gedalia, and vov is pei which of course is Purim on Thursday.

 

Fascinatingly enough he doesn’t bring a corresponding day for the 7th day of Pesach which was Friday and would correspond to the letter ayin. Maybe there wasn’t a holiday on that day 500 years ago when he wrote that yet. But isn’t it amazing that Yom Ha’Atzmaut- with an ayin for Atzmaut the 5th of Iyar when the State was established is on the same day of the week as the 7th day of Pesach? The day that corresponds to the final aspect and celebration of our redemption from our first exile in Egypt is always on the same day-when it’s not pushed off because of Shabbos- itself an incredible thing that so as there not to be desecration of Shabbos it’s celebrated a day early this year- as the beginning of our final redemption and return to Israel.

 

The Rambam writes that we celebrate Chanuka despite the fact that we lost it all because it heralded in over 200 years of Jewish sovereignty over Eretz Yisrael. This is despite the fact that for the majority of those years we were ruled by terrible non-religious Jews and even quasi Jews like Herod that murdered  thousands of Rabbis and students- yeah… governments cutting kindergarten subsidies for Chariedim is a mosquito bite compared to the evil we bore in the past from bad anti-religious Jewish governments back then. But we still celebrate. We have a home. We could live there. We didn’t have to sit and wait for them to kill us or throw us out of Babylonia, Rome, Italy, Spain, Boro Park or Lakewood and not know where we would go next. Not know where we would be welcomed. When we could come home and live in the only place Hashem tells us we are supposed to live. Where we get a mitzva to live. Where we can really really fulfill our spiritual potential. Where we could shine His light out to the world from. That’s important to us, right? That’s everything, isn’t it? Shouldn’t it be a holiday?

 

There’s a fascinating juxtaposition to the parsha of the holidays which is the laws of all the Kohein. He can’t marry everyone. He can’t come in contact with the dead or serve in the Temple. If he did he must wait until he’s purified. He can’t serve if he has blemishes. A lot of details that seemingly have nothing to do with the adjacent portion of shaking a lulav, blowing the shofar, and eating matza on Pesach and rejoicing on all our holidays. But perhaps the answer is to allow us to appreciate what the holidays we all celebrate are all about. They’re about connecting to Hashem. They’re about us understanding how perfect the world could and would look when we are in the home of Hashem.

 

In the times of the Bais Hamikdash there were a group of people that were sitting in Yerushalayim that were there to help us connect to that eternal life that we are meant to strive for. They have no blemishes. They are perfect when I see them. They have nothing to do with death and tuma because they are entirely holy for us. They have given up on marrying anyone that might even make us get distracted from the perfect eternal life that we are meant to appreciate when we think about Yerushalayim on those holidays when we see them. No past marriages that failed. No widows for the high priest, no one with a sordid past that had become impure. When we think about Yerushalayim, when we celebrate our holidays, we have to know, that its not just about the rituals of each one. It’s about seeing the perfection that we can strive for. It’s about only seeing the blessing of the Bais Ha’Mikdash and privilege we have to come there. To be with our Father. To experience His home filled with His family back again.

 

There’s the famous story that Rabbis say about this non-religious soldier crying when he came with all of the other soldiers in 1967 and they liberated the Kotel and Jerusalem. When asked why he was crying he answered that he’s crying because he doesn’t know what to cry for. Raised secular, he didn’t know how special and important and how much he’s missed out on about who he is as a Jew and what this holy place was supposed to mean to him. And that made him cry. Maybe you don’t say Hallel on Yom Ha’Atzmaut. As I told you, I’m kind of traditionalist and pretty much follow my Rabbi and grandparents tradition. But I cried this year for the first time that I wasn’t saying Hallel. Ok I didn’t really cry- I’ll be honest. But I should’ve. We all should if we don’t say Hallel. Something miraculous happened 74 years ago. Something holiday worthy. Something that if I ignore and don’t see the miracle, the blessing, the incredible tovah of Hashem and the hand of the redemption and all I see our blemishes than I’m missing the boat. I’m missing the refugee boat. Let’s call her Exodus.

 

There have been 42,000 Olim to Eretz Yisrael that have found their way back home this past year alone mei’arba kanfos ha’aretz- from the four corners of the globe and from lands of our enemies. Millions that have come over the past few decades and whose children born here don’t know another country. They don’t know that they will never be homeless. That’s something to sing about. Something they need to thank Hashem for. Something that we need a holiday and Kohanim to remind us about how perfect life is when we have that blessing and how much closer and holier we can become. If I don’t realize that this really should be a day of Hallel, it’s because I can’t haven’t found those kohanim that are calling me back there yet. I haven’t davened for them hard enough. I haven’t come to Israel to receive their blessings. I’m waiting for Mashiach, perhaps I tell myself, but I’ve forgotten that he’s waiting for me as well.

 

The Gaon of Vilna writes that the name of the first man of creation embodies all of us what we’re meant to be and to ultimately fulfill. A name after all describes the essence of a being. And the neam Adam is the essence of why we’re here and what we’re m

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RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

Az me gait tsevishen leiten, vaist men vos se tut zich in der haim..- When you go to your neighbors, you find out what is happening at home.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://youtu.be/7oFxcQOoTPU    – The Goy and Reb Shayaleh

 

https://youtu.be/luwJ3HtwSmY   Ari Goldwag’s Acapella Geshmack to be A yid

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VtjAIzrRYE  – Rav Yoshe Beir Soloveitchik 1956 Yom Ha’atzmaut 10 years reflection on the State… powerful

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XO6VcvnOGeY  Shlomo Carlebach on Yom ha’Atzmaut

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

26)  Machtesh Hatira is also known as:                         _________

It is widely believed that the craters in the Negev were formed as a result of:

a)  An asymmetrical anticline

b)  Hard and soft rock layers

c)  The erosional downcutting (hithatrut) of a stream           

d)  All the answers are correct

           

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/SHABBOS CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

 

A Day to Shine -Parshat Emor -  Parshat Emor which contains all of the holidays that we celebrate also mention the mitzva of the counting of the Omer. What’s interesting about this mitzva is that it repeatedly mentions and seems connected to the Shabbos. We are told that w should count from the day after Shabbos- which are sages tell us is really another term and reference for the first day of Pesach. We should count 7 complete Shabbasos. And we should count until the 7th Shabbos. Shabbos Shabbos Shabbos, what’s it all about?

 

The Nesivos Shalom explains that the mitzva of counting Omer is that this is the time of year when we move from the 49th level of impurity of Egypt and rise to the level of holiness to receiving the Torah on Shavuos. In fact the word sefor- to count is also the same word as sapphire- that precious clear gem that we are told is under the throne of Hashem. Now how can someone so low and so dirty and tamei rise so high? The only way is if there is help from Hashem behind us. Pushing us. Inspiring us. Giving us the strength and fortitude to rise and grow. That special gift is the gift of Shabbos.

 

Shabbos we are all blessed with this divine light that pushes higher week to week that comes from Hashem. Pesach is the epitome of that divine intrevnetion. Our Exodus from Mitzrayim was all from that special leap Hashem made skipping over our sins and bring us under His wings. With that strength we move forward. We move to Sinai. Each Shabbos we get that gift again and again. It is the light of Creation renewed. So as a result of that each day of Omer we recognize where we have the strength to go forward week to week from. It is the power of Shabbos, our precious sapphire that we count from to bring us to the day when we will god willing once again merit that special revelation.

 

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

 

King Asa of Yehuda -740 BC The victory against Zerah the Kushite brought peace to the land for 35 years. The Jews celebrated in Jerusalem sacrificing 7000 sheep and 7000 goats! Woah… Talk about a Yom Ha’Atzmaut Barbeque. Ok it wasn’t exactly Independence Day, rather it was Shavuos and the Jews from the north started to trickle down to be Oleh Regel and to join once again in the good times. This of course concerned Baasha, the King of the North. And so they went to war.

 

Now although Asa had seemingly experienced Divine intervention in the past, yet perhaps time had weakened his faith. Baasha had made a treaty with Ben Hadad, the King of Aram which was in Damascus. So rather than go heads up against the two of them, Asa made the royal error- which only kings can- and went to Ben Hadad and bribed him to break his treaty with Baasha. A true busha. Imagine Jews bribing gentile arabs to break their treaties so that other Jews could attack them. But that’s what happened. They broke the treaty and Asa attacked the Northern cities of Dan, Iyun, and Avel Beit Maacha and wiped them out and destroyed their temples.

 

For those that like the tour part of this column. Dan is of course by Tel Dan. Iyun is the great Tanur waterfall right outside of Metulla which gets its water from Lebanon and is one of the highest in Israel. And Tel Avel Beit Maacha is right around the corner from it right outside Kiryat Shmona although there’s really not much to see there.

 

Baasha realizing that he can’t fight on two fronts retreats down to his capital of Tirtza abandoning as well the area near Nebi Samuel of Rama and Asa as well destroys those temples and with the wood and stones he built Geva Binyamin and Mitzpa. Today Geva Binyamin is the official name of the settlement known as Adam in Binyamin. It is adjacent to the arab village Jebba nearby where the original tel is found. In fact the original walls built by Asa described in our verse are still found there! Mitzpa nearby is either Nebi Samuel or the arab village of tel al natzba. Yet despite these great victories the Navi Hanani tells Asa that he has angered Hashem for his lack of faith. Rather he persecuted the bearer of bad news Hanani. As well he made a forcible draft of newlyweds and yeshiva students, which is never a good thing to do. Newly weds are biblically exempt from battles and yeshiva students provide the power of Torah that allows us to win our battles. These are lessons that unfortunately many Israeli governments forget.

 

Asa’s long reign that had so much potential ends with this tragedy. He becomes sick he is paralyzed from his feet and up and dies and is buried in the City of David. His belongings are all burned so that no one else could use them. And the cycle of civil war does not end but even ups itself as the next stage of descendants and kings take over.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE REFUGEE JOKES OF THE WEEK

 

What's the difference between a refugee and E.T? E.T learned English and wanted to go home.

 

I met a refugee on the bus today.

"What country are you from?" I asked.

"Iraq" he said.

"How did you escape?" I asked.

IRAN

 

An Afghan soldier called me earlier and told me he was in a refugee camp......but when he told it to me, he said he was caught between Iraq and a hard place.

 

Why are refugees so bad at baseball? Because they can't get home

How does Germany pay for all these refugees it’s taken in ? Krautfunding.

 

A refugee who recently snuck over the border is sitting in the street in Mexico in the streets of Texas, bemoaning his life, when suddenly, a genie appears.

"I'm the socialist, liberal genie," says he, "and I'm here to grant you three wishes."

The refugee says "You see this gap in my teeth? I want it fixed." No sooner does he say that, that he gets a copy of a new law, decreeing that all refugees in the US will get free health and dental care, courtesy of the state. He ran to the dentist and got his teeth fixed for free.

 

He is ecstatic, and says "I want a fully furnished house, endless money and to be reunited with my family."

No sooner does he say this, that a new law is passed, guaranteeing all refugees to the USA a fully furnished new home, welfare, and reunification with their families. And in his hands were a deed to his new home, and refugee papers for his family.

The man is stunned. He had gotten everything he wanted, and still had a wish left. So he said "I want to be a US citizen. In fact, I want to be named Billy." And as soon as he said that, his teeth went back to having a gap, and his house and family disappeared.

"What happened?!" he yelled.

"What do you mean, 'what happened'?" replied the genie. "You're an American now. You should be ashamed, trying to live off of government money. Go get a job, Billy!

 

About a month ago, a man in Amsterdam felt that he needed to confess.

So he went to his priest, "Forgive me Father, for I have sinned. During WWII I hid a Jewish refugee in my attic."

"Well," answered the priest, "that's not a sin."

"But I made him agree to pay me 20 Guilders for every week he stayed."

"I admit that wasn't good, but you did it for a good cause."

"Oh, thank you, Father; that eases my mind. I have one more question..."

"What is that, my son?"

"Do I have to tell him the war is over?”

 

Sam Levinson, the famous Jewish comedian told this story: When his parents were immigrants, escaping the prejudice of war-torn Europe, they fell under the spell of the American dream that the streets were paved with gold.

“When pop got here, he found three things: First, the streets weren't paved with gold… Second, the streets were not even paved. And third, he was supposed to do the paving.”

 

local Aliyah ambassador from the Israeli government was noticing that the response to his usual “pitch” about moving to Israel was having limited effect so he decided to change tactics.

“Instead of talking about Israel today, I am going to talk about nutrition and health.” Said the Aliyah representative. “Here is a summary of the latest medical findings:

The Japanese eat very little fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than do the British or Americans.

On the other hand the French eat a lot of fat and also suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or Americans.

The Japanese drink very little red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or Americans.

At the same time Italians drink excessive amounts of red wine and also suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or Americans. As well the Germans drink a lot of beer and eat lots of sausages and fats and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or Americans.

 

My conclusion: Eat and drink what you like. Move to Israel and learn to speak Hebrew. Speaking English is apparently what kills you.”

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Answer is D -I have never even heard the term Machtesh Hatira. The three incredible craters in Israel, our “Grand Canyons” are Machtesh Ha’Gadol, Ha’Katan and the largest is Machtesh Rimon. I knew they were formed by all of the above unique phenomena that were choices, I’ve seen the movie there tons of times- which is actually cool because it’s the only science museum  I’ve ever been to that starts off Bereishis Bara Elokim- in the Beginning Hashem created the world! But Hatira? Never heard that name. I suspected it was one of the two that are in Sinai which I didn’t even know if they have names. But that’s not in Israel so therefore I didn’t go with them. I guessed Ha’Katan. But it turns out the correct answer was Ha’Gadol, which I didn’t even know had officially been renamed Machtesh Yerucham- to increase tourism to the city nearby. So I got it half right and the score is now Schwartz 21 and 5 for MOT (Ministry of Tourism) on this exam.

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