Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile

Friday, April 28, 2023

The Holy Jungle- Parshat Acharey Mos- Kedoshim 2023 5783

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

April 28th 2023 -Volume 12 Issue 28 7th of Iyar 5783

 

Parshat Acharey Mos- Kedoshim

The Holy Jungle

I think it was the serenity more than anything that was the most awesome part of our recent trip the past week and a half. That was the thought that hit me when I was out on my porch in middle of the jungle- or bush as they call it in Africa. It seems that a jungle is densely giant trees and vegetation, whereas the “Bush” is merely an uninhabited large area of smaller and less dense trees, shrubs and bushes. About 1/3 of the land of the world is forest, Bush and jungle. But for a city guy like myself, and most of you as well if there’s no one there and there’s lots of wild animals we’ve only seen or that belong in a zoo, it’s a Jungle. It’s what my father calls New York, by the way.

 

But it wasn’t the amazing animals that we saw on our Safari. It wasn’t the incredible wonder of Victoria Falls, the largest downpour of water in the world. It wasn’t Table Mountain standing at the edge of the cliff of Cape Town above the clouds looking down over gorgeous Ocean below us. It wasn’t the crocodiles, hippos and water buffalos on our water cruise or the giraffes we fed in the wild while impalas and Zebras frolicked around us. Forget about the elephants, hyenas and leopards. They were all amazing and wonderous. Ma Rabu truly. (Wait until you hear the latest song that I composed while I experienced all of that…coming soon after Lag Ba’Omer). Yet it was that morning out in the Bush in Krueger before sunrise outside our more rustic tents while everyone was sleeping and I was sipping my coffee that most touched by soul.

 

The world was perfect. It was rising. It was being born anew. I heard in my head that “Waaaa Falenya… “Circle of Life- Lion King” song playing in my head. The crickets, the small creatures, the birds chirping, the predators returning after their nights hunt and the jungle just awakening to a new day. It was the pristine natural world, and I was just sitting there on my porch watching it all come together. It was perfect. It was creation. It was sitting next to Hashem and experiencing Him sitting next to me in that seat- just as I sat with my children the previous day in our Safari jeep, shepping so much nachas at the sites and world I was showing them. It was so holy. It was Yom Kippur in the Holy of Holies. It was just the two of us together. Me and my Father in Shamayim. I didn’t want it to end. I could have sat there forever…

 

It’s taken me a long time to write this next paragraph. I didn’t want to leave the last one. But I have to write this E-Mail. I have to find something that I can write and share with you that will inspire you and even connect it to the Parsha. But the truth is words can never adequately describe or make any more inspirational that moment there in the Jungle. Just as text can never describe the music and magic of a beautiful song, harmony or full orchestra. It’s a different sphere of experience. It’s separate. It’s holy. It’s beyond words and letters. It’s the soul. It’s Hashem.

 

Fortunately, this week’s Parsha is actually about precisely those emotions, that experience and that holiness that I’ve just described. Yet fascinatingly enough it seems to be described and we are told repeatedly is achievable in what feels like a counterintuitive process. This week we read two parshiyot that often go hand in hand. We have Parshat Acharey Mos which begins with the Temple service that is done on Yom Kippur by the High Priest. The Parsha concludes then with the laws of all of the forbidden and incestual relationships that we are meant to avoid.

 

The second Parsha we read appropriately titled Kedoshim- Holy seems to run the whole spectrum of various and even unrelated commandments. With 51 Mitzvos, 38 negative and 13 positive ones, it’s almost ten percent of all of the mitzvos in the Torah. The Mitzvos touch on relations between man and his fellow man, loving and rebuking one’s friends and judging favorably and behaving honestly in business. It contains agricultural mitzvos of the land of Israel and maintaining its crops. And it has laws relating to our relationship with Hashem and prohibitions of idolatry of sorts and the awe of the Temple and Shabbos. It’s all over the map.

 

You know how I said previously that words detract from the spiritual description of what I felt that morning in Africa. Well, that idea is only compounded when I think about how we feel about Yom Kippur or being holy in general. When we think about the sanctity and purity or holiness of Yom Kippur is the first thought that crosses your mind slaughtering animals? Goat lotteries that get thrown off cliffs? Blood sprinklings, incest burning, clothing changes and repeated Mikva dips?

 

If I asked you to describe me what a holy person is do you think anyone would describe it as someone who doesn’t have marital relations with a cow? With his sister or mother-in-law? Would it be someone who doesn’t curse his parents? Someone who doesn’t sacrifice his child in fire, worship idols or take on foreign pagan customs? Is it a person without tatoos or unshaven sidelocks?  Is it someone who isn’t vengeful someone who doesn’t lie, cheat, steal gossip or not pay his workers? Would even one of those descriptions be the first that comes to your mind when you think about a holy person? Yet that’s precisely what our parsha titled Kedoshim is all about.

 

Perhaps the best way to really get to the crux of this and perhaps one of the most important aspects of understanding our entire existence is really by understanding what this idea of holiness really is. There are two concepts that come up repeatedly in our parshiyot that to most of us seem to be interchangeable yet in fact they are worlds apart. The first is purity- tahara and the second is kedusha holiness. Do they sound the same to you? What’s the difference between them?

 

Rav Charlap in his incredible work Mei Merom quotes the Talmud in Nidda that tells us that when a child comes to the world he is sworn

 

Know that Hashem is pure and His servants are pure and the soul inside of you is pure- if you will keep it pure it is good”.

 

He points out that the idea of kedusha- holiness is not mentioned at this point. His explanation is that purity-tahara is only a concept when there is impurity to differentiate and contrast it against. Kedusha- holiness though, is an encompassing reality of the universe in which only Hashem’s presence is realized, and impurity doesn’t exist at all. Everything is holy. It’s all and only Hashem.

 

Before a soul enters the body, it is only pure. This stands opposed to the mortal and finite body which is impure. It is only when the pure neshoma enters the body that holiness can be achieved by uplifting the body and transforming it with that pure soul into something divine and eternal. It is the reason, as well that a fundamental part of Jewish belief is the resurrection of the dead body. For in life and through our mitzvos and the experience of the soul with the body the physical body has become holy and eternal as well. It’s no longer impure. It’s kadosh. It’s as eternal as the soul. It’s as holy as Hashem is.

 

The Zohar Ha’Kadosh reveals to us that the first verse of our Parsha ‘Kedoshim tihiyu’ should not be understood as it commonly is, as a commandment to be holy. For if so, it should say ‘yihiyu’. Rather ‘tihiyu ‘is a ‘havtacha’- it is a promise and a description. We will be holy. We are inherently and at our core holy and should maintain that holiness. We should let it shine and naturally reveal itself. The centerpiece of our davening each day is the Shemona Esrei, and the center of that as well is the Kedusha prayer recited in the prayer of the holiness of Hashem.

 

Kadosh Kadosh Kadosh- Holy! Holy! Holy!

Melo Kol Ha’Aretz Kevodo- the entire world is filled with His glory.

 

The angels wait for one another to make this declaration. Even more amazing is that they wait for us to recite this first each day. For it is only we who are in mortal bodies that can begin the process of uplifting and transforming the physical world where Hashem and His holiness is hidden, into a holy one.

 

Do you know what was so holy about that jungle morning? It’s that there is a sense that the world is perfect as created. It’s that Hashem’s glory is all around me. I only feel and see him. It’s the barest most natural and untainted state of the world. It’s the garden of Eden and I was like Adam Ha’Rishon walking with Hashem in it. Sipping my coffees to be more precise.

 

That sense of holiness the Torah tells us is what is meant to be found inside of us always. It is there. The problem is that there is too much impurity that is preventing it from shining out. There’s blockage. Tumah. It’s hiddenness. It’s shmutz on our glasses or camera lens. It’s smashed moths on our windshields. The pure view that our never tainted neshoma has, can’t shine out to see the holiness in the rest of the world. So we have to clean it first. We have to get out to the pristine jungle without any electricity and buildings and noise. We have to look at the stars and the sky and the moon without the any “light pollution” and then Hashem’s kedusha will shine out to us. Then our neshoma sees it all. The tumah has all disappeared. Malah Ha’Aretz Kivodo- the world is only filled with His Glory.

 

Acharey Mos, Yom Kippur begins with getting rid of that tumah. It’s not about holiness yet. It’s killing the goats. It’s sprinkling the blood. It’s chucking it all off the mountain. It’s getting clean and then finally entering that Holy of Holies. When the Kohen Gadol, who represents all of us comes out of there, that holiness and purity to change the world and cleanse it comes out with him to all of us. Now we just have to let it shine naturally. We need to keep our windshield clean. We need to make sure that our natural physical desires are tuned into that correct channel by not distorting them. We need to marry the person that will be connected to because holiness first and foremost happens in that wedded state where the two souls become one and build a home together.

 

The Sefat Emes notes that whenever we preform a mitzva the blessing we say is asher kidishanu b’mitzvosuv- He sanctifies us with His commandments. The word ‘Kidishanu’ doesn’t only mean sanctify us, but rather it can also mean that He marries us with His commandments. Hashem becomes betrothed to us again and again and again. Each mitzva deepening and furthering the level of our relationship with Him. With every act we shine the beauty of the holiness of Hashem within us out to the rest of the world. We fill it with His glory. He compares it to a gift. When one gives a gift to a friend there is two things that happen. There is the actual gift that we receive and there is the love and emotion behind that gift that is even more significant; that is really the crux of it all.

 

Asher Kidishanu- that is the love and the holiness. V’tzivanu is the mitzva, is the connector, is the gift that brings that love out and brings us together.

 

Being holy doesn’t mean doing anything more than getting away from all the things that prevent the natural holiness from shining out. We recite the word Kadosh three times as there are three planes of existence. There is time, place and the soul- A’Sha’N -Olam, Shana and Nefesh. In the sphere of time that holiness is our Shabbos. It is the day without any distractions. It is all holy. Don’t taint it. Let the holiness of it shine out.

 

In Nefesh. It means not hating. It means not being vengeful and not speaking gossip. It is not having idolsnor feeling the need to alter one’s body. It means not only loving and seeing the holiness in every Jew and human but rebuking them and bringing them close to the truth and uniting us all together.

 

In place there is Eretz Yisrael, our holy land. We shine its holiness by not thinking its ours. We leave parts of the fields for the poor, we don’t distort and intermingle our crops. Let the kedusha of the land shine out. Even more so it is the Bais Ha’Mikdash. It is the palace of the King. It’s the place where we come to see Him three times a year. It is where we come close to Him. It’s the source of where all of the holiness of the world will shine forth from.

 

One of the jarring fascinating things that continuously struck me when I was in Chutz La’Aretz- as I am saying Kaddish currently for a neighbor of mine that passed away and had no one to recite it for him, is that there is an additional word in Kaddish that you only recite in Israel. In the Rabbinic Kaddish in the diaspora when we ask for blessing for all of Israel and its Rabbis and studiers of the Torah we say ‘B’Asra Ha’dein’- in this land. In Israel though we add in the additional word of ‘Asra Kadisha Hadein- this holy land. As I said Kaddish here I always felt that the reason for this addition was to remind me that Israel is a holy place and different than everywhere else. Yet upon my trip there something else became clear to me. The opposite effect actually happened. As the words started to roll off my tongue- as my kaddishes are usually on cruise control and by rote, I had to stop myself and catch myself from saying the word “Kadisha”. I wasn’t in a holy land. I was in Africa. There is only one holy land. And as beautiful and remarkable and as awesome and even as a spiritual as it felt, it still wasn’t holy. I wasn’t in an Asra Kadisha.

 

The world will only be malah ha’aretz kivodo- filled with the glory of Hashem, when all of Israel is here together shining out that kedusha from its source. When every last piece of our national body is together as one in wedded harmony fulfilling our mitzvos here and celebrating our Shabbos here. When our Father is in his House together with us. When just as we were by Sinai, we are Ish Echad B’Leiv Echad. We are all one.

 

Kadosh Kadosh Kadosh- The Magid teaches us is Israel, Hashem and the Torah. That is the light we are waiting for. The period of Omer when we count to that moment on Sinai when that once happened is the time when we long to once again experience that. It’s the day and the beautiful morning when the whole world will soon experience that ultimate holy serenity.

 

Have a serene and wild Shabbos,

 

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

 

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YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“Es iz nit azoi tei’er der geshank vi der gedank.” - The gift is not as precious as the thought

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

19) The ancient period in which the "Agricultural Revolution" took place is called:

Among the following periods, which is the earliest?

a) Iron I

b) The Chalcolithic

c) The Paleolithic

d) Early Bronze I

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tQGfoyZcnw  - Sefira Acapella time of year- Baruch Levine’s Beautiful new Yehi Ratzon

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4lnqE93w84   -Benny Friedmans Latest Acapella incredible original words for Siyum Ha’Rambam of Messianic times… beautiful…U’Voso Ha’Zman

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy-PFu1feJ8 – Joey Newcomb’s Acapella for Hatzala museum- Mi Shoamar Dai- nice but I still like SYR’s version better of these words..

feast!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhBwBSoeTr4   – Cool Reb Shaya Ben Reb Moshe Sand art song and video… Cool!

 

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

 

Floating Metal- 680 BC- With Geichazi the Metzora (this week’s parsha) being sent away, it seems that Elisha’s yeshiva went up in popularity. Lots of prophet students gathered to Elisha to study by him. It seems the Yehsiva was bursting at it’s seams to the point where the students approached  Elisha and asked to begin an expansion campaign to build a wider facility near the Jordan River. Elisha acquiesced and the campaign began.

 

Now back then an expansion campaign wasn’t about fund-raising or Charidy campaigns. It meant that the students actually did the work of chopping down trees and building the new structure. Not having much money, the even borrowed the tools to chop down the wood. And  wouldn’t you know it? Lo and Behold one of the students- who it seems was a bit of a shlemazel knocked off the bladed of his Axe and it went down down down the Jordan River. Now, I take tourists all summer long rafting down the Jordan- and yes, where I do it is the Upper Jordan River. I can tell you that it was more than a few times that they’ve lost glasses, water bottles, goggles, slippers or Crocs down the river. When that happens, you pretty much give up hope- although I’ve had some that have found them. But only by diving in immediately. The Jordan River today is a about2 % of the size that it was back then. You can imagine that there was no way you were getting that back. I’m standing today, by the Zambizei River in Zambia (I’ll tell you about that in a future upcoming E-Mail- don’t worry). There is no way- your finding an Axe blade that sinks in it.

Yet, if you’re a student of Elisha, you don;t

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE WILD ANIMAL JOKES  OF THE WEEK

 

What animal has more lives than a cat? Frogs, they croak every night!

What did the grape say when the elephant stepped on it? It gave a little wine.

What do you call an exploding monkey? A baboom.

Why couldn’t the leopard play hide and seek? Because he was always spotted.

Can a kangaroo jump higher than the Empire State Building? Of course. The Empire State Building can’t jump.

Why did the lion always lose at poker? He was playing with a bunch of cheetahs.

What’s the difference between a hippo and a Zippo? One is really heavy, and the other is a little lighter.

 

Yankel went on safari with his wife and mother-in-law. One evening, while still deep in the jungle, the wife awoke to find her mother gone. Rushing to her husband, she insisted on them both trying to find her mother. Yankel picked up his rifle, put on his hat, and started to look for her. In a clearing not far from the camp, they came upon a chilling sight: the mother-in-law was backed up against a thick, impenetrable bush, and a large male lion stood facing her. The wife cried, "What are we going to do?" "Nothing," said Yankel. "The lion got himself into this mess, let him get himself out of it."

 

Berel was a Jewish dog who went on a safari with his owner Shemerel.  One day Berel the dog starts chasing butterflies and before long he discovers that he is lost. So, wandering about he notices a leopard heading rapidly in his direction with the obvious intention of having lunch.

The dog thinks, "Uh Oh, I'm in trouble now”. Then he noticed some bones on the ground close by, and immediately settles down to chew on the bones with his back to the approaching cat.

Just as the leopard is about to leap, the dog exclaims loudly, "Man, that was one delicious leopard. I wonder if there are any more around here?"

 

Hearing this the leopard halts his attack in mid stride, as a look of terror comes over him, and slinks away into the trees. "Whew", says the leopard. "That was close. That dog nearly had me."

Meanwhile, a Achmed the monkey who had been watching the whole scene from a nearby tree, figures he can put this knowledge to good use and trade it for protection from the leopard. So, off he goes. But the dog saw him heading after the leopard with great speed and figured that something must be up.

 

The monkey soon catches up with the leopard, spills the beans and strikes a deal for himself with the leopard. The cat is furious at being made a fool of and says, "Here monkey, hop on my back and see what's going to happen to that conniving canine."

When Berel saw the leopard coming toward him with the monkey on its back, he thought to himself, "What am I going to do now?" But instead of running, the dog sat down with his back to his attackers pretending he hasn't seen them yet. And just when they got close enough to hear, the dog says, "Where's that monkey, Achmed,. I can never trust him. I sent him off half an hour ago to bring me another leopard, and he's still not back!!"

 

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The answer to this week”s question is C –Ancient civilizations or what is known as pre-history was never one of my strong points. I probably would’ve known this answer 12 years ago when I studied for my exam, but that information which I never use in my guiding really has long been deleted from my limited brain space. I have to leave room for where the latest kosher restartaunts are. So when I looked up the answer I remembered that it was in fact called the Neolithic or New stone age which was the agricultural revolution. Scientists put that about 10,000 years ago. We of course know that started with Noach only about 5000 or so years ago. As far as part two I got that right. Calcolithic I knew was copper age. And stone is first so Paleolithic is way before the Iron Bornze or copper and that of course is the right answer  So I got this one half wrong or half right depending on how you want to look at it. So that makes the score as of now  15 for Schwartz and 4 for Ministry of tourism on this exam so far…

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