Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Bring them Home- Parshat Vayeitzei 2023

 

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

November 24th 2023 -Volume 13 Issue 7 11th of Kisleiv 5784

 

Parshat Vayeitzei

 

Bring them Home

 

He didn’t think too long about the question, which was good. I didn’t have a lot of time. I had a flight to catch to America and this ceremony needed to get moving. I had already cut out most of my speech- which was painful. But now I just had to move. So when the Kohen asked my son-in-law whether he wanted his son or the 5 silver coins in his hand to redeem him with, my Yehuda answered ritualistically and appropriately that he’ll take the kid. And thus my grandson Shmuel Gedalia was redeemed and we were able to wash, eat a bagel, and make it to the airport on time. My grandson’s pidyon ha’ben had taken place. Mazel Tov!

 

It’s a strange unique ceremony and I pondered it on my train ride to the airport especially in light of the times and news and discussion and painful debates of the day. The mitzva of pidyon shvuyim- the redemption of hostages, of prisoners, of our two hundred and forty or so babies, children, young men, women, holocaust survivors, Bubbies and Zaydies- or perhaps more accurately Sabas and Savtas and chayalim and chayalot from the hands of these evil Hamas monsters- may their names be blotted and may the all die horrible painful deaths as Hashem avenges the blood of our innocent, is on all of our minds.  And I have a lot of good ideas for the painful deaths that I’ve wished upon these miflatzot- (monster sounds so much better in Hebrew)- in case anyone was short on them. Stringing them up by their tails and chopping them up limb by limb as cats and pigs lick their dripping blood with a big sign on their backsides that says this is what happens to anyone that spills any blood of any of my sisters and brothers, being one of the tamer terrorist deterrent methods that’s come to mind. But anyways I digress. The question that’s racked this country and that has been ripping all of our hearts to shreds even in its discussion is what should we do, what can we do, how great of a price must we pay to redeem and get our family back home again.  

 

The question is so painful, because we are all in such torment. We all feel their loss. Our hearts are ripped open. There is no Jew who hasn’t lost sleep, who hasn’t called up their own loved ones and hugged their own children or parents a little longer, who hasn’t had that nightmare or grappled with the pain of what if this was my_______. And there is none of us that won’t admit that if we were in that position there would be no price that would be too great to get our loved ones out of the hands of these baby burning, children shooting, rapist demons.

 

Yet, as well we know that every prisoner we release may and most likely will come back to kill us and wreak even more terror. The head of Hamas himself, who was the evil behind this latest massacre, was released in a prisoner exchange. Studies that have been documented show that thousands- not hundreds, but thousands of terror attacks were caused by released prisoners from previous hostage deals. Hundreds of Israeli have been killed by these repeat terrorists whom we have put back on the streets, and that’s not counting the most recent Simchas Torah massacre. Is that a price that we can pay? Should pay?

 

As well, even if we want to turn our eyes away from that likely reality, a cease fire in of itself at a time like this, when our soldiers are there on the ground, when the likelihood that Hamas will regroup somewhat, will get more power, will feel invigorated and empowered and perhaps even gain more world antisemitic world support that will try to prevent us from eradicating this evil. That will make that clock tick faster on the limited time the world and perhaps even the US will “allow” us to pursue this goal of destroying them and all of our enemies. This as well endangers and puts at great risk and will more likely cause the deaths of more and more soldiers making their jobs that much more fatal. More funerals. More shiva calls. More families that will have an empty place at their Shabbos table, in their hearts, in their lives. More generations wiped out that these young men and women would’ve brought to the world.

 

Yet, who can not look at those faces and pure eyes on those posters, cannot listen to the pain and tears of the bereaved pleading families and not be moved to do anything to bring them home?  Only an animal and antisemite- of which we’re learning that there are more and more of them and they are all around us. So what do we do? Do we want to redeem our son or do we want the 5 coins is an easy quick answerable question. This one though is so painful, I don’t believe there is a right answer. Certainly not one that I can sleep with the night after. And perhaps whoever makes that decision shouldn’t as well. What does Hashem want from us? Is the even harder question. What does he want us to do? I think the only answer to that question and to all of the questions that this has brought up is that he doesn’t want us to sleep. We’ve slept for too long. Bedtime is over.

 

Yet, as we do every week during this incredible period, one needs only to look to the weekly Torah portion and at least be amazed at how much of what we’re dealing with is there for us to delve into and to uncover. This week’s parsha of Vayeitzei, the story of the journey of Yaakov into Galus and the founding of the first entirely Jewish family of the 12 tribes of Israel is one that really at its start is one that has its roots as a stranger in a hostile foreign environment, with evil murdering liars that want only to destroy us. Hello, Uncle Lavan. From the get-go he takes away Yaakov’s beloved Rachel from him and replaces her with Leah. Yaakov has to “redeem” his wife by working another 7 years for her. It’s the good old last minute hostage switch. Even after that, he doesn’t want Yaakov to leave. He’s trying to keep him there. He wants him to keep working. He doesn’t want to let him return to Israel. He keeps him busy with sheep, goats, real estate deals, nursing homes, mortgage brokering, nice houses, fancy shuls. Whatever it takes to keep the Jew in galus. And it works for a very long time. It still does. Until Yaakov gets his wake-up call. And redeems everything.

 

Tena es nashai v’es yeladai- give me my women and children”- he cries out in this week’s parsha and its eternal call echoes still to us today.

 

Even the birth of every one of the tribes comes with a price. Leah is “hated” and only marries Yaakov with trickery. Rachel is barren. They each have to give their maid-servants to be joint wives with Yaakov. There’s duda’im flowers that have to be exchanged. The Jewish family comes into existence with a price. A question. How much would you pay for a child? How much would you pray for one? What would you give?

 

That question, that price, for our existence though really becomes the fundamental question of our nation that will proceed with us for the rest of the Book. What will we do to get Dinah, back from the terrorist in Shechem? Will we hide our children in boxes to prevent Esau from taking them? In bomb shelters? In migunits? Will we sell Yosef? Will we give up one brother to save another? To save the other 12? To save the future of the Jewish people when we perceive one of us to be a threat? What will we do and how far will we got to get back him back after we realize how precious he is to us? Will we all go into slavery? Will we hand over our innocent youngest brother, Binyamin? What do you want Yehuda?- The money or the child? Your Olam Haba or Binyamin? It’s one big story of pidyon haben. Of pidyon shvuyim.  

 

And yet the story continues and it was even foretold to Avraham that it would be this way. We all become shvuyim in Egypt. We are all prisoners. Hostages. Captives. The story that was our birth as a family, becomes the story of our birth as a nation. Hashem redeems us. He cuts the ultimate deal. He kills their first-borns and from that moment on every Jewish family’s first-born boy will remember that is how a Jewish family is born. By redeeming the first-born of their family. They are holy to Hashem. They are meant to be His representatives here to remind us and connect us to him. The Matza we eat on Pesach, the four cups, the story is not enough. We need every Jewish family to recognize that when their first-born son is born- he has a role to play. The role is that first question that he will cause us to ask of ourselves. Do we want to redeem the birthright? Are we willing to pay the price to be that family of Israel. That will be the first-born nation of Hashem.

 

{By the way, it’s fascinating that the role of the bechor was taken over and given to the Kohen who answered that call and picked up swords and went to fight against even our own brothers that threatened that birthright. That threatened our entire right to existence. It is to them that Hashem granted the kedushas bechor. The first-born only gets that back when he goes to the Kohen and tells him and recognizes that he wants that role back and he will do anything that is necessary to restore. He will give it all up for Hashem. To return us.}

 

Why is it this way? Why did Hashem make it that our birthright has to be redeemed? Why did Yaakov have to steal it and work for it to get it from Esau. Why did Yitzchak have to sacrifice himself to get it and prove himself so that Yishmael wouldn’t be the one. That Avraham would have to take Hagar as a wife and even bear a Yishmael and then painfully throw him out? That he would have to suffer with having his wife Sarah kidnapped by Pharaoh. Why? Why? Why? Why is this birthright and chosen people status have to be so intertwined with redemption? With struggle. With pain. With hard painful choices.

 

The answer our sages tell us is because the job of the birthright is in fact to redeem the entire world. To bring the world to teshuva. To return them to the Father that we have been captured and distanced from in a dark dangerous place. The word for captive, for hostage, for prisoner is shevi. It’s the same root as teshuva. Since the sin of the Adam and Chava and the snake in garden we have been taken out of Gan Eden where we once walked together with our Father. The sparks of holiness are spread all over the world. They are captured in what the mystics called kelipos. They are hidden in tunnels under hospitals in Gaza. In Spain. In Rome. In America. Our job is to redeem those shvuyim. Those sparks. Those lights. We need to bring them home. To liberate those sparks. In order to bring them home we need to be acutely aware of the pain of that Father. That parent that longs for His children. For all of His children. For the light that was once in His House. In His world.

 

The only one that could do that is that bechor- that chosen one who himself was redeemed. Who was born in exile. Born in that evil and that experienced the joy and jubilation of the return. Someone who sips Frappuccinos and sits in Universities and listens to lectures all day and are coddled and “protected” and “affirmative actioned” and that click all day on Tik Tok and Insta will never really get it. Someone that sits in the Bais Midrash all day (l’havdil) and whose Torah learning is disconnected from the pain of their brothers and sisters and their distance from their Father, those tinokos she’nishbu- the captive children who never had a chance to understand how rich and special and holy their legacy and job is, are just as guilty.

 

Someone who can go on with his and her life and their day-to-day “yiddishkeit” when there is so so much pain and turmoil when hundreds of thousands of families are incomplete, as they are refugees in their own country, they have sons, daughters, husbands, fathers that are serving in Gaza and who knows when and if they will come back, is not a bechor. He hasn’t understood that our job is to be redeemers. That our job as a Jewish family is to do what it takes to get our boys back. To bring the world back. To bring them ALL home.

 

Our parsha ends off with Yaakov finally leaving exile and returning to Israel. He has redeemed all of the tzon of Lavan- all those precious Jewish sheep that were “captured” by the lying forces of evil- that paint themselves white and that are the predecessors of all those that captured us. There are angels that escort him back, just as there were angels that brought him down. They are the angels of Gan Eden waiting outside to welcome us back into the Garden. May this week as well be the one that bring us all Home. We all have a flight to catch…

  

Have holy hartzigeh Shabbos,

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz 


************************

YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

Di gantseh velt iz ain ganev..”– The whole world is one thief.

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

15.The settlement named "Em Hakvutzot" (first of the kvutzot) is ___________.

Which of the following settlements is a Moshav?

A. Rosh Pina

B. Alonei Abba

C. Nahalal

D. Yodfat

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AyEqil-MfVE    Simcha Leiner’s latest song Ki Ata Imadi

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6y2laYXcBdU&list=RD6y2laYXcBdU&start_radio=1     Koololum amazing Like a Prayer “Bring em home edition

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6K1Kh13L1K8   -  The original Tzli V’Zemer Shmor aleinu KiYeladim with Zohar for us old timers…

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTcsBfy3G3w   - mind-blowing Sounds of Sirens Swords of Barzel war edition must listen…

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSCHdRMHxiw     Shwekey and Baruch Levine Refuah Shleima and Chasof at Zaka concert

 

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S PARSHA PRAYER INSPIRATION OF THE WEEK

 

Mariv and Mashiach We’re up to the third of our Patriarchs and the last of our three daily prayers being established; the evening prayer of Mariv. The parsha tells us of this prayer as Yaakov runs away from his brother Esau. He is the first Jew to enter into an elongated Galus. As he leaves the Midrash tells us that he passed over the place of the Beit HaMikdash and realizes that he didn’t pray there and thus he returns. On his way back it gets dark outside, he gets tired- not sleeping over 14 years while studying in the house of Shem and Ever can do that to you. He puts his head down and the Torah tells us that Hashem brought the mountain to him. Eretz Yisrael folded up underneath his head, and low and behold he was resting his head in the place of the Temple. There he sees the vision and dream of the angels going up and down. There is where he davens that first Mariv.

 

Rav Charlap in his incredible work sees in this prayer and the miracle of Hashem bringing the mountain to him the essence and secret of this prayer, of all our prayers in fact and the secret of our redemption. He notes that Yaakov’s longing when he went into Galus was obviously what all Jews feelings are. They are of longing to come back. For the galus to be over. For the Bait Ha’Mikdash. He returns to Eretz Yisrael  even before actually leaving and his thoughts are on the Bais Hamikdash. That’s the first Mariv. It’s a prayer that starts off with the recognition of Hashem in the dark, when it’s not light, when things seem bleak.

 

The first blessing is that even in this darkness we see Hashem as the Kel Chai V’Kayam- the Eternal King that rules over us. The second is that we feel Hashem’s love for us in this dark period even more than in the morning when we say ahava rabba- a great love. By night we say ahavas olam and eternal love. We recite the Shema and then we focus on our redemption. On our return. On the Bait Ha’Mikdash. It’s where all our prayers are meant to take us to.

 

When we do that, Rav Charlap writes, when all of our hearts and prayers are focused on that makom, that place where heaven meets earth and where the shechina comes down from. Then Hashem will bring the Mountain to us. He will return the Bait Ha’Mikdash. He will bring us home. Va’Yifga Ba’Makom- all of our prayers have to be about getting to that place. That’s where the gate of heaven is and that is the day we are waiting for.

 

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

 

Eilat- 600 BC Today the city of Eilat is swamped with refugees from the Gaza border settlements and from families from the North of Israel that had to leave their homes from the attacks of Hezbollah and fear of incursions. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard tourists say to me that Eilat is really not part of Israel. They think it’s a “Zionist” modern city. Israel’s “Miami beach”. It’s not a holy city. So, let’s slow down a bit and talk about this city, which we’re up to in our Navi study that was conquered by the king of Yehudah that followed Amatzia, who we learned last week was assassinated in Lachish by servants of his who were upset that he went to war against the North and had their children taken hostage as a result of that. Already while Amatzia was still living and hiding in Lachish his 16 year old son Azaria was anointed King. The time that he ruled until when ultimately Amatzia was killed is a subject of dispute, yet it seems that Azaria’s kingdom lasted 52 years which is quite long.  

 

The major and singular accomplishment mentioned over the reign of Azaria is his conquest of Eilat and the expansion of the Kingdom of Yehudah down south to the Red Sea. By the way why is it called the Red Sea? The reason is because it was in the land of Edom which means red. I’ll bet you didn’t know that… See, there’s always a parsha connection in this column. Edom of course is Esau. Now it is true that Eilat is not in the biblical borders of Israel and thus it is not subject to the laws that are dependent on the biblical borders such as shemitta and terumos and maasros according to many of the halachic authorities. As well it is even a subject of debate whether it should even have two days of Yom Tov as they do in Chutz L’Aretz although the overwhelming consensus is that they celebrate only one day.

 

Yet, there seems to be overwhelming opinion that the laws of settling the land of Israel is a separate mitzva from the laws of the sanctity of the land. And thus since Eilat is certainly within the borders that were promised to Avraham, and that seemingly not only that he “walked through”, but was even conquered by King David and Shlomo and settled during the first Temple period, as well we see that Azaria conquers and again later settles the area and even fortifies it tells us that in regards to Yishuv Eretz Yisrael this certainly is a fulfillment of the mitzva. The Tzitz Eliezer rules this way as do many others.  There are certainly even many opinions that view a battle by the Kings of Israel historically and as well by an army of Israel even in modern times on behalf of strengthening Eretz Yisrael as well is part of the mitzva.

 

So as you see Eilat besides being one of the most beautiful parts of Eretz Yisrael is one of the 10 nations that originally Hashem promised to Avraham that we would ultimately inherit. Those days are here as we once again return to our borders. The ones in Gaza as well as the other three nations we were meant to inherit on the other side of Jordan, up to Syria and Damascus and even up in Lebanon. The time for the fulfilment of that promise is here.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S FUNNY GAZA MEMES/ JOKES OF THE WEEK

 

Of Course the Jews agreed to a 4 day cease fire pause that just so happens to coincide with black Friday and Cyber Monday…

 

Incredible that Hamas can immediately locate and count 10,000 dead civilians but can’t find 25% of the children they abducted 45 days ago.m

 

If “Queers for Palestine were in Palestine their pronouns would be

Was/ were

 

The answer to this week”s question is C – So I’m going to count this on as right because I think that they messed up the question. The first part was easy. Degania just south of Tiverya is of course the first and oldest Kibbbutz in the world That was easy. The second part though was a bit tricky. See I knew that Nahalal was a Moshav and thus I got that right. The problem was thought Yodefat is as well. And the question really asked for which of the following which could be understood as a singular question. They really should’ve asked plural form which would be eizeh instead of mi which It does in Hebrew. But there are really two correct answers her. So I’ll count it as right. And thus the new score being Rabbi Schwartz at 11 point and the MOT having 4 point on this latest Ministry of Tourism exam.

 

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Thursday, November 16, 2023

Downs and Ups- Parshat Toldos 5784 2023

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

November 17th 2023 -Volume 13 Issue 6 4th of Kisleiv 5784

 

Parshat Toldos

 

Downs and Ups

 

I’m not a roller coaster type person. It’s not that I’m scared of them. I’ve grown up a bit since my father took me on Space Mountain when I was 8 years old and made them stop the ride in the middle because I thought I was having a heart attack. I’m pretty confident that I’m not going to die if I go on one. I just don’t enjoy even the thrill of the slight chance that it might happen. Which to be honest, I’m not sure why anyone really does.

 

Life is good. I don’t feel the need to escape from it. I don’t like to think about the fact that it might not always be here. The “it” being me. See… I don’t even like to say it or write it… I like things to keep going the way they are. Slight improvements or small ups and downs are good- even exciting at some points. But I don’t need to go up slowly in a small open-air car on a tiny track to the top of an insanely twisted railroad track with crazy drops, again and again to get a high out of life.

 

It’s one of the reasons why this month has been particularly challenging for me. Because as much as I don’t like amusement park roller coasters- that pales as to what I feel about emotional roller coasters. Being married to a woman who was pregnant multiple times was more than traumatic enough for me. I like to be happy-always. Funn- always. Inspired-always. I can deal with a small drops here and there, but really I like the steady heartbeat.

 

I don’t know how women do it to be frank. Those highs, those lows, those hormonal emotional ups and downs that they have to go through. I never appreciated the bracha I made each day of shelo asani isha- until I married one. Until I got to know one really well, that wasn’t my mother or sister. Since then, I thank Hashem every day that I don’t have to go through those emotional swings. I can just be happy, inspired Rabbi Schwartz. Until this past month… When everything changed.

 

No, I’m not pregnant. I’m not even fat- although without tour guiding as I sit on the couch and am not out there running and hiking around Israel a few pounds have come back. But I renewed my gym membership. Yeah... it’s Corona-take-II, for tour guides. So, no I’m not carrying a baby around growing in my belly. But it kind of feels that I have the weight of the world on my shoulders. On all of our shoulders. And the emotional swings of this party are not doing me well at all.

 

The first three days were shock, grief and even fear. How can this happen? Where is this going? Where is everyone? The Army…the police…Hashem? Is this for real? After that there was anger, rage, betrayal and fury. The focus of course wasn’t just on the Hamas, although the horror and real vengeful, destroy-Amalek sentiment that I can say I never honestly felt before against an entire nation men women children babies…all of them was a new emotion for me. Rather it was against our government or lack thereof here. How could they have let this happened. How could they be so blinded. How could they continue to abandon their citizens? Why are they not doing more? Where are they? What are they? It was horrible. And to a large degree it still is.

 

And then there were the tears. The non-stop flow of tears that just keep coming at random moments. I’m still glued to the news- for better and for worse. And it doesn’t stop and perhaps it shouldn’t. Families of hostages, of soldiers that have fallen, of so so many that went through the Holocaust of October 7th and 8th and 9th…. Listening to the constant barrage of tears of the 150,000 people that are refugees in our own country and can’t go home and don’t even know when or if they will return. Children who miss their homes, their friends, Businesses shutting down one after another, farmers who after Shemitta and the post-shemitta year are now seeing their fields and crops going to pot. The pain is so great, so deep, so endless. And so so personal. It is so dark.

 

And yet the roller coaster has ups. Incredible ups and slopes and tracks that we are climbing to heights never before. The Achdus/ Unity is insane.  The love of one jew to another, the disappearance of any hatred, any enmity any resentment or holier-than-thou ism that we suffered and divided us for so long. The not-normal revelation of Hashem in the world. In our world. In our soldiers, in the so many keeping Shabbos, wearing tefillin, tzitzis in the unparalleled chesed in the history of Klal Yisrael. In Egypt the Torah tells us “Ein bayis asher ein sham meis- there was no house that didn’t have a dead body. Well today there is no Jewish home anywhere in the world that not only doesn’t feel that they have lost someone, but that hasn’t done something whether it is to donate, to bake something, to take food, supplies, to daven, to learn, to comfort, to cry, to march, to post- there isn’t a Jew that hasn’t connected to do this and revealed the oneness of our nation and our God and it is inspiring. It’s mind-blowing. It’s as high as it gets.

 

There have been moments of pride. Proud of our soldiers, proud of our citizens, of our family. There are lots of funny laughing moments and fantastic memes and jokes and humor that we always seem to find in these situations. There’s lots of singing, of new songs, of concerts, of inspiration. Manny Matara- Sha- Gerrrr and Eretz Nehederet spoofs. There have been moments of unreal joy- and that’s not just for the Bris of my grandson a few weeks ago and his upcoming pidyon haben this week- but when miracles took place, when we returned to our homeland, when that hostage was rescued-that was out of the park!

 

There are those tear-jerking moments, the so so many Army base weddings taking place, the proposals, the births and the bar mitzvas. Those video clips of the soldiers coming home to their children, to their parents with that song they keep playing again and again. As I said, it’s been a roller coaster of emotions. Are you feeling pregnant just reading this? It’s like we woke up the day after Simchas Torah on emotional steroids. The ups and downs keep coming. But yet the month of light in the darkness, of miracles and of salvations is here. The ride is getting closer to the end.

 

As we enter this month we open up the chumash as we do every week and look for today’s message to me. Oh and for you too… We’ve finally reached the point of the birth of the third and last of our Patriarchs Yaakov; the father of the 12 tribes from whom we descend. As well we get his brother our Uncle Esau, who pretty much by the end of the parsha resolves to kill us. And he’s still trying to. We also have the final stories of the life of Yitzchak vs the Philistines in Gerar, non-coincidentally located in Gaza. His wife is taken from him. He’s subject to severe antisemitism. He even calls the well that he dug and that they fought with him over Sitna- hatred.

It’s actually fascinating if you read the text. The first well he dug, it says he called Iska- contention, because they fought with him over it. The third well which they didn’t fight with him over, he called Rechovot- as Hashem has widened our place and made us fruitful in the land. Yet that middle one which he called Sitna- hatred, it doesn’t say why he called it that. The answer I’ve seen given is because as opposed to the first well where he fell under the “contzeptzia” that they were fighting over land, over wells, over water, over whatever… When they continued to fight with him even after he gave it to them, he understood that the whole time it was all about hate. Hate doesn’t have a reason. They’re just hateful, spiteful, Philistine animals that can’t tolerate the Jew in our land. It’s not necessary to give a reason for it. It’s self-understood.

 

But that’s not what my E-Mail is about this week. That’s just a bonus. The moment that really stood out for me is the roller-coaster ride at the end of the Parsha. Here we have Yitzchak getting ready to pass his blessing down to his son. This is not just a bracha- this moment is really the fulfillment of all of Creation. In Yitzchak’s mind it’s a return to Gan Eden. Yaakov will be the spiritual heir and Esau will be his material partner in bringing Hashem’s glory out to the world. Unlike his father Avraham who had two wives and a Yishmael. Yitzchak has only one wife. He was brought up at the akeida and offered as a sacrifice. He knows that his entire job in life is to bring the world to its fulfillment. It’s Pesach night. It’s the night of the redemption. It’s also Yitzchak’s birthday as he was born on Pesach- as we know that our eventual exile takes place 400 years to the day from his birth. He’s literally at the footsteps of Mashiach. When Yaakov comes in, he smells Gan Eden, the food that he tastes our heavenly. It’s a Pesach Seder. He’s ready to open the door for Eliyahu. And then the ride goes downhill.

 

Eliyahu is not at the door. It’s Esau. And Yitzchak trembles the greatest shudder of his life. Rashi tells us he sees Gehenom open up in front of him. The Midrash and Zohar tells us that he sees everything that will happen from this moment on. He sees the destructions of the Temple, He sees the Crusades, He sees the inquisition, the Holocaust, the 6 million. He sees Simchas Torah 5784. Beeri, Kfar Azza, the soldiers, the pain, the horror and the terror. And he shudders. And he is terrified for he realizes that everything that he thought he knew. Everything that he thought should and would be. The son, Esau, that he loved, that he had banked so much on. That he had planned the future with. That ultimately would be essential to Hashem’s plan of revealing His presence to the world had sold it. It wasn’t going to happen. It would all be up to Yaakov now.

 

The path that Yaakov would have to take was going to be terrifying, long, and full of turmoil. It was going to be a roller coaster ride between these two brothers. One would be up, and one would be down. The day that he had hoped for, that his father had been blessed with, that Hashem was waiting for, when the entire world would find Him and bask in His glory, would require Yaakov to not only do the work of Esau with the hands of Esau that he had taken for himself, but he would still have to remain Yaakov. He would have to unite the two parts of himself. The two parts of his nation and his descendants. Then and only then would Esau become subject to him and recognize the blessing that he could only get from Hashem through Yaakov.

 

There is a fascinating statement in the Talmud Yerushalmi. Rav Hoshiya says

Gadol kiddush Hashem mei’chilul Hashem- The sanctification of Hashem’s name is greater than the desecration of Hashem’s name.

 

The Talmud proves this point from the law that on the one hand we see that we are prohibited from leaving a body of a criminal who had been executed hanging over night. Yet, at the same time we find in Navi that Shaul’s children who were executed were left hanging for months in order to publicize the sin that they did and to sanctify Hashem’s name.

 

Rav Tzvi Yehuda Kook though would often quote this Talmud and explain its seemingly simple and perplexing statement. After-all it would seem obvious that a sanctification of Hashem’s name is great and a Chilul Hashem is not. Rather he understands the wording of the Talmud to be that it is not that kiddush Hashem is greater than a Chilul Hashem- but rather that it is greater “mei- chilul Hashem”- from a desecration of Hashem’s name. When the Kiddush Hashem comes from a desecration of Hashem’s name it is and will always be greater. It will be the greatest light to happen.

 

Do you know what a Chilul Hashem is, he would ask? The Holocaust is the greatest chilul Hashem. For a chilul- a desecration, comes from the word chalal- empty space- chol- mundane or absent of God. When Hashem’s name is not apparent. When it is hidden. When all we see is evil. When the righteous are exterminated, murdered, butchered. When His nation are like sheep to the slaughter. That’s the biggest Chilul Hashem. And from that Chilul Hashem came the return to Israel. Came the State. It was a light that the world had waited 2000 years to experience.

 

It’s not only then. It’s always that way. The destruction of the first Temple led to the light of the story of Purim, and the miracle of our salvation and the rebuilding of the Temple. The chilul Hashem of the Hellenists and the Greeks and our assimilation during the second Temple led to the eternal holiday of Chanuka and the Kiddush Hashem that we celebrate annually still over 2000 years later. The destruction of the second Temple led to the Mishna, the Jerusalem Talmud, the Babylonian one. The Crusades led to the period of the Rishonim. The expulsion from Spain, the Torah in America. The ups follow the downs. The Kiddush Hashem that comes from the Chilul Hashem is from where the greatest light will come out.

 

The truth is that is the story of our biblical ancestors. It’s the entire Torah and book of Bereishis. Avraham’s success and downfall and success again and downfall. It’s Yitzchak’s story. It will be Yaakov’s story, the tribe’s story, Yosef and Egypt and our first Exodus on Pesach. It’s the roller coaster of Jewish history and life. It’s an eternal one. It’s an emotional one. It’s a tragic painful one, yet it’s the one that will bring Mashiach. One whose ride is almost over. Whose pregnancy will finally give birth.

 

The past 75 years here in Eretz Yisrael have been perhaps the greatest and most intense roller coaster ride of all. Built on the Chilul Hashem of the ashes of the crematoria and the martyrdom of the 6 million Kedoshim our state was born. Yet, that state was not one that was ready yet to acknowledge Hashem’s hand. The founders weren’t and the Jews that chose to remain in galus didn’t either. We didn’t have Yerushalayim. We didn’t feel we needed it. We were going to continue “rebuilding” in America spiritually and in Israel economically and materially. We didn’t bring Yaakov’s voice and the hands we took from Esau together in the country we were meant to. Thus the chilul Hashem got greater and greater and led to the 6-day war only 19 years after our founding. Yet, the miracles that came from that Chilul Hashem when we were abandoned by the world and when we thought we would lose it all brought perhaps the greatest Kiddush Hashem. We quadrupled our country, we got back all our holy places. We saw Hashem. Many started to return. Teshuva happened. The light was great. We were on the way up. And then we lost it.

The roller coaster took a downturn again. Kochi V’otzem yadi- our strength, our power, our army became the “contzeptzia”. Frum Jews that hadn’t moved decided that they didn’t need to. That they couldn’t. That we need to wait. That it’s not time. And the land mourned. And the miracles ceased. And the chalal- the hole and void got bigger and bigger. Yom Kippur came and we lost thousands. We were broken. We were terrified. Hashem saved us, yet the miracles were hidden. This wasn’t a 6- Day war. This didn’t give us any more land. This was a test to see if we could finally get the message and do what we need to do. And we didn’t. We made an even greater Chilul Hashem.

 

Sure we learned. Sure we strengthened our Torah. Sure we even moved to Israel. But it wasn’t together. We were divided. The frum for the frum. The Left for the left. The settlers for the settlers. In 2005 we had perhaps the next black day of chilul Hashem. We left Gaza. We left Gush Katif. We threw out 7000 Jews from their home. We made a deal with “Avimelech” of Gerar. We assumed it was just an “iska” when it was a “sitna”.

 

But it wasn’t their “sitna” for us. It was ours for one another. It was a lack of appreciation of how every inch of this land is ours from our forefathers. It’s from Hashem for all of us to live in. For all of us to inherit. For all of us to unabashedly declare that to the world.. For us to wipe out every single smelly Arab that doesn’t want to accept that. And by the way there are many many that actually serve in the army and really do want to live here in a Jewish State. It is possible. It’s what’s supposed to be. It’s what we are supposed to bring the world to see. It’s why we took the hands of Esau to use with our voice of Yaakov. It’s the end of the roller coaster ride and the last big twist and turn before the greatest kiddush Hashem finally is revealed.

 

It’s not fun being on a roller coaster. It’s not fun to be pregnant. Yet Hashem has put us on that ride. He put that baby in all of our tummies. There is a reason why the era of Mashiach is called by our sages as the birth pangs. It’s not just the actual real pain of the birth. It’s the 2000 year emotional pregnancy that we’ve been walking around with that is taking it’s final toll. Yet, the end is around the corner. We’re in the birthing room already. The crib is waiting for us. The light is getting brighter and brighter. I can smell the Kiddush. It smells like Gan Eden. The 5784-year-old chulent has been cooking for a long time. It’s going to be a real “Kiddush” Hashem.

  

Have holy hartzigeh Shabbos,

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz 

This week's Insights and Inspirat

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YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

Aroif kletert men pavolyeh; arop kolert men zich shnell.”. – Uphill one climbs slowly downhill you roll fast.

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

14.The use of Muqarnas in architecture in Israel started in the ___________ period.

Under the auspices of which country did the Catholics operate during the Ottoman period?

A. Turkey

B. Italy

C. Spain

D. France

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/good-shabbos    It's been a few weeks and you probably miss this song. Here it is my Good Shabbos song!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olxRpPMfVGg    Ishai Ribbo and Omar Adam in Washington DC

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDIupxVmnLo  -  Hillarious Eretz Nehedert BBC Sinwar interview spoof

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IiqIDCYZRs     - Shulem Lemmer Holocaust survivors song for Israeli Hostages

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0_WM5iKOfE    Ahavas Chinam Shuki Solomon…

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JBMG5mkg_s    Miami Boys Choir latest- We stand with Israel.

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S PARSHA PRAYER INSPIRATION OF THE WEEK

 

Praying for others Mincha The Torah portion this week tells us an incredible story about a special thought and approach to Tefilla that I sessential for us to feel particularly at this point in time. The parsha tells us that Yitzchak and Rivka after they had been married for 10 years and didn't have any children realized that she was barren. Rashi notes that unlike his father Avraham and even his son Yaakov, he was unable to take another wife or maidservant to marry him and produce children because since he was brought up a sacrifice by the akeida, he was sanctified and couldn't have a maidservant wife. So Rashi tells us that he went into one corner and prayed and Rivka went into the other corner and prayed.

 

There are a few puzzling things about these Rashi's. Did Yitzchak and Rivkah not pray for the entire 10 years that they would have children. Wouldn't anyone pray once they got married to have kids? Rashi as well seems to note that it was because he couldn't take another wife that they both went to pray. Really?! Is that what it took? And why does Rashi tell us they prayed in the corner? Who cares if they davened in their shul, in their kitchen, living room, study or in Uman? What does this make a difference?

 

I heard an incredible insight explaining a similar story in the Talmud in Ketuvot (62:). It tells us that the Rebbi Yehudah Hanasi married his son off to the daughter of Rebbi Yosi Ben Zimra. They got married and then he went off to study for 12 years, as it seems was the agreement and custom back then. Lock in the marriage when they're young and they'll finish the deal after the learns a bit. When he returned from his studies, they tried to have children and realized she was infertile. So the Talmud tells us that the two rabbis discussed the options. He couldn't take another wife because then it would look bad that he kept her waiting for 12 years like this. He couldn't take another wife because then people would shame her and say she is only his mistress. Therefore with no other option they decided to pray, and what do you know? She had children.

 

Once again this is a very strange story. Why do they have to go through all the options first? Did not the great Rebbi and Rebbi Yosi not understand what seemingly every one of us does; that we should daven.

 

The answer is that there is prayer and then there is prayer. As long as one feels that there are other options on the table, their prayers will not reach the ultimate sincerity. They won't hit home the way they are meant to. For them really to accomplish the maximum one has to feel that they have nowhere else to turn. They are in a corner. There's no right, there's no left. Their back is against the wall. That was the reason they eliminated all other options before their prayer. That is why Yitzchak and Rivkah’s prayer after 10 years were the most heartfelt when they realized he couldn't take another wife. That's why it tells us they davened in the corner.

 

We have a father in heaven that is waiting for us to turn our hearts to Him and understand that besides Him there are no other options. After 2000 years of Exile we have returned here to Eretz Yisrael. Yet, as we see and Hashem is telling us it’s not enough. that we have a home, a refuge, a place to settle a country even to shine out the light to the world from. We need our Father back here as well. He hasn't yet sent Mashiach perhaps because we still feel we have other options. Our backs are not yet to the wall. We're not in the corner. Hashem thus thrust us into a corner. We felt lost. We felt that nothing could stop our enemies. We woke up and we davened like never before. We still need those type of prayers.

 

We have entered the month of Kislev. It is a month of miracles. It is the darkest Shabbos of the year this week and it is in that dark corner, in that darkest of months that the light of miracles and of the dedication of the Temple can break through once again. May we merit to have our millennia of prayers for that day finally answered.

 

 

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

 

Civil War and Jewish Hostages? 620 BC We know and we’ve learned and our sages repeatedly tell us that the worst things happen to us when we have sinas chinam- when we’re fighting amongst each other. Today, those fights are civil compared to the times of the prophets, we have demonstrations, media posts and lashon hara. We couldn’t possibly imagine Jews taking swords against one another. But that’s exactly what happens at this juncture we are up to in our column. Amatzia the king of Yehuda after his resounding and brutal victory over Edom, is dealing with the pillaging and raids of the tribe of Ephraim from the Northern kingdom who had felt rejected by Amatzia when they were turned away from battle. So Amatzia sends message to Yoash the king of Israel in the North that they should meet in battle and settle this in war. Craziness…

 

Yoash tries to beg out and warns Amatzia that he’s messing with the wrong Kingdom. Remember the Northern Kingdom is 10 tribes against the two of Yehuda and Binyamin. As well fascinatingly enough the Northern Kingdom looked upon themselves as being more righteous. Since Yoash is a grandson of Yehu that had killed out the house of Achav, the only remaining members of Achav’s house were from his daughter (or sister) Atalia who had married Amatzia’s grandfather Achazya. So ironically we have the King of Yehuda being considered rightfully so not frum enough as they are looked upon as Achav’s descendants. And Yoash who is a grandson of Yehu that killed out Achav’s family felt that it was time to finish the job. Nothing like a family fight and certainly a generational one.

 

So they meet in battle in Beit Shemesh. The fact that the battle took place in Amaztia’s home turf showed that Yoash really wasn’t that scared. They devastated the army of Amatzia who fled back to Jerusalem. There Yoash pillaged the temple taking gold and silver from the Beit Ha’mikdash and even taking children as hostages from the house of Amatzia and his vassals and lords back to the Shomron. They were taken in order to serve as “insurance” that Amatzia would not try to attack him back again. As I said this is pretty insane, especially in light of what we are going through now. Jews taking other Jews as hostages. Using them as protection that they won’t be attacked, and in fact they weren’t. Amatzia was eventually hounded out and assassinated over a decade later by his own servants in the city of Lachish- not far from Beit Shemesh. Probably because they were upset that their hostages were not returned and seemingly he did nothing to return them Yoash on the other hand died right after this story. It’s chaos. And as we will see it spirals down even worse.

 

Kind of makes you feel that we were miles ahead with our petty fights about judicial reform and mechitzas in Tel Aviv and nasty rhetoric. We perhaps have learned the lesson that fighting among ourselves is never a winning strategy.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S FUNNY GAZA MEMES/ JOKES OF THE WEEK

 

Shifa is a hospital like Mengele was a doctor

 

If a Jews is murdered in the woods, does the World make a sound

 

Not everybody likes my new slogan- from the Sea to the River don’t you mess with my shvigger

 

New Monopoly Game Card- “Get out of Jew-Hater Jail Free – when you’re too much of a coward and a hypocrite to admit you hate Jews. Claim you’re an anti-Zionist and not an Anti-Semite

 

Washington Rally Security guards- “umm this rally is for 2 hours, you have enough food for a week.

 

The News used to tell us what happened and we had to decide how we felt about it. Now the News tells us how to feel and we have to decide if it happened.

  

          I       F

       Y    O    U

    C A N T   S  E  E

   WHATS HAPPENING IN

    I S R A E L  Y O U   N E E D

 

TO   BUY   SOME   NEW   GLASSES

 

OK I think that we have to really give it to them. No more mercy. We need to return to them their internet today… But we have to make HOT their provider and let them try to disconnect from them…

 

I have family fighting in Israel now. They’re not in the army… they just fight a lot.

 

A new study out of Johns Hopkins University shows that an increase of gun ownership among Gabbaim correlates with reduced talking during Davening.

 

People now seem afraid that Gaza will be occupied by Israel. Those same people were already saying that Gazs was occupied by Israel. For everyone’s sanity please make up your minds!

 

In response to the call for a boycott of Israeli made products amongs Palestine supporters here is a List of Palestinian Made Products and Companies You can Boycott

1)

2)

3)

4)

5)

Yeah…

 

The answer to this week”s question is D – Got  a half and half on this one. Arab archeology isn’t my strong point, but I knew that much of the architecture we have is in the Mamaluk period that really built a lot. The muqranas is the flowery columns I believe so I got that one right. Churches and all that mishigas is even less my interest. I guessed that the Ottoman which is Turkey was the right answer for Part B, the answer was France. Who cares? Not even interested in googling it. I’ll take the half right and be happy with is.  So got the new score being Rabbi Schwartz at 10 point and the MOT having 4 point on this latest Ministry of Tourism exam.