Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile

Friday, February 28, 2025

Happy Ending- Parshat Teruma Shekalim 2025 5785

 Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

February 28th 2025 -Volume 14 Issue 18 30th of Shevat 5785

 

Parshat Teruma / Shekalim

Happy Ending

 

Have you ever wanted something so bad that you just couldn’t stop thinking about it? Sure, you could distract yourself with other things through out the day. We have lives after all. We have jobs, we have family, we have tours to give, shuls to run, cars to fix, phone calls to make. We have things to be busy with all the time. Yet, then there’s that thing that we are just dying for, that one thing that we are missing, that we are longing for, that just doesn’t stop entering our mind, that eats away at all of those distractions, that niggles on our subconscious and that at the end of the day is like a gaping hole in our heart that just can’t be plugged with everything else that we try to clog it up with. Have you ever felt that way about something so badly? Do you feel that way about something like that now?

 

I look at the world and I think that most of us have gone through something like that and maybe still feel that way now about something. I want to try to tap in and express that emotion, that I’ve been feeling to all of you. To myself. This weekly E-Mail is my weekly therapy. You guys out there reading this are just flies on the wall. Nice flies. Generous with your time, flies, to read these weekly thoughts. I wouldn’t mind if more of you were more generous with your sponsorships as well. I mean how cool would that be for me to get paid by you for this weekly Torah therapy, that you’re giving me, by just reading this. But, I’ll take what I can get. Although I am just mentioning that with Parshat Shekalim our twice a year annual campaign is starting. Check it out below…

 

But anyway, back to the therapy. Back to the longing. Back to that aching emotion of wanting something that just won’t go away. We’re going to deep this week, people. It’s been a rough week. But don’t worry or stop now. I need you here with me. I promise it will be a happy ending. It’s Adar after all. But let’s stop and think about what I’m trying to describe to you. Of that feeling, of that emotion and need. Think about that “older single” that’s been trying to get married for so many years of fruitless dating. It’s hard. They can’t stop thinking about it. They try to distract themselves. If they’re healthy they fill their lives with so many things. With work, with friends, with volunteerism, with chesed, with family. With babysitting for nephews and nieces. But it’s always there. When will I get married? When will I find love? When will I walk down the aisle? Build a home. Have a family? That’s the emotion I’m talking about.

 

The same is for someone that is married but that didn’t yet merit or weren’t blessed with a child. They try and they try and they go to doctor after doctor. But its just not happening. Again they try to fill their lives up with so many things. But everywhere they go they see families. They see children playing. They hear their laughter. They wonder if they will ever have their own. Who will say kaddish for them after they’re gone? Is their family line going to end with them? Will they ever have a baby to hold, to coddle, to love? To call their own. It’s not something you can run away from. There are not enough distractions in the world to remove that longing from your heart.

 

 I’ve been spending a lot of time in ancient Shilo on tours lately. There, where the Mishkan rested for 369 years when we first entered the land and where the entire nation came and prayed, worshiped and sacrificed to Hashem, we have the story of Chana. Chana who didn’t have children for so long. Chana who saw her sister Penina with all her kids. Whose husband Elkana loved her and tried to console her. Chana, who understood that she could never be consoled. That Hashem created her to have children. To have Shmuel who would anoint the kings of Israel. Chana pours out her heart to Hashem there and it is from her we learn out what a true prayer is. It’s wanting something so, so, badly, and just pouring out your heart to Hashem for it. That’s the yearning that I’m talking about.

 

When one davens at the Kotel, or at many holy places around Israel, graves of tzadikim of which there are no shortage, I look at those people that have their faces buried in the “Wall”. Their tears and eyes swallowed up around their book of Psalms that seems smashed on their nose being held so tightly as they whisper their prayers. What are they crying for? Is it to get married? Is someone sick that they love? What burdens are weighing them down? A wedding they have to make and can’t imagine paying for? Do they perhaps have a child that has lost their way, that is hurting themselves, that is in so much pain and they can’t bear to watch them suffer anymore? A parent that is sick, a court case that is looming and doesn’t look good, a sibling that is going through hell. They cry, they pray, they pour out their hearts as they beg and implore and shatter the heavens with their tears. There’s a hole so large, a need so deep. When will it get filled? When will it be over?

 

I don’t know if you have ever felt that need, experienced that longing or prayed that prayer. But we’ve all seen it. I think this year more than ever we’ve seen it on steroids. We watch these families of hostages being held in Gaza and we hear them. We feel that pain. We internalize their longing for their loved ones. Their fear. Their anxiety. Their anguish. It’s so powerful and reaches so deep that it has even taken over our own lives. We don’t sleep. We think about them. We just want them home. We feel they are ours.

 

We feel the pain of those who have lost children, fathers, siblings, soldiers loved ones. We want it to be over for them. We need it to be over. We try to imagine what so many mothers, wives, girlfriends, children are going through knowing that their_______ is in Gaza fighting, in Lebanon. That body bags are being brought back here all the time. That there are funerals all the time. Graves on Har Hertzel that are just swallowing up lives. They don’t sleep worrying that their loved one will be next. If that last hug and kiss that you gave them as they walked out the door would be the last time you felt their warmth close to you. Would they come back with two arms and legs? What type of trauma will they suffer? Will they be the same after all they will see and do? There’s no distraction in the world that can stop that longing for it all to be over. For them to be safe. For life to be what it was.

 

I think now you get what I’m talking about. But now I want to ask you about another longing that I’m not sure any of us really have. Or to be honest with ourselves- and that’s what we do here in Schwartz weekly Parsha therapy- ever really experience or care much about. Do you have that longing for the Bais Ha’Mikdash? Do you feel that you really really need that building? Do you dream about it? Do you find it on your mind and soul all the time? Is it to you like that single woman who wants her husband, like Chana or any childless person wanting a child? Like the parent whose child is in Gaza, whose father is there?

 

Or is it rather more like that Tesla that you wish you could be driving instead of that farkakteh old yeshivish Chevy that’s in the mechanic every other week. Is it the good American prime rib that you wish you could be eating rather then what they call entrecote in this country, but really just tastes like it fell off of one of those skinny cows in Pharaoh’s dream. It’s a land of milk honey and 7 species of grain and fruit… Hashem never promised us Prime Rib. But is that what the Bais Ha’Mikdash longing is for you? Don’t be shy. I’ll say it first. Yeah… it kind of is more like the Tesla thing for me.

 

Now I’m not talking about the Messianic era. That I think we all really, really, want. We want peace. We want love. We want light. We want Shalva- tranquility, like Yaakov Avinu did. We even want the so badly the eradication of Amalek, evil and darkness. And that they should suffer a lot while that happens. But the house of Hashem? The palace? The sacrifices? I mean that’s all good and stuff but are we really longing for it? Do we really lose sleep over the marble, the gold, the altar, the Holy of Holies, the Menora and show bread? Sure, it sounds cool. I’d love to hear the Levites Kumzitz and heavenly music. But that just seems like icing on the cake of the Messianic era. The cherry on the top. But I’m dreaming and longing for the cake. Who dreams and longs and can’t stop thinking about the cherry?

 

Yet, I think that’s where we have to take a pause and really understand what this whole Mikdash/ Mishkan/ Tabernacle/ House of Hashem is all about. Because ultimately that is really the core of it all. Longing for everything else besides that House, is like a woman going through a painful child fertilization procedure and just hoping for the shot to be over. It’s like someone that needs to get married and find their bashert and who is only hoping for the annoying dating process to be over. It’s the parent whose child is a hostage in Gaza who only is praying that their child has a good breakfast over there and isn’t too hungry. They’re missing the big picture. They don’t get what they really should be longing for. They’re missing the boat, big time.

 

What is this Mikdash? This Mishkan? Why is it so important? Why is it the core of everything? To be quite honest with ourselves. I pretty much have Hashem wherever and whenever I want Him. His Glory fills the world. He’s even in Lakewood. In Teaneck. In Boca. I’ve got a shul. I have Shabbos. I have Torah and Daf Yomi and mitzvos and tefillin and Sukka and even Purim with Shalach Manos. I mean, sure, sacrifices and fancy buildings and miracles would be nice. It would be great to not have to see that golden pimple or those horrible churches all over the Jerusalem.  And yeah, I even daven and close my eyes and imagine it a little bit during shemona Esrei, or on Tisha B’av or after four cups of wine at my seder when I sing L’shana Haba… But l’maaseh, none if that is really anything that I can honestly say I’m longing for.

 

The scary part about that is, that if I’m not really, really, longing for it, if I can’t feel that my life is really, really, incomplete without it- that I’m bereft, that I’m like a mother without a child, like a husband without a wife, then why should Hashem feel any real need to give it to me. To bring us to that day. To leave us with our fairly contented “yeshivish car” existence, in galus, in Boro Park, in a secularly run “State” of Israel, without a King, without a palace. Why give us a Tesla, if to be honest, the Chevy works fine enough for us?

 

There’s a fascinating Ramban, in this week’s parsha that opened up my eyes to an incredible insight. He explains that the secret of the Mishkan and the Bais Ha’Mikdash is really the replication of that moment that we stood on Mt. Sinai and saw, heard, connected and were bonded with Hashem. It’s when He came down to us and we were One with Him. It’s heaven and earth uniting. The essence of Creation finally being realized. It’s the encapsulation of all that mankind has ever longed for. It’s the world being returned to the state of the Garden of Eden.

 

Read through all of the intricate details of each and every one of the vessels of the Mishkan in this week’s parsha. Do you know how each one ends off? They each are commanded to be built

 

Ka’mareh asher hareiseim ba’har- like the image/ the vision that I showed you on the Mountain.

 

It’s all about a recreation of that Mountain, but eternally.

 

 For 210 years we suffered in Egypt in the worst world. For over 2000 years since the Creation of the world, we had been exiled from Eden. There was a flood, the tower of Bavel, there was destruction and then finally there was the beginning of the light with the birth of Avraham. There was a return of our family to the land of Israel. The 12 tribes, born in exile by Lavan’s house to Yaakov, came home. But then we were thrown out. We were in a tunnel for so long. Our babies were killed. Were murdered. We forgot who we were. What we needed to really long for. We forgot Eden. We forgot Jerusalem. We just wanted the pain to be over. The fighting to stop. And Hashem heard our cry.

 

He took us out. He showed us unreal miracles. He reminded us who we were. And then He took us to that mountain and we experienced His glory. We felt His love. The world was fixed. All our “zuhama” -the spiritual poison injected in us so long ago and that had numbed us for so long, had been removed. Our souls leapt out of us. When we came to that mountain, Hashem said that He would give us the Torah and the Mitzvos through Moshe and we told Him that wasn’t enough.  

 

Ritzoneinu li’ros Malkeinu- our will, our longing, our desire is to see our King.

 

We want to be one with You. We want You home. We want to be this way forever.

 

 It was the most awesome experience in the history of mankind. It did something to us a nation. It implanted in us the deepest and most core desire to experience that once again. To experience that forever. To have the whole world feel and taste that and live with and like that eternally. But it wasn’t going to happen there. Our job to bring that day and share it with the world, to bring that hostage Shechina home, to release mankind from the captivity of our exile from Eden, would only happen when we came into Israel. It comes when we build and have that Bait Ha’Mikdash. The Mikdash that is the representative of that Mountain, of Sinai, of the voice of Hashem speaking to us but not from the heaven on the top of a mountain, but rather from between the angels on the Aron Ha’Bris- the Ark of the covenant that we built for Him with our own two hands. The Bris that states that we are His and He is ours. That is the Mikdash. That is the longing of all longings.

 

There on that mountain, the parsha told us last week, we brought sacrifices. We ate together. We were united as one man and one heart. All of the Jewish people were in one place. There was one of us, because only when we are one, can He be revealed as One to us. There was only one thing that we longed, dreamed, and didn’t stop praying for. It was that that moment should be eternal. It should be forever. The world will finally be fixed. That feeling, that emotion is the at the root of all our desires and needs. It’s fascinating when one reads the prayer of Chana to see this. She praises Hashem. She sings about He has raised her up. How He has given her request and she concludes her prayer

 

Va’yarem keren li’Meshicho- He has or shall raise the horn of His anointed one; of Mashiach.

 

The more and more that we have longings, the deeper and deeper that those longings get, the closer and closer we get to recognizing that the core of it all is to get back to that total revelation of Hashem, of Sinai, of the Bais Ha’Mikdash, of Gan Eden. All of our tzoris, and all our other longings bring us back to that first and most essential one.

 

I read this morning an interview with Eli Sharabi who had been kept hostage in Gaza for 500 days and was released only to find that his wife, his children, his brother his friends were all killed. He said that he never recited Shema before in his life until he was taken hostage. But there he recited it every single day. He tapped into that faith, into Hashem, into a God he never knew he had and he felt Him there with him. There’s Agam who found Shabbos there. Romi and Eliya who made kiddush on water. Keith, who never recited a bracha in his life yet there on his piece of moldy pita they gave him he recited a bracha he once had heard of Mezonos. Elokeinu Melech Ha’Olam. He found the King of the World. He saw Him. He was one with Him. They all found in that darkness that what they really needed was light. They needed Hashem. They needed to be close. It’s all they dreamt about and cared about. And we all feel that too…

 

Hashem has brought us all in this past year and a half of war to the point where none of us are really sleeping well. Where we are experiencing deep, deep ,pain at different times and to different degrees. Hashem has been pulling off the numbness, the coldness of the galus-anesthesia and we’re in touch with that hole, that cavity inside of ourselves that we are finding it harder and harder to distract ourselves from. That hole is the Bais Ha’Mikdash. That hole is telling me that everything else that I have is just a distraction. It’s busy things to keep me from longing for the real Home, the real return. It’s a hafrashas challa ceremony, it’s a stand-with-a- sign’poster demonstration, it’s posting on social media, a yellow ribbon on my car, it’s going to Amuka or a Rabbi for a beracha to solve your problems. It’s me trying to feel I can do something to put a band-aid on the pain I’m feeling to achieve the small goal that I want to realize. But to a large degree, it’s missing the big picture of all of this. It’s missing that the real source of longing that our soul has been craving for since it stood on that mountain is to be one together and forever with Hashem.

 

I told you that this E-Mail will have a happy ending and it does. The Geula is really right here. It’s happening. We’re in it. Hostages are coming home. Evil is being destroyed. Daily we are seeing those families reuniting. We cry as we see them embrace. We feel it in our souls, and it reminds us of that embrace we had with Hashem on that Mountain. We remember the “image He showed us on the Har”. The world is screaming at us on all sides. Half of them are screaming for us to build the Mikdash and the other half wants to see us destroyed. The world is not letting us sit idle and go halfway on this one. Their souls also remember that day and experience. They know our job, perhaps even better then we do. The Mishkan was built with chashukeihem- with their desire. Parshat Teruma, the donations for the Mishkan are asher yidvenu libo- is with the donations of our heart. Our hearts are overflowing. Our desires for a new world are more intense then ever. The month of Adar is here. It is the month of Simcha. Of joy, of rejoicing. Of the Jews standing up and decimating their enemies. It’s the month before Nissan when we are told that the Geula, the final redemption will happen once again.  

 

We read Parshat shekalim the first of the four parshiyot and we recall that half shekel that Hashem showed Moshe on the mountain. The half shekel is that desire and understanding that we are incomplete without Him. Those are the coins that will buy the sacrifices that will be used in the Temple this year. Hopefully it will be money and donations we give to rebuild the Bais Hamikdash. This Shabbos we start the reading of the Torah to remind us about them. May this year, be the one that we fulfill that mitzva with more than just our reading, but rather with us donating and bringing our deepest hearts desire in the place that will return us to that moment when we stood at that mountain so long ago. That will find us a nation redeemed. To a world of Simchat Olam.

 

Have a very generous Shabbas Shekalim, a happy Chodesh Adar and a exuberant Shabbos!

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz 

 

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

YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“Gelt iz keilechdik—amol iz es do, amol iz es dort. -  Money is round, it rolls away from you

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

10. Privileges granted to various European powers by the Ottomans are referred to as ______


What is the importance of the Egyptian occupation of the Land of Israel in the 19th century,

from a historical perspective?

A. Some researchers see it as the beginning of the modern era in the Land

of Israel

B. The Egyptian occupation strengthened the position of the peasants in the

Land of Israel, creating local Arab nationalism

C. The Egyptian occupation increased the waves of first Aliyah due to its sympathy for

members of Hovevei Zion

D. The Egyptian occupation’s hostility to the West curbed the modernization begun by

Napoleon


RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/yiddelach -   Purim is here let’s get started with Rabbi Schwartz’es Purim hits! Yiddelach from last year….


https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/layehudim   - And here’s my Layehudim by Dovid Lowy on vocals and arrangements start dancing NOW!!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcQ_p97PQG8   -  Thank YOU HASHEM kicks off Adar with the new Happy Clappy album!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EhqVdWBrKo0     – Uri Davidi’s latest Purim Song La’Yehudim!

 

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

End of Yehoyakim- 598 BC – It was the 2nd of Adar. Yup talk about the timeliness of this column. Yehoyakim had been returned to Jerusalem after being held hostage by Nevuchadnezzar which seemingly should’ve taught him a lesson. Yet, it seems we Jews and our leaders are bad at receiving messages. This is despite the fact that the Navi Yirmiyahu was literally screaming at us that we needed to get our act together and the destruction was imminent. Yet Yehoyakim continues in his evil arrogant ways. When the opportunity presents itself after Nevuchadnezzar loses a battle to Egypt in AshkelonYehoyakim thinks he can rebel against him once again. Needless to say Nevuchadnezzar is not a happy camper.

 

Camped out in Ribla, which fascinatingly enough we discussed was also called Chamas… Ouch! There are some that place this in the South in the Northern Negev, whereas one opinion in Chazal is that it up near Turkey and Lebanon in Antochia. I guess Chamas is everywhere. There the Arab nations around us from AmmonMoav, the Kasdim/ Chaldeans and Syrian/ Aramites all converge and tell Nevuchadnezzar the prophecies that the time for the Temple to be destroyed is here. Clean out the Temple Mount destroy the Jews. Nevuchadnezzar is wary though. The Sanhedrin come to Nevuchadnezzar and tell him the time is not ripe yet. So Nevuchadnezzar agrees to forestall the destruction but demands that Yehoyakim be handed over to him. Yup, he wants his head.

 

For those learning Daf Yomi, this is particularly relevant in this week’s Daf. Is one permitted to hand over a person to save everyone else. Yehoyakim not surprisingly is of the opinion that this is prohibited. The sages respond that Dovid Ha’Melech did no less when he demanded that Sheva Ben Bichri be handed over to Yoav or the entire city of Avel would be killed. Yehoyakim is reluctant and there seems to be different opinions as to what happened. According to some the Jews handed him over and Nevuchadnezzar had him killed. Others say he died while they were sending down over the wall. While the most dramatic opinion is that the Jews themselves killed him and handed his body over to the Babylonians. Yet what followed next should sound familiar to us…

 

The Babylonians paraded him through the streets chopped him up into pieces, stuffed him into the carcass of a donkey, fed him to the dogs…etc… etc… etc… October 7th style but in the year 598 BC… It seems that they haven’t developed any more decency or humanity since then. And if 2600 years hasn’t done the trick, what makes you think that something has changed or will change…

 

This end to Yehoyakim is the punishment for his sins and all of the sins of his grandfather Menashe in whose evil ways he followed. We’re down to the last two kings. The end is near and nothing looks good for the Jewish people.

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TERRIBLE MONEY JOKES OF THE WEEK

 

Rebbi Goldberg posed a question to his 2nd grade class, "If I were to sell my house, car, donate my possessions to charity, and give all my money to the shul, would I get into heaven?"

The children unanimously replied, "No."

The Rebbi then asked, "If I were to keep the shul clean, mow the lawn, and keep everything neat and tidy, would I get into heaven?"

Once again, the answer was a resounding "No."

Apparently perplexed, the Rebbi asked, "Well, then how can I get into heaven?"

Quick-witted five-year-old Berel piped up and replied, "You have to be dead!"

 

A young blonde girl in her late teens, wanting to earn some extra money for the summer, decided to hire herself out as a "handy woman" and started canvassing a nearby well-to-do neighborhood.

She went to the front door of the first house and asked the owner if he had

any odd jobs for her to do. "Well, I guess I could use somebody to paint the porch" he said. "How much will you charge me?"

Delighted, the girl quickly responded, "How about $50?"

The man agreed and told her that the paint and brushes and everything she would need were in the garage. The man's wife, hearing the conversation, said to her husband, "Does she realize that our porch goes ALL the way around the house?"

"That's a bit cynical, isn't it?" he responded.

The wife replied, "You're right. I guess I'm starting to believe all those dumb blonde jokes."

A few hours later the blonde came to the door to collect her money.

"You're finished already??" the startled husband asked.

"Yes," the blonde replied, "and I even had paint left over so I gave it two coats."

Impressed, the man reached into his pocket for the $50 and handed it to her along with a $10 tip.

"Thank you," the blonde said, "And, by the way, it's not a Porch, it's a Lexus...

 

To this day, the boy that used to bully me at school still takes my lunch money. On the plus side, he makes great Deli sandwiches.

 

What do you call a man who gives students money? Grant

 

It’s true women do make less money than men. But it’s their fault because they choose the lower paying jobs. Men, for example, choose the higher paying jobs like doctor or lawyer. Whereas women choose the lower paying jobs like women doctor and women lawyer.

 

A robber held up a well-dressed man pointing his gun and yelling, “Give me all your money!”

The man replied, “Don’t you know who I am? I’m a U.S. congressman!”

The robber retorted, “In that case, give me all my money!”

 

How were you able to donate money to Hamas in America without getting in trouble? Just pay your taxes.

 

I asked the cashier “Could you give me small change instead of bills? I need money for the bus “

She said “That’s fare

 

What's the fastest way to earn money as a photographer? By selling your camera.

 

The reason why Saudi Arabia has so much money is not because of oil, but, because they wouldn't let their women spend it

 

What money do they use on Superman's homeworld? Kryptocurrency

 

What's the hardest part of being addicted to money? The withdrawals.

 

A factory owner is trying to come up with innovative ideas to save money and therefor save his business from going under.

The owner calls a meeting with all of his 200 employees out on the plant floor.

"Ok everyone, we are in deep trouble. I will give $2000 dollars to the first person that comes to me with a cost saving idea."

Immediately a guy in the front row shoots up his hand.

Owner says "Yes, Barry. That was fast, what's your cost saving plan?"

Barry says "make it $1000".

 

I‘m so good with managing money. I got a letter from a debt collector saying ‘outstanding payment’

 

My neighbour just finished writing a book on "How to make money."

Now he needs money to publish it .I told him to read the book

 

My local gas station started charging money just to put air in your tires. When I commented that this had been free for decades, the attendant just looked at me and said "that's inflation for you".

 

Growing up we didn't have a lot of money. I had to use a hand-me-down calculator with no multiplication symbol on it. Times were tough

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

The answer to this week”s question is A –  This doesn’t happen often, Thank Hashem, but when it does I will face the music. See, this one I got entirely wrong. I really had new clue about either part of this question and to be honest, I really don’t think I ever will need the information. If this was a real exam I definitely would’ve skipped this question, as you only have to answer 30 out of 33. But anyways the correct answer is the Turkish rights were called Capitulations and the Egyptian occupation they claim is the start of the modern Era of Israel… udder yeah udder nisht… whoe knows. Who cares. All I know is that as of now I don’t have a passing score on this exam so far which is not good… And thus the  new score is Rabbi Schwartz 6 Ministry of Tourism 4 on this exam so far. Oy….

Friday, February 21, 2025

Hear the Cry- Parshat Mishpatim 2025 5785

 Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

February 21st 2025 -Volume 14 Issue 17 23rd of Shevat 5785

 Parshat Mishpatim


Hear the Cry


 

Dear Shiri,

 

I believe with all my heart that you did your best to protect your young boys...  You must have warmed them with hugs in the cold and drafty tunnels. Or rationed the little food you received to feed them an extra bite or two. Over the past 500+ days, I've looked at that photo of you and your kids being brutally whisked away. You were holding both of your children, a combined weight of at least 25 kilos - and you carried them effortlessly.  Some might call it adrenaline, but I know it was a mother's strength. And I will crop out the background of that picture and replace it with a tunnel - because I'm sure you were just as strong for your babies in that awful hellhole beneath Gaza.

 

I imagine you singing to your boys in whispers, keeping their spirits alive with stories and games even in darkness. I picture you counting their breaths as they slept, the way all mothers do when their children are ill or afraid. And I can't help but wonder about your last moments.

 

Did you watch your children die?

Did your children watch you die?

 

These questions haunt me, along with the stolen moments of childhood:

 

Did Kfir ever take his first steps?

Or say his first words?

Did he make it to his first birthday? Or his second?

Did Ariel get to turn 5 and hold up all five fingers on one hand for his age? Did he finally make it through the night without any accidents?

 

I try to suppress these questions because the more I wonder, the deeper my grief becomes.

 

Your final act of motherhood was perhaps your greatest - holding them close, being their whole world when their world had been reduced to nothing. We will remember you not just as victims, but as a family bound by love and a mother's infinite strength.

 

May your memory be a blessing, and may your children's smiles - those bright, beautiful smiles before October 7th - remain forever in our hearts.

 

I didn’t write the above. It was sent to me, as were hundreds of others of letters of mourning. Of sadness and grief. And of rage. So so so much rage… Of humiliation. Of the desecration of the name of Hashem. The honor of His nation. Like sheep to the slaughter.

La’ag Va’keles ba’goyim- scorned and degraded by the nations

La’harog u’labeid- to be killed and exterminated

L’makah- to be beaten

 And worst of all…

L’cherpa- to be humiliated and shamed…

 

The pain, the shame, the horror… it’s too much. Ad masai?! Until when… How much more Ribono Shel Olam? As someone else sent me a meme. Only in Israel can 5 bombs blow up on buses in one day and that’s not the worst thing that happened.

 

Yet I think the answer to that question is that Hashem is asking us the exact same thing. How much longer will we not do what he has given us the command and mitzva to do. How much longer will we sit by and play politics and allow this desecration of His name to continue. We don’t even have Biden anymore to blame it on. We don’t have to worry about the world. Donald, Himself, (and yes that capital “H” is intentional) is basically imploring us to step up to the plate and do what we need to? So how much longer, Hashem is asking us? What more does He need to do? It’s like that old joke about man drowning in the ocean waiting for a miracle and Hashem sends him a lifeboat, a plank to grab on to, a helicopter and he just drowns there waiting for a miracle. When he comes up to heaven Hashem asks him what else he wanted. He sent him everything he needs.

 

After 2000 years Hashem has given us an army. A holy army. He gave us planes, guns and to make it sweeter a new shipment of 2000 lb bombs. Trump has told us to destroy them. To kill them all. “Not a building should be left in Gaza”. And I’m sure he really doesn’t care that much about the West Bank or anywhere else. Does Hashem need to have the entire United Nations pass a resolution that Israel should murder every single man woman and child there for us to finally act. How many more murdered and massacred red-haired babies do we need to be handed back to us pathetically in coffins by jeering scorning celebrating mobs of “innocent” civilians and their spawn, until we say we’ve had enough. Until we recognize that the shame of humiliation of our God and His nation has boiled over. That the blood of our girls, our babies, our parents, our grandparents is screaming at us from the stained earth. Ad masai… Hashem is yelling at us. How much longer will you wait. What else do I have to do for you to awaken. Wasn’t 6 million enough…?

 

This week’s parsha is called Mishpatim. Justice. Laws. It’s a parsha that is meant to give us the moral compass we need to navigate in this world and fulfill our role as the nation of Hashem. It’s fascinating that this parsha really divides the narrative of the giving of the Torah into two stories. Last week we read Yisro which tells us the story of the Ten commandments and the Jewish people being chosen as the special nation of Hashem. We accepted that role joyously as one man and one nation. Yet peculiarly enough I think that the two words that we would be looking to see in that parsha, that we all associate with the receiving of the Torah don’t appear in Yisro. The words are of course, Na’aseh V’Nishma- we will do and we will hear or internalize to be more accurate. Check it out! Those words are not there at all…

 

Rather those words appear in the second narrative of the story of Sinai at the end of this week’s parsha. Yet this narrative brings a whole new story of sacrifices and sprinkling of blood on the nation and eating and celebrating. It’s a whole different story. It is only here that Na’aseh V’Nishma appears. The sandwich in between these two stories which our parsha are all the various commandments, “justice” and social laws, as well as the more spiritual ones including the holidays. It seems that to get to Na’aseh V’Nishma from merely just blind acceptance and doing without internalizing we need to go through Parshat Mishpatim first. Only then can we reach the point where we could sit. We could eat. We could celebrate. We could be free.

 

Perhaps the greatest challenge to someone, to a nation that has undergone 210 years of slavery, persecution, exile and subjugation, is understanding and internalizing what being a free man is. Our hostages that are returning now after merely 500 days of being held in tunnels can explain that to you. Or perhaps they can’t… After living so long with being forced to do things, without having any ability to exert our basic human essence and expression of free will, the only thing we know how to do is take orders. The only way that we see society and others is of subjugators and servants. Man doesn’t have free-will. We don’t have choices. We are either the powerful ones that enslave or we are slaves that follow orders. The only thing that we can say after Hashem took us out of Egypt miraculously with a strong hand is Na’aseh- You are our new master. We will now do what You tell us to do.

 

 The mountain was held over our head, as the Midrash perhaps homiletically is teaching us, and we have a new Master. But we still have a slave mentality. We still don’t understand that our servitude to Hashem is a different animal entirely. It is a partnership. It is about us making choices. It’s about us revealing His spark and essence within each of us and in all of mankind. The reason Hashem took us out, the reason He gave us the Torah, the purpose of Him bringing us to the land, is for us to reveal that divine spark that is in all of humanity. It is to bring Hashem’s light to the world. We’re not meant to be a nation that is merely slaves or servants of a new powerful Divine Master. Rachmana Liba Ba’ai- Hashem wants our hearts. He needs our hearts. He needs the “nishma”- the internalization of who we are and the understanding that our freedom allows us to preform His will and shine His light unabashedly to the world.

 

Thus the first mitzva in this lesson is that we can never enslave a fellow Jew. We can purchase him. We can pay his bills for his crimes and take him into our home to rehabilitate him by giving him work, while providing for his family. But he’s not our slave really. We have to set him free. We have to bring him to a point where he expresses his humanity. And if he can’t do that in 7 years because he is so entrenched in that slave mindset, then he has until the yovel year and then he is automatically freed

 

. This is such a critical and essential first step for us to freedom because it forces us to look at the world in a different light than we have done. It forces us to get out of the slave/ owner mentality that has been drilled into us. Because as long as we can enslave others then we ourselves are really still slaves. We’re slaves to a worldview that Egypt engrained in us that there are only masters and servants in the world. There are none that have free-choice. There is no spirit of Hashem. We have to understand that being a slave for so long creates within us a slave mentality that may prevent us from leaving that life. That even when our master throws us out and tells us to leave, we may not have the strength to do it.

 

That godless slave/master worldview of galus is what the entire parsha of Mishpatim is trying to knock out of us. It’s a sickness that tells us that we can’t conquer and throw out our neighbors because we are subject and slaves to the world’s judgement and opinion. The first sentence of our parsha is

 

Eileh Ha’Mishpatim asher tasim lifneihem- These are the judgements Hashem has commanded Moshe to place before us.

 

The Talmud derives from this that the laws are what Hashem tells us to do. It is forbidden to go to the gentile courts. Even if they rule like our courts and laws. Because we need to know that they are NOT our moral compass. The Torah and Hashem’s laws are. If we need to go to them then we are really still slaves. Then it’s because we are still enslaved to them. Then we can buy a Jewish slave and keep him forever. Then we can fall under hard times and think that we can sell our own daughter to the nations. Sell our children to their ideology and their judgement and their resolutions. So the second law the Torah tells us

 

L’am nochri lo yimhso lmachro- You can’t sell her to a goy. Don’t sell out our children, our hostages, our impoverished to them. Rather take her as your wife. Provide for her. Realize that this poor Jewish maidservant kibbutznik is a free-man, just as you are. She as well has a spark of Hashem to reveal. Don’t let the goyim enslave that. Don’t let them turn you into their slaves to their opinions or judgements. You’re free. I took you out Egypt. You’re Mine. Do what I need you to do. Be My partner in fixing the world.

 

How? Next law… If someone kills someone. Kill him. He’s evil. Eradicate Him. If he plots and conspires to kill him and it’s intentional then even take him away from the Bais Hamikdash and kill him. There are no safe zones. There are no off-limits places where you should feel you can’t touch them. If someone kidnaps another human being put him to death. That the old-world view of masters and slaves, that is the essence of evil. That is the squashing of the Divine spark. Our job is to wipe out that evil.  Sure, Hashem could take care of it on His own. But He wants us to be His partners. It’s only as His partner, His Messenger, His nation, that His spark within us will be revealed.

 

In Hashem’s world we need to understand and personalize our job. An eye for eye, a tooth for a tooth, a hand for a hand, a burn for a burn, a wound for a wound. A baby for a baby. This law although our sages tell us refers to a monetary payment isn’t described as such. The reason that it isn’t punitively literal is because it’s impossible to exactly and precisely take the perfect vengeance that’s not too much or too little. Yet, the Torah doesn’t describe the retribution as a fine, or a payment or compensation. It’s payback. It’s personal. It’s your eye for the eye that they took out. It’s not just a bill. In a goyishe world compensation, or “reparations” are just a bill and negotiation. In Hashem’s world it’s an eye for an eye. A slave mindset doesn’t allow one to do that. One can pay, but they can’t get vengeance. They can’t restore justice. There is no justice. It has to be nishma- internalized to get here. That’s what Hashem wants us to understand and start absorbing into our psyche.

 

There’s mitzva, after mitzva, after mitzva, in this parsha that is all about us being that partner. That hand of Hashem that He chose us to be. There is even a mitzva that we shouldn’t be an

eid chamas”- a false witness to steal. To kidnap. To join forces in their evil by merely giving credence to their cause. To saying that anything besides death is coming to them. There is a mitzva of revenge against killing anyone that kills even a non-Jewish slave. This non-Jewish slave is someone that you took under your wing. He’s a loyal citizen of Israel. He maybe even serves in the army. He may be a Bedouin. But he was killed brutally. We are obligated to avenge their deaths. To bring justice to their murderer. To put them to death- even if the murderer is Jewish even more so when they are Hamas. In fact, it is here that we learn out that the punishment for murder is with sword. This is the source.

 

Yet after all of these mitzvos Hashem tells us, again right before we arrive at the narrative of Nishma, that He will bring us to the land when we follow the laws. Our borders will go down to Egypt. The land of the Philistines (Gaza), Up to the Euphrates through Lebanon and Turkey. There He will chase out and kill out or enemies. Is it only Hashem’s job though…? No. The Torah then shifts it to us, His partners.

 

“Don’t bow down to their gods. Don’t serve them. Don’t do like their actions.”

 

We’re not their slaves anymore. We don’t bow down to their values. We don’t answer to their courts. Not international ones or personal ones.

 

Destroy you shall destroy and shatter and break their altars and you shall serve Hashem”.

 

Do not make a treaty with them. Don’t let them live in your land, lest they cause you to sin to Me.” How???

 

“For you will serve their gods and they will be a mokeish- a stumbling block for you.”

(In hebrew, by the way, a bomb on a bus is called a mokeish)

 

This is not Donald Trump talking. Although from the way he talks and the way we talk it sounds like he’s reading the Torah more accurately than we are. This is Hashem. This is Him telling us that we’re free. That the world is in front of us. That He’s waiting for us to stop waiting for eagle’s wings and for stinging bees, or helicopters or life boats. It’s up to us to remove the chilul Hashem. It’s up to us be Nishma. To internalize these mitzvos. It’s up to us to realize that we really really are free. That we are no longer slaves. That we need to set all of that slavery free and allow our true free choice to do what needs to be done to happen.

 

The haftorah tells us about how right before the destruction of the Temple, the prophet Yirmiyahu recalls to the Jewish people this mitzva of setting free slaves. It seems that even when we had the temple, we couldn’t shake this goyishe world view that we are enslaved. It was the reason our sages tell us that we were exiled. It’s the reason why we are still not redeeming ourselves. We are a nation that were rescued and very easily said na’aseh. We will become slaves to Hashem. We will take a new master. We can follow Torah. We can observe mitzvos. We can obey the nuances of every law and take orders well. Yet, it’s the Nishma that we haven’t yet arrived at. We haven’t internalized that Hashem isn’t looking for order-takers. He wants us to be one with Him. Nishma is Shema Yisrael Hashem Echad- that we are One with Him. That’s the second narrative of the Torah. That’s when we merit to hear the story of the sacrifices, the celebration, the atonement of the blood finally, and seeing Hashem as we sit and celebrate together with Him.

 

This Shabbos we bless the month of Adar. It is the last month of the Jewish calendar before the month of Nissan, the month of redemption is here. The month of Adar is one where we remember that first exile from our Temple to Persia and how the Amalekites tried to wipe us out. How the whole world turned against us. How Hashem gave us the strength to be

l’aamod al nafsham” to stand up for our lives. 


To kill ALL of our enemies. We did that then. Can we do that today. We did that there as we fought for our lives in Chutz L’Aretz, in Iran, in Persia. Can we do that here in Eretz Yisrael as well? Hashem tells us we can. Do you hear it? Are you Nishma? The blood of our children is calling out to us. Do you hear Shiri? Kfir? Ariel?  Theirs should be the last call, the last cry that we need to finally realize the time is finally now.

Have a consoling Shabbos and a blessed joyous month of Adar,


Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz 

 

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YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“Got shtroft ober der mentch is noikem-  God punishes but man takes revenge..

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

9. “Anu” Museum is located in the city of ______

Who were the Black Panthers?

A. A social protest movement established in the early 1970s protesting institutional

discrimination against members of Mizrahi communities

B. A group of street artists operating in Jerusalem in the 1990s, inspired by blacks in the United

States

C. A group of poets who highlighted the absence of representation of Mizrachi Jews in Israeli

culture

D. A radical armed group operating against Israel in West Bank refugee camps


RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ANiOJXflHs  -  The mourning in Israel for the Bibas loss..


https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/avinu-malkeinu   - My haunting memorial song Avinu Malkeinu composition. Composed in memory after the Har Nof massacre but that still tragically is relevant…


https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/yizkeraim  -  This song Yizkereiem, I composed after the three boys were kidnapped and killed by the first Gaza War in 2012… As well May Hashem avenge their deaths and the blood of all of the Martyrs and finally herald in the Geula…


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gut1jyzwFV8    – Must see hilarious and so so true spoof on BBC “Slim-tifada”. Eretz Nehedert!

 

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


Hostage Kings and Children- 600 BC – It’s not only our children that are taken hostage. We’ve lost our Kings as well. The navi tells us of the evil Jewish King Yehoyakim who rebelled against Nevuchadnezzar. As we mentioned last week, the world map had changed. Assyria fell to Iran as did Egypt and its leader Pharaoh Necho. Bavel was the new world leader on the block. Yehoyakim still living under the old world concept rebelled and Nevuchadnezzar. wasn’t going to let that sit. He came to Jerusalem where he took Yehoyakim, the King of Israel himself into exile to Bavel, as well as many of the vessels of the Temple. There he kept him in prison in his palace for three years. Did the Jewish people try to get him out? It seems not…

 

 Perhaps they were too fearful. Perhaps they weren’t so fond of this king that had done so much evil and been such a goy… After all he desecrated the temple, brought licentiousness into the land and as we will see next week had it out with the prophet Yirmiyahu as well. He’s not someone that Israel was going to go up against Iran to rescue.

 

Remarkably after three years Yehoyakim was released. He was returned to Israel. Nevuchadnezzar thought he could trust him. Yet to hedge his bets, the prophet Daniel whom we will discuss as well soon and who starts to tell us about this time frame as he lived in Bavel, tells us how Nevuchadnezzar kept all of the children and many princes there in Iran with him. He wanted educate them and assimilate them into their culture. He wanted to turn them against their people, make them into Chamasnikim…

 

Yehoyakim returns to Israel, yet when he comes back it seems he doesn’t learn his lesson. He continues in his evil ways. He ignores the prophet Yirmiyahu. He emboldens himself to rebel once again against Nevuchadnezzar. This was a bad move. It was signing his own bitter death warrant. His ignominious and violent end is a message for us today. Stay tuned as we continue to learn about this last era before our Temple is destroyed and we head out to the story of Purim in Persia with this exile. Yet it is here already that the first exile begins at the 70 years of exile’s that the prophet foretold of was mistakenly first calculated from. (Those that are learning Oraysa’s Amud Yomi of Megilla this past week know what I’m talking about…)

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S DEAD GAZA BABY JOKES OF THE WEEK


(DISCLAIMER- I REALLY WASN’T IN THE MOOD TO WRITE JOKES THIS WEEK, BUT THEN I FIGURED YOU GUYS WOULD GET ALL UPSET…SO THIS IS THE TOPIC THAT CAME IN MIND… ) THE ONLY THING THAT MAKES ME SMILE…BUT DON’T READ IF YOU’RE TO DELICATE…YOU’VE BEEN WARNED….)

What is the best thing about dead Gaza baby jokes? They never get old

 

How do you make a dead Gaza baby float? 2 scoops of ice cream 1 scoop of dead Gaza baby

 

What's better than 2 dead babies in a dumpster? One dead Gaza baby in two dumpsters

 

Q. whats more fun than spinning a dead Gaza baby around at 50mph? A. stopping it with a shovel.

 

 I was going to cover my bathroom floor with dead Gazan baby skin... but my wife told me that would be infant tile.

 

How many dead Gazan baby’s do you need to fix a lightbulb? Apparently more than 11 cause my lightbulb is still broken

 

What's the difference between a dead Gaza baby and a Styrofoam cup? A dead baby doesn't harm the atmosphere when you burn it.

 

What's the difference between a dead Gazan baby and a trampoline? I take my shoes off to jump on a trampoline

 

How do you get 100 Gazan babies into a bucket? With a blender.

 

What is funnier than a dead Gaza baby? A dead Gazan baby in a clown costume.

 

How do you stop a baby from crawling around in circles? Nail it’s other hand to the floor

 

What is the difference between a Gaza baby and a onion? No one cries when you chop up the Gaza baby.

What’s the difference between a Gaza baby and a pizza? A pizza doesn’t scream when you put it in the oven

What’s the difference between a Gaza baby and a bagel? You can put a bagel in the toaster. You have to put the Gaza baby in the oven.

 

How many Gazan babies does it take to paint a house? Depends how hard you throw them.

 

What do you call a dead Gaza baby pinned to your wall? Art.

 

What bounces up and down at 100mph? A Gaza baby tied to the back of a truck.

 

What is red and hangs around trees? A Gaza baby hit by a snow blower.

What is green and hangs around trees? Same Gaza baby 3 weeks later.

 

What do vegetarian ogres eat? Cabbage patch kids.

 

What do you call a Gaza baby on a stick? A Kebabie.

 

What goes plop, plop, fizz, fizz? Twins Gaza babies in an acid bath.

 

There’s plenty more… but even I’m getting nauseous…

 

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The answer to this week”s question is A –  I only got half of this one right. And I should be ashamed of myself. The ANU museum which is the new formerly called Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv I knew. I’ve been there. I’m not the biggest fan of it. It’s a bit secular for me and lame all though they have some cool exhibits like shuls from all over the world. The Black Panthers though I should’ve known. I debated if it was the jewish protest movement of the Sefardim against the Ashkenazim. I kind of remembered learning about it. But I read the answer wrong and thought it saud the Ashkenazim against the Sefardim. So I went with D which is the terrorist movement in the West Bank and was wrong. So it’s a 50/50 on this one and the  new score is Rabbi Schwartz 6 Ministry of Tourism 3 on this exam so far.