Karmiel

Karmiel
Our view of the Galile
Showing posts with label soldier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soldier. Show all posts

Thursday, November 9, 2023

B'Ychad Ninatzayach - As One- Parshat Chayei Sarah 2023 5784

 

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

November 10th 2023 -Volume 13 Issue 5 26th of Cheshvan 5784

 

Parshat Chayei Sarah

 

B’Yachad Ninatzayach- As One

 

I never dreamed of being a soldier, being a warrior, being Rambo, or even a super-hero that beats up bad guys and destroys evil. I’m more of the wimpy type. I was the guy that stood behind the big, tall, scary, strong guy (back in Long Beach it was Rechnitz) and wagged my fingers from my ears and stuck out my tongue and mocked whoever it was that I thought deserved it. That was as brave as I got. I wanted to be a comedian, a librarian, maybe even a writer- although becoming a tour guide and Rabbi kind of fits all those life-skills. But actually taking a gun and getting out there and facing off against evil in the really battle-field- not just the pulpit one or social media one, that was never me. And it still really isn’t.

 

It’s why when this whole thing broke out here, I was kind of at a loss. This wasn’t a time for words. The enemy that we’re facing, the evil that needs to be eradicated, the filthy, sub-human, baby-killing, dreck that needs to be wiped off the face of the earth wasn’t going to happen with words. This called for real men with real guns. Big bad boys with big bad guns. Me and my jokes and laptop and Whatsapp statuses weren’t going to be able to do much. I felt helpless. And the first three days I just sat in front of my computer and watched with horror everything that was going on…that I couldn’t do anything about.

 

And then Hashem had mercy on me… like he always does. My phone rang. It was a friend of mine. His son was on the border not far from Karmiel. He was hungry, he needed cigarettes, he needed some chizuk and some love. Would I by any chance be able to go up there and bring him some stuff? I can do that! I’m good at love. Chizuk is what I do. Cigarettes, food, nosh, pizza, meals? No problem. I’m in! And it’s been life changing.

 

Since that first week, for those that haven’t been following me on my statuses- which you should of course- shame on you…- I’ve been heading up a few times a week to bases all over the North and even center of the country bringing stuff to soldiers and to families that have been evacuated. There are local volunteer organizations that have been making hot meals for them. Many of you readers or other followers have sent me money to buy them stuff. Pizza, cigs, supplies, nosh, BBQ’s, whatever they need. Whatever I can get.

 

It’s amazing how much this means to them. I stop off at army posts all over the North and some of these soldiers have been there for weeks without hot meals, without any smokes, without any love. I jump on them, I kiss them. I joke and laugh and tell them how holy they are. What an incredible job they have. How they are the High Priests of our nation. The Maccabees. I blast music and sing and dance. And then I fire them up to the heavy task at hand that stands before them. To wipe out this garbage and to return Israel to its rightful borders and get me a nice room with a view in the future Jewish hotel in Beirut, Israel while they’re at it.

 

When I do all this, something amazing happens. There is a light that goes on in their eyes. There’s a fire that I can feel gets ignited. They have been waiting for this. They join in the song, the dance. We grab hands. We jump and we sing songs to Hashem. Songs of faith. Of hope. Of victory. Of peace and of Mashiach. It’s not just the soldiers. It’s the families that I visit. That Klal Yisrael is visiting. That Klal Yisrael is embracing and joining together with. There is a light that has exploded that gives us a sense and appreciation that we all each actually do have a part in this that we can play. That we need to play. That we need to become. That part is about melding together and breaking down all the previous barriers and becoming one. Becoming One. United in our hearts and souls. United as a family and as a nation. That is the real battle that is taking place and we are all soldiers in that battle.

 

Well, if we are soldiers, then we need to have weapons. As the saying goes you don’t come to a gunfight with a slingshot or knife. What weapon do we have in our arsenal? The answer… Torah. Yeah… I know you weren’t expecting that from me. I always like to shock a bit. But actually, I don’t just mean just learning Torah. I mean learning it like never before. Like it was meant to be learnt. Lilmod al means la’asos- to learn it in order to really do it the right way. And that means starting at the beginning and reading the Torah and finding the eternal messages that it contains for us. And then perhaps most importantly implementing them. Taking it from the word and The Book to action. From the couch or the shtender to the battlefield, to the frontlines. It’s what I’ve always tried to do with this weekly E-mail. And this week’s parsha contains perhaps the most important lesson of all; the lesson of chesed.

 

Parshat Chayei Sarah is a Torah portion that repeatedly mentions the concept of chesed. Eliezer asks Hashem to show kindness to Avraham by answering his prayer that Rivkah passes the outrageous shidduch- kindness test he had set up. That incredible task of her offering to giving water not only to him but to his camels as well to drink, which in itself needs explanation. When this happens the verse again tell us that he recognizes the chesed of Hashem. He recognizes her chesed. He asks Lavan and Besuel to do chesed and to let her go with him. The word ‘chesed’ appears 4 times in this perek alone, more than any other parsha in the entire Torah.

 

As well fascinating enough the parsha begins with the story of the burial of Sarah and has quite a few funerals in it, Avraham’s and Yishmael’s as well. Burial of the dead, our sages tell us and the kindness that one does with the deceased is the ultimate “true” kindness- the chesed shel emes. It’s the quintessential kindness and thus introduces this parsha of chesed. Yet, why would that be highest form? What makes it so unique?

 

There’s an incredible Yalkut Midrash that tells us that Hashem notes that Avraham is the true Baal Chesed when he buries his wife. In fact the Midrash on the verse of Avraham burying Sarah explains the verse in Mishlei/ Proverbs about chesed using this burial as the greatest example of the kindness of Avraham.

 

 Rodef Tzedaka V’Chesed- He who pursues charity and kindness

Tzedaka zeh Avraham – charity is Avraham as it says…

Chesed – is the kindness that he did to Sarah.

 

Why would this be the epitome of kindness? Seemingly if I would ask you to give me some examples of the kindness of Avraham it would be his tent with 4 doors that would always welcome in guests. His taking in Lot. All of the people he was mekarev and brought close to Hashem. His prayers even on behalf of Sodom. On behalf of Yishmael. Sitting out in the heat of the day after his Bris and waiting and personally serving guests. Yet, the Midrash and our sages seem to find all of that to be pale in face of the “true” chesed he did for his wife. Why is that so significant. I mean what was he supposed to do with his wife? Leave her on the kitchen table? Wouldn’t anyone take care of the burial of their wife?

 

Perhaps the best way to understand this idea is by appreciating the difference between two often confused terms; tzedaka and chesed- charity and kindness. The Maharal explains the difference in that tzedaka- charity is taking care someone needs. It’s restoring perhaps even a balance or sense of justice or tzedek to the world. Why should I have and he doesn’t? Much of what Avraham does and what we are involved in is tzedaka. Healing, fixing, stepping in to take care of a need, filling a void where there is an absence in some way. It’s all about the taking care of someone else. It’s what we Jews do.

 

Chesed on the other hand is something else entirely. It’s an ethical moral character trait. Chesed is about imitating the ways of Hashem. It’s something that I have to do for myself. The difference between the two is that in a perfect world when everyone has everything they need, there is no point in tzedaka. The world is just. Yet, there is still a need for chesed. Because as long as I can’t or don’t do chesed then I can’t reveal the godliness within myself.

 

In the case of the burial of Sarah, Rabbi Yochanan Zweig notes that the Midrash is written on the words that ‘Avraham buried Sarah’. That’s where Hashem sees Avraham is the true Baal Chesed and not just a Baal Tzedaka. Everything that he did until now could’ve been considered and interpreted as acts of charity. He was filling a need and standing up for unjust situations. The truth is even the burial of his wife could be viewed as that. All Jewish burial is a tremendous tzedaka. It’s the greatest need that there is for someone to be laid to rest properly. Look at the tremendous heroic and mind-blowing work that Zaaka has been doing collecting all of the remains of the terror attack. But that’s tzedaka it’s not chesed.

 

Chesed is more than just arranging a burial. It’s not just sending the check. Or going to the Zaka concert. It’s personal, because it’s not about filling the need. It’s grabbing the shovel and doing it yourself. It’s about me doing what I need to do because that’s how I can become me. It’s how I can reveal the Hashem in myself.

 

Avraham was the richest person in the world. He could’ve sent Eliezer to negotiate the purchase of the grave for his wife. He sent him to find a wife for his son. He could’ve hired a crew from his thousands of servants to dig a grave and bury her. He was over 100 years old. Yet the verse tells us that Avraham himself dug that grave. He gets up at his moment of grief from mourning his beloved wife of over a hundred years with whom he went through it all with, in order to negotiate her gravesite. Because by Avraham this is a chesed. It’s what he needs to do. It’s personal.

And that’s my friends is what this is really all about for us as well. It’s the weapon in our arsenal that we need to engage in finally.

 

We have always been the most charitable nation in the world. I don’t think it would be in anyway an exaggeration to say that in the past month alone over 100 million dollars have gone out to charity from every Jew in the world. But it’s not just now it’s always been that way. In every community there’s a Gemach- a charity organization for every comprehensible need. We throw money at any cause, any tragedy. We have volunteer organizations for the living and the dead, for newborns, for brides, to people suffering from infertility and those that need shiduchim. For prayers, for money, for clothing and of course for food. We have Hatzala, Zaaka, Chevra Kadishas, Bikur Cholim, Hachanasas Orchim, and Kiruv organizations. There is no one like Am Yisrael in that regard.

 

But that’s all tzedaka. That’s because we want to fix all of the problems. We don’t want anyone to suffer. We want everyone to feel as happy and as blessed as we are. Chesed though, is a notch above that. It’s becoming personally invested. It’s becoming emotionally invested. It’s making their pain, my pain. It’s not just sending a check. It’s about getting off the couch and getting over there and holding their hands, hugging them, connecting with them. It’s about feeling. It’s about hurting. It’s about empathizing. Not fake showing-them-we-feel -empathy, or “you’re in my thoughts and prayers”. But real can’t-sleep-at-night, can’t-stop-crying-when-I-think-about-what-they’re-going-through empathy. I can’t stop davening, yelling, screaming to Hashem to make it stop already empathy. It’s feeling how Hashem must feel. It’s bringing us all together. That’s not tzedaka. That’s me becoming me. Me becoming Hashem.

 

The word Chesed is an interesting one.  The first two letter ches and samech spell “Chas” in Hebrew which means compassion. To feel. And that’s really what we are meant to do. But even more fascinating is that if you take the first and last letter, the ches and the daled then you have the word chad- one. How do we become one? With the samech in the middle. The full circle. The somech- that we support one another. We are all connected. We are told that in the future all the righteous will form a circle and point to Hashem in the middle and say that He is one. That is the Chad- the One that shines from the connected circle that is the samech in the middle. It’s all of us together as one.

 

Eliezer when he goes to find a spouse for Avraham’s son, asks Hashem to do chesed with him. He wants Hashem to do more than just take care of our needs, of Avraham’s needs, of Yitzchak’s bashert. He wants that home to be founded on chesed of extraordinary proportions. Eliezer had servants there with him. He could’ve given the camels to drink himself. He was a big boy. Yet he wanted someone who wanted to do it herself. Someone who wanted to not just offer a drink to a hungry wayfarer and take care of the problem at hand, rather he needed someone that would look at it is as an opportunity to do chesed. Someone that, like Avraham, would be waiting around for someone that they could connect to in that way. Someone that would rush and offer them and their camels, like they just won the lottery, like they were finding their Bashert. And indeed, little did she know, that was exactly what she was doing.

 

Someone once said that a liberal is a conservative that hasn’t been mugged yet. Sadly there are a lot of new conservatives or right wingers in Israel these days that have had a wake-up call as to who our neighbors always were. Yet they never got this before. And the truth is that most of us never really did. This is despite the fact that all the signs were there. There were enough people killed. There were enough attacks and missiles that had happened in the past. But yet we never got it. We never saw this coming.  The reason is because we never really personalized all of the tragedies, deaths and hardships that our brothers and sisters faced until now in what we thought were isolated incidents that never really got into our kishkas. We paid lip service but it never ripped our hearts opened.

Today we see all these antisemitic demonstrations and protests. People ripping down posters of babies, of old people, of families and children of the hostages and we are in shock. How can anyone do something like that? Are they human? What’s going through their minds? And the answer is that it’s not personal to them. It’s someone else’s kids. It’s Jewish kids. It’s Israeli kids. If it was their own mothers, sisters, children in Gaza that were being held or that were massacred or having missiles thrown at them, it would be a different story. The response to that, that Hashem is telling us is that for us this has to be personal. It has to be our brother, our mother, our sister and brother. Our pain. Our children that are the soldiers on the front line. Our worry. Our tefillos.  Because if it isn’t then we are really only a little bit better than them if at all. So that is the task that is in front of us. It’s the mission that makes us all soldiers. That give all of us a job.

 

Our sages tell us Rachmana Liba Ba’ai- Hashem wants our hearts. The term for Hashem is Rachamana- the Merciful one. If we want mercy, we have to really feel merciful. Not just pragmatic, but emotionally full of mercy and compassion.

 

We are at the period before Mashiach is coming. When Hashem Echad- the Oneness of Hashem will be revealed to the world. For that to happen we need to continue with what we say in Shema each day. To love Hashem, b’chol livavcha, bichol nafshecha, u’bechol me’odecha- with ALL our heart, with ALL our soul with ALL our possessions; with all our all. There’s no half-heartedness anymore. There’s no un-plugging ourselves. These families who have lost someone, who have parents, children or siblings missing, kidnapped, those mothers and fathers and wives and children that have fathers and sons serving in Gaza or in the front lines are never un-plugged. That’s all they’re thinking about. That’s what we need to be doing as well.  

 

The slogan of the moment in Israel today is B’Yachad Ninatzeyach- together we will win. Together doesn’t mean that we are there for one another. It means that we are yachad. We are one. If we are one, then what happens is not merely that we will win. It means we will be netzach- we will be eternal. For that is really what this is all about. Becoming netzach. Becoming One.

 

Have unifying Shabbos,

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz 

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

YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

Es art mich vi di ketz fun mitvuch”. - I care like a cat cares if it's Wednesday

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

13.In the Sataf site one can find a reconstruction of findings of the ___________ field.

Where can the white broom (Retama) bush be found?

A. In the Mediterranean forests and on mount Hermon

B. On the coastal plains and on mount Hermon

C. On the coastal plains and in the desert

D. In the desert and in the Mediterranean forests

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S COOL VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://soundcloud.com/ephraim-schwartz/rivkah   Parshas Chayei Sarah is never complete without my Rivkah Achoseinu song- composed for my sister Rivky’s wedding

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2a4pQM_8ng   Dovid Lowy’s magnificent new release Tamid on how Hashem watching over His land

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srbtbDfD4uo  -  Shulem Lemmer haunting and heart wrenching Kehilos Ha’Kodesh for the communities that were destroyed

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HgKB4-kQdA    - Iyal Golan AM Yisrael Chai great song that says it all…

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28gtzg6r3QQ   Avraham Fried’s latest war song! B’Karov Mamash

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WbbVRz2UZY   Finally Ari Goldwags Latest Ana Hashem Aneinu beautiful…

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S PARSHA PRAYER INSPIRATION OF THE WEEK

 

Praying for others Mincha Interestingly enough we actually have two prayers in our Parsha. The first is Eliezer asking Hashem to send him the proper spouse for Yitzchak and fulfil his mission in a fantastic way. Interestingly enough, the Netziv writes that this prayer that he davened was the precursor to Mincha. It’s why he davened it instead of the regular one. Yet Rav Zilberstien points out something fascinating about this prayer and the way it’s described. The pasuk tells us he said

Va’yomar- and he said

 

Hashem the God of my master Avraham, please cause to happen to me today, and perform loving kindness with my master, Avraham.

 

It’s a strange terminology. It seems that there are two things going on. First ‘Cause to happen to me today’ and secondly ‘perform kindness with Avraham’.  What are these two requests? So he explains incredibly that in fact Eliezer davened his own personal request. As Rashi tells us he himself had a daughter. Not only did he have a daughter, but his daughter was just rejected for a shidduch by none other than Avraham. And yet here he was going to find a shidduch for the very boy that said “no” to his daughter. Eliezer realized that his action. His dedication to act and worry about Avraham and Yitzchak when he had the exact same need himself was a perfect time to ask Hashem for a shidduch for his own daughter. And thus he asks Hashem please cause to happen to me- find a shidduch for my daughter at this same moment that you are preforming loving kindness to Avraham.

 

This is what our sages tell us is that if someone needs his prayers answered he should pray or act for someone else that has that same need. Amazing!

 

Yet it is not only here where we find that concept, we find it as well by Yitzchak’s first prayer of Mincha. The verse goes out of it’s way to tell us where Yitzchak paused to daven for a shidduch for himself. At a place called Be’er l’Chai Ro’i. What is so special about this place. So the midrash tells us that this was the place where Hagar had her prayer answered for Yishmael. Once she was thrown out she fled back there. And it was there that Yitzchak went to bring her back to marry his father Avraham after Sarah passed away. Think about this. Here, Yitzchak is bringing back the mother of his brother who was thrown out, who Hashem had said to throw out. To the one that was threatening his own birthright. Yet, Yitzchak overlooked all of that because his father needed a shidduch, and Hagar was the only one that was fitting for that role. After all Sarah herself had chosen her for him. And so he overlooks his own need- just as Eliezer did- to find a shidduch for his father and bring her home to him. In doing that he as well realizes this is the best time to daven for myself. And he does. And just like Eliezer’s prayer he is answered right away. That is the first Mincha ever.

 

Each day we daven Mincha. Do you know what the essence of our prayer is and the power of that prayer? Our sages even tell us that it is the most powerful of all prayers as Eliyahu was answered at that time. What makes Mincha so powerful is precisely this idea. Unlike Shacharis which is before we start our day or Maariv which is the end of the day after everything is over. Mincha is smack in the middle. For us to daven Mincha we need to push aside our own activities that we may be busy with and put Hashem first. Put our davening first. When we do that then Hashem answers our own request immediately. During this hectic time of war we need every merit that we can. We need to pray for those others before our own prayers and the best time is of course during Mincha. May Hashem then bring Menucha to us…

 

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

 

The War that led to division Part II- 620 BC As we discussed last week Amatzia goes to war against Edom. The nation of Edom in the South of Israel had long been a thorn in our side. Amatzia felt that with his quasi-teshuva movement this was the time to take them out. He had initially recruited and even paid to the Kingdom of Yisrael led by Yoash a lot of money to the tribe of Ephraim to join them in the battle. But then at the urging and prophecy of the prophet Shemaya he backs out- even allowing them to keep the money. Hashem had told them, that they weren’t righteous enough to win the battle with him.

 

Amatzia wins and then he does something which our sages tell us was brutal. He takes 10,000 Edomites and chucks em off a cliff and kills those prisoners of War. This seems not only to be a violation of Geneva convention laws, but Hashem’s as well, fascinatingly enough. We won. Take the win and leave. As a result of that Amatzia steps over the line and begins to get more arrogant. Hashem wants to send him a message and he does so via the tribe of Ephraim who felt scorned being told that they weren’t worthy to fight. So they went out and terrorized the Jewish nation from Shomron all the way down to Beit Choron which is near the modern city of Modi’in. They pillaged and showed who the boss is.

 

The temperature has risen between these two Jewish kingdoms. The prophets are cautioning Amatzia to tone down and take the proper message that he needs to reflect and look in himself for the reason this is happening. Yet, he doesn’t. He instead blames this on the prophet for having advised him to send away the tribe of Ephraim and not allow them to join him in battle. He then does something crazy. He sets up a worship of the Se’ir god. The god of Edom. He does this to show his rejection of the God of the prophet- Hashem. This is a big mistake. His doom is foretold. Yet, he continues in his obstinancy and challenges Yoash, the king of the North to a faceoff and war. This will not end well…

 

I find this story fascinating and perhaps even relevant on so many levels. But to focus on one. Edom is Rome, is the west, is America. They have a god. It’s called democracy. It’s called proportionality, it’s a value system perhaps that is not from Hashem. When we feel we need to look to them and worship their “gods” rather than listen to our own prophets, there is no greater Chilul Hashem. What do you think?

 

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

 

If you keep saying FREE PALESTINE, be careful. We Jews will come and take it. We love free stuff!

 

Beware tearing down hostage posters won’t free Palestine, but it might end your occupation

 

The Pro-Palestinian arguments I’ve heard lately sound much better in the original German

 

Does a humanitarian pause mean that the hostages get to come home for a Shabbat? Asking for 240 friends…

 

Only in Israel can a 19 year old kid drive an 80 ton tank and yet still be considered a “young driver” on his parents private Toyata.

 

Seen at a Jewish wedding- “From the Liver to the Tea the Smorgasbord will be Free

 

Military Terms Dictionary

 

English                                  Hebrew                     Hamas

Rocket Launch Site               Atar Shigur               School

Weapons Cache                    machsan neshek         hospital

Headquarters                         mifkada                      Kindergarten

Operations Room                  cheder Mivtzaim        Residential buildig

 

Exchange each hostage for 100 Pro- Hamas US college student. Good For Israel, Good for USA, educational for students…

 

The Islamic Jihad asked Israel if they could buy an Iron dome to defend Gaza from the missiles that they shoot on themselves by mistake.

 

I heard the sirens and ran into the shelter and locked the door. All of a sudden I hear loud booms on the door… It seems my wife wanted to come in as well.

 

The Prime Minister and members of his staff from the Knesset went for a tour to see the situation of various State institutions. Their first stop was at the local school. They see that the walls were falling apart, the books were old and outdated and the roof was leaking. The principal cried to the PM that they needed money for the basic renovations. Yet, the PM sadly told him that right now it was a difficult situation for the country and there was no money in the budget for this.

 

Their next stop was to the local university. There as well the President of the University showed how lack the security was and outdated, how the computers were old and failing and how the yards and landscaping was all over run. Again the Prime Minister sadly told him that there was no extra funds to allocate to them as the budget for the country was very tight.

 

Finally their last stop was to the local prison. There the warden gave them a tour and showed them the shabby matresses and smelly bed sheets, the leaky broken  air conditioning system and how the Television and entertainment center was always on the blink. Immediately the Prime Minister said that he would take care of the problem and within a few minutes he informed them that repair men were on the way and new beds, sheets and even hi screen TVs were coming as well. When asked by his staff member who was shocked how this could happen. Bibi eloquently explained

School we finished already, College I don’t think we’ll ever be going to, but prison on the other hand….”

 

The answer to this week”s question is C – Got this one right! The first part was pretty easy. It’s not like I’ve guided at Sataf a lot. In fact I think I’ve only been to this national park maybe once with tourists. It’s right near Yerushalyim and it’s specialness is the recreated ancient agricultural irrigation fields from thousands of years ago. So the answer is an irrigation field as opposed to a rain field. This has terraces and little cisterns. The second part of the question I got correct. As you know agriculture isn’t my strong point. But I knew that the rotem which is actually called a Retama in English is in the midbar. We find that Eliyahu Hanavi took shade in it’s small bush when he ran away. That being the case then by process of elimination I went with C which is the Mediterranean coastline which is more similar to the desert as opposed to a forest. So got it right and the new score being Rabbi Schwartz at 9.5 point and the MOT having 3.5 point on this latest Ministry of Tourism exam.

Friday, September 9, 2022

Love and War- Parshat Ki Teitzei 2022/ 5782

 

Insights and Inspiration

from the

Holy Land

from

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

"Your friend in Karmiel"

September 9th 2022 -Volume 11 Issue 4 13th of Elul 5782

 

Parshat Ki Tetzei

Love and War

 

Vacation, finally! And yet although the tour guide Rabbi Schwartz might get a few days off to recuperate and re-“Jew”-venate, your friend in Karmiel still needs to get out his weekly E-Mail. Your children wouldn’t know what to do if their Shabbos meal ended an hour early without the weekly missive. Your boss might wonder why you don’t have that smile you usually do Friday mornings while you pretend that you’re working on your computer at work, but really reading the jokes on the bottom. The Rabbi in your shul might wonder why you’re paying attention to his drasha instead of reading that printed up E-Mail each week. But perhaps most significantly, my mother would be disappointed if she didn’t have something to either read and compliment me on and tell me how much she loves me- or alternatively to scold me and give me Mussar and tell me to stop writing about my surgery and my personal life and business.   Then she would of course tell me that she loves me as well… and I forget everything else she said. If I even heard it in the first place.

 

Regardless I gotta write this. So here we are sitting out in the front yard of my vacation tzimmer overlooking the Mediterranean and the hills of the Western Galilee and writing to you. It’s beautiful, by the way. It’s serene. I’m here without my family. It’s just me. Me and Hashem. Hashem and His mountains in His magnificent country that He has privileged me with sharing with so many over the past few months once again. I sit here and can’t even express how loved I feel by Him and how much blessing He has given me. Have you ever felt like that? Just so amazingly loved, so grateful, so close to Hashem, perhaps even a bit unworthy.

 

Why me? What have I done to deserve such love? I certainly can think of plenty of reasons and things for Him to be pretty annoyed at me. And ‘annoyed’ is a polite don’t-feel-so-bad, kind of word. There’s lots that I’ve done or haven’t done that He should be downright fuming at me about. And my wife, my mother, my kids, my rebbeim and even my tourists and congregants could give Him an even more elaborate list just in case He was looking for things. Yet… yet… yet… He doesn’t stop loving me and showering me with blessing. It’s crazy. It’s overwhelming. It’s really everything.

 

As I sit and ponder and bask in this glow of appreciation, I hear music come on. It’s the neighbors tzimmer next door to mine. Like every good Israeli they like 70’s and 80’s American music. Thankfully it’s not Pink Floyd or Madonna. Rather perhaps the couple next door seem to be feeling as loving as I am. They are listening to love songs. Songs that I’m familiar with. Songs that aren’t Jewish, that I listened to in my younger goyish music stage of life. Songs that are actually beautiful and emotional. But as I sit here in Elul trying to write this E-Mail, I try to make those songs that I can’t get out of my head a little holier. Like the Chasidic Rebbes of old who also perhaps snatched one or two goyish songs, and as they say, found and released the sparks of holiness inside of them. Perhaps I can have my goyish music and my kedusha too… Or not. Regardless, it’s playing, my soul is stirring, and it’s too beautiful to go inside and close the windows. I’m here and now you are too.

 

The truth is it really isn’t that hard to find that holiness. Maybe even it’s a bit too easy. I just never thought about it before, but now the words come rushing out to me from their very loud surround sound speaker with entirely new meaning. The love songs that they are singing about really aren’t about the love between a husband and wife, a boyfriend and a girlfriend or perhaps even something more illicit or forbidden. They’re about Hashem and me.

 

I can’t live my life without You”.

 I’m alive when You’re with me”.

You give me meaning.”

“You’re my world.”

My inspiration

You’re my everything.”

“I’d walk the world for You.”

Our love is eternal”.

You bring out the best in Me”.

 I’m alone without You”.

 

Lyric after lyric, chorus after chorus. It’s all Hakadosh Baruch Hu. It’s a jukebox or playlist from heaven. (or not). But its tugging all of my heartstrings. I feel as if I’m being serenaded by Hashem. The Melech is in the field with me. (or not).

 

After this musical introduction I open up our parsha. It is a parsha that is packed with mitzvos. Interestingly enough they are mitzvos that are primarily concerned with two topics: love and war. Sure, there are plenty of other mitzvos here as well, but the themes of love and war keep coming up again and again. We are introduced to the conjunction of both of those in the first mitzva of the parsha. The strange mitzva that during war one is permitted to take a non-Jewish captive woman as a wife.

 

The Torah tells us that it’s a love story that really isn’t,. On the one hand this guy is perhaps moved by the flaring testosterone of warfare and killing and murdering people- enemies of course. His spiritual guard is understandably a bit down. On the other hand, this woman is really not a good match for him. No less than Dovid Ha’Melech fell into this trap, and found out much later, with the rebellion of his son Avshalom who came from such a union, that bad things come from fake love songs.

 

As well the Torah continues its journey with marriages and love gone awry. We have the person who has two wives one which he doesn’t love. He hates her. We have divorce. We have widows who have to marry their brothers-in-law. We have all types of people who engage in forbidden pre-marital or extra- marital, or forbidden relationships-some consensual some not. It’s a mess. It’s a goyisheh love song. At the same time, interestingly enough, we learn the laws of making your wife happy during the first year (and always!) and the laws of marriage. We have women jumping into their men’s fights and standing up for their men. Inside of all this murky bad stuff we have holiness. We have a love song of Hashem joining this union.

 

Similarly, the laws of war have all types of brutal depictions. In last week’s parsha we are told to wipe out the 7 nations men women and children. Genocide. Ouch. At the same time, it told us to be careful not to knock down any fruit trees. Man is like a tree. Hmmm… It told us about the holiness of the soldiers in battle. Who was exempt. How not to fear. The Kohen recited Shema and gave them blessings. It’s intense. This week with the holy army- according to Rashi it only contained those that didn’t fear they had any sins in their hands, right away though it starts to tell us about taking these captive women. The Chozeh of Lublin notes that the Torah permitted this because if not the yetzer hara would be too great and the men would take her even if she was forbidden. Wryly, he says, that the only Jews that would be susceptible to this yetzer harah are the ones that think they don’t have any sins. The ones that think they’re big tzadikim- those are the guys you have to watch out for. Those are the ones that the yetzer harah could snare with one pretty shiktza. With one goyisheh love song.

 

The Torah then tells us that our camp must be holy. It must be sanitary. Hashem is amongst our camp. This is not a goyisheh army. As well the parsha concludes with the obligation to wipe out Amalek. Again, men women, children and even animals. We are meant to do this with brutal hatred. They are the enemy. They are preventing the shechina from shining amongst us. We need to take them out.

 

War and love. This is the season we are in as well in Elul when we read this parsha. On the one hand this month we are told that we are together with our beloved. Ani l’dodi v’dodi li- is the famous acronym for this month. At the same time, it is a time of fear and trepidation. We have a court case coming up this year. In a few weeks’ time Hashem will pull out the books and decide if we will live or we will die. The Satan will be there with plenty of ammunition. Like most Israeli wars- we don’t have too much to fight and shoot with. But anachnu b’sheim hashem elokeinu nazkir- we come in the name of Hashem.  How do we navigate these extreme emotions and situations we face?

 

Rav Shlomo Aviner notes that the obligations of war really obviate many of the commandments. Not just simple ones either. We violate Shabbos, not only to go to war but even to rescue people and even bodies. We even violate the “theme” at least of the three big sins. As we noted it is permitted to take a non- Jewish woman, we are obviously killing and even some of the Kosher laws are permitted to being violated during war according to the Rambam non-Jewish wine is permitted to being drunk. The reason he suggests is because when we go to war there are no personal considerations that mitzvos are obligated in. It’s about negating oneself entirely for the nation and for Hashem’s glory. I am not an individual in war. I am Israel. I am Hashem’s army. As one we have the power, and we move beyond the usual individual mitzvos which are about our personal growth. We are entirely connected to Hashem and the mission he placed upon us.

 

In marriage it is a very similar concept. It’s not about what I want. What I’m feeling. What I can get out of the relationship. What I desire. It’s about building a home for Hashem. It’s about creating a family. It’s about becoming one. It’s about understanding that the love and bond shared between you and your spouse has the ability to be eternal, if Hashem is part of that love song as well. If He’s not, then you’re in trouble. Then your children are in trouble. Then it will be war.

 

Rebbi Nachman of Breslav said that every wisdom in the world has a song attached to it. Even non-Jewish ones. It is where it gets its chiyus from- its spiritual essence to exist. Religious songs, love songs, celebratory songs, they are all pieces of one great song of Creation. Amazing grace, if you will. In Shir Ha’Shirim – the Song of Songs it says

Tavo’I v’tashuri mei’rosh amana- which literally means you should come straight down from the peak of Amana.

 

 Rebbi Nachman though reads it homiletically, that we will come with the ultimate redemption and sing from the peaks of faith- emuna. As well others note that that the word tashuri is like the word Tishrei- me’rosh is rosh Hashana. On Rosh Hashana when we sing, we connect to that first song. We reveal the core and the love of all Creation that Hashem had when He made man. Since that first sin on that great day of love we have been at war. War with the yetzer hara, the Satan, the nations, with ourselves. But the King is back in the field in this month. It’s time to reveal that love song to the world. To put down our swords and turn them into plowshares. We’ll then live forever…knowing together… that we did it all for the glory of love.Have a song-filled Shabbos

Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

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YIDDISH PROVERB OF THE WEEK

 

“Tsu itlechen neiem lid ken men tsupassen an alten nigen..” - To every new song one can find an old tune

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S FAVORITE VIDEO OF THE WEEK

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HxjWn_7FdI   -  Nissim Black and Dustin Paul Human Greatness! Latest release…

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kt0mR1i9lOk   – A classic and powerful video from the Haftorah B’Shetzef Ketzef from Avromy Flam

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5dNzfzJVoE    Ahavas Olam from Akiva.. beautiful

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Nx_tkCB0a8    Eitan And Shlomo Katz Everlasting Love also from this weeks hafotrah

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YjgCN3k3Uc    And of course Parsha ki Teitzei is never complete without Yigal Calek’s Ki Yikarey kan Tizppor

 

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S TOUR GUIDE EXAM QUESTION OF THE WEEK

answer below at end of Email

 

11)  The Muchraka monastery was founded by the    _________ church order

Its location is where

A)  The prophets of the Baal were slaughtered, and their idolatry was invalidated

B)  Eliyahu went up to heaven and where he appointed Elisha

C)  A heavenly fire came down and the faith in one God was restored

D)  The resurrection of the child of the widow was preformed and Eliyahu went into isolation

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ'S PARSHA/SHABBOS CONNECTION OF THE WEEK

 

Remember- Parshat Ki Teitzei- Our Parsha concludes with the mitzva to remember what Amalek did to us and to erase them from the face of the earth. We read this right before Purim each year. Yet it’s a strange mitzva. On the one hand if we remember them then we will never forget and then they exist. On the other hand we are obligated to destroy them so that there shouldn’t be any memory of them.

 

Amalek as we know is not the only remembrance mitzva. We are also obligated to remember Shabbos each week. It’s in the Ten commandments. The Ramban explains that the mitzva has two aspects to it. On the one hand it’s a daily commandment each day of each week to do things to remember Shabbos. Each day we count towards Shabbos. Each day we make little preparations for Shabbos. As well the mitzva of remembering is on Shabbos as well. On Shabbos we need to do something to make the day a memorable one. We need to sanctify it and make Kiddush on wine to celebrate it each week.

 

Shabbos reveals Hashem’s presence in this world. Each day we remember Shabbos we are erasing Amalek. We are testifying that Hashem created and controls the world. The remembrance of Shabbos erases Amalek. As well on Purim when we drink wine and celebrate the day we erase the memory of Amalek. They are totally gone. They are destroyed and we are redeemed. At least for the moment. Each Shabbos when we make Kiddush and remember Hashem on this special day as well we have erased Amalek. We have remembered. Lchayim!

 

 

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

 

Hit Me - 724 BC – After the incredible 2nd miraculous victory of Achav against Ben  Hadad of Aram that was foretold by the prophet Micha. Their army of 100,000 was wiped out and they fled to the city of Afek where Hashem made a miracle and the walls of the city collapsed upon them. Yet, as we mentioned last week our enemies know how to play upon our mercy and our un-comfortability with being victors. Ben Hadad and his men realizing that the end was near dressed in sackcloth and put nooses around their next and appeared before Achav and asked for mercy. That’s our weak point. We don’t like to see people in sackcloth and being pathetically submissive to us. As well when someone-especially a goy apologizes to us that’s pretty much all we really need. So Achav not only pardons them but even restores them to their land giving them their “terror” state in Damascus. Of course we signed treaties- that of course they had no intention of keeping and thus they left.

 

Hashem wasn’t happy with this. Fortunately, he had the prophet Micha to do some splainin to Achav. In a fascinating story Micha approaches another prophet and tells him to beat him up. The prophet of course refuses, and Micha curses him that since he didn’t listen to the word of Hashem as he spoke then he will die. Sure enough a lion pops out and eats him. Boom one down. Next he goes over to another person and gives him the same command and prophecy. This guy learned his lesson and sure enough he beats up Micha. Micha then waits for King Achav to pass by. He disguises his face as a beaten-up soldier coming from war and he turns to him and asks him a seemingly hypothetical question. Here he was told by a soldier to watch over a prisoner. If he did so properly, he would be rewarded, if however the prisoner wasn’t there when he got back then he would punished with his life in place of the prisoners. Sure enough, he told Achav I got distracted and the prisoner escaped. What should happen to me now.

 

Achav without blinking an eye told the “soldier/prophet” in disguise that he pronounced his own fate already. He should die in place of the prisoner. Boom! He fell into the trap. Micha then takes off his disguise and tells Achav that he had just pronounced his own fate Hashem had given Ben Hadad into his own hands to get rid of him. How dare Achav let him free and even build him up once again? Because of this Achav and the Jewish people will be held accountable with their lives. The truth is it will only be Achav that will be accountable. The Jews will be set free as the midrash tells us that Micha prayed that the suffering that he had when he got beaten up should atone for them.

This is a Tanach story yet it is an important one that many don’t know and realize. It’s as timely as it gets and it is the mistake that Israel makes again and again. We keep having mercy on the cruel who Hashem gives in our hand and we don’t appreciate that our obligation is to rid the country of those that wish to destroy us and who ultimately don’t accept our sovereignty over the land. There are no peace agreements. They can live and remain on one condition only they accept us. They are subservient to Hashem and us His nation. Perhaps the governments need to start reading this column

 

RABBI SCHWARTZ’S TERRIBLE FASHION JOKES OF THE WEEK

 

Yankel: I stood under my Kallah's window and sang a love song to her. She threw me a flower.

Berel: then why is there a wound on your head?

Yankel: she forgot to take the flowers out of the pot

 

A shabby-looking man walks into an upscale bar full of businessmen and orders a Scotch. The bartender looks him over and says, "Sir, I don't believe you can afford the drinks at this establishment. May I ask that you go somewhere else?"

The man shrugs his shoulders and says, "You're right. I don't have any money on me. But I'll tell you what. I can show you a miracle. If I do, can I have one on the house?" The bartender sighs and nods, and sees the man take a hamster out of the pocket of his overcoat. Before the bartender can tell the man that animals aren't allowed, the man leans down to the hamster and says, "Play."

The hamster darts out of the man's hand, runs up to the grand piano in the bar's corner, and runs across the keys, playing Gershwin songs as he does so. It's incredible. Concert pianists don't play this well! At the end of the hamster's set, everyone applauds, and the bartender pours the man who came in a glass of their best Scotch.

The man savors the Scotch, and says, "That was incredible! If I show you another miracle, can I have another drink?" The bartender nods excitedly, and sees the man pull out a frog from his coat this time. He leans in and says, "Sing." The frog opens his mouth and begins singing a deep and rich love song. Everyone stops talking in the bar to listen to this frog. They have tears in their eyes, thinking about the ones they love, the loves that they let slip away. Not a dry eye in the bar. When the frog stops singing, the whole bar bursts into applause, and the weeping bartender gives the man the whole bottle of fine Scotch.

One of the businessmen comes up to the man and says, "Hey buddy, you look hard up. I'll give you five thousand dollars for the frog, what do you say?" The man thinks it over, says yes, and accepts five thousand dollars that the businessman offers. The businessman takes the frog and runs out. The bartender, shocked, looks at the man and shouts, "Are you nuts? That frog was beautiful! And it was a FROG! How could you let something worth a fortune go away like that?"

The guy takes a swig from the bottle and says, "What are you talking about? My hamster is also a

ventriloquist."

 

Dad, whose music did you listen to when growing up?”

Dad: Led Zeppelin.

Son: Who?

Dad: Yes. They were good too.

 

My drunk friend was kicked out of Karaoke for singing “Danger Zone” 7 times in a row.

He had exceeded the maximum number of Loggins attempts.

 

Knock knock!

Whos There?

Kenya!

Kenya who?

Kenya feel the love tonight!

 

“Somebody just gave me a shower radio. Thanks a lot. Do you really want music in the shower? I guess there’s no better place to dance than a slick surface next to a glass door.”-Jerry Seinfeld

 

“I wrote a song, but I can’t read music so I don’t know what it is.”-Steven Wright

 

“My definition of an intellectual is someone who can listen to the ‘William Tell Overture’ without thinking of The Lone Ranger.” -Billy Connolly

 

“I love to sing, and I love to drink scotch. Most people would rather hear me drink scotch.”-George Burns

 

“When she started to play, Steinway came down personally and rubbed his name off the piano.”-Bob Hope

 

“Talking about music is like dancing about architecture.” -Steve Martin

 

“I know only two tunes: one of them is ‘Yankee Doodle’, and the other isn’t.” -Ulysses S Grant, former US President

 

Q: “What kind of music are balloons afraid of?”

A: “Pop music”.

 

Me and my friends are in a band called “Duvet.” We’re a cover band.

 

What part of a turkey is musical? The drumstick.

Why couldn’t the athlete listen to her music? Because she broke the record.

Why did the pianist keep banging his head against the keys? He was playing by ear.

How do you make a bandstand? Take away their chairs.

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Answer is B This is a bit of a trick question, even for all of my tourists that I have brought here. Muchraka of course is the Carmelite Monestary on the tip of Mt. Carmel. Even those of you that haven’t been there with me, but if you’ve been watching my statuses you’ve certainly seen me there plenty with its incredible lookout point of much of the North of Israel. It’s there where the story of Eliyahu and the prophets of the Baal take place. The question though is which part of the story? Well for those of you that remember the story it could be one of two answers. Either the fire came down or he had the prophets of the Baal slaughtered there. But the name Muchraka should give it away. See, Muchraka means burnt place (it’s similar to the word in Hebrew as well charach is charred). The top of the mountain is where the fire came down and ate up Eliyahu’s offering. He then ordered them to take the prophets of the Baal to the bottom by Nachal Kishon and kill them there. So the right answer is B, which of course I got right.  So the score now is Schwartz 8.5 and 2.5  for MOT (Ministry of Tourism) on this exam.