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29 August 2021

Rav Amnon Yitzchak – שמענו הרבה על סומסום!!

התרופה שמאפשרת לכלל המגזר לקבל טיפול לכל חיידק.הרב אמנון יצחק..מומלץ
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 הרב אמנון יצחק - צריך דילול.....מנהיגות - חלק ע | הרב אמנון יצחק..תתחילו להיות בנים של מלך….תקשיבו  https://shofar.tv

 

 הרב אמנון יצחק - צריך דילול.....מנהיגות - חלק ע | הרב אמנון יצחק..תתחילו להיות בנים של מלך....תקשיבו.....הרב אמנון יצחק ,סרטון מיוחד, עבור כל יהודי, שרוצה לדעת את האמת, ולהתרחק מהשקר, לעשות את רצונו של הבורא יתברך, התחברו לערוץ, הירשמו, ותזכו להפיץ תורה ודברי מוסר ברבים, בכל סרטון, שיוגש כאן בערוץ, ניתן ללמוד, מוסר, השכלה, תבונה, דרך חיים, על פי תורתנו הקדושה, להתרחק מרבני השקר של הדור, ולהיות מאלה, שזוכים לקבל, את פני גואל, נשים, גברים, דתיים, רחוקים מהדת, נוער, בנות ישראל, בארץ ישראל, ובתפוצות, הפיצו את המידע, ואת דברי התורה,  
ויש לכם זכויות גדולות, תהיו ברוכים
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27 August 2021

Leah From Itamar — Shabbat Ki Tavo

 



Leah’s Blog – Parashat Ki Tavo    

August 2021

“V’haya ki tavo el Haaretz”


“V’haya ki tavo el Haaretz” (When you come into the Land) (Dvarim 26:1) Our parsha focuses on layers of time, about recalling deliverance from the bondage of Egypt, the journey of wandering the desert, that domain of emptiness where nothing was accessible and nothing was needed, nursing Divine inspiration all the way, not having to cook or prepare food, not having to change a garment or worry about anything, culminating in the final destination revealed now in Ki Tavo -a new identity as the gates of Eretz Yisrael opened like a curtain on stage – the props-  the Mountain of the Blessing, the Mountain of the Curse. 


Walking 60 kilometers from the Jordan to these mountains, to the Land of Shechem, a place our forefathers purchased at the dawn of Judaism. 


Am Yisrael are positioned on the scales of the Gerizzim and Eval, the blessings and curses are read. Now it was time to actualize G-d’s plan. With beating hearts and a flurry of strength and animation, Israel embarked on settling down. It took several hundred years to bring the first fruits to the Holy Temple in Jerusalem finally built. 


Remembering our humble beginnings as Abraham first came here, Yaakov bought a field here and deliverance from Egypt seared into us from day one, right here at these mountains, the place we transitioned into the life force that Israel is, was and will be one day. The blessing and the curse.


There are times that Divine appointment touches you literally like it does right at this moment as I look out my living room window to the stage in front of me at this early hour of an end of August day. The sun just rising from the east behind lights up the sky and shines upon those translucent low clouds hovering over the valley of Shechem. This is an hour of precision as this portion comes to greet me literally. For me, so many memories of our times in this backyard, trips to shop in Shechem, visits to the Tomb of Yosef, leaving our car doors open without a care in the world. 


But then drama began, the tragedy of foreign governments deciding to start “peace”, opening the door to terror. The hostile environment had Israeli soldiers evacuating and abandoning our holy sites. We were told, the PLO whether we like it or not are in charge now. We must acquiesce. Fear, alarm, dread and later horror were a daily portion of our lives and many a time as I opened my curtain here I asked G-d- “What gives! Are we blessed or are we cursed!” 


But what killed me the most was the notion that WE were the obstacle to peace. It didn’t take long that the pull out in Gaza and the north Shomron had Hamahs terrorists calling the shots as they sent missiles into Israel from the once lush green houses of Gush Katif. 


When you vacate good, don’t expect it not to fill up with evil. You know those calls to defund police? Ever see a riot in Portland? They say if the terrorists “make good” on their commitments then people in Kabul will be safe. The rapid fall of Afghanistan is the paradigm of the Oslo accords. Portland, Chicago, all chaos everywhere. The insurgents have become the established authority. We have enabled evil, hanging on a sick hope that the Taliban and Hamas will keep their word.


By the time thousands of Israeli citizens were murdered, as law and order were burnt bombed and shot out of the heartland of this tiny country we had been clawing at clumps of earth here, trying to secure as large as possible an enclave of a terror free area. Some of the most important lessons in life I learned on my own skin from the ancient template I’m looking at right now, a place I can see but I can’t touch, the blessing and the curse. We have given our first fruits. We treasure life and our right. The endurance that Hashem has enabled in this story is the blessing in this curse. 


The faith is what keeps the light entering our splintered and broken lives. Blessings and curses we in essence bring upon ourselves. There is free choice. There is no greater curse than to be alive and not live truth and justice. This portion is positioned precisely at the time we need to hear it, close to the Day of Judgement as we begin a new cycle in our lives, a time we must choose what will bless us- what will curse us. Hashem’s enduring love and vigilant watch and promise to carry us on eagles’ wings has been nothing short of a miracle. 


The fact is- the primordial covenant lives eternally on despite the tests along the way and how the generations have fallen away from who we really are. The peace you feel here in our garden you can cut with a knife. But the other side is just over the fence. We don’t have the privilege of an ocean that separates us from it. Deliver us from the bondage of Egypt! Take us out of the desert! The capacity for change and the much needed transformative enforcement starts here in the beating heart. Once we recognize how far we have fallen from our ideal selves and move to reclaim the majestic potential of who we are, can we begin to repair. Teshuva Tefilla Tzeddakah is now. It’s time to settle down.


This is the time we would like to thank all of you dear friends for your love and support. It’s also a good time to bring new friends into Friends of Itamar our 501c3 assisting in life giving projects here on Itamar in the heartland of Israel.


Shabbat Shalom, Leah


Shalom From Itamar

I hope this letter finds you in good health and enjoying the end of the summer. As the year comes to a close we would like to bless you with a good new one coming in with good health, security and joyous occasions.  Here in Israel, we have been experiencing a churning volatile period of time with war and political upheaval. Cities and towns were attacked by missiles as the violence percolated close range in the deliberate burning down of Jewish properties, physical assault and other malicious hate crimes. On top of this, political instability has taken over. We ask ourselves- what can we do in the face of all of this! Without a doubt, a stable and secure heartland which ensures no terror state that will ever reign from here. 


Here on Itamar we believe the way to strengthen Israel is by strengthening Israel's heartland. Our 501c3- Friends of Itamar, is facilitating a support system for many realms of community life in a challenging place to live. We are building schools that teach Torah values of mussar, love for the land, ethics and preparing the next generation of Patriots. We are prepping the new ranks of elite unit combat soldiers. We are tilling the earth and producing the finest of environmentally friendly produce, literally living Torah. We are expanding our community and hope to grow tremendously over the coming year. We are planning to complete our visitor's center that will teach about the foundation of the bible, where it all happened! Right here! 


You are part of a growing group of people who understand something new is starting in the foundational process of redemption. As our enemies try to overcome us; we at Friends of Itamar see to it that we remain strong and secure and most importantly- that we grow. We have many tasks on the ground to complete as we ensure the safety of our residents which ensures inevitably the safety of the entire Israel. 


We turn to you at this time to invite you to continue being a part of the vitality and blessing that pours out and will surely come back to you! At this special time in history, we need to work fast and hard creating facts on the ground. In order to accomplish this great mission, we must expand our support network.  


We ask you to please spread the word to your family and friends. 


https://touritamarsupportisrael.com/donation-select/


Blessings from the land
Moshe and Leah Goldsmith 
Moshe - moshe@touritamarsupportisrael.com
Leah - leah@touritamarsupportisrael.com
www.touritamarsupportisrael.com
www.friendsofitamar.org

Reb Neuberger: Ki Savo – Break Your Will

 

BREAK YOUR WILL

 

 

“Even though I walk through the valley overshadowed by death, I will not fear evil, for You are with me….” (Tehillim 23)

 

Human beings go through a lot. We cannot even begin to understand some of the pain that we ourselves and others endure. How did even one person survive the Shoah? Even one? How can one understand what they went through? These were the holiest of the holy, pillars of righteousness! How do we understand?

 

My friends, I described to you last week the aftermath of my recent surgery. Looking back, I see there was no choice. I needed that surgery. Yet the pain was huge. I believe that this is a vignette of our life during this unspeakable Golus. We are getting to the Bais Hamikdosh. Oh yes, we will get there, but we apparently need to go through something before we get there, and that “something” can be pretty tough.

 

This week we read the second Tochacha in the Torah. One of the lines in that terrible drumbeat of destiny has always profoundly affected me: “You will go mad from the sight of your eyes ….” (Dvarim 28:34) The Torah uses the word “meshuga.” We joke around with that word “meshuga,” but it is deadly serious. It means that my resources are insufficient to deal with the reality of life and my spiritual system is collapsing. This is the lifelong padded cell. This is not a joke. This is one of the most fearsome things one can imagine.

 

Does that word “meshuga” not describe our feelings when we look out upon today’s world? It is too much. One feels as if the world will drive one to insanity, G-d forbid. Let’s take a recent headline. (Please excuse me, because I make it a practice not to hear the news, but I understand that this happened.) Here is the headline: “Taliban Takeover.” I heard a religious Jew bemoaning this the other day.

 

What is so bad?

 

I’ll tell you. These are the barbarians of the barbarians. What’s to stop them? The U. S. couldn’t stop them, so who is going to stop them … anywhere? Who is to stop them from taking over the planet and turning it into the stone age?

 

And then I thought of the only thing that can ever save us, anywhere.

 

I thought of a beautiful possuk from my hero, Dovid ha Melech. We read it every week, but … my dear friends … every week it saves us. “When the wicked bloom like grass and all doers of iniquity blossom, it is to destroy them ‘till eternity!” (Tehillim 92) Ah, yes! Hashem is in charge, not the Taliban l’havdil!  This is a sure sign that Moshiach is around the corner, because the wicked are blooming like grass.

 

What do I mean by “around the corner?” I mean that you turn a corner and … suddenly Moshiach ben Dovid is staring you in the face!

 

It will happen that fast! And we will have no warning! Except, “when the wicked bloom like grass …” That is our warning. Get ready, my friends, because (in my humble opinion) it’s going to be just like that! Before you can blink. Like the scene in Mitzraim when the potentate said, “Ani Yosef,” and, suddenly, the curtain was lifted!

 

I was wondering about the avoda of Elul. What should I really concentrate on this month? Every year we try to prepare for Rosh Hashana. On what should we be focus?

 

I saw a beautiful piece from Rabbi Yehuda Baum Shlita”h on Parshas Ki Seitzei. The Ohr ha Chaim explains the sugya of “aishes yafes toar … the woman of beautiful form.” (Dvarim 21:10ff) as an analogy to the Great War of Elul, our personal war with the Yetzer ha Ra. As I understand it, the “woman of beautiful form” is our own neshoma, and we are fighting to bring her back from the enemy. She has been sullied by golus.

 

How do we bring her back?

 

I think the big avoda of Elul is to break our will. The surrounding culture is totally subservient to its will, its desires, its lusts, its pleasure. “Just do it,” as the advertising says.

 

No! Do not just do it!

 

Do what Hashem says, not what my desire says to do! Do not go “acharei levavchem v’acharei ainachem … after our heart and after our eyes.” No! That is the way of the umos ha olam, the surrounding nations. No! Our way is to break our will and go after the Torah.

 

To wrench oneself from the world of desire on every level, at every minute is a test of astounding difficulty. I know that, each time I make a bracha, I am fighting with my yetzer ha ra. To have kavana on even one word is like the fight of a lifetime. I feel the yetzer ha ra in there wrestling with me. I have to fight to concentrate on each word, each mitzvah, every second of my life.

 

If we go through life listening to and obeying the Voice of Hashem … that’s what it’s all about. Each moment is a war. We are trying to grab our neshoma back from the enemy. We are trying to break our will.

 

I know this can be done, because our people have done it over the ages and that is how we have become the Holy Nation.

 

Look at Avraham Avinu. Talk about breaking your will! How did he bring his beloved son to the Akeida? But he did it, and that is why his children are the holy of the holy.

 

How did Yosef resist, there in the court of Potiphar, where “no one was looking?” But he did it, because he saw the image of his father. And that is why his children are holy of the holy.

 

How did our Yidden survive the Shoah and hold on to Hashem? I don’t know, but they did it, and their children are holy of the holy.

 

My friends, if we imitate the ways of our holy ancestors, it won’t be long before we turn that corner, and … there is Moshiach ben Dovid, right in front of us!

 


When the wicked bloom like grass …

 

 

GLOSSARY

Golus: Exile

Neshoma: Soul

Shoah: The Holocaust

Sugya: A subject under discussion in the Written or Oral Torah

Yetzer ha Ra: Evil Inclination

 

Rabbi Winston – Parashas Ki Savo

August 23 and 30, 8:30 pm Israel time: In Advance Of The Ten Days, two sessions on rising to the task between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Register here



ABOUT FORTY YEARS ago I had what was to be my first of four hernia operations. In those days it was still treated like a normal operation, in a hospital, general anesthetic, three days recovery, etc. And before I went in, someone told me that I would wake up in a recovery room, and that they would not move me back to the quiet comfort of my own room until they saw I was up.


I’m not sure why that message stuck with me, because as cold and impersonal as the recovery room is, does it really matter if you’re still floating around la-la land? But at some point, I became aware of where I was, and that message played back in my head, and I found myself trying to wake up.


I say trying because it was not like getting up from a deep sleep. I’ve also struggled to wake up from a deep sleep, but once you decide it is time to get up, you just wake up. When you are still under, something continues to make your body sleep no matter how much you decide it is time to wake up. 


Nevertheless, that voice had me throwing my head from side-to-side fighting my way back to consciousness. I didn’t say anything, just moaned each time I threw my head from one side to the other. But it was enough, because the nurse noticed me and soon enough I was being wheeled back to my room, quite the ride in itself.


Once they shifted me from the gurney to the bed in my room, I finally relaxed and stopped fighting. The rest of the day I just kept going in and out of sleep. It wasn’t until later that afternoon that I finally felt free of the tractor beam that had kept pulling me to other levels of consciousness. And I have never forgotten the feeling or the experience, nor have I ever had to fight to wake up like that again.


Well, at least in that sense of the idea. In some areas of my life, I am still sleeping. What’s worse is that, unlike after my operation, I don’t really know that I am asleep, so I don’t fight to wake up. I live in a dream like it is reality, and waste countless waking moments that I will later wish I had used more productively.


But what happens when you think you have woken up, but you are still sleeping? Not physically sleeping, but spiritually sleeping. You are disconnected from G–D and truth, and make up your own, making your “dreams” nightmares for others. Well, that’s when you get to the curses in this week’s parsha.  



WHEN HAMAN AND Achashveros plotted their holocaust against the Jewish people, the latter worried aloud:


“I am afraid that their G–D will do to me what He did to my predecessors.” (Megillah 13b)


The evil people of yesteryear were classier. The average antisemite today either doesn’t believe in G–D, or believes in a false one. In the good old days of antisemitism, they not only believed in the G–D of the Jewish people, they feared Him, and this made Achashveros hesitate, and Haman reassure him:


“The Jews are sleeping. Since they no longer perform mitzvos as they once did, they do not merit Heavenly intercession.”  (Megillah 13b)


Haman, like his original ancestors Amalek, believed in G–D. They also knew how He worked, like Bilaam for example, who knew how to curse people when G–D was angry. Amalek knew how to take advantage of spiritual stragglers and do his worst. 


According to the Kli Yakar on last weeks parsha, that’s why Amalek cut off the bris milah of those he was able to attack. They were the ones whose spiritual laziness caused them to be spit out by the protective Cloud of Glory, leaving them open to attack from Amalek. They broke the very covenant that bris milah represents, making theirs meaningless.


Now, Haman didn’t mean that it was the middle of the night while Jews slept, because they weren’t obligated in mitzvos then. He was obviously talking in general about daily life, having observed the lack of sincerity in the way Jews performed mitzvos in his time. Somehow, he knew how important such sincerity was to G–D, because he was willing to bet the bank that it would work in his favor.


Was he wrong? Not about that, but about the following: 


Rav says: All the “ends” have passed, and the matter depends only upon teshuvah and good deeds. Shmuel says: It is sufficient for the mourner to endure in his mourning. This is like another disagreement. Rebi Eliezer says: 


If the Jewish people repent they will be redeemed, and if not, they will not be redeemed. Rebi Yehoshua said to him: If they do not repent, will they not be redeemed? Rather, The Holy One, Blessed is He, will establish a king for them whose decrees are as harsh as Haman, and the Jewish people will repent, and be restored to right. (Sanhedrin 97b)


It has been said that a Jew once told a Roman general, “If you want to unite and strengthen us, then go to war against us. But if you want to destroy us, then just go home. We’ll take care of that on our own.” I don’t know if a Jew ever really said this to a Roman general, but the idea is definitely true. As it has also been said,  there is nothing better for a Jew than antisemitism. Left alone, we spiritually disintegrate. Attacked, we tend to return to our spiritual roots. We WAKE UP. 


Reading all of this into this week’s parsha, G–D is telling us, “If you remain spiritually awake, I will bless you in this world as well as in the World-to-Come. But if you are spiritually asleep, then I will waken you.” So often in the past, this has been with a nightmare.



THIS IS WHY it is more than ironic that the rising culture in the United States, where most Diaspora Jews still live, is called “Woke Culture.” Those who apply this term to themselves obviously mean that they have woken up to the world in which they have lived until now, and what they can do about it. 


But what they call waking up, others would call going to sleep.  They have these notions about what they can promote to make the world a “better” place, well, for them at least. High on their list of changes is the abolishment all religion. Once upon a time that was called religious persecution. They think it is being progressive. 


Here’s the question, vis-a-vis this week’s parsha. Are they just another movement to rise up and eventually fall with little impact on the Jewish community? Or, will they be the instrument to wake up the Jewish people from their slumber? As it says in Shemos, and it is echoed in the Talmud, it takes but a single leader, just one, to rise up and turn the situation on its head by making decrees like Haman. 


And now with a culture to spawn such a leader, and with a government that is sympathetic to its demands, the stage is being set for something. Don’t forget, the Jews in Egypt had a Moshe Rabbeinu to awaken them in his time, and the Jews had a Mordechai and Esther at Purim time. Do we have anyone yet capable of waking us up in our time to avoid destruction? 


We didn’t in 1942. 


The prophecies do not speak promisingly about how it will all end. The Talmud isn’t optimistic either. Remember Yonah on the boat, the one that was thrashing around in a raging sea trying to stay afloat? All hands were on deck doing what they could to survive, except for one, the lone Jew on board who was sleeping soundly in the hold of the ship. He had to be awakened before he told them what to do to save themselves. 


Incredible. It’s one thing to sleep soundly in your house during a bad storm. It is another thing altogether to do it on a boat that is lunging up and down. 

Who can do that? 


The Jewish people.


Maybe that is one of the reasons why we read Sefer Yonah on Yom Kippur. Hopefully Yom Kippur will wake us up. After that, it is up to us to remain “awake” the rest of the year.



DOOM AND GLOOM. That’s this week’s parsha. It was also going to be this final segment of Perceptions, which I wrote and later erased. The Torah finishes off on a positive note, sort of, so why shouldn’t we, sort of? 


Yet until this day, G–D has not given you a heart to know, eyes to see and ears to hear. (Devarim 29:3) 


Yet…G–D did not give you a heart to know: to recognize the kind acts of The Holy One, Blessed is He, and to cleave to Him. (Rashi)


Question. Shouldn’t it be, “eyes to see, ears to hear, and then a heart to know”? Isn’t a knowing heart dependent upon the seeing eyes and hearing ears to conclude things about life? 


Yes, if seeing is believing for you. If you have one of those hearts that so many people have that cannot make up its mind about G–D and His providence until they see it clearly with their eyes, and hear it perfectly with their ears, then the verse is out of order. But since G–D wrote it that way, you have to assume it is correct and you are out of order. 


How so? The Western world believes that seeing is believing, so if they can’t see something, they don’t believe it. The Torah comes from the opposite direction. It says that the eyes and ears are just information gatherers. It is a person’s predisposition to things that determines how the gathered information is interpreted, impacting how they see and hear the world. 


This morning I heard about police officers in California who were caught painting swastikas on Jew’s cars and guilty of other antisemitic slurs. Turns out there are actually hundreds of cases, and that is just in California! What about the rest of the States?


Shocking. But is it really? Why do we think that the very police force that we rely upon to protect us is free of racism, and specifically antisemitism? What is the basis of that assumption? They’re human like the people they are paid to police, and sometimes even more “human.” How many Jews will write this off as a random event and stay with their baseless assumption?


It’s false loyalty. The only One we can love unconditionally is G–D. The only One we can trust unconditionally is G–D. If we appreciate this, and all the good He has done for us, and wants to do for us, then we will cleave to Him. 


When our heart goes to Him, and nowhere else, then we will see and hear the truth as it is, and know what to do to remain safe. That’s the choice we make. As someone cleverly told me this morning, “As long as you do what’s right, G–D will do what’s left.”

26 August 2021

Rabbi Kahana: Ki Tavo – Becoming Am Yisrael

BS”D Parashat Ki Tavo 5781

Rabbi Nachman Kahana

** Becoming Am Yisrael


In this week’s parsha we read in Devarim 26:16-19:


^טז היום הזה הא-להיך מצוך לעשות את החקים האלה ואת המשפטים ושמרת ועשית אותם בכל לבבך ובכל נפשך:


^יז את ההאמרת היום להיות לך לא-להים וללכת בדרכיו ולשמר חקיו ומצותיו ומשפטיו ולשמע בקלו:


^יח וההאמירך היום להיות לו לעם סגלה כאשר דבר לך ולשמר כל מצותיו:


^יט ולתתך עליון על כל הגוים אשר עשה לתהלה ולשם ולתפארת ולהיתך עם קדש להא-להיך כאשר דבר:


^16 The Lord your God commands you this day to follow these decrees and laws; carefully observe them with all your heart and with all your soul. 

^17 You have declared this day that the Lord is your God and that you will walk in obedience to Him, that you will keep His decrees, commands, and laws that you will listen to Him. 

^18 And the Lord has declared this day that you are His people, His treasured possession as He promised, and that you are to keep all His commands. 

^19 He has declared that He will set you in praise, fame, and honor high above all the nations He has made and that you will be a people holy to the Lord your God, as He promised.


After leading the Jewish nation for 41 years, Moshe Rabbeinu is now in the closing days of his farewell speech. Soon, on the 7th day of the next month of Adar, Moshe will climb Mount Nevo, from where he will ascend to the highest realms of heaven.


Moshe and the Jewish people have experienced unprecedented occurrences: the ten plagues, splitting of the Red Sea, receiving the Torah from the Almighty Himself at Mount Sinai, the Manna, Miriam’s Well, the defeat of the mighty Sichon and Og and other innumerable miracles.


Why then did Moshe say to the Jewish people: You have declared this day that the Lord is your God… And the Lord has declared this day that you are His people…?


Haven’t the Jews been God’s “people” since the time of Avraham, or at least from the time we received the Torah at Mount Sinai? Why “this day”?


I submit:


Life consists of objective facts, incidences, and intellectual knowledge. However, it often takes an extraordinarily long time for an individual to internalize the changing realities of his life.


An example: A person completes his formal education (usually university). He then realizes that, for the first time in his life, he is no longer subject to the schedules dictated by others. The world is now open before him. He is on his own to sleep late in the morning or to change the world. It occurs again when a person loses his last parent, and he realizes that being “the son of” will now be replaced with being the “head” of his family – with all of its accompanying responsibilities.


For the past 40 years in the desert, the Jewish people were comfortable under the protective wing of Moshe Rabbeinu – their personal and intimate link to the Almighty. Moshe taught them Torah. He was father, judge, peacemaker, general, and all else. He was the staff upon which every Jew leaned, affording them the confidence necessary to exist in the harsh, barren desert for so long.


They are now shocked into the realization that Moshe’s end is drawing near – that the great protective shelter of Moshe will soon be gone and replaced by a relatively smaller and more obscure person. Yehoshua will lead them into Eretz Yisrael, where they will have to wage war against 31 city states for seven years; and then, during the following seven years, each family will leave the community of the twelve tribes and depart to the homestead allotted them by HaShem.


On that day, it awakens in the nation’s consciousness that in another 14 years they will be “on their own,” free from the schedules and dictates of an acknowledged leader. They will no longer have the comforting feeling that their father figure will solve all their problems.


One can be a citizen of a nation, either by birth or naturalization. It is his choice to either identify with his country or not to feel the national pulse by distancing himself from the challenges facing the nation.


On the day when Moshe said to the Jewish people, “You have declared this day that the Lord is your God”, he realized that the people had finally understood the purpose and ultimate goal of being taken out of Egypt.  It was in order for them to be HaShem’s chosen nation. Moshe went on to declare: “And the Lord has declared this day that you are His people”. The Jewish people had reached a national consensus that, in order to survive, they would have to join together as one nation, with “one for all and all for one”.



** To be part of Am Yisrael today

------------------------------------------------------------


Seventy-three years ago, Medinat Yisrael was established. Unfortunately, our brothers and sisters in the galut and many here have not internalized that the Medina is the entity which will usher in the final redemption of our people. They refuse to identify with the revolution that our Father in Heaven has performed for us.


To be part of Am Yisrael today is to live in the land specified by HaShem for His chosen people. It is to speak the language of the Bible and in the way 90% of Israelis do, not Chasidish or Litvish, but pure Ivrit. It is to share in the hardships our people are going through in order to prove to HaShem how much we want to return home. It is to know the military history of the Medina prior to its establishment 


(The Irgun (https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=77c3453a73&e=feed7b2b4c)


and Palmach (https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=f7b9fce214&e=feed7b2b4c) ), 


including the names of the holy young men who were hanged on the gallows for fighting to rid the land of the brutish British. To know what Yechida 101


(https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=df7648d8af&e=feed7b2b4c

(Unit 101 


(https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=f106bae6d9&e=feed7b2b4c)

means. 


The Altalena (https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=281c498cce&e=feed7b2b4c)


The Lamed Heh (https://nachmankahana.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=4c9326909d716bf00d4be7986&id=fafaddd808&e=feed7b2b4c) 


(35 soldiers murdered on their way to aid Gush Etzion in the War of Independence). Golani, Bislach, Ramatkal, tironot and tirturim. To know the civics of the land – its judiciary, legislative and executive branches.  In short, it is to feel that this is your home, and we are one family.


Just as HaShem creates human beings with a physical body and a spiritual soul, so has He created Am Yisrael with the physical land of Eretz Yisrael, upon which we are commanded to perform His mitzvot. He created our holy souls to become enriched and nourished by the fulfillment of those mitzvot in Eretz Yisrael. As in the words of the great Ramban, the mitzvot were given to be kept in Eretz Yisrael.


To be involved in keeping the mitzvot outside of the national collective, is like catching a floating cloud which has no substance.


At the outset, this excludes anyone who does not live in the land of Israel.  It even excludes those who abide here but do not accept Israeli citizens, because they prefer to be on the periphery of society.


When I first arrived in Eretz Yisrael, I asked a great posek about reciting Hallel on Yom Ha’atzmaut. He answered in the wisest of ways: “It depends on how you feel. If you see the hand of HaShem behind all the episodes of the Medina, then you must say Hallel; but if you don’t feel it then do not”.  I see the hand of HaShem every day and in every way.


The vast majority of our people here love the Medina. They are willing to make any and all sacrifices for the Medina’s welfare, security and development. Even those who do not observe all the mitzvot will tell you, privately, that what is transpiring here is the hand of God.


The phenomenon of a people keeping alive a 2000-year dream of returning to their ancient homeland is unprecedented and beyond human terms. That the Jewish people are so faithful to the Torah, and the desire even by people who are not observant to be Jewish, is a mystery.


It is so wondrous that even the Almighty is taken aback at the degree of faithfulness of His people, as stated by the prophet Zecharya (8:3-8):


^ג כה אמר השבתי אל ציון ושכנתי בתוך ירושלם ונקראה ירושלם עיר האמת והר הצבאות הר הקדש: ס


^ד כה אמר הצבאות עד ישבו זקנים וזקנות ברחבות ירושלם ואיש משענתו בידו מרב ימים:


^ה ורחבות העיר ימלאו ילדים וילדות משחקים ברחבתיה


^ו כה אמר הצבאות כי יפלא בעיני שארית העם הזה בימים ההם גם בעיני יפלא נאם הצבאות:


^ז כה אמר הצבאות הנני מושיע את עמי מארץ מזרח ומארץ מבוא השמש:


^ח והבאתי אתם ושכנו בתוך ירושלם והיו לי לעם ואני אהיה להם לאלהים באמת ובצדקה:


^3 This is what the Lord says: “I will return to Zion and dwell in Jerusalem. Then Jerusalem will be called the Faithful City, and the mountain of the Lord Almighty will be called the Holy Mountain.”  


^4 This is what the Lord Almighty says: “Once again men and women of ripe old age will sit in the streets of Jerusalem, each of them with cane in hand because of their age. 


^5 The city streets will be filled with boys and girls playing there.” 


^6 This is what the Lord Almighty says: “It may seem marvelous to the remnant of this people at that time, but will it seem marvelous to me?” declares the Lord Almighty. 


^7 This is what the Lord Almighty says: “I will save my people from the countries of the east and the west. ^8 I will bring them back to live in Jerusalem; they will be my people, and I will be faithful and righteous to them as their God.”


כתיבה וחתימה טובה לאלתר לחיים טובים


שבת שלום


Nachman Kahana


Copyright © 5781/2021 Nachman Kahana 

Quantum Miles Ahead

There are many NEW (to us) scientific discoveries/inventions creeping into our ordinary lives in a destructive manner. They have invaded our medicine, food, farming, governing and more. One such creation is CRISPR; it has its place in these dynamics, but where we are today is quantum miles ahead:

"Charles Lieber’s SYRINGE INJECTIBLE MESH ELECTRONICS, nor [and] Ido Bachelet’s DNA-Origami-in-a-syringe that lets him ‘swarm’ billions of WIFI-connected and remote controlled nanobots in the human body.”  


Reading just one bit of tightly packed information on this website is enough to make you scratch your head in disbelief. But its true, and this is just the beginning.


As Rivka writes

"People, there is no time left to keep burying our heads in the sand, and / or wringing our hands in despair.  It’s time to be brave, and to start to push back, in whichever small ways we can. Why not start by sending a few of these posts around to start informing more people about what’s really going on?

So hop on over and read about COVID and GRAPHENE: From Theory to Fact. 

Pack Your Bags… It’s Finally Happening