Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality From Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Korach

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality From Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Korach

The sensei clapped his hands loudly: “Yame!” (‘Stop!’); and the entire Dojo (everyone in the Karate Training hall) went silent. We all gathered and sat as our Sensei (Master) strode to the front of the hall. He motioned to one of the larger brown belts in the room to stand and assume a fighting stance, and then pointed to Laurie to stand opposite. Were it not for everyone’s serious demeanor I would have burst into laughter; she could not have been more than 5 feet tall, a thin wisp of a girl, and seeing her assume a fighting stance opposite the tall muscular brown belt seemed ludicrous. Barry was well over six feet and all muscle; he probably outweighed her by almost a hundred pounds, and had been training for nearly five years, while Laurie had only joined the Dojo six months earlier.   My mind vividly recalled almost the exact same scene when Laurie had first walked into the Dojo...
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Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

From His-tory to Her-story Is G-d male or female? One day my son Ananiel and my two daughters, Leyadya and Ne'ema, burst into my study. They had obviously been fighting over something and were very upset. I could see that I was chosen to be the lucky arbitrator to resolve another case of sibling rivalry. They shouted at each other, "You go, you ask Daddy." "No, no! You go, you go." Finally Ananiel, who was age five at that time, took the challenge and said, "O.K., O.K. Daddy, isn't it true that G-d is a boy?" Ne'ema and Leyadya, ages eight and nine, had tears in their eyes. I could hear them silently pleading with me, "Please no, please no. Tell us it's not true. It's bad enough our brother is a boy. Surely, G-d is really a girl." I said to them, "G-d is not a boy and G-d is not a girl. G-d is beyond that. We may talk about...
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Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality From Rav Binny  – Portion of Sh’lach

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality From Rav Binny – Portion of Sh’lach

A black and white image of a Jew being beaten in the streets of Vienna; Jews being forced onto trains and deported, and a column of Jews with faces full of despair, being forced out of town, herded down a dark street led by Rabbis holding Torah scrolls… Scenes straight out of the Holocaust; except they aren’t. These are actually scenes from a silent movie produced in 1924 in Austria, nearly fifteen years before Hitler’s Nazi Stormtroopers came marching across the border when Austria was annexed to Germany in what became known as the Anschluss, in March of 1938. The film was based on a book written and published in 1922 by Hugo Bettauer, a Jewish writer, who, somehow, saw what was coming. The book was a huge success and sold a quarter of a million copies. And it shined a light on the overt storm of anti-Semitism that was rapidly spreading across Austria and all of Europe. Two years...
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Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Getting the Divine View on You How to make worlds of a difference And he said, Hear now my words: If there be a prophet among you, I the LORD will make myself known unto him in a vision, and will speak unto him in a dream. My servant Moses is not so, who is faithful in all mine house. With him will I speak mouth to mouth, even apparently, and not in dark speeches; and the picture of the LORD shall he view           (Numbers/BaMidbar 12:6-8) Several years ago, I gave my kids Cheerios for breakfast. It said on the front of the Cheerios box that on the back of this box is a three-dimensional Cheerios bumblebee. So I looked at the back of the box and saw a distorted, blurry thing. Have you ever looked at a 3-D book without the goggles? You see a mishmash of misprinted, distorted images. There were no goggles inside the box of Cheerios,...
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Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Beha’alotcha

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Beha’alotcha

We all love getting those cute 3 minute videos during the day that give us a laugh or a smile. Recently, someone sent me a clip that really got me thinking. It’s a video of a fellow giving his (I assume) two sons a challenge: they have four minutes to call the number he has written down… using an old rotary phone. Their comical and unsuccessful attempts to figure out how to use the phone were also instructive. At one point, realizing that turning the dial round was not actually accomplishing anything, one of them realizes they need to ‘turn the phone on’, so he lifts the receiver and puts it back down with a triumphant look! And through-out the video as they figure out how to use the rotary-dial, they continuously miss the detail that makes it all irrelevant: they keep putting the receiver back down…. ( To see the video :  https://www.google.es/search?source=hp&ei=FBsHXfLQOcrVwAKY2pPACA&q=Boys+trying+to+figure+out+how+to+use+a+rotary+phone+...&oq=Boys+trying+to+figure+out+how+to+use+a+rotary+phone+...&gs_l=psy-ab.3...2804.15799..16094...1.0..0.139.6402.1j55......0....1..gws-wiz.....0..0i131j0j0i10.4trbVpxSUlE   ) It never ceases to amaze...
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Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Prophecy 101: Ego is a Non-Prophet Venture This week we begin to read from the fourth of the five books of Moses. Although this book is referred to in English as the Book of Numbers, in Hebrew it is referred to as Bamidbar because of the opening verse; "And the Lord spoke to Moses in the wilderness (Bamidbar) of Sinai ..." The Midrash, Jewish Oral Tradition, derives a somewhat puzzling insight from the fact that G-d spoke to Moses in the wilderness : Unless one makes himself hefker (open and ownerless) like a wilderness he cannot acquire wisdom and Torah. (Bamidbar Rabbah 1:7) In other words, to be receptive to the revelatory word of G-d you must be like the wilderness completely open and ownerless – in a state of humility and surrender. Moses heard the word of G-d not only in the physical location of the wilderness but also because was he was in a “wilderness” state of mind. Edging G-d Out The creative experience...
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Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality by Rav Binny Freedman – Shavuot

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality by Rav Binny Freedman – Shavuot

This week we celebrate the festival of Shavuot, commemorating a moment, thirty-two hundred years ago, when we all stood together, beneath a wind-swept mountain, deep in the Sinai desert. The power of that moment, was that, more than at any other time in our history as a people, we truly became one; one people, experiencing a desire to receive and to share, together. There is a legend about Moses Mendelssohn, the grandfather of the well-known German composer, who was far from being handsome.  Along with a rather short stature, he had a grotesque hunchback.            One day he visited a merchant in Hamburg who had a lovely daughter named Frumtje. Moses fell helplessly in love with her. But Frumtje was repulsed by his misshapen appearance.            When it came time for him to leave, Moses gathered his courage and climbed the stairs to her room to take one last opportunity to speak with her. She was a vision of heavenly beauty, but...
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Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Bamidbar

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Bamidbar

We were on our way back, heading south-east from Beirut back down towards Marja’oun when the shelling started, and our jeep driver was in a near-panic. He was not part of our regular unit; he was a reserve duty soldier doing a few weeks of reserve duty in Lebanon and had been assigned to me as a driver. We had just finished escorting a convoy of trucks up to a base on the outskirts of Beirut, and I was counting our blessings that the trip had been un-eventful; obviously I was getting ahead of myself. We had barely gotten out of Beirut when all hell broke loose and the artillery shells started flying literally just over our heads. Logically, especially as my assumption was that they were trying to hit us from the hills above us, the smart thing to do would have been to pull over and take cover. But the driver panicked and hit the gas trying to...
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Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Sparks – by Rabbi David Aaron

Stand Up and Be Counted How to let your self be loved. “The LORD spoke to Moses in the Tent of Meeting in the Desert of Sinai on the first day of the second month of the second year after the Israelites came out of Egypt. He said: "Take a census of the whole community of Israel by their families and households, listing every man by name, one by one.” ~~ Numbers 1:1-2 Because of His [G-d's] love He counts them ~~Rabbi Shlomo ben Yitzchak (RASHI) (1040- 1105) Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach, a Torah Scholar and song composer of the 20th century, would often do concerts in prisons. He would greet all the prisoners in their cells, even the most harden criminals, give them each a big loving hug and invite them to join him for his concert in the prison. One time after a concert, as he was on his way out from the prison, one of the prisoners, a tough looking guy, runs after...
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Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Bechukotai

Small Tastings of Torah, Judaism and Spirituality from Rav Binny Freedman – Portion of Bechukotai

The famous 19th century blood libel in Russia, which came to be known as the ‘Beilis Trial’, became much more than the trial of just one man. Judaism as a whole stood accused, and its faithful defenders were forced to fend off repeated attacks while world Jewry rallied to their support.  The judge challenged the defense. He said: “It says in your Talmud: You the people of Israel are called Adam, Man, yet the nations of the world are not called Adam.’ What then do you consider the nations of the world to be, if not men?” demanded the prosecution. “Would you call them animals? “ The rabbi who was acting as the defense attorney explained: “In Hebrew there are two terms for man: Ish and Adam. Israel is called Adam because this term appears only in singular; there is no plural form for Adam. The Jews are described as the singular form of man because they are more than a...
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