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News
and Muse
Teachings from A Still
Small Voice
|
Old City, Jerusalem — Tisha b’Av,
5772 / 2012 |
|
This
teaching is dedicated to the complete and speedy healing
of Ayala Pamela bat Lea and Tsivia bat Malka.
They should experience a complete healing of body and soul,
they along with all the persons and creatures who are in need
of refua.
|

Announcements
Woman’s
Eicha reading by Chana Yaffe followed by a teaching by Sarah Yehudit
Schneider
Motsei
Shabbat 28th July
9.45
p.m.
10
Hashoarim Street, Old City
(roof-top
of Rabbi Yitschak and Tova Sokol)
(cnr
Burgers bar in the Rova Square)
Good idea
to bring a flashlight and cushion
hainsof@gmail.com
0547-922-969

.
Torah
(PDF
attached.)
Tisha
B’Av 5772 / 2012
Based on
R. Tsadok HaKohen Pri Tsadik, Devarim 16 and Resisei
Laila, 48 (וביום שני...)
Sarah Yehudit Schneider
Any person
who acquires daat, it is as if he built the Temple in his
days. (Brochot 33a)
The world
came into being when God took a certain stone, which is
called the “Foundation Stone”, and cast it into the abyss, and upon
that stone God founded the world. It is the center point of the
universe and upon it stands the Holy of Holies…This stone has on
it seven eyes, as Zechariah prophesied, “On one stone seven
eyes”… [And Ezekiel describes this sapphire stone] “as the
likeness a throne…full of eyes all around.” (Zohar
1:231a)
On Tisha
B’Av we mourn the loss of our House of Holy Presence (aka
Bet HaMikdash), the heart of our people, that turns us from a
throng into a higher order unity called Kenesset Yisrael, a
synonymous term for Shekhina. Without our holy hub it is hard to
contain the ricochet of our clashing extremes that produce the
causeless hatred that prevents our inner peace.
We hope
for mashiach to redeem us from this strife—certain that when truth
finally prevails, all will agree that our opinion was the
right one all along. Most secretly expect that among the pleasures
of our messianic Golden Age will be the thrill of vindication, the
opportunity to say, “I told you so”.
But what
are we waiting for. The Talmud clearly states what we must do
to build the Temple now. Let’s roll up our sleeves and start
acquiring daat. And R. Tsadok tells us what that
means.
When Adam
and Eve ate from the Tree of Daat—Knowledge of Good and
Evil—it is daat that shattered and it is daat that we,
their descendants, must now strive to repair. Daat is
translated as internalized knowing for it integrates knowledge so
deeply that it becomes part of our flesh. Daat’s power of
unification dissolves the chasm between head and heart, or self and
other.
According
to kabbala, the measure of one’s daat is gauged by one’s
capacity to bear paradox—to accept that two contradictory assertions
are both true and find a way to negotiate between them. The
mightier the daat the greater its power to unite incompatible
opposites. It’s no great feat to join like to like, but it is
extremely challenging to bridge polarities. But what does this have
to do with building a Temple?
It is
fair to say that we are all hoping for mashiach (however we conceive
of that person, couple or era). And yet there are
prerequisites. There is a tipping point—there is some critical
measure of tikun that we, as a people, must complete before
we can enter the reward phase of history. It might be that,
bottom-line, there is just more that needs to be done. But it
might also be that we (as a people) have already reached the quota,
but because we are so fragmented, the cumulated mitzvoth of
this faction don’t combine with the mitzvoth of that
faction given the barbed wire fence (metaphorically) between them.
And so, if we could acknowledge that this “other” (across the
barricade) is actually motivated by a Jewish value even though it
seems to us that they’ve applied it in a counterproductive way,
still our admission carves out a channel between us and them which
allows our respective merits to combine. It might be that at this
point in history consolidating our mitzvoth will make a more
dramatic difference than generating new ones.
This
acknowledgment doesn’t mean that you must now support their
efforts. In fact you could decide that your life’s
mission is to oppose their efforts and block their path. You could
decide that although they are promoting a Jewish value they have
taken it totally out of context and are applying it in a way that
harms the Jewish people instead of helping
them.
Even
still, there is something gained by acknowledging that underneath it
all, this other is still driven by a Jewish value (however
extreme or unbalanced its expression). First because that admission
opens a channel of energetic exchange between us and them, allowing
our respective merits to be added together to the pool of
credits that must reach a critical value, to bring mashiach
now.
And
second, because there is this whole system of compensation and
counterbalance that happens unconsciously within our nation. For
every imbalance in this direction (for example toward the
political left), there is an equal and opposite imbalance in the
other direction (i.e. toward the political right). When we
see extremism, our habit is to neutralize it by leaning more heavily
to the other side. But in the end, that is actually
counterproductive—it produces the opposite effect of what we
intended—it produces even more reactivity that we must now offset by
becoming even more extreme ourselves.
Instead,
if we could (for a moment) disengage from the dispute, step back,
and find the shared truth—the Jewish value—that is also driving this
person’s actions, then we stop participating in the polarization of
our people and instead become a centering
force.
By searching out the sliver of truth in these (mostly) contrary
perspectives we acquire daat (the joiner of polarities) and
build the Temple in our day. With each success we make space
in our psyche for a new angle of truth. The composite of vantage
points that we create through this effort is a precursor to the
mysterious Foundation Stone which lies at the center of the universe
and “has eyes all around.”
Please,
Hashem, help us to acquire the daat that enables us to honor
our own I-center which organizes the world according to the
preferences and aversions that reflect its value frame…and, at the
same time, still make space in our psyche for others to assert
different (even contrary) truths…and to do all this in a way that is
real, yet does not weaken the vehemence of our own position or
produce doubt regarding the certainty of our own beliefs. And may it
be on this Tisha B’Av that our daats finally fuse into the
holy foundation stone which has as many angles as there are
truth-perspectives in the universe. And may we each enjoy a moment
of vindication when we point to our facet of the Foundation
Stone and, to cheers and thunderous applause, announce before the
world, “I told you so.”
Blessings
galore…A Still Small Voice

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