Get to Heaven Keep the Seven

Everybody wants spirituality. To be a good person means to walk in G-d's ways. How does that translate to reality? The only guidebook to spirituality that has stood the test of time is the Hebrew Bible. The Bible says that the Jews will be a light onto the nations. But if you are not a born Jew, you have to convert, which is not so easy!! If you do convert, it is a lot of work to be a Jew (three times a day prayer, keeping kosher, observing the Sabbath).

This blog will show you how to be Jewish without the work!!

Monday, November 30, 2015

Your brain is always with you

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

Here is a Hamass Kindergarten party from 2007. These are the todlers that are stabbing us today. In any other society this would be a joke but they take it for real:
https://www.facebook.com/theisraelproject/videos/10153614483042316/

The IDF version of Lenard Cohen's Halleluja

YouTube link (Whole Playlist is awesome): https://www.youtube.com/watch…
Producer: Micky Joseph: https://www.facebook.com/micky.joseph



https://www.facebook.com/JewishStandard/videos/10152384530103717/


My Brain Is Always With Me

Wherever you go, your amazing brain is with you. This is quite obvious, you might be thinking. Actually, it isn't that obvious to most people. They sometimes forget that they are carrying every positive resource and every positive state with them wherever they go.

Every moment of confidence and courage is always with you. Every moment of joy is always with you. Every moment of kindness and compassion is always with you. And every moment of enthusiasm is always with you just waiting for you to access it.

A tool for remembering that your brain is there is to place your hand on your forehead. This is a reminder that the positive resource you need at a given moment is right there. Placing your hand on your forehead can also serve as a tool to remind your brain to upgrade the specific state and strength in all contexts. You might experience confidence and courage in some contexts, that is, in certain situations and with some people. But since you have confidence and courage in your brain, you can now tell your brain that you want to apply this in every single context that arises. That is, in more situations and with more people. The same applies to enthusiasm. As long as you are enthusiastic in some situations and in some places, it means that you have enthusiasm stored in your brain. And therefore your brain can apply this to any context that you feel is appropriate.


Love Yehuda Lave


5 Greatest Gifts of Being a Jew

5 Greatest Gifts of Being a Jew

Being Jewish confers precious divine gifts that we should never take for granted.

by

Albert Einstein once startled an audience when he announced, "I'm sorry I was born a Jew." The people were shocked. How could this great man make such an outlandish statement? With a smile, Einstein then impishly continued, "Because it deprived me of the privilege of choosing to be a Jew."

As a tenth generation Rabbi, I did not choose to become a Jew; it was my natural birthright. But with the wisdom of age and the perspective of worldly experience I have come to recognize that my identity conferred precious divine gifts that we should never take for granted. Here are five of the greatest blessings of being a Jew.

1. Our Unique Mission

I was sitting in the airport in Dallas reading my daily page of the Talmud when an elderly priest, readily identifiable by his collar, stopped by my seat and asked me a question. "I hope you don't mind my interrupting you. I see you are reading a Hebrew book and you are wearing a hat. Are you by any chance a Rabbi?"

When I responded that indeed I am, he continued, "I hope you don't think I'm out of place but all my life I've been hoping that someday I might meet a Rabbi. You see, although I'm a priest I've always felt that Jews are the people of The Book and enjoy an especially close relationship with God. You are God's chosen people and as a Rabbi you are one of their spiritual leaders. I've always wanted to ask a Rabbi for a blessing. Would it be possible now for me to ask that you honor me with that favor?"

I cannot convey in words how moved I was by that request. I gave him the priestly benediction from the Torah and recited it to him in the original Hebrew. He was moved to tears. In all humility, I understood that for him I was the link to the original Torah. Whatever theological beliefs might separate us – and there are surely many – he clearly recognized the unique role of Judaism, in the words of Isaiah, to serve as "a light unto the nations." Jews are the direct descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the nation that stood at the foot of Mount Sinai and received the Torah to transmit from generation to generation. Jews were "chosen" not to claim superiority but to accept the responsibility to convey God's messages to the rest of mankind.

It was to Abraham, the first Jew, that God said, "And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great; and you shall be a blessing" (Genesis 12:2). Abraham's descendants will not only be blessed but they themselves will be a blessing – a source of divine spirituality, goodness and sanctity here on earth.

Can there be anything more precious than being a part of the people entrusted with that mission?

2. The Torah

It is a sign of the special regard others have for Jews as "The People of the Book" that I've been frequently asked, "What does Judaism have to say about this?" Of the three major faiths – Judaism, Christianity and Islam – ours is the oldest. Our teachings and traditions go back the furthest.

According to the Midrash, before God gave the Torah to the Jewish people he asked all the other nations of the world if they would be willing to accept it. Every one of them asked about its contents before they would make a commitment. When they discovered that one or more of its commandments precluded them from continuing lifestyles in opposition to divine ethical norms, they declined. Only the Jewish people readily submitted their lives to God's will. Jews were not so much the chosen people as they were the choosing people; a people for whom morality would not be defined simply by personal preference nor happiness by the self-serving motto of "whatever makes me feel good right now."

To be a Jew is to submit to divine law in the firm conviction that our Creator was kind enough to supply us with a user's manual for how to live a good life – a life which in the quest for holiness grants us the greatest happiness. And to be a Jew is to declare every day, "How wondrous is our portion and how pleasant is our lot" because we are privileged to hear God speaking directly to us through the Torah He gave us at Mount Sinai.

3. Progress

Thomas Cahill, an Irishman who was so profoundly impressed with the contributions of Jews and Judaism to mankind, wrote an international best-selling book, The Gift of the Jews : How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels. In it he credits the Jews not only for monotheism and the idea of a personal relationship with God; it is these concepts, he reminds us, that led us to the understanding that we have a personal responsibility for ourselves and our relations with our neighbors, as well as to our respect for history itself. The roots for what we consider Western individuality, personal responsibility, conscience, and culpability for ourselves and the world – all these, Cahill asserts, can be traced to the monotheism of the Jews.

But perhaps the most important gift of all, he concludes, is that Judaism gave to the world the idea of progress. Prior to the rise of Judaism, Cahill explains, men believed in life as a "circularity." We are born. We die. The next generation comes along and repeats the process. Life has no direction but merely keeps reiterating itself. Only with Abraham and God's commands to "go forth from your land, from your birthplace, and from your father's home, to the land that I will show you," do we recognize the idea of life as a journey of discovery.

Abraham, Cahill makes clear, is not only the first Jew. He is our first Explorer, the first human to intentionally set out for the unknown. This notion of life as a process or progression created the very idea of history, of the present different from the past, of moving towards a destiny.

That is the idea behind the Jewish principle of tikkun olam – perfecting the world. We have an obligation to become partners with God in completing creation. It is an awesome task and a huge responsibility – but it is a profound gift which makes our lives have meaning and purpose.

4. Optimism

To be a Jew is to know that the world has not yet reached its divinely ordained end. God has a plan for us and eventually it will be fulfilled. No matter how long it takes, Jews remain the eternal optimists. Through all the horrors of history and the Holocaust of the past century we have never lost hope in the prophetic promise of the coming of Messiah – a time when nation shall not lift up sword against nation and peace will prevail over the face of the earth.

Golda Meir put it this way: "Jews cannot afford the luxury of pessimism." Ben Gurion reminded us that in Israel "In order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles." And Maimonides included the belief in messianic redemption at the end of days as one of the thirteen Cardinal principles of our faith.

Jews long ago learned to look beyond all the problems they faced in the present by an abiding trust in a prophetically promised glorious future. That forced Jews to forever be optimists. Just as Creation was accompanied by God's daily verdict that "it was good," so too, Jews look at daily life through the same divine perspective. Even if we cannot presently understand it, somehow it is all for the good.

And that gift of optimism is what turns our lives from pain to hope, from difficulties to challenges, from troubles to confidence in better times – in short, the key to a sanctified and meaningful life.

5. The Gift of Others

Religion is defined by more than our faith in the Almighty. It is demonstrated and validated by the quality of our relationships with fellow human beings. That is why the Ten Commandments were given on two separate tablets. The first five of the commandments are between man and God; the other five, between man and fellow man. Together they encompass the dual provinces of human responsibility.

It is an incredible idea. We're all family. We share a common father in heaven. When we help others, we make God happy. When we ignore or harm them, God weeps and we fail to live up to our responsibility. The greatest pain is to feel alone; the greatest sorrow is to have no one with whom to share our life's journey.

The great Rabbi Hillel had the audacity to identify as the single most important verse in the Bible the one which commands us to love our neighbors as much as ourselves. To be a Jew is to know that we are never alone. It is knowing that we are always in each other's prayers because every prayer is written in the plural, never in the singular. It is knowing that every one of us is part of a larger, caring community.

Each one of these gifts would have sufficed to warrant our gratitude – dayeinu. How much more so we need to give thanks for receiving all of them.

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Sunday, November 29, 2015

Appreciate reality

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

Because of the changes in Google, I am using two mail servers to deliver this email. Although this one is pretty good, I want to have two in order to have a backup. For Tuesday and Wednesday I will use the other server. I can't check if your email address is missing from the other server. The only way to know is if you don't get my email on Tuesday or Wednesday. Please email me to tell me you haven't gotten my regular email post if you fall into that category. Thank you, your friend Yehuda.

Accept And Appreciate Reality

Rabbi Mordechai of Lekhivitz used to say, "If things do not go the way you wish them to be, you should then wish them to be the way they are in reality."

This means we need to accept reality and find our joy in life within that.

Today, find a good time begin a program whereby you repeat this thought every day. Repeat it many times until it becomes part of your thinking. Mastery of this attitude can transform a person's life.

I have had a tremendous life with great ups and downs. If I focused on what I don't have it would be easy to get depressed. I focus instead on what I do have and happy with making my reality my wishes.

Love Yehuda Lave

10 Year old Frank Sinatra newcomer does it "his way"

http://www.ba-bamail.com/video.aspx?emailid=18199&source=share2&e=f8G0ycEUpMctjcNP2WYYTumXYuytCktkubeLyZk80qs%3d&d=693

Subject: Horse show amazing. These horses were always my mother's favorites.

Watch Arthur C. Clarke describe the Internet - in 1974.

In 'C for Computer', first broadcast on 29 May 1974, he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that by 2001 every household will have a computer and be connected all over the world.

https://www.facebook.com/COSMOSmagazine/videos/455...

Engagement party in Mea Shearim (see below)

Op-Ed: Syrian Refugees, How Lucky They Aren't Jews

 During WWII, the Times put the Holocaust atrocities on page 36. The Syrians are on page one. Somehow, the Jewish refugees always had the wrong papers and were always standing in the wrong line.


Published: Tuesday, September 08, 2015 3:09 PM Jack Engelhard

The refugee tsunami coming out of Syria may well be genuine. But here's something to ponder. "We are deliberately ignoring the issue as a strategic maneuver. If these refugees go and settle in the West then they will take with them the beacon of light that is Islam," an official from the Saudi government said.
So whatever the result, by accident or by design, the West, beginning with Europe , is being gifted by "the beacon of light that is Islam."
Whether from ISIS and whoever else is maneuvering from behind the scenes, this could have been the plan all along…to force millions to vacate one continent in order to subsume another continent. By hook or by crook they keep on coming and most of them are men. Where are the women?
Where are the 57 countries that make up the world's Islamic constituency? Oh – this has just been explained, has it not?
The Islamic confederacies are "deliberately ignoring the issue" to deliver Islam into our homes. Understood.
Says the Saudi authority -- "We already have a lot of Muslims here. We don't need any more."
Apparently we do. We need more.
That Syrian infant washed up on shore. The world weeps. One and a half million Jewish babies never even got that far.
Lucky for these Syrians that they are indeed Muslims. If they were Jews they wouldn't stand a chance. For the Jews in the same spot only a generation ago, no tears, no hugs, no welcoming arms, no open borders, no cry to help these people – nothing. Nothing but silence, the silence of complicity.
Every door was closed. The refugee ship St. Louis tried to find an open door but was sent back.
The New York Times could not be bothered. The paper that covered the Holocaust on page 36 as part of "in other news," today lobbies and campaigns to bring Syrians into the United States – FRONT PAGE.
That Syrian infant washed up on shore. The world weeps. One and a half million Jewish babies never even got that far. So the Times needs more and Europe needs more and is getting more from "the beacon of light that is Islam." Quite a bargain.
We already wrote here about Germany trading its Six Million murdered Jews for six million living and very active Muslims. Good luck with that.
But most of the good luck goes to the Syrians. They have the right papers.
The Jews in the same situation always had the wrong papers and were always standing in the wrong line. Canada 's Mackenzie King government spoke for Canada . Asked how many Jewish refugees it was willing to absorb, a high-placed official uttered these famous words – "None is too many."
He spoke for Canada . He spoke for the world.
He is still speaking for the world. A generation later it's the same scorn, but this time it's for Jews who have come home to the Land of Israel .
So Dear World, spare me your tainted pieties. I can't remember your sweet mercies when the Jews were the storm-tossed refugees.
I can't remember your hugs, your, smiles, your warm embrace when the few of us, the remnants, made it to shore as we told it in our memoir .
Our bad timing, it must have been, that we failed to arrive as Arabs. Yes, lucky them, doubly so because these Syrian men who left their women behind and pushed their children forward, only yesterday weren't they stomping the American flag and shouting death to Christians and Jews?
Tomorrow, once settled in and comfy in their European jihadist no go zones, won't it be the same thing all over again, with raping your wives and daughters as an added feature, a specialty of the beacon of light that is Islam? It's already there, but there's more coming.
Tomorrow, It's already there, but there's more coming.
So spare me your superior compassion because some of us fail to weep as loudly as you do for Syrian infants. We are dry of tears after weeping for Jewish toddlers in Israel who were stoned, knifed, firebombed and shot by Palestinian jihadists who share Syrian kinship.
They are brothers and lucky for them to find you so hospitable. The Jews --we had no such luck. None was too many.
For you, Dear Europe, there is no stopping "the beacon of light that is Islam." That's called justice.
New York-based Novelist Jack Engelhard writes a regular column for Arutz Sheva. His latest work is "The Bathsheba Deadline," a newsroom thriller that features legendary editor Jay Garfield and his heroic stand against media bias and Islam's clash against the West.
MailerLite

Saturday, November 28, 2015

The Death of Conversation

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

Enthusiasm Is Contagious

We are all influenced by the emotional states of the people we interact with. In the presence of cheerful, sincerely kind, upbeat people, we find it easier to become more cheerful and positive. Conversely, in the presence of someone who is negative, kvetchy, irritable, and angry, we easily feel more negative or uncomfortable ourselves. The person whose state is more intense and enduring will have a greater influence on the states of others, for better or worse.

Because the state of enthusiasm is contagious, if you want to increase your own level of enthusiasm, it makes sense to be around other people who are enthusiastic. Even talking to an enthusiastic person for a few minutes is frequently sufficient to elevate our own state. At times just talking to an enthusiastic person on the telephone will raise our spirits.

Your own enthusiasm will have a positive influence on the lives of others. By being enthusiastic you will be doing many acts of kindness. At times, you won't even be aware that your enthusiastic state was helpful to someone else. This can add a dimension of motivation for developing a greater amount of enthusiasm. Not only will you gain yourself, you will also be helping numerous others. Notice the handsome guy on the right. speaking of the right, to enjoy the cartoons you have to scroll to the right below.

Love Yehuda Lave

Birds of Paradise You tube video that must be watched for its beauty:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTR21os8gTA

Death of Conversation...

US President Barack Obama, right, presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Barbra Streisand during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House, on Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2015 (AP Photo via JTA/Evan Vucci)

MailerLite

Thursday, November 26, 2015

The Prophecy of the Vilna Gaon  that is coming true now and Marc Chagall slide show

November 24, 2015

"I haven't found that they invented any new sins in the last 2,000 years... all the sins are the same ones."

- Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz

The Two Skills of Happiness

Happiness is a skill that can be learned. To acquire this skill, it is necessary to master two basic skills:

1) The ability to focus on happiness-producing thoughts, as opposed to those which cause unhappiness.

2) The ability to evaluate events and situations as positive instead of negative. (Or at least to lower the degree of negativity - i.e. rather than considering some discomfort as a tragedy, evaluating it as minor.)

Love Yehuda Lave

ZF-UK Extrajuditial

20, 000 socer fans singing the Israel National Anthem (Hatikva)

https://www.facebook.com/StandWithUs/videos/101525...

MARC CHAGALL

This is so beautiful - a feast for both the eye and the ear!

https://www.youtube.com/embed/WHZ6gV0RDrU?rel=0


The Prophecy of the Vilna Gaon: "When you hear that the Russians have captured the city of Crimea, the 'Times of the Messiah' have started, that his steps are being heard"

http://destination-yisrael.biblesearchers.com/destination-yisrael/2014/05/the-prophecy-of-the-vilna-gaon-when-you-hear-that-the-russians-have-captured-the-city-of-crimea-the-.html

Jewish Rabbi Eliyahu - Vilna GaonJewish Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman (1720-1797) known as the Gra, or the "Vilna Gaon"

It was in the year of 1720 that a young prodigy and genius was born. The Gaon (Hebrew for "genius"), Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman was to become the most influential Jewish leader in modern history. He would be known as the most renowned Ashkenazi Torah authority in the past thousand years. His vast skills in memorization, his extraordinary talents, great wisdom and his comprehension of all branches of Torah and secular knowledge were early recognized.

By the age of seven, he gave his first public discourse on the Torah demonstrating an intellect that was fully developed to abstract thinking as an adult. By the age of ten years, his wisdom in the understanding of the Torah was so renowned for he no longer could find a teacher with the command of the Torah as he. Known as "The Gra", this prodigious Torah giant set the standard of Torah study, absolute devotion to G-d and a character perfection emulated by centuries of later students of his manuscripts and books.

Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman
Authentic Picture of the Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman

According to the enlightening article in the Jewish Virtual Library called the"Vilna Gaon – Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna"we read that at a very young age, the young rabbi went into a self-imposed "galus" or exile where he wandered from community to community as a beggar and sage. For forty years, he studied in isolation.

To the Gaon, the Torah was paramount and primary to all other studies. According to the Gaon's son's testimony, his father did not sleep more than two hours in a twenty four hour period for over fifty years. His memory and biblical knowledge was legendary, for he had no peers equal among the sages for the breadth for this knowledge included both revealed and hidden Torah knowledge. Yet he was also knowledgeable in secular sciences including authoring books on grammar and mathematics. His yeshiva, (academy of Torah study) was the premier yeshiva of the world for over 100 years and recognized as the model of all subsequent seminaries of Torah studies.

After forty years of studying in isolation, he finally settled in the town of Vilna. Living a quiet life, his fame as a Tzaddik (righteous man) and Torah scholar soon spread all over the land. In spite of a life of poverty, he gave 20% of all his income to charity and even would limit his own personal needs so he could marry an orphan girl or redeem a captive. Though in constant study, his ear was also kept to the needs of the local population. He began a local yeshiva, accepting students from the renown Torah scholars of that ere and from the writings of these students, scholars today are given a glimpse of the rare breadth of intellect that the Gra upheld.

Rabbi Moshe Shturnbuch

- See more at: http://destination-yisrael.biblesearchers.com/des...

The Prophecy of the Vilna Gaon: "When you hear that the Russians have captured the city of Crimea, the 'Times of the Messiah' have started, that his steps are being heard"

http://destination-yisrael.biblesearchers.com/destination-yisrael/2014/05/the-prophecy-of-the-vilna-gaon-when-you-hear-that-the-russians-have-captured-the-city-of-crimea-the-.html

Jewish Rabbi Eliyahu - Vilna GaonJewish Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman (1720-1797) known as the Gra, or the "Vilna Gaon"

It was in the year of 1720 that a young prodigy and genius was born. The Gaon (Hebrew for "genius"), Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman was to become the most influential Jewish leader in modern history. He would be known as the most renowned Ashkenazi Torah authority in the past thousand years. His vast skills in memorization, his extraordinary talents, great wisdom and his comprehension of all branches of Torah and secular knowledge were early recognized.

By the age of seven, he gave his first public discourse on the Torah demonstrating an intellect that was fully developed to abstract thinking as an adult. By the age of ten years, his wisdom in the understanding of the Torah was so renowned for he no longer could find a teacher with the command of the Torah as he. Known as "The Gra", this prodigious Torah giant set the standard of Torah study, absolute devotion to G-d and a character perfection emulated by centuries of later students of his manuscripts and books.

Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman
Authentic Picture of the Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Elijah ben Shlomo Zalman

According to the enlightening article in the Jewish Virtual Library called the"Vilna Gaon – Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna"we read that at a very young age, the young rabbi went into a self-imposed "galus" or exile where he wandered from community to community as a beggar and sage. For forty years, he studied in isolation.

To the Gaon, the Torah was paramount and primary to all other studies. According to the Gaon's son's testimony, his father did not sleep more than two hours in a twenty four hour period for over fifty years. His memory and biblical knowledge was legendary, for he had no peers equal among the sages for the breadth for this knowledge included both revealed and hidden Torah knowledge. Yet he was also knowledgeable in secular sciences including authoring books on grammar and mathematics. His yeshiva, (academy of Torah study) was the premier yeshiva of the world for over 100 years and recognized as the model of all subsequent seminaries of Torah studies.

After forty years of studying in isolation, he finally settled in the town of Vilna. Living a quiet life, his fame as a Tzaddik (righteous man) and Torah scholar soon spread all over the land. In spite of a life of poverty, he gave 20% of all his income to charity and even would limit his own personal needs so he could marry an orphan girl or redeem a captive. Though in constant study, his ear was also kept to the needs of the local population. He began a local yeshiva, accepting students from the renown Torah scholars of that ere and from the writings of these students, scholars today are given a glimpse of the rare breadth of intellect that the Gra upheld.

Rabbi Moshe Shturnbuch

- See more at: http://destination-yisrael.biblesearchers.com/des...

As we approach the second shabbat that Johnathan Pollard is free, here is an interview with him from Wednesday.

Interview With Rabbi Pesach Lerner, Leader Of The Effort To Free Pollard


Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Rabbi Pesach Lerner is Executive Vice President Emeritus of the National
Council of Young Israel and a decades long advocate and activist on behalf
of Jonathan Pollard. More than anyone, he kept the case alive and in the
headlines, working heroically to seek freedom for the famous prisoner. We
spoke to him on Monday.
How was Jonathan Pollard's first Shabbos outside the prison, the first time
in 30 years that he experienced a Shabbos as a free man?
I asked Jonathan that question when we spoke after Shabbos.

3 Images:

<http://www.yated.com/_sub/_yated/uploads/content/pollard1_03.jpg> 1

<http://www.yated.com/_sub/_yated/uploads/content/pollard-2_03.jpg> 2

<http://www.yated.com/_sub/_yated/uploads/content/pollard-4_05.jpg> 3

<http://www.yated.com/interview-with-rabbi-pesach-lerner-leader-of-the-effor
t-to-free-pollard.7-1614-7-.html>

Jonathan hesitated for a moment and told me that at 4 p.m.Friday afternoon,
"federal agents from the regional parole board were in my apartment, fitting
me with a GPS device that I must wear on my wrist 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. They were explaining to me what I can and cannot do, where I can and
cannot go. They were informing me of my apartment lockdown, that I am
restricted to my small Manhattan studio apartment from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.
every night.

"I felt embarrassed, humiliated, used.

"I had spent 30 years in prison, I was paroled because they had to, not
because the government wanted to, and now I am subjected to this?

"I really didn't know what to think.

"The agents left, and I turned my attention to my wife and the small table
in the room.

"I saw the most beautiful sight you could imagine: Esther lighting Shabbos
candles on a beautifully arranged and set table, with a new challah cover, a
beautifully polished kiddush cup, a bottle of Israeli wine, bentchers.

"Yes, Shabbos was wonderful!

"I was able to sing the kiddush, have a normal dinner conversation, bentch,
for the first time in 30 years.

"And I enjoyed delicacies I have not eaten in 30 years; fresh challah,
chummus, techinah, pineapple, dates, fresh fruits and vegetables."

What are Jonathan's plans for the future?

First he needs to acclimate to the outside world; remember, he was in prison
for 30 years.

This past Friday, I picked him up from his Manhattan apartment and drove him
to a doctor to have the weeping edema on his legs checked out. Sitting in
the passenger side of the front seat, Jonathan commented, "Pesach, this is a
nice car. I haven't been in a car for 30 years; they have changed."

Jonathan and Esther went food shopping at a grocery store down the block
from their apartment. Jonathan told me, "I was overwhelmed with the
selection, so many types of so many things. I was literally dizzy."

We are also dealing with his numerous medical issues, one issue at a time.

Then we will need to work on getting him a job. Jonathan is a Stanford
University graduate, very bright and very creative. He has so much to offer.
However, his parole guidelines affect his use of a computer. Meaning, if he
uses any computer, the government has the right to inspect the contents of
that computer, anytime, anywhere, 24/7. And any employer who gives Jonathan
a job must agree that every computer in the employer's system is subject to
inspection by the federal government. Which employer, which company will
agree to that? In fact, the company that had offered Jonathan a job has
retracted their offer; they cannot agree to allow the federal government
unlimited access to their computers and systems.

He has plans. Jonathan is an avid reader. While in prison, he read hundreds,
if not thousands of books. His interests are the history of Israel, the land
and the people, going back hundreds of years; military history and strategy;
and alternative energy.

Jonathan has numerous ideas with regard to alternative energy that he would
like to research, test, and implement.

What lessons do you take from your 25 plus year involvement with the Pollard
case?

There are many lessons, for the individual and the community.

For the individual, appreciate the simple things, be makir tov to Hakodosh
Boruch Hu for the simple and daily opportunities. Ask for less and help
others more.

For the klal, the Jewish organizations, you represent the klal, you are
authorized by that klal, your power comes from the klal, and you have a
responsibility to treat that mission seriously, to act upon that
responsibility.

The National Council of Young Israel, led by its president, Chaim Kaminetzky
z"l, responded to my request to get more involved in the Jonathan Pollard
cause. Reb Chaim had a seichel hayosher. He was a straight thinker; he
instinctively knew when something was wrong, and he acted upon it. In this
case, he told me to take the lead, he will support me, and the NCYI board
supported us.

We were not concerned if the cause was politically correct, as long as it
was correct.

We were not concerned what other organizations or people would say; we were
concerned with what was the right thing to do. We asked she'eilas chachomim,
received our instructions, and we acted. Together, we made that first visit
to meet Jonathan close to 25 years ago.

In the beginning, we were practically alone. As we researched the case,
asked the right questions, began to see through all the "protective"
coverings, others saw we were on to something. It took a while for other
organizations to come around, but they did. I am proud to say, for years
already, Jewish organizations across the religious and political spectrum
were all in support of Pollard's release.

The injustice was and is so blatant.

I remember reading a column of Reb Avraham Birnbaum in the Yated. I don't
remember the subject, but I remember the message. He told the story of, I
believe, Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzenski zt"l, who advised a young bochur who was
in danger of being drafted into the Russian army. A soldier in the Russian
army would in all probability not remain frum.

Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzenski gave him instructions and then told the bochur, "I
am available to you whenever you need me." The bochur followed the
instructions he was given, but it did not work. He went to find the Brisker
Rav, who was at the city hotel meeting with a group of rabbonim and askonim.
The gabbai would not let the bochur approach the Brisker Rov.

The bochur insisted, created a tumult, and would not leave. Rav Chaim Ozer
heard the tumult, saw the bochur, excused himself from the meeting, and went
out to talk to the bochur. 15-20 minutes later he returned to the meeting.
He sensed a slight tension in the room and he realized that perhaps the
rabbonim and askonim were upset that he left their meeting to talk to a
young bochur.

Rav Chaim Ozer responded, "What are we doing here? Aren't we discussing
important issues effecting Klal Yisroel? Well, that bochur out there is Klal
Yisroel!"

Yes, Jonathan Pollard is Klal Yisroel.

Today boruch Hashem Jonathan Pollard is no longer in prison. But he is not
yet free; many restrictions have been imposed upon him, as we have
discussed.

The message is clear. Embark upon the mission to free Jonathan Pollard was
the right thing to do. We cannot judge success in years, but often only by
the results. Often, an organization has to act simply because it's the right
thing to do.

The lesson we can all take from the events of the last few days is that an
individual can make a difference, save a life, change the world.

Esther Pollard was moser nefesh for her husband during these years. The fact
that Jonathan could endure the prison system for so many years was because
of the chizuk and support she gave him. Jonathan walked out of the prison
with hopes and aspirations because he knew that Esther was waiting for him.

Jonathan's pro bono attorneys of over 15 years, Eliott Lauer and Jaques
Semmelman, worked selflessly and tirelessly on his behalf. They left no
legal opportunity untouched, never accepting no for an answer. They always
looked for another legal angle. The fact that Jonathan was finally granted
mandatory parole is to their credit.

We recognize the small group of supporters in Israel, the United States and
Canada that never gave up.

We thank the wonderful Jews who never stopped davening for Jonathan's
release and were able to call upon rachamei Shomayim until Hashem answered
our prayers

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