Parshat Naso, 5768: Thinking for the Post-Digital Age

by in Naso .

The information age is over. The post-digital age or, what Daniel H. Pink[1]calls “the Conceptual Age”, has begun. Conventional educational models cannot adequately prepare our minds and those of our children for this new age. (Refer to http://www.iawaken.org/shiurim/view.asp?id=6577 for a more detailed explanation of why not.) Paradoxically, Torah is the learning tool more suited than any other to mold the minds of people who will lead in this post-digital era. Children raised in the digital era think differently from the rest of us[2]. In fact their brains may even be “wired” ..

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Parshat Chayei Sarah 5768: LeHashem Ha’aretz Umelo’oh: The Slave who was a Master

by in Chayei Sarah .

Breishit, Chap. 23, & 24:2   Purchasing and Investing This week I gave back a car I had been leasing for four years. It was the first car I have driven that I really “loved”! The experience led me to reflect on ownership. The Hebrew word ba’al means “owner”. Ba’al also means “master”.  Ownership describes a static relationship between a person and an object and is achieved through legal transaction. Mastery describes a dynamic relationship achieved through focused attention and disciplined effort. Normally one owns things but one masters skills a..

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Parshat Toldot 5768: Transforming The Ordinary Into Holyness

by in Toldot .

Breishit, 27:4 Health and Spirituality Eating, exercise and caring for our other physical needs are so much more than the nourishment of our bodies. They are an avodah (a spiritual practice), a religious responsibility, a mitzvah. The connection of our souls to our bodies is the most fragile aspect of human life. When our bodies lose their connection to our souls, death results. Spiritual activities nourish our souls, but it is our physical health that keeps our bodies connected to our souls and keeps us alive. Physical health is a Mitzvah; that is why we sayBera..

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Parshat Vayeshev 5768: Inappropriate Silence is no Different to Inappropriate Speech

by in Vayeshev .

In Memory of Harav HaGaon Reb Azriel Goldfein ztz"l Zohar (3:46b): © Rabbi David Lapin, 2007 This week a dark tragedy befell the Jewish community of South Africa: it lost its beloved and revered Rosh Yeshiva, Rabbi Azriel Goldfein ztz"l, originally from Minnesota, USA. He was a man of gigantic Torah stature by any international standard. But his egoless humility, his love of people and adoration of the Torah, his fanatical pursuit of shalom, and his almost fanatical insistence on normality, nobility of character and balance set him apart in a regal class of his own. The communi..

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Chanukah 5768: Abundant Energy, Scarce Fuel

by in Chanuka .

The Spiritual marathon Athletes hit their peak somewhere under the age of 30. Then it’s downhill all the way! People who compete (against no one but their own potential) in the sport of spiritual athletics on the other hand, reach their peak much, much later on. In last week’s “Toldot with Meforshim Shiur for Women (and Men)”http://iawaken.org/shiurim/view.asp?id=6506 I explained the Kelei Yakar who sees this as the essence of the name “Yaacov”. Eisav is born near perfect (from the perspective of his physical appearance), but Yaacov (named that by G-d Himself not by his parents[1]..

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Parshat Vayigash 5768: The Matrix

by in Vayigash .

  I am Accountable With the authority of majesty, Yehuda opens one of the most powerful speeches ever recorded: "Bi Adoni" ("I am accountable").[1]  Taking personal responsibility irrespective of the consequences, Yehuda manifests the royal qualities that have for some time distinguished him.  "We are both Kings, and can speak as equals[2]", he implies to Yosef (the last letters of the first three words of the Parsha spellshaveh - equality). We see Yehuda taking personal responsibility last week in Mikeitzwhen his father refused to allow Binya..

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Parshat Vayechi 5768: The Window of the Soul

by in Vayechi .

Bereichit 48:10-11; and Seforno 48:10   The Power of Sight We underestimate the power of seeing. Seeing the objective world around us is an undervalued activity; something few of us recognize as an activity at all.  We rarely see one another truly, even in intimate relationships.  Sometimes romantic couples will look deeply into one another’s eyes when they date, but that is likely to happen less frequently in the routine of their marriage.  We are often preoccupied when we see, and so we see very little of what is around us; what is happening on any level deeper..

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Reflections on Reb Elya Lopian z''tzl

by in Reb Elya Lopian .

  Reb Elya Lopian z”tzl Ish Ha’Elokim Personal Recollections of Rabbi David Lapin Adar, 5768 A few months ago I was enjoying an informal breakfast with a few outstanding young Roshei Yeshiva and other Talmidei Chachamim. They were quizzing me about what my great uncle, Reb Elya Lopian z”tzl, was really like as a person. I have been blessed with Torah giants as mentors, and in a way Reb Elya was one of them. Reb Elya was not only the Rebbe and mentor of my father z”tzl (who was my primary Rebbe), but I too had the privilege of learning directly from him, observing him fro..

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