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The Rabbi's thoughts culled from the "word from the Rabbi" in his weekly email

The essence of Judaism is not eating the hot dog 🌭

Dr. Velvl Greene was a professor of epidemiology at the University of Minnesota around 1960. He worked on NASA's program to find life on Mars. Despite being a scientist immersed in the secular world, his path would cross with Rabbi Moshe Feller. Once, before a trip, Rabbi Feller convinced the professor to order a kosher airline meal to inspire other Jewish passengers.

"If it will make you happy, I'll do you the favor," Dr. Greene reluctantly agreed, though he continued eating non-kosher at home.

On the flight, disaster struck. His kosher meal never arrived. While other passengers enjoyed their dinner, Greene sat hungry and increasingly frustrated. His anger built: at the airline, at himself for agreeing to this arrangement, and especially at Rabbi Feller for putting him in this position.

During a midnight stopover at Chicago's O'Hare airport, the hungry professor spotted an open non-kosher hot dog stand. The aroma was irresistible. Fuming, he called Rabbi Feller collect to announce his rebellion.

"I'm about to eat a non-kosher hot dog with mustard, onions, relish and kraut," he declared, "and with each bite, I'll be thinking of you!"

The rabbi listened patiently before responding with unexpected simplicity: "Velvl, you've often asked me about the essence of Judaism. Tonight, I'll tell you. It's about passing the hot dog stand and not buying one. That's all of Judaism; the rest is commentary."

"You're crazy!" the professor exclaimed before hanging up.

At the counter, something profound happened. He couldn't bring himself to order. In that moment of hesitation, a deeper understanding emerged. The kosher laws, which seemed arbitrary and inconvenient, suddenly revealed their spiritual purpose. This wasn't about food or rules; it was about his relationship with G-d and his identity as a Jew.

The kosher laws, like many Jewish traditions, aren't always easily explained through logic. They are chukim—divine statutes given without explicit rationale. Yet throughout history, these practices have served as a daily reminder of Jewish identity and covenant. In choosing to pass by that hot dog stand, Dr. Greene wasn't just making a dietary choice; he was embracing his heritage and reconnecting with something eternal.

Dr. Greene never ate non-kosher again. That single moment of choice, that small "no" to a hot dog, became a transformative "yes" to a deeper, more meaningful life.

What mitzvah is your “hot dog” that can transform your relationship with Hashem, because you embraced the connection over the hunger pangs.

Have a good Shabbos,

Rabbi Kushi Schusterman

You can live a magical life

Long ago in 1772, there was a kind and wise Rabbi named Menachem Mendel Horodoker. He and his friends went on a big adventure, leaving the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth to live in a special place called Eretz Yisroel - AKA Israel/The Holy Land.

One sunny day in Jerusalem, something exciting happened! A man climbed up a tall mountain called the Mount of Olives. At the very top, he blew a shofar. The sound was so loud that everyone in the whole city could hear it!

"WHOOOOOOOOO!" went the shofar.

All the people in Jerusalem started running around excitedly.

"Did you hear that?" they shouted. "The Moshiach has arrived! The world is going to change and become magical!"

The news spread faster than spilled juice on a white tablecloth! Everyone was talking about it.

Rabbi Mendel heard all the noise outside. He walked over to his window and opened it wide. Then he did something funny - he stuck his nose out and took a big, deep sniff of the air, like he was smelling for Kosher for Passover cookies baking.

After his big sniff, Rabbi Mendel smiled gently and shook his head.

"Not yet, my friends," he said. "When Moshiach really comes, the whole world will feel different. Everything will be filled with wonder and goodness, like the ocean is filled with water. We're not quite there yet."

Later his friend, Reb Gronem, explained: "Do you know why Rabbi Mendel had to stick his head OUT the window to check? Because inside his own little house, the air was ALREADY filled with that special magic of Moshiach! His room was so full of goodness and wonder that he couldn't tell the difference!"

This story is shared by Chassidim for over 200 years. But what is the message?

One message is that even before the global era of Moshiach, we can choose to live a life where exile, limitations, small minded thinking doesn't exist. So much so that our life inside is essentially messianic. To see if the global Moshiach has arrived, we need to open the window and smell the energy outside.

On the last day of Passover, we celebrate the possibility for this energy with the "Moshiach Meal". RSVP HERE The form will close once we are full or at noon on Friday. 

Join us if you can. If you can't, ask yourself how can I make Moshiach energy more real in my life?

Rabbi Kushi Schusterman

 

 

 

How the Seder answers the paradox of freedom!!

Passover is the Holiday of Freedom.

To celebrate freedom, we have a whole ritual called a Seder, which means order. For most people freedom means lack of order, no rules and I get to do what I want!

One who grew up Torah observant and now is no longer observant, in Yiddish they are called “Frie”, pronounced “fry”, which means free.

How does this freedom affect my connection with my higher power?

When you have a relationship with a G-d that recognizes the “Egypt” you live in and you trust that Hashem will take care of you, like he did for the Jews in the original Egypt on the original Passover, then you are truly free. You have a structure. E.G., at the Seder we first focus on the good and holiness (kadesh) and only then start to dabble with the challenges (karpas in saltwater).

True freedom is when you are free from worry, both the spiritual and material kind. True freedom is when you have nothing holding you back; no internal or external constraints and boundaries to living a complete Jewish life.

When you sign up for the limitations of an exclusive relationship with Hashem, you open yourself up to all the benefits of a meaningful, personal, and exclusive relationship.

To be free, you need to accept that structure, seder, is good.

Have a freeing, kosher, happy and orderly Passover.

Rabbi Kushi Schusterman 

Be Passionate

While Judaism encourages us to not overly focus on material desires. It is permissible to enjoy the pleasures of life, there is a call to be mindful of choices that contribute to overall well-being.

As we approach Pesach It is interesting that, the plagues begin with the plague of blood rather than the plague of frogs. What distinguishes blood from frogs, and why does this order matter?

In Hebrew, Egypt is referred to as "Mitzrayim," which literally means limitations. The plagues, beginning in the Nile, are not merely punitive measures against the Egyptians but serve a deeper purpose – to guide us in understanding how to navigate our own constraints and limitations.

Blood represents life. Frogs are cold-blooded creatures. The symbolism here is profound. Life, full of vitality, is essential in our connection with the divine. The call is that before abstemiousness detaching from the physical world, we must infuse our actions with spiritual meaning and passion, with Torah and Mitzvot. Not because we MUST but because it brings vitality.

Our behavior and expressions of G-dliness must be vibrant, passionate, and full of zest. By ensuring that our connection to spirituality is alive and dynamic, our navigating the physical world can be with less attachment to its draw and temptation.

The Torah suggests that once our spirituality is alive and passionate, our connection to the physical world can naturally diminish. It is a dance between the two worlds, where a robust spiritual connection becomes the prerequisite for disengaging from excessive material pursuits.

This is just one insight before we start Passover, the intertwining of our spiritual and physical lives is a delicate balance. Rather than just avoiding the physical, the main thing is transforming our actions to be infused with spirituality.

This enriches our spiritual connection and allows us to navigate the limitations (Mitzrayim) of the physical world more thoughtfully.

Let us strive to have an alive, passionate connection with Hashem and spirituality, making our Shabbat and our Passover and our daily lives truly meaningful.

Rabbi Kushi Schusterman

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