A Depressed Comedian?!

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A Message from the Kalever Rebbe
for Parshas Behaaloscha 5782

Watching today's entertainment industry brings depression

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Rabbi Uri Zohar zt"l (Former Israeli film director, actor and comedian), who was niftar two week ago

"He said, please don't leave us, for because you are familiar with our encampments in the desert, and you will be our guide (literally "our eyes")." (Bamidbar 10:31)


Crying on the Inside

There is a story is told of a man who once went to a psychiatrist for help. "I am feeling dissatisfied and unhappy with life my and I simply cannot break free from this depression," explained the man.

"You're in luck!" replied the doctor. "There is a popular circus in town that has a famous comedian. Everyone finds his show hysterical. Go and see his show a few times and come and back to see me. I am confident your disposition will be happier."

"That cannot help me," replied the man somberly.

"How do you know?

"Because I am that comedian..."

A person may appear happy on the outside but be struggling with an empty darkness, a sadness on the inside. Even a clown whose entire profession is to bring joy to others might find joy elusive for himself.

The joy that entertainers bring to the audiences is temporary and fleeting. It is superficial. It cannot last. Once a person realizes that everything that they thought would bring them joy was only a temporary fix, a momentary feeling of satisfaction, the joy will dissipate and all that will be left is sadness, disappointment, and depression.


All Just Actors

A Baal Teshuva, who was a well-known American actor, once visited me. He shared with me his story of returning to Hashem:

He was living a life of glamour, he explained. He was famous and had all the riches he could imagine. But he felt empty inside. One day, he realized that all of his friends, his fellow entertainers, were living a performance. On the outside they appeared happy as they chased after their desires and lifestyles. However, none of them were truly happy. In fact, as he told me, they mocked ultimate truths like religion and faith.

When he thought about this culture that surrounded him, he decided to stop entertaining and return to Judaism and Hashem. He made a choice to seek out truth in his life. Only then, once on the path of Torah and Mitzvos, did he finally feel a sense of satisfaction and happiness, true happiness.

This is like the story of R' Uri Zohar, zt"l:

He was a secular Jew who had become one of the most famous actors in Israel. One day, he met a friend who he hadn't seen in a long time. This friend had become a Baal Teshuva, a completely Torah-observant Jew. And, when they met, Uri recalls how content and happy his friend looked. In fact, he never seemed happier, and Uri wanted to explore what had transformed his friend. What was the secret to his happiness?

Uri began learning about Yiddishkeit and exploring the religious communities. Through this process, he came to the realization that the Jews who were observant had a joy and contentment that could not be found in the secular world, even with all the fame and success. Their happiness was rooted in the reality that they had a purpose in this world: to fulfill Hashem's Torah and perform His Mitzvos.

Soon enough, Uri began transforming his own life and eventually became a completely observant Jew and he made it his mission in his life to share his story and inspire others to change their lives as well.


The influence of the "stars"

Society idolizes these "stars". They envy their glamorous lifestyles. They even fantasize how incredible it must be to be that wealthy and famous. But when you take a hard look at these "stars" you quickly see how far off reality is from fantasy.

Their lives are in shambles. They are miserable. Some struggle with substance abuse. Others get married and divorced multiple times. Their behaviors are despicable and indecent. Some of them even take their own lives, intentionally or accidentally. They are reckless. This behavior is just an affirmation that they suffer from a tremendous weight of sadness and dissatisfaction with their lives. On the outside they "act" happy but it is all a false façade. What someone sees on the outside is merely a performance.

But their behaviors are not isolated to their own lives. They influence society creating new norms and redefine acceptable behavior.

In today's society, we see an eruption of violence, disregard for human life, an overwhelming addiction problem and a culture that values immorality and promiscuity that is destroying the wholesomeness of the family dynamic.

Social scientists attest that this can be attributed to the violence and promiscuity people see on television and other mediums of entertainment. These behaviors are being learned, adapted from what has become forms of entertainment. The entire entertainment industry has reshaped the moral compass redefining what is acceptable and what is unacceptable behavior.

Within each person is an animalistic soul that drives someone's instincts. This element of a person is like a monkey; it will mimic the behaviors of its peers. When it sees these behaviors playing out even in the fantasy world of entertainment, it arouses that desire, that behavior within the person. But they are all empty pursuits and in the end all a person will be left with is a sense of emptiness, of sadness and depression.

People have stopped considering the impact that their actions have on the world. They behave destructively without regard for consequences, acting violently and fueling their desires with promiscuity.

A person's desires are evil from birth. When these dark instincts are awakened by the images on television and other places, it inevitably motivates the person to chase after more of the same. And when someone can't satiate his desire, this brings him depression.

When someone eats food that might be delicious, sweet and tasty but void of any real nutrients, they will still be hungry. They will want to eat more and more. However, unless they eat something of substance, they will never be satiated. So too, with desire. These pursuits of false happiness only create a more massive void which, in turn, fuels the pursuit for more of the same.

The entertainment industry amasses fortunes by fueling these desires, creating a market for false happiness that only leaves the audience desiring more eroding the morality of society. The leaders of this industry know about this bad impact, but they are here to get money and publicity.


Leading by Example

However, when one of these actors does teshuva, repents, and returns to Torah and Mitzvos, he exposes the destructiveness and falsehoods of the entertainment industry. They encourage others to stop watching, to stop being influenced by the entertainment industry as well.

Chazal teaches (Sanhedrin 99a) that the place, the level, of a Baal Teshuva, isn't even attainable by a Tzadik . My ancestor Reb Zvi Hirsch of Ziditshov Zy"a explained that the reason for this is, because when a person returns to Hashem and the Torah and mitzvos, they lead by example demonstrating to others the virtues of Torah and mitzvos in stark contrast to the vile and depraved behaviors of society. That example inspires others to also return to Hashem, and all of the mitzvos that those new Baalei Teshuva perform are in the merit of the person who showed them the way to the extent it is as if that original personal actually performed them.


The conversion of Yisro

Perhaps, this can help explain this dialogue with Yisro:

He was the high priest for idol worship in Midian, where he was serving the idol of Baal Pe'or. The Gemara in Sanhedrin (106a) explains that the priests in that place encouraged their followers to behave promiscuously and to dress immodestly. They wanted to create a culture of false happiness and desires that would fuel their followers without ever having them obtain true contentment. They knew that the more these behaviors were in public view, the more people would be drawn to their idol worship, to their community. As a result, those masses would contribute financially allowing the priest to amass fortunes. Their influence would grow.

However, Yisro saw the truth behind these motivations, and began to despise that system. He understood the falsities and the inevitable damage being done to society through that infrastructure. Therefore, he returned to Hashem and converted.

After Yisro had spent time with the Jews in the desert, he was ready to return home. When the Jews implored him to stay, they said, "you will be for our eyes." The yidden were asking Yisro to stay to be a teacher for them for their eyes, how to protect themselves from seeing promiscuity. They wanted Yisro to teach them how important it is to be careful with what they saw, to avoid being drawn into the behaviors that Yisro had abandoned.

May Hashem help every yid to find the strength to guard against seeing anything inappropriate, and to remain steadfast in pursuing only true happiness in this world, which is only possible through Torah and Mitzvos. In the merit, may you only have blessings of health, happiness and success in your lives.

 

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