חדש באתר: NotebookLM עם כל תכני הרב מיכאל אברהם

Q&A: Congratulations to the Rabbi on his Daughter’s Wedding!!!

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Originally published:
This is an English translation (via GPT-5.4). Read the original Hebrew version.

Congratulations to the Rabbi on his Daughter’s Wedding!!!

Question

Dear Rabbi Michi,
many congratulations on your daughter’s wedding!!! 
Wishing the newlywed couple — and of course you, Rabbi — lots of happiness, success, joy, and love.

Answer

Thank you very much. The birds of the sky carried the news… 🙂

Discussion on Answer

Tam. (2020-09-11)

I join the above as well!

Michi (2020-09-11)

Thank you.

Or Pri Devash (2020-09-12)

Congratulations 🙂

Moshe Cohen (2020-09-12)

Joining with all my heart!
May it be God’s will that the Rabbi always merit to see his family’s joyful occasions, and in general, amid abundant peace of mind and breadth of understanding.

Avremi (2020-09-13)

Congratulations!

Shoel (2020-09-13)

May I add my wishes too?
Congratulations!

Roni A. (2020-09-13)

Congratulations

Nur (2020-09-13)

Joining the well-wishes wholeheartedly [even if heart and emotion don’t have much significance…]

Michi (2020-09-13)

Thanks everyone for the good wishes. May we share only happy occasions.

Ish (2020-09-13)

Like Judah, and even more so
I too join the above
and offer abundant blessing
The Lord’s man, son of our teacher Rabbi So-and-so

Cucumber (2020-09-13)

Congratulations!!!
And it is well known that the custom among Hasidim is to get married in the month of Elul:)
By the way, why doesn’t the Rabbi write some book about matters of domestic harmony,
as is the practice of every self-respecting Religious Zionist rabbi (and not only…)?

Michi (2020-09-13)

First, the answer is in the body of the question itself (actually two answers are in the body of the question).
Second, I think Haredi rabbis write no less about these matters.

Embraces upon Embraces (2020-09-13)

1. Custom
2. Rabbi
3. Religious Zionist
4. Self-respecting
What are the 2 answers in the body of the question? 1,3? 2,3?

Embraces upon Embraces (2020-09-13)

Or actually, the custom of every rabbi, so you don’t need anything more, and furthermore it is an established principle that everyone is presumed blind

Michi (2020-09-13)

The last one is the main point: if others have already written about it, why do I need to bring straw to Ephraim?!
And I’m not a Religious Zionist rabbi.

Embraces upon Embraces (2020-09-13)

The last one is a bit difficult, since even some of the later ones who follow custom brought straw to Ephraim, and if so I’ll include all that under custom. But custom isn’t the main thing, so specifically the first one, 1, is the main point.

Embraces upon Embraces (2020-09-13)

By the way, one can infer from the fact that he did not say “I am not Religious Zionist” that he holds that a “Religious-Zionist rabbi” is a different kind of entity from a non-Religious-Zionist rabbi, and not that “rabbi” is one attribute and “Religious Zionist” is a second attribute, like a blue ball. This requires further analysis.

Embraces upon Embraces (2020-09-13)

And in my humble opinion, he intended to make a fine point from the hyphenation, and that is exactly the point: the hyphen fuses the two qualities into the creation of a new, indivisible entity

Daniel Koren (2020-09-15)

Long live our perfect Rabbi Michi!!
I’m joining the commotion too — many, many congratulations on your daughter’s wedding 🙂

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