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Hisbadadut On The Road

June 13th, 2010

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I recently went on a short vacation to Quebec City. While there, I took to opportunity to do my Hisbadudut in a huge park called The Plains of Abraham. The Plains of Abraham are a historic area within The Battlefields Park in Quebec City, Quebec, that was originally grazing land, but became famous as the site of the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, which took place on 13 September 1759 between the English and the French.

The conflict between English and French that shaped Canada also shaped the lives of my generation and me personally. There was much to say to HaShem on that ancient field of battle.

I took the picture above to help remember that special Hisbadadut experience.

Chaim Oliver

Chaim Oliver Hitbodedut, Uncategorized

Two NEW Classes May 4 & May 11 How to Dress for Spiritual Success

May 4th, 2010

Here are the references for the two classes:
Crossing the Narrow Bridge, Page 225 – 226
Advice, Page 54
The Aleph-Bet Book, Page 40 – 42
Rabbi Nachman’s Stories: The Turkey Prince, The Sophisticate and the Simpleton
Likutey Moharan, Volume lV, Torah 151
Likutey Moharan, Volume lV, Torah 29:3
Likutey Moharan, Volume lll, Torah 21:16

Chaim Oliver Uncategorized , ,

New Class on Passover

March 18th, 2010

7 Amazing Ideas from Rebbi Nachman that you can tell over at your Seder
and wow your crowd!

March 22 @ 7:00 EST on Skype.

To join the class contact howard.o on Skype at the start time.
Email me at coliver@breslov.org if you need any help with Skype.

Chaim Oliver

Chaim Oliver Classes

Dvar Torah

March 12th, 2010

Based on Likutey Halakhot, M’onen u’M’nacheish 2

Parshat HaChodesh, celebrating as it does our very first mitzvah that we received as a people, cries for an explanation: Why are we moonies (pardon the expression)?

From its first mention in the Torah, the moon represents all that has gone wrong and remains in a state of imperfection in the world, as it currently operates. By immediately giving us the mitzvah to sanctify the moon, God is telling us that our mission is to correct what is broken, to “fill the moon’s lack.”
“[None among you shall be a...] diviner of auspicious times or omens…” (Deuteronomy 18:10). One of the motivations for seeking out the help of fortune-tellers and soothsayers is to gain an advantage over Nature by knowing what is in store and how to avoid it, if detrimental, or how to optimally use it. The mitzvah to not seek such knowledge is to remind us that we are, essentially, a super-natural people. Of course, none of us can fly and we all have to look both ways before crossing the street—we are not impervious to physical
harm or disease.

But to fulfill our mission as a people, we as individuals have to take care to guard our essence, our connection to the Creator of Nature. In an ideal world, one’s connection to the Divine, through observance and performance of His will, would correspond directly to a like-result. We know all too well, however, that the world does not currently operate that way. God hides His continual, loving control and guidance behind the screen of Nature.

Filling the moon’s lack requires our synthesizing the natural and the rational laws of life with faith in the Creator, Who is beyond and outside them, Who can contravene them as He likes, whenever He chooses. To seek magical and paranormal solutions is to misuse our faith, even if we haven’t totally excluded God from our calculations.

And coming on the heels of last week’s episode of the Golden Calf, we see that the Jewish women, who refused to give their jewelery to produce the Golden Calf, exhibited a Jewish essence deeper than their husbands’. This is why they, and not the men, were given Rosh Chodesh as a special holiday, and why they are promised to be continually renewed in the Future (Pirkei d’Rebbe Eliezer, Chapter 45), when faith and nature will collaborate to reveal God’s presence.

May we live to see it, soon. Amen.
agutn Shabbos!
Shabbat Shalom!
© Copyright 2010 Breslov Research Institute

Chaim Oliver Uncategorized

How to Learn Likutey Moharan

January 28th, 2010

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We will meet at 7:00 PM EDT, February 2, 2010 on Skype to Study Likutey Moharan. Our focus will be building content knowledge, learning skills and an overall appreciation of the Rebbe’s Teachings.

The topic of this series of is: “You are HOW you Eat”.

Source Material:
Advice by Reb Nasson, Eating, Page 20 – 25, Breslov Research Institute
Crossing The Narrow Bridge, Food, Glorious Food, Page 215-225, Breslov Research Institute
Likutey Moharan, Lesson 17:3,Page 29-35, Volume lll, Breslov Research Institute
Likutey Moharan, Lesson 62:1,2,5,Page 282-319, Volume Vll, Breslov Research Institute

Please join us for this group study session if you can!

To join the class contact howard.o on Skype at the start time.
Email me at coliver@breslov.org if you need any help with Skype.

Chaim Oliver

Chaim Oliver How to Learn Lekutey Moharan ,

Dvar Torah for Parshat Bo

January 20th, 2010

Based on Likutey Moharan I, Lesson #54

“Moshe said, ‘God said, “About midnight I will make Myself known in Egypt and every firstborn in Egypt will die”…’” (Exodus 11:4–5).

“At midnight I awake to thank You…” (Psalms 119:62).

Did David know and Moshe not know [when midnight was]?! David had a harp hanging over his bed. When midnight came, the North Wind would blow, and the harp played by itself (Berakhot 3b).

At midnight, sacred music, descended from David’s harp, is triggered.
This is the music that extracts the good spirit from the bad. This is the time [of day] to strengthen oneself in service of God, to awake and immerse oneself in Divine worship, to pour out one’s heart to God…Understand well the practical application of these words.
(Lesson #54 [end])

Let’s face it. When the Redemption, the one we Jews have been waiting for for close to two thousand (count ‘em—2000!) years, finally comes, the “bad guys,” people whose attitudes and behavior are antithetical to what redemption and the Redemption Era are all about, are going to get hurt. They will have to be “removed.”

This is not something that has to happen. It is quite avoidable.
People and peoples can get with the program so that they can be part of the Redemption Era. Pharaoh got hit real bad because he wouldn’t take a hint and get the message to rehabilitate himself. He had opportunities to soften his heart and change for the better, but he waffled and refused so often that ultimately he couldn’t.

When Pharaoh didn’t change, neither did his people. As a result, they died—but not from loss of life. They died from too much life. When God revealed Himself, they didn’t have the vessels to hold the Divine life-force. They shattered.

Rebbe Nachman teaches that God is constantly trying to get us to soften our hearts. Whatever your situation, everything in your life, even the seemingly random, is a message to “let My people go so they may serve Me” (Exodus 9:1). Admittedly, says Rebbe Nachman, the ordinary folk cannot perceive from every detail of life every hint.
But we ready ourselves to hear and accept the message through simple
activities: sleeping, tzitzit and tefillin, Torah study (including reading the Shema), prayer and business. Each, in its way, prepares a person to understand what s/he needs to understand to become a better Jew.

Rebbe Nachman suggests another way to prepare: wake at midnight. By waking in the still of night to devote time to hitbodedut, Torah study and prayer, one will remember life’s true purpose. The more one’s memory is sensitized to that purpose, the more one is prepared to receive the life-force of the Redemption Era, may it come swiftly and soon, in our lifetime. Amen

agutn Shabbos!
Shabbat Shalom!

© Copyright 2010 Breslov Research Institute

Chaim Oliver Weekly Parsha

Online Group Study on Skype This Evening (7:00 PM EST, January 5, 2010)

January 5th, 2010

We will meet at 7:00 PM EST, January 5, 2010 on Skype to study the Rebbe’s Torah: AYEH? Where?

“To achieve lasting happiness, you have to know how to rise out of the lows. This is the theme of Rebbe Nachman’s teaching of “Ayeh?” which shows how to find hope in even the darkest, most desperate situations and turn them to your own advantage”

Reference Clink: http://www.breslov.org/bookstore/explorations/i-will-sing-azamra-where-ayeh-/prod_5.html

To join the class contact howard.o on Skype at the start time.
Email me at coliver@breslov.org if you need any help with Skype.

Chaim Oliver

Chaim Oliver Uncategorized , ,

Thoughts for Today

November 4th, 2009

IF YOU HAVE AWARENESS, WHAT DO YOU LACK?
IF YOU LACK AWARENESS, WHAT DO YOU HAVE?

TALMUD, NEDARIM 41A

Grant me holy wisdom and intelligence. Let me always see all things in the light of the holy wisdom they contain, and so attach myself to You through everything in the world.

Reb Noson’s Prayers, Volume One, Prayer One

Chaim Oliver prayer , , , , ,

Likutei Morahan Thornhill, Ontario Chaburah Thursday, September 24, 9:00 pm EST

September 24th, 2009

This week (Thursday, September 24 9:00 pm EST) we will be starting an in-depth study of Torah 1 of Likutei Morahan. We will also be exploring the deeper ideas of the story of the “Sophisticate and Simpleton”.

To attend in person please RSVP via email to coliver@breslov.org. You can join the Chaburah on Skype at howard.o

Cheers!

Chaim Oliver

Chaim Oliver Breslov Research Institute, Weekly Parsha

The Thornhill, Ontario Likutei Morahan Chaburah – Thursday, September 10 9:00 pm EST

September 10th, 2009

This week we will I”H be continuing an in-depth study of Torah 6 of Likutei Morahan. We will also be exploring the deeper ideas of Rosh HaShannah using Crossing The Narrow Bridge and other texts by The Breslov Research Institute.

Torah 6 has a powerful message for Rosh Chodesh Elul that we will explore together.

To attend in person please RSVP via email to coliver@breslov.org. You can join the Chaburah on Skype at howard.o

Chaim Oliver Classes, Uncategorized ,