Mir Dinner 2022 - This Is Mir

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 26

  • @wave-films
    @wave-films 2 года назад +5

    Beautiful video, sound design is flawless! Wow!

  • @Abi-yt4te
    @Abi-yt4te 2 года назад +6

    I went here for 3 years and I can tell you this video captured the feel perfectly. I'll give some context:
    The students of all ages come here to learn voluntarily day and night. The day started after a modest breakfast (handful of cucumber slices for me) at 7am in the learning hall. If you had a seat you were lucky. You and your learning partner would prepare what your particular Rabbi (there were many, some more advanced than others with more students than others) set for the morning class for 2-3 hours which involved decoding complex aramaic and hebrew sources pretty much on your own. Usually the most advanced student was available to ask questions to see if you were on track (I became that person after 2 years of intense learning). After the preparation time was done we all filed into the class which lasted another 2-3 hours led by the Rabbi who would teach us a new depth into the text within the context we prepared. After, we had a break where most ate lunch (the part of the video where everyone came into the lunch room to eat) and prayed. Everyone treated each other with the upmost respect and there was never any judgement. During break you could also grab a seat in the learning hall and take upon yourself more studying or review. Then there was a quicker paced learning time set for the afternoon to cover more ground in the text but to go in less depth. After a few hours of that, there was a break to eat dinner (on the nights I could afford I would purchase a small roll of bread for 1 shekel or 25 cents and smear it with honey. It was better than the food they had for dinner but it was small. Most nights i wouldn't eat) and continue learning until about 9-10pm. I'd utilize that time to review the morning class then pray and go to bed.
    The Rabbis are highly respected and all students would stand when they entered the room, passed by the students or left. It was not expected but they had our respect, these are very special people.
    Every student had a story and are there to be dedicated to learning torah. Even the Rabbis had stories with difficult backgrounds, one in particular had a severely autistic son who he had to care for and the head of the yeshivah had Parkinsons but would painfully show up every day to teach, lecture and pray. He was a massive scholar.

    • @PawsomeFeeders
      @PawsomeFeeders 2 года назад

      Kol KaKavod Tzaddik. Thank you for upholding the world with your Torah studies and tmimiut. Please keep on shteiging and know that you are the purpose of the creation and a jewel in Hashem’s crown. This inspired me a lot. May Hashem bless you with a long long healthy healthy happy happy life where you serve Him with enthusiasm and zeal. Also major success in ruchniyut and gashmiyut. Nachat from kids and grandkids that are also talmide chachamim or wives of talmide chachamim-kedoshim and kedoshot. Please be well

  • @matisyahup613
    @matisyahup613 3 месяца назад

    i am 37 years old, and became baal teshuva around the age of 17, 20 years ago. By now I have finished about half of the entire talmud, and I consider it my main goal in life to know torah.
    But so much of my journey has been alone, using online shiurim and artscroll gemaras. I cannot imagine being in a place with so many talmidim and rabbis, in the holy land. it would be a dream of mine to learn in a place like this.

  • @folkeholtz6351
    @folkeholtz6351 2 года назад +2

    This is a place that I would like to be in many hours, days, weeks and years. Greetings from the Jewish man from the Jewish community in Stockholm, Sweden

  • @leslieparris4530
    @leslieparris4530 2 года назад +2

    What a good revelation to be connected to the story and study of the one treasures of the most high what a miracle God bless

  • @pbaklamov
    @pbaklamov 2 года назад +2

    This is what it means to fear GOD. L’Chaim and Shalom.

  • @shmuelkurinsky
    @shmuelkurinsky 2 года назад +3

    Why is made so depressing, it’s the Mir it’s happy

  • @jonathanshiff3892
    @jonathanshiff3892 5 месяцев назад

    My brother went here.

  • @irisscott9488
    @irisscott9488 2 года назад +1

    Shalom! Can't help but wonder, what if a fire broke out under these crowded conditions?!? 😫😯😥😣😮🙏🙏🙏🎀

    • @benmarcus3044
      @benmarcus3044 2 года назад +1

      Mostly cement.. this is Israel

    • @irisscott9488
      @irisscott9488 2 года назад

      @@benmarcus3044 okay, thanks for enlightening me! Huge crowds scare me! Was caught in a crowd outdoors and lifted off my feet and carried about 6 city blocks beyond where I was trying to go! So frightening! And dangerous! Finally got free and away! Never went back for those crowded events again! Always think of trampling if things go wrong! I guess I worry to MUCH!👍😍🙏🙏🎉🎈

  • @leslieparris4530
    @leslieparris4530 2 года назад

    Shaloam thank you the salvation of life evermore lesle-Ann A Parris

  • @חלישעיה
    @חלישעיה 2 года назад

    משטרת ישראל מעשיכם שפליים ומתואבים מלך יש אחד

  • @getkraken8064
    @getkraken8064 2 года назад +1

    Why was Jerusalem destroyed in 70 AD?

    • @ljg3897
      @ljg3897 2 года назад

      We learn in Chofetz Choim that the main reason for the destruction of the Beis HaMikdash was for the spies in Am Yisroel so had spoken so much lashon hara. Therefore HKB"H punished us.

    • @ElishamaPagiel
      @ElishamaPagiel Год назад

      They did a revolt against the Romans, and the Romans destroyed it

  • @Enrico160
    @Enrico160 Год назад

    💙💙💙🇮🇱

  • @leslieparris4530
    @leslieparris4530 2 года назад

    God bless

  • @danielafesti6728
    @danielafesti6728 2 года назад +1

    ISRAEL ✡🔯🕎..CHAIM-🦁- TAMID 👍🙏AMEN 🙏FROM ITALY

  • @nadanisa8422
    @nadanisa8422 2 года назад +1

    Zuper Yisroel Day