Beit Yisrael International YOM KIPPUR-The Hidden Light of Atonement, Soul Renewal, and Oneness with God.

 Beit Yisrael International YOM KIPPUR-The Hidden Light of Atonement, Soul Renewal, and Oneness with God.







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    Mr. Murthy Gaddi

    YOM KIPPUR-The Hidden Light of Atonement, Soul Renewal, and Oneness with God.


    Yom Kippur for Hebrew Year 5786 begins at sundown on Wednesday, 1 October 2025 and ends at nightfall on Thursday, 2 October 2025.


    “Gaddi’s Notes on the Eternal Wisdom of the Prominent Sages”: Tuesday, 30 Sep 2025,9th of Tishrei, 5786


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    1. What is Yom Kippur?


    Yom Kippur (יוֹם כִּפּוּר), the “Day of Atonement,” is the holiest day of the Jewish year (Leviticus 16:29–31; 23:27–32). It is observed on the 10th of Tishrei and is marked by fasting, prayer, repentance, and seeking reconciliation with both God and fellow human beings.

    The Torah describes it as a day when the High Priest would enter the Holy of Holies to offer incense and blood sacrifices for the atonement of Israel. Today, without the Temple, the focus is on prayer, teshuvah (repentance), and acts of righteousness.

    The sages describe Yom Kippur as the day when the gates of heaven are opened, and God’s mercy flows most abundantly, offering forgiveness to those who return to Him wholeheartedly.


    2. Deep Concepts from the Jewish Sages


    A. The Power of Teshuvah (Return)

    • Rambam (Hilchot Teshuvah 7:6): Even if a person sinned his entire life, if he repents on the day of his death, none of his sins are remembered. Yom Kippur reveals God’s infinite readiness to accept sincere teshuvah.

    • Midrash Rabbah (Vayikra 29:9): Teshuvah was created before the world itself. Yom Kippur taps into this primordial light of forgiveness.


    B. Five Afflictions and the Five Levels of the Soul

    • Zohar (Vayikra 102a): The five afflictions (no eating, drinking, bathing, anointing, wearing leather shoes, or marital relations) correspond to the five levels of the soul — nefesh, ruach, neshamah, chayah, yechidah.

    • By abstaining, we elevate each layer of the soul back toward its source, achieving purity.


    C. White Garments and Angelic State

    • Talmud (Yoma 35b): Israel is compared to angels on Yom Kippur, wearing white garments and abstaining from physical needs.

    • Rav Kook (Orot HaTeshuvah 14): On Yom Kippur, the human being reveals their deepest essence — the Godly soul, untouched by sin.


    D. The Day Itself Atones

    • Mishnah (Yoma 8:9): “Yom Kippur atones for sins between man and God, but not for sins between man and his fellow until he appeases him.”

    • The day itself holds a cosmic power of atonement, but it demands ethical repair in the human realm as well.


    E. Oneness and the Name of Hashem

    • Ramban (Vayikra 16:30): On Yom Kippur, Israel unites as one before God, just as the High Priest entered the Holy of Holies alone. The unity of the people reflects the unity of God.

    • Chassidut (Sefat Emet, Yom Kippur 5631): The five prayers of Yom Kippur represent ascending stages of union with God, culminating in Ne’ilah, the closing of the gates, when we reach yechidah — the singular spark of divine oneness in the soul.


    F. Joy Hidden Within Awe

    • While Yom Kippur is awe-inspiring, the sages reveal it also contains deep joy:

    • Taanit 26b: “There were no days as joyous for Israel as Yom Kippur and the 15th of Av,” because on Yom Kippur sins are forgiven, and the bond between God and Israel is renewed.

    • This joy is hidden under the solemnity of the day, much like the soul’s hidden light shining through fasting and prayer.


    3. Summary


    Yom Kippur is not merely a day of abstinence but a day of elevation, oneness, and renewal . The sages teach that through teshuvah, prayer, and righteousness, the soul ascends to its root, becoming angelic, purified, and united with the Creator. Its essence is love cloaked in awe, where forgiveness and joy emerge through divine closeness.




    “Yom Kippur in PaRDeS: From Atonement in the Temple to the Soul’s Union with the Infinite.”


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    1. Weights (Simple / Literal Level)


    Textual Basis:

    • “For on this day He shall atone for you, to purify you; from all your sins before Hashem you shall be purified” (Leviticus 16:30).

    Explanation:

    On the simplest level, Yom Kippur is the Torah-ordained Day of Atonement. The High Priest performed the service in the Beit HaMikdash, sprinkling blood in the Holy of Holies, confessing on behalf of Israel, and sending away the scapegoat (se’ir la’azazel) to atone for the nation.

    • Rashi: Yom Kippur is a special day of grace from Heaven, set aside for forgiveness.

    • Mishnah Yoma 8:9: It atones for sins between man and God, but requires reconciliation for sins between people.

    👉 The Peshat level emphasizes the halachic obligations — fasting, refraining from five pleasures, and engaging in prayer and teshuvah.


    2. Remez (Hint / Allegorical Level)


    Hints in Numbers and Practices:

    • The five afflictions correspond to the five levels of the soul (nefesh, ruach, neshamah, chayah, yechidah) (Zohar, Vayikra 102a).

    • The white garments worn in synagogue hint at Israel’s resemblance to angels (Talmud Yoma 35b).

    • The scapegoat sent away hints at casting away negativity and redirecting it toward its proper rectification.

    👉 Yom Kippur hints that man, though clothed in flesh, has the capacity to transcend and touch eternity, shedding physical layers to reveal the soul’s radiance.


    3. Drash (Homiletical / Interpretive Level)


    Ethical and Spiritual Teachings:

    • Rambam (Hilchot Teshuvah 7:6): Teshuvah is always accepted, but Yom Kippur magnifies its power.

    • Midrash Rabbah (Vayikra 29:9): Teshuvah was created before the world — meaning forgiveness is embedded in creation itself.

    • Talmud (Taanit 26b): “There were no days as joyous for Israel as Yom Kippur and Tu B’Av,” teaching that beyond solemnity lies a hidden joy — the joy of being cleansed and renewed.

    👉 The Drash level shows Yom Kippur as an existential teaching: man can always return, repair, and be embraced by Divine mercy.


    4. Sod (Mystical / Secret Level)


    Kabbalistic and Chassidic Insights:

    • Zohar (Acharei Mot, 67b): Yom Kippur is “the day of Yechidah,” when the deepest point of the soul (yechidah she’banefesh) unites with the Oneness of God.

    • Arizal (Sha’ar HaKavanot, Yom Kippur): The five tefillot (prayers) correspond to the ascent through five spiritual worlds, culminating in Ne’ilah, where the soul cleaves to Ein Sof beyond all veils.

    • Sefat Emet (Yom Kippur 5631): On Yom Kippur, the light of the soul is revealed without obstruction, for fasting removes the dominance of the body, leaving the pure essence of the neshama.

    • Rav Kook (Orot HaTeshuvah 14): The day itself is a revelation of the “hidden point of holiness” in every Jew, showing that sin never touches the essence of the soul.

    👉 The Sod level reveals Yom Kippur as a cosmic reunion — the day when heaven and earth unite, when Israel mirrors the angels, and when the innermost spark (yechidah) encounters the Infinite.




    Medicine for the Soul: Repentance, Prayer, and Righteousness during Yom Kippur



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    1. The Threefold Path: Teshuvah, Tefillah, Tzedakah


    The High Holy Days liturgy famously proclaims:

    “U’Teshuvah, U’Tefillah, U’Tzedakah ma’avirin et ro’a ha’gzeirah — Repentance, Prayer, and Righteousness remove the evil of the decree.” (Unetaneh Tokef, Machzor for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur)

    The sages emphasize that these three are the spiritual remedies for the soul — not just abstract virtues, but actual medicine that heals spiritual illness and restores connection with the Divine.


    2. Teshuvah (Repentance / Return)

    • Rambam (Hilchot Teshuvah 7:5): Teshuvah brings one closer to the Divine Presence. The sinner who repents is no longer distanced but stands beloved before God.

    • Midrash Rabbah (Vayikra 29:9): Teshuvah was created before the world itself — meaning it is the primordial cure, anticipating human frailty and providing the soul with an eternal pathway back.

    • Zohar (Vayikra 106a): Teshuvah heals the “wounds” of the soul. Just as a physician removes poison from the body, teshuvah removes spiritual toxins.

    👉 On Yom Kippur, repentance is the medicine that detoxifies the soul and allows it to breathe freely in God’s presence.


    3. Tefillah (Prayer)

    • Talmud Bavli, Berachot 6b: “Prayer stands at the height of the world, yet people take it lightly.” On Yom Kippur, prayer becomes a ladder, ascending through the heavens.

    • Ramban (Vayikra 16): The High Priest’s prayer in the Holy of Holies mirrors the individual’s inner prayer. Just as the incense cloud filled the sanctuary, so prayer fills and sanctifies the heart.

    • Chassidut (Sefat Emet, Yom Kippur 5631): Each prayer of Yom Kippur corresponds to ascending levels of the soul — Kol Nidrei awakens nefesh, Shacharit elevates ruach, Musaf refines neshamah, Minchah touches chayah, and Ne'ilah reveals yechidah.

    👉 Prayer is the medicine that realigns the soul, reattunes it to its Source, and draws divine compassion into the world.


    4. Tzedakah (Righteousness / Charity)

    • Proverbs 10:2: “Tzedakah saves from death.”

    • Midrash Tanchuma (Noach 12): Charity is more powerful than all sacrifices.

    • Rambam (Hilchot Matanot Aniyim 10:1): Giving to the poor is the surest sign of righteousness because it imitates God’s kindness.

    • Zohar (Terumah 128a): Tzedakah not only redeems the giver but sweetens harsh decrees for the entire world.

    👉 On Yom Kippur, righteousness is the medicine that heals relationships — it restores balance between man and fellow man and extends divine mercy outward into society.


    5. The Healing Integration

    The sages explain that these three remedies work in harmony:

    • Teshuvah heals the past (cleansing the soul of stains).

    • Tefillah strengthens the present (attuning the heart to God in the moment).

    • Tzedakah secures the future (channeling blessing and life into the world).

    Rabbi Saadia Gaon compares them to a physician’s regimen: repentance is the removal of poison, prayer is the strengthening of the immune system, and righteousness is the nourishment that keeps the body and soul healthy.


    6. Mystical Dimension

    • Arizal (Sha’ar HaKavanot): These three correspond to the divine triad of Chesed (Tzedakah), Gevurah (Tefillah), and Tiferet (Teshuvah). When performed sincerely on Yom Kippur, they unify the higher worlds and draw down divine light of healing and forgiveness.

    • Baal Shem Tov: The soul is a candle. Teshuvah removes the soot, Tefillah fuels the flame, and Tzedakah spreads its light to others.


    Final Insight


    Yom Kippur is not a day of denial but of healing. The sages reveal that Repentance, Prayer, and Righteousness are not punishments or restrictions but medicines for the soul, designed to restore vitality, joy, and closeness to God. When all three converge, the human being becomes renewed, whole, and aligned with the Divine purpose.


    Shalom - Gaddi Efrayim- A Servant of the Most Ancient Holy One of Yisrael.

     Beit Yisrael International: Please Donate for our coming New Social Network, ‘a light unto the nations’.




    Shalom Am Yisrael,

    I would like to call you up, please come and help me? As an Orthodox Jew for many years now I am reaching out to The Lost Sheep from the House of Yisrael. With my friend Gaddi, from India, we started to gather The Lost Sheep from the House of Yisrael in India. As the non-profit organization Beit Yisrael International. Groups of people with diverse backgrounds becoming associated with Beit Yisrael International as: Ultra-Orthodox Chassidic/Lost Tribes of Efrayim/'Ger Toshav', Israelite by accepting the Shulchan Aruch and Chasidut, the teachings of CHaBaD in hearing and doing. The goal of Beit Yisrael International is that they find a way to come home, to Eretz Yisrael, under rabbinical supervision.

    Today, because of the war that we have with Amalek things are changing…….. At the end of the war, when we come to total victory over Amalek, we shall start to build a House devoted to HaShem and near His House a house for the great Sanhedrin.

    We started with Beit Yisrael International.  Now I think we should start with a new social network something like ‘Facebook’ but only for all Israel Lovers: Jews and Ger Toshavim. Please think about the words of Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, The founder of the Yeshiva Har Bracha,

    ‘Ger Toshav’: Obstacles and Aspirations

    The Torah’s vision is that in the Land of Israel, besides the Jewish nation, only those who share in Israel’s mission of being a ‘light unto the nations’ may live here * The controversy surrounding the issue of non-Jews residing in the Land of Israel today, when the status of ‘ger toshav’ (resident alien) does not apply * The Druze meet the conditions of ‘ger toshav’, as opposed to those Arabs who support terrorists, and do not recognize Israeli sovereignty * Presently, fulfilling the mitzvah to expel the hostile minority is impractical * In spite of this, the concept of ​​’ger toshav’ should be studied in depth, and aspire to implement when possible * Once we delve deeper into the moral logic of the mitzvah, it will serve as a model for all countries coping with immigrants

    Non-Jews Residing in the Land of Israel

    The grand vision of the Jewish nation in its land is for the land to be inhabited by the Jewish people, on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem the Holy Temple will stand, all forms of national life will be conducted according to the teachings of the Torah morally and with holiness and the people of Israel will be a light unto the nations who will come to visit Israel and receive inspiration for their nations’ betterment and that of the world, as expressed in the words of the prophet: “In the last days, the mountain of the Lord’s house will be the highest of all— the most important place on earth. It will be raised above the other hills, and people from all over the world will stream there to worship. People from many nations will come and say, ‘Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of Jacob’s God. There he will teach us his ways, and we will walk in his paths.’ For the Lord’s teaching will go out from Zion; his word will go out from Jerusalem. The Lord will mediate between nations and will settle international disputes. They will hammer their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will no longer fight against nation, nor train for war anymore” (Isaiah 2: 2-4).

    In order to achieve this vision, the entire land must be inhabited by Jews, and only non-Jews wishing to be part of Israel’s grand vision will be able to join the Jewish people in the status of a ‘ger toshav‘, or technically, a ‘resident alien’. While the road to realizing the vision is still long, we should nevertheless strive to the best of our ability to achieve it.

    Source: 'Ger Toshav': Obstacles and Aspirations - Yeshiva

    According to traditional interpretations, for a ger toshav to be formally recognized and permitted to reside in the Land of Israel, their commitment had to be accepted by a rabbinic court (Beit Din) during a time when the Jubilee year (Yovel) was observed.



    To ALL Yisrael Lovers: Do you like to help me with a donation? I need 300 dollars. For the creation of this special Social Network.

    This Social Network shall be owned by the non-profit Beit Yisrael International

    The administration of this Social Network is by me: Ariel van Kessel WhatsApp: +972 54-568-3031 for making an appointment for further information.

    This Social Network comes under the Domain of Har HaBayit Jewish Sovereign for all Israel

    For every Israel Lover it should be free to join.

    Ultimate goal of this Social Network: in Love to each other creating a community ‘a light unto the nations’ coming from The Har HaBayit by our Prayers on the Har HaBayit.

    Please send your donations, with the description: ‘a light unto the nations’, to:


    Click:




    For further study: 

    In the Torah, Is the Ger Ever a Convert?

    Conversion to Judaism as we know it is a rabbinic development, but what, then is the biblical ger, and why does he need to be circumcised in order to eat from the paschal offering?

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