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<tagline mode="escaped" type="text/html">There are two popular theories about its origin of the word ''Daven'': 
The first is that it is related to the Aramaic word meaning ''of our fathers''. This refers to the tradition that Abraham instituted the practice of morning prayer, Isaac afternoon prayer, and Jacob evening prayer, as recorded in many places. The second theory is that it comes from Old French, in which case it is related to the English word ''devotion'', and entered Jewish vocabulary by way of Rashi.</tagline>
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<link rel="start" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/Davening" /><feedburner:info uri="davening" /><atom10:link xmlns:atom10="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" rel="hub" href="http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/" /><feedburner:browserFriendly>This is an XML content feed. It is intended to be viewed in a newsreader or syndicated to another site.</feedburner:browserFriendly><entry>
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<author>
<name>Gruven Reuven</name>
</author>
<issued>2006-08-16T23:50:00-04:00</issued>
<modified>2006-08-17T03:50:50Z</modified>
<created>2006-08-17T03:50:50Z</created>
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<summary mode="escaped" type="text/plain" xml:base="http://www.davening.net/blogger.html">BS"D

RE'EH
Set Your Sites

FRIDAY NIGHT:

See, I set before you this day a blessing and a curse... Devarim 11:26)

This is the third "Shabbat of Consolation", which is easier to feel since
Tisha B'Av is now far behind us. Sometimes Tisha B'Av falls early in the
week, and there is time to become consoled by Shabbat Nachamu. However,
this year Tisha B'Av fell on Thursday, and having one day to</summary>
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<entry>
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<author>
<name>Gruven Reuven</name>
</author>
<issued>2006-07-17T23:34:00-04:00</issued>
<modified>2006-07-18T03:34:49Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-18T03:34:49Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">BS"D<br />
<br />MATTOT-MASSEY<br />A Body and Soul Job<br />
<br />FRIDAY NIGHT:<br />
<br />Moshe answered the descendants of Gad and Reuben, "Should your brothers go<br />to war while you live in peace here? Why would you discourage the<br />Israelite na-tion from crossing into the land which G-d has given to them?<br />That's exactly what your ances-tors did when I sent them from Kadesh-<br />Barnea to scout the land . . ." (Bamidbar 32:6)<br />
<br />When it comes to spiritual growth, it is all about increasing "the light."<br />The more the light, the stronger the connection is to G-d and therefore,<br />the greater is the spiritual growth. Hence, we learn more Torah, pray with<br />more intention, and do even more mitzvot in order to draw additional light<br />towards ourselves and achieve greater spiritual heights.<br />
<br />But what are we really trying to improve in the end, to our souls or to<br />our bodies? Are we trying to enhance our spiritual or our physical<br />component, so that it can retain more of the light that is already there,<br />but we simply don't access because at the present time, we can't? Is life<br />about adding candles to a dark room, or about finding a bigger glass with<br />which to draw water from the sea?<br />
<br />As the Vilna Gaon points out, life is about "shevirat hamiddot," the<br />breaking of traits, as in negative character traits, which are obviously a<br />function of the body, but not the soul. We come into this world with<br />strengths and weaknesses, with the goal of using the former to rectify the<br />latter. We are born to be "craftsmen," in order for us to bring perfection<br />to the kli - the physical vessel with which we have been born into so that<br />it can access the light that is already there.<br />
<br />That is why Bilaam changed his mode of attack. For, when he tried to curse<br />the Jewish people, an attack on their soul, he failed, because the Jewish<br />soul is, by definition, blessed. Hence, his next attack was on the Jewish<br />body, and with respect to that he was VERY successful when he sent the<br />daughters of Midian in to draw the tribe of Shimon in a very "physical"<br />direction.<br />
<br />With the vessel damaged through the entire episode of Ba'al Peor, the<br />light of G-d and Torah could not longer be retained and a transformation<br />occurred. Hence, not only did the tribes of Reuven, Gad, and Menashe ask<br />to live outside of Eretz Yisroel, something that was unfathomable at that<br />stage of Jewish history. They couldn't even sense on their own how they<br />had repeated the mistake of their ancestors just forty years prior! Even<br />after hearing Moshe Rabbeinu's reply, and then after he agreed to their<br />terms for living there, they could not sense the importance of abandoning<br />their plans and desires in order to contribute their part to the Geulah<br />Shlaimah - the Final Redemption.<br />
<br />This is, in fact, the basis of what Rashi says on the fourth posuk of the<br />Torah:<br />
<br />G-d saw that the light was good, and G-d separated be-tween the light and<br />the darkness. (Bereishit 1:4)<br />
<br />G-D SEPARATED: He saw that the wicked were unworthy of using it (the<br />light); He therefore set it apart for the righteous in a Future Time.<br />(Rashi)<br />
<br />As we have pointed out before, this time "Future Time" does not refer to<br />Yemot HaMoshiach, but history henceforth. In other words, access to the<br />holy Primordial Light of Creation was going to be limited once mankind was<br />created, limited to those worthy of using it.<br />
<br />Hence, as the Talmud points out, Adam HaRishon had access to the light for<br />a while, and it allowed him to see from one end of the world until the<br />other end (Chagigah 12a). Thus, the Leshem explains:<br />
<br />He [G-d] made a separation in the illumination of the Light that it should<br />not flow or give off light except for the righteous, whose actions draw it<br />down and make it shine. However, the actions of the evil block it, leaving<br />them in darkness, and this itself was the hiding of the Light. (Sha'arei<br />Leshem, p. 133)<br />
<br />Thus, the light IS there, but it just won't enter them; their bodies<br />simply block it, being instruments of evil.<br />
<br />SHABBOS DAY:<br />
<br />The concept of teshuvah is very fascinating, for a number of reasons. It<br />is even more fascinating to watch another person go through the process of<br />teshuvah, knowing that one day he or she will become the very thing that<br />he or she, at the present time, is terrified of becoming.<br />
<br />"I could never wear a kippah full time," someone I used to learn with once<br />told me. "I can't stand having anything on my head for a period of time,"<br />he explained.<br />
<br />Two months later, the kippah went on full time and he never complained<br />about it, nor did he look uncomfortable about wearing it all the time.<br />Quite the contrary, he wore it like a crown of distinction.<br />
<br />"And I could NEVER wear those fringes . . . EVER!" he said quite<br />emphatically. "It's one thing to put on Tefillin every morning for an hour<br />in shul, but I grew up wearing T-Shirts all summer long. Just looking at<br />you guys wearing your . . . what are they called again? Tzi . . .<br />tzi . . . uh . . ."<br />
<br />"Tzitzis."<br />
<br />"Right, tzeetzees. Watching you wear that AND your jackets and hats on 90-<br />degree days makes me want to pass out from heat exhaustion right on the<br />spot. I don't know how you guys survive, but I would go NUTS!"<br />
<br />Well, needless to say, after learning for a while longer he didn't go<br />nuts, and he went to the tzeetzees man to buy his own pair . . . and today<br />he wears the entire get-up, tzeetzees, jacket, hat, and all.<br />
<br />"Cover my hair?" a beginner once said to me when I taught in a girl's<br />seminary. "NO WAY! My hair is one of my best features . . . so I'm not<br />about to cover it up! Besides, my family will think I've really gone off<br />the deep end this time . . ."<br />
<br />I could only smile that knowing smile, for she was walking the path tread<br />by so many ba'alei teshuvah before her. After a few years of learning, and<br />a confirmed commitment to G-d and His holy Torah, she will begin to date<br />young men who will only marry someone who covers her hair, as she dreams<br />of building her own "Bayit Ne'eman B'Yisroel."<br />
<br />Granted, you put anything religious on the body before it is ready and it<br />will buck like a wild bronco. And, since Judaism places such a great<br />emphasis upon using one's free-will to decide to serve G-d, the body has<br />to buy into the sacrifice of physical freedom, which can only happen after<br />a process that includes Torah education and a refining of the spiritual<br />body itself.<br />
<br />In fact, you wouldn't believe how spiritual the body can become, based<br />upon how physical it became. And now, at this late stage of history, the<br />body has been taken to its lowest point of spiritual potential, as the<br />Western world goes to extremes to physically enhance it with all its<br />materialistic experiences. We have truly arrived at the end of history,<br />for how much more can Heaven put up with?<br />
<br />The question is, what is happening when a person does teshuvah, on any<br />level? For a secular Jew, it is about embracing the totality of Torah. For<br />an already religious Jew, it is about being committed to continuous growth<br />in the direction of G-d, which includes yearning for redemption and the<br />return to Eretz Yisroel. If a Jew is out of step with any Torah concept,<br />either in thought or in action, teshuvah is necessary to bring him back in<br />line with every aspect of Torah. What is teshuvah really about?<br />
<br />SEUDAT SHLISHIT:<br />
<br />Every concept, like a Holy Spark, is an aspect of the Divine Light, a hint<br />to the Ohr Ain Sof. Any misconception is the result of the lack of this<br />light, something that is most pronounced during times of Hester Panim,<br />when Divine Providence works behind the scenes and in seemingly mysterious<br />ways.<br />
<br />As the rabbis teach, the Torah is the blueprint of Creation, which means<br />that Creation must, by definition, exude all of Torah,. In other words,<br />every concept is there in the world all around us, and our being able to<br />see each one depends upon our body's ability to receive and retain that<br />light. If we are lacking some aspect of Torah understanding, it is<br />because, for some personal reason, our bodies are not capable of receiving<br />that particular aspect of the Ohr Ain Sof. Our "keilim," that is<br />our "vessels" are damaged in some respect, and teshuvah is about making<br />the necessary repairs.<br />
<br />For, even though service of G-d is not an all-or-nothing thing, it is,<br />nevertheless, limited by what is missing from the totality available to<br />man. This is why "dereck eretz" (good character traits) must come before<br />Torah, because it is pointless to pour Divine Light into a "kli" that<br />cannot retain it. On the contrary, it can be damaging, as the Talmud<br />warns: "Torah can be either an elixir for life or one for death" (Yoma<br />72a); it all depends upon the body's ability to receive the Torah's light.<br />
<br />Hence, teshuvah is about returning the body to its illustrious state<br />of "Kesones Ohr," when it was more like a soul rather than a body, prior<br />to the sin of Adam HaRishon. Indeed, the whole point of Techiyat HaMeitim<br />(Resurrection of the Dead) is to achieve precisely this. In that period of<br />time, the body that will return will resemble an angel more than a man,<br />and thus be ready to enter the next phase of history, after the year 6000.<br />
<br />However, in the meantime, that is what we are supposed to be trying to<br />achieve on whatever level it is possible, based upon our spiritual<br />advantages and disadvantages. And, the important thing to remember is that<br />whatever we don't do on our own time through learning and mitzvot, we do<br />in G-d's way and as He determines. Kabbistically, this is called "tziruf<br />v'libun," - "refinement and whitening," and as cleansing as the term<br />sounds, it refers to the suffering we undergo in life.<br />
<br />MELAVE MALKAH:<br />
<br />The descendants of Reuven and Gad had a lot of cattle, and saw that the<br />land of Ya'azer and Gilad was a good place for cattle. The descen-dants of<br />Gad and Reuven approached Moshe, Elazar the kohen, and the princes of the<br />congregation, and asked, "Atarot, Divon, Ya'azer, Nimrah, Cheshbon,<br />El'aleh, Sevam, Nevo, and Beon, in the land which G-d struck before the<br />Children of Israel is a land for cattle, and we have cattle. Therefore, if<br />it is good to you, allow us to take it. Do not require us to cross the<br />Jordan." (Bamidbar 31:1-5)<br />
<br />The upshot of this is that the request of Reuven, Gad, and the half tribe<br />of Menashe revealed the "damaged goods" that arrived with Moshe Rabbeinu<br />to the border of Eretz Yisroel. As the nation stood there at that<br />momentous occasion of history that was literally the threshold of the<br />Final Redemption, and the light of Eretz Yisroel emanated out in all<br />directions, it could not penetrate the keilim of these three tribes.<br />
<br />Therefore, they remained unmoved and uninspired to live in the land they<br />had been traveling to for forty years, if not longer if you also take into<br />account the dreams of the Forefathers. Instead, their bodies were then<br />more attuned to the frequency of materialism, though they were committed<br />to keep all the Torah they could on the east side of the Jordan river.<br />
<br />The light emanated out, and those unaffected by the episode of Bilaam, and<br />those that had at least done teshuvah and fixed their keilim, were able to<br />absorb it and become transformed by it. There was spiritual ecstasy, and<br />an even greater draw to enter the land and to settle it, even though<br />others had just the opposite reaction.<br />
<br />In fact, it is very interesting how different Jews react to Eretz Yisroel.<br />You have some who are religious and can't leave the land, and you have<br />some who are religious and can't tolerate it. As well, there are those who<br />are secular who love the land, while there are those who are secular who<br />have no connection to the land whatsoever. You have some who have lived<br />here all their lives but yearn to be elsewhere, and some who grew up in<br />Chutz L'Aretz (outside the land) but came to love the land only after<br />moving here.<br />
<br />What's the difference? Is it all only just a matter of upbringing?<br />
<br />Yes and no, for as much as we are genetically the products of our<br />ancestors, our physical bodies can still vary quite a bit from those who<br />came before us. On the other hand, each family has its own approach to<br />life, even if there is a major common denominator, such as Torah, guiding<br />all of us. Thus, the patterns that one family chooses to live by can be<br />very different from those of their neighbors and the rest of their<br />community.<br />
<br />This has an effect on the body, making it more receptive to some of the<br />aspects of G-d's light, and less receptive to others.<br />
<br />So, therefore, as we sit down to do our "Cheshbon HaNefesh,"<br />our "Accounting of the Soul," we should recall that it is really an<br />accounting of our bodies, a reality check of what we are prepared to<br />accept as truth, and what we reject without any basis. Knowing this allows<br />us to chart a course across our own "Jordan river," a course of teshuvah<br />that allows us to finally receive and benefit from the Ohr Ain Sof that<br />flows all around us.<br />
<br />CHAZAK!<br />
<br />Have a great Shabbos,<br />PW<br />
<br />-------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />Perceptions, Copyright ? 2006 by Rabbi Pinchas Winston and Torah.org.<br />Rabbi Winston has authored fourteen books on Jewish philosophy<br />(hashkofa).  If you enjoy Rabbi Winston's weekly Perceptions on the<br />Parsha, you may enjoy many of his books.  Visit the Torah.org bookstore -<br />Genesis Judaica - http://books.torah.org/authors/winston/ for more<br />details!  Or, send e-mail to winston@books.torah.org to receive additional<br />information.<br />
<br />Permission is granted to redistribute, but please give proper attribution<br />and copyright to the author and Torah.org. Both the author and Torah.org<br />reserve certain rights. Email copyrights@torah.org for full information.</div>
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<author>
<name>Gruven Reuven</name>
</author>
<issued>2006-07-14T14:15:00-04:00</issued>
<modified>2006-07-14T19:52:03Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-14T18:17:17Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Two other interesting items to note. On the day after Tisha B'Av (the 9th of Av fast day on the Jewish calendar), Israel started the retreat from Gush Katif. A day before the 17th of Tammuz (the fast day that starts the 3-week mouring period) in under a year, war starts. As Rabby Brody wrote, "the current breach of Israel's borders , including the unprecedented attacks on Haifa and Tzfat, has been the 17th of Tammuz, the exact same day when the city of Jerusalem was breached before the destruction of the Second Temple."</div>
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<author>
<name>Gruven Reuven</name>
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<issued>2006-07-14T12:34:00-04:00</issued>
<modified>2006-07-14T16:34:41Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-14T16:34:41Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Parshas Pinchus 5766<br />Rabbi Label Lam<br />Who Dares to Care<br />
<br />And it will be to him and his descendants after him an eternal covenant of<br />priesthood because he zealously took up G-d’s cause and made atonement for<br />Israel. (Bamidbar 25:13)<br />
<br />In one courageous moment Pinchus earned an eternal contract for himself<br />and his children. This was no incentive package. It was payment for a job<br />well done. Well, what had he done? How was he able to earn such great<br />credit from a single deed?<br />
<br />It’s admittedly a bad joke but it may help illustrate what the case of<br />Pinchus is not like. A schul Rabbi and an Israeli Egged bus driver are<br />called before the heavenly court upon the occasion of their having parted<br />this world. The bus driver’s life is made to appear upon the computer<br />screen. The interviewing agent hums and haws and evaluates. Afterward a<br />door is thrown open with a glowing light of love that embraces the driver<br />lovingly as he enters. Now the Rabbi confidently takes his place next<br />before the screen that shows his life in review. The angelic agent sadly<br />shakes his head and reveals the opening to another door. Streaks of<br />intensely hot fire jump forth to grab the poor fellow. The Rabbi shouts in<br />protest, “Why did that simple bus driver get preferential treatment. He<br />just drove a bus but I was a Schul Rabbi and the leader of a precious and<br />loyal flock!” He is given the following explanation, “Rabbi, you must<br />understand that when you gave your speeches- your sermons people became<br />extremely tired and fell asleep, but when that Egged bus driver started<br />driving his bus ooohhhh everyone began to pray!”<br />
<br />In this crazy account the funny point is that one is considered to have<br />achieved and is credited so due to secondary results he had no idea he had<br />inspired while another’s good and noble intentions and deeds are deeply<br />discounted. By the incident involving Pinchus the opposite forces may have<br />been be more at play.<br />
<br />The Mishne in Chapters of the Fathers makes the following amazing<br />claim, “All who exert themselves for the community should do so for the<br />sake of heaven, for then the ancestors will assist them, and their<br />righteousness will endure forever. And you, I will bestow upon you as<br />great a reward, as though you had done it”   What does this mean?<br />
<br />The Maharal explains that there is universe of difference when one<br />performs a deed for some local immediate concern or if one has in mind the<br />total and eternal mission of G-d and Israel. Just like the patriarchs were<br />the architects of the entire building and share in every detail of the<br />future accomplishments of their children throughout history so too any<br />later personality that has in his mind that even his small part should<br />have a positive affect upon the entirety of the edifice will be credited<br />as if he too had created the whole thing, even though he had only worked<br />on one part of a part of one floor and even though his part was hardly his<br />own doing.  Wow! Working for the community can have some incredible<br />benefits and dividends. One can borrow from the bank account of the<br />patriarchs and with the correct mind-set be credited with accomplishments<br />far beyond one’s individual means.<br />
<br />The verse reveals that Pinchus was granted unending generations of<br />Priesthood – holy public service, because his action was not a response of<br />anger, personal and passionate or of zealous rage. Rather he purely<br />intended to take up G-d’s cause and to achieve atonement for the Children<br />of Israel. Since he was focused, in that single deed, on defending the<br />honor of the Almighty and the welfare of the Nation of Israel, he was<br />rewarded with a gift of endless opportunity, available to those who dares<br />to care!<br />
<br />-------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />DvarTorah, Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Label Lam and Torah.org.<br />
<br />Permission is granted to redistribute, but please give proper attribution<br />and copyright to the author and Torah.org. Both the author and Torah.org<br />reserve certain rights. Email copyrights@torah.org for full information.</div>
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<issued>2006-07-06T08:22:00-04:00</issued>
<modified>2006-07-06T12:23:15Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-06T12:23:15Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">PARSHAS CHUKAS/BALAK - 12 TAMMUZ 5766<br />UNCOMMON COURTESY<br />by Rabbi Pinchas Avruch<br />
<br />"And G-d said to Balaam 'Do not go with them [the emissaries of Balak] and<br />do not curse [the nation of Israel] for it is blessed.' And Balaam arose in<br />the morning and said to the officers of Balak, 'Go to your land, for G-d<br />refuses to let me go with you.'" (Bamidbar/Numbers 22:12-13) Rashi, the<br />fundamental early medieval commentator, explains that "you" is the pivotal<br />word: G-d will not let me go with you, but he might let me go with a<br />delegation of higher rank (Balak got the hint and did, as the following<br />verses indicate, send a mission of greater officers). But, concludes Rashi,<br />we see that Balaam was haughty, for he did not disclose that G-d had<br />expressly forbidden him from cursing the Jewish people.<br />
<br />Rabbi Chaim Shmulevitz (1) notes that Balaam's statement was not deceptive.<br />Indeed, G-d gave him two distinct commands: not to accompany an unbefitting<br />delegation and not to curse the Jewish nation. How did Balaam know that G-d<br />was concerned for his honor?<br />
<br />Ohr HaChaim (2) explains that G-d's simple query as recorded by the Torah<br />("Who are these people?") is actually the opening of a longer, more<br />complicated question. The question was really "Who are these people that<br />you let them into your private inner chamber?" Once Balaam appreciated<br />that G-d was genuinely concerned for his honor, he understood the deeper<br />meaning of the Divine statement "Do not go with them": because it is<br />beneath you. Ohr HaChaim further notes that this component of the command<br />preceded the instruction not to curse them. Conveniently Balaam spared<br />himself the discomfort of revealing the second reason, but it was only<br />because he had the more compelling first one: G-d was concerned for his<br />honor.<br />
<br />Similarly, the Talmud relates that G-d killed Balaam's donkey to spare the<br />owner embarrassment. Had the donkey lived, every time it went to the<br />marketplace the masses would comment, "That is the donkey that chastised<br />Balaam". Rabbi Shmulevitz contemplates the incredible sanctification of the<br />Divine Name that would have come from that phenomenon. Everywhere that<br />donkey would travel people would be reminded of the Divine mandate of all<br />mankind to follow G-d's will, as well as the moment-by-moment Providence<br />given to the welfare of the Jewish people. Nevertheless, the gain did not<br />justify the ongoing shame and humiliation of Balaam.<br />
<br />Most noteworthy is the appreciation of for whom G-d did all this, Balaam.<br />At his essence, Balaam was evil. True he may have possessed such a profound<br />awareness and comprehension of G-d that he merited prophecy, but G-d<br />granted prophecy to one so evil only to pre-empt the claim of the Nations<br />of the World: Had G-d given us a prophet then we would have followed His<br />will (G-d did and the nations still did not). After G-d told him that he<br />could not curse the Jewish nation, he accepted the invitation of Balak's<br />second delegation to curse them. And while G-d did not allow him to curse<br />them and forced Balaam to utter blessings, three times Balaam expended a<br />genuine effort to fulfill Balak's charge. Nevertheless, so great and<br />valuable is the honor of our fellow human, concludes Rabbi Shmulevitz,<br />that G-d went so far and "gave up" so much to preserve the honor of<br />someone so evil.<br />
<br />And how will we react the next time someone pushes their shopping cart<br />ahead of ours at the market? Or the next time our child neglects to put<br />his dishes in the dishwasher after dinner?<br />
<br />Have a Good Shabbos!<br />
<br />(1) famed Dean of the Mir Yeshiva, who brought the Yeshiva intact to<br />Shanghai in the early days of World War II, and after the War transplanted<br />the institution in Jerusalem<br />(2) Biblical commentary of eighteenth century scholar and Kabbalist Rabbi<br />Chaim ben Atar<br />
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