Why We Need Israel (and Zionism)
My Yom Kippur morning sermon about why American Jews need to reexamine the meaning of Zionism and Israel. He argues that we need Israel as much as Israel needs us.
Several years ago, Yotam was working on a Greek island when Syrian refugees were struggling to escape from Assad’s murderous regime. When a boat capsized near the shore and a young child was unable to swim, Yotam rushed into the ocean to carry her to shore. Her father was able to swim and was greeted on the beach by other Israelis who welcomed him with blankets and fluent Arabic. The little girl was reunited with her father and when he realized that his daughter’s rescuer as well as everyone else who lined that beach were Israeli, he said, “My own people and the people who are supposed to protect me are chasing me away while my worst enemy has become my greatest friend.”
This summer I met Yotam. I was in Israel attending the Shalom Hartman Institute’s rabbinic convention. It had been three years since my last visit. I did not realize how much I missed being there and the inspiration I would find there among Israelis. I wish to explore what I rediscovered there. I wish to ponder why we need to revisit the meaning of Israel in our own day and why we need to reassess the import of Zionism for our own age. Jewish leaders spend considerable effort talking about why Israel needs us. Let’s instead take a step back. Let us reexamine why we need Israel. First some background.
Zionism, and the nationalisms to which it is related, have become dirty words...
This summer I met Yotam. I was in Israel attending the Shalom Hartman Institute’s rabbinic convention. It had been three years since my last visit. I did not realize how much I missed being there and the inspiration I would find there among Israelis. I wish to explore what I rediscovered there. I wish to ponder why we need to revisit the meaning of Israel in our own day and why we need to reassess the import of Zionism for our own age. Jewish leaders spend considerable effort talking about why Israel needs us. Let’s instead take a step back. Let us reexamine why we need Israel. First some background.
Zionism, and the nationalisms to which it is related, have become dirty words...
Piles of Memories, Piles of Stones
My Yizkor memorial service meditation about the meaning of bringing stones when visiting graves and the new ritual we created from an ancient custom.
When visiting the graves of loved ones, we leave a stone. This tradition dates back to biblical times when grave markers were piles of stones. Most Jews do not observe the custom of bringing flowers. These wither and can rarely withstand nature’s surprising, and oftentimes unpredictable, temperament. Stones offer permanence. Although they are smoothed by the weather’s steady drumbeat, they remain unmoved. In addition, rocks remind us of one of the tradition’s many names for God: Tzur Yisrael—Rock of Israel. God stands against life’s precariousness. God stands above life’s vicissitudes.
Leaving a stone is a beautiful custom. It can be as small as a pebble or as large as the palm of a hand. We walk to the footstone and bend over, placing the stone on its corner, or we approach the headstone, often reaching over the bushes and then find a comfortable resting place for the pebble or rock. And there they sit for months and perhaps even years, unmoved by wind and rains, unmoved by how often we visit or if we only choose to light a candle in the quiet of our homes. There they sit reminding others who might visit of our remembrances. Over the years, the piles accumulate into memories.
I have often encouraged families to invite young children to write thoughts or wishes on these stones with permanent markers. And then, even after many months one can still decipher the scrawl of “I love you grandpa. Or I miss your matzah balls, grandma.” I also urge people to collect stones on their travels. And while our biblical ancestors never piled seashells atop a grave marker, we can. When you pick up a perfectly smoothed stone at the beach and bring it to the cemetery you connect your loved one to your travels. Often when returning from a trip you want to call and share your adventures with the mother or father, sister or brother with whom you talked about everything. Or when enjoying a peaceful stroll on the beach you find yourself dreaming about the time you walked there with your spouse.
In that moment, reach down and find a stone. Save it. Hold on to it. Add it to the piles of stones accumulating on the grave. Add it to the memories piling up within your soul.
The strange thing about mourning is that years later you can be in the most mundane of places like walking along any beach, shopping in the supermarket or even driving in the car, thinking that you have no more tears left, but then you hear the music of the Beatles or see a box of kasha or are awed by the sight of the waves lapping on the shore, and you find yourself overwhelmed by a flood of tears. This was her most cherished song! This was his favorite dish! This was their beloved place! The memories accumulate like an endless stream of pebbles churning at the edge of the seashore.
Find a stone. Let memories accumulate into piles.
This year, we are adding a new ritual to our Yizkor service. In a moment, I will invite you to form a line in the sanctuary’s center aisle and place a stone or stones, if you prefer, on the table in front of the bima. Take a quiet moment when placing this stone. Listen to the music and be alone with your thoughts and memories.
Let our memories then accumulate into piles. And let this be our Yom Kippur prayer. May our shared remembrances give us strength and comfort.
When visiting the graves of loved ones, we leave a stone. This tradition dates back to biblical times when grave markers were piles of stones. Most Jews do not observe the custom of bringing flowers. These wither and can rarely withstand nature’s surprising, and oftentimes unpredictable, temperament. Stones offer permanence. Although they are smoothed by the weather’s steady drumbeat, they remain unmoved. In addition, rocks remind us of one of the tradition’s many names for God: Tzur Yisrael—Rock of Israel. God stands against life’s precariousness. God stands above life’s vicissitudes.
Leaving a stone is a beautiful custom. It can be as small as a pebble or as large as the palm of a hand. We walk to the footstone and bend over, placing the stone on its corner, or we approach the headstone, often reaching over the bushes and then find a comfortable resting place for the pebble or rock. And there they sit for months and perhaps even years, unmoved by wind and rains, unmoved by how often we visit or if we only choose to light a candle in the quiet of our homes. There they sit reminding others who might visit of our remembrances. Over the years, the piles accumulate into memories.
I have often encouraged families to invite young children to write thoughts or wishes on these stones with permanent markers. And then, even after many months one can still decipher the scrawl of “I love you grandpa. Or I miss your matzah balls, grandma.” I also urge people to collect stones on their travels. And while our biblical ancestors never piled seashells atop a grave marker, we can. When you pick up a perfectly smoothed stone at the beach and bring it to the cemetery you connect your loved one to your travels. Often when returning from a trip you want to call and share your adventures with the mother or father, sister or brother with whom you talked about everything. Or when enjoying a peaceful stroll on the beach you find yourself dreaming about the time you walked there with your spouse.
In that moment, reach down and find a stone. Save it. Hold on to it. Add it to the piles of stones accumulating on the grave. Add it to the memories piling up within your soul.
The strange thing about mourning is that years later you can be in the most mundane of places like walking along any beach, shopping in the supermarket or even driving in the car, thinking that you have no more tears left, but then you hear the music of the Beatles or see a box of kasha or are awed by the sight of the waves lapping on the shore, and you find yourself overwhelmed by a flood of tears. This was her most cherished song! This was his favorite dish! This was their beloved place! The memories accumulate like an endless stream of pebbles churning at the edge of the seashore.
Find a stone. Let memories accumulate into piles.
This year, we are adding a new ritual to our Yizkor service. In a moment, I will invite you to form a line in the sanctuary’s center aisle and place a stone or stones, if you prefer, on the table in front of the bima. Take a quiet moment when placing this stone. Listen to the music and be alone with your thoughts and memories.
Let our memories then accumulate into piles. And let this be our Yom Kippur prayer. May our shared remembrances give us strength and comfort.
Give Some More Peace
My Yom Kippur evening sermon about about the importance of making peace with those closest to us. Pursuing peace is not so much about nations but instead about us.
John Lennon sings, “All we are saying is give peace a chance.” I prefer Elvis Costello’s “What’s so funny ‘bout peace, love and understanding.” And every Shabbat we pray, “Shalom rav—grant abundant peace” and “Oseh Shalom—may the One who creates peace on high, bring peace to us.” The examples are endless. Peace is the stuff of countless songs. Shalom is one of our prayerbook’s favorite words. Peace is elusive. It often appears distant. Our longing for it persists. And so, peace constitutes are most fervent, and frequent, prayers. And it obviously makes for some of our best songs.
Back to Costello. “As I walk through this wicked world/ Searchin' for light in the darkness of insanity/ I ask myself, is all hope lost?/ Is there only pain and hatred, and misery?/ And each time I feel like this inside/ There's one thing I wanna know/ What's so funny 'bout peace, love and understanding?” Aside from the discovery that your rabbi’s musical tastes are stuck in the early 80’s (“Same as it ever was”), why is it that every generation who has ever lived pines after peace but never fully experiences it? Why is peace so fleeting? Why is shalom so seemingly unattainable?
All around us are examples of its absence. Every day we are barraged by news of violence and war. Take the war in Ukraine as but one example. Let us pause and take note. Praise is due to the Ukrainians for fighting for democracy and against the tyranny of Russia. Who would have expected that a Jewish comedian named Volodymyr Zelensky would have rallied his citizens as well as much of the world against Vladimir Putin’s onslaught. He is deserving of unending praise. Accolades are also due to President Biden and our own country for helping to lead the world in its support of Ukraine’s noble fight. There is no question who is right and who is wrong. Ukraine is on the side of right. And Russia wrong.
There should be little doubt whose victory we should be praying for and who our nation must continue to support. Leon Wieseltier offers these words: “The most consequential event of our time, I pray, will be the heroism of the Ukrainians. Here are men and women fighting and dying for liberal democracy. It was beginning to seem as if such a thing were no longer possible. Worse, no longer desirable.” The Ukrainians are fighting for everything we believe in. They are fighting against those who disparage the freedoms we cherish and the democracy to which we must continually aspire. Praise to Zelensky who seems to know better the true meaning of courage and the real meaning of democracy and that most of all, such ideals are worth defending and fighting for. I pray that President Biden finds the strength to do even more in support of Ukraine.
Do I pray for peace for Ukraine? Yes. Do I also pray not just for the cessation of this war and the realization of the Ukrainian people’s aspiration to become a full-fledged democracy? Also, yes. You can be a peacenik and support a just war and such a righteous struggle. Our tradition is not absolutist. Sometimes our ideals prevent us from making peace or even delay us in negotiating peace deals. I continue to wonder. Is this what stops us from realizing our millennial hope of shalom?
The Israeli poet, Yehudah Amichai writes: “Not the peace of a cease-fire,/ not even the vision of the wolf and the lamb,/ but rather/ as in the heart when the excitement is over/ and you can talk only about a great weariness….Let [peace] come/ like wildflowers,/ suddenly, because the field/ must have it: wildpeace.” I have often found comfort in this poem. It placates my fervent hope, and prayers, for peace while also upholding the devastating necessity of waging war in defense of our ideals or taking up arms to better guarantee our security. Amichai, like most Israelis of his generation, fought in far too many wars. In addition to fighting alongside the British against the Nazis, he fought in Israel’s War of Independence and the Yom Kippur War. Many of his poems struggle with the terrible costs of war. He writes: “God has pity on kindergarten children,/ He pities school children — less./ But adults he pities not at all./ He abandons them,/ And sometimes they have to crawl on all fours/ In the scorching sand/ To reach the first aid station,/ Streaming with blood.”
How can you not read this poem and not scream with passion, “Oseh shalom!” The prayer’s words are as if to say, “Oh God, You make peace in the heavens, please make peace for us down here.” Right now! Or to paraphrase Amichai, “Let peace sprout from the ground and grow naturally.” I understand the prayer. I hear the poet’s lament. In fact, Amichai read “God has pity on kindergarten children” after the signing of the Oslo Accords when peace between Israelis and Palestinians briefly appeared nearer. Peace remains so very distant. Perhaps even more so for the soldier who bleeds for his or her nation.
The prophets take up the cause. Isaiah writes in the eighth century BCE: “Lo yisa goi el goi cherev, v’lo yilm’du od milchamah. Nation shall not take up sword against nation; they shall never again know war.” (Isaiah 2) The prophet also experienced war and hoped for its eradication. It is unfortunate that his words are often translated as “never again know war.” The Hebrew is clear. Isaiah hopes that we will never even have the need to learn about war. His vision is grander than most translations suggest. We will have little need for an army. We will never even have to teach people how to use weapons or even instruct them in how to defend themselves. It is a messianic dream that war colleges will be dismantled and that the tools of war will be refashioned into everyday items like farming utensils.
It is of course a distant dream. This peace thing is far, far off. It remains the stuff of prayers and songs. That is what makes it a really good prayer and why shalom appears so many times in our prayerbook. Prayer is not meant, however, as a cure all. It does not magically create peace. It points us toward a better tomorrow. Perhaps it inspires us to action. Perhaps it goads us to do more. Then again, we are not diplomats who can broker peace treaties. We are left to pray for our nation and world and leave the peace-making to professionals. But why can’t we be peacemakers as well? Why is peace only for the Shimon Peres’s and Anwar Sadat’s of the world? Why is it not about each and every one of us?
Perhaps the problem is that we think peace only has to do with nations. Our tradition offers insights. Our rabbis offer us practical advice. They teach. Maybe we can’t heal the world, so let’s make peace in our families, let’s heal our friendships, let’s heal ourselves. Let’s make peace where we can actually and readily make peace. It’s the same insight that drives the rabbis to insist we should only pray for rain in the rainy season. We do not pray for rain during the land of Israel’s dry summer months but in the winter when we expect nature to provide it. Look again to our prayers. Oseh Shalom and Shalom Rav say nothing about war. It is just that when we hear the word peace, we think about it only in reference to its opposite. Maybe that’s the problem. Our prayers may be meant to turn us inward and focus energies on ourselves rather than toward nations and toward things about which we have little control. Our prayers are meant to inspire us to act on our own souls.
The word shalom comes from the root meaning complete or whole. In the Torah one of the sacrifices is called “zevach shelamim.” (Leviticus 3) This is often translated as a peace offering but it would be better to understand it as sacrifice of well-being. Shalom can mean wholeness, happiness or even health. The root implies “to repay or make good.” In fact, one of the hallmarks of this sacrifice is that it was shared with others. Unlike other sacrifices portions of the zevach shelamim were given to friends and guests. A portion was offered on the altar, another portion was given to the priest and the remainder was shared with friends and family. Zevach shelamim is shared. We make good on our obligation to others. The meaning of shalom can then be understood as to share with others, to bring others into your circle, to make good on our commitment to the world at large by beginning with the world nearby.
That is one of the main goals of our Torah. It is about inculcating a sense that we are in fact our brother’s keepers, that we have a shared responsibility for our neighbors and friends. The Torah begins with this message. Don’t behave like Cain who when God asked, “Where is your brother Abel?” thought it legitimate to say, “I do not know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” (Genesis 4)
We have likewise lost our sense of responsibility to others. We have lost our devotion to the meaning of the public square that is defined by sharing and where we care for one another. Instead of asking ourselves, “How might my actions impact others?” we too often say, “What can I gain? How can I profit? How will this enable me to get ahead?” We spend our days on the internet, searching for like-minded opinions and new toys to purchase. Lewis Hyde writes, “The desire to consume is a kind of lust. But consumer goods merely bait this lust, they do not satisfy it. The consumer of commodities is invited to a meal without passion, a consumption that leads to neither satiation nor fire.” The fire of a meal is only found when it is shared. Recall, the sacrifice is about doing for others. We construct fence after fence around our homes and our lives where everything is deemed private, and nothing is shared. Doing for others is the essence of making peace. Caring for friends is what peacemaking is truly about. Opening our hearts to others—to their concerns and their pains—is the essence of shalom.
People often think that the central message of Yom Kippur is about drawing close to God. We attend synagogue for the better part of this day. We fast and beseech God to forgive us. And yet there is this sense that before we can even approach God, we must draw close to the people in our lives. Beginning on the first day of the month preceding this month of Tishrei we are to turn to our friends and family members, acknowledge our mistakes and ask their forgiveness. The tradition says in effect, “Don’t even bother asking God for forgiveness if you have not asked others to forgive you.” You cannot get close to God if you refuse to get close to other people. That is the central message of these High Holidays.
Even though this day of Yom Kippur is widely observed, Sukkot is probably the more emblematic Jewish holiday. On Sukkot, which begins in four days, we are supposed to spend a week in our sukkahs and invite as many guests as possible to share meals with us. On Shabbat evening we pray that God might protect us with a sukkat shalom—a sukkah of peace, but in reality we are supposed to create that very sukkah here and now. It is defined not by its flimsy walls but instead by the embrace of friends, the joy and song that accompanies sharing a meal with those you love. You make peace by sharing. You want more peace, then spend more time with others.
Sure, it can sometimes be really, really challenging, especially if you find out you disagree with them or heaven forbid, sit on the other side of the political divide from them. But when is being with other people ever been easy or effortless? We spend so much time on social media reinforcing our strongly held beliefs and tightly felt notions that we forget there are lots of people who don’t think the way we do or believe what we do. How many of us still have friends who voted for candidates whose political affiliations are not our own? I know it’s hard and sometimes uncomfortable, but who said friendship is all about comfort and agreement?
This is why the rabbis teach: “Be of the disciples of Aaron, loving peace and pursuing peace?” (Avot 1). Peace is not about nodding your head in agreement. It is not about convincing your friends of the rightness of your opinions. Shalom is instead about the embrace. It is a pursuit. Making peace is not about nations. The rabbis were thinking about us and our friends. Be prepared to run after it.
Pick up the phone and reach out to a friend who you have not spoken to in a while. (And please, speak to them. Don’t text them.) Repair the mistakes you made. Forgive the wrongs done to you. Say, “I’m sorry,” more often than you think is necessary or even required. Forgive more often than you think is deserved. That is what pursuing means. Discard the notion that compromise is a dirty word. It is not. It is the single most important act we perform to sustain relationships.
Do you know why the rabbis hold up Aaron as the model of a peacemaker? It is because he was even willing to build a Golden Calf to keep the peace. I know it is a seemingly outrageous, and even sinful, example. And yet they still hold him up as a model for us all. It is as if to say, “Be prepared to go to extraordinary, and even surprising, and yes, even radical, ends to make peace.” Why? Because friendships are worth it. Because being with other people demands it.
Asking God for forgiveness is easy compared to saying “I’m sorry” to another person. God is all forgiving, but people, well they hold grudges. They sometimes even withhold forgiveness. I admit. There are times when the compromise required to sustain a relationship means sacrificing too much of yourself and who you truly are. It is true that not all friendships are worth repairing, but I would venture this guess: more are worth preserving than you probably think. Ask yourself these simple questions. “Can I count on them? Can they count on you?” If the answers to both of those questions are “Yes” then fashion yourself into a peacemaker and start making peace with those closest and nearest to you. Pursue peace. This will make you more whole and more complete than you might imagine. This will bring you more shalom than you ever thought possible and maybe even one day, as our prophets dreamed, to the world at large.
Peace is about what we do for others. It is not for prayers alone. It is really found in how we care for those nearby, for those sitting closest to us, for those who inhabit what we erroneously call our small, private worlds. There is nothing small about our worlds. There is nothing private about our lives.
Become a peacemaker. Bring shalom into your life, into the lives of others and into our world. That peace is within your reach and within your grasp. Shalom is not so much the stuff of our prayers. It is not even about messianic dreams. Peace is instead the work of our hearts and our hands. Shalom is the pursuit we are supposed to do day in and day out.
May you be the one who makes peace if not on high, then for each and every one of us.
Back to Costello. “As I walk through this wicked world/ Searchin' for light in the darkness of insanity/ I ask myself, is all hope lost?/ Is there only pain and hatred, and misery?/ And each time I feel like this inside/ There's one thing I wanna know/ What's so funny 'bout peace, love and understanding?” Aside from the discovery that your rabbi’s musical tastes are stuck in the early 80’s (“Same as it ever was”), why is it that every generation who has ever lived pines after peace but never fully experiences it? Why is peace so fleeting? Why is shalom so seemingly unattainable?
All around us are examples of its absence. Every day we are barraged by news of violence and war. Take the war in Ukraine as but one example. Let us pause and take note. Praise is due to the Ukrainians for fighting for democracy and against the tyranny of Russia. Who would have expected that a Jewish comedian named Volodymyr Zelensky would have rallied his citizens as well as much of the world against Vladimir Putin’s onslaught. He is deserving of unending praise. Accolades are also due to President Biden and our own country for helping to lead the world in its support of Ukraine’s noble fight. There is no question who is right and who is wrong. Ukraine is on the side of right. And Russia wrong.
There should be little doubt whose victory we should be praying for and who our nation must continue to support. Leon Wieseltier offers these words: “The most consequential event of our time, I pray, will be the heroism of the Ukrainians. Here are men and women fighting and dying for liberal democracy. It was beginning to seem as if such a thing were no longer possible. Worse, no longer desirable.” The Ukrainians are fighting for everything we believe in. They are fighting against those who disparage the freedoms we cherish and the democracy to which we must continually aspire. Praise to Zelensky who seems to know better the true meaning of courage and the real meaning of democracy and that most of all, such ideals are worth defending and fighting for. I pray that President Biden finds the strength to do even more in support of Ukraine.
Do I pray for peace for Ukraine? Yes. Do I also pray not just for the cessation of this war and the realization of the Ukrainian people’s aspiration to become a full-fledged democracy? Also, yes. You can be a peacenik and support a just war and such a righteous struggle. Our tradition is not absolutist. Sometimes our ideals prevent us from making peace or even delay us in negotiating peace deals. I continue to wonder. Is this what stops us from realizing our millennial hope of shalom?
The Israeli poet, Yehudah Amichai writes: “Not the peace of a cease-fire,/ not even the vision of the wolf and the lamb,/ but rather/ as in the heart when the excitement is over/ and you can talk only about a great weariness….Let [peace] come/ like wildflowers,/ suddenly, because the field/ must have it: wildpeace.” I have often found comfort in this poem. It placates my fervent hope, and prayers, for peace while also upholding the devastating necessity of waging war in defense of our ideals or taking up arms to better guarantee our security. Amichai, like most Israelis of his generation, fought in far too many wars. In addition to fighting alongside the British against the Nazis, he fought in Israel’s War of Independence and the Yom Kippur War. Many of his poems struggle with the terrible costs of war. He writes: “God has pity on kindergarten children,/ He pities school children — less./ But adults he pities not at all./ He abandons them,/ And sometimes they have to crawl on all fours/ In the scorching sand/ To reach the first aid station,/ Streaming with blood.”
How can you not read this poem and not scream with passion, “Oseh shalom!” The prayer’s words are as if to say, “Oh God, You make peace in the heavens, please make peace for us down here.” Right now! Or to paraphrase Amichai, “Let peace sprout from the ground and grow naturally.” I understand the prayer. I hear the poet’s lament. In fact, Amichai read “God has pity on kindergarten children” after the signing of the Oslo Accords when peace between Israelis and Palestinians briefly appeared nearer. Peace remains so very distant. Perhaps even more so for the soldier who bleeds for his or her nation.
The prophets take up the cause. Isaiah writes in the eighth century BCE: “Lo yisa goi el goi cherev, v’lo yilm’du od milchamah. Nation shall not take up sword against nation; they shall never again know war.” (Isaiah 2) The prophet also experienced war and hoped for its eradication. It is unfortunate that his words are often translated as “never again know war.” The Hebrew is clear. Isaiah hopes that we will never even have the need to learn about war. His vision is grander than most translations suggest. We will have little need for an army. We will never even have to teach people how to use weapons or even instruct them in how to defend themselves. It is a messianic dream that war colleges will be dismantled and that the tools of war will be refashioned into everyday items like farming utensils.
It is of course a distant dream. This peace thing is far, far off. It remains the stuff of prayers and songs. That is what makes it a really good prayer and why shalom appears so many times in our prayerbook. Prayer is not meant, however, as a cure all. It does not magically create peace. It points us toward a better tomorrow. Perhaps it inspires us to action. Perhaps it goads us to do more. Then again, we are not diplomats who can broker peace treaties. We are left to pray for our nation and world and leave the peace-making to professionals. But why can’t we be peacemakers as well? Why is peace only for the Shimon Peres’s and Anwar Sadat’s of the world? Why is it not about each and every one of us?
Perhaps the problem is that we think peace only has to do with nations. Our tradition offers insights. Our rabbis offer us practical advice. They teach. Maybe we can’t heal the world, so let’s make peace in our families, let’s heal our friendships, let’s heal ourselves. Let’s make peace where we can actually and readily make peace. It’s the same insight that drives the rabbis to insist we should only pray for rain in the rainy season. We do not pray for rain during the land of Israel’s dry summer months but in the winter when we expect nature to provide it. Look again to our prayers. Oseh Shalom and Shalom Rav say nothing about war. It is just that when we hear the word peace, we think about it only in reference to its opposite. Maybe that’s the problem. Our prayers may be meant to turn us inward and focus energies on ourselves rather than toward nations and toward things about which we have little control. Our prayers are meant to inspire us to act on our own souls.
The word shalom comes from the root meaning complete or whole. In the Torah one of the sacrifices is called “zevach shelamim.” (Leviticus 3) This is often translated as a peace offering but it would be better to understand it as sacrifice of well-being. Shalom can mean wholeness, happiness or even health. The root implies “to repay or make good.” In fact, one of the hallmarks of this sacrifice is that it was shared with others. Unlike other sacrifices portions of the zevach shelamim were given to friends and guests. A portion was offered on the altar, another portion was given to the priest and the remainder was shared with friends and family. Zevach shelamim is shared. We make good on our obligation to others. The meaning of shalom can then be understood as to share with others, to bring others into your circle, to make good on our commitment to the world at large by beginning with the world nearby.
That is one of the main goals of our Torah. It is about inculcating a sense that we are in fact our brother’s keepers, that we have a shared responsibility for our neighbors and friends. The Torah begins with this message. Don’t behave like Cain who when God asked, “Where is your brother Abel?” thought it legitimate to say, “I do not know. Am I my brother’s keeper?” (Genesis 4)
We have likewise lost our sense of responsibility to others. We have lost our devotion to the meaning of the public square that is defined by sharing and where we care for one another. Instead of asking ourselves, “How might my actions impact others?” we too often say, “What can I gain? How can I profit? How will this enable me to get ahead?” We spend our days on the internet, searching for like-minded opinions and new toys to purchase. Lewis Hyde writes, “The desire to consume is a kind of lust. But consumer goods merely bait this lust, they do not satisfy it. The consumer of commodities is invited to a meal without passion, a consumption that leads to neither satiation nor fire.” The fire of a meal is only found when it is shared. Recall, the sacrifice is about doing for others. We construct fence after fence around our homes and our lives where everything is deemed private, and nothing is shared. Doing for others is the essence of making peace. Caring for friends is what peacemaking is truly about. Opening our hearts to others—to their concerns and their pains—is the essence of shalom.
People often think that the central message of Yom Kippur is about drawing close to God. We attend synagogue for the better part of this day. We fast and beseech God to forgive us. And yet there is this sense that before we can even approach God, we must draw close to the people in our lives. Beginning on the first day of the month preceding this month of Tishrei we are to turn to our friends and family members, acknowledge our mistakes and ask their forgiveness. The tradition says in effect, “Don’t even bother asking God for forgiveness if you have not asked others to forgive you.” You cannot get close to God if you refuse to get close to other people. That is the central message of these High Holidays.
Even though this day of Yom Kippur is widely observed, Sukkot is probably the more emblematic Jewish holiday. On Sukkot, which begins in four days, we are supposed to spend a week in our sukkahs and invite as many guests as possible to share meals with us. On Shabbat evening we pray that God might protect us with a sukkat shalom—a sukkah of peace, but in reality we are supposed to create that very sukkah here and now. It is defined not by its flimsy walls but instead by the embrace of friends, the joy and song that accompanies sharing a meal with those you love. You make peace by sharing. You want more peace, then spend more time with others.
Sure, it can sometimes be really, really challenging, especially if you find out you disagree with them or heaven forbid, sit on the other side of the political divide from them. But when is being with other people ever been easy or effortless? We spend so much time on social media reinforcing our strongly held beliefs and tightly felt notions that we forget there are lots of people who don’t think the way we do or believe what we do. How many of us still have friends who voted for candidates whose political affiliations are not our own? I know it’s hard and sometimes uncomfortable, but who said friendship is all about comfort and agreement?
This is why the rabbis teach: “Be of the disciples of Aaron, loving peace and pursuing peace?” (Avot 1). Peace is not about nodding your head in agreement. It is not about convincing your friends of the rightness of your opinions. Shalom is instead about the embrace. It is a pursuit. Making peace is not about nations. The rabbis were thinking about us and our friends. Be prepared to run after it.
Pick up the phone and reach out to a friend who you have not spoken to in a while. (And please, speak to them. Don’t text them.) Repair the mistakes you made. Forgive the wrongs done to you. Say, “I’m sorry,” more often than you think is necessary or even required. Forgive more often than you think is deserved. That is what pursuing means. Discard the notion that compromise is a dirty word. It is not. It is the single most important act we perform to sustain relationships.
Do you know why the rabbis hold up Aaron as the model of a peacemaker? It is because he was even willing to build a Golden Calf to keep the peace. I know it is a seemingly outrageous, and even sinful, example. And yet they still hold him up as a model for us all. It is as if to say, “Be prepared to go to extraordinary, and even surprising, and yes, even radical, ends to make peace.” Why? Because friendships are worth it. Because being with other people demands it.
Asking God for forgiveness is easy compared to saying “I’m sorry” to another person. God is all forgiving, but people, well they hold grudges. They sometimes even withhold forgiveness. I admit. There are times when the compromise required to sustain a relationship means sacrificing too much of yourself and who you truly are. It is true that not all friendships are worth repairing, but I would venture this guess: more are worth preserving than you probably think. Ask yourself these simple questions. “Can I count on them? Can they count on you?” If the answers to both of those questions are “Yes” then fashion yourself into a peacemaker and start making peace with those closest and nearest to you. Pursue peace. This will make you more whole and more complete than you might imagine. This will bring you more shalom than you ever thought possible and maybe even one day, as our prophets dreamed, to the world at large.
Peace is about what we do for others. It is not for prayers alone. It is really found in how we care for those nearby, for those sitting closest to us, for those who inhabit what we erroneously call our small, private worlds. There is nothing small about our worlds. There is nothing private about our lives.
Become a peacemaker. Bring shalom into your life, into the lives of others and into our world. That peace is within your reach and within your grasp. Shalom is not so much the stuff of our prayers. It is not even about messianic dreams. Peace is instead the work of our hearts and our hands. Shalom is the pursuit we are supposed to do day in and day out.
May you be the one who makes peace if not on high, then for each and every one of us.
Letting Go of Certainty
The Israeli poet, Yehuda Amichai, writes:
The only way we can grow, and learn, is to let go of certainty. We must open ourselves to others and their opinions. We must invite the possibility that we could be mistaken.
Certitudes, and the stubbornness they foster, lead us away from change.
Our tradition believes we can turn. It believes we can always do better. We can admit mistakes. We can make amends.
This is the path laid before us on the High Holidays. It is plowed by opening ourselves to doubt. It is heralded by making room for love.
Every year we are summoned to build our lives anew. We are called to rebuild what is ruined. We are roused to repair what is broken.
It begins by letting go.
Cast stubbornness aside. Banish certainty if but for a moment.
From the place where we are rightAs we approach Yom Kippur I am leaning into the poet’s words.
flowers will never grow
in the spring.
The place where we are right
is hard and trampled
like a yard.
But doubts and loves
dig up the world
like a mole, a plow.
And a whisper will be heard in the place
where the ruined
house once stood.
The only way we can grow, and learn, is to let go of certainty. We must open ourselves to others and their opinions. We must invite the possibility that we could be mistaken.
Certitudes, and the stubbornness they foster, lead us away from change.
Our tradition believes we can turn. It believes we can always do better. We can admit mistakes. We can make amends.
This is the path laid before us on the High Holidays. It is plowed by opening ourselves to doubt. It is heralded by making room for love.
Every year we are summoned to build our lives anew. We are called to rebuild what is ruined. We are roused to repair what is broken.
It begins by letting go.
Cast stubbornness aside. Banish certainty if but for a moment.
Allow a whisper of repair to enter.
Let us open ourselves to doubt. Let us take in the blossoming of love.
Let us open ourselves to doubt. Let us take in the blossoming of love.
It's All About the Kippah and Concession Speech
My Rosh Hashanah Morning sermon about how custom, rather than law, are integral to our families, community and country.
An Upper West Side synagogue recently announced that it will no longer serve lox. Can you imagine? A shanda! Its leaders argue that they wish to help reduce pollution and the environmental impact of overfishing. And while salmon farming is indeed environmentally damaging and provides eighty percent of the salmon we eat on a far too regular basis, can you envision break-fast without bagels, cream cheese and lox? The rabbis added this note to their announcement about the elimination of lox from the synagogue menu: “We know that for some this is a heretical move! We are here to support you as you process this change.” Such changes make us feel as if we are mourning the loss of something precious. Messing with we have come to know as traditional foods can be tantamount to heresy.
Our holidays seem to turn on food. And lox is right up there with the other High Holiday staples like round hallahs and apples and honey. The funny thing is that we have only been eating lox in recent years—at least if you measure time in the thousands of years that amount to Jewish history. My Nana never ate lox in the shtetl in which she was born and from which she fled. If she ate any fish, it was the less expensive carp that was ground up into gefilte fish. Claudia Roden, author of The Book of Jewish Food, writes there is no evidence that Jews ate lox in Eastern Europe. Apparently, it is an American Jewish creation and dates back about hundred years when salmon from the Pacific Northwest became available in New York thanks to the railroads. Most of the immigrant families from whom we are descended and who lived in the 1920’s and 30’s could not afford a refrigerator and so cured fish was the perfect solution. And herein is how our beloved custom was born.
The origins of customs are often mysterious. Their power, and hold, over our lives remain profound. Families are defined by them. Communities are sustained by them. Countries are upheld by them. Customs are distinct from laws. Yet they often tug at our hearts in even more telling and significant ways. This morning I wish to explore customs and their importance to us: to our community, to our families and to our country.
Let’s begin with some familiar examples: the kippah and tallis. I have often found it curious that people feel more strongly attached to the kippah or yarmulke. Its origins date back to the Talmud whereas the tallis is a mitzvah, and commandment, and found in the Torah. The tallis is law. The kippah is custom. Originally the kippah signified an extra measure of piety and was optional. It gained wider acceptance in medieval times. And now many people feel it is required. There is something about the kippah that suggests its power transcends any commandment or law. There have been many shiva minyans when I gather the group together to begin the service and people start asking me if I have kippahs. While I do have kippahs and prayerbooks in my bag, people rarely ask me for prayerbooks and only kippahs. When I was a far younger rabbi, I would cite chapter and verse suggesting that any head covering will do. It’s optional. You can wear a baseball cap, I would add. The words are far more important than a kippah. The prayers are far more significant than some silken black cloth or a felt yarmulke with a bat mitzvah date from decades ago. Or are they? My learned opinions were greeted with bewilderment.
Even that tattered kippah offers comfort that little else seems to provide. The kippah is a connection to generations gone by. It does not matter that we wear it at few other occasions than services, weddings and funerals. The kippah centers. It connects. I cannot explain it entirely. I honor the custom. I let go of trying to argue that it is less important than the legally required tallis. Customs accumulate power that laws cannot quantify. They bind us together. They define communities.
Every synagogue sings Adon Olam but very few have a cantor who sings it so magically or a rabbi so poorly while dancing so emphatically. Every synagogue recites the Shema as required by Jewish law, but some sit, and others stand. No law commands the tunes which accompany our prayers, but people are attached to some as if they were given on Mount Sinai. Every synagogue has aliyas to the Torah on Yom Kippur morning but few honor all those who were married in the past Jewish year as ours does. It is the seemingly small and even idiosyncratic customs that make our synagogue our own and Congregation L’Dor V’Dor our home.
The Jewish word for law is halachah. It derives from the Hebrew root meaning “to go or walk.” It suggests a path or better, walkway. Custom is called minhag. It is related to the word “to drive” not like Moses drove the car but as Moshe drove the flock into the wilderness. (Exodus 3). It is fascinating that both custom and law suggest movement. They are not static. They carry us through life. Just as Moses drives the flock through the wilderness, custom drives us along the path.
Many families gather for Passover seders, but over time each of them develops their own minhag and customs. There are varied observances regarding who hides the afikomen and who redeems it. When I was growing up only the child who finds the afikomen was given some coins. Today, every child receives a gift. In some families, children band together to hide the afikomen and the adults have to search for it. While this inevitably delays the start of the second half of the seder, for families who do seder in this way, they would never dream of doing Passover any differently. Their way is the only way they believe the Seder has ever been celebrated or should be celebrated.
When couples get married, they often must negotiate differing family customs. I, for example, thought it was normal for birthdays to simply be acknowledged. A card, and perhaps a check, along with a phone call is all the day demands. Saying “Happy birthday” was the essence. Susie hails from a family who believes gift giving defines not only birthdays but pretty much every day and certainly every visit, and as many occasions as possible. I have to admit I was a bit surprised to get a Valentine’s Day card from my in-laws in our first year of marriage, but I remain forever grateful for their unending love and support. Of course, in one of our first years of marriage, when I simply offered Susie “Happy birthday, sweetheart. I love you so much.” and did not accompany that with a gift or even flowers, I soon discovered that the customs with which I was raised might require some adjustment. Marriages, or any significant relationship for that matter, are about the meshing of different customs. You have to take the idiosyncrasies with which you are raised and mold them into something slightly different, while still remaining loyal to your birthright. And so, customs evolve.
Back to food. Haroset recipes are also as varied as the countries from which we fled. The familiar Ashkenazi recipe of apples, walnuts and lots of Manischewitz is often spiced up in Sephardic homes with dates, pistachios and even rose water. One year we gave our son Ari, who was then beginning his cooking adventures the opportunity to prepare the haroset. We told him the most important thing is that it just has to look like bricks. That year we ended up with bananas in our haroset. And guess what? We pretty much have had bananas in our haroset every year for the past twenty years.
What makes families our own are those small, occasionally quirky things that make them different and provide us with a private language and a comforting pattern to move us through the years. My favorite Jewish custom is the blessing of the children every Shabbat evening. Although we recite the tradition’s prescribed words, it is our opportunity to hold Shira and Ari close and kiss them on their heads. Even when our children grew older and were racing to leave the house or were worried that holding their heads would mess up their hair or now when they are only home for the holidays, this custom has become so engrained that we cannot imagine giving up the opportunity to hold them close, kiss them and bless them at least for that moment. We move through the week, often in different directions, but on Shabbat and holidays we draw close if only briefly.
Whether it is watching the Giants or Jets games every Sunday or organizing what many now see as the obligatory Friendsgiving celebration the day after Thanksgiving or the furious search for the afikomen every Passover these are the customs that define families. These are also the customs that when loved ones who have now died but, in the past, sat beside us at the table or near us on the couch, give us pangs of longing. At first, we say to ourselves, “I don’t even want to watch the game.” Or “Who I am to lead the seder?” But then when we grab hold of those family customs, they mysteriously carry us forward. Customs define families. Hold on to them. Find some new ones. Finesse the tradition’s directions and make them your own. And one day, you will look back and not even remember how they were started or when you added this or that, but you will be unable to imagine your family without them. So let me now loudly proclaim, “Happy Valentine’s Day Mom.”
There are no laws prescribing these customs. They are what make families are own. They are what define us.
Countries too have customs. If you have ever had the privilege of being in Israel for Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, you would discover that at 10 am, the air raid sirens wail throughout the country to begin a two-minute period of silence. People stop their cars in the middle of the road and stand. Here in the United States, visit Arlington Cemetery and observe the ritual changing of the guards surrounding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Some customs are profound. And others are mundane. Who can imagine a baseball game without the seventh inning stretch? And yet it is these customs that define our American culture. This is why people were so offended when football players kneeled for the National Anthem. There is no law mandating that we stand and take off our hats just as there is no law that every Israeli motorist stops on Yom HaShoah, but these customs seem definitional. That is of course why Colin Kaepernick’s, and other players’ protests were so effective. They goaded us to look within. They stabbed at the seemingly sacred.
The concession speech is another American ritual that makes this country a unique democracy. Again, no law demands it, but custom requires it. Just as we recognize the importance of customs to families and communities, so too we must bow before its significance to our country. The first public concession in a presidential race was delivered by telegram. In 1896, Democrat William Jennings Bryan offered these words to Republican William McKinley: "I hasten to extend my congratulations. We have submitted the issue to the American people and their will is law." I have been thinking about this custom for some time. Until recently I had not thought it to be so significant. I fear now that letting go of it may forever fray the ties that bind us together and make us one united country.
President Trump’s failure to offer even a modicum of concession continues to undermine our nation’s democratic foundations. His refusal to do so in 2020 continues to sow lingering doubts in 2022. My friends, let me be forthright. This entire fragile project is built on the supposition that our elections are fair. In the days after the polls close, Democrats and Republicans as well as Independents, must all be willing to say, “It’s over.” This is not to say that elections are perfect or that there are not mistakes here and there, but overall, we must say together, “It is over. It worked. And let’s get behind him. Or let’s try to work with her. Or even, let’s gear up for next time.” If we cannot offer simple phrases such as these, and we are not led to say such words, we are lost. Let me be crystal clear. Only unfounded theories can sustain the notion that President Biden did not win more votes in November 2020 and enough electoral votes to become our 46th president. I fear that we may be entering a period where every election result will be disputed, that Republicans and Democrats will soon both refuse to concede and that a significant percentage of voters will say in effect, “She is not my representative.” Or “He is not my senator.” Already such voices are growing louder and more menacing.
People think that victory speeches are the more significant, but I have come to believe that the concession speech is the more important. The candidate receiving the most votes makes grand promises that often go unfulfilled whereas the candidate with fewer votes doubles down on the values that hold us together. I don’t remember President Obama’s speech in 2008 but the words of Senator John McCain (zecher tzaddik l’vrachah—may the memory of the righteous be a blessing) still ring in my ears. He said, “Whatever our differences, we are fellow Americans. And please believe me when I say no association has ever meant more to me than that. It is natural to feel some disappointment, but tomorrow we must move beyond it and work together to get our country moving again. We fought—we fought as hard as we could. And though we fell short, the failure is mine, not yours.” The failure is mine.
Nothing screams the High Holidays and this day’s message more than those words. “The failure is mine.” This is the essence of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. We are imperfect creatures who create imperfect institutions, who make mistakes and miss the mark. And the only corrective is to admit such failures and move forward. Character truly shines when we are called to own our mistakes. And it is this custom of conceding election results that move us sometimes haltingly and other times grudgingly and perhaps even painfully from one election to the next. But it is this custom that drives us along the path.
I recognize that some might accuse me of being partisan. Let me acknowledge before you the successes of President Trump’s administration. He is deserving of praise for facilitating the development of the Covid vaccines that have helped pull us through this pandemic. He is deserving of unending thanks for brokering the Abraham Accords between Israel, the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco and that have brought a new level of peace and prosperity to parts of the Middle East and especially to the Israel I cherish. In the last weeks a Jewish wedding was held in Abu Dhabi. 1500 guests attended. This is unprecedented. It is historic. My heart is filled with gratitude.
Even though I can enumerate such successes, our democratic republic only moves forward if we honor the results of our elections. It is the only way this thing works. One person has to say, “The election is over. My opponent is now my president.”
Let me also add, President Biden deserves criticism for not calling out pro-Democratic party groups who are spending millions of dollars ($40 million to date) in Republican primaries to help nominate those candidates who deny the 2020 election results. Perhaps this is good strategy and shrewd calculation to support candidates who one thinks will be easier to beat in November, but it is antithetical to what should be our shared mission of upholding the integrity of our electoral system. Shame on President Biden for not calling this out loudly and forcefully. It is not simply about winning. It is about holding the nation together and more importantly, staying true to the values that define us. We are all called to make sure everyone can participate in voting. And then, before we cast our votes we fight like mad and argue and debate the issues and candidates. But when it's all over we get behind our elected officials.
The whole American democratic project may hinge on a custom that usually goes unnoticed and unheralded except by a candidate’s most devoted followers. It does not matter that John Adams did not give a concession speech and only privately conceded to Thomas Jefferson and that this custom in its present form does not date back to our nation’s founders who dreamed up this precious but fragile American democracy. What matters is that this custom has become foundational. It is what drives us forward. I feel like with every passing month, it is as if we are trampling upon those flimsy, silken kippahs that held us together at shiva minyans when we believed our small world was falling apart.
Customs move us forward. There are no laws that demand them. Without them we cannot move through the generations. We cannot find our path. Without customs families lose connections, communities wither and countries lose their way. Families are defined by customs. Communities are sustained by them. And countries must be upheld by them. Custom moves our American democracy forward and from one generation to the next. God bless the United States of America!
Our holidays seem to turn on food. And lox is right up there with the other High Holiday staples like round hallahs and apples and honey. The funny thing is that we have only been eating lox in recent years—at least if you measure time in the thousands of years that amount to Jewish history. My Nana never ate lox in the shtetl in which she was born and from which she fled. If she ate any fish, it was the less expensive carp that was ground up into gefilte fish. Claudia Roden, author of The Book of Jewish Food, writes there is no evidence that Jews ate lox in Eastern Europe. Apparently, it is an American Jewish creation and dates back about hundred years when salmon from the Pacific Northwest became available in New York thanks to the railroads. Most of the immigrant families from whom we are descended and who lived in the 1920’s and 30’s could not afford a refrigerator and so cured fish was the perfect solution. And herein is how our beloved custom was born.
The origins of customs are often mysterious. Their power, and hold, over our lives remain profound. Families are defined by them. Communities are sustained by them. Countries are upheld by them. Customs are distinct from laws. Yet they often tug at our hearts in even more telling and significant ways. This morning I wish to explore customs and their importance to us: to our community, to our families and to our country.
Let’s begin with some familiar examples: the kippah and tallis. I have often found it curious that people feel more strongly attached to the kippah or yarmulke. Its origins date back to the Talmud whereas the tallis is a mitzvah, and commandment, and found in the Torah. The tallis is law. The kippah is custom. Originally the kippah signified an extra measure of piety and was optional. It gained wider acceptance in medieval times. And now many people feel it is required. There is something about the kippah that suggests its power transcends any commandment or law. There have been many shiva minyans when I gather the group together to begin the service and people start asking me if I have kippahs. While I do have kippahs and prayerbooks in my bag, people rarely ask me for prayerbooks and only kippahs. When I was a far younger rabbi, I would cite chapter and verse suggesting that any head covering will do. It’s optional. You can wear a baseball cap, I would add. The words are far more important than a kippah. The prayers are far more significant than some silken black cloth or a felt yarmulke with a bat mitzvah date from decades ago. Or are they? My learned opinions were greeted with bewilderment.
Even that tattered kippah offers comfort that little else seems to provide. The kippah is a connection to generations gone by. It does not matter that we wear it at few other occasions than services, weddings and funerals. The kippah centers. It connects. I cannot explain it entirely. I honor the custom. I let go of trying to argue that it is less important than the legally required tallis. Customs accumulate power that laws cannot quantify. They bind us together. They define communities.
Every synagogue sings Adon Olam but very few have a cantor who sings it so magically or a rabbi so poorly while dancing so emphatically. Every synagogue recites the Shema as required by Jewish law, but some sit, and others stand. No law commands the tunes which accompany our prayers, but people are attached to some as if they were given on Mount Sinai. Every synagogue has aliyas to the Torah on Yom Kippur morning but few honor all those who were married in the past Jewish year as ours does. It is the seemingly small and even idiosyncratic customs that make our synagogue our own and Congregation L’Dor V’Dor our home.
The Jewish word for law is halachah. It derives from the Hebrew root meaning “to go or walk.” It suggests a path or better, walkway. Custom is called minhag. It is related to the word “to drive” not like Moses drove the car but as Moshe drove the flock into the wilderness. (Exodus 3). It is fascinating that both custom and law suggest movement. They are not static. They carry us through life. Just as Moses drives the flock through the wilderness, custom drives us along the path.
Many families gather for Passover seders, but over time each of them develops their own minhag and customs. There are varied observances regarding who hides the afikomen and who redeems it. When I was growing up only the child who finds the afikomen was given some coins. Today, every child receives a gift. In some families, children band together to hide the afikomen and the adults have to search for it. While this inevitably delays the start of the second half of the seder, for families who do seder in this way, they would never dream of doing Passover any differently. Their way is the only way they believe the Seder has ever been celebrated or should be celebrated.
When couples get married, they often must negotiate differing family customs. I, for example, thought it was normal for birthdays to simply be acknowledged. A card, and perhaps a check, along with a phone call is all the day demands. Saying “Happy birthday” was the essence. Susie hails from a family who believes gift giving defines not only birthdays but pretty much every day and certainly every visit, and as many occasions as possible. I have to admit I was a bit surprised to get a Valentine’s Day card from my in-laws in our first year of marriage, but I remain forever grateful for their unending love and support. Of course, in one of our first years of marriage, when I simply offered Susie “Happy birthday, sweetheart. I love you so much.” and did not accompany that with a gift or even flowers, I soon discovered that the customs with which I was raised might require some adjustment. Marriages, or any significant relationship for that matter, are about the meshing of different customs. You have to take the idiosyncrasies with which you are raised and mold them into something slightly different, while still remaining loyal to your birthright. And so, customs evolve.
Back to food. Haroset recipes are also as varied as the countries from which we fled. The familiar Ashkenazi recipe of apples, walnuts and lots of Manischewitz is often spiced up in Sephardic homes with dates, pistachios and even rose water. One year we gave our son Ari, who was then beginning his cooking adventures the opportunity to prepare the haroset. We told him the most important thing is that it just has to look like bricks. That year we ended up with bananas in our haroset. And guess what? We pretty much have had bananas in our haroset every year for the past twenty years.
What makes families our own are those small, occasionally quirky things that make them different and provide us with a private language and a comforting pattern to move us through the years. My favorite Jewish custom is the blessing of the children every Shabbat evening. Although we recite the tradition’s prescribed words, it is our opportunity to hold Shira and Ari close and kiss them on their heads. Even when our children grew older and were racing to leave the house or were worried that holding their heads would mess up their hair or now when they are only home for the holidays, this custom has become so engrained that we cannot imagine giving up the opportunity to hold them close, kiss them and bless them at least for that moment. We move through the week, often in different directions, but on Shabbat and holidays we draw close if only briefly.
Whether it is watching the Giants or Jets games every Sunday or organizing what many now see as the obligatory Friendsgiving celebration the day after Thanksgiving or the furious search for the afikomen every Passover these are the customs that define families. These are also the customs that when loved ones who have now died but, in the past, sat beside us at the table or near us on the couch, give us pangs of longing. At first, we say to ourselves, “I don’t even want to watch the game.” Or “Who I am to lead the seder?” But then when we grab hold of those family customs, they mysteriously carry us forward. Customs define families. Hold on to them. Find some new ones. Finesse the tradition’s directions and make them your own. And one day, you will look back and not even remember how they were started or when you added this or that, but you will be unable to imagine your family without them. So let me now loudly proclaim, “Happy Valentine’s Day Mom.”
There are no laws prescribing these customs. They are what make families are own. They are what define us.
Countries too have customs. If you have ever had the privilege of being in Israel for Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, you would discover that at 10 am, the air raid sirens wail throughout the country to begin a two-minute period of silence. People stop their cars in the middle of the road and stand. Here in the United States, visit Arlington Cemetery and observe the ritual changing of the guards surrounding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Some customs are profound. And others are mundane. Who can imagine a baseball game without the seventh inning stretch? And yet it is these customs that define our American culture. This is why people were so offended when football players kneeled for the National Anthem. There is no law mandating that we stand and take off our hats just as there is no law that every Israeli motorist stops on Yom HaShoah, but these customs seem definitional. That is of course why Colin Kaepernick’s, and other players’ protests were so effective. They goaded us to look within. They stabbed at the seemingly sacred.
The concession speech is another American ritual that makes this country a unique democracy. Again, no law demands it, but custom requires it. Just as we recognize the importance of customs to families and communities, so too we must bow before its significance to our country. The first public concession in a presidential race was delivered by telegram. In 1896, Democrat William Jennings Bryan offered these words to Republican William McKinley: "I hasten to extend my congratulations. We have submitted the issue to the American people and their will is law." I have been thinking about this custom for some time. Until recently I had not thought it to be so significant. I fear now that letting go of it may forever fray the ties that bind us together and make us one united country.
President Trump’s failure to offer even a modicum of concession continues to undermine our nation’s democratic foundations. His refusal to do so in 2020 continues to sow lingering doubts in 2022. My friends, let me be forthright. This entire fragile project is built on the supposition that our elections are fair. In the days after the polls close, Democrats and Republicans as well as Independents, must all be willing to say, “It’s over.” This is not to say that elections are perfect or that there are not mistakes here and there, but overall, we must say together, “It is over. It worked. And let’s get behind him. Or let’s try to work with her. Or even, let’s gear up for next time.” If we cannot offer simple phrases such as these, and we are not led to say such words, we are lost. Let me be crystal clear. Only unfounded theories can sustain the notion that President Biden did not win more votes in November 2020 and enough electoral votes to become our 46th president. I fear that we may be entering a period where every election result will be disputed, that Republicans and Democrats will soon both refuse to concede and that a significant percentage of voters will say in effect, “She is not my representative.” Or “He is not my senator.” Already such voices are growing louder and more menacing.
People think that victory speeches are the more significant, but I have come to believe that the concession speech is the more important. The candidate receiving the most votes makes grand promises that often go unfulfilled whereas the candidate with fewer votes doubles down on the values that hold us together. I don’t remember President Obama’s speech in 2008 but the words of Senator John McCain (zecher tzaddik l’vrachah—may the memory of the righteous be a blessing) still ring in my ears. He said, “Whatever our differences, we are fellow Americans. And please believe me when I say no association has ever meant more to me than that. It is natural to feel some disappointment, but tomorrow we must move beyond it and work together to get our country moving again. We fought—we fought as hard as we could. And though we fell short, the failure is mine, not yours.” The failure is mine.
Nothing screams the High Holidays and this day’s message more than those words. “The failure is mine.” This is the essence of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. We are imperfect creatures who create imperfect institutions, who make mistakes and miss the mark. And the only corrective is to admit such failures and move forward. Character truly shines when we are called to own our mistakes. And it is this custom of conceding election results that move us sometimes haltingly and other times grudgingly and perhaps even painfully from one election to the next. But it is this custom that drives us along the path.
I recognize that some might accuse me of being partisan. Let me acknowledge before you the successes of President Trump’s administration. He is deserving of praise for facilitating the development of the Covid vaccines that have helped pull us through this pandemic. He is deserving of unending thanks for brokering the Abraham Accords between Israel, the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco and that have brought a new level of peace and prosperity to parts of the Middle East and especially to the Israel I cherish. In the last weeks a Jewish wedding was held in Abu Dhabi. 1500 guests attended. This is unprecedented. It is historic. My heart is filled with gratitude.
Even though I can enumerate such successes, our democratic republic only moves forward if we honor the results of our elections. It is the only way this thing works. One person has to say, “The election is over. My opponent is now my president.”
Let me also add, President Biden deserves criticism for not calling out pro-Democratic party groups who are spending millions of dollars ($40 million to date) in Republican primaries to help nominate those candidates who deny the 2020 election results. Perhaps this is good strategy and shrewd calculation to support candidates who one thinks will be easier to beat in November, but it is antithetical to what should be our shared mission of upholding the integrity of our electoral system. Shame on President Biden for not calling this out loudly and forcefully. It is not simply about winning. It is about holding the nation together and more importantly, staying true to the values that define us. We are all called to make sure everyone can participate in voting. And then, before we cast our votes we fight like mad and argue and debate the issues and candidates. But when it's all over we get behind our elected officials.
The whole American democratic project may hinge on a custom that usually goes unnoticed and unheralded except by a candidate’s most devoted followers. It does not matter that John Adams did not give a concession speech and only privately conceded to Thomas Jefferson and that this custom in its present form does not date back to our nation’s founders who dreamed up this precious but fragile American democracy. What matters is that this custom has become foundational. It is what drives us forward. I feel like with every passing month, it is as if we are trampling upon those flimsy, silken kippahs that held us together at shiva minyans when we believed our small world was falling apart.
Customs move us forward. There are no laws that demand them. Without them we cannot move through the generations. We cannot find our path. Without customs families lose connections, communities wither and countries lose their way. Families are defined by customs. Communities are sustained by them. And countries must be upheld by them. Custom moves our American democracy forward and from one generation to the next. God bless the United States of America!
Apples, Honey and the Bees
I am thinking about apples and honey.
On Rosh Hashanah we dip apples in honey. This custom originated when Jews first made their way to Europe where apples could be found in the fall. During biblical times we were more familiar with those fruits found in the Middle East such as figs and dates, and most especially pomegranates.
In fact, the pomegranate is the quintessential Jewish fruit. There is nothing quite like the sight of a pomegranate tree with its picturesque fruits hanging from its branches or its floral blooms which attract bees for pollination. According to tradition there are exactly the same number of seeds in the pomegranate as there are commandments: 613. And while I have never counted its sees, the pomegranate figures more prominently in our tradition than the apple. Some therefore add the pomegranate to their holiday meal.
In addition, even though the Bible calls the land of Israel a land flowing with milk and honey it was not bee honey to which it referred but instead date honey. And so now I found myself thinking about bees.
Many have read about the collapse of the world’s bee population. This does not have to do with honeybees who are raised, like other farm animals, for their honey and were brought from Europe to the American colonies in the seventeenth century. It does involve the ordinary bees we occasionally see buzzing around the flowers adorning our lawns. It is this indigenous bee population which is dramatically decreasing. While scientists debate the causes for this precipitous decline, there is little doubt that the numbers of native bees, as well as bumble bees is far less than it should be.
We depend on these bees to pollinate flowers and crops. Without them there will be less beauty and nourishment in our world, and maybe even less coffee. We depend on their tireless work. The bees’ work is extraordinary. A grain of pollen here or there eventually amounts to something grand. It eventually amounts to something larger and more monumental than anything we can imagine.
I look to my garden and watch as a bee flies from one flower to the next. I do not know or even see what might become its finished product. What wonder and amazement the tiniest of creatures adds to the world.
Just like the bees who fly from one pollen patch to another, so too are we expected to bring a measure of beauty and compassion to the world at large. When I taste the apple dipped in honey I am thinking about the honeybees but I am also thinking about the ordinary bees whose names I do not know, and whose names may soon be lost to extinction, and I wonder what beauty they provided for which I can now give thanks and what nourishment they sustained for which I may now want.
I do not know the work of their little wings. And yet I can imagine it, and taste it, as I recite the blessings for the new year. Perhaps it will give me strength to do more. Perhaps I can bring a small measure of compassion and sweetness to the world around me.
This new year I resolve. Let my work likewise remain hidden. Let my pursuits give flower to things as grand and beautiful, nourishing and healing, as the flowering pomegranate tree.
On Rosh Hashanah we dip apples in honey. This custom originated when Jews first made their way to Europe where apples could be found in the fall. During biblical times we were more familiar with those fruits found in the Middle East such as figs and dates, and most especially pomegranates.
In fact, the pomegranate is the quintessential Jewish fruit. There is nothing quite like the sight of a pomegranate tree with its picturesque fruits hanging from its branches or its floral blooms which attract bees for pollination. According to tradition there are exactly the same number of seeds in the pomegranate as there are commandments: 613. And while I have never counted its sees, the pomegranate figures more prominently in our tradition than the apple. Some therefore add the pomegranate to their holiday meal.
In addition, even though the Bible calls the land of Israel a land flowing with milk and honey it was not bee honey to which it referred but instead date honey. And so now I found myself thinking about bees.
Many have read about the collapse of the world’s bee population. This does not have to do with honeybees who are raised, like other farm animals, for their honey and were brought from Europe to the American colonies in the seventeenth century. It does involve the ordinary bees we occasionally see buzzing around the flowers adorning our lawns. It is this indigenous bee population which is dramatically decreasing. While scientists debate the causes for this precipitous decline, there is little doubt that the numbers of native bees, as well as bumble bees is far less than it should be.
We depend on these bees to pollinate flowers and crops. Without them there will be less beauty and nourishment in our world, and maybe even less coffee. We depend on their tireless work. The bees’ work is extraordinary. A grain of pollen here or there eventually amounts to something grand. It eventually amounts to something larger and more monumental than anything we can imagine.
I look to my garden and watch as a bee flies from one flower to the next. I do not know or even see what might become its finished product. What wonder and amazement the tiniest of creatures adds to the world.
Just like the bees who fly from one pollen patch to another, so too are we expected to bring a measure of beauty and compassion to the world at large. When I taste the apple dipped in honey I am thinking about the honeybees but I am also thinking about the ordinary bees whose names I do not know, and whose names may soon be lost to extinction, and I wonder what beauty they provided for which I can now give thanks and what nourishment they sustained for which I may now want.
I do not know the work of their little wings. And yet I can imagine it, and taste it, as I recite the blessings for the new year. Perhaps it will give me strength to do more. Perhaps I can bring a small measure of compassion and sweetness to the world around me.
This new year I resolve. Let my work likewise remain hidden. Let my pursuits give flower to things as grand and beautiful, nourishing and healing, as the flowering pomegranate tree.
I give thanks to the bees.
Dreaming of Better Borders
In the West Bank, near Nablus, one finds Mount Ebal, one of the tallest peaks in the area. From its 3000-foot peak one can almost see the entire land of Israel: Mount Hermon in the North, the hills surrounding Jerusalem in the South, the Jordan to the East and the Mediterranean Sea to the West. The city of Shechem sits below and serves as a reminder of Abraham and Sarah’s first journey to the promised land.
After Joshua led the Israelites into the promised land, the people constructed an altar on Mount Ebal. In the 1980’s archaeologists uncovered what some believe to be the altar’s remains and evidence of the Torah’s command and the Book of Joshua’s report: “At that time Joshua built an altar to the Lord, the God of Israel, on Mount Ebal... an altar of unhewn stone upon which no iron had been wielded.” (Joshua 8) Sadly, the Palestinian Authority apparently used some of these ancient stones for the construction of new roads.
This past Spring, archaeologists announced they had dated a small piece of stone found on Mount Ebal, inscribed with God’s name written in proto-Semitic to the eleventh century BCE. This discovery provides archaeological evidence that the Israelites were literate when they entered the land and that our ancestors have been present in the land of Israel for over 3000 years.
Archaeologists have not, however, uncovered evidence that the Israelites observed another of the Bible’s instructions. The Torah commands: “Upon crossing the Jordan, you shall set up these stones, about which I charge you this day, on Mount Ebal, and coat them with plaster…. And on those stones, you shall inscribe every word of this Torah most distinctly.” (Deuteronomy 27)
There is debate if the word “Torah” refers to all five books. The rabbis suggest it does. Biblical scholars believe this seems unlikely and theorize these stones included select chapters from the Book of Deuteronomy. The Hebrew word “Torah” can be translated as “Teaching” and so the phrase is open for interpretation. Regardless, even if it ten chapters were inscribed, there must have been a lot of stones.
It is wonderfully revealing to think about the implications of the Torah’s command. Imagine a nation marking its borders not with a fence, or signs emblazoned with the words “Keep out” but instead commandments about caring for others. Immediately prior to the instructions to erect these stones with every word of this Torah is the commandment to set aside tithes to those less fortunate, in particular the stranger, the fatherless and the widow.
Imagine how extraordinary the world might be if border markers proclaimed, “Here we are expected to care for others” rather than “Keep your distance.” I know it is a utopian, and perhaps even messianic, dream but it also appears to be our Torah’s vision.
The rabbis push this understanding even further. They suggest the words “most distinctly” mean that the Torah’s verses emblazoned on these stones should be written in the world’s seventy languages. Despite the fact they were off in their count by a factor of one hundred, it is a remarkable teaching.
On the borders of the land of Israel, the markers should proclaim in every language, “Here we are obligated to care for those less fortunate than ourselves.” Is this meant as a message to the world or a reminder to ourselves?
And I am left wondering. Which reader is more important? Do our laws serve as beacons to the world or a call to our higher selves?
Why must this remain a messianic dream?
Let it be instead a call for dreamers of a better today.
After Joshua led the Israelites into the promised land, the people constructed an altar on Mount Ebal. In the 1980’s archaeologists uncovered what some believe to be the altar’s remains and evidence of the Torah’s command and the Book of Joshua’s report: “At that time Joshua built an altar to the Lord, the God of Israel, on Mount Ebal... an altar of unhewn stone upon which no iron had been wielded.” (Joshua 8) Sadly, the Palestinian Authority apparently used some of these ancient stones for the construction of new roads.
This past Spring, archaeologists announced they had dated a small piece of stone found on Mount Ebal, inscribed with God’s name written in proto-Semitic to the eleventh century BCE. This discovery provides archaeological evidence that the Israelites were literate when they entered the land and that our ancestors have been present in the land of Israel for over 3000 years.
Archaeologists have not, however, uncovered evidence that the Israelites observed another of the Bible’s instructions. The Torah commands: “Upon crossing the Jordan, you shall set up these stones, about which I charge you this day, on Mount Ebal, and coat them with plaster…. And on those stones, you shall inscribe every word of this Torah most distinctly.” (Deuteronomy 27)
There is debate if the word “Torah” refers to all five books. The rabbis suggest it does. Biblical scholars believe this seems unlikely and theorize these stones included select chapters from the Book of Deuteronomy. The Hebrew word “Torah” can be translated as “Teaching” and so the phrase is open for interpretation. Regardless, even if it ten chapters were inscribed, there must have been a lot of stones.
It is wonderfully revealing to think about the implications of the Torah’s command. Imagine a nation marking its borders not with a fence, or signs emblazoned with the words “Keep out” but instead commandments about caring for others. Immediately prior to the instructions to erect these stones with every word of this Torah is the commandment to set aside tithes to those less fortunate, in particular the stranger, the fatherless and the widow.
Imagine how extraordinary the world might be if border markers proclaimed, “Here we are expected to care for others” rather than “Keep your distance.” I know it is a utopian, and perhaps even messianic, dream but it also appears to be our Torah’s vision.
The rabbis push this understanding even further. They suggest the words “most distinctly” mean that the Torah’s verses emblazoned on these stones should be written in the world’s seventy languages. Despite the fact they were off in their count by a factor of one hundred, it is a remarkable teaching.
On the borders of the land of Israel, the markers should proclaim in every language, “Here we are obligated to care for those less fortunate than ourselves.” Is this meant as a message to the world or a reminder to ourselves?
And I am left wondering. Which reader is more important? Do our laws serve as beacons to the world or a call to our higher selves?
Why must this remain a messianic dream?
Let it be instead a call for dreamers of a better today.
Sharing Is Commanded
Years ago when hiking through Israel’s Galil region, my guide would sometimes take a detour through a farmer’s field. There she would reach up and take an orange from a tree, immediately peel off its skin and then eat it. I protested. “This is not your field. These oranges are not yours to take.” She would then correct my understanding. “Our Bible permits it.”
The Torah proclaims: “When you enter your neighbor’s vineyard, you may eat as many grapes as you want, until you are full, but you must not put any in your vessel.” (Deuteronomy 25)
Our Bible has a different understanding of ownership. We do not own the land. The earth belongs to God. We are but tenants. So when I look to my yard, the flowers, vines and trees (the Kousa Dogwood’s branches are now weighed down by fruit) I might think they are mine, but the food they produce is certainly not mine alone.
The Torah makes clear. If you are hungry, you can take the fruit from any tree, whether it be yours or your neighbor’s. Even though the farmer has expended all the effort, and expense, to grow and nurture the tree, its fruit must be shared. Still foragers can only take a little bit. They can only take enough to satiate their hunger. They may not take so much that they fill a basket and are then able to sell the fruit in the market. That would be stealing.
Sharing is demanded. Stealing is forbidden.
While very few of us have vineyards or even know how to grow grapes, or for that matter have an abundance of fruit trees, imagine how different the world might be if we shared some of nature’s bounty with our neighbors.
I continue to dream.
And then I recall the fruit that spoils in my refrigerator, and the bag of half-eaten grapes that make their way into our garbage can.
My dreams are within reach if I can let go and share. Perhaps all it takes for no one to know hunger is for each of us to offer some fruit here or there. Perhaps all it might take for us to alleviate hunger is for us to recover the notion that the land and its bounty are not mine but God’s. And God makes demands on us.
Sharing is commanded.
The Torah proclaims: “When you enter your neighbor’s vineyard, you may eat as many grapes as you want, until you are full, but you must not put any in your vessel.” (Deuteronomy 25)
Our Bible has a different understanding of ownership. We do not own the land. The earth belongs to God. We are but tenants. So when I look to my yard, the flowers, vines and trees (the Kousa Dogwood’s branches are now weighed down by fruit) I might think they are mine, but the food they produce is certainly not mine alone.
The Torah makes clear. If you are hungry, you can take the fruit from any tree, whether it be yours or your neighbor’s. Even though the farmer has expended all the effort, and expense, to grow and nurture the tree, its fruit must be shared. Still foragers can only take a little bit. They can only take enough to satiate their hunger. They may not take so much that they fill a basket and are then able to sell the fruit in the market. That would be stealing.
Sharing is demanded. Stealing is forbidden.
While very few of us have vineyards or even know how to grow grapes, or for that matter have an abundance of fruit trees, imagine how different the world might be if we shared some of nature’s bounty with our neighbors.
I continue to dream.
And then I recall the fruit that spoils in my refrigerator, and the bag of half-eaten grapes that make their way into our garbage can.
My dreams are within reach if I can let go and share. Perhaps all it takes for no one to know hunger is for each of us to offer some fruit here or there. Perhaps all it might take for us to alleviate hunger is for us to recover the notion that the land and its bounty are not mine but God’s. And God makes demands on us.
Sharing is commanded.
Pursuing Justice, Making Peace
We live in a world where people scream about injustices. Sometimes, justified. And sometimes, unjustified.
Those we most often speak about are the wrongs, or slights, that involve people closest to us. We complain about this friend or that. We criticize this family member or another. Rarely do we seek to make amends and make peace. Rarely do we shout about societal ills needing repair.
This week we read about seeking justice. In addition to legislating how judges should be appointed, the Torah proclaims: “Justice, justice you shall pursue, that you may thrive and occupy the land that the Lord your God is giving you.” (Deuteronomy 16)
We must hear this call for justice. Too often we misapply its message to friends and family. Instead, we need to spend more time pursuing justice for our society.
Our country faces many challenges. One example. There is a growing inequity between rich and poor. On our very own Long Island there are far too many homeless and hungry. The Interfaith Nutrition Network, for example, serves over 300,000 meals per year. We need to do more. We need to fight against the injustice of hunger and poverty.
This is the Torah’s demand. We must pursue justice.
Rather than working to fix these problems we look elsewhere to those closest to us and level the charge of injustice against family members and friends. With regard to these relations, we are instead commanded to pursue peace. According to our tradition Aaron best exemplifies peace making. Why? The Israelites clamored to build a Golden Calf when their leader Moses was busy on the mountaintop communing with God. Aaron was left in charge. He did not as one might expect talk them out of their unholy task of building an idol. Instead, he appears to have helped them. Aaron facilitated the building of the calf. The Torah’s judgment of his actions is harsh.
The rabbis, however, see in Aaron a model of peace making. They call him a pursuer of peace. Their suggestion is extraordinary. Even when family members are straying, or in this case building idols, we are to be like the disciples of Aaron, and make peace.
When it comes to family shalom, peace, is the greatest virtue. When it comes to the larger society the greatest value is tzedek, justice. We often confuse which value is to lead the way.
Pursue justice for society. Run after peace for family and friends. As the High Holidays approach, I pledge to seek justice for our society, and make peace among my friends and family.
Those we most often speak about are the wrongs, or slights, that involve people closest to us. We complain about this friend or that. We criticize this family member or another. Rarely do we seek to make amends and make peace. Rarely do we shout about societal ills needing repair.
This week we read about seeking justice. In addition to legislating how judges should be appointed, the Torah proclaims: “Justice, justice you shall pursue, that you may thrive and occupy the land that the Lord your God is giving you.” (Deuteronomy 16)
We must hear this call for justice. Too often we misapply its message to friends and family. Instead, we need to spend more time pursuing justice for our society.
Our country faces many challenges. One example. There is a growing inequity between rich and poor. On our very own Long Island there are far too many homeless and hungry. The Interfaith Nutrition Network, for example, serves over 300,000 meals per year. We need to do more. We need to fight against the injustice of hunger and poverty.
This is the Torah’s demand. We must pursue justice.
Rather than working to fix these problems we look elsewhere to those closest to us and level the charge of injustice against family members and friends. With regard to these relations, we are instead commanded to pursue peace. According to our tradition Aaron best exemplifies peace making. Why? The Israelites clamored to build a Golden Calf when their leader Moses was busy on the mountaintop communing with God. Aaron was left in charge. He did not as one might expect talk them out of their unholy task of building an idol. Instead, he appears to have helped them. Aaron facilitated the building of the calf. The Torah’s judgment of his actions is harsh.
The rabbis, however, see in Aaron a model of peace making. They call him a pursuer of peace. Their suggestion is extraordinary. Even when family members are straying, or in this case building idols, we are to be like the disciples of Aaron, and make peace.
When it comes to family shalom, peace, is the greatest virtue. When it comes to the larger society the greatest value is tzedek, justice. We often confuse which value is to lead the way.
Pursue justice for society. Run after peace for family and friends. As the High Holidays approach, I pledge to seek justice for our society, and make peace among my friends and family.
A Song Is All We Need
The High Holidays begin in one month. During the preceding Hebrew month of Elul which starts this weekend, we focus on the task of repentance. We seek to better our lives. We turn inward. We make promises about our Jewish commitments.
A Hasidic story.
A student came to see the Karliner Rebbe because he was depressed. “I don’t know what to do,” he said. “I’m not a good Jew. I don’t study enough, I don’t know enough; all I do is work, work, work. But I want to study more. Rabbi, I have a question. What do our great and holy rabbis study on Friday night?”
“Well,” said the Karliner, “some study Kabbalah and Jewish mysticism.”
“Oh,” said the student, “that is not for me.”
“No,” said the Karliner, “that is not for everybody. But I am sure you study Talmud regularly. How is that going?”
“Rebbe, I am ashamed to admit it, but I do not study Talmud regularly. You see, I grew up poor. I had to work from an early age to help my family out. I did not get much of an education. I find the Talmud very difficult.”
“Perhaps you study something with a friend?” asked the Karliner.
“My friends also work very hard; they don’t know much about Jewish tradition. Besides, I have no time to sit in the study hall for hours. What else can I do?”
“Working hard for your family is a mitzvah and an important Jewish obligation,” said the Karliner. “You can study the weekly Torah reading for one hour a week.”
“Oh no,” said the man. “I always found doing that too difficult. As I told you, I hardly got a Jewish education. I struggle through the portion each week. If I am really being honest, the Torah portion does not uplift me. I am a failure. I am really not a scholar. I prefer to work with my hands. All I know how to do is work long hours.”
“No Jew is a failure!” said the Karliner sternly. “Every Jew can learn. And every Jew should learn. I know there is something for you. You certainly will enjoy telling beautiful stories about our Jewish heroes to your friends and family!”
“I am bad at telling stories,” objected the student. “I always forget the important points, I mix them up, and I am not a good talker either. Please, I can’t do that too...”
The Karliner leaned back in his chair. He closed his eyes, and then he began to hum. He hummed and he swayed back and forth, and the student listened in amazement to this wordless melody. This was beautiful. What a niggun! And he began to sing along. He never had felt so wonderful before. He had never felt so close to God.
After a long time, the singing stopped. The Karliner opened his eyes and looked at the student intently.
“Rebbe,” the student exclaimed, “I understand. I don’t feel depressed anymore. Thank you, thank you!”
And he went home, and every Shabbat and holiday and nearly every day, he sang the most beautiful melody. He did not know the words. He did not study any of the books the rabbi asked him about. He just sang the tune. He loved the niggun of the Karliner Rebbe. And he did not feel depressed anymore.
Sometimes the melody is all we need to better our lives. Sometimes a song is all we need to uplift our spirits.
A Hasidic story.
A student came to see the Karliner Rebbe because he was depressed. “I don’t know what to do,” he said. “I’m not a good Jew. I don’t study enough, I don’t know enough; all I do is work, work, work. But I want to study more. Rabbi, I have a question. What do our great and holy rabbis study on Friday night?”
“Well,” said the Karliner, “some study Kabbalah and Jewish mysticism.”
“Oh,” said the student, “that is not for me.”
“No,” said the Karliner, “that is not for everybody. But I am sure you study Talmud regularly. How is that going?”
“Rebbe, I am ashamed to admit it, but I do not study Talmud regularly. You see, I grew up poor. I had to work from an early age to help my family out. I did not get much of an education. I find the Talmud very difficult.”
“Perhaps you study something with a friend?” asked the Karliner.
“My friends also work very hard; they don’t know much about Jewish tradition. Besides, I have no time to sit in the study hall for hours. What else can I do?”
“Working hard for your family is a mitzvah and an important Jewish obligation,” said the Karliner. “You can study the weekly Torah reading for one hour a week.”
“Oh no,” said the man. “I always found doing that too difficult. As I told you, I hardly got a Jewish education. I struggle through the portion each week. If I am really being honest, the Torah portion does not uplift me. I am a failure. I am really not a scholar. I prefer to work with my hands. All I know how to do is work long hours.”
“No Jew is a failure!” said the Karliner sternly. “Every Jew can learn. And every Jew should learn. I know there is something for you. You certainly will enjoy telling beautiful stories about our Jewish heroes to your friends and family!”
“I am bad at telling stories,” objected the student. “I always forget the important points, I mix them up, and I am not a good talker either. Please, I can’t do that too...”
The Karliner leaned back in his chair. He closed his eyes, and then he began to hum. He hummed and he swayed back and forth, and the student listened in amazement to this wordless melody. This was beautiful. What a niggun! And he began to sing along. He never had felt so wonderful before. He had never felt so close to God.
After a long time, the singing stopped. The Karliner opened his eyes and looked at the student intently.
“Rebbe,” the student exclaimed, “I understand. I don’t feel depressed anymore. Thank you, thank you!”
And he went home, and every Shabbat and holiday and nearly every day, he sang the most beautiful melody. He did not know the words. He did not study any of the books the rabbi asked him about. He just sang the tune. He loved the niggun of the Karliner Rebbe. And he did not feel depressed anymore.
Sometimes the melody is all we need to better our lives. Sometimes a song is all we need to uplift our spirits.
Taste the Wonderment
This past year, Susie and I joined a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). The requirement is that we pay the farm for the upcoming season’s vegetables in April. And then beginning in June and lasting through November, we pick up an assortment of vegetables every Tuesday at our Huntington drop off location.
We don’t know for sure what will be in our bag until Monday evening when the farm emails us what to expect. This week it was corn, tomatoes (large and grape), baby bok choy, potatoes, and cantaloupe (there is the occasional melon). A few weeks ago, we picked up onions, romaine lettuce, beets, new potatoes, kohlrabi, corn and ong choy (Chinese water spinach).
In addition to the extraordinary freshness of the vegetables (the lettuce lasts two weeks!), we have to adjust our cooking based on what the farm provides. While I can eat corn on the cob every week, after several weeks corn salad felt like a necessary and welcome change. And again, after weeks of potatoes it was time to make salad rather than the usual roasting of them. We have to be inventive or at least more creative than we used to be. Sometimes we have to do research.
And so, after some reading, we grilled the kohlrabi. And while it will probably take us several summers to perfect what to do with this somewhat strange looking cruciferous vegetable, we must admit that had it not come in our bag we never would have purchased this large turnip looking thing with green horns. We better start preparing for the inevitable squashes that will arrive in the fall!
For most of our lives, our cooking was dictated by what we were in the mood for or what Shabbat or the holiday required, rather than being influenced by what the land provides. It is a refreshingly demanding shift in orientation. So much of American cooking is built around convenience. Restaurants are often touted for their prompt service. They are heralded for their portion size. All we seem to want is more. We want whatever we want when we want it.
We began to shift our shopping and tried to buy more of what is in season and grown locally. Most Sundays we pilgrimage to the local farmer’s market. And these days, when I arrive early enough, I discover my favorite treats of strawberries, blackberries and raspberries. Sure, I can purchase these berries in the supermarket all year round, but they are most likely imported from California or South America and bred to withstand the rigors of shipping.
When we started eating local berries only during the summer months they seemed to taste better. Perhaps, it was that we saved, and therefore savored, their sweetness for these months alone. We discovered.
The earth provides taste and wonderment.
My spirit is renewed. I am forced to think about what the land offers us—today. This can appear demanding, but it can also be spiritually rewarding.
The earth is meant to give us nourishment. It is meant to provide sustenance. The land offers us nuance, beauty and inspiration.
And while the CSA, and farmers markets, do not offer us everything we need, or admittedly all we sometimes want, it has helped to reorient our lives more towards what the earth provides. Who would have thought there is wisdom to be found in a kohlrabi.
The Torah concurs: “God gave you manna to eat in order to teach you that a human being does not live on bread alone, but that one may live on anything the Lord decrees.” (Deuteronomy 8)
We don’t know for sure what will be in our bag until Monday evening when the farm emails us what to expect. This week it was corn, tomatoes (large and grape), baby bok choy, potatoes, and cantaloupe (there is the occasional melon). A few weeks ago, we picked up onions, romaine lettuce, beets, new potatoes, kohlrabi, corn and ong choy (Chinese water spinach).
In addition to the extraordinary freshness of the vegetables (the lettuce lasts two weeks!), we have to adjust our cooking based on what the farm provides. While I can eat corn on the cob every week, after several weeks corn salad felt like a necessary and welcome change. And again, after weeks of potatoes it was time to make salad rather than the usual roasting of them. We have to be inventive or at least more creative than we used to be. Sometimes we have to do research.
And so, after some reading, we grilled the kohlrabi. And while it will probably take us several summers to perfect what to do with this somewhat strange looking cruciferous vegetable, we must admit that had it not come in our bag we never would have purchased this large turnip looking thing with green horns. We better start preparing for the inevitable squashes that will arrive in the fall!
For most of our lives, our cooking was dictated by what we were in the mood for or what Shabbat or the holiday required, rather than being influenced by what the land provides. It is a refreshingly demanding shift in orientation. So much of American cooking is built around convenience. Restaurants are often touted for their prompt service. They are heralded for their portion size. All we seem to want is more. We want whatever we want when we want it.
We began to shift our shopping and tried to buy more of what is in season and grown locally. Most Sundays we pilgrimage to the local farmer’s market. And these days, when I arrive early enough, I discover my favorite treats of strawberries, blackberries and raspberries. Sure, I can purchase these berries in the supermarket all year round, but they are most likely imported from California or South America and bred to withstand the rigors of shipping.
When we started eating local berries only during the summer months they seemed to taste better. Perhaps, it was that we saved, and therefore savored, their sweetness for these months alone. We discovered.
The earth provides taste and wonderment.
My spirit is renewed. I am forced to think about what the land offers us—today. This can appear demanding, but it can also be spiritually rewarding.
The earth is meant to give us nourishment. It is meant to provide sustenance. The land offers us nuance, beauty and inspiration.
And while the CSA, and farmers markets, do not offer us everything we need, or admittedly all we sometimes want, it has helped to reorient our lives more towards what the earth provides. Who would have thought there is wisdom to be found in a kohlrabi.
The Torah concurs: “God gave you manna to eat in order to teach you that a human being does not live on bread alone, but that one may live on anything the Lord decrees.” (Deuteronomy 8)
Live the Question!
Rainer Marie Rilke, the early twentieth century mystical poet, writes:
And yet God’s demands guided him. For forty years he led the people through the wilderness. He lost his temper on several occasions. God became impatient and angry with the Israelites as well. And on one occasion, God said to Moses that is enough. “Now you cannot lead the people into the Promised Land.”
“Why now? Why this moment?” Moses must have thought. The Torah relates: “I pleaded with the Lord at that time, saying, ‘O Lord God, You who let Your servant see the first works of Your greatness…. Let me, I pray, cross over and see the good land on the other side of the Jordan…’ The Lord said, to me, ‘Enough! Never speak to Me of that matter again!’” (Deuteronomy 4) The commentators are also perplexed. Why would Moses plead on his own behalf? Why would he share with the people his frustration that his plea was denied.
The medieval commentator, Ibn Ezra, suggests it is to teach the importance of living in the land of Israel. This land is more important than any other. The rabbis believe it is to convey the lesson that no one should ever lose hope. Our most fervent prayers may yet be answered. The modern commentator, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, offers that Moses still does not acknowledge his sin. He is not praying for forgiveness but instead asking that this unjust decree be annulled.
All suggestions appear inadequate. The questions remain.
They haunt Moses.
Then again, perhaps they animate him. The answer always stands at a distance.
“Moses was a hundred and twenty years old when he died; his eyes were undimmed and his vigor unabated.” (Deuteronomy 34)
Live the question!
Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not now look for the answers. They cannot now be given to you because you could not live them. It is a question of experiencing everything. At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day. (Letters to a Young Poet)When Moses pleaded before God that he be allowed to step foot in the land of Israel, I imagine questions to plague his soul despite his many years of experience. “Why cannot I cross over and see the good land on the other side of the Jordan?” Questions defined him throughout his years. When God first called to Moses, he wondered aloud about his worthiness and protested God’s choice to send him to Pharoah.
And yet God’s demands guided him. For forty years he led the people through the wilderness. He lost his temper on several occasions. God became impatient and angry with the Israelites as well. And on one occasion, God said to Moses that is enough. “Now you cannot lead the people into the Promised Land.”
“Why now? Why this moment?” Moses must have thought. The Torah relates: “I pleaded with the Lord at that time, saying, ‘O Lord God, You who let Your servant see the first works of Your greatness…. Let me, I pray, cross over and see the good land on the other side of the Jordan…’ The Lord said, to me, ‘Enough! Never speak to Me of that matter again!’” (Deuteronomy 4) The commentators are also perplexed. Why would Moses plead on his own behalf? Why would he share with the people his frustration that his plea was denied.
The medieval commentator, Ibn Ezra, suggests it is to teach the importance of living in the land of Israel. This land is more important than any other. The rabbis believe it is to convey the lesson that no one should ever lose hope. Our most fervent prayers may yet be answered. The modern commentator, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, offers that Moses still does not acknowledge his sin. He is not praying for forgiveness but instead asking that this unjust decree be annulled.
All suggestions appear inadequate. The questions remain.
They haunt Moses.
Then again, perhaps they animate him. The answer always stands at a distance.
“Moses was a hundred and twenty years old when he died; his eyes were undimmed and his vigor unabated.” (Deuteronomy 34)
Live the question!
Getting the Future Back on Track
Representative Jamie Raskin, who recently appeared at our synagogue in conversation with Representative Steve Israel, writes: “If we cannot get the past right, we will get the future all wrong.” (Unthinkable: Trauma, Truth, and the Trials of American Democracy)
Ours is an oftentimes sad and tortured history. We sometimes struggle to get it right. This is because holidays are not the same as history. Holidays are about creating memory. They are about inculcating identity. History is about uncovering truth. It is about drawing lessons.
On Sunday, Jews will commemorate Tisha B’Av, the day our tradition sets aside to mark past tragedies, in particular the destruction of the First Temple by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E. and the Second by the Romans in 70 C.E. We look at these through the lenses of tradition.
Judaism suggests that not only were the temples destroyed on this day, but nearly every tragedy that ever happened to the Jewish people occurred on the ninth of Av. The spies returned from the land of Israel with a bad report on Tisha B’Av. The Jews were expelled from England in 1290 and then from Spain in 1492 on the ninth of Av. World War I started, and operations began at the Treblinka death camp, as well as deportations from the Warsaw ghetto, on Tisha B’Av.
Our tradition is decisive. History is less clear.
The tradition suggests the Babylonians leveled the temple. Historians continue to dig for the truth. Some suggest it was not really King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylonia but instead the Edomites who burned the temple to the ground. The tradition turns away from this debate and shifts the focus to why. The Book of Lamentations, the words we chant on this fast day, argues that it was all because of our sins. “Jerusalem has greatly sinned; therefore, she is become a mockery.” (Lamentations 1)
Likewise, the rabbis looked within to explain the destruction of the Second Temple. The Talmud tells a remarkable story. Here is the legend. A man had a friend named Kamza and an enemy called Bar Kamza. One time when he was throwing a party, his event planner sent the invite to Bar Kamza instead of Kamza. When Bar Kamza showed up at the party, the man was furious.
He told Bar Kamza to leave and even said to him, “I don’t want you here. You have been gossiping about me.” Bar Kamza was embarrassed about leaving, but not apparently about gossiping, and so offered to pay for the cost of the party. The man refused his generosity and threw him out. The other guests did not get involved in the dispute. Even the rabbis in attendance said nothing.
Bar Kamza left the party stewing in anger. So, he went straight to the Roman authorities and said, “The Jews are rebelling against you.” The emperor asked, “How can I be certain?” Bar Kamza responded, “Send them a calf to offer as a sacrifice and you will see that they will refuse it.” Meanwhile, Bar Kamza secretly rendered the animal unkosher.
The rabbis realized they were in a bind. If they offer the calf, they will please the Romans but dishonor their tradition. If they don’t offer the sacrifice, they will uphold their traditions, but anger the emperor. The majority argued to keep the peace. (Some argued to kill Bar Kamza! Too bad they did not say, “Maybe we should have gotten involved at the party.”) Rabbi Zechariah ben Abkulas persuaded them that the tradition must persevere and so they refused the emperor’s gift.
The Romans were so enraged that they destroyed the temple and leveled Jerusalem. (Babylonian Talmud, Gittin 55b-56a) All of this happened because of a mistaken invitation. One small, seemingly insignificant event spiraled out of control. Interpersonal failures can sometimes lead to tragic, and cataclysmic, consequences. They can spill over well beyond the initial people involved.
And this is a lesson that continues to find contemporary resonance. Beware of where baseless hatred can lead. “Lonely sits the city. Once great with people! She that was great among nations is become like a widow; the princess among states is become a thrall.” (Lamentations 1)
Traditions offer morals. They also neatly hue to preconceived ideologies.
Historical tragedies impel us to mourn, but they can also provide us with opportunities for self-examination. Do we heed this call?
What of history’s lessons?
If we only look at the past through the lenses of tradition and identity, if we only view the past through the morals and ideals we hold dear, how will we get the history right?
My bewilderment continues.
How will we get the future back on track?
Ours is an oftentimes sad and tortured history. We sometimes struggle to get it right. This is because holidays are not the same as history. Holidays are about creating memory. They are about inculcating identity. History is about uncovering truth. It is about drawing lessons.
On Sunday, Jews will commemorate Tisha B’Av, the day our tradition sets aside to mark past tragedies, in particular the destruction of the First Temple by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E. and the Second by the Romans in 70 C.E. We look at these through the lenses of tradition.
Judaism suggests that not only were the temples destroyed on this day, but nearly every tragedy that ever happened to the Jewish people occurred on the ninth of Av. The spies returned from the land of Israel with a bad report on Tisha B’Av. The Jews were expelled from England in 1290 and then from Spain in 1492 on the ninth of Av. World War I started, and operations began at the Treblinka death camp, as well as deportations from the Warsaw ghetto, on Tisha B’Av.
Our tradition is decisive. History is less clear.
The tradition suggests the Babylonians leveled the temple. Historians continue to dig for the truth. Some suggest it was not really King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylonia but instead the Edomites who burned the temple to the ground. The tradition turns away from this debate and shifts the focus to why. The Book of Lamentations, the words we chant on this fast day, argues that it was all because of our sins. “Jerusalem has greatly sinned; therefore, she is become a mockery.” (Lamentations 1)
Likewise, the rabbis looked within to explain the destruction of the Second Temple. The Talmud tells a remarkable story. Here is the legend. A man had a friend named Kamza and an enemy called Bar Kamza. One time when he was throwing a party, his event planner sent the invite to Bar Kamza instead of Kamza. When Bar Kamza showed up at the party, the man was furious.
He told Bar Kamza to leave and even said to him, “I don’t want you here. You have been gossiping about me.” Bar Kamza was embarrassed about leaving, but not apparently about gossiping, and so offered to pay for the cost of the party. The man refused his generosity and threw him out. The other guests did not get involved in the dispute. Even the rabbis in attendance said nothing.
Bar Kamza left the party stewing in anger. So, he went straight to the Roman authorities and said, “The Jews are rebelling against you.” The emperor asked, “How can I be certain?” Bar Kamza responded, “Send them a calf to offer as a sacrifice and you will see that they will refuse it.” Meanwhile, Bar Kamza secretly rendered the animal unkosher.
The rabbis realized they were in a bind. If they offer the calf, they will please the Romans but dishonor their tradition. If they don’t offer the sacrifice, they will uphold their traditions, but anger the emperor. The majority argued to keep the peace. (Some argued to kill Bar Kamza! Too bad they did not say, “Maybe we should have gotten involved at the party.”) Rabbi Zechariah ben Abkulas persuaded them that the tradition must persevere and so they refused the emperor’s gift.
The Romans were so enraged that they destroyed the temple and leveled Jerusalem. (Babylonian Talmud, Gittin 55b-56a) All of this happened because of a mistaken invitation. One small, seemingly insignificant event spiraled out of control. Interpersonal failures can sometimes lead to tragic, and cataclysmic, consequences. They can spill over well beyond the initial people involved.
And this is a lesson that continues to find contemporary resonance. Beware of where baseless hatred can lead. “Lonely sits the city. Once great with people! She that was great among nations is become like a widow; the princess among states is become a thrall.” (Lamentations 1)
Traditions offer morals. They also neatly hue to preconceived ideologies.
Historical tragedies impel us to mourn, but they can also provide us with opportunities for self-examination. Do we heed this call?
What of history’s lessons?
If we only look at the past through the lenses of tradition and identity, if we only view the past through the morals and ideals we hold dear, how will we get the history right?
My bewilderment continues.
How will we get the future back on track?
The Importance of Keeping Our Word
The Torah states: “Moses spoke to the heads of the Israelite tribes, saying, ‘This is what the Lord has commanded: when people make vows or take an oath, they shall not break their pledge; they must carry out all that has crossed their lips.’” (Numbers 30)
Commentators ask, “Why did Moses speak to the heads of the tribes? Why did he direct his words to the leaders and not all the people?” And like most rabbis, they answer their own questions.The Hatam Sofer, a leading nineteenth century rabbi, responds: “The reason is that leaders often make all types of promises which they don’t keep. Because they often go back on their promises, this warning was aimed specifically at them.”
Leaders should be the most careful with their words. They should be more careful than everyone else.
The Torah’s counsel remains even more relevant today. Its teachings are a reminder of the power of what we say, and promise, and the importance of keeping our word.
The Wilderness Light Is Nearby
Ed Yong writes: “More than a third of humanity, and almost 80 percent of North Americans, can no longer see the Milky Way. ‘The thought of light traveling billions of years from distant galaxies only to be washed out in the last billionth of a second by the glow from the nearest strip mall depresses me to no end,’ the visual ecologist Sönke Johnsen once wrote.” (“How Animals Perceive the Word," The Atlantic, July/August 2022)
Sometimes a phrase startles. It radiates meaning.
I can still recall those few, miraculous times when I witnessed the nighttime sky iridescent with millions of stars. One instance was many years ago when I was hiking in the Sinai desert. There, after the light of the campfire was extinguished, I looked up to see the blackness filled with innumerable stars. When I look up from my backyard, I can often see a few stars, but nothing as luminous as when I turned my eyes upward from the Sinai wilderness.
That difference is only a matter of a billionth of a second!
These days I have been marveling at the images from the Webb Telescope. I did not know what the Carina Nebula was before last week, but I have now discovered it is breathtaking and beautiful. There is the Southern Ring Nebula, Stephan’s Quintet and even SMACS 0723. Science reveals nature’s majesty.
One of the blessings of the pandemic—and I hesitate to extol its blessings while we are still struggling with its disruptions and reckoning with its losses—is how it turned us toward nature. For those first months most especially God’s handiwork was the only spectacle we could attend. And I suspect this might be why I became captivated and intrigued by Ed Yong’ article.
In it he explains that every animal lives within its own sensory bubble, called Umwelt. Its perceived world is its entire world. Only human beings can appreciate the Umwelten of other species. Only human beings can expand their vision and broaden their concern to other worlds. Because of this we have the added responsibility to care for the earth and its creatures.
And then I turned to the Torah and happened upon this verse: “Let the Lord, God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint someone over the community…” (Numbers 27)
Again, I was struck by a phrase. The spirits of all flesh. Does this point to animal spirits? There is the divine spirit in all creatures, in all of nature.
Ed Yong once more:
Sometimes a phrase startles. It radiates meaning.
I can still recall those few, miraculous times when I witnessed the nighttime sky iridescent with millions of stars. One instance was many years ago when I was hiking in the Sinai desert. There, after the light of the campfire was extinguished, I looked up to see the blackness filled with innumerable stars. When I look up from my backyard, I can often see a few stars, but nothing as luminous as when I turned my eyes upward from the Sinai wilderness.
That difference is only a matter of a billionth of a second!
These days I have been marveling at the images from the Webb Telescope. I did not know what the Carina Nebula was before last week, but I have now discovered it is breathtaking and beautiful. There is the Southern Ring Nebula, Stephan’s Quintet and even SMACS 0723. Science reveals nature’s majesty.
One of the blessings of the pandemic—and I hesitate to extol its blessings while we are still struggling with its disruptions and reckoning with its losses—is how it turned us toward nature. For those first months most especially God’s handiwork was the only spectacle we could attend. And I suspect this might be why I became captivated and intrigued by Ed Yong’ article.
In it he explains that every animal lives within its own sensory bubble, called Umwelt. Its perceived world is its entire world. Only human beings can appreciate the Umwelten of other species. Only human beings can expand their vision and broaden their concern to other worlds. Because of this we have the added responsibility to care for the earth and its creatures.
And then I turned to the Torah and happened upon this verse: “Let the Lord, God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint someone over the community…” (Numbers 27)
Again, I was struck by a phrase. The spirits of all flesh. Does this point to animal spirits? There is the divine spirit in all creatures, in all of nature.
Ed Yong once more:
The majesty of nature is not restricted to canyons and mountains. It can be found in the wilds of perception—the sensory spaces that lie outside our Umwelt and within those of other animals. To perceive the world through others’ senses is to find splendor-in familiarity and the sacred in the mundane. Wonders exist in a backyard garden, where bees take the measure of a flower’s electric fields, leafhoppers send vibrational melodies through the stems of plants, and birds behold the hidden palettes of ultraviolet colors on their flock-mates’ feathers. Wilderness is not distant. We are continually immersed in it. It is there for us to imagine, to savor, and to protect.Although I can still remember the stars illuminating the Sinai’s darkened sky, wilderness need not remain so distant. It can be discovered in my backyard.
Mr. President, Visit the Parks and Coffee Shops
President Biden arrived in Jerusalem yesterday. He is staying a short walk from the institute where my wife Susie and I are studying.
The other evening, we walked home past the King David Hotel where the president is staying and made our way through Liberty Bell Park. It was filled with Muslims celebrating Eid al-Adha, the holiday commemorating Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son, Ishmael. (Islam’s version of this story is different than Judaism’s.) There was enthusiasm, and ease, in the air as families shared picnic dinners and children played on the basketball courts.
We then made our way to the First Station, the renovated space of what was once the train station where people arrived in Jerusalem when they traveled from Tel Aviv. There, among the restaurants, bars and shops, we discovered secular, ultra-Orthodox and Arab Israelis, as well as a fair number of rabbis from our program. In one area, Israelis were taking a dance class and in another, they were enjoying a late dinner and in yet another, an evening cocktail.
There was no sense of the tension, and challenges, one reads about in the news....
The other evening, we walked home past the King David Hotel where the president is staying and made our way through Liberty Bell Park. It was filled with Muslims celebrating Eid al-Adha, the holiday commemorating Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son, Ishmael. (Islam’s version of this story is different than Judaism’s.) There was enthusiasm, and ease, in the air as families shared picnic dinners and children played on the basketball courts.
We then made our way to the First Station, the renovated space of what was once the train station where people arrived in Jerusalem when they traveled from Tel Aviv. There, among the restaurants, bars and shops, we discovered secular, ultra-Orthodox and Arab Israelis, as well as a fair number of rabbis from our program. In one area, Israelis were taking a dance class and in another, they were enjoying a late dinner and in yet another, an evening cocktail.
There was no sense of the tension, and challenges, one reads about in the news....
Walking Jerusalem's Streets, Walking to Redemption
In 1996, the leading American Jewish historian, Jonathan Sarna wrote: “The Zion of the American Jewish imagination became something of a fantasy land: a seductive heaven-on-earth, where enemies were vanquished, guilt assuaged, hopes realized, and deeply felt longings satisfied.”
The Torah reports: “The Lord said to Moses and Aaron, ‘Because you did not trust Me enough to affirm My sanctity in the sight of the Israelite people, therefore you shall not lead this congregation into the land that I have given them.’” (Numbers 20)
This week, I returned to Jerusalem after a three-year pandemic induced hiatus. Walking the streets of Jerusalem, even though still jet-lagged, felt immediately restorative. I have returned home. I wonder. Is this imagined or real?
It is an incalculable blessing to live in this unparalleled time in Jewish history....
The Torah reports: “The Lord said to Moses and Aaron, ‘Because you did not trust Me enough to affirm My sanctity in the sight of the Israelite people, therefore you shall not lead this congregation into the land that I have given them.’” (Numbers 20)
This week, I returned to Jerusalem after a three-year pandemic induced hiatus. Walking the streets of Jerusalem, even though still jet-lagged, felt immediately restorative. I have returned home. I wonder. Is this imagined or real?
It is an incalculable blessing to live in this unparalleled time in Jewish history....
Greatness Is an Aspiration
This week we read the story about Korah’s rebellion. He, his followers and 250 leaders, gathered against Moses and Aaron. They said: “You have gone too far! For all the community are holy.” (Numbers 16)
At first glance their complaint appears legitimate. They seem to say that no person is greater than another. Every Israelite is holy and can have a relationship with God. They appear to suggest that while no one is Moses, every person can aspire to his level of holiness.
Yeshayahu Leibowitz, the great Israeli philosopher, finds meaning in the words “are holy.” The rebels believe they are holy, that they have already achieved greatness. Leibowitz teaches that holiness is about striving for greatness. Korah and his followers say in effect, “We have achieved everything. Nothing more is demanded of us.”
The Torah teaches the contrary. Holiness must never be a present boast, but instead a future goal. Leibowitz continues to say that there are people like Korah in every generation. In every time and every place, there are people who believe that they are already holy and great. They are convinced that there is nothing more for them to do to improve their lives or the lot of those who surround them or the people they serve or the world, and the earth, they are bequeathed.
The Torah reminds instead. Our task is to become holy.
Look as well at Moses’ humility. When he was first called at the burning bush, he proclaimed his unworthiness. The true measure of someone who wants to serve God, and others, is to always proclaim, and feel, that they are not up to the task. And yet, circumstances (and God’s call) propel them to serve others. They spend their lives striving, but never achieving.
On this July 4th weekend, when we celebrate the gifts, and responsibilities, of American democracy, we would do well to heed the Torah’s message.
Holiness is about becoming.
Greatness is not an achievement. It is instead an aspiration.
At first glance their complaint appears legitimate. They seem to say that no person is greater than another. Every Israelite is holy and can have a relationship with God. They appear to suggest that while no one is Moses, every person can aspire to his level of holiness.
Yeshayahu Leibowitz, the great Israeli philosopher, finds meaning in the words “are holy.” The rebels believe they are holy, that they have already achieved greatness. Leibowitz teaches that holiness is about striving for greatness. Korah and his followers say in effect, “We have achieved everything. Nothing more is demanded of us.”
The Torah teaches the contrary. Holiness must never be a present boast, but instead a future goal. Leibowitz continues to say that there are people like Korah in every generation. In every time and every place, there are people who believe that they are already holy and great. They are convinced that there is nothing more for them to do to improve their lives or the lot of those who surround them or the people they serve or the world, and the earth, they are bequeathed.
The Torah reminds instead. Our task is to become holy.
Look as well at Moses’ humility. When he was first called at the burning bush, he proclaimed his unworthiness. The true measure of someone who wants to serve God, and others, is to always proclaim, and feel, that they are not up to the task. And yet, circumstances (and God’s call) propel them to serve others. They spend their lives striving, but never achieving.
On this July 4th weekend, when we celebrate the gifts, and responsibilities, of American democracy, we would do well to heed the Torah’s message.
Holiness is about becoming.
Greatness is not an achievement. It is instead an aspiration.
Self-Esteem Is the Secret
At the conclusion of a recent family get together we stood for the requisite photo. The twenty somethings among us said things like, “I want to be on the left. This is my better side. Let me stand in the middle. I look better in that spot.” To be honest, I have no idea which is my better side, despite the fact that photographers often move me around for better angles.
Unlike prior generations, our children are keenly aware of how they appear to others.
They are also the most photographed, and catalogued, group of people in history. What a monumental task to sift through the innumerable digital files we collect in order to stitch together a montage. Today, because of social media, most especially Instagram, people are intensely aware of how they look to others.
The spies returned from scouting the land of Israel and reported, “We looked like grasshoppers to ourselves, and so we must have looked to them.” (Numbers 13) How did they know how they looked to the land’s inhabitants? I wonder. Is their estimation of themselves so diminished that this is how they imagined everyone saw them?
Abraham Twerski who was both a rabbi and psychiatrist, comments:
In our own age, this phenomenon is compounded by social media. The tabulation of likes has become the incessant and imaginary voices of the Canaanites saying, “Look at that outfit. Look at his smile. Look at her hair.” And now, I worry. Everyone is in danger of seeing themselves as grasshoppers.
Self-perception is unduly influenced by others. Self-esteem is undermined by likes, or even more so, by their absence.
I wonder how we can better sway our perception of ourselves. Twerski observes, “The way you feel about yourself is the way you believe that others perceive you.” Do his words continue to hold true? His insights from 1987 seem so outdated. Or are they instead prophetic?
Because of the spies’ negative report, the Israelites are destined to spend forty years wandering in the Sinai wilderness. God insists that those who left Egypt as slaves, apart from Joshua and Caleb who offered a positive report, will die in the wilderness. Only those who were born in the Sinai, who were born free, will enter the land of Israel and live there in security.
Those born in freedom do not see themselves as grasshoppers. They instead see themselves as mighty. They are free from the shackles of how others see them.
Does the Torah’s story hinge on self-perception? Is our own redemption tied to self-esteem?
How can we tell our children not to mistake Instagram’s comments and likes for who they are and who they can become? How can we convince our children that faith in themselves, and their own abilities, and most especially their God-given potential is all that really matters? It is this faith in themselves that ensures the Israelites eventual redemption.
This faith makes all the difference in the world. It can likewise change our children’s Torah. It can transport them, like the Israelites, from wandering aimlessly to finding security and arriving home.
Unlike prior generations, our children are keenly aware of how they appear to others.
They are also the most photographed, and catalogued, group of people in history. What a monumental task to sift through the innumerable digital files we collect in order to stitch together a montage. Today, because of social media, most especially Instagram, people are intensely aware of how they look to others.
The spies returned from scouting the land of Israel and reported, “We looked like grasshoppers to ourselves, and so we must have looked to them.” (Numbers 13) How did they know how they looked to the land’s inhabitants? I wonder. Is their estimation of themselves so diminished that this is how they imagined everyone saw them?
Abraham Twerski who was both a rabbi and psychiatrist, comments:
The person who sees a given object is certain that everyone else sees just what he sees. He does not doubt the validity of his sense of perception, and if he sees a brown-table, he naturally assumes that everyone else also sees the object as a brown table. Similarly, the person who has a perception of himself as being dull, socially inept, unattractive, or unlikeable, is convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that this is also the way others perceive him. To him, his perception is reality.The spies could not hear what the Canaanites said about them. They imagined that they called them puny grasshoppers because that is how they saw themselves. They heard the inhabitants saying over and over again, “Look at how small those Israelites are.”
In our own age, this phenomenon is compounded by social media. The tabulation of likes has become the incessant and imaginary voices of the Canaanites saying, “Look at that outfit. Look at his smile. Look at her hair.” And now, I worry. Everyone is in danger of seeing themselves as grasshoppers.
Self-perception is unduly influenced by others. Self-esteem is undermined by likes, or even more so, by their absence.
I wonder how we can better sway our perception of ourselves. Twerski observes, “The way you feel about yourself is the way you believe that others perceive you.” Do his words continue to hold true? His insights from 1987 seem so outdated. Or are they instead prophetic?
Because of the spies’ negative report, the Israelites are destined to spend forty years wandering in the Sinai wilderness. God insists that those who left Egypt as slaves, apart from Joshua and Caleb who offered a positive report, will die in the wilderness. Only those who were born in the Sinai, who were born free, will enter the land of Israel and live there in security.
Those born in freedom do not see themselves as grasshoppers. They instead see themselves as mighty. They are free from the shackles of how others see them.
Does the Torah’s story hinge on self-perception? Is our own redemption tied to self-esteem?
How can we tell our children not to mistake Instagram’s comments and likes for who they are and who they can become? How can we convince our children that faith in themselves, and their own abilities, and most especially their God-given potential is all that really matters? It is this faith in themselves that ensures the Israelites eventual redemption.
This faith makes all the difference in the world. It can likewise change our children’s Torah. It can transport them, like the Israelites, from wandering aimlessly to finding security and arriving home.
Unexpected Turns Make for Great Stories
Imagine the Israelites’ journey through the wilderness. They moved from camp to camp and from location to location throughout their wanderings in the Sinai desert. They were led on this forty-year journey by God. When the cloud remained over the tabernacle they stayed in camp. When the cloud moved, they broke camp.
The Torah reports: “Whether it was two days or a month or a year—however long the cloud lingered over the tabernacle—the Israelites remained encamped and did not set out; only when it lifted did they break camp.” (Numbers 9)
And I am lingering on those opening words: “whether it was two days or a month or year.” How unsettled is the Israelites’ lot. They did not know which way they were headed or how long they would stay once they got there. Rabbi Obadiah ben Jacob Sforno who lived in late fifteenth century Italy comments:
Sforno again comments: “It was impossible to predict with any degree of probability how long they would stay in one location.”
Perhaps the entire journey was a test. Perhaps all of their wanderings were meant to teach the Torah’s most important truth. There is only one thing on which the people can know for certain and on which they can rely. And that is God.
The journey was entirely in God’s hands.
Do we have the faith to determine the same? Do we have the faith to exclaim, “Our wanderings are entirely at God’s direction?”
Is it possible to see life’s journeys, its unexpected turns, and most especially those unforeseen hurdles that are entirely outside of our control, as adventures or better yet as demonstrations that we are not leading but being led?
Even Moses did not know how long they would stay in one location. If he did not know, then how can we expect to know what lies ahead?
Sure, we can complain like the Israelites. But we can also have faith like the Israelites.
We may think we are Moses and leading our lives. Instead, we are just like the Israelites being led in a circuitous path that provides miracles and adventures, grumblings and mishaps. All that we can know for sure is that it makes for great stories.
And one beautiful Torah.
Have faith!
The Torah reports: “Whether it was two days or a month or a year—however long the cloud lingered over the tabernacle—the Israelites remained encamped and did not set out; only when it lifted did they break camp.” (Numbers 9)
And I am lingering on those opening words: “whether it was two days or a month or year.” How unsettled is the Israelites’ lot. They did not know which way they were headed or how long they would stay once they got there. Rabbi Obadiah ben Jacob Sforno who lived in late fifteenth century Italy comments:
This is now already the fifth time the Torah belabors the subject of these journeys, something totally unprecedented. It alerts us to how sometimes the people did not even have time to send their beasts to graze, whereas on other occasions they had to dismantle everything at very short notice, any plans they had made having to be abandoned.It is no wonder that they complained. It is no wonder that they grumbled against Moses. “The people took to complaining bitterly.” (Numbers 11) Just when they started getting comfortable in one place they had to pack up and move to another.
Sforno again comments: “It was impossible to predict with any degree of probability how long they would stay in one location.”
Perhaps the entire journey was a test. Perhaps all of their wanderings were meant to teach the Torah’s most important truth. There is only one thing on which the people can know for certain and on which they can rely. And that is God.
The journey was entirely in God’s hands.
Do we have the faith to determine the same? Do we have the faith to exclaim, “Our wanderings are entirely at God’s direction?”
Is it possible to see life’s journeys, its unexpected turns, and most especially those unforeseen hurdles that are entirely outside of our control, as adventures or better yet as demonstrations that we are not leading but being led?
Even Moses did not know how long they would stay in one location. If he did not know, then how can we expect to know what lies ahead?
Sure, we can complain like the Israelites. But we can also have faith like the Israelites.
We may think we are Moses and leading our lives. Instead, we are just like the Israelites being led in a circuitous path that provides miracles and adventures, grumblings and mishaps. All that we can know for sure is that it makes for great stories.
And one beautiful Torah.
Have faith!