The holidays are over. The mahzorim are back on the shelf. All that's left is to take down the Sukkot, change the Torah mantles back to their regular colors, and get the white robe dry-cleaned. But now that we're in the month of Tishrei's swan song, I'd be remiss if I didn't share some thoughts about this past month, mostly what I'm grateful for.
This has been an amazing month, possibly the best High Holidays I've experienced in my brief rabbinic career. Sermons were well received, Gift Of Life recruited over 100 people to the Registry, we collected nearly 5000 pounds of food for the Food Bank of Delaware. Lay participants were amazing, the music was amazing; from the High Holidays to the Festival, the beginning of Religious School and Simchat Torah and Confirmation, everyone brought their 'A' game. But for me, it was the little things, the personal things, the small moments that made the difference.
A lot of it goes back to my son. He insisted on helping me put up and take down the Sukkah. A few weeks ago he came to me wanting to listen to Shabbat music he found on Youtube. Before last night, he practiced the shema for Consecration with enthusiasm, then last night he wanted to read his little Torah for his bedtime story. We were reading a "Peanuts" comic and Schroeder was talking about "Fur Elise", so we listened to it on the computer, and I watched his eyes grow wide listening to the music. For school E's teacher wanted us to share our hopes for him for this year. So I wrote them down, but then E wanted to hear them. We talked about learning to try and not wanting to be perfect, to experience new things, to defend his values with his words, and he was totally tuned in. He's a 6-year old boy, not the Baal Shem Tov: he still wants to spend most of his time talking Pokemon and Lego Chima, but these last few weeks have been filled with amazing moments of sharing and joy.
Normally, the holidays are hell on a rabbinic family, but Marisa and I have been able to find time to share quiet moments, to go out and celebrate with friends, to support one another, and to have her wisdom and strength throughout.
People came this year with a positive attitude. I can't explain it, but I'm also not going to question it. People came to the holidays (largely) happy and engaged, or at least open to engagement. It makes all the difference.
Last Sunday I Skyped with a pile of my High School buddies, and for a few hours I was 17 again. I don't advise it regularly, but it was wonderful and renewing.
I'm sure if I thought about it, I could come up with more. But for all these, I am grateful.
A place to explore questions about Torah, Jewish tradition and how we interact with the world meaningfully.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Yom Kippur Sermon 2: We Belong Together
Rabbi Yair Robinson
Yom Kippur Morning 5773
Once upon a time there was a town with a tiny synagogue.
They had no rabbi, a small building, and only enough Jewish adults that if
everyone came to services, they could make minyan. So every Friday, every
Shabbat morning, every Holiday, each adult would come to services, because they
knew they were needed. They taught each other’s’ children, they celebrated
together, said Kaddish together, broke bread together. Then one day, a new
family moved to town, bringing up the number of eligible members of the minyan
to 13. The community rejoiced—they hadn’t had a new family in years. They
celebrated the new family together with a special Shabbat dinner and service.
Everyone was full of joy. The following day, at Shabbat morning services, only
eight people came.
What are we to learn from this story? There are many—an
entire generation—that remember a time when, while the synagogue wasn’t 10
people, it was pretty close to this ideal. Everyone was the same generation,
had the same experiences, and worked together intimately to create a sacred
community. Everyone was needed, and everyone participated. Ask someone about
the brotherhood breakfasts, the meetings in people’s living rooms, the marches,
the favorite teachers, and you get the idea.
It’s easy to say, “Oh, we’re such a big congregation now. It
doesn’t matter. We have staff, we have Clergy. We don’t count. Therefore, I
don’t have any responsibility toward this. It’s someone else’s problem.”
Everyone in a
congregation counts. Every dollar donated, every person who teaches, who
volunteers his or her time, who shares the history of a congregation and
preserves it for the next generation, who sings, who plays an instrument, who
trains up new leaders, who even just brings a friend or a new family to a
program or service. Everyone who contributes of his or her wealth wisdom or
work moves this congregation forward. Everyone counts.
How do we count? We
all contribute in different ways; Yehuda Leib of Ger reminds us that each
person has a unique knowledge of God's greatness, and only that person can
share that spark of holiness with the world. To withhold that talent, that
ability, that spark from the congregation would be the equivalent of what
happened in that story. We cannot assume someone else will do it; it is our task,
all of us, to our ability and blessing.
I have spoken with
people who describe themselves as spiritual, who talk about studying Judaism
for themselves without any interest in participating in the larger community.
I’ve spoken to people whose connection is through their chavurah, or their
small circle of friends, but as a result now don’t know more than half the
congregation, and feel less and less of a connection. There is a reason Judaism
insists on a minyan for worship, especially the most critical prayers. Ours is
a religion of community, not individuality. Jewish values fly in the face of
American ideals of the rugged individual, all on their own. In Judaism, you
didn’t build that—not on your own. You don’t suffer alone, in the dark, no
matter what the joke about the light bulb says. In Judaism we come together, we
share together. We cling to one another. And in fact, we don’t just count each
other as a number; we recognize the specific holiness, the specific quality of
the person before us. There is a tradition in Judaism that when we count a
minyan, we don't count by number, we use the first line of Ma Tovu, the verses
from Torah and the morning service, each syllable of the first verse = 10. We
do this to remind ourselves that people aren't just numbers. We do this to
remind ourselves that our house is fair only when everyone counts and everyone
does the work.
If that’s the goal,
if that’s how it’s supposed to be, then why don’t we feel it? Or why don’t we
feel it enough? What’s missing? Last night I talked about how too often we have
that sense that our kishkes aren’t being nourished. We come to services (or
not), come to programs (or don’t) and too often feel alone in the crowd. I
mentioned that there is much work for me and leadership to do to help alleviate
this, but there’s another ingredient, another crucial piece: YOU.
Ask yourself: what is your gift, your talent,
your unique knowledge of God you could be sharing with this place. Then ask the
question: Why aren’t you sharing it? Maybe it’s because no one asked. An
officer of the Federation told me that he was at a congregational meeting, and
a longtime leader of the community confided in him that he had wanted to get
involved in Federation, but no one asked. Perhaps no one knew to ask, but it didn’t
matter—that officer immediately asked for the leaders’ help. Perhaps it’s
because you didn’t think this was a place where your talents would be valued,
or perhaps you had a great idea in the past and were rebuffed. Perhaps you
shared it in the past, and after a while, you got tired. No shame in that. But
it’s time to share, or share again, Knowing that you are the one who allows us
to make blessings together.
This past summer we
had a gathering on a Saturday afternoon to talk about trends in the Reform
Movement. In our discussion, we talked about what we should expect from a
synagogue: that it is caring, respectful of our individual needs, a place where
Jews could gather to worship, study, and be with one another, that it be a
place that was part of the greater community. But we also spoke of what the
congregation should expect from us. The list—generated by laypeople of all
ages, backgrounds, and levels of engagement—ranged from the expected: fiscal
participation, for example, to the unexpected. What I learned from that
experience is that people want to feel needed, want to know that they matter,
want to know that this place isn’t just a place of convenient Jewish
experience, but meaningful Jewish experience.
So let me then,
respectfully, tell you what is needed of us—ALL of us. And it’s very simple. We
need to be here.
That’s it. We need to be here. We need to be present in each
other’s lives. Don’t tell me “I have enough friends.” Don’t tell me “it’s inconvenient.”
Don’t tell me “I can never make it anyway, I don’t use it anyway.” We need to
be here. Being part of a congregation is not the same as joining a gym, or a
country club. It’s a promise, a covenant. When I woke up this morning, I didn’t
think to myself, “I wonder if I’ll be a husband today?” “I wonder if I’ll be
father today?” or even “I wonder if I’ll be a rabbi today?” Why? Because
I promised. When I married Marisa, when Elishai came into this world,
when I stood on the bimah of the Plum Street Temple, I swore an oath; I made a
promise, one that changed my identity radically and permanently. I made a
commitment to something larger than myself—marriage, fatherhood, the rabbinate.
Each of us has, in one way, shape or form, reaffirmed a promise made by our ancestors. We read today, “Kedoshim Tihiyu”, you shall be holy. We assume it’s a mitzvah, a commandment, but really, it’s an affirmation by God of something we as a people had already said at Sinai. We said, “Kol diber Adonai na’asei”, all that God has said, we will do. Only by making that commitment, that promise, was God able to proclaim our holiness. By affirming and reaffirming our connection to Judaism, we are making the same promise our ancestors made on that desert morning long ago.
Likewise, each of us have sworn an oath: to this community, to our family, to our
people. It’s swearing an oath, to support others in time of trouble, to
celebrate with others in times of joy. To take each other seriously, and assume
the best in one another. To speak words of love and praise when we see a
harried volunteer or teacher or staffer doing their best to make something
work, to share words of concern when we see a fellow congregant in pain, to
embrace each other fully and see the face of God in one another even—and
especially—when we disagree with one another. To worship and study and gather
and break bread with and party with and raise kids and grandkids with each
other. Because we promised. We made a covenant.
Sounds too simple, right? That’s not how our world works,
right? To join a synagogue is a consumerist activity; we choose a synagogue by
going ‘synagogue shopping’. We decide that our connection is tenuous: how often
we’ve heard people say, “Oh, I quit because my friends weren’t there anymore”,
“we weren’t using it”, “and our kids are grown.” But we are not consumers—we
are CONGREGANTS. And congregants congregate. Because we promised.
No, we can’t do
everything and be everywhere, but it was the sages of the Chasidim who
said: when I say I can’t do everything, let it not be in order to do nothing.
Let it be, instead, merely a recognition that I don’t have to do everything,
that other people too will do their part to right wrongs, just as they—and
I—will try not to add to the wrongs we see done each day. And friends, your absence from one
another’s lives adds to the wrongs we see done each day. Because I will tell
you, when we are here only for a few state occasions, when we see each other
less, when we’re in each other’s lives less, that is when we begin to see each
other as non-essential, that is when we assume the worst instincts in each
other, that is when this place—and its participants—becomes inconvenient, that
is when our hearts grow hard and coarse and that is when we stop counting.
I began with a
story about a small community that chose to make itself smaller, not only in
terms of size but in terms of quality, a community of individuals who shirked
their responsibilities, their promises to one another, who forgot that each was
essential to the other, and that the whole was nothing without the individual.
We can write a different story, you and I. We can write a story of hands
touching hands, of lives and joys and gifts shared and people supported and
music and prayer made together. We can write a new story this moment. We can
affirm our relationship—our promise—to one another. The poet David Whyte
reminds us “there is no house like the house of belonging.” In this house, with
each other, we belong together. Amen.
Yom Kippur Sermon 1: Standing Together, Standing Apart.
I want to share an experience I had with you some time ago,
one that I suspect you can relate to. If you remember, a few years ago I went
to the AIPAC conference. In case you’re worried, by the way, this isn’t an
AIPAC sermon. That said, it was unlike any other experience I’d ever had, and
I’ve been processing it ever since.
Now, a word about me and large gatherings of Jews: I’m
really comfortable with them. I’ve been going to the URJ biennial since 1991.
That doesn’t overwhelm me. Being in a room with five or seven thousand other
Jews for services, or just milling around energizes me. Heck, I probably know
half of the people in the room. Between my camp, HUC and youth group
experiences, Biennial becomes Trafalgar square. Add to that my comfort in
gatherings in general. Without popping my collar, I know how to work an oneg.
Been doing it my whole life. In fact, Marisa and I frequently joke that, when
we’re at a gathering of people we don’t know, we go into ‘oneg mode’ and just
wade into the crowd, introducing ourselves, making conversation and
connections.
But AIPAC was different. After going through security and
getting my credentials, I walked down to the main convention floor, and
suddenly realized that, other than the Delaware delegation and a couple of
colleagues sprinkled about the 10,000 attendees, I didn’t know a single person.
I was overwhelmed. I was alone. And I was miserable.
As I said, I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about
that experience. It’s not that the work we were doing wasn’t important—I bought
into the reason for being there. It’s that I didn’t have enough points of
connection with the other people there. For me, there wasn’t a sense of
community. I made small talk with a couple of new people, exchanged business
cards, and got to meet Shmuely Boteach, but otherwise felt like I got nothing
out of the experience.
Notice what I just said. Because I didn’t make meaningful
connections with people, I didn’t feel like I got anything out of it. Meaningful
connections weren’t the reason for being there—it was never the point. The
point was to learn about issues affecting Israel and advocate for the Jewish
state on Capitol Hill. But that lack of engagement with others meant a lack of
engagement with the program itself. I’m sure for those who are regulars they
were ‘at home’, and no one was mean or explicitly rude, but for me it felt
cold, distant and off-putting.
So why have I been thinking about it for the last two years?
Because I worry—no, I know—that for too many of you, that’s your experience
HERE. You want to be here, you want to make a connection. You’re good at
connecting with others—you have a circle of friends and loved ones, and have no
trouble schmoozing in your given circle. But when you come here, you’re alone,
and miserable. Not because someone treated you explicitly poorly, and not
because you’re not committed to the idea of being a part of the
synagogue—you’re here, after all. But there’s a lack of engagement, a lack of comfort,
a lack of connection. So you come, you have some chitchat, and you leave
disappointed rather than renewed.
And so, increasingly, being a part of the synagogue doesn’t
mean being a part of the synagogue, it means being apart from the synagogue. I
can’t tell you how many people I talk to who leave the synagogue who say it’s
because the kids are gone or they don’t use it, but in conversation we
eventually get around to “my friends aren’t here anymore” or “I don’t feel
connected to anyone here”. A lack of meaningful connection means a lack of
engagement with the synagogue itself.
My friends, this is a problem. It’s a hard problem to see,
because we look so successful, and in many respects, we are, or to borrow the
punchline from the joke about the Jewish businessman, we’re comfortable. We
have a beautiful building, a religious school filled to the brim, and a
calendar so chock-full of programs it gives me a headache. Our pews are not
empty on Friday night. But the problem is there. It’s there when I see people
once active start to back away and eventually disappear without an explanation.
I see it in folks who come to services but don’t stay for oneg—and not because
they’re going out with a group from the Temple for a drink. I see it in
Chavurot that are lovely to each other but seem to have very little connection
with the synagogue itself. I see it in the folks who, despite this being my
FIFTH high holidays, have never had so much as a conversation with me over a
cup of coffee. And I see it in the occasional assumption of mistrust that no
one wants to talk about: that new board members won’t know the history, while
longtime leaders are trapped in the past, that the young and the old in our
congregation work at cross purposes, and that we can’t speak truthfully AND
sensitively at the same time.
Friends, it’s not about the building—buildings exist to
serve our needs, not the other way around. Programming, as wonderful as it is,
can only do its job if people are engaged with each other, and not just the
event. And knowing each of the different groups in the congregation, no one is
trying to pull a fast one on anyone else. And by the way, the problem we face
isn’t a catastrophe, not a crisis—yes, believe it or not, not every issue is a
crisis! Ours is a good congregation, a healthy congregation, a normal
congregation. But we can be better. We
can do better. We are good—we can be great. But it won’t happen if we don’t
work together on this fundamental problem: a problem of relationships.
What do I mean? I mean that we’ve been spending a lot of
energy—spiritual, financial, programmatic and emotional—on the wrong set of
outcomes. For many of us, for too long, we’ve thought the goal was
transactional: to belong to a synagogue in order to educate the kids, bury loved
ones, participate in programming, have a place for the high holidays. But it’s
no more about the programs than it is about the building. It’s not about giving
the kids a bar mitzvah, or High Holiday tickets. Ron Wolfson articulates it
well: The goal is…to become a Relational
Jew, a Jew who views Judaism as impacting virtually all of one’s
relationships.”
Think about that: your Judaism impacting—in a positive
way—your relational choices: at work, at school, at home, with your friends,
with your family, with yourself and—dare I say it—with the still small voice of
God within you. Belonging to a Jewish
community, then, is not about getting an outcome, it’s about engagement; it’s
about relating to your fellow Jewish man or woman.
The question is how.
The first part requires all of us to be a little more
optimistic, a little more hopeful, and a little more kind in our interactions
with each other. Let’s assume good intent toward one another. Let’s assume
we’re all here to help and support one another, to love one another the best
way we know how—not necessarily the way we want, but the way we can. True, a
new board member doesn’t know the history of what happened here in the 1970s,
but she still works for the good of the congregation and to benefit her members.
The parent who comes in bedraggled from a schedule packed to the gills is
looking for help, but also for meaning, he just doesn’t always know how to ask
for it. That doesn’t mean he wants the place to crumble. The phone call that
comes from a stranger sometimes is about checking up and making sure you’re
okay. And the good suggestion you want to share with the rabbi may just get
heard and implemented—but only if you share it.
The second part is one of engagement. Much of it rests on
me. As I said, this is my fifth high holidays, and too many of you I’ve only
met once, or not even once. You’re going to be hearing from me. You’re going to
get personal invitations to connect—here in the synagogue and out of the
building, connected to a program and unconnected to anything except an
opportunity to build relationships. We owe it to each other to deepen that
connection, so when you get that envelope or phone call, say yes; to coffee, to
wine-and-cheese before services, to a chance to study together. Say yes.
The third is going to require your help. We need to deepen
our relationships with each other, to know one another better. Ask each other:
what keeps you up at night? What gets you up in the morning? What crossroads
are you at this week? But that means more than just showing up, it means
reaching out and touching each other. If you have a suggestion how that can
happen—great! Bring it forward. My answer will be yes. Let me say that again—it
will be yes.
So why bother? Why do we need to do this? Is this just about
dues, about preserving the institution? Nothing could be further from the
truth. Those who know me well know that, while I’m loyal to the people of Beth
Emeth, I’m not one for perpetuating institutions for their own sake. If Beth
Emeth were failing its members, utterly failing, I’d be among the first and the
loudest to say it was time to pack it in. We are not failing. We’re doing good
work, we’re serving needs. But it’s time to take it to the next level. It’s
time to ask the question “why are you here” and not answer “because I get this,
that or the other thing” out of my dues, but to answer “Because we need each
other, and the greater community needs us.” “Because by sharing in study,
worship, singing, and gathering with my fellow Jews, I feel renewed, energized;
I grow as a person when I’m there.” “Because this is where my friends are: we
support each other.” “Because my voice and experience matters.”
Two years ago I asked the question: Why are you here?
Tonight I ask the question again. Are we here out of a sense of obligation, or
to get our money’s worth, or are we here with a great and heavy ambivalence? Or
are we here because, on this holiest day of the year, it’s essential to touch
and be touched by people who share our people’s values, because we love each
other deeply and fiercely? I hope the answer to the latter is yes; but I
appreciate that for many, getting to yes will take time and effort. Tonight we
ask the question, tomorrow we explore more deeply how we’re going to get there.
But for now, we end with a prayer:
Hear, O Israel-
On this Sacred Day we Stand:
We stand together,
We stand apart
Our hearts ache to reach toward each other,
But we don’t know how.
We are seeking one another
We are seeking our God in each other’s eyes
May our efforts be received with love
May our Kavannah, our
intention, be shared
And may we come to fulfill the words of Our Torah
That we stand Facing one another
And thus facing the God who loves this people
And calls us to love each other. Amen.
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Wise Counsel, and a prayer for forgiveness
From the Wisdom of Ben Sira, as recorded in the Birnbaum High Holiday Prayerbook:
Reverence for the ETERNAL is the root of wisdom,
and the branches of wisdom are long life.
Do not exalt yourself, or you may fall
And bring disgrace upon yourse.f
He who provides for his father atones for his sins;
He who honors his mother is like one who gathers treasure.
My child, help your father in his old age;
do not grieve him as long as he lives.
As water will quench a blazing fire,
So kindliness will atone for sin.
My child, do not defraud the poor of their living;
do not make the eyes of the needy wait long.
Do not pain a hungry heart;
Do not anger a man in distress.
Listen to what a poor man has to say,
and give him a peaceful and gentle answer.
Do not put off turning to the ETERNAL;
Do not postpone it from day to day.
Do not be known as a whisperer;
do not set an ambush with your tongue.
Do not follow your impulses,
But refrain from your longings.
Do not indulge in too much luxury,
And do not be tied to its expense.
Flee from sin as from a serpent,
For it will bite you when you come near it.
Do not be angry with your neighbor,
And overlook men's ignorance.
Forgive your fellow man his wrongdoings,
Then your sins will be forgiven when you pray.
My heart is open to the hearts of others.
I forgive those who have wronged me this year.
May they not stumble on my account.
I ask forgiveness of all I have done.
May I live up to their--and my own--expectations.
O God we plea before you: give us wisdom, love and kindness
to forgive each other and ourselves. Pardon the iniquities of this People, of all people.
May we all live up to the words of your Torah, fulfill Your Sacred word:
"The ETERNAL said: 'I pardon according to your plea.'"
AMEN.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
On September 11th
קֹטֶר הַפְּצָצָה
קֹטֶר הַפְּצָצָה הָיָה שְׁלֹשִׁים סֶנְטִימֶטְרִים
וְקֹטֶר תְּחוּם פְּגִיעָתָהּ כְּשִׁבְעָה מֶטְרִים
וּבוֹ אַרְבָּעָה הֲרוּגִים וְאַחַד עָשָׂר פְּצוּעִים.
וּמִסָּבִיב לָאֵלֶּה, בְּמַעְגָּל גָּדוֹל יוֹתֵר
שֶׁל כְּאֵב, וּזְמַן, פְּזוּרִים שְׁנֵי בָּתֵּי חוֹלִים
וּבֵית קְבָרוֹת אֶחַד. אֲבָל הָאִשָּׁה
הַצְּעִירָה, שֶׁנִּקְבְּרָה בַּמָּקוֹם שֶׁמִּמֶּנּוּ
בָּאָה, בּמֶרְחַק לְמַעְלָה מִמֵּאָה קִלוֹמֶטְרִים,
מַגְדִּילָה אֶת הַמַּעְגָּל מְאֹד מְאֹד,
וְהָאִישׁ הַבּוֹדֵד הַבּוֹכֶה עַל מוֹתָהּ
בְּיַרְכְּתֵי אַחַת מִמְּדִינוֹת הַיָּם הָרְחוֹקוֹת
קֹטֶר הַפְּצָצָה הָיָה שְׁלֹשִׁים סֶנְטִימֶטְרִים
וְקֹטֶר תְּחוּם פְּגִיעָתָהּ כְּשִׁבְעָה מֶטְרִים
וּבוֹ אַרְבָּעָה הֲרוּגִים וְאַחַד עָשָׂר פְּצוּעִים.
וּמִסָּבִיב לָאֵלֶּה, בְּמַעְגָּל גָּדוֹל יוֹתֵר
שֶׁל כְּאֵב, וּזְמַן, פְּזוּרִים שְׁנֵי בָּתֵּי חוֹלִים
וּבֵית קְבָרוֹת אֶחַד. אֲבָל הָאִשָּׁה
הַצְּעִירָה, שֶׁנִּקְבְּרָה בַּמָּקוֹם שֶׁמִּמֶּנּוּ
בָּאָה, בּמֶרְחַק לְמַעְלָה מִמֵּאָה קִלוֹמֶטְרִים,
מַגְדִּילָה אֶת הַמַּעְגָּל מְאֹד מְאֹד,
וְהָאִישׁ הַבּוֹדֵד הַבּוֹכֶה עַל מוֹתָהּ
בְּיַרְכְּתֵי אַחַת מִמְּדִינוֹת הַיָּם הָרְחוֹקוֹת
, מַכְלִיל בַּמַּעְגָּל אֶת כּל הָעוֹלָם
וְלֹא אֲדַבֵּר כְּלָל עַל זַעֲקַת יְתוֹמִים
הַמַּגִּיעָה עַד לְכִסֵּא הָאֱלֹהִים
וּמִשָּׁם וָהָלְאָה וְעוֹשָׂה
אֶת הַמַּעְגָּל לְאֵין סוֹף וְאֵין אֱלֹהִים
..THE DIAMETER OF THE BOMB
The diameter of the bomb was thirty centimeters
and the diameter of its effective range about seven meters,
with four dead and eleven wounded.
And around these, in a larger circle
of pain and time, two hospitals are scattered
and one graveyard. But the young woman
who was buried in the city she came from,
at a distance of more than a hundred kilometers,
Enlarges the circle considerably,
and the solitary man mourning her death
at the distant shores of a country far across the sea includes the entire world in the circle.
And I won’t even mention the crying of orphans
that reaches up to the throne of God and
beyond, making
a circle with no end and no God.
-Yehudah Amichai
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Erev Rosh Hashanah 5774: The Gift of Life
Rabbi Yair Robinson
Congregation Beth Emeth
Erev Rosh Hashanah 5774: Gift of Life
When in your time on earth have you had the opportunity to
save someone else’s life? How often have you had the opportunity to save
another person’s life? If presented with the opportunity to save a life, would
you do so?
It’s a challenging question, and I’m sure you’re thinking of
this time you had to drive a loved one to the hospital, or that time you called
in a traffic accident, or perhaps a time you used the Heimlich maneuver or CPR
on a person.
As a people, we take life seriously. The principle of pikuach nefesh, of saving life, trumps
all other mitzvot, all other Jewish laws and traditions. If observing the
Sabbath would prevent you from saving a life, you violate Shabbat. If
performing ritual circumcision might jeopardize the child because of family
medical history, you don’t circumcise the child. Donating organs is permitted
so long as it will save lives and the ‘discarded’ organ is buried respectfully.
Doctors, nurses, and other professionals tasked with saving lives are not
required to sit a full seven days of shiva. Indeed, I once had a surgeon come
to me who agonized over missing Yom Kippur because of his call schedule, and I
told him that he needed to be in that hospital, that it was his sacred obligation to be in that hospital
because of pikuach nefesh. Pikuach Nefesh
even holds true in challenging and upsetting circumstances: if you have the
means to stop someone who has a weapon and is pursuing another individual, even
if that means killing the armed assailant, you do so, to save a life. Likewise,
abortion in the case of a mother whose life is in jeopardy, even very late in a
pregnancy, is required in order to save the life of a mother. That’s not
Liberal Judaism folks, that’s Judaism—from
the Mishnah to Maimonides to the Shulchan Aruch.
So let me ask again, and let me ask this way: what if I told
you there was a way you could save
someone’s life, right now. A way to fulfill the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh. Would you do it? To save someone who, without your
help, would certainly die.
There is a way, and it’s right outside this door. It’s
called “Gift of Life” . Gift of Life is one of the nation’s public bone
marrow registries helping children and adults find donors for bone marrow
transplants. What does that mean? It means that children
and adults who, without a bone marrow transplant, would die of leukemia, or
some other blood cancer, are able to be cured. Someone like Sam.
Sam is the son of friends of mine, fellow rabbis. Those who
follow me on Facebook or Twitter have probably seen their posts. Phyllis and
Michael, Sam’s parents, are rabbis in Chicago, classmates of mine. They have
four children. Sam is their third. He’s seven. He loves superheroes and hanging
out with his grandparents, videogames and everything you’d expect a 7-year old to
love. He has a pet turtle named Speedy. He also has acute myeloid leukemia.
This is a rare form of Leukemia, at least for children. He was diagnosed around
two years ago, and has been fighting it with chemo and radiation since then.
Chemotherapy and radiation alone will not cure him of his leukemia. In fact,
he’s had a relapse just this past spring, and after three months out of the
hospital, had to return for inpatient treatment. He needs a bone marrow
transplant.
As of right now, there are fewer than 300,000 registered
donors with Gift of Life. They have matched over 10,000 individuals and
facilitated nearly 2500 transplants. And you could be one of those registered
donors. How does this work? It’s something I’ve done myself, years ago. On Yom
Kippur, you will see a station. There you’ll find volunteers, led by HarrietAnn
Litwin, who will ask you to fill out some minor paperwork, and take a swab of
your cheek. It’s a giant q-tip that they rub inside your mouth and then bag.
Anyone ages 18-60 is eligible to be a donor; anyone of any age could be a
volunteer. Those giant q-tips are bagged carefully and sent to Gift of Life
with your paperwork, adding you to the registry. It may be days, or weeks, or
years before you receive a call verifying that you are a match for someone, and
then asking if you would be willing to donate bone marrow or stem cells.
What does donation look like? For bone marrow, they bring
you in, and an anesthesiologist puts you in a twilight state. They use a needle
to extract the bone marrow from your hip. When you come out of the anesthetic,
it’s a little uncomfortable, like you were kicked in the side, and you take
some Advil and go home. For stem cells, it’s much like donating blood, or more
specifically, donating platelets. You’re injected with a medication that
encourages the stem cells to move from the bone marrow to the bloodstream. A
cell-separating machine filters out the stem cells, which can then be infused
in the recipient. It takes between 60-90
minutes.
One or two hours of inconvenience in order to save a life. A
couple of Advil to save a life. Is it worth it? The answer is unquestionably
yes. For a kid like Sam, the answer is yes.
On the holiest day of the year, will you fulfill the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh, of saving a life? I hope
the answer is yes.
This past spring, I got a phone call. As I told you, I was
cheek swabbed some years ago. They think I might be a match, and wanted to know
if I was willing to be a donor. After a few questions exploring the
possibility, I said yes. I haven’t heard back—it may be that they don’t need
me, that someone is a better match. But how could I say no? How could any of us
say no, knowing that in our marrow, in our blood, may be the key to bringing
someone to a complete healing.
I strongly encourage you to go to the Gift of Life website,
to pick up a handout on your way out of this service, to ask questions, and
then come and add yourself to the donor registry on Yom Kippur. And I encourage
you, on their website, to go and read the donor stories there, stories of
people who lost their friends to cancer, who felt called to help these young
people with cancer, who added themselves while at camp, on a birthright trip,
at synagogue, in some way to fulfill the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh, who simply donated because it was the right thing
to do. And if you cannot donate due to age or for a medical reason, I strongly
encourage you to think about how else you can help.
Sam is lucky--he has a donor, he has a match; he had his transplant last Monday. Too many
people are waiting for that match.
We read in Talmud Sanhedrin: if you save a single life,
scripture ascribes merit to you as if you saved the entire world. Each life is
a world of its own, and we have an obligation to protect and secure that life.
I hope you’ll choose to join me on the Gift of Life register and help fulfill
the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh, of
saving lives.
Rosh Hashanah Morning 5774: What Does It Mean To Be A Jew?
Yair D. Robinson
Yom Kippur Morning 5774: To be a Jew
A man imprisoned and cast into a spell.
A man condemned to be the snake
Who keeps watch over infamous gold.
A man condemned to be Shylock
A man bent over the earth in hard work
Knowing that once he stood in Eden.
An old man with his eyes put out who will bring down the
walls.
A man condemned to wear a mask,
A man who in spite of man is Spinoza and the Baal Shem and
the kabbalists.
A man who is a book
A tongue that praises from the depths
The justice of the skies.
A salesman or dentist who spoke with God on the mountaintop.
A man condemned to be the object of ridicule
The abomination, the Jew
A man stoned, set afire,
Asphyxiated in death chambers,
A man who endures and is deathless,
Who has now returned to his battle,
To the violent light of victory
Handsome as a lion in the twelve o’clock sun.
The words of Jorge Luis Borges, from the poem “Israel”,
first published in 1970.
What does it mean to be Israel? What does it mean to be a
Jew in today’s world, where identity is fungible, not fundamental, personal,
rather than communal or tribal? What does it mean for you, for me, to be
Jewish?
I suspect that is a question that’s on your minds today,
especially today. And I would guess there are others of you who would rather
not dwell on that question, those who are here regretfully, out of some ethnic
or familial allegiance, but reluctantly, perhaps even resentfully, whose Jewish
identity arises only when others call attention to it, frequently in the negative.
What does it mean to be a Jew? Is the question—that is to
say, are we, relevant anymore? There
is a lot of hand-wringing in the organized Jewish world today over that very
question. Once barred from schools, professions, and civic organizations, we
clung to each other, or when we did reach out, we did so with an explicit
understanding that we were bringing our corporate
values to the public square. We were speaking up as Jews for an issue—be it liberalizing school holidays, or
policies in the workplace, or causes that were near and dear to us. I’m not
necessarily describing religious values, but values that perhaps any minority
would embrace: tolerance, acceptance, diversity, room for divergent voices
where before people spoke only as one. I think of folks like Henry Schenker,
who activelyengaged in interfaith dialogue, of Rabbi Drooz and Nardy Ableman,
who made a point of going to Rotary club, and other countless individuals who
were explicitly representing us. For
them, what it meant to be a Jew was clearly defined: it was ethnicity, it was
tribe. It was civilization: it was
about being with your own people, your
own kind, and promoting their welfare here and abroad, facing hostile
enemies and threats.
But that was two generations ago. My father’s generation
faced little persecution; I experienced almost none, despite growing up in a
community where there were nearly no Jews at all. It has been two generations
since intermarriage was stigmatized; today, it is normative. It has been two
generations since Jews had no choice but to seek out other Jews; today,
regardless of whether you grow up in Muncie Indiana or Monsey New York, whether
you grow up fully assimilated or a Satmar Hasid, you can chart your own course.
A generation ago you could discuss the differences between American values and
Jewish values; the generation coming of age today—and their parents—don’t
understand the question. The values of individual experience and autonomy trump
tradition and text. Today, we as liberal Jews may find that we have more in
common with our friends at Hanover Presbyterian in terms of how we live our
lives and the expression of our daily values, than we do with our friends at
Chabad on Silverside Rd., despite the fact that the National Presbyterian
Church has for years been anti-Israel, and despite our friends on Silverside
being members of the Tribe.
A few years ago Alan
Dershowitz wrote a book entitled “The Disappearing American Jew” (it seems
we’re always disappearing, aren’t we?). What he failed to understand was that
the American Jew wasn’t disappearing—it was merely a kind of American Jew that
he recognized. For him, the American Jew was one who grew up in a Jewish
neighborhood, who joined Jewish institutions reflexively, who married within
the tribe, raised kids within the tribe, who shared cultural and ethnic markers
with one another. Today, that doesn’t hold water at all. I often share an
article with folks called “Judaism is not Chicken Soup”. Written by a Jew-by-choice,
it laments that image. He didn’t grow up with Yiddish and kneidlach. His
Judaism isn’t ethnic, or tribal. It’s spiritual, it’s personal, and it’s rooted
in the choices he made. But because he wasn’t
raised as an ‘insider’, he laments that he may ever feel like an
outsider. And we know that too often this is true. How many times have I heard
people say, “oh, it’s an intermarriage—the Bride converted.” As if her
commitment to a new faith, a new set of traditions, a different way of looking
at the world wasn’t somehow enough to count her in?
What does it mean to be a Jew today? How often do we base
the question not on belief, or spirituality, or theology, or connection to text,
but on actions that may be irrelevant to our lives. In Inventing Jewish Ritual, The writer Vanessa Ochs laments [quote
here]. Is that really how we define our Jewishness? Should those pieces be what
defines our Jewishness? And if we don’t do them, is our Judaism even relevant? At
the same time, how often have we heard—in fact we may ourselves have
expressed—Jewish values reduced to ‘just be nice to one another’ or ‘follow the
ten commandments’? Is that even Judaism anymore? What makes that Jewish, as
opposed to just being a nice person?
What does it mean to be a Jew today? It means a whole host
of diverse experiences and understandings, a myriad of different voices coming
together or separating us based on values shared and in conflict. The liberal
Jew, the secular Jew, the traditional Jew all on a continuum of practice and
understanding, all too frequently questioning one another’s authenticity,
creating false boundaries because of hidebound fears. Fears of the empowerment
of women—in the case of the Orthodox establishment in Israel, fears that
experimenting with tradition, with kashrut, with taking Torah seriously—not
literally but seriously—will get one pegged as ORTHODOX, and therefore to be
viewed with suspicion by the liberal community. It means existing in silos,
duplicating efforts, fearing boogiemen, remembering those who have died because
they were Jews without giving people reason to LIVE as Jews. It means creating
program after program hoping desperately that our children—marrying older,
having children later—will raise up another generation without taking the time
to either empower them to create experiences and community for themselves, just
as every other generation has.
What should it mean to be a Jew today? It means to live up
to our mission, to God’s vision for us, a vision and mission we read this
morning. We shall be holy. We are a chosen people, a light to the nations—not
to be better, but to be exemplars. We are chosen to do work in the world, to
redeem it, to heal it, to root out injustice and remind each other of our
diversity and our unity. We are chosen not to be elevated except to shine a
light—Israel is not on a pedestal, we’re a lighthouse.
That means accepting the past without smoothing it over or
pretending the past doesn’t bleed into the present. We have been an oppressed
people. There is still hate and ignorance today throughout the world and in our
own community. To many, we are still Fagin and Shylock, we are still slaves in
Egypt, and to pretend otherwise is to do a disservice to the generations who
came before, and the other myriad minorities in our midst who can’t laugh off a
joke and ‘pass’ for the majority. We were strangers once, we are strangers
still, the consummate outsider, the prophetic people: when we see ignorance or
injustice—in the way women are treated in the workforce, in the casual Jew
joke, in the double standard black men are held to in this country—we must
speak out, we must speak loudly, and we must act. We must act with a courage
greater than ourselves—to speak out at injustice slight and great, to remind
the people around us that they were created in God’s image and that means
something.
And that means we need each other. To be a Jew is a communal
experience. There is a reason we join together in minyan. We study together, we
break bread together, we pray together, we mourn together, we rejoice together.
We’re good at rallying together when we’re in jeopardy—we don’t come together
enough in Joy: to dance at Simchat torah, to sing at Shabbat, to celebrate
another child’s bar mitzvah or our confirmation class when they are called up
to the Torah. We treat those as private events, meant for a specific group or
family. Worse, we sometimes communicate that to each other. We don’t invite all
our kids’ classmates, we don’t expand our circle of friends and invite them to
sit with us at services, we get uncomfortable when older people come to
Kabbalat Shabbat or young children come to services and act like children. The
widow or single person too often sits alone, and goes home alone. And
frequently, those who are happy to help others reject the loving extension of
support when they’re the one in need. For the Jew, these are all communal experiences,
meant for everyone, but they only work if everyone embraces each other fully
and extends the invitation. Not just leadership, or clergy, or staff, but
everyone.
And that community must extend beyond the one we make for
ourselves. Israel may not be perfect, but it is ours. We may be angry with our
Orthodox brothers and sisters for their rejection of us and their frequent
attempts to stymie our progressive values, but our anger must the anger of
family members, and not the indifference of strangers. Because the reality is
that the challenges are so great we cannot tackle them ourselves. And that is
true of non-Jews as well. There is too much poverty, too much damage to our
planet, too many people young and old who are suffering from violence and
neglect. Vision and mission are never for ourselves alone; to act as such would
be an act of tremendous ego, of hubris, mistaking the lighthouse for a
pedestal, shining the light in the wrong direction. We must lift those around
us up, we must educate in word and in deed, we must make as much of a
difference as we can, TOGETHER.
And that means keeping hope. To be Jewish is to be
sarcastic, we know that. Our humor is black, and sharp, and speaks to our past
disappointments. But sarcasm is different than cynicism. Indeed, we could argue
that sarcasm is the humor of hope. We cannot grow cynical, cocooning ourselves
away from the plight of the world, ignoring those around us who disappoint us.
So long as we see our individual needs as primary above our mission as a
people, then we will always be disappointed by those around us, and see them as
obstacles, inconveniences. Our mission reminds us: we shall be holy, we may be
holy, but we are entitled to nothing. We were chosen for a task; we must
fulfill it, and we cannot let our own experience get in the way, our
anticipated dissatisfaction get in the way.
What does it mean to be a Jew? It means to struggle mightily
with beings human and divine, and it means prevailing. It means remembering
that we are a prophetic voice in the world, and that we stand together. It
means turning to the tasks of life not only for personal fulfillment but to
reshape the world, to heal it entirely. It means at last stepping up out of our
doldrums, taking up our mission, and returning to our battle, handsome as a
lion in the noonday sun.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Blogging Elul Day 28: Giving and Receiving
As you can tell, my postings have gotten more sporadic than I'd like. Probably to be expected--the holiday is that much closer. Synagogue life is picking up. Preparations, before conducted in earnest, are now at a fever pitch. Selichot services were beautiful, as always. The sifrei Torah are now covered in their High Holiday whites. On top of that, we've mourned with two families in the last week.
And yet everyone is wonderfully calm. And I've managed to carve out some 'normal' time--I had my fantasy football draft (really, an excuse to 'hang out' with my old high school buddies), we introduced the boy to Star Wars (Episode IV, natch) and got to watch my son's mind get totally blown away. The dog's getting walked and the family is having dinner together, what more can one ask?
It was watching my son watch Star Wars (and watching it again for the first time in far, far too long) that I remembered how whimsical it can be, and how mysterious, two qualities I wanted my boy to have as part of his life from the very beginning. And as I watched him play with friends or do a project with me, I was reminded that, in our mad focus to make the holidays 'perfect' or 'just so' for everyone else, we miss the point of the holidays themselves. To make us stop and wonder, as Abraham Joshua Heschel might say, in radical amazement at the world and our role, however small, in it.
I don't know whether I'll get a chance to blog again before tomorrow night, so I'll leave you with the words I shared with my colleagues in DERECH (Delaware Rabbis and Cantor's Association, where I'm president this year):
And yet everyone is wonderfully calm. And I've managed to carve out some 'normal' time--I had my fantasy football draft (really, an excuse to 'hang out' with my old high school buddies), we introduced the boy to Star Wars (Episode IV, natch) and got to watch my son's mind get totally blown away. The dog's getting walked and the family is having dinner together, what more can one ask?
It was watching my son watch Star Wars (and watching it again for the first time in far, far too long) that I remembered how whimsical it can be, and how mysterious, two qualities I wanted my boy to have as part of his life from the very beginning. And as I watched him play with friends or do a project with me, I was reminded that, in our mad focus to make the holidays 'perfect' or 'just so' for everyone else, we miss the point of the holidays themselves. To make us stop and wonder, as Abraham Joshua Heschel might say, in radical amazement at the world and our role, however small, in it.
I don't know whether I'll get a chance to blog again before tomorrow night, so I'll leave you with the words I shared with my colleagues in DERECH (Delaware Rabbis and Cantor's Association, where I'm president this year):
As we each put the finishing touches on sermons and services and programs, prepare to gather with family and friends, and carve out time for—God-willing—real cheshbon hanefesh, may we find in our ‘work’ the avodah God desires and that nourishes the kol d'mamma daka--The Still Small Voice--within each of us.Wishing you and yours the renewal that comes with the New Year, and profound hope for a meaningful year to come.