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“We all want to change the world” – by Kareem Abdul-Jabaar – A Review

01 Sunday Jun 2025

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antisemitism, gaza, Israel, palestine, politics

Kareem Abdul-Jabaar’s newly published book We all want to change the world – My Journey through Social Justice Movements from the 1960s to Today is a sweeping, thoughtful, self-revelatory, honest, and inspiring review of most of the major social justice movements and human rights challenges in the United States since the 1950s when Kareem was coming of age as a African American athlete in New York City. One of the greatest basketball players in the history of the NBA, Kareem is now among the most prolific writers, probing thinkers and public intellectuals in America.

I read Kareem’s Substack newsletters from start to finish each time he publishes (twice weekly) and I find him always smart, rational, intellectually honest, thorough in his research, moral, and entertaining with his short videos of extraordinary athletic feats, musical selections, and cultural moments. Just as his Substack newsletter is worth reading, so is his newest book.

Kareem covers the impact on American society of the movements for Free Speech, Civil Rights, anti-Vietnam War, Women’s Liberation and Gay Liberation, and the cultural, emotional and psychological mindsets that spawned the courageous leadership that furthered human rights and opportunities in the United States for discriminated groups of Americans.

Kareem describes his personal mantra as that inspired by civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer’s adage: “No one is free unless everyone is free,” and what Dr. King said in another way: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

As a young black man growing up in the 1950s and 1960s in New York City, becoming a famous athlete, meeting Dr. King, Mohammad Ali, and other leading black sports, entertainment and human rights figures, and reading constantly from the time he was a teen-ager, the shy, intellectual, self-reflective and compassionate young man felt compelled to think not only about himself and his athletic career and the moral compromises that many fellow black athletes felt they had to make in order to further their careers, but about every individual struggling for dignity beyond the stereotypes and cultural definitions that oppressed them.

Kareem wrote:

“Writing [the chapter on Civil Rights as My Gateway Movement] was especially challenging for me. As I chronicled the history of decade after decade of civil rights abuses and the martyrs who gave up their lives in pursuit of the freedoms already promised by our Constitution, I felt the rising heat of frustration and anger from my younger days. I needed to take frequent breaks to remind myself that frustration and anger by themselves accomplish nothing. Injustice is fueled by indifference, but passion without a plan is just as destructive. For me, the fiery passion of my youth needed to be channeled in order for me to do my part to bring about justice.”

This book is well-researched and well-written, and it lays out the historical facts and events of each of the human rights movements Kareem discusses in detail. He first presents those events historically, then dives into the emotional, social, and psychological challenges the leaders and followers of each movement confronted. For me, about three years younger than Kareem (age 78), I remember so much of what he describes, and I appreciate his insights about the forces that propelled the leadership of each movement to do what they did, as well as the baked-in cultural norms that reflected (and still reflects) the thinking of massive numbers of Americans.

Among other self-revelatory sections of the book, Kareem describes himself as a feminist. He wrote:

“As a Black teenager growing up in New York City, I loved books, movies, television, and music. Looking back on all that I was exposed to, I see now how those popular art forms conspired to produce a pounding thrum of dangerous misogyny, an insistent earworm that ran through my generation as it had so many generations before. With this evolving women’s movement, as more and more voices joined the chorus protesting misogyny, our heads were cleared enough to choose for ourselves. That’s how it was for me.”

In his epilogue, Kareem confessed:

“The biggest challenge I had in writing this book was the frequent breaks I had to take due to the build-up of frustration and anger. Again and again in my research, I saw the same pattern: basic human rights denied, indignities and disrespect piled on, and the refusal of oppressors to acknowledge why they were wrong. The worst was the complicity of so many people who disagreed with the discrimination in principle but who were too complacent to act. They might justify their collusion with ‘What can I do?’ but they already know the answer. They just don’t like it.”  

He concludes the book discussing the ongoing need for open and public protest in all the areas he discussed:

“The Founders enshrined the right to protest in our Constitution. They did that because they knew that the forces of self-interest and corruption would always try and to subvert the ideals of democracy they laid out.”

Kareem can be forgiven for the human rights issues he did not include in his book. However, there is one that Kareem does not discuss in this volume – the oldest of all hatreds, antisemitism. I’ve wondered why he didn’t discuss it specifically since it has become a major issue in North America, on college and university campuses, and around the world especially since Hamas’s brutal attack, murder and rape of 1200 Israelis and others on October 7, 2023 in Southern Israel and reactions to Israel and Jews as a consequence of the ensuing war between Hamas and Israel.

On October 9, 2023, two days after the Hamas attack, Kareem wrote in his Substack newsletter of his support of Israel. He condemned Hamas categorically, and elsewhere he described antisemitism as “especially heinous.” Kareem was the 2022 winner of Canada’s “Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center’s first Ally Against Anti-Semitism Award,” so his pro-Jewish and pro-Israel bona fides are undisputed. Given Kareem’s 1.1 million Substack readers and the likely large number of people of color, athletes, and liberal-left readers who will read this book (as well as interested moderates and conservatives), I would have appreciated his discussion of antisemitism, its nature and history going back thousands of years and reemerging today in the United States, especially in this post-October 7th period in which so many on the far left publicly have identified with Hamas against Israel and Zionism and so many on the far right who openly court and identify with neo-Nazis and right-wing extremists, including the sitting President of the United States.

Hamas is among the most brutal, undemocratic, unenlightened, Jew-hating, extremist Muslim terrorist organizations in the world. It is one thing for decent people to want peace and justice for the Palestinian people in some kind of a demilitarized state of their own alongside a secure and democratic Jewish State of Israel, but it is something else entirely to support Hamas and its call for a free “Palestine from the River to the Sea.” That position means the destruction of the State of Israel and the murder of Jews. It is antisemitic Jew-hatred.  

There is a strong human rights case to be made about this oldest of hatreds that would have merited Kareem’s inclusion of a discussion of antisemitism in his book. Historically, the evidence is clear that in every country in which Jews have been discriminated against, attacked and accused of corrupting the soul of a people or nation, human rights generally and democracy specifically have been diminished and/or destroyed. To me, antisemitism would have been an obvious chapter to write about. I’m disappointed that Kareem didn’t take the opportunity to address Jew-hatred head-on, especially because I know he understands what antisemitism is and its “heinous” character. It was a missed opportunity to educate those very groups and individuals in which antisemitism has taken root and found a home in recent years on both the far left and the far right.

Eurovision 2025 Final: Israel’s Yuval Raphael Finishes in Second Place as Hundreds Protest Gaza War in Basel – Haaretz

18 Sunday May 2025

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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eurovision, eurovision-2025, Israel, music, palestine

My Introductory Notes: This article from Haaretz today (May 18, 2025) describes the 2nd place finish of Israel’s spectacular new-comer star, Yuval Raphael, in the 2025 Eurovision Competition. She was not expected to place second, but her song and her beautiful voice, won the day. I post at the end the link to Yuval’s official entry into the competition.

No one from a singer’s host country is permitted to vote for his/her own country’s entry, so Yuval won on the merits, despite anti-Israel demonstrations inside and outside the concert hall.

Yuval survived the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre of 1200 Israeli young people at the Music Festival in Southern Israel by hiding for 8 hours underneath the bodies of fellow concert-goers who had been murdered.

Yuval had never performed before any large audience, so to ascend so quickly to represent the people and State of Israel at this international competition before 6500 people in the hall and millions watching on television is a remarkable accomplishment. She did so with courage and grace, and her voice is spectacular – resonant, beautiful and open, entering the heart.

Here is the Haaretz article:

The Eurovision Song Contest final ended on Saturday night in Basel, Switzerland. Israel’s Yuval Raphael’s performance of “New Day Will Rise,” a song written by Keren Peles, finished in second place, with Austria taking the lead.

The competition venue, which holds around 6,500 spectators, featured performances by several frontrunners, including Sweden, Austria and France.

Audience voting opened at the start of the performances. A combination of public votes and national jury scores determined the final results. Viewers could vote up to 20 times using the official app, phone, or text message. Jury votes had already been cast during a rehearsal held Friday night.

Austria was crowned the unexpected winner, after Wasted Love by JJ received a total of 436 points. Israel received 357 points. The public votes awarded Israel 297 points – more than any other country.

Raphael, 24, was at the Nova music festival during the October 7 attack by Hamas militants on southern Israel that killed 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage.

During the attack, she hid in a shelter near Kibbutz Be’eri and sustained shrapnel injuries. She was one of only 11 survivors from that shelter, having hidden under the bodies of victims for eight hours.

She later shared her harrowing experience in a speech before the United Nations Human Rights Council. Witnesses said that on Saturday, two protesters—a man and a woman from Holland — splashed red paint and began shouting during Raphael’s performance. Security guards quickly led the protesters out of the venue.

Since Thursday’s second semifinal, Israel had dropped to seventh place in the betting rankings, with Finland and Estonia overtaking it. Raphael was scheduled to perform fourth out of 26 entries – a relatively early slot that, according to past trends, tends to reduce a country’s chances of winning.

During Friday’s jury rehearsal – and similarly in Thursday’s semifinal dress rehearsal – a few audible boos and other disturbances could be heard during Yuval Raphael’s performance. However, no disruptions were heard during rehearsals for the press.

After a relatively quiet week, a pro-Palestinian protest took place in Basel ahead of the final. Several hundred people gathered in central Basel to express solidarity with the Palestinian people and to oppose Israel’s participation in the contest. Demonstrators chanted slogans such as “Boycott apartheid Israel,” “No stage for genocide,” and “Free Palestine.”Swiss police declined to provide Haaretz with information regarding the investigation of a pro-Palestinian demonstrator who made a throat-slitting gesture toward Raphael and the Israeli delegation on Sunday. “The public prosecutor’s office is handling the case, and for tactical reasons, we cannot provide further information at this stage,” the police stated repeatedly.

https://www.google.com/search?q=Israel%27s+Yuval+Raphael%27s+song+at+Eurovision&rlz=1C1GGRV_enUS934US991&oq=Israel%27s+Yuval+Raphael%27s+song+at+Eurovision&aqs=chrome..69i57j33i160l5.11033j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:2cf0822c,vid:Q3BELu4z6-U,st:0

“Rededicating Ourselves to Deepening Interfaith Relationships: A Pledge Sponsored by the International Council of Christians and Jews”

11 Sunday May 2025

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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bible, christianity, Israel, palestine, religion

 I signed this pledge today and invite my readers to do so as well, wherever you live around the world, whether you are Jewish, Christian or Muslim. Please read this commitment to Interfaith Relationships carefully, and if you believe in this declaration of commitment, click onto the link at the end of the statement and include your signature. I thank you in advance.

An Invitation to Recommit to Interfaith Relationships in These Tumultuous Times

In this year of 2025 in the Western calendar, defining religious observances for Jews, Christians, and Muslims occur within days of each other. Jews commemorate liberation from slavery at special Passover meals. Christians celebrate freedom from the slavery of death brought by the resurrection of Jesus. Muslims celebrate Eid-al-Fitr as the joyful culmination of Ramadan, uniting in prayer, charity, and reinvigorated communal experience. This convergence provides a moment that our world in turmoil desperately needs, a moment to continue the progress of the past several decades in deepening interfaith relationships.

Our world is living through a time when relations among people of different faith traditions are under great stress. The ICCJ, being especially dedicated to dialogue between Jews and Christians, as well as trilateral dialogue with Muslims, believes that the violent and polarized world of today urgently needs such dialogues to continue and, indeed, to intensify in the months and years ahead.

The ICCJ has composed a declaration of recommitment to the work of dialogue, including specific practices to enhance it.

We invite any individual, organization, or institution that cherishes interreligious amity to join us in our resolve by endorsing the declaration and enacting its values in their own lives and circumstances.

A Pledge Sponsored by the International Council of Christians and Jews

The First and Second World Wars killed over one hundred million people and made refugees of hundreds of millions more. Empires fell. Nations were born. Weapons with unimaginable power were devised, threatening the very existence of life on our planet. Nonetheless, from this carnage and chaos positive initiatives arose, including in many places an historically unprecedented transformation in relationships between Jews and Christians.

Appalled and traumatized by the industrialized slaughter of two-thirds of European Jewry, people in both communities sought rapprochement after nearly two millennia of estrangement and antipathy. Christians had to confront a long history of anti-Jewish rhetoric and violence, while Jews had to risk hoping that Christian overtures were truly sincere. Crucial turning points were a conference in Seelisberg, Switzerland in 1947, which led to the founding of the International Council of Christians and Jews, and the Catholic Church’s 1965 Second Vatican Council declaration Nostra Aetate and the 1967 report of the Faith and Order Commission of the World Council of Churches, “The Church and the Jewish People.”

The quest for open dialogue and sincere friendship between Jews and Christians raised many moral, theological, and social questions and shed new light on each community’s self-understanding. After centuries of mutual ignorance and polemic, it took time to build trust and to learn how to speak to one another. Gradually, a unique era of dialogue, understanding, and mutual enrichment began. As never before, unfolding differently in various parts of the world, Christians and Jews, while forming civic collaborations and deep personal friendships, studied together in exceptional depth, some becoming expert in the other’s history and texts. These dialogue partners explored religious ideas that previously were avoided. Understanding themselves to be journeying together in God’s covenantal presence, they found new respect for each other’s religious integrity, leading many churches to disavow missions to convert Jews. Such efforts and experiences were models to engage with other religious communities, especially Muslims.

Over the years there have been disputes and missteps. The journey has been a complicated and uneven one. The post-Shoah geographic concentration of Jews in Israel and major cities in the United States means that most Christians around the world cannot personally engage in interreligious dialogue with Jews. In various times and places, religious radicalism dehumanizes people by setting them against each other along religious lines. Even though peace often seems an impossible dream, there are Jews, Christians, and Muslims who have nevertheless steadfastly pursued dialogue and friendship for decades. Their courageous efforts are signs of hope to people everywhere.

The war between Israel and Hamas in the wake of October 7, 2023, which has longstanding regional and intercontinental aspects, has shaken interreligious amity to a degree not seen since World War II, and will have long-term consequences. Among some Christians and Jews old stereotypes and suspicions about each other have resurfaced. Around the globe, antisemitic bigotries and even violence have surged, provoking fear. Although people view and are impacted by the current crises in diverse ways, all are haunted by the tragic death toll. Yet we who cultivate interreligious friendships yearn for and must prepare and work for the day when peace will dawn and both Palestinians and Israelis, Christians, Muslims, and Jews, will prosper in peace and security.

THE SIGNATORIES OF THIS PLEDGE RESOLVE that interreligious dialogue cannot be a victim of these or any other attacks or conflicts. Indeed, dialogue is more important than ever. We believe it to be God’s will and our holy calling. Wherever we live and whatever our circumstances, we pledge to:

  • Be blessings for one another and therefore for the world,
  • Support one another in our covenantal responsibilities to God,
  • Share each other’s joys and sorrows,
  • Actively oppose religious prejudice, including especially antisemitism, Islamophobia, or anti-Christianity, and bear truthful witness for each other when misrepresented or defamed,
  • Review our religious teachings, rituals, and practices to address any elements that caricature or teach disrespect for each other, or that in any way racialize or dehumanize anyone,
  • Continue and deepen the joint study of subjects that urgently need attention, such as: Christianity as more of a credal religion in comparison to Jewish self-understanding as a peoplehood, the land and state of Israel in Jewish and Christian spirituality, the meaning of the Jewish identity of Jesus for Jews and Christians today, the ongoing implications of the Shoah for Christians and for Jews, their bonds in the scriptural Word of God, their traditions of ethical reasoning, and how they can speak and act together for the good of humanity and creation,
  • Seek to develop deeper interreligious friendships with Muslims, and
  • Better discern the divine Presence in each other’s communities, traditions, and rituals.

In making these commitments, we pray that God will bless our efforts and continue to accompany us in our search for deepening and lasting interreligious friendship and understanding.

THE INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHRISTIANS AND JEWS (ICCJ)
MARTIN BUBER HOUSE, HEPPENHEIM

APRIL 2025

To endorse this pledge, go to – https://www.iccj.org/resources/iccj-statements/iccj-declaration-2025.html

Wiping Clean the “Human Stain” – A Pesach Message

10 Thursday Apr 2025

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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gaza, hamas, Israel, palestine, politics

Fear, anger, outrage, disgust, rage, anxiety, worry – these are among the feelings millions of Americans have been experiencing since Trump took control of the federal government, appointed incompetent sycophants to his Cabinet, began firing hundreds of thousands of federal workers, dismembering whole government departments and agencies, crashing the economy, obliterating the life savings of millions of seniors, threatening America’s social safety net, and wrecking the international global trading system.

And then there’s the endless war in Gaza that PM Netanyahu refuses to end thereby callously forsaking the lives of the remaining hostages, withholding desperately needed humanitarian aid from the most vulnerable Palestinian civilians in Gaza, and allowing more killings in Gaza and the destruction of Palestinian lives and villages in the West Bank.

In his novel The Human Stain, Philip Roth wrote cynically:

“…we leave a stain, we leave a trail, we leave our imprint. Impurity, cruelty, abuse, error, … – there’s no other way to be here. Nothing to do with disobedience. Nothing to do with grace or salvation or redemption. It’s in everyone. Indwelling. Inherent, Defining. The stain that is there before its mark. Without the sign it is there. The stain so intrinsic it doesn’t require a mark. The stain that precedes disobedience, that impasses disobedience and perplexes all explanation and understanding. It’s why all the cleansing is a job. A barbaric joke at that. The fantasy of purity is appalling. It’s insane. What is the quest to purify, if not more impurity?” (p. 242)

Roth’s dystopic characterization of the human condition is soul-crushing and contrary to fundamental Jewish values promoting goodness, justice, compassion, and human decency.

Years ago at a convention of Reform Rabbis in Jerusalem that met between Purim and Pesach, Yossi Klein Halevi offered this teaching about the truths at the core of each holiday. Purim, he said, reminds Jews that there are indeed evil actors in the world whose hatred of our people threatens us and we cannot be naïve about their worst intentions. Pesach reminds us, he said, that as a people who have long known enslavement and suffering must never forget that it’s our duty to remain compassionate despite the cruelty around us.

Pesach reminds us also that we need each other, our families, friends, and community as we face the multitude of moral challenges before us. When we open the door for Elijah, we’re reminded that not all is lost, that hope abides despite the human stain that leaves its corrosive residue in the heart, and that it’s our moral and Jewish duty to act justly, to love mercy, and to pursue peace.

Our role today, along with the millions of Americans who marched last weekend against the despotic over-reach of this corrupt and heartless American President, is to be, like them, on the right side of history. And it is to be grateful for the thousands of lawyers and law firms, the hundreds of college and university presidents and faculties, and the many decent public servants in Congress, state capitals and local communities across the United States who are resisting tyranny.

As Jews who love Israel, it is our place to act in solidarity with the hundreds of thousands of Israeli demonstrators marching weekly and calling for an immediate end to Israel’s longest war, the return of the hostages, the restoration of humanitarian aid for Palestinian civilians in Gaza, and on behalf of Israeli democracy.  

When the ancient Israelites escaped Egypt with Pharaoh’s troops in pursuit, they came to the Sea of Reeds, a natural blockade to their liberation. Moses turned to God in prayer and asked for Divine agency. However, Nachshon ben Aminadav took history into his own hands and leaped into the sea, whereupon the Holy One took note of Nachshon’s courage and parted the waters that the people might escape upon dry land.

The Babylonian Talmud (Shabbat 54b), many centuries later, reflected on the moral responsibility of our people to take action whenever they confronted injustice, corruption, and hard-heartedness:

“If a person can protest the misdeeds of one’s household, yet does not, that one becomes guilty with them. If a person can protest the deeds of one’s towns-people, and does not, that one is guilty with them. If a person can protest the deeds of the entire world, and does not, that one is guilty with them.”

Chag Pesach Sameach!

Rabbi Stanley Davids, z’l – The Death of one of our G’dolei Dor

01 Tuesday Apr 2025

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Israel, Jewish, judaism, palestine, zionism

Introductory Note: Rabbi Stanley Davids z’l died on Motzei Shabbat, March 22. He will be interred in the cemetery in Ma’aleh HaChamishah, Israel. A Memorial celebration of his life was conducted at the Wilshire Boulevard Temple in Los Angeles on Monday, March 31. Stan’s son, Rabbi Ronn David and I eulogized Stan. The following is the text of my eulogy that I offer in loving memory of my/our Rabbi, teacher, leader, and cherished friend.

When I received a text from Stan’s daughter Aviva the night that her dad died, I thought of the words of grief spoken by the young David following the death of his beloved friend Jonathan in the 2nd Book of Samuel: “Eich naflu hagiborim – How the mighty have fallen.” If anyone was a mamash gibor in American Jewish and Zionist life, it was Rabbi Stanley Davids.

Last August, I sat with Stan at our favorite lunch diner in Santa Monica and he told me that his end was fast approaching. I was stunned and disbelieving because Stan was like a cat with 9 lives. He had overcome so many serious health trials over the past thirty years, and I assumed he would surmount yet again whatever medical challenge he was now confronting.

After telling me more about his current illness, Stan asked me to offer a eulogy at his memorial service. Actually, Stan didn’t ask me; he told me that he and his family had made a decision that I was to speak, and as so often was the case, I couldn’t refuse whatever Stan asked of me not only because I loved and respected him, but because I knew he loved me too and he wouldn’t ask me to do something unless it was very important to him. I know this was the case for so many of us.

And so, I replied – “Yes, I’d be honored to speak;” but I wondered how I could possibly do so adequately enough. Stan was, after all, one of our g’dolei dor – great ones of our generation, a formidable Jewish and Zionist leader, an American and Israeli Rabbi of significant accomplishments, a veritable force of nature, graced with a keen intellect, a huge heart, forceful passions and opinions, indefatigable energy, and great humor, wit, and charm.

Whenever I have thought of Stan over the many years we’ve been close friends, I’ve also thought of Resa, because they were joined at the hip for more than 61 years. I believe that Stan likely surmounted his many health challenges on account of having two advantages – great medical care on the one hand (my brother was one of his physicians – a hematologist and oncologist) and Resa on the other, who stood with him, loving and supporting him along with their children Ronn and Nicolle, Shoshana, Aviva and Jason, and their 8 grandchildren – Beth, Hannah, James, Joshua, Gabriel, Zeke, Mya, and Cole about whom Stan and Resa have been so proud.

I first met Stan 38 years ago when I brought one hundred 15 year-old Confirmation students from the Washington Hebrew Congregation in D.C., where I was serving, to tour Jewish New York. One of our annual destinations was the magnificent sanctuary of Central Synagogue. When we arrived by pre-arrangement before Kabbalat Shabbat services, Stan greeted us with his customary grace and warmth. With his radiating smile, high energy and open heart Stan welcomed us as he led us on a tour of Central’s historic synagogue building and then with his community in Shabbat prayer.

Over the years, and especially when he served as ARZA President, he and I became closer friends. In time, he and Resa along with then ARZA Chair Rabbi Bennett Miller persuaded me to assume the chairmanship of ARZA. It was a great honor to be so considered, but I was reticent to take on that responsibility because I had a demanding congregational position here in LA as Senior Rabbi at Temple Israel of Hollywood, but Stan persuaded me. He said that by assuming this position I would be at the center of action of the United States Reform Zionist movement and that I would have an experience that would change me, as it had changed him long before.

He promised me that he would help guide me to understand and manage the confusing and complex interplay of the 3 national institutions of the Jewish people and their leaders (some of whom could be quite challenging) on the boards of which I would have a seat, the WZO, the Sochnut, and the Jewish National Fund. He fulfilled that promise and so much more, and he was right, the experience changed me.

As I have learned over the years, Stan mentored so many of us. He inspired many of his students growing up in his congregations to become rabbis, and he befriended countless other rabbis and lay leaders in North America and Israel.

Stan was a born leader who honed his skills over a lifetime of exceptional service. He loved to lead, to be in the limelight of consequential organizational decision-making. He relished thinking deeply about the great challenges facing modern Judaism and the Jewish people, and he used every position he ever held to enhance the quality, depth and breadth of reach of his Jewish and Zionist visions for those communities that he served.

Stan graduated with a Bachelor’s degree, magna cum laude, from Case Western Reserve University in Ohio and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. As a college student, he served as the president of his university’s Alpha Epsilon Pi chapter eventually rising to serve as the international Supreme Master of AEPi, the membership of which includes more than 100,000 living alumni with chapters on more than 150 college campuses in four countries, making it the world’s largest and leading Jewish college fraternity. Hanging over his home computer is his framed “AEPi Lion of Judah Award” about which he was so very proud.

Stan was ordained from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1965. Then he served as a Chaplain in the U.S. Army, followed by service as an assistant rabbi in a Milwaukee Reform synagogue, and then as the Senior Rabbi of congregations in Longmeadow and Worcester, Massachusetts, New York City, and Atlanta. His reach, however, extended far beyond the Jewish community, and as a sign of his prominence in interfaith work, he was honored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews.

Within the Central Conference of American Rabbis, Stan chaired the National Youth Committee, the Israel Committee and was on the CCAR’s National Executive Committee. As a lover of the Hebrew language and Israel from his youth, he was the “Father” of ARZA’s Reform Zionist Think Tank that eventually led to the CCAR’s Reform Zionist Platform that embraced for the first time Aliyah as a Reform Mitzvah.

If all that was not enough, as a skilled fundraiser for the Jewish people, Stan also was appointed as Honorary Chairman of the State of Israel Bonds National Rabbinic Cabinet.

When Stan became a candidate for the presidency of ARZA in the early 2000s, he told Resa that if he were to be fortunate enough to be elected they would have to make Aliyah because he believed that Israel must be their home-base. As soon as he was chosen, on that very day, Resa quietly went to work, without Stan knowing. She made all the complicated plans to make Aliyah. Stan came home the day the details finally had been worked out and Resa handed him a pen and told him to sign some papers and then to inform his Atlanta synagogue leadership that he was retiring and they were moving to Israel.

He served proudly as President of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA – the largest American Zionist movement representing 1.5 million Reform Jews) between 2003 and 2008, and he rose in stature to serve on the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency for Israel and the Executive Committee of the World Zionist Organization. Later on he was named an Honorary Fellow of the WZO.

In Jerusalem, he was invited to be a member of the Board of Overseers of the Jerusalem campus of the Hebrew Union College where he served for eight years, and then upon coming to Los Angeles he was invited to serve on the Advisory Board of the HUC/LA campus.

Resa and Stan loved those 10 years in Jerusalem. In May 2016, as he retired from all his positions in the WZO, Sochnut, and K’Kal, the Israel Movement for Reform Judaism honored him. After all the praise expressed to him by a number of our Israel movement leadership, Stan said simply: “The best part of being engaged here for so long are the people – all of you whom I love.”

As their health concerns intensified, Stan and Resa decided they wanted to spend their final years close to their family in Los Angeles. They found an apartment on the 7th floor of a high rise at the Santa Monica beach looking northwest over the wide sands, watching sunsets, walking the boardwalk and swimming, and they wasted no time in renewing old friendships and creating new friends. Stan began teaching at University Synagogue and Wilshire Blvd Synagogue, mentoring rabbinic students at HUC, serving on the HUC/LA Advisory Council, coming to know well most of the Israel Consul Generals stationed here, and becoming a part of Los Angeles Jewish life – and Stan and Resa did all that from their mid-70s.

Stan was a deep thinker and a superb writer, and never one to rest on his laurels. In the last six years he inspired, co-edited and wrote the introductions and a chapter in each of three books published by the Central Conference of American Rabbis Press. The first was The Fragile Dialogue – New Voices of Liberal Zionism that he co-edited with his friend and Canadian Zionist leader Rabbi Larry Englander. The second was called Deepening the Dialogue: Jewish-Americans and Israelis Envisioning the Jewish-Democratic State, written in Hebrew and English, a first by the CCAR Press. I had the honor of co-editing that volume with Stan. And the third he called Re-forming Judaism: Moments of Disruption in Jewish Thought that he co-edited with HUC/LA Professor of Jewish Thought Leah Hochman. Stan had plans for a fourth book that he called Confronting Evil – Jewish Responses to be co-edited with HUC Bible Professor Tamara Eskenazi and JTS Professor of Jewish Philosophy, Dr. Alan Mittleman. However, his final illness took control of his life and he was unable to move forward with it.

Two-plus years ago, Stan and Tamara Eskenazi became B’nai Mitzvah together at the age of 83. I sat in the sanctuary at Leo Baeck Temple along with their two families, colleagues and friends and witnessed their joyful ‘coming of age.’ What a great accomplishment and example Stan and Tamara offered to all of us younger Jews. After that day, Stan told me that partnering with his brilliant friend was a highlight of his older years as a Jewish thinker and leader.

After Stan told me that he and his family wanted me to deliver this eulogy, he said that I should ask him whatever I needed to know. I asked him first what, if anything, he regretted in his life. He paused for effect, looked me in the eye, and said: “I wish I were Prime Minister of Israel. Actually, I’d like to be Prime Minister of anything.” Beyond that, he said only that he wasn’t done with this life, that he loved Resa, his kids and grandkids, his friends and being part of the Jewish and worldwide liberal Zionist family too deeply to leave us.

I also asked Stan if he had any significant worries; and he did. He worried about the increasingly illiberal State of Israel, the well-being of the remaining hostages and the families of so many young Israeli soldiers who died in defense of the State in this war, and about prospects for real peace. And he worried about the gallop towards autocracy in the United States.

Most recently, he and Resa worried deeply as they watched from their 7th floor apartment window the rapid spreading of the Malibu fire and feared having to be evacuated. Thankfully, the ferocious Santa Ana winds died down and the fire-fighters heroically stopped the fires from spreading towards their home.

Stan worried mostly about Resa, about leaving her alone and wanting to be certain that their family and friends continued to stay close to her after he was gone. I reassured him that Resa, though sure to miss him dearly every day for the rest of her life, was a force of nature all her own, that she would not only be cared for by their kids and grandkids, but by her many close friends.

Finally, Stan said that another great worry was that his children and grandchildren would not really know his full story. I asked what part of his story they didn’t already know. He explained that, of course, they know him, but he wanted them to know about his life’s work and his service to the Jewish people and to the well-being of the State of Israel. He asked me to tell that story here.

Though I have noted some of the highlights in his life, it’s impossible to tell all that he did over so long a period of time. I suggested to Resa that each of us might write to her our stories about Stan and what he meant to us, and that she, or one of her children, compile those stories filled with photographs and documents into a volume to share with their family.

One of Stan’s greatest wishes was to cast his vote in the 2025 World Zionist Congress elections for the Reform Zionist Slate. Two months ago, he told Rabbi Josh Weinberg (the Union for Reform Judaism’s Vice-President for Israel and Reform Zionism and President of ARZA): “Nothing would bring me more honor, and I hope to do so, but…” – he trailed off. Stan didn’t know if he would survive to March 10th when voting began. However, on that day Stan did indeed cast his vote.

Josh wrote in his tribute for Stan a letter to the tens of thousands of ARZA members: “Voting was Stan’s final act to support and fight for the Movement and the people he loved so dearly. He voted for all those whom he had mentored and taught, for whom he had fought, and who had learned from his example. He was indeed one of a kind, and his memory and legacy will live on. We will continue our work to cherish his legacy and honor his memory.”

Stan was born 85 years-ago on October 6, 1939 in the week the Jewish world then read Parashat Bereishit, and he died as we read Parashat Pekudei, the concluding portion in the Book of Exodus.

Bereishit describes the creation of the world and the beginnings of our history three and a half millennia ago as a people when many of our people’s moral values were taking form.

And Pekudei describes a later period during which the design and building of the sacred Mishkan, Menorah and Ner Tamid are described in detail.

Every member of the ancient Israelite community was called upon to contribute to the building of Tabernacle and its accoutrements. Their design reflected their highest artistic, religious, and moral vision.

Stan took to heart his birth parashah, its myths and moral principles, and he spent his life with Resa and their family and the many communities that Stan served creating new and old structures to bring God’s presence and our people’s moral values into the world. In doing so, he fulfilled the command, “Asu li mikdash v’shachanti b’tocham – Make for me a sanctuary that I – the Eternal One – might dwell amongst the people of Israel.”

There was no one like Rabbi Stanley Davids – he was sui generis. His heart was large, his mind ever-percolating, sharp and seeking knowledge and understanding, his soul striving always to make meaningful connections with everyone he encountered, his passions strong for his family and community, for our people and all peoples, his humor, wit, sarcasm, and charm drawing people in, the works of his hands, heart, mind, and soul integrated thereby seeking to create new worlds and confirm the teachings of the old – just as did the early Zionists who created a new/old world order for the Jewish people in our ancient Homeland.

In thinking about all that Stan was and did, the words from Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” feel like a most fitting farewell tribute:

“His life was gentle and the elements / So mix’d in him that Nature might stand up / And say to all the world, “This was a man.”

To Stan’s family, may you find comfort in the love that Stan felt so deeply for each one of you, and may we all find comfort as we mourn Stan with all others who have suffered the loss of dear ones in Zion and Jerusalem.

זכרונו לברכה–  May the memory of Rabbi Stanley Davids, הרב שמריה בן חיים צבי וצפורה  be a blessing. Amen!

[Below is a link to photographs of Rabbi Stanley Davids at the 2015 World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem where Stanley conducted numerous seminars and was omnipresent throughout the Congress; at ARZA’s 40th Anniversary Reception at the 2017 Union for Reform Judaism Biennial Convention in Boston, Massachusetts; and photos from the 2017 Fried Leadership Conference (WRJ) in Nashville, Tennessee. All photos were taken by Dale Lazar – Photographer, World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ) – Director of Photography, Women of Reform Judaism (WRJ)

https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjC6Ycw ]

For my Jewish readers – Have you voted yet?

23 Sunday Mar 2025

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At a time when democracy in Israel is being challenged by the most extreme right-wing messianic and autocratic-ruling-coalition-government in the history of the state, we American Reform Jews who care about Israel have an opportunity to make our voices heard in protest. Voting in the World Zionist Congress (WZC) election is our opportunity to take a stand for democracy and pluralism in Israel.

I have written twice on this blog already about the singular importance of this election. I am doing so again because our voting for the Reform Slate is one way for Diaspora Jewry to participate in the future of democracy in Israel. Contrast our intent to that of our ultra-Orthodox opponents who have pledged to get 100,000 votes in order to defund Israeli Reform Judaism and turn back the clock on Israeli democracy, pluralism and peace. 

Israel’s leaders are watching closely to see who is going to emerge as the predominant voice of American Jewry – and it must be us!

If we Reform American Jews vote in large numbers in this election, we can directly impact the amount of resources and funding for our Israeli Reform synagogues, rabbis, values, and advocacy work on behalf of democracy and human rights in Israel and Diaspora communities. The Israeli Reform Movement does not receive the kind of funding that the Orthodox and Ultra-Orthodox movements receive from the government, and so our standing in the World Zionist Congress can make a very significant impact on the financial health of the Israeli Reform Movement.

I am running for a seat in the WZC, and I ask for your vote – BUT, your vote isn’t only for me. It’s for our values to help ensure religious pluralism, women’s rights, LGBTQ+ inclusion, and a pathway to peace that includes the return of all hostages.

To be eligible to vote in 39th World Zionist Congress you must:

  • Be Jewish (and not subscribe to another religion)
  • Be 18 years or older by June 30, 2025
  • Be a U.S. citizen or a legal permanent resident in the U.S.
  • Maintain your primary residence in the U.S.
  • Accept the Jerusalem Program (the Zionist movement platform)
  • Have not voted in the November 2022 Knesset election (and will not vote in any future Knesset election which may be held prior July 28, 2025)

To register to vote, pay the $5 administrative fee, go to https://www.vote4reform.org/

I’m running for Congress and I ask for your vote!

10 Monday Mar 2025

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Israel, middle-east, palestine, politics, zionism

No – not the United States Congress – Rather, the World Zionist Congress (WZC).

Known as the “Parliament of the Jewish People,” the WZC was founded by Theodor Herzl (the Father of Zionism) in Basel, Switzerland in 1897 and convenes every 5 years drawing representatives of the Jewish people from around the world and Israel to meet together in Jerusalem.

What does the WZC do? The WZC is responsible for dispensing $1 billion annually in each of the following 5 years. It sponsors programs and funds departments and positions that further the interests of the Jewish people worldwide and in Israel.

That makes this coming Congress a very big deal. It is consequently important for the Reform movement worldwide and Israel to send a large delegation of representatives. All each of us needs to do to win the most delegates that we can is to register to vote, pay the $5 administrative fee, and then – Vote Reform.

There are other progressive Zionist slates on the ballot that may appeal to some of you. I am a part of that progressive community as well, and I support their agenda – but, I’m voting Reform because we badly need funds to support our Israeli Reform movement, its rabbis, congregations, youth movement, pre-military educational programs, kibbutzim, nursery schools, elementary schools, and our Reform movement’s social justice arm through the Israel Religious Action Center. The Israeli Reform Movement (IMPJ) is discriminated against by the ruling right-wing government that includes Ultra-Orthodox Parties that prevent the IMPJ from receiving funds as does its own Ultra-Orthodox synagogues and Yeshivot. 

The Reform movement delegation will be part of a coalition in the WZC that includes the Conservative movement and those progressive Zionist slates because our values are very similar.

I wrote about in a recent blog what the WZC is and does and how each of us can easily vote (see Vote Reform – and read that blog here – rabbijohnrosove.blog/2025/03/04/i-ask-for-your-vote-in-the-world-zionist-congress-election-march-10-may-4/

I’m printing below an appeal written by my friend and colleague Rabbi Josh Weinberg, the Vice-President for Zionism and Israel in the Union for Reform Judaism and the President of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA), an organization I once served as national chair. In that position, I was able to see from the inside the three national institutions of the Jewish people (the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency for Israel, and the Jewish National Fund) and come to understand why a large Reform Zionist movement vote total in this election is so critical to the future well-being of our liberal Reform Jewish values in Israel and around the world.

Please read carefully what Josh wrote below, and be certain to vote for the Reform Slate (#3 on the ballot):

“On Monday March 10, voting opens to elect the American delegates to the 2025 World Zionist Congress. By choosing the Vote Reform slate, we will be voting for our liberal Jewish values in the WZC. Our representatives there will help set policies and direct the allocation of a $1 billion+ annual budget that affects Jews around the world. However, this election is far more than simply about funding programs.

Like all Zionists, we Reform Zionists fight for the right to our self-determination as a people in our nation-state, affirm our close connection to the land, people, and State of Israel, and our aspirations that Israel will be a liberal, free, pluralistic, open, and tolerant democratic society.

We Reform Zionists are fighting every day against those extremist Israelis and right-wing Zionists who hold a completely different vision of what the Jewish State ought to be, and who say that we Reform and liberal Jews are inauthentic and that we practice an inauthentic Judaism.

We’re fighting also against those who champion the Greater Land of Israel vision [1], and who fervently oppose any diplomatic solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

We Reform Zionists are fighting so that the best interests of women, members of the LGBTQ+ community, and Israel’s marginalized minorities will be seen and heard and their human rights protected.

We’re fighting so that our Israeli Reform rabbis and leaders will be recognized by the State of Israel, and their conversions will continue to be accepted in the Jewish state.

We’re fighting to say to the world that Israel is our people’s historic Homeland, even if it is not our home.

Reform Zionism is about nurturing the soul of the State according to our liberal Jewish values and upholding the values of Israel’s founders who laid them out clearly in Israel’s Declaration of Independence. [2]

Since October 7th, Zionism is about bringing back those who were taken as hostages from their homes on that day and are still languishing in Gaza, and taking care of those who were displaced from their homes and need to rebuild their communities – and not lining the coffers of those who refuse to recognize the State of Israel and shirk military/national service (i.e. the Ultra-Orthodox).

Zionism is about reimagining what it means to be Jewish in the Jewish State and offering new, authentic, inclusive and creative expressions of Jewish life there as led by our Israeli Reform rabbis (close to 150 Israeli women and men ordained by our movement in Jerusalem) and leaders.

Our Reform Zionism is not only about exercising power to defend ourselves and to maintain our sovereignty as a people, but also about our exercising compassion and care for the vulnerable and powerless in Israel’s midst and under its sovereignty.

We Reform Zionists are faced today with a choice because so many in the larger Zionist tent are striving to delegitimize us as Reform Jews. We can choose to fight for our rightful place at the Zionist table or to surrender our place to the extremist powers that seek to weaken and marginalize us as Jews amongst the Jewish people.

So often, we’re told as Diaspora Jews that we shouldn’t have a voice in what happens in the State of Israel. But we know that everything that happens in Israel has a direct effect on us, our security and our identity as Jews. So, as Zionists, we need to have our voices heard in our people’s national institutions and around the world.

Starting on Monday March 10th and continuing through to May 4th, I ask that you to take one minute to cast your vote for the Vote Reform slate (#3 on the ballot). Your vote will help our Reform movement secure its rightful place at the Zionist table, assure our influence and fair funding of our movement’s social justice programs and congregations in Israel, and thereby enable us to contribute to shaping the soul of the Jewish State itself.

Let’s take back Zionism for our Reform Movement, for our future, and for the future of the Jewish people. Vote Reform from March 10 – May 4.

If you are Jewish and over the age of 18 years, you have the right and privilege to vote in the WZC election. Please do so and ask everyone who qualifies in your extended family and friendship circles, in your synagogues and Jewish community centers, to vote Reform. Every vote matters. We need you, so do not delay – Vote Reform!”

[1] “Greater Israel” generally refers to the notion of expanding Israel’s territory and sovereignty to what proponents of the ideology see as its historic Biblical land. In Israel today, the term is generally understood to mean extending Israel’s sovereignty to the West Bank (of the Jordan River) and, in some interpretations, the previously occupied territories in the Sinai Peninsula, Golan Heights, and Gaza Strip.

[2] “THE STATE OF ISRAEL will be open to the immigration of Jews and for the Ingathering of the Exiles from all countries of their dispersion; will promote the development of the country for the benefit of all its inhabitants; will be based on the precepts of liberty, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel; will uphold the full social and political equality of all its citizens, without distinction of race, creed or sex; will guarantee full freedom of conscience, worship, education and culture; will safeguard the sanctity and inviolability of the shrines and Holy Places of all religions; and will dedicate itself to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations.” (Paragraph 13, Megilat Haatzmaut)

I ASK FOR YOUR VOTE IN THE WORLD ZIONIST CONGRESS ELECTION – MARCH 10 – MAY 4

04 Tuesday Mar 2025

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gaza, Israel, palestine, politics, zionism

I am running to be a delegate representing the United States Reform Jewish Movement in the World Zionist Congress, and I ask for your vote .

The following explains why it is important that every American Jew over the age of 18 votes for the Reform Movement Slate in this election.

When I served as the National Chair of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA) representing 1.5 million United States Reform Jews, I had the honor of having a seat in the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency for Israel, and the Jewish National Fund, and that experience persuaded me how important it is that we in the American Reform Movement do very well in this election, which means that as many Reform Jews vote as possible.

The following should answer questions you might have about the election. If you have questions after reading this blog, please ask and I’ll respond.

What is the World Zionist Congress (WZC)?

The World Zionist Congress is a central nongovernmental institution in Israel. Often called “The Parliament of the Jewish People.” From the era of Theodor Herzl, the father of the Zionist movement, the WZC was the pre-statehood governing body representing the entirety of the Jewish world. The WZC convenes every five years to bring together representatives from Jewish communities around the world to decide key issues affecting the Jewish people in Israel and globally. The Congress elects the leadership that sets policies and influences the allocation of significant funding of about $1 billion annually. It plays a crucial role in supporting activities worldwide that promote Jewish identity and combat antisemitism.

What does the Reform Jewish Movement have to do with the WZC?

While the Reform Jewish Movement is the largest Jewish denomination in North America, we are a minority in Israel of just 8% – partly due to the lack of Israeli government funding in comparison to Orthodox communities in the Jewish state. Your vote will help to bring funds that are crucial to survive, thrive, and further our core values of democracy, freedom, pluralism, and security, and champion a different vision of what it means to be Jewish in the Jewish State. The Israeli Reform Movement includes more than 50 congregations, more than 140 Israeli trained Reform Rabbis (women and men), an active youth movement, pre-military educational programs, two kibbutzim, a renowned high school in Haifa, and many nursery schools and elementary schools all of which promote liberal Judaismand represents our liberal Jewish values as a counter-balance to the illiberal values that Israel’s right-wing promotes.

Where does the money come from? Where does it go?

The World Zionist Organization receives its funding from various Zionist institutions, donations, and partnerships. A major financial pillar, the Jewish National Fund (KKL-JNF) generates revenue from leasing and developments in Israel. Additional funds come from the Jewish Agency for Israel, donations, membership dues, and indirect state funding from Israel.

THE IMPORTANCE OF YOUR VOTING

Why is voting important? What’s really at stake?

Our representation in the WZC helps protect fundamental rights for all Israelis and Reform Jewish communities. It also prevents extremist factions from implementing policies that oppose our core shared values of democracy, freedom, pluralism, and security. The ultra-Orthodox and ultra-Nationalist movements are using the levers provided through these institutions – and power gained in the World Zionist Congress elections – to advance their extremist agenda, including: rejecting our conversions and questioning the authenticity of our children’s Jewish identity, stripping Israeli Reform clergy and communities of their rights and funding, advancing anti-democratic policies, and rolling back gains for LGBTQ+ rights.

What has been the impact of the Reform Movement at the WZC in the past? 

Our work has proven crucial for Israel’s secure, democratic and inclusive nature and for marginalized individuals within Israeli society.

● We ensured that over $4,000,000 a year ($20 million over 5 years) of financial support goes to the Reform movement in Israel thereby allowing it to significantly expand its reach to Israelis who seek a liberal Jewish community for themselves and their families.

● Our leaders have stood up for a secure Israel, directly preventing settlement building and advancing policies that align with our liberal Jewish values.

● We have passed key resolutions for equality, transparency, and pluralism.

● We helped guarantee LGBTQ+ rights for same-sex partners of fallen soldiers

● We battle for gender equity in Israel

The work of the WZC:

● Supports Reform rabbis and congregations;

● Offers humanitarian aid, inclusive housing for people with disabilities, and programs that empower women;

● Provides counseling and other services for over 20,000 Reform Jews in Israel each year;

● Fights discrimination among marginalized groups of Israeli society through the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), representing up to 500 people a year in court.

THE VOTING PROCESS

When does the vote start?

Voting runs from March 10 – May 4, 2025!

Who is eligible to Vote?

In order to vote, one must be:

● 18 or over.

● Self-identified as Jewish

● Live in the United States

● Pay $5 administrative fee

How can I vote?

You can vote online or by mail starting March 10 – May 4 at ZIONISTELECTION.COM. Note that voting requires a $5 administrative fee to help fund the cost of the election. Payments can be made by credit card, e-check, PayPal, Venmo, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. The payment serves to prevent fraud by making sure that individuals are voting and are only doing so once.

Why Vote Reform and not for one of the other pro-democracy slates?

● The Vote Reform Slate (the THIRD SLATE ON THE BALLOT) has successfully and consistently represented Reform values in the WZC for decades. Because we represent the largest pro-democracy mandate from the United States, we are uniquely situated within the infrastructure of Israel’s National Institutions (The WZO, The Jewish Agency for Israel, and the Jewish National Fund) to stand up against far-right settler, messianic and anti-democratic extremism. Our work as a movement has proven crucial in defending a secure and democratic Israel:

● We ensured that over $4,000,000 a year ($20 million over 5 years) of financial support goes to the Reform movement in Israel, allowing it to significantly expand its reach.

● Our leaders have stood up for a secure Israel, directly preventing settlement building and advancing policies that align with our values.

● We have passed key resolutions for equality, transparency, and pluralism.

● We helped guarantee LGBTQ+ rights for same-sex partners of fallen soldiers.

● We fight discrimination among marginalized groups of Israeli society through the Israel Religious Action Center, representing up to 500 people a year in court.

ONCE AGAIN – I ASK FOR YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REGISTER NOW OR ON MARCH 10, PAY THE NOMINAL ADMINISTRATIVE FEE OF $5 PER PERSON, AND HELP SECURE THE WELL-BEING OF LIBERAL REFORM JUDAISM IN ISRAEL AND AROUND THE WORLD.

American Jewish Identity Challenges after October 7th

24 Monday Feb 2025

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gaza, Israel, palestine, politics, zionism

Introductory Notes: I was invited on Sunday, February 23rd by the Washington Hebrew Congregation in our nation’s capital and co-sponsored by the National Jewish Book Council to deliver the Amram Lecture in its 70th anniversary year to discuss the identity of liberal American Jews, as well as my most recently published book From the West to the East – A Memoir of a Liberal American Rabbi – https://westofwestcenter.com/product/from-the-west-to-the-east/ and at Amazon. This was the first time I had returned to WHC since I served there as Associate Rabbi from 1986-1988. It was a kind of home-coming and its Senior Rabbi Susan Shankman presided with her customary grace and intelligence. This talk and the Q and A session following was recorded and will be available in the coming days. I will post the link when it is available.

This is what I said:

So much has happened in the Jewish world, 38 years since I began my service with you. I want to speak with you this morning about the historic challenges facing Israel and the American Jewish community today, especially since October 7th, and share some of the broad themes and inflection-point stories in my life and rabbinate that I write about in my Memoir that I believe have universal take-aways for us all.           

Today is the 506th day since October 7th. The trauma of that day remains palpable in both Israel and for so many of us as well. The murder by Hamas of the Bibas family of two small children and their mother has renewed the trauma and rage felt by Jews around the world. Israeli society, despite the release of some hostages, is still frozen by the horrors of that day, arguably the deadliest and most traumatic day for Jews since the Holocaust. Border communities bear the scars of destruction and displacement. The trauma of war affects virtually every Israeli in how they relate to their families and with friends, with fellow Jews around the world, with the Palestinians and their Arab neighbors.

As much as we Jews are thrilled that some of the hostages are home, we worry about the well-being of the remaining hostages and we fear that this deal will fall apart any day. Despite the joy of seeing the freed hostages reunited with their families, there’s something morally repulsive and offensive in the fact that these innocent Jews and others who were stolen from their bedrooms and from fields filled with music on that day were exchanged for those very Hamas terrorists who committed atrocities against our people or who support the murderous Hamas intentions.

To see the starving and tortured faces of the three hostages released a few weeks ago recalled the old black and white photographs taken when the camps were liberated which is why President Trump’s ‘solution’ for Gaza was acceptable to Israel’s far right wing. His plan mainstreams for the first time in Israel’s history the idea of “transfer,” a euphemism for ethnic cleansing, without any concern for the rights of the Palestinians living there, most of whom are not terrorists, nor were members of Hamas, and are suffering. His plan threatens the Israeli-Egyptian and Israeli-Jordanian peace agreements, the future of the Abraham Accords, the lives of the remaining hostages, and feeds the most extremist, messianic, and illiberal trends in Israeli society.

Just as Israelis find themselves at a significant crossroad in their history, so too do we American Jews find ourselves at a significant cross-road. For the first time in American Jewish history since the founding of the State of Israel, many liberal American Jews who love the Jewish state have been deeply disturbed not only by what happened on October 7th but also by Israel’s overwhelming and massive military response against Hamas that killed and injured so many thousands of Palestinian civilians and essentially destroyed Gaza. I was one of them, however, in fairness to Israel it’s important for us here to understand that this war, the longest in Israel’s history by far, was a response to what the Israeli government and army most feared would happen immediately after October 7th.

Israel’s leaders believed then that they were fighting for the existence of the Jewish state itself. They knew that Hamas intended to expand its attack, that there were realistic threats also by Hezbollah and Iran to join the war, and that a sympathetic uprising could ignite in the West Bank forcing Israel to fight simultaneously on three fronts. It was unclear then whether Israel could meet those threats. Hamas was organized and executing a plan that it had developed over many years. The IDF was disorganized. The Israeli army command believed that it had to distribute immediately its authority to a far lower level of officers than it had ever done before. That decision reduced the IDF’s customary safeguards to protect as much as feasibly possible Palestinian civilians who were used by Hamas as human shields, a massive war crime on top of what Hamas did in Southern Israel, massacring 1200 Israelis, raping and taking as hostage 250 more.

The army command believed that Israel had to fight with overwhelming fire power to disrupt Hamas’s chain of command and reach its leaders hiding everywhere under homes, apartment buildings, schools, community centers, hospitals, and mosques. If Israel didn’t succeed in disrupting Hamas immediately and demonstrating to Hezbollah and Iran how capable the IDF still was, Israel’s military and government leadership feared that tens of thousands of Israelis would be killed.

Both Israelis and American Jews are only now beginning to ask about the horrible impact this war has had on both Israelis and Palestinian civilians and what long-term psychological damage has been done on both peoples. We’re trying here in Diaspora communities as well to figure out where exactly we stand as American Jews and how much we want to say and reveal publicly about our fears and moral concerns in the war and the illiberal trends that are taking over Israel.

Taking a 10,000 foot view, the significance of this period in Jewish history is unparalleled in the modern era except for the three years from 1945 to 1948 when the Jewish people went from our lowest nadir after the Shoah to the establishment of Israel. That wide swing of the pendulum is testimony to the Jewish people’s durability and ability to survive, adapt and thrive after catastrophic events. Perhaps, the tragedy of October 7th and Israel’s turnaround military successes will have a strong deterrent impact on the perceptions of Israel by its enemies.

Despite Israel’s military successes, only a completed cease-fire and hostage deal will bring October 7th to an end and enable Israelis to begin a process of healing. But, any peace deal must include also a pathway to a demilitarized Palestinian state of some kind in Gaza and the West Bank in the context of a larger Middle East peace agreement that includes Israel and Saudi Arabia and all its moderate Arab neighbors.

That larger deal won’t be easy to attain because right-wing Israeli political parties and the extremist settler movement want to keep the war going as long as possible to enable Israel to annex Gaza and the West Bank into Israel. Should those extremist and messianic forces have their way, more terrorism and more war with the Palestinians and Islamic extremists will be inevitable and Israel’s international standing will remain diminished for decades to come.

Thankfully, polling of Israelis today suggests that the grip of the extremist right wing on the Israeli government is weakening. Sixty to seventy percent of all Israelis say they want all three stages of the agreement with Hamas to go forward with the return of the hostages and a permanent end to the war.

Even if and when that were to happen, there are immense residual problems facing Israel that have to be confronted and resolved including the massive humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the lack of an Israeli consensus about the role of the Palestinian Authority in the future governance of Gaza and the West Bank, Israel’s severely damaged international standing, what we in the American Jewish community think and feel about Israel and Zionism, and the dramatic rise here in antisemitism.

Among the greatest and immediate internal challenges facing Israel is that it has yet to set up a State Commission of Inquiry into what happened leading up to October 7th and Israel’s conduct in the war. Israel needs a power-house authority to undertake this inquiry to restore the people’s confidence that every lesson has been learned, that leadership failings are exposed, conclusions are drawn, and whether military excesses and war crimes were in fact committed.

In considering Israel’s culpability, however, we Jews who love Israel have to be able to distinguish between two kinds of criticism leveled against Israel’s conduct of the war.

There’s criticism from Israel’s friends that the IDF went too far, bombed Gaza too heavily using thousands of those huge 2000-pound dumb-bombs that destroyed entire apartment buildings and neighborhoods to get at Hamas command sites deep underground thus causing far too much damage to life and property, and that Israeli commanders and soldiers in the heat of battle crossed red lines against international moral standards of war. Israelis need to address this legitimate criticism from Israel’s friends and not characterize it as either anti-Israel or antisemitic.

The second kind of criticism is very different and comes from those who believe that the Jewish State has no moral legitimacy, is a colonial and foreign entity in the Middle East, has no right to exist and therefore no right to defend itself. That criticism clearly is based upon antisemitism.

Despite the loss of hundreds of young Israeli soldiers, the suffering of the hostages and their families, and the massive carnage in Gaza and the loss of life and property in the Strip, there have been a few positive things that have come from this war for Israel. Immediately after October 7th, Israel’s civil society came together from across all political and religious lines to support one another following a year of intensive demonstrations and hatred that brought hundreds of thousands of Israelis into the streets and tore apart the fabric of Israeli society as a consequence of the government’s proposed Judicial Reform efforts, or over-haul, or Judicial coup de etat – however one characterizes it. And hundreds of moving Hebrew songs have been written focusing on war and peace, hopelessness and hope.

In Diaspora communities $1.4 billion was raised for Israel representing the single largest set of contributions on behalf of Israel in our history, and 300,000 Jews and friends of Israel came together here in Washington in solidarity with Israel, the largest Jewish demonstration since the 1987 Soviet Jewry rally on the Mall.

All of that is a source of inspiration and pride. However, the rise of antisemitism here and around the world has been dramatic. Between March and May of 2024, Jewish students on 147 campuses in North America were under attack. The ADL counted 10,000 incidents against Jews representing an increase of 200 percent over the year before. In a new survey released three weeks ago by the ADL and Hillel International, 83 percent of all North American Jewish students have experienced or witnessed antisemitism firsthand since October 7, 2023.

An American Jewish Committee study reported that over 50 percent of us won’t show in public spaces anything that identifies us as Jews including wearing kippot, the Magen David, dog tags with the names of Israeli hostages, and yellow hostage ribbons.

At the same time, many American Jews have experienced a passionate reconnection to Zionism, Israel and their Jewish identity. However, 42 percent of young Jews under 35 have had difficulty finding common ground with the Jewish State. Some, though a minority, now say they’re anti-Zionists.

Antisemitism comes from both the far right politically and the far left. The far right doesn’t consider American Jews to be part of white America and that we’re foreign interlopers here with far too much power and influence in government, politics, the media, banking, business, and entertainment – classic antisemitic canards. The far left considers us to be part of white America and in league with right-wing colonialists around the world that oppress peoples of color most especially in America and Israel.

It’s unclear what impact October 7th and the war will ultimately have on each of us and on the character of our traditional Jewish institutions, most especially our synagogues, religious schools and day schools. In the early weeks and months of the war, many Jews sought out the organized Jewish community for themselves and their children. Many non-Jews were choosing to convert to Judaism in numbers greater than we’ve experienced in a generation. More American Jews began reading books, attending classes and on-line seminars that helped them better understand Zionism, Israel, and Middle East politics and history.  

In the Reform Movement, many of my rabbinic colleagues, however, have confessed either that they don’t know enough or don’t understand well enough what’s really happening in Israel to be able to publicly speak and teach with confidence about it. Many who do love and understand Israel have feared for their positions if they spoke critically about Israel’s conduct in the war. They’ve worried that conservative wealthy and influential congregants will take exception to what they say and advocate for their dismissal. Too many synagogues have become unsafe places where rabbis and congregants are unable to discuss and debate openly the wide range of opposing views that exist in our community concerning Israel, Zionism, antisemitism, the war, the Israeli government, illiberal trends in Israeli and American societies, and the Israeli-Palestinian and Israeli-Arab conflicts.

We don’t know how our American and Israeli Jewish identities will evolve over time, but my sense is that we Jews are in a deeply troubling but also transformative era. Whereas in years past, Israelis were happy simply to take Diaspora Jewish dollars and seek American Jewish political support for Israel’s security needs, in a recent Israeli poll, 80 percent of Israeli Jews now feel strongly that the Israel-Diaspora relationship is important personally to them.

I characterize myself as a liberal American Reform Zionist and a lover of Israel and the Jewish people. But, even as I identify so closely with Israelis – many of whom are among my dearest friends – I’ve been confused why so many Israelis haven’t empathized nearly enough with the suffering of the Palestinians in Gaza.

Rabbi Donniel Hartman and Yossi Klein HaLevi of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem raised this issue last month in their weekly podcast For Heaven’s Sake. They noted that amongst the many challenges Israeli Jews have faced is that in the midst of the war they felt no significant moral angst about the suffering of Gazans because they themselves felt victimized first by Hamas’ attack on October 7th and then by the world’s remarkably quick turn-about against Israel once the IDF began fighting only days later.

Donniel and Yossi explained that victims generally respond to their enemies with fear, anxiety, rage, hostility, and a desire for revenge, and from that embattled position they morally justify themselves in whatever they do. I confess that in the initial months of the war, I felt the same way. These terrible effects of feeling victimized explain not only why Israeli society and the Israeli media did not focus on the destruction of Gaza and the huge loss of life there during the war, but why Palestinian society too has historically tolerated and embraced terrorism as a legitimate tool and moral response against Israel and the Jewish people. As victims, Palestinians living under Israel’s harsh occupation in the West Bank and formerly in Gaza until Israel unilaterally withdrew 20 years ago believe they’re justified in committing even the most vicious crimes without moral consequence.

At the beginning of the war, a colleague and friend called me distraught because his college-age daughter had joined the Jewish Voice for Peace, an anti-Israel, anti-Zionist and anti-nationalist Jewish organization. She claimed to want no part of Israel in her life and even expressed the view to her father, a rabbi and Reform Zionist, that Israel should never have been created. My colleague, as you might imagine, was deeply upset and didn’t know what to say to her. He asked me what I thought. A number of my congregants called me as well (though I’m retired they called me anyway) with the same question about their college age and twenty-something kids.

You might remember a letter signed by hundreds of young Reform Jews, children of rabbis and alumni of our American Reform Jewish summer camps that was published in the Jewish press that accused us older Reform Jewish leadership with hypocrisy – that we taught them liberal universal Jewish values but now support an illiberal and immoral Jewish state.

That letter provoked op-eds, sermons and conversations throughout our movement about how we Jewish leaders have failed to educate our people and especially our young Jews about Israel and Zionism.

To my colleague and congregants, I said the following:

“First – these are your kids. Your relationship with them is what’s most important now. Don’t say or do anything that will alienate them from you. Love them a lot which means listening to them without your having to instruct or correct them. Recognize that we’re all struggling in this new era of American Jewish history. Take a 10,000 foot perspective and remember that they’re at the beginning of their adult journeys as Jews and Americans and that they’ll likely evolve and change their thinking over time just as we’ve done over the course of our lives. You’ve instilled in them the Jewish values that are important to you. This isn’t the end of their engagement with Jewish life or in their relationship with Israel. Keep the door open to continuing a conversation with them. They already know, most likely, how you feel and what you believe about Israel. You don’t have to persuade them now about anything. Just listen and tell them that you respect them and love them. If they’re open to reading about why Israel matters to the American Jewish community and what liberal Reform Zionism has to offer them and Israel as a direct response to the illiberal trends in Israeli society, there are books that deal directly with these challenges.”

The greater question confronting us here now is what do we do to better educate ourselves and our young people about Israel and Zionism? That’s the $64 million question.

The best thing we can do is to go there individually or in congregational groups and meet Israelis face to face from the right, left and center, with Palestinian-Israeli citizens and Palestinians living under occupation in the West Bank, with Israeli and Palestinian journalists, with members of Knesset, and with our Reform movement rabbis and leadership, and especially with the leadership of the Israel Religious Action Center whose liberal values we share and who are working every day to counter the extremist actions of the government and on behalf of pluralism, equality and democracy in Israeli society.

Taking a longer view, there are a number of questions we need to be asking ourselves, debating, and striving to find consensus. Those questions include:

  • How we regard the impact of October 7th and the war on our Jewish lives and institutions?
  • How we memorialize what occurred on October 7th without identifying as victims?
  • What it means to belong to the Jewish people and to have a Jewish state?
  • How we look at the world today beyond our Jewish agenda and act on behalf of other minorities and groups who may feel towards us Jews as colonialists and interlopers?
  • How we regard ourselves as a distinct “other” in our Diaspora communities?
  • How we frame how others ought to be regarding us as American Jews who love Israel?
  • How we rebuild trust in our Jewish institutions and even in many of our clergy and teachers who some young people regard with a measure of suspicion and distrust because we haven’t been honest enough or knowledgeable enough about Israel, Jewish peoplehood, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when they grew up?
  • And finally, how we understand anti-Zionism, anti-Israel sentiment, and antisemitism today, and what we do about it?

From the 1990s, the organized American Jewish community worked to reestablish inter-group relationships with the African-American, Latino, Asian, Christian, and Muslim communities in America. We worked on writing textbooks and developing curricula together, and we attempted to influence how other groups understood Israel and the American Jewish experience. Today, many of those efforts have been vacated. The American Jewish community is consequently in a shifting place, and though October 7th and the war contributed mightily to that shift, the events of the past 16 months were not the starting points of that shift.

There’s still, of course, so much that’s positive for us to celebrate about the American Jewish experience and opportunities to address the challenges I’ve mentioned. Our financial resources are great. We have many talented rabbinic, cantorial, academic, educational, professional, lay and political leaders helping us forge a new path forward.

Our message as American liberal non-Orthodox Zionists and as lovers of the people and State of Israel has to be clear and unrelenting – DON’T GIVE UP ON ISRAEL. We have a moral Jewish duty to fight for Israel despite her imperfections just as we fight for America despite its imperfections. My friend and colleague Rabbi Josh Weinberg, the Vice President for Israel and Reform Zionism at the Union for Reform Judaism, put it well with these words: “We have a duty to fight for Israel’s right to be the only Jewish state in the world and for Jews to be a free people thriving in our historic Homeland without always having to live by the sword. We liberal American Zionists also have a moral duty to fight for Israel to live up to the values articulated in Israel’s Declaration of Independence. We have the duty also to fight against those who constantly defame and delegitimize Israel, who unfairly criticize her and judge her by unreasonable double standards.”

As Reform Jews, we have the duty to join with our growing Israeli Reform movement in its fight for religious pluralism, democracy, equality, the return of all the hostages, and to pursue a pathway to peace with the Palestinians, the Arab and moderate Muslim world.

One of the most important ways for us American Reform Jews to do all of this is to vote in next month’s World Zionist Congress elections for the Reform ARZA slate. Rabbi Shankman is prospective delegate, as am I, and I hope you will vote in large numbers so that we will do very well in this election. Our liberal Jewish values are at stake in the National Institutions, the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency for Israel, and the Jewish National Fund. The World Zionist Organization dispenses annually $1 billion dollars and since our Israeli Reform institutions are discriminated against by the government of Israel, having a large representation in the World Zionist Organization will enable more dollars to flow to our Reform movement programs in Israel that educate and advocate for liberal Jewish and democratic values.

Though I’ve articulated some of what I said this morning in my Memoir, I want to say a few more words about it. I chose as the title “From the West to the East – A Memoir of a Liberal American Rabbi” based on a medieval poem by the 11th century rabbi, poet and philosopher, Yehuda Halevi, who lived most of his life in Muslim Spain and eventually made his way to the Land of Israel. He said famously: “Libi b’mizrach v’ani b’kitzei ma’arav – My heart is in the East and I’m at the edge of the West” thereby expressing the age-old longing of the Jewish people for Zion, a longing I’ve felt since I was a little boy as parts of both sides of my family made Aliyah – my mother’s side in 1878 and my father’s side in the mid-1930s.

My Memoir is organized around many events in my life including the intense blow-back I received to sermons I delivered and actions I took in San Francisco, here in D.C., and in Hollywood.

I write about many causes I took up in my life-long social justice activism and in my role as a past national chairman of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA), and as a national co-chair of the rabbinic and cantorial cabinet at J Street.

I have a number of important mentors about whom I’ve written who have come from the Israeli political right, the American political left, the moderate-liberal center in both the American Jewish and Israeli Jewish communities. Each of their voices has guided me, and their voices inside my mind and heart often have been at odds with one another, pushing me one way and then another, always sowing doubt, but helping me to clarify my liberal American Jewish and Zionist moral values.

I write in my Memoir, for example, about a dramatic story at Congregation Sherith Israel in San Francisco in 1980 as a young 30-year old rabbi after I delivered a Rosh Hashanah sermon to a packed sanctuary stopping just short of calling for a Palestinian state alongside a secure Israel. A brawl almost broke out after the service when an Israeli leader of Tel Aviv’s right-wing Likud Party barged into a group of the synagogue’s leaders and took great exception to what I said.

I describe another dramatic story here in Washington, D.C. in 1987 after I delivered another High Holiday sermon and moral appeal for us to become a sanctuary synagogue on behalf of the 100,000-plus El Salvadoran refugees living in the nation’s capital, many of whom were being hunted by Salvadoran death squads, and how I was taken to task in the weeks following Rosh Hashanah by a group of Jewish advisors to then Vice President George H. W. Bush. However, I was supported by the former American Ambassador to El Salvador Robert White who told me to resist the pressure to recant what I said in that sermon that he told me was 100 percent accurate.

I told the story in 2012 about my then 32-year policy of not officiating at inter-faith weddings and then changing that policy and announcing it on Rosh Hashanah morning resulting in a surprising standing ovation, and how my decision became for me an inflection point in my life and rabbinate and an inflection point for my congregation with congregants crying in the halls and parking lot for weeks afterwards. As only one example, a good friend, an African American actor married to a Jewish woman, came to me immediately after the service before I even left the bimah and said: “John, I’ve always felt welcome here, but now I consider Temple Israel of Hollywood my home.”

I wrote in some detail as well about contemporary antisemitism, anti-Zionism, and anti-Israel sentiment and what it means to raise proudly identifying young Jews today to assure the future of liberal American Jewry and our positive relationship to the people and State of Israel.

I wrote about my cancer diagnosis 15 years ago, the overwhelming loving response of my congregation to me, my coping with what I believed initially was a death sentence thanks to the brutal way my first physician informed me of my condition, and of the pain I suffered during my recovery from surgery, radiation treatment, and a staph infection, and how the experience changed me and made me far more empathic than I had ever been before to those confronting life-threatening illness and chronic pain.

I share how we liberal Jews might refocus our faith away from the traditional God-King and narrow idea about God that comes to us from tradition – especially the God Who doles out rewards and punishments – a classic image in the Hebrew Bible and rabbinic tradition, but instead embrace a mystic model that asks not “Do I believe in God” but rather “How might I best experience myself as a spiritual being?” based on my life-long study of Jewish mysticism and the thought and writings of such luminaries as Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.

And I wrote about the difference between optimism and hope, that hope is an attitude of the heart and a mindset that helps people endure even the most negative and destructive challenges without denying that reality around us, and what transpired at my family Seder a dozen years ago in which my millennial sons challenged me given their pessimistic and, at times, cynical understanding of contemporary American, Israeli and world events.

I wrote this Memoir first and foremost for them, my children and grandchildren, that they might know more about who their father and grandfather was in this fractious and troubled era of Jewish, Israeli and human history; but I believe that what I’ve written is relevant for the large non-orthodox American Jewish community and many outside our Jewish tent.

My father died when I was 9 years-old, and other than a group of letters he wrote to his cousins in Philadelphia during his period of service as a Navy physician during WWII in Hawaii and on the Midway Atoll, I have nothing from his hand communicating to me who he was, what he most valued and believed as an American Jew living in the first half of the 20th century, or any details about his parents and grandparents and their immigration to America in the closing years of the 19th century. Not having his reflections and beliefs have been for me a large missing piece in the greater puzzle of my family’s life, and I didn’t want my grandchildren and their children to have no record of what I’ve experienced, cared about, valued and learned that might be of use and importance to them.

When I served my congregation in Hollywood, I met with every family a year before each bar and bat mitzvah celebration, and I urged the pre-b’nai mitzvah young people to research with their oldest living relatives their life stories. I gave them a list of 40 questions to ask those family elders. Doing so became for the young people and their parents an enriched experience that offered them greater appreciation for the life-experiences of the oldest surviving members in their families and a larger context for their lives. If you’ve not done so yourself in writing, audial or video, I urge you to consider it. To have such a record will preserve your memories and lives for the generations to come.

I’d be happy to share with you that list of 40 questions if you email me. Simply respond to this blog with your email address and I’ll send you a copy.

Finally, I hope you will acquire a copy of my Memoir for yourselves, your adult children, grandchildren and friends, whether they be Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindi, or without a faith tradition who are open to expanding how they think about their lives in this era and what possibilities this period in our history holds for each of us and the Jewish people.

At Last – The Hostages are Returning to their Families

20 Monday Jan 2025

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Uncategorized

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Tags

gaza, hamas, Israel, palestine, politics

I have waited until the first group of hostages is home to express my joy in the agreement that brings about a ceasefire, the return of the hostages, and increased humanitarian aid into Gaza. At last, I’m beginning to feel a measure of relief that the first three Israeli hostages – Emily Damari, Romi Gonen and Doron Steinbrecher – are home after their 471 days of captivity and that the remainder of the hostages will be home soon. According to the agreement, 30 more hostages will be released during the first phase of the agreement in groups every Saturday over the next six weeks. In the next phase, more hostages will be released.

The greatest of all commandments in Jewish tradition is the “pidyon shevuyim – redemption of captives” (Maimonides, Mishnah Torah, Hilchot Matanot Aniyim 8:10-11). The Shulchan Aruch, the authoritative 16th century code of Jewish law, emphasizes that “every moment that one delays in freeing captives, in cases where it is possible to expedite their freedom, is considered to be tantamount to murder.” (Yoreh De’ah 252:3) Three millennia ago, the Psalmist exclaimed “B’shuv Adonai et shivat Zion hayinu k’cholmim… – When God returns the captives to Zion we will be like dreamers — our mouths will be filled with laughter and our tongues with joy.” (126:1)

Hamas’ kidnapping on October 7th 250+ babies, children, young women, men, and seniors from their beds and the music festival, and viciously raped many of the young women, paraded both the living and dead through the streets of Gaza like trophies to the cheering of the crowds, are unforgivable crimes against humanity. Worry about the fate and well-being of these hostages has been a constant every-day reality for Israelis and the Jewish people worldwide. The suffering too of innocent Palestinian civilians at the hands of Hamas’ criminality has been also a deep concern over all this time for compassionate human beings everywhere. Now, at last, the suffering can begin to end and Israelis and Palestinians can start to move on, to reconstruct their destroyed and damaged communities, to heal from this longest war, and consider paths towards peace with justice and security for both our peoples in our shared Homeland.

As a Jew and as an American, I’m grateful for the Biden Administration’s consistent effort to find a diplomatic resolution that brings about a ceasefire and the return home of the hostages. Credit is due as well to the incoming Administration that worked with Biden to achieve this agreement.

As much as we Jews are thrilled that the first small group of hostages are home and more are scheduled to be reunited with their families in the coming weeks, there is something repulsive and morally offensive to me that these innocent and peaceful men, women, children, babies, parents, and grandparents will be returned in exchange for the release of those terrorists who committed cruel acts against our people, who have much Jewish blood on their hands, or who profess the murderous Hamas intentions towards the Jewish people and Jewish State. I comfort myself, however, in the knowledge of and respect for Jewish tradition that insists that we do everything possible to bring home innocent captives and not leave them to a certain fate of death in the tunnels of Gaza.

I’m guardedly optimistic that all the hostages will be home soon and that peace will settle in the land. Until that happens, it is upon us to remember that despair is not an option, that hopeful aspirations have historically characterized the Jewish people regardless of our circumstances, and that our dreams of the return of the captives will be fulfilled and that peace and security will eventually come.

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