I’m taking this personally

I’m taking this personally

By Joan Joanne Greene

My grandparents lived through pogroms – organized massacres where bands of men, seething with hatred of Jews, rode into Jewish villages on horseback, looting, raping, killing, and burning down their homes. I’ve known this the same way I’ve known about the killing fields in Cambodia and the Armenian genocide. Unimaginable evil that happened to someone else, people who didn’t speak my language, who didn’t live like I did, safe and with boundless opportunity in late 20th and early 21st century America. 

In Hebrew school they showed us newsreels from the war, the Holocaust, the Shoah. So many names for something that happened far away at another time. I and my friends had nightmares from seeing the grainy, black-and-white images of emaciated naked dead bodies piled high. But that was history, I told myself…like the slaughter by Syrian-Greeks, the annihilation decreed by Egyptian Pharoahs. Except that the murder of 6 million Jews had taken place only twenty years earlier. Twenty years, I now know, is an instant. I’ve read countless books, seen innumerable films, been privileged to hear many first-person testimonies, but these atrocities were things that happened to other Jews, at other times, in other places. 

Until now. “Never again is now.” It’s what we chant at rallies, our minds filled with images of kids who look like our children, brutally murdered at a music festival, parents, and grandparents, just like us, mowed down in their homes. “Bring them home,” we chant of the 200 hostages perhaps held in tunnels filled with weapons, being used as human shields as Israel fights for its very existence against an enemy that doesn’t protect its people, that is known to use relief money to buy weapons, that teaches its children that judgement day will only come when every Jew is killed.

For the first time in my life, I fear for Jewish American college students enduring vicious threats that scare them into remaining inside their dorm rooms, that cause the closure of kosher dining halls because they’re no longer safe. Yes, I’m taking this personally because reason seems absent from much of the discourse. The left with which I’ve marched and identified over so many issues for decades – reproductive rights, women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, human rights – seems not to care about Israeli hostages from more than twenty-five different nations held by a group of people that celebrate the beheadings of Jewish infants. 

I am sad and confused and feel the need to be counted among those who stand up for Israel’s right to exist. I support the Israel that has continued to try to negotiate a Palestinian state, that, while imperfect, is still the closest thing to a democracy in the middle east. I take great pride in knowing that hundreds of thousands of Israelis turned out every Saturday after the Sabbath to protest judicial reforms that would have changed the makeup of the Jewish state. I, like so many around the world, yearn for a free and independent place for Palestinians to live peacefully, to cultivate land, to build infrastructure and to educate their children, not just about Jihad but about science and mathematics, art, and economics. This isn’t a fight against the Palestinian people; it’s a fight against the Islamic Resistance movement that is committed to killing Jews until Israel is wiped off the map.

Anti-Semitism pre-dates the printing press and, at this point, it may even be inevitable. And perhaps I should have been feeling it’s ugliness more deeply, more personally, all along. Instead, I’ve acted by upholding Jewish values and traditions, learning and teaching about our people’s history and struggles, visiting sites where Judaism thrived and Jews were murdered throughout the world, celebrating our rituals, telling our jokes, eating our foods. 

Today’s geopolitical issues in the Middle East are complex and nuanced and the more I read and listen to experts, the more complicated I understand the path to peace to be. What galls me is that most people, with little to no appreciation for history, reduce this and all conflict to good and evil, us and them, the haves and the have nots. In this terrifying, quickly moving scenario in which we find ourselves, the narrative has shifted in mere moments from Israel as victim to Israel as all-powerful master of brutality. 

I have no answers, only pain punctuated by moments of joy and guilt that, still, even now, I and my immediate family have it so good.

November 1, 2023

Do something out loud, even if it’s a whisper!

Do something out loud, even if it’s a whisper!

By Debra Rich Gettleman

Everyday I wear a very tasteful, and very noticeable Jewish star around my neck. It falls just above the necklace that reads my Hebrew name, Devorah. I also wear a blue ribbon when I go out to show my support for Israel and my hope that all of the hostages will be returned to safety. I’m not screaming or shouting from rooftops. I’m quietly asserting who I am and speaking up about what I believe.While friends of mine are taking down their mizuzot, removing kippot and affirming not to put their hanukiahs in their windows this year, I am asking you to honor your Jewishness by displaying meaningful Jewish symbols in your homes and on your person. 

It’s not enough to support Israel silently right now. It’s about standing proudly for the Jews and the Jewish state. Because back in 1938, when the Nazi regime was gaining power, most Jews preferred to tamp down their identities and try to wait out the antisemitism creeping into their lives.

In pre-World War II Germany, it was incomprehensible to imagine that Jews, successful members of a cultured society, could ever be targeted in one of the deadliest genocides the world had ever seen. Jews were barred from certain professions. Their businesses were shut down.  Jewish children were no longer able to go to school. Jews were defined as biologically inferior through their blood lines. And as all that happened, no one believed that it would lead to the systematic destruction of 6 million Jewish men, women, and children. Look around right now. Jews are being targeted. Jewish businesses are being boycott. Jewish students on campuses all over the world are not safe. And yet, most Jews I know continue to assert that something like the Holocaust could never happen today. We say, “never again” and yet, we are watching history repeat itself.

Look at the Cooper Union Jewish students who hid in a library while pro-Palestinian rioters banged on the glass doors threatening violence. Or the Jewish people in Rashida Tlaib’s 12th district who lost family during the October 7th massacre and have to grapple with the reality that their congresswoman sponsors terrorism and hate. Or, think about Aaron Dahan, Upper East Side owner of Caffe Aronne, whose half a dozen baristas walked off the job due to his support of Israel.

This is history repeating itself. And it is up to all of us to say something, do something, stand for something, and not pretend it isn’t happening. Let’s applaud business icons like Bill Ackman  and Idan Ofer who spoke out against Ivy league alma maters that support anti-Jewish student groups. Let’s support the 234 Democrat and Republican Representatives who voted to censor Tlaib’s insensitive pro-Hamas rhetoric.  Let’s cheer loudly for Pro-Israel community members in New York who showed up to volunteer to work at Café Aronne. Doctors, lawyers, Rabbis, Jews from all walks of life came to help and encourage people to buy gift cards to bolster the business. Customers now line up around the block to support the store and the business continues to see a significant bump in customers after news of the barista walk-off spread.

Elie Wiesel said, “Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.” 

Speak your truth and speak it now.

Speak your peace – A message from Rabbi Bill Berk in Jerusalem

Speak your peace – A message from Rabbi Bill Berk in Jerusalem

 Rabbi Bill Berk, Rabbi emeritus Temple Chai

Rabbi Berk served for twenty-three years as the Senior Rabbi of Temple Chai in Phoenix, Arizona. 

 The Simchat Torah Massacre

     In September 2005 Israel pulled out of Gaza with the hope that the Palestinians there would build a healthy prosperous country.  Two years later Hamas took over Gaza and began focusing not on building a good country but on destroying Israel.  We found out, to our shock and horror, that Hamas had zero interest in peace and was viciously opposed to pluralism.  Since then Hamas has made it clear that Israel will never be welcomed in the MIddle East.  They believe in creating an Islamic Empire–no Jews and no Israel.  Most of the modern world is making peace with the idea of pluralism–but not Hamas.

     Now it is one thing to be opposed to pluralism.  It is quite another thing to commit the atrocities they have unleashed with this war which began on October 7th.  These atrocities have crossed a red line that changes how we look at our situation.  We now look at it like this–we have no choice.  If we don’t stop Hamas they will kill us. Many others around the world, including many in the U.S.,  look at the situation differently and either equate the two sides or simply support Hamas.   Part of our enormous stress right now is exactly this issue–especially the way the world got tired of Israel’s suffering after two days of empathy.  For us a line has been  crossed.

     The joyous laughter of Hamas fighters as they murdered parents in front of their children and children in front of their parents–crossed a line.  The kidnapping of little children and babies and elders–crossed a line.  Raping teenage girls before killing them–crossed a line.  Chopping babies heads off and burning babies alive–it’s too much, it crossed a line.  Shooting rockets at us–12 shot at us in the last few minutes (October 31)–crosses a line. So the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) is going to do what it needs to do whether students at Harvard like it or not.  (News reports as of the end of October tell us  that many Harvard students are demonstrating on behalf of Hamas.)  Jewish suffering is no longer making headlines.  

     Here’s a secret about Israeli society.  If there had been ten people murdered and four people kidnapped we would be as horrified and stressed out as we are with 1400 murdered and 245 kidnapped.  Why?  Two reasons: 1) We take seriously that every human is created b’tzelem, in God’s image, which to us means that every single person has infinite worth.  2)  Israel is one big family.  We are a gregarious group of people who love life.  We feel connected to each other.  So the numbers don’t matter–each and every person is a world, precious beyond words.

     Speaking of numbers–if we took what is happening here in Israel and Gaza  and on a per capita basis extrapolate what the numbers would be in the U.S.–it would look like this: on one day (9/11) 90,000 people murdered and  7,000 kidnapped–you get an idea of the extent of the tragedy on October 7, 2023. 

     We feel terrible for the people trapped in Gaza, held captive by Hamas.  We pray for their liberation from Hamas.  For those whose sympathies lie more in the direction of Hamas please keep  in mind that sometimes in order to stop evil from spreading it is necessary to hurt innocent civilians.  In Germany five million civilians were killed by the Allies desperate to stop Hitler.  They didn’t want to hurt these people–but that is war. 

     One last word–in the Bible the word hamas means  wild, destructive, violent behavior.   

Empathy in Action: How best to support Israel now

Empathy in Action: How best to support Israel now

As Israel and America stand strong against Hamas, Hezbollah, and anyone who supports the massacre of innocent civilians, the desire to help is palpable. But how do you know where and how to give? How do you determine a charity is credible and fiscally responsible? How can you be sure that the money you donate is getting to those in danger and most in need?

Jewish Life Now has done some research and through a careful analysis of philanthropic, economic, and human service non-profit organizations and charitable organizations, we have put together a list of some of the most reputable and effective charities. In addition to the short list below, your Jewish Federations, Combined Jewish Philanthropies and Jewish Community Foundations are equipped to help as well.  (As always, please do your own research):

American Friends of Magen David Adom

https://afmda.org

Help is desperately needed to put more ambulances on the road and to replenish supplies for EMTs and paramedics and for MDA’s blood services division.

 

American Friends of Meir Panim

https://meirpanim.org/

Food insecurity in Israel

https://donate.meirpanim.org/2023-emergency-campaign/

Adopt the families of Nachal Oz

 

American Friends of Natal

afnatal.org

NATAL - the Israel Trauma and Resiliency Center is an apolitical non-profit organization which provides a unique, multidisciplinary model of psychological support to victims of trauma due to terror and war, regardless of religion or political affiliation.

 

Citrus & Salt Cooking/Citizen’s Kitchen

www.citrusandsaltcooking.com

https://www.gofundme.com/f/citizens-kitchen

Tel Aviv cooking studio turned meal operation for soldiers and families in Isarel.

 

Dogs Are Us Israel

www.Dogsrus.co.il

A dog rescue for the last 7 years, the need to rescue and house dogs since October 7 has increased substantially due to the chaos that ensued including displaced families, deaths and fear.

 

Friends of the Israel Defense Forces

https://www.fidf.org

A non-political, non-military organization that provides for wellbeing of the soldiers of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), veterans and family members.

 

Jewish National Fund (JNF)

Jnf.org

They work to ensure a strong, secure, and prosperous future for the land and people of Israel from planting trees, building  houses and parks, source water solutions, buy fire trucks, and improve the lives of people with special needs and run volunteer programs in Israel. To volunteer on farms across Israel - register to their mission: https://bit.ly/3ucxy5D

 

One Israel Fund

https://oneisraelfund.org

Primarily focused on enabling Jewish life to flourish in all areas of our Biblical Heartland, as well as other areas throughout Israel.

 

Soldiers Save Lives

www.soldierssavelives.org

A grass roots organization that saw the need on October 8 and jumped into action.They send equipment to the IDF via their US- to- Israel supply chain.

In memory of David Newman.

 

United Hatzalah

https://israelrescue.org/

The largest community-based volunteer emergency medical services (EMS) organization that provides the fastest response to medical emergencies across Israel free of charge. You can donate for emergency equipment as well.

israeli flag

Volunteers For Israel

https://vfi-usa.org/

Opportunities for civilians to volunteer on IDF bases