Showing posts with label diaspora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diaspora. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2013

You and I Will Change the World: Arik Einstein and the Hope of Israel

Leaving Israel is, for me, always accompanied by a certain sense of melancholy. Some authorities in our tradition (reading from Numbers 33:53) teach that while it is arguably a mitzvah to go to Israel, it is an aveirah, a transgression to leave.

But of course, I have a job and a family and a life here in Great Neck. I have a congregation that needs me (well, sometimes). I am 100% American, and in many ways I belong here. (Once in a while, I am complimented by actual Israelis about my accent in Hebrew, and they are surprised to learn that I grew up in Massachusetts. But I don't look or dress or have the body language of an Israeli, and the more astute observer can pick out an American long before he opens his mouth.)

Nonetheless, I feel a sense of belonging in Israel that I have never had here. These are my people. This is my land. Whether sitting at a cafe (and the cafes in Israel are numerous and excellent) drinking kafeh hafukh (literally, “upside-down coffee,” what the rest of the world calls cappucino), hiking through the desert, visiting an archaeological site, strolling through one of Israel’s many shopping malls (Israelis love malls!) or lounging on the beach, I feel at home. Yes, I speak the language, and I have spent in aggregate more than two years there, and am accustomed to the quirks and unpleasantries of Israeli society and culture that often make life there challenging for Americans. But there is something more there, a steadfast bond that connects me on a primal level to those ancient, contested rocks.

Apropos of the beginning of the book of Shemot / Exodus, the story is told of how God asked Moses which place he wanted to be the Promised Land. Moses, as we all know, was slow of tongue. So he starts to say California, but can’t quite get it out. So God says, “Canaan? That wasteland? Well, if you say so.”

But the last laugh may be on God, since the discovery of natural gas off the coast of Haifa in Israel’s territorial waters. It’s the largest natural gas field in the Middle East. Go figure!

I’m not sure exactly what is the source of my connection with Israel, or why it is so strong. But I do know that this feeling is quite real. Israel lights a fires in my soul. And my daughter seems to have the Israel bug as well: she has been saying for at least two years that she plans to marry her Beth HaGan classmate Andrew and make aliyah and live in Jerusalem. (Judy and I are not quite sure if Andrew was at all complicit in hatching this plan.)

And one thing of which I am certain is that Israel is a symbol of hope. It represents what the early Zionist poet Naftali Herz Imber called Hatikvah HaNoshannah, the ancient hope of our people to live in our own land. His poem was later modified to become the Israeli national anthem that we know and love. And there’s another hope, a hope for the future that Israel inspires in me: the hope of tiqqun olam, the potential for repairing the world. Both of these hopes were encapsulated in the best-known song of Israel’s most-beloved pop singer, Arik Einstein, who passed away a few weeks ago when I was there. Anybody who knows anything about Israeli pop will surely be familiar with some of his songs.

The NY Times ran an obituary for Mr. Einstein, which is remarkable not only because very few people in America have heard of him, but also because if we read anything in the American press about Israel, it’s only either about violence or the peace process, which paints a very narrow picture of Israel as it is. Let’s face it: Zionists only make for good copy when they are threatening or being threatened.


Arik Einstein's grave in Trumpeldor Cemetery, Tel Aviv, December 1, 2013.


But Arik Einstein was a Zionist - perhaps not overtly or politically, but he was an essential part of the fabric of Israeli culture, and a devoted citizen of the State of Israel and the voice of a musical revolution. Born in Tel Aviv in 1939, the son of a stage actor, he grew up in the center of the artistic and cultural ferment of the nascent Jewish State. Einstein took cues from the Beatles and other international pop groups of the 1960s and ultimately fashioned an experimental rock and roll sound that was at once distinctly Israeli and universal. While the state-sanctioned music of the time still presented the themes of love and war and good ol’ Eretz Yisrael, Mr. Einstein (to whom everybody in the country was referring as “Arik” in the wake of his death) emerged at a time when Israeli musicians, just like those all over the world, were beginning to challenge the status quo.

His best-known song was a favorite among American youth groups in the 70s and 80s: Ani VeAtah:
אני ואתה נשנה את העולם,
אני ואתה אז יבואו כבר כולם,
אמרו את זה קודם לפני,
לא משנה - אני ואתה נשנה את העולם.

אני ואתה ננסה מהתחלה,
יהיה לנו רע, אין דבר זה לא נורא,
אמרו את זה קודם לפני,
זה לא משנה - אני ואתה נשנה את העולם.
You and I will change the world
You and I, and then everybody else will come along too
Others have said it before me, but it doesn’t matter
You and I will change the world.

You and I will strive from the beginning
If there will be anything bad for us - no problem! No big deal.
Others have said it before me, but it doesn’t matter
You and I will change the world.
It is a tremendously moving song that speaks of the ability of each of us to influence those things that seem unchangeable, of the power that we each have to do good in the world and for each other, despite the naysayers. I have at times been moved to tears by this song.

Ani VeAtah is not explicitly Jewish, other than the fact that it is in Modern Hebrew. It does not quote any traditional source - the Torah or the Talmud or midrash or anything. But it implicitly references two fundamentally Jewish texts: Hatikvah, which I have already mentioned, and Aleinu, everybody’s favorite “we’re-almost-done-with-services” prayer.

Why Hatikvah? Because Ani VeAtah is the flip-side of the Israeli national anthem. Hatikvah is about the ancient Jewish yearning for return to Israel. It tells a story of hope, of national desire, and the actions of a small band of politicians, ideologues, and fighters that realized the ancient dream of Israel, a seeming impossibility. Arik’s anthem for changing the world is a plea to turn the realized ancient hope, that hope of 2,000 years, into the universal message that hope should never be lost in the future.

Why Aleinu? Because it contains a line (in the second paragraph, which we always recite silently here at Temple Israel) that speaks of our hope to repair the world: letaqqen olam bemalkhut Shaddai - we hope that that You, God, will perfect the world through Your sovereignty. In its original context, the author of Aleinu meant tiqqun olam to imply bringing everybody in the world to worship our God. But modern interpreters see this as the origin of the idea of repairing this very broken world through deeds of hesed, of lovingkindness to our fellow people. Arik’s 20th-century lyrics reflect our obligation to work toward this goal, that despite obstacles, we each have the potential to right the wrongs around us: to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to straighten the bent, to house the homeless, to promote environmental stewardship, to seek peace and pursue it, in the words of the Psalmist, and so forth.

You might think that the lyrics are naive, particularly given the great complexity of all of these challenges. And Arik himself confesses as much in the song. But, “lo meshaneh.” It doesn’t matter. The simple message of hope is the one that inspired the complex process that brought about the miracle of the State of Israel in our time, and this message will guide us in the future in our task of further perfecting the world.

It has often been observed that the book of Shemot is about the creation of the Israelite nation. Curiously, much of this nation-building takes place outside of the land of Israel, in Egypt and Sinai, and so from the very beginning of our people, we have faced the challenge of diaspora, of living away from our home.

There has been much talk, in the wake of the Pew Research Center study released in October, about the challenges facing American Jews concerning our relationship with Judaism. (Temple Israel and SHAI hosted Uri Cohen of the Queens College Hillel this past week, and he spoke about some of the implications of these statistics.) There are many voices in our sphere saying that contemporary Diaspora Judaism has a problem, that is, the disengagement of Jews with Judaism.

For centuries we have focused much of our yearning, as filtered through the lens of Jewish prayer and text, on redemption. This theme is found throughout your siddur, and permeates rabbinic literature. The future redemption that Jews have prayed for and meditated on and repeated over and over in the beit midrash, the study hall, like our first redemption from Egypt, is the return to our land after centuries of dispersion, the re-establishment of the Davidic throne over a united kingdom over the entire Promised Land.

Part of that redemption has arrived, ladies and gentlemen. It is an imperfect, incomplete redemption. But we now have sovereignty within our historical land. And that is, at least on a personal level, one of the most inspiring, most appealing aspects of living as a contemporary Jew, here in the Diaspora or in Israel.

The answer to the disengagement suggested by the Pew study is Israel. The messages sent by its pre-eminent rock-and-rollers, is the inspiration that we all need, the answer to the Diaspora’s Jewish malaise. It is the very essence of hope. Israel might very well be the world’s poster child for the ability of Hatikvah, of hope’s ability to effect change.

No, it's not perfect. No, it's mostly not even holy. Yes, there are many, many political and social problems in Israel.

But no other place gives me that sense of hope, of hatikvah hanoshannah, of ancient and future hopes that ignites a fire under my Jewish identity.

As another great Israeli songwriter, Ehud Manor, put it, “Ein li eretz aheret.” “I have no other land.” (Translation here.)

I am fortunate that on the heels of my most recent trip, I will be returning to Israel in February with 35 teens on Temple Israel’s Youth House trip to Israel. I know from having done this before that Israel will ignite a fire under those kids’ Jewish identities as well.

Through our active embrace of the Jewish State, by going there and experiencing all that Israel has to offer, we can sustain that feeling, that connection. We can feel the hope. And we can change the world.

Keep singing, Arik, and Shabbat Shalom.


~
Rabbi Seth Adelson
(Originally delivered at Temple Israel of Great Neck, Shabbat morning, 12/21/2013.)

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Devarim 5770 - Delegitimization of Diaspora Jewry by the State of Israel

,
(Originally delivered on Saturday morning, July 17, 2010.)

The following is from an open letter to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, by Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, Exec. VP of the Rabbinical Assembly, the international organization of Conservative rabbis. It concerns the bill that was introduced in the Knesset this week by David Rotem, a member of the Yisrael Beiteinu party. This bill will effectively turn over the question of “Who is a Jew” to the increasingly Haredi/ultra-Orthodox chief rabbinate of Israel, and threatens to draw a deep division between Israeli Jewry and all the rest of us.

"Dear Mr. Prime Minister,

"I have good news and I have bad news.

"The bad news is that rabbis all over the world are thanking you for giving them a Rosh Hashanah sermon.

"The good news is that you get to write every one of them.

"The sermon we all want to give is one in which you, as a visionary leader, make an unambiguous statement in opposition to this bill which divides Israel from the Diaspora. We hope that we can invoke your name, Mr. Prime Minister, with the same spirit of reverence we reserve for the great leaders of the Jewish people.

"Regrettably, David Rotem has already brought us a tragically cynical Rosh Hodesh Av homily, when he unexpectedly reintroduced his bill, undermining discussions you set in motion with Natan Sharansky [the former Russian Refusenik who is now the head of the Jewish Agency]. Our tradition teaches that the exile of our people was brought about by senseless fighting among ourselves. Please, Mr. Prime Minister, bring us a message for Tishrei that is redemptive."

Rabbi Schonfeld goes on to say that it would be a true betrayal of Jewish history and heritage if our communities are torn apart by one extremist group’s judgment about who is “religious” enough. (You can read her entire letter here.)

The last time I spoke about Israel, the subject was the delegitimization of the Jewish State by others. Today, it is the delegitimization of non-Orthodox Jews BY the Jewish State.

Yisrael hi lo Iran. Israel is not Iran. This is a bumper sticker that I recall having seen when I lived in Israel a decade ago. It is a defiant statement made by secular Jewish Israelis that no matter how much certain sectors of Israeli society want to live in a theocracy, or believe that they do, the State of Israel stands for all of its citizens (Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Druze, Circassian, Hindu, Buddhist, religious, secular, Zionist, anti-Zionist, gay, straight, female, male, etc.). Unlike all of the Arab governments in her neighborhood, Israel is a healthy democracy. Everybody in Israel is free to practice his or her own religion, except, apparently, for Jews who do not subscribe to Orthodox Judaism.

Now, it is true that Israel is not a theocracy, like Iran, where the religious leaders control the government. However, there are times when Israel’s lack of official separation between Synagogue and State causes this complicated nexus of politics and Judaism to boil over in conflict, and particularly regarding personal status issues.

And that happened again this week. Actually, two truly horrible things happened: the introduction of the Rotem bill, and the arrest of Anat Hoffman at the Kotel plaza for carrying a Sefer Torah. These two things amount to, if not an organized campaign, then at least a haphazardly deliberate delegitimization of progressive Judaism by the Jewish State.

1. The Rotem bill you may have already heard of, particularly if you read the emails sent from Temple Israel. The bill was introduced unexpectedly into the Knesset, despite assurances that it would not be, with even harsher language than what had initially been proposed.

This bill, if passed, would do the following:

It would allow conversion candidates in Israel to go to different state-enfranchised rabbis in municipalities other than their own. This is helpful especially to immigrants from the former Soviet Union, who have often had trouble marrying because one of the members of the couple is not halakhically Jewish, and the local rabbi is more right-wing and makes the process more difficult, or refuses to do it, or invalidates the conversion after the fact (this has happened! More than 15,000 Israeli converts were recently invalidated by the Chief Rabbinate.)

Of course, the rabbi that they go to cannot be Conservative or Reform (and there are, of course, many non-Orthodox rabbis in Israel).

The bill would also place total control over conversion in the hands of the Chief Rabbinate. It has not been this way in the past. Until now, the State of Israel recognized conversions performed by non-Orthodox rabbis, even if the Chief Rabbinate or local rabbis did not. This would be a major affront to the Conservative and Reform movements in Israel, because our converts and their families would no longer be recognized as Jews by the State, and therefore would not be able to become Israeli citizens under the Law of Return. This would implicitly create a legal second-class status for non-Orthodox Jews, who account for something like 80% of Diaspora Jewry.

The bill states that conversions will only be considered valid if the candidate has "accepted the Torah and the commandments in accordance with halakha." Now, we in the Conservative movement, of course, expect this of both our adherents and converts, but we do not follow them around to see if they are fulfilling every miniscule custom. Once language like that is enshrined in law, those who are in a position to judge others based on their behavior will surely do so, according to their standard.

Is anybody upset yet? You should be outraged by this. I am.

2. The second item of concern is the arrest of Anat Hoffman.

Somebody sent me a YouTube video this week that brought me to tears. It shows Anat Hoffman, a former Jerusalem city councilwoman who is the head of the Israeli Religious Action Center, the Reform Movement’s political adjunct in Israel, carrying a Torah on the women’s side of the Kotel, and subsequently arrested for doing so. Ms. Hoffman, who is well-known to police who work the Kotel beat, such that they call her Anat, is a long-time crusader against the creeping Haredization of Jerusalem and the Kotel in particular. She has been participating in the monthly Women of the Wall services, which take place every Rosh Hodesh.

As it turns out, this past Rosh Hodesh was Monday, the same day that the political storm let loose in the Knesset regarding the Rotem bill. Just a few miles across town from the Knesset, in the most ancient part of the city, the Women of the Wall met for their monthly service, many of them sporting their tallitot wrapped around their necks like scarves (because it would be “illegal” for them to wear them properly as tallitot). It is also, apparently, illegal for them to chant from the Torah, as is done at the morning service on Rosh Hodesh, and as our own Linda Abrams does on every RH in the chapel here at Temple Israel, but it is apparently not illegal for the women to carry the Torah. If so, why was Anat arrested? I am not sure, and I daresay, neither is she.

BTW, you can see the video elsewhere on this blog. Watch women and men cursing and screaming at the Women of the Wall, and watch the police esCORT Anat from the plaza, take the Torah away from her by force, and put her in a police vehicle. Hear the defiant Women and their supporters sing both joyful and mournful tunes as all of this takes place.

So it seems that the State of Israel has officially, legally declared the Kotel to be an Orthodox synagogue, and the rule of law prevents violations of religious law, as interpreted by the Haredi rabbi of the Kotel, one Shmuel Rabinowitz.

Why is the State of Israel enacting laws about religion? Why is the Kotel no longer a place where any Jew can worship in his/her own style? Why was a woman arrested for holding a Torah? Yisrael hi lo Iran. Israel is not Iran.

You should be outraged by this as well.

And not only because it is an affront to everything that this community, this congregation stands for, but also because of what we read today in Parashat Devarim, p. 983, Deut. 1:8:

Bo-u urshu et ha-aretz asher nishba Adonai la-avoteikhem,
Le-avraham leyitzhaq ulya’aqov latet lahem ulzar’am ahareihem

Go, take possession of the land that the Lord swore to your fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to assign to them and to their heirs after them.

The Hebrew does not literally say “heirs,” but “seed.” We are all the seed of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and, for that matter, the seed of Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rahel. It is not the land of some Jews, nor the holy places of a subset of very fervent Jews, but of ALL Jews. No qualifications. No insistence that we all hew to a particular standard. No litmus test. All of us.

Israel is ours, and the Kotel is ours. We cannot allow ourselves to be made second-class citizens in the land that was promised to us by God. Let us channel that outrage to defeat the status quo of Israeli politics and religion. If you have not sent an email to Prime Minister Netanyahu regarding the Rotem bill, do so. As of yesterday, more than 15,000 people had done so through the Masorti website, and just as many from a similar Reform site.

But do not stop there. Don’t just email Netanyahu - call his office in Jerusalem (they’re open on Sunday! 011-972-2-640-8457) and the consulate in NY (212-499-5000). Call Gary Ackerman (718-423-2154). Call Senator Schumer (212-486-4430). (A group of Jewish senators are writing a letter to Israel. That’s right, the US Senate is involved!) Email all your friends.

There are more of us than there are of them, and we matter. Israel needs us, and we need Israel.

We are approaching the saddest day of the Jewish year, the ninth day of the month of Av, usually referred to by its Hebrew name, Tish’a be’Av. In my Mishnah Class this past spring, we studied an oft-quoted passage from tractate Ta’anit, which tells us that the First Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed because of Israelites who committed the three biggest sins: idolatry, murder, and sexual impropriety, and that the Second Temple was destroyed because of sin’at hinam, baseless hatred. We are fortunate to live in times in which Jerusalem, if not the Temple itself, is rebuilt and thriving. The shame would truly be on us if we were to allow sin’at hinam tear apart the earthly Jerusalem (Yerushalayim shel mata) once again.

The sermon that I want to give, as Rabbi Schonfeld put it, is the one in which PM Netanyahu prevents this from happening. He is the only one who can make that sermon possible. Let us hope that he does so.