Rabbi Joshua Hammerman
Sermon for Yom Kippur Day
Sermon for Kol Nidre
Sermon for Yom Kippur Day
Kol Nidre 5780
The Power of One
Last week, you’ll recall that I focused on the power
of group identity, of being part of a tribe. Tonight, we focus on having the courage to
stand apart. And because this topic is
so important, I’ve taken the liberty of providing lecture notes. See source packet here.
So let’s start with photo #1 in your packets. I first saw this picture during my first trip
to Berlin, when visiting the “Topography of Terror,”
a museum
located in the former headquarters of the SS. It mesmerized me. In depicting the courage of one against many,
that iconic photo is equaled perhaps only by #4 – the man in front of the line
of tanks in Tiananmen Square in 1989.
Now there were many acts of courage during the
Holocaust. At the Emmys last month,
supporting actress winner Alex Borstein talked about her grandmother, who was in line to be shot
into a pit by the SS. She asked a guard
"what happens if I step out of line?" and he responded "I don't
have the heart to shoot you, but somebody will" – she stepped out and then
no one shot her. "So step out of line, ladies," Borstein told the
audience. "Step out of line!"
It takes courage to step out of line, but for Borstein’s grandmother,
staying in line meant death was certain.
The man
in this photo was not motivated by a survival instinct, nor by altruism. He wasn’t hiding anyone in his attic or
employing a thousand condemned Jews in his factory. It was a different kind of bravery that he
demonstrated. All he was doing
was not raising his arm in the Nazi salute.
But when you look at everyone around him – just look. This was a huge rally. And this photo was taken in 1936, by which time the disease of Nazism had spread to the entire country. Hitler’s power had been consolidated. The free press was no more. Same with the independent judiciary. There were no opposition parties. The Reichstag was destroyed. All the political enemies had been murdered or placed into concentration camps. The mentally ill were being euthanized. In a flash, democracy had yielded to a police state. Germany had become the fulfillment of George Orwell’s vision in 1984: “If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever.”
But when you look at everyone around him – just look. This was a huge rally. And this photo was taken in 1936, by which time the disease of Nazism had spread to the entire country. Hitler’s power had been consolidated. The free press was no more. Same with the independent judiciary. There were no opposition parties. The Reichstag was destroyed. All the political enemies had been murdered or placed into concentration camps. The mentally ill were being euthanized. In a flash, democracy had yielded to a police state. Germany had become the fulfillment of George Orwell’s vision in 1984: “If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever.”
It’s almost inconceivable that an ordinary
citizen would have had the courage to protest Hitler so brazenly.
That time had passed. They had already rushed passed the “first they
came for the socialists and I did not speak out” part of Pastor Martin Niemöller’s famous dictum – which he penned in
hindsight after the war. They had
already come for the trade
unionists, and he did not speak out— because he was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and he did not
speak out—because he was not a Jew. “Then
they came for me,” he wrote “—and there was no one left to speak for me.”
But without
the benefit of hindsight, without knowing about the crimes that were yet to be
committed; the guy in the photo just saw what was happening right then and
there and he dared to protest it.
Oh, and one other thing. Hitler was speaking at the time this photo
was taken. And so I wondered how
someone could have the chutzpah to do that – to defy Hitler to his face. What would lead to an act of such audacity –
an act that was, incidentally, illegal.
The sieg heil salute
was mandatory for all German citizens as a demonstration of loyalty
to the Führer, his party, and his nation.
And the three were indistinguishable.
So I did some research. Okay, I checked
Wikipedia. Turns out the guy was
probably someone named August Landmesser.
(There are some who claim, with solid evidence, that it was a guy named
Gustav Wegert, but Landmesser’s story fits better into this sermon, so therefore
it was him).
Landmesser
joined the Nazi party in 1931, hoping it would help him get a job. But in 1935, two years after Hitler’s rise to
power, he became engaged to Irma Eckler, a Jewish woman, and he was
expelled from the party. They registered to be married in Hamburg, but
the Nuremberg Laws, which had just been enacted, made their union illegal.
On October 29, 1935, their daughter,
Ingrid, was born. The photo was taken just a few months after that, so August’s
refusal to raise his arm could have been a protest against the discriminatory policies
of a racist state – or maybe it was just a gut response from an aggrieved husband
and father.
One year after that photo was taken, Landmesser and
Eckler tried to flee to Denmark but were apprehended at the border. She was
again pregnant, and he was charged and found guilty of "dishonoring the
race." The couple continued their relationship, until
he was arrested again and sentenced to two and a half years in a concentration
camp. He later died in battle in Croatia
in 1944 and two years before that, it is believed that Irma was among the 14,000 to
be killed at Bernburg Euthanasia Centre.
So the guy who had the temerity to stand up to Hitler
paid a steep price. But his children
kept fighting to restore the honor of their parents. Their marriage was recognized retroactively
by the Senate of Hamburg in the summer of 1951, and when the photo of
the rally came to light in 1991, Landmesser became a phenomenon. So in other words, after his death, August Landmesser’s
life improved tremendously.
How hard is it, to be the only one to fold your arms
when everyone is saluting? How much does
one have to believe in the justice of a cause to deliberately break the
law? How unjust does a law have to be
for it to be deliberately broken? And
how low does a society have to sink before there is only one person, one among
thousands, willing to take the risks and stand up for what is right?
These are very important questions for our day, for
Jews and for everyone. And this is not merely for people from one political silo. It’s for everyone. Last week I spoke about how we need to
redefine tribalism, to expand the concept so that there is no “us and them,”
only us. This evening I go one step
further. We need to understand tribalism
in such an expansive way that it leaves room for the autonomous individual to
stand alone, to temporarily separate from the tribe if need be, so as to
not acquiesce to a tribe run amok. We
need to allow room for what Abraham Joshua Heschel called spiritual
audacity.
Heschel
drew his inspiration from the Hebrew Prophets.
Two fantastic examples can be found in the haftarot of Yom Kippur. There is Jonah, whose solitude drove him to
the depths of despair, but who gained the courage to rise from those depths and
stand up to the sinful city of Nineveh, inspiring them to repent.
And
Isaiah, who stood up the temple aristocracy, and decried the hypocrisy of
ostentatious sacrifice and mindless fasting.
“Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the fetters of
wickedness, to undo the bands of the yoke, and to let the oppressed go free,
and that ye break every yoke?
The
prophets understood that they answered to a higher authority. Heschel writes, “To us a single act of
injustice--cheating in business, exploitation of the poor--is slight; to the
prophets, a disaster. To us, injustice is injurious to the welfare of
the people; to the prophets it is a deathblow to existence: to us, an episode;
to them, a catastrophe, a threat to the world.”
Heschel
asked the same question about the ancient world that so many ask to this day – I
excerpt from source #4 in your packets.
“Why
were so few voices raised…in protest against the ruthlessness of man? Why are human beings so obsequious, ready to
kill and ready to die at the call of kings and chieftains? Perhaps, Heschel
suggests, it is because they worship
might” – rather than right.
When you
study the Hebrew prophets, some key questions jump out at you:
Why would
anyone want to be a prophet in such a society?
How is it possible that there were so many? And how was it possible that they weren’t immediately
arrested, exiled or killed? No other
nation but Israel saw anything like this.
No other nation’s monarch had to suffer the barbs of so severe a critic
without entertaining the option of eliminating him.
I mean,
think of the prophet Nathan, who told King David to his face that he
would lose a child because of his murderous, adulterous affair with Bathsheba. I mean, talk about being the bearer of bad
tidings. He was employed by the king's court but at the same time he was a one man check and
balance. Nathan was federal judge,
independent press and government whistleblower all rolled into one. But did David have Nathan immediately
executed for his impertinence – or simply fired, at the very least? No. Look at source #3, from the book of
Samuel.
וַיֹּאמֶר דָּוִד אֶל-נָתָן, חָטָאתִי לַיהוָה; And David said unto Nathan: 'I have sinned
against the LORD.'
And then Nathan told the king וַיֹּאמֶר נָתָן אֶל-דָּוִד, גַּם-יְהוָה הֶעֱבִיר חַטָּאתְךָ--לֹא תָמוּת. The
Lord has also removed your sin, you shall not die.”
David surrenders
in utter devastation and pleads for forgiveness. Imagine that happening anywhere else. Imagine Richard Nixon beseeching Daniel
Ellsberg to forgive him – or Ronald Reagan begging forgiveness from Sam
Donaldson. Or Bill Clinton prostrating
himself before Newt Gingrich.
But in
our sacred texts, only Nathan, as
God’s agent, has the power to remove the stain of punishment from King David. And that story, of David’s submission to the
will of the prophet, inspired the penitential prayers of Yom Kippur. David is confronted by the prophet and – in his moment of truth – he sees himself in
the mirror and takes responsibility for his sin. In Psalm 51
David cries out to Nathan:
אַל-תַּשְׁלִיכֵנִי מִלְּפָנֶיךָ; וְרוּחַ
קָדְשְׁךָ, אַל-תִּקַּח מִמֶּנִּ
Cast
me not away from Thy presence; and take not Thy holy spirit from me.
We’ll hear
David’s plea chanted in a few moments, but this time in the first person
plural, in the Sh’ma Kolenu prayer.
But the
question remains, how is it possible that David could have such respect for one two-bit
critic, when David had all the power of the state at his disposal?
Listen –
if you comb through all of history, you can probably find other examples where a
system of governance had built into it the idea that it is good for someone to
step out of line to condemn the king – without bearing the risk of getting
killed for it. I know…we can call it, “checks
and balances.”
Nah, it
will never fly.
Well,
thanks in large part to James Madison, it has in this country, thus far.
But the biblical model wasn’t simply so unique in ancient times simply because of the king’s acquiescence. Abraham Joshua Heschel asks how could the people endure this kind of defiance of the ruler? Time after time, the solitary voice of the prophet stood out against the entire power structure. And remember, in those days, there were no body cameras to record abuses. There was no New York Times or Washington Post to run to with the story. The prophets were the whistleblowers, judicial reviewers and the independent media, all rolled into one.
They
stood alone. Like August
Landmesser.
And not
only were they tolerated, they were welcomed.
Granted, there are extra-biblical sources, both Jewish and Christian,
that speak of Isaiah being sawed
in half by King Menasseh, and Ezekiel, Jeremiah and Micah were
assassinated, but otherwise, not bad. And
that’s because, embedded at the very core of the Jewish message, is the belief
that we answer to a higher authority.
That’s what makes us different.
That’s what makes us a nation of prophets. And oftentimes, that’s what makes us so hated
by others, especially autocrats, but, at the same time, so able to live with
ourselves.
Judaism
is inherently counter cultural, subversive and self-correcting. We don’t own the media. But many great journalists happen to be
Jewish because, what other religion places inquiry as so fundamental a
value, that the first Jewish ritual a child performs is to ask a question –
four of them, in fact? We ask questions.
we demand the highest standards of justice and we do not compromise when
it comes to opposing the abuse of power.
That is non-negotiable. There is
no new normal. This is our old
normal, our always normal and it is our only normal.
Jewish
sources emphasize the need to think for ourselves. Look at the verse from
Exodus 23, and the two commentaries that follow it, sources 5 and 6. “Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do
evil.” That’s in the Torah, folks.
What does
that verse mean? In most cases, it
should be noted, Jewish law was determined democratically – in other words, if
a majority of rabbis ruled one way, that way was usually followed. But Rashi understood that verse as a stern
warning that a majority, even a super majority, is not automatically right. We need to avoid a herd mentality, especially
where there is demagoguery afoot.
In source
#6, Rambam goes even further in explaining this verse from Exodus. A judge in a capital punishment case cannot
simply parrot the conclusion of a colleague.
You can’t just go along with the crowd.
You can’t say, “I’ll have what she’s having.” You have to weigh all of the evidence
yourself, without giving any consideration to what another judge has ruled.
The Book
of Exodus states that when the Israelites received the Torah they said “na’a’seh
v’nishma,” often translated as “We will obey and then we will
understand.” But the word “na’a’seh” connotes active engagement, not
blind obedience. In our age of bots and
fake news, the verse needs to be better understood as, “We will grapple with
each word to assess its validity, and then we will understand.” Each of
us needs to be that pain in the butt who is always commenting “Are you sure
this is true?”on social media, even under articles shared by people we love.
On all
sides of the political spectrum, the time has long since passed for blindly
sharing or retweeting without first being sure that the source is reputable.
We need to be the ones to ask, all the time, is this true? Na’aseh
V’Nishma. We will scrutinize and then
understand.
Real news
follows a rigid system of journalistic ethics, with an iron clad commitment to
truth and accuracy, independence, fairness, and accountability, and an
understanding that words have the power to both harm and heal. The
Society of Professional Journalists has an official Code of Ethics, (click here to see it).
But even
if something has been shared a gazillion times, we need to have the courage to
ask questions and assert the Power of One.
And if
you find yourself at a political rally or march this coming year, and things
start to get heated, as they will, and a chant starts up that you find to be
morally repugnant, like the chant of “send her back” in Greensboro this past
summer, find a way to stand up for what is right. Even if you are afraid to shush people up,
simply fold your arms like August Landmesser.
Someone will capture it in a photograph, and the world will know.
The Torah
is teaching us that the majority may rule, but it cannot trample. Even if it’s 99-1, according to source 8. Again and again in our sources, we see rabbis
reminding us to hold ourselves and our society to the highest standards. The Torah believes in the Power of One, the
primacy of justice, and speaking truth to power.
Since we
may have been distracted lately by the goings on in our country, you may not be
aware that in Israel, Prime Minister Netanyahu will likely be indicted within
weeks, and he could go to jail, like Prime Minister Olmert and President Katzav
before him. Israeli jails could have
minyans with all political leaders who have done time, like Aharon Abuhatzira, Aryeh Deri, Tzachi Hanegbi, Avigdor Lieberman, Yitzhak Mordechai, and others.
One might
think that a Prime Minister under indictment would be a national disgrace –
what we call a Shanda. But I’m proud
of it. Now I am no great defender of
Netanyahu, and the crimes we are talking about are serious. But these are crimes that in other societies
might easily be overlooked. I mean, the
kind of corruption that Israeli politicians are routinely going to jail for
would be what Vladimir Putin calls, “Tuesday.”
We answer
to a higher authority. Yes, it’s
embarrassing to have corrupt leaders, but it’s a badge of honor to have
courageous attorney generals like Avichai Mandelblit, a Netanyahu appointee,
stand up to power and withstand the most inordinate pressure, including
character assassination and physical threats, in order to do his job.
Isaiah
would be proud of Mandelblit. It’s not a national Shanda to have corrupt
leaders, it’s a national Shanda when corrupt leaders get away with it. Any nation can have kings and emperors. We have Jeremiah. We have Nathan. We are the people of Mike Wallace and Philip
Roth and Arthur Miller and Boris Pasternak. We are the people of Carl Bernstein
and “Deep Throat” Mark Felt. Actually, Felt, the great Watergate whistleblower, was not
Jewish, but the Watergate tapes disclosed that Nixon was suspicious of him and asked
H.R. Haldeman, "Is he a Catholic?" Haldeman replied that Felt, who was
of Irish descent, was Jewish, and Nixon, replied: "It could be the Jewish
thing. I don't know. It's always a possibility."
Yes, it’s
nice to know that to Richard Nixon, Jews were a “thing.” We are thing that speaks stands up to corruption. We are a “thing” that believes in the Power
of One.
Take Natan
Sharansky, who stood up to the entire Soviet system. He withstood the inhuman conditions of
solitary confinement in the Gulag, and, as you can see in source number 9, when
he was freed and crossed he Gleinike Bridge in Berlin, the famous Bridge of
Spies, on February 11, 1986, even then he defied his tormentors. The KGB told him to walk in a straight line, and he
walked in a zig zag. It was one man
against the entire Soviet system. And he
brought it down. And on our Europe trip
this summer, we’ll be visiting the Bridge of Spies in Berlin, right near
Wannsee.
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Sometimes
standing up to power means standing up to God.
Abraham modeled that when arguing over the fate of the people of Sodom. And oftentimes it means breaking the law.
We may
not have invented civil disobedience, but we sure have had a lot of
practice. In ancient Mesopotamia, child
sacrifice was the law of the land. We
answered to a higher authority. Rome was
a hotbed of political assassination and rampant cruelty. We answered to a higher authority. In ancient Babylonia, an eye for an eye was literally
the law of the land. We answered to a
higher authority, stipulating that compensation for bodily injury should be
monetary. In Spain, the Inquisition was
the law of the land and the practice of Judaism was forbidden. We answered to a higher authority and
practiced our religion in secret. In
South Africa, apartheid was the law of the land, and Jews like Helen Suzman had
the audacity to protest, answering to a higher authority. In the US, slavery was the law of the
land. A
number of noted Jewish abolitionists answered the call. Women were not given the vote until our
country was nearly a century and a half old.
Many Jewish women were central to the
suffrage movement. When segregation and voter discrimination
were the law of the land, throughout the civil rights movement, time
after time, Jews answered the call.
We answered
to a higher authority.
Adam
Serwer recently wrote in The
Atlantic after seeing photos
of lynchings in the U.S. He wrote that “it’s
not the burned, mutilated bodies that stuck with (him).” It’s the faces of some
people in the crowd.” He saw a picture of
the lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith in Indiana in 1930, in which a
white man can be seen grinning at the camera as he tenderly holds the hand of
his wife or girlfriend. It’s photo #3 in
your packet. You can see the dangling
legs of one of the victims in the background.
Let that
sink in for a moment.
This was
not uncommon. Back in the day, not too
long ago, lynchings were veritable happy hours in some communities. Look at that guy’s face. It doesn’t look like an execution. It looks like they are hanging out at
Arnold’s Drive-In with Richie and the Fonz.
But a man is swinging from a tree a few feet away. Two, in fact. This is not Hamburg or Munich
of the 1930s. It’s not even the deep
south. It’s Marion, Indiana, on the same
latitude as New York City, and just 147 miles away from Gary, Indiana, my home
sweet home.
Where is the
August Landmesser in this photo?
In the
photos of the Nazis marching in Charlottesville, I’d have loved to have seen
one August Landmesser. Just one, putting
down his torch and folding his arms.
Just one.
I’m not
greedy. Abraham asked for ten righteous
people in Sodom. In Charlottesville, I’d
have loved to see just one good person on that side.
Where was
August Landmesser?
Where are
Nathan or Isaiah or Jeremiah in those photos?
And if we had been there, would that person have been us? Would we have had the courage to stand
alone? Or would we not have wanted to
risk being labeled a traitor, a spy or an enemy of the people?
It is hard
to stand up. So we need to look to our
glorious history for inspiration and strength.
To the
Maccabees, whose patriarch Mattathias stood in the town square and shouted,
“Whoever is for the Lord follow me!”
To Elijah
who singlehandedly took on 450 priests of Baal on Mount Carmel.
To Nachmanides,
the Ramban, who in 1267 was forced by King Aragon of Spain to debate a
Jewish apostate on the merits of Judaism vs. Christianity. The king, a pious
Catholic, thought that if he could convince the greatest rabbi of the veracity
of Christianity the rest of the Jews would follow and he would have his ticket
to heaven. But Nachmanides insisted that
it be a fair fight, and standing with the weight of the world on his shoulders
before the entire power structure of Christian Spain, he won!
His
prize? A week later he was deemed a
heretic and was exiled.
Source 11
speaks of how, in January 1944, a group of heroes blew the whistle on the State
Department’s foot dragging in letting in Jewish refugees, and as result,
Washington did an about face, which resulted in saving 200,000 potential
victims of the Holocaust. Some of these whistle-blower
heroes were Jewish, some not. But they
all had the courage to recognize the Power of One and to stand up for a better
world.
There is
one more source that I want to share, photo #2. You’ve likely heard of Greta Thunberg,
the 16 year old crusader for global action on Climate Change. This photo was taken in August 2018, before
Greta was internationally famous, as she sat alone outside the Swedish
Parliament. This was the first school climate
strike. In all, she skipped school to protest at Parliament 25 times, to little
effect and lots of ridicule.
No one
has ever looked more alone in a photo than she does here.
But in just one year, Greta created a wave
that is changing the whole world. Last
month, Greta, who used to call herself the invisible girl, came to America on a
solar powered boat and presided over a world-wide school strike that brought
millions of students out of their classrooms and onto the streets. “Oceans are
rising and so are we,” read the sign that 13-year-old Martha Lickman carried through
London.
On Rosh
Hashana, I made the case that we need to expand the idea of tribe to include
all of humanity. But in truth, sometimes
the greatest thing one can do for one’s tribe, one’s city, one’s country or the
entire world, is to rise up and stand alone.
The rabbinic sage Ben Azzai (Avot 4:2) said, “Do not despise
any person, and do not discriminate against anything,
שֶׁאֵין לְךָ אָדָם שֶׁאֵין לוֹ שָׁעָה וְאֵין לְךָ דָבָר שֶׁאֵין לוֹ מָקוֹם
שֶׁאֵין לְךָ אָדָם שֶׁאֵין לוֹ שָׁעָה וְאֵין לְךָ דָבָר שֶׁאֵין לוֹ מָקוֹם
…for there is
no person that has not his hour, and there is no thing that has not its
place.”
Greta – whose name is an
anagram for GREAT – is having her hour right now.
As we enter a new year, it’s time for each of us to look
into the mirror and ask, has the time come for that person, that prophet
Nathan, that Greta Thunberg, that Natan Sharansky, to be me? Is each of us prepared to be the one to step
out of line, or simply to fold our arms when everyone else is saluting?
When she
was 11, Greta Thunberg stopped eating. She stopped growing. She spoke only to family, and, at school, only
to one teacher, suffering from severe depression.
“Before,
my own world was very big,” she recalled recently. “I was all alone.”
“Is the
alone-world still there?” a reporter asked.
“Yes,”
she readily replied. “But it’s getting smaller.”
When you
are willing to stand for principle, you will rarely be alone for long.
“Let no
one be discouraged by the belief that there is nothing one person can do
against the enormous array of the world’s ills, misery, ignorance and violence. Few will have the greatness to bend history,
but each of us can work to change a small portion of events. And in the total
of all those acts will be written the history of a generation. It is from numberless, diverse acts of
courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a person stands up
for an ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against
injustice, he or she sends a tiny ripple of hope. Crossing each other from a
million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples can build a
current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.”
There is no better way for us to bring our community,
our nation and our world together than by pledging to have the courage to stand
alone.
“No man is an island,” said Amos Oz, the great Israeli
writer who died this year. “But everyone is a peninsula.” Yes, we are inextricably connected to our
neighbors on the mainland, to our tribe. But ultimately, each of us must face
the ocean alone.
But as we face that ocean, just as Jonah as looked out
over Jaffa port before embarking on his perilous journey, or like David as he
stared into the abyss of Nathan’s accusatory stare, recognizing the enormity of
his sin, we know that we are heirs to a glorious tradition that prizes courage
over corruption, pursues justice to the ends of the earth, and celebrates the
Power of One.
Yom Kippur Day 5780
Letting Go of Shame
Pearl
and Lilly, two elderly ladies in a senior’s residence in Miami, were enjoying
the sunshine on a bench outside their residence.
This
was their daily ritual on every sunny day for the past 18 years, chatting and
enjoying each other's friendship.
One
day Pearl turned to Lilly and said: "Please don't be angry with
me, bubbaleh, but I am embarrassed after all these years. What is your
name? I am trying to remember, but I just can't."
Lilly
stared at her friend, looking very distressed, said nothing for two full
minutes, and finally said, "How soon do you have to know?"
As
with so many Jewish jokes, that joke makes us want to laugh and cry at the same
time. Having dealt only too recently
with these things on a personal basis, I know that there’s nothing funny about
dementia. But I don’t think the main
point of that joke is to be funny. It’s
to help us deal with our brokenness in a manner that allows for a chuckle or
two, so that we can relieve the tension and go on – otherwise the pain might be
just too great.
Today
I want to talk about that brokenness, and how we might let go of the sense of shame
that casts such a shadow over our lives, along with its subsidiary, Jewish
guilt, which we can trace to its two most basic components: A) our parents and
B) our parents.
So
let me tell you about the one moment of my year that I cannot let go of. It was the moment I let go of my mother’s
hand for the final time.
I last saw her at the Jewish
home on Wednesday, October 24, almost exactly one year ago, and the day before
she died. It was a pretty normal day. I spent an uneventful hour with her that
morning. Her quality of life had not
been great for some time. But she still
seemed to find pleasure in two things – my visits, and chocolate.
She
smiled, as she almost always did, when I came in. And she opened her mouth wide when I fed her
half a Yodel. I enjoyed the other half. She rarely talked during her final few years–
it was just too difficult to force the words out – so I would typically do most
of the talking, maybe play some classical music or show her family photos on my
iPad. She always listened attentively when I mentioned the names of family
members – especially her grandchildren - so she could remember them. She watched my mouth closely as I said each
name and then repeat them. That was her
way of holding onto life. And she held on relentlessly.
And
when I got up to leave, on that final day that I didn’t realize was going to be
the final day, she grabbed hold of my wrist and held it tightly. And
the words came flying out with a force that she always reserved for that moment
when I would get up to leave – and she called out, “Don’t go!”
My
mom rarely put two words together during the course of a visit. But when I got up to leave, suddenly the
words would come to her. “Don’t
go.” She did that all the time – and she
did it that last time. And I freed up my wrist, because I had to get back to
the bar mitzvah lessons and the dogs and the phone calls and other people’s
yahrzeits and the food shopping and email and… whatever.
No,
I’m not blaming you! It’s life.
I had
to leave. So I let go then – and
I can’t let go of that letting-go now.
The
rational side of me knows that I did so much for my mom, and that she
appreciated it. Before her health
declined, she always ended visits by thanking me for coming. For a year before I brought her down here, I
drove up to Boston every other week, and she was grateful for that.
And
when she died, she passed quickly and without warning. She just let go of life, just as I had let
go. And when I got the shocking call at
3:30 on that fateful Thursday, I felt myself crying out, in her voice, “Don’t
go!”
It’s
almost cheapening it to use a cliché like “Jewish guilt” to describe what I
felt then, and still do today; it seems far deeper, this sense of powerlessness
to help when she needed it most, a sense of abandonment while abandoning, of
prayers unanswered, of aloneness and loneliness, of inadequacy and
invisibility, of not being God and of being all too human.
It
doesn’t stop with parents and children.
When I receive a phone call about a congregant who has died, that
feeling often comes back – what more could I have done?
When
I’m sitting with someone who has just gotten bad news from a doctor, I struggle
for the right words. What can I possibly
say? That sense of helplessness, of
being unable to respond to the need.
Al
Tashlichaynu l’et zikna– we
read in the Sh’ma Kolenu prayer – Do not cast us off in our old age. Really it is saying, do not let us go. Al taazveinu! Do not abandon us. Al tirchak mimenu! Do not distance yourself
from us!
That
sense of alienation and abandonment is a curse of modernity, but the sages felt
it many centuries ago when they wrote this prayer. We feel so alone, so powerless, so humbled, and
so guilty at having had to leave our parents behind, to let go of them.
This
intergenerational angst is complicated by an old rabbinic concept known as Yeridat ha-dorot (ירידת הדורות), meaning literally "the decline of
the generations." Each generation
is considered a lesser facsimile of its predecessor. Like a xerox of a xerox.
So
not only do we feel guilty at having abandoned our parents, we also feel like
we can’t live up to their idealized image – as well as their expectations
of us; and sometimes Judaism seems to stack the deck against us. We live in a perpetual state of inadequacy. We carry the burden of our parents’
accomplishments because we can’t measure up to them. In rabbinical school, my classmates and I were
taught to see the prior generations of rabbis as greater than our own teachers
– our teachers themselves bought into that - and we were reminded constantly
that we reside at the very bottom of the totem pole. The farther we get from receiving the Torah
at Mount Sinai, the more our ability to know what God wants of us, diminishes.
Yeridat
ha-dorot affects
everyone. The Talmud even calls Sarah the
matriarch a monkey compared to her ancestor, Eve.
A
Hasidic tale speaks of how the Baal Shem Tov would go to a special place on
Rosh Hashanah, light a fire in a special way, say a special prayer, and the
whole world would be blessed. In the
next generation they knew the location and how to light the fire, but they
forgot the prayer. The next generation
knew the location but forgot everything else. So they just stood there and
said, “Whatever the Baal Shem Tov achieved here, we should achieve.”
Today
we’ve even forgotten the location. So
what do we do? We tell the story.
This
is where Jewish guilt comes from. This
concept of Yeridat ha-dorot makes us all feel like imposters. How could we ever be as worthy as they were –
they were the Greatest Generation.
This idea
has seeped into the general culture. We
call it the imposter syndrome, which was coined in 1978 by two
American psychologists, (Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes). It’s that nagging feeling that we’re not good
enough, that we don’t belong, that we don’t deserve that job, that promotion,
that book deal, that significant other, that seat at the table.”
“Even after writing eleven books and winning
several prestigious awards, Maya Angelou couldn’t escape the nagging
doubt that she hadn’t really earned her accomplishments. Albert
Einstein experienced something similar: he described himself as an
“involuntary swindler” whose work didn’t deserve as much attention as it
had received.”
That’s what Elizabeth Cox reminds us in her Ted Talk. She
says that everyone is susceptible to a phenomenon known as pluralistic
ignorance, where we each doubt ourselves privately, but believe we’re alone
in thinking that way because no one else voices their doubts. Intense
feelings of imposterism can prevent people from sharing great ideas or
applying for jobs and programs where they’d excel.
Think
about it. The greatest novel ever
written quite possibly never saw the light of day because its author may
have felt like a sham and tossed it.
Kafka didn’t want anything of his to be published posthumously. Thankfully his agent didn’t listen.
Like
Kafka and his greatest literary creation Gregor Samsa, we all feel that we are
in some manner unworthy. This is an age
where it is almost impossible to distinguish between an imposter and the real
thing, and even when we can, sometimes we respect the former more than the
latter. “I’m not a doctor, but I play
one on TV.” Actors routinely are
confused by people who think they are the roles that they play, which is almost
never the case, though I have hopes that Morgan Freeman might actually turn out
to be God.
This
summer’s sleeper hit “Yesterday” put its finger on the zeitgeist. By some
inexplicable act of nature, all of humanity was afflicted with a very selective
amnesia, causing people to forget random things, like Harry Potter, cigarettes
and everything about the Beatles. Except
basically for this one guy, an average Joe named Jack Malik, who begins to sing
Beatles songs as if they are his own and is hailed as a musical genius.
One
reviewer (Tim Grierson) wrote, “No matter how successful you are, you never
outrun imposter syndrome — that sinking feeling that you’re just a fraud
and that, eventually, the world will find out. It’s a condition that afflicts
everyone, even geniuses. “Part of me suspects I’m a loser,” John Lennon once said,
“and part of me thinks I’m God Almighty.” His former bandmate Paul McCartney
has long held onto a similar insecurity, admitting in 2015, “I never really felt like, ‘Oh, I did good.’ Nobody
does.”
If
the Beatles faced such doubts, what hope do the rest of us have?”
And
if the Beatles harbored such doubts, how about the guy who actually was
impersonating the Beatles! We should
hate Jack – but we come to sympathize with him.
We recoil alongside him when his marketers try to change the title of
one number from “Hey Jude” to “Hey Dude.” in the end, when he takes responsibility for his
ruse, the faker becomes our hero.
Yes,
we’re all fakes. We’re all not “good
enough.” But we’re just good enough to
come clean about it – and to forgive our friends and ourselves our
imperfections and lift everyone from their shame.
For
most of us, imposter syndrome is curable, once we realize that it afflicts everyone,
that we are not alone. Sure, we’ve
forgotten how the Baal Shem Tov lit the fire and said the prayer, and we’ve
even forgotten where he went. But we
haven’t forgotten how to tell the story.
And sometimes telling the story is good enough. We are the people of the story! And if we are insignificant in comparison to
our ancestors, we are standing on their shoulders. We should see them as lifting us up rather
than crushing us to the floor.
The
medieval Kabbalists disagreed with Yeridat ha-Dorot. In their mind, with
each successive generation, we build on the mystical wisdom of the past to have
greater insights, and we therefore come closer to God. Deepening inquiry
broadens the knowledge of Torah, which draws down higher levels of
divine illumination.
Rabbinic
sources present us with another antidote to Yeridat ha-dorot. It’s called svara. It’s the power to overturn ancient ideas when
there is a moral urgency.
Two
rabbis are walking down the road, late on a Friday afternoon. An obviously
poor, elderly woman approaches them with a chicken in her hand. “Rabbis,” she
asks, “is this chicken kosher? I’ve just bought it, but I’m worried that it may
not be.”
The
first rabbi examines the chicken very carefully, then hands it back to the
woman and answers, “Yes, absolutely. This chicken is definitely kosher. Good
Shabbes!”
After
the woman leaves, the second rabbi, incredulous, says to the first: “You know
as well as I do that that chicken wasn’t kosher! It was obviously treif!
How can you be so makil (lenient) about kashrut?!” The first
rabbi responds, “I’m not lenient about kashrut. I’m stringent about
love for my fellow Jew!”
Here
the moral intuition – svara – supersedes even the wisdom of our ancestors.
We’re not pale imitations of our
teachers’ and parents. We’re not
frauds. In fact, we are exalted. We are the real deal. But only when we lift up our neighbor.
“The
day I learned the word “svara,” my universe changed, writes
Rabbi Benay Lappe, founder of SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva in Chicago, and a recipient of the 2016 Covenant
Award for excellence in Jewish education. “I was already a rabbi when I learned
that there was a Jewish word that implored us to trust our life
experiences, our deepest convictions about who we are and how we
think the world should be, even if the Torah says something different. I
realized that “svara” was the name for that inner voice I had
listened to when I came out as a teen in the 1970s, the voice that told me that
love is love and that love is good, and that we must live out our truth, even
at great cost. Why had they never taught me this word in Hebrew school — or
even rabbinical school?”
But svara
is being taught now. We can rise above
our own feelings of inadequacy by loving more and shaming less.
The
first people who felt shame were Adam and Eve.
It was the first emotion they felt, in fact, after they ate the
forbidden fruit. They saw their
nakedness and were embarrassed. And what
does God do? On their way out of Eden,
God says, “wait a minute” and gives them some parting gifts:
וַיַּעַשׂ
יְהוָה אֱלֹהִים לְאָדָם וּלְאִשְׁתּוֹ, כָּתְנוֹת עוֹר--וַיַּלְבִּשֵׁם.
And
the LORD God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them.
God dressed
them. God did not want them to feel
shame. Interestingly, the Hebrew word
for shame is Busha. The Hebrew
word for to dress is lil-BOSH. By
dressing them, by enabling Adam and Eve to cover their imperfections, God recognizes
that shame paralyzes us. Shame isolates us. Shame convinces us that we are
unworthy. Shame goes beyond simple generational
guilt.
But
our embarrassment prods us into the realization that shame need not be a
permanent state – that we can, in fact, change things by recognizing that we
are not alone.
Abraham
Joshua Heschel put it this way, in discussing Yom Kippur: “We are all
failures. At least one day of the year
we should recognize it. … The root of
any religious faith is a sense of embarrassment, of inadequacy. It would be a great calamity for humanity
if the sense of embarrassment disappeared….
Those who have no embarrassment remain sterile. He then adds that “the meaning of sin has
disappeared from Jewish consciousness in America.”
So
shame, for lack of a better term, is good.
And where
better to feel embarrassment than right here, in a synagogue? There’s even a term for it: Jewbarrassment,
which is defined as “That uncomfortable moment when you come across something
Jewish that you don’t understand or don’t know how to pronounce, but you think
you should. Can lead to nervous laughter, shortness of breath, loss of interest
in/anxiety about anything Jewish.”
Up
here on this bima over the past year, someone was reciting the blessing over
the washing of hands, as we do when we are about to eat (sorry), and he
inadvertently conflated that blessing with the one at the seder for eating
matzah. So instead of saying, baruch
ata adonai…asher kidshanu bmizvotav vtizvanu al netilat Yadayim. …he
concluded the blessing “al achilat Yadayim.” Literally he thanked
God for the mitzvah of eating our hands.
I
giggled for a moment when it happened because of my great and unmatched wisdom,
but then I was sobered by two realizations:
First,
that no one else in the room was laughing, or even smirking – just a little –
which told me that no one in a packed room knew Hebrew well enough to get the
joke. That was sobering – and we American
Jews need to address our Jewish literacy problem.
But
the second thing I realized is how courageous it was for this person to come up
here – to overcome the Jewbarrassment, to get out his safe zone in order
to live a more fully Jewish life, in order to praise God and fully participate.
In David Sedaris’s best seller, “Me Talk Pretty Some
Day,” he discusses how hard it was for him to move to Paris because of the
language barrier.
“My fear
and discomfort crept beyond the borders of the classroom and accompanied me out
onto the wide boulevards,” he writes. “Stopping for a coffee, asking
directions, depositing money in my bank account: these things were out of the
question, as they involved having to speak….I was convinced that everything I
said was wrong. When the phone rang, I ignored it. If someone asked me a
question, I pretended to be deaf. I knew my fear was getting the best of me
when I started wondering why they don’t sell cuts of meat in vending machines.
My only comfort was the knowledge that I was not alone.”
We
all know the discomfort of feeling like an outsider – of being a “them.” I’ve spent lots of time in Israel, but
although I have a good grasp of Hebrew, foreign languages don’t come naturally
to me. And to add to my insecurity, over
there many Israelis make fun of American accents just like we make fun of
foreign accents back here. It’s humbling
when you know you don’t talk pretty.
Because of my experiences in Israel I don’t make fun of foreign accents
anymore. I’ve been there. And don’t get
me started about my experiences in France!
It’s not
easy to talk in a foreign language, and even harder to pray. Even in English prayer feels like a
foreign language. That’s why I have
tremendous admiration for our Torah readers and service leaders who get up here
and overcome that fear – that fear of Jew-miliation.
So
when that person recited the blessing over the eating of the hands, I had a
choice. I could have corrected him. But
instead I thought to myself, “Ani Medaber Yafeh.” “Me talk pretty.” And
I thought of the story of the poor woman and the chicken. This was a case of svara if there ever
was one, of being less stringent about blessings and more about people’s shame.
And I never mentioned the gaffe to
anyone, so that the person would never feel embarrassed… Until I mentioned it just now in front of
1500 people.
But
no one here should ever be afraid to try Jewish things on for size. Here is where it’s okay to pray pretty. Judaism, like life, is all trial and error,
with the emphasis on the error.
And
that, my friends, is the central message of Yom Kippur.
Judaism,
like life, is all trial and error, with the emphasis on the error.
It’s
natural to be Jewbarrassed from time to time, but no one, neither Jew
nor non-Jew, has the right to tell any of you that you are a bad Jew, an
ignorant Jew, or – may I add – a disloyal Jew.
No one has that right.
Heschel makes an important point. Spiritual growth begins with the sense of
inadequacy, guilt and shame that we cultivate on Yom Kippur. Hasidism teaches that when a righteous person
– a tzaddik - moves from one level of holiness to another he can only go higher
if he first falls from his prior rung.
The reason for this is stated in Ecclesiastes 2:13 – כִּיתְרוֹן הָאוֹר, מִן-הַחֹשֶׁךְ.
“Greater light comes from darkness.” It
is out of our experience of darkness that one can reach expanded light. Our setbacks lead to wisdom – in fact,
without setbacks, there can be no wisdom.
So, if you are sitting here praying for a perfect, hunky-dory year,
you’re also praying for a year of spiritual stagnation. Good luck with that!
But we
can’t take this humiliation thing too far.
Maimonides states that his commentary to the Mishna: (Avot 2:18)
אם ידמה
האדם עצמו פחות - לא תהיה חמורה בעיניו פחיתות שיעשה
If
one has a base view of oneself, one will readily do base things.
As
Rabbi Simcha Bunam of Pzhysha once said to his students: "Everyone must
have two pockets, so that he can reach into the one or the other, according to
his needs. In his right pocket are to be the words: 'For my sake was the world
created,' and in his left: 'I am but dust and ashes.' "
So, the
goal is not to continually punch ourselves in the gut, but to establish
a balance of self-deprecation and self-esteem, so that in the end, we are
better able to love our neighbor AND ourselves.
The
Yom Kippur journey is a controlled environment, taking us from guilt and shame
–upwards to renewal and hope. That’s how
this day works – we descend to the depths and then, exhausted but restored, and
we rise in the end to the sound of the shofar, the call of renewal.
And
then we eat.
So,
now let’s start our ascent.
If we
look closely at the liturgy of the penitential section of the Yom Kippur
liturgy, we can see that when it comes to parents and children, it’s
complicated. Right before the Ashamnu
prayer, that prior paragraph states plainly: “Our God and God of our ancestors,
we are neither so insolent nor so obstinate as to claim in Your presence that
we are righteous, without sin; “Aval anachnu V’Avotaynu v’Imotaynu
Hatanu.” “For we, like our
ancestors who came before us, have sinned.” (This added phrase did not appear in our prior machzor - there's a longstanding debate about the matter).
They
sinned too! And we are bearing the
burden of their sins, as well as their accomplishments. That would seem overwhelming, but in fact it
is –empowering. It’s based on a
verse in the book of Nehemiah, where the people specifically confessed not just
their own sins but the sins of their ancestors too. This is just so profound. Because we know our parents weren’t
perfect. They weren’t the Greatest
Generation after all! And they
bequeathed us a lot of baggage.
Emotional baggage. Sometimes burdens that crossed the line of being
abusive. They made mistakes.
But
we can make it right, not only for us, but, if they deserve it, we can make it
right by them too.
Although most of us were brought up to believe that our grandparents were somehow
kinder, tougher, more principled and less materialistic. But let me tell you something about nostalgia:
It
‘aint what it used to be.
True,
Thomas Jefferson might have been a better writer than me – but he had slaves.
Was he more moral than any of us?
Moses
might have been a better teacher, but he killed a guy.
I let
go of my mother’s arm, but I didn’t let go of her legacy. I took it on, just as I took on my father’s
when he died.
How
liberating it is to know that our parents and grandparents sinned too. And they perceived themselves to be imposters
too. And life crushed them too - and
shook their faith to the core, just like with us. And they struggled and thrashed against the
dying of the light. Our parents did all
these things. And then, despite all
their fears and failings, they had us.
And
we can make it better.
And
through our teshuvah, our soul searching, maybe we can break the
destructive patterns that we’ve inherited so that we need not burden the future
with their sins or our own. Remember,
the Thirteen Attributes of Divine Mercy, another part of the penitential
liturgy, includes the line Poked Avon Avot – who visits the sins of the
ancestors unto future generations. Tirzah Firestone, in her new book, Wounds
into Wisdom—Healing Intergenerational Jewish Trauma, creatively translates
that divine attribute as “The mind of the universe observes the wounds of
parents as they ripple down to their children, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren… unto the fourth generation.
So,
we rise from shame and guilt by paying it forward with teshuvah. Heschel
commented that when the Torah says, “Honor your parents,” that obligation is
not on the children but on the parents, to behave in such a way so that
their children will honor them.
As we
try to deal with the sins of prior generations, the key is to look forward,
with the goal of healing wounds. We
should consider that, as we also address some of the great generational traumas
of our society too, including the legacy of the Holocaust and institutional
racism. We won’t fully redress these
sins by ourselves, but we will lay the foundation for our children to. Our children are pretty angry at my generation right now, for leaving them a world far messier than we found it.
So
let’s grapple with our parents’ shame, as well as our own.
Our very lives are at stake. The future of our civilization is at stake. We’ve got to make things right – for our
parents and our children. While on Rosh
Hashanah, I asked that we think expansively about tribes. Today, we reach out not merely horizontally to
all those living now, but vertically, to those who came before us and those in
generations to come.
When
I was in college, I once brought mother a journal as a gift, and unbeknownst to
me, she jotted down reflections through the years, including reflections from many
of the lectures she loved to attend or trips she loved to take. While going through her possessions, I found
it and it was a great source of comfort during the period of mourning.
In 1988, she wrote: “Two wrongs don’t make a right, but
three lefts do.”
"God gave us memory so we could have roses in December."
"As one gets older, one values every day."
"To be born a Jew is an accident. To live as a Jew is an achievement."
"God gave us memory so we could have roses in December."
"As one gets older, one values every day."
"To be born a Jew is an accident. To live as a Jew is an achievement."
1989: “Unhappiness is the hunger to get. Happiness is the hunger to give.” Elsewhere: “Turn your wounds into wisdom.”
Another aphorism: “I like being Jewish. It’s the best way I know of being
human.” And then, after an enjoyable
celebration of her birthday, she wrote, of her family:
“You
were all the best thing that ever happened to me.”
Finally,
1988, my second year here: “I spent Yom Kippur at Josh and Mara’s. I was pleased and proud that Josh speaks out when
injustice occurs.”
I
included several of the pages from her journal in an online album dedicated
to my mother that I created right after her passing.
We
live in a perpetual state of shame. And we live with the power to redeem. We redeem our parents and they redeem us. We bear the burden of their sins, just as
they bore ours.
Slowly,
I feel myself grasping her hand; and this time I don’t let go.
This time,
we can’t let go.
For our
parents and our children need us. We
need one another. Everyone in this
room. We need one another. We need one another to navigate our path
through the shame and embarrassment of simply being human.
We
need to get past those feelings of shame and inadequacy that hold us back. If we’ve sinned, and we all have, then let’s
recognize it, own it and move on. We have
no time to waste.
For this
is our moment to love one another.
This is our moment to be alive.
This is our moment to be alive.
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