Showing posts with label Yair Lapid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yair Lapid. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

Tu B'Shevat O Gram


Join us tonight for services at 7:30, with our special guest harpist Lisa Tannebaum and speaker Gershom Gorenberg, who will speak tonight on "The Crisis of Israeli Democracy and What to Do About it," and tomorrow morning on "Israel and Diaspora: A New Relation for a New Generation."  Gorenberg is the author, most recently, of "The Unmaking of Israel," a superb analysis of Israeli society today. This Shabbat we also welcome guests from other Fairfield County Conservative shuls as part of 5-7th grade Shabbaton, staffed by our friends from Camp Ramah.  We've got 50 kids coming, and they will be here all Shabbat long.  Kudos to Al Treidel, all who will be staffing this event and all the parents who are helping out.

Israel and Passionate Centrism

Having lived my entire life as a "passionate centrist" (I'm a middle child, after all), long promoting a Conservative movement espousing "passionate centrism," it's nice to have seen this week that Israelis too are tired of polarization.  The polar extremes are there, still, as they are here in the U.S., but those polar ice caps are melting - and in this non ecological sense it's a good thing.

David Hazony put it best in the Forward:

Indeed, if Israelis seem disillusioned by the Oslo Accords and the prospects for peace-through-negotiations, they're also disillusioned by the settlement movement and the prospects for peace-through-strength. There has been, quite decisively, a shift away from the extremes toward the center. 
  
Yair Lapid's passionate defense of religious pluralism, delivered to Conservative rabbis last spring, has been making its way around the Web, and for good reason.  In Israel, centrism is not new, but passionate centrism is.  As a congregant commented to me, "modern Jewish history has been characterized by ferocious debates about ideas that are now no longer respected."  Jews have long argued about ideology but now, the ideologues are taking a back seat.  The Labor party has stored its red flags in the attic and the revisionists are now recoilong as well, realizing that they went just a bit too far last week, when Jeremy Gimpel of HaBayit Hayehudi (Naftali Bennett's party) was caught on tape speaking to supporters in Florida about blowing up the Dome of the Rock and building a third temple.  My sense is that this revelation, which got big play in Israel, was a significant cause behind the late shift of many voters to the Lapid camp.  He converted a whole bunch of Israelis into passionate centrists.

Memo to right wing politicians in the US and Israel: Next time you speak to supporters at a Florida parlor meeting, make sure no one is taping. 

Gimpel claimed last week that he was joking.  Yeah.  Well, his "joke" likely kept him from being elected.  He was 14th on the party list and the final Knesset results left his party with only 12 seats, less than was expected.

J.J. Goldberg lays out nicely the hard choices ahead for Lapid and Netanyahu.  The most likely outcome, it appears, is a secular government that will be static regarding an already moribund Peace Process but will make significant progress on social issues and matters of religion and state.   If the region stabilizes, the Iranian threat abates and the Palestinians indicate a true willingness to engage in dialogue (each of these will require much US involvement), it will be time for Bibi and Yair to switch partners and form a government more able to negotiate.  But by then, there well could be new elections. 

In any event, Lapid is now a factor and passionate centrism is a force to be reckoned with. 
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Tying the elections nicely into the Torah portion, Storahtelling's Amichai Lau Lavie writes,

Moses instructs Joshua, at the end of this week's epic Torah text, B'shalach. "Choose the people who will fight for us against the tribe of Amelek" (Ex.17:9) . This is happening five minutes after the song of the sea and the big euphoria of the Exodus. Bam. right into war and the choosing of people is the first thing that they have to as a nation to survive- pick leaders to battle the dangers. It's not at all the same kind of choosing as the one we had this week but inherent in the action is the same primal drive - for security, for trusted leaders, good people who will stand up for real values, and fight  fear. Amalek, in many traditions, does not represent another race or nation - Amalek means Fear. And to stand up against fear we need good people, leaders, teachers, friends.

The people chosen this week, as Moses told Joshua, are our people - people for the greater good of this bigger reality, one way or another, I hope and trust - it's all good choices. There are new leaders, some of them good friends, who will help us with more trust, less fear, less wars, more peace, and change for the better.


Tu B'Shevat Resources

This weekend we celebrate Shabbat Shira and Tu B'Shevat.  As we reflect upon the deeper spiritual and environmental messages of the New Year for Trees, take a look atBeth Boyer's excellent d'var Torah on the secret (Jewish) life of bees (and the name of the heroine of this week's haftarah, Deborah, means "bee").   Also, this week's portion brings the Children of Israel through the Red Sea and into the wilderness, and that's where their incessant kvetching begins.   They should have read The ten things we think will make us happier, but don't.  They didn't, but you can.

There's so much out there about this holiday that it's hard to separate the forest from the trees, so to speak.  Here are some Tu B'Shevat resources:

-          A nice collection of freeware on the holiday, called "Tree Bien" can be foundhere

-          The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL), found at http://www.coejl.org/ has lots of Tu B'Shevat information.

-          http://www.kolel.org/pages/mishnah/brachot6.1.html  has Mishnaic insight on the spirituality embedded in a simple blessing over "the fruit of the tree."'


-          You can find a number of Tu B'Shevat links (including seders) here.

-          Tu B'Shevat is a fine time to reconnect with that Land of Israel. Our ancestors in Europe looked forward to that taste of dates, figs and other fruits from the holy land, including (ugh) carob (aka Bokser).  As we read in a nice Tu B'shevat Haggadah at http://mcohen02.tripod.com/tbsmbc.html, "After the exile of the Jews from Israel, Tu B'Shevat became a day on which to commemorate our connection to Eretz Israel. During much of Jewish history, the only observance of this day was the practice of eating fruit associated with the land of Israel. A tradition based on Deuteronomy 8:8 holds that there are five fruits and two grains associated with it as a "land of wheat and barley, of vines, figs and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and [date] honey." Almonds were also given a prominent place in Tu B'Shevat meals since the almond trees were believed to be the first of all trees in Israel to blossom. Carob or St John's bread - was the most popular fruit to use, since it could survive the long trip from Israel to Jewish communities in Europe and North Africa."

-          We can experience the Israeli natural landscape more directly athttp://www.neot-kedumim.org.il/.

-          And the best way to show that love, naturally, to be there. Second best? Plant a tree: Go to the JNF web site at http://www.jnf.org/. No, you won't be able to find a photo of "your" tree there. But you will be able to become a modern day Honi Ha Ma'agel (Honi the Circle Drawer). Find out about him athttp://www.ualberta.ca/~yreshef/tuintro.htm, and bring the kids along for this part of the journey (nice music too at this site). "Just as those who came before us plant for us," Honi said back in the days of the Talmud (http://www.ualberta.ca/~yreshef/agada1.htm), "so do we plant for our children."

-          Finally, my personally favorite Jewish environmental website, Hazon.  Here istheir explanation of Tu B'Shevat. Also, Healthy, Sustainable Tu B'Shvat Resourcesand the piece de résistance:   the Hazon Tu B'Shevat Haggadah.  The Hazon Tu B'Shvat Haggadah is designed to help you think about your responsibility towards the natural world in relation to four different levels: physical place, community, world, and spirituality. Each section of the haggadah relates to one of these four levels of responsibility, and offers texts, questions, and activities to spark conversation around your seder table. You may also download the Haggadah in booklet form.

Happy Tu B'Shevat and Shabbat Shalom!
 

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Lapid Factor

Below I've posted an excellent morning-after summary of the electoral mood of Israel, from TBE's Jan Gaines. Jan and I often stand on different sides of the political spectrum, but I agree with this assessment 100%. Lapid is someone I've been keeping an eye on and he is legit on many of the issues that are near and dear to American Jews, including religious pluralism.  I opened my Kol Nidre Sermon with a story Lapid recalled at APIAC, where he spoke eloquently about his father's miraculous escape from the Nazis as a child in Budapest.  He also spoke to Conservative rabbis at the Rabbinical Assembly convention last spring.  That in itself was remarkable for an Israeli politician.  He is, as Jan mentions, a member of a Conservative (Masorti) shul in Israel.  

Here's a where Lapid talks about religious pluralism and why it's important.



In the end, Lapid is a politician and may give in to the temptations of the moment.  But never before has there been more potential to bridge the gaps between ultra-Orthodox and modernists - a group that includes secular Israelis and progressive or modern Orthodox Jews who want to engage the modern world rather than flee it or deny its existence.  

If you want to hear more about Lapid's vision in his own words, his recent column in the Times of Israel.

Here's Jan's report:


Dear Friends,

  The Israeli elections are over and while the results are not official but rather based on exit polls, the outcome is pretty well known.  Likud took a hit and both Labor and the new Yesh Atid (meaning "There is a future") Yair Lapid party came out strong.

  I want to emphasize that while American Jewish left wing groups like J Street may be celebrating,  this election was not at all about the Palestinian problem. Most Israelis know nothing can happen unless the Palestinians are willing to acknowledge the right of Israel to exist. And that isn't happening.

  Rather, this election was about domestic issues.  The big one, and the one which brought Yesh Atid into existence, is the issue of who serves in the army and in national service;  who doesn't, and where the money is going to subsidize those who don't serve in either one. Add to that the high cost of housing,the problems with the education system, and the deeply resented power of the ultra-Orthodox over conversion, marriage and divorce, and you have the reasons for the turn to center and left. And this is a good thing for the health of the country.  If the eventual coalition that Netanyahu forms excludes Shas, that will be reason enough for the outcome of this election.

  Lapid has stated emphatically that he will not bring his party into a coalition that includes Shas.  And since he is now in a very strong position to form a new coalition, that may actually happen.  Perhaps we are seeing, finally, a weakening of the strangle hold that Shas and other ultra Orthodox parties have had on the country.

  It is also interesting to note the composition of the Yesh Atid party, which Lapid put together. The No. 2 person is an Orthodox rabbi and the No. 17 person (who never expected to make it into the Knesset) is an American Haredi rabbi who has vowed to work for equal treatment for Reform and Conservative (Masorti) Judaism.  There are 2 Ethiopians, several women, Russians and activists for social change.  And Lapid himself goes to a Masorti synagogue in Tel Aviv!

  As for the Labor party, the oldest, veteran party in the country, the leader is a former  female TV commentator (like Lapid) who campaigned totally on local issues, especially demanding that the 2013 budget include funding for all of the social issues I've mentioned, with housing and education emphasized.  Labor is where the young activists from the demonstrations two summers ago landed.

  Netanyahu was smart in not doing anything about draft reform and housing reform until after the election, taking a chance that he would garner more support in the future.  He was very mistaken to have formed an alliance with Israel Beitenu whose leader, Liberman, helped to bring down the Likud as a result. But Bibi is a canny politician and will be able to maneuver Likud into a coaltion with Lapid and Labor hopefully. 

   Finally, it appears that the Anglo Israeli population voted for both Lapid and secondarily Bibi.  From my own group of friends and acquaintances, it was overwhelmingly Lapid where previously they had been Likud voters, and only secondarily Likud and coming in 3rd was Labor.In Raanana according to the J Post it was similar with Likud preferred and Naftali Bennett who comes from Raanana, coming in strong.  Bennett did not do as well with his Strong Home party, to the right of Likud but he did revive the dormant national religious body of voters who had almost faded away.

  So that is my take on the election.  The official results will be announced either today or tomorrow.  After the paper ballots have been counted.  I get a real kick out of the system here. There are no voting machines.  Each of the 32 parties running had a Hebrew letter or letters as identifying each one.  You come into the voting booth, take one of the slips with the letter of your party on it, put it into an envelope, seal it and drop it into a cardboard box. Wow!! Antiquated?  At least there aren't any" hanging chads."  But Israel is a small country and can easily handle the primitive looking system. I myself panic every time because the identifying letters are not translated into English (or French) but only Russian and Arabic. So I had to memorize again and again the Hebrew letters before I went into the booth and then read them over several times to be sure I had the right letters for the party I wanted.  If you don't read Hebrew, you're in big trouble although I'm sure one of the official volunteers would help you.

  And in the end, it was a wonderful day. Everyone gets off work, the stores are open and running sales, and the weather was a gorgeous 74 degrees so everyone took their kids to a national park, zoo or nature reserve. After they voted  of course.

With about 66% voter turnout, that's better than the U.S.  More importantly, it shows that Israelis are thoughtful and want to make a real difference in their lives.  Democracy here may be chaotic but somehow it works.

  Jan Gaines

Kol Nidre Sermon 5773: A Jewish Culture of Life


Kol Nidre 5773 -  A Jewish Culture of Life
by Joshua Hammerman

Last March at the AIPAC Policy Conference I had the opportunity to listen to Yair Lapid, one of Israel’s best known TV journalists, who left his prime time spot to enter the fray of Israeli politics.  How well he does remains to be seen, but like his late father Tommy Lapid, his mere presence in the political arena will really shake things up.  Yair was speaking of his new book, a tribute to his father called “Memories after my Death,” and he told an incredible story:

It was Feb. 1945, and Tommy Lapid, 13, lived with his mother in a basement in the Budapest Ghetto.  Early one Monday morning, the Germans started liquidating the block Lapid’s family lived on.  At one point, as the Jews were being forced to gather in the square, a squadron of Russian planes buzzed over head, and in the commotion, Tommy Lapid hid behind a small public lavatory painted in green.  His mother pushed him inside and told him, “You need to pee now.”  The boy was scared, but he listened to his mother.  It’s hard to pee when it’s cold and people are shooting all around you, but he did.  And she closed the door behind him.  The convoy left without them. 

A few minutes later, of the 600 Jews who had gathered in the square, 598 were dead under the ice in the Danube River.  And Tommy Lapid and his mother stood in the street in Budapest, free.  But he had no place to go to.  So they went back to the ghetto, to the same basement, hoping only that the Russians would arrive before the next convoy was rounded up. 

Many years later, in 1986, Tommy Lapid went back to Budapest with Yair.  It was the first time in 40 years that Tommy had been there.  They were walking on the street and suddenly Tommy burst into tears.  There was nothing there – except for a small public lavatory, painted in green.  He said – this is the place.  And there they were, two grown men, stroking the peeling green walls of a public lavatory.  And the Hungarians were walking and glancing at them warily, Yair says. “They must have thought we were nuts!” 

“But we were not nuts!” he adds. “We were a statistical error.  My father was supposed to be dead and I was never supposed to be born.” 

That green bathroom became their Wailing Wall, a holy place, a symbol of the precariousness of life.  To be that close to death is something that most of us cannot imagine.  That was the precise point where life meets death – where heaven and earth intersect.

Mircea Eliade, the great scholar of religion, calls that point an axis mundi, a cosmic axis – a place holier beyond all others precisely because it is where life is elevated and death defeated.  In some cultures, it is the highest mountain, like Mt. Fuji or Mt Kilimanjaro.   In others, it is a man made structure, like the pyramids, or a pagoda, a steeple or a minaret, all reaching for the heavens, all seeking to transcend life and defeat death.  And in some cultures it is not a place, but a time – like Yom Kippur. 

Yom Kippur is the holiest time, when the holiest person, the high priest, would enter the holiest place – the Holy of Holies in the temple and utter the holiest sound – God’s ineffable name.  And at that moment, that person, in that place, hovered between life and death.  No one knew if the Cohen Gadol would survive.  No one else could go in with him, so they tied a rope around his ankle so that if he died in there, so they could pull him out. 

There is no known occurrence of a high priest actually dying on Yom Kippur, so the odds were in their favor; unlike the fictitious “Hunger Games” where, in a dystopian, Darwinian setting, two dozen teenage children are selected by lottery to fight to the death, with only one allowed to survive.

Yom Kippur is the Jewish version of the “Hunger Games.”  The hunger is real, but fortunately, our flirtations with death are purely symbolic, and the opponents we battle are not other people, but our own inner demons. The white garment we wear, the kittel, is, symbolically, a death shroud.  Anthropologists suggest that white is symbolic of death because the lifeless body turns that color. It also symbolizes our purification in this day long trial by fire.   And the synagogue is bathed in white on the Day of Awe.  The Torahs, the table coverings, some wear special all white tallises. 

In many ways the opposite of white is not black, but red.  Red is the color of blood, and blood is the stuff of life.  But with life comes temptation and sin, with blood comes bloodshed, and with bloodshed comes impurity.   Isaiah states (1:18) – “Even though your sins be like crimson, they can turn snow white. Red as dyed wool, they can become like fleece.”  

And so, on Yom Kippur, the fast becomes a day-long purification ritual, a dangerous journey right up to that third rail, that place where life and death meet, and the fast becomes a means toward a simulated death, a death of all things physical – and the prelude to a rebirth at day’s end.  On Yom Kippur we are born again, as we are on the wedding day, a day when it is also traditional to fast, when our old selves die and something very new is born.

In a sense, our task on Yom Kippur is to channel those moments of death and rebirth that have molded us, and return to that place, that bathroom in Budapest, the place that in our lives marked the nexus between life and death – our own personal Holy of Holies.  That moment in time when death was nearest, when we realized how precious life can be.  We’ve all had that place.  We’ve all had that time – when we saw the colors of the world with extreme clarity.  And then we thank God for life, and we cling to it all the more earnestly, we hold on tight.  We are that goat, the one that won the lottery and escaped death, hence its name, the scape-goat, the one sent out to the Wilderness.  And we realize that purely arbitrarily and through sheer luck, we survived the lottery that was Auschwitz.  How lucky we are.

Tommy Lapid went into a urinal to pee and he lived.  My grandparents decided to come to America, and I lived.  And because of that, I was born, while six million died, and because of the accident of my birth, I have a responsibility to appreciate life and to choose life.
Time and time again, Moses says in Deuteronomy, “Choose life, so you and your children may live.”  That, in a nutshell, is the message of Yom Kippur. And in this post Holocaust era, we chose life because we were selected for death- and we lived.

Somehow, in our day, this reverence for life has gotten all mixed up in partisan politics – so it is time to step back and take another look.  At this moment when we are all closest to death, if only symbolically, we need to affirm that reverence for life is too precious to be politicized or outsourced to any interest group.  It is an overriding value, and it belongs to us all.

As I mentioned last week, I visited Colorado this summer, and on a whim one afternoon in the Denver area, we decided to visit Columbine.  Another holy place, for the saddest of reasons.  April 20, 1999.  Twelve students and one teacher gunned down.  The memorial is lovely, a peaceful, beautiful homage on a hillside facing the Rockies. 

For each victim, there is a large plaque with an inscription written by family members.  On one plaque, memorializing Daniel Lee Rohrbough, age 15, a question appears: “Dad.  I have a question.  Why?”  And then the answer, written in stone:  “Son, in a Nation that legalized the innocent killing of children in the womb…in a Godless school system your life was taken….Dan, I’m sorry.” 

So, for this father, Daniel’s murder had less to do with two crazed killers named Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold than on a ruling handed down by the Supreme Court in 1973. 
I tried to put myself in the position of this father – the anger he must feel – anger at a country that has let him down.  And I tried to understand that.  I’m sure I would be angry too.  If I were one of the bereaved parents of Columbine, I would be angry too.  I would be angry at a country that seemed not to value the life of my child enough to make it safer.  For me, the issue would be the guns – the guns and the hatred of anyone who is different.  For him, it was all about abortion.  For both of us, though, there is a common denominator.  We have a common complaint.  Life has become cheap in 21st century America. 

We have become numb to all the killing.  Whether the video games or the bullying or abortion or a society that has gone insanely gun-crazy, or whether it’s simply because we don’t see death the way our ancestors did – back in the day where we didn’t sweep the frail and sick  away to die in isolation.  Or maybe we’ve just gotten numb to seeing wars on TV or in the movies, where you push a button in New Mexico and an unmanned drone kills someone in Afghanistan… where fantasy and reality blend to the point where they are unrecognizable one from the other, where one second an evil killer is massacring people on the streets of Gotham City on the screen and the next, a real life Joker is spraying a movie theater with automatic gunfire. 

Oh sure, we all pretend to be shocked.  But are we really?  Or have we simply forgotten how precious life is.  Have we become numb to all the killing?

We need a reaffirmation of a culture of life.  It’s really not about abortion or guns or euthanasia or smoking or video games, or Hollywood or capital punishment or teen suicide or drugs or alcohol: It’s about all of them, and then some. It’s about life.

Our Torah demands it: Choose life!  But can we find common ground?  Can this seeming 
unbridgeable canyon be spanned?

We all know that the issue of life has dogged every presidential campaign, in one form or another, for decades.  We can’t seem to shake it.  And it’s only getting worse.  It was a rude awakening for me to drive through Middle America this summer and see enormous billboards of dead fetuses where one would expect to see an ad for Motel 6 or Wall Drug. 
But maybe there is a way.

Last April, Connecticut became the 17th state to eliminate the death penalty in future prosecutions, the fifth in the past five years.  Nationally, the tide appears to be turning away from the death penalty, as even some capital punishment supporters are beginning to be troubled at the extent to which human error has claimed innocent life.  Since 1973, 138 prisoners sentenced to death were later exonerated. And those are only the mistakes that were caught in time. We have no idea how many were not.

Judaism has much to teach on that score, and some of those lessons could help bridge the gap between social conservatives and liberals.

Since the days of the Bible, Jews have always been reluctant to impose the death penalty. The Torah mandates it for 36 offenses, ranging from murder to kidnapping, adultery, incest, rape, idolatry, apostasy, disrespecting parents and desecrating the Sabbath. But during the rabbinic period, the sages effectively abolished capital punishment, understanding that while most convicted murderers may indeed be guilty, if only one innocent person is hanged by the state, all citizens of that state are guilty of murder.  

In Israel, where Jewish law is taken quite seriously, not even terrorists with blood on their hands are put to death. Only those convicted of crimes against humanity can be executed (thus far, only Adolf Eichmann).  But otherwise, we always need to err on the side of life.  Judaism is, in the truest sense of the term, “pro-life.”
So back here in Connecticut, T.R. Rowe, a Republican, crossed party lines to support the death penalty repeal. While siding with the Democrats, he then challenged that those who protect the “worst of the worst” should also protect the ones who are most innocent of all, as he put it: those not yet born.

In this polarized political climate, one legislator’s crossing of the aisle is nearly as noteworthy – and miraculous – as the crossing of the Red Sea.  Rowe is to be commended for pushing us to step out from behind political and denominational barricades and seek a bipartisan dialogue, and also an interfaith conversation that aims to protect innocent life while also safeguarding our precious liberties.

We can find that in the Jewish approach. Judaism always seeks to defend the imperiled, even to the point of allowing the desecration of the Sabbath when it can save a life.  But the threat to life must be immediate, not potential or theoretical.

Even were capital punishment proven to deter potential murderers – and that is not the case – the prospect of potentially saving a life in the future is trumped by the very real possibility that an innocent life, that of a wrongly accused prisoner, might be taken now. A Jewish culture of life would demand that the death penalty either be repealed or, if remaining on the books, rarely be implemented.

But what of abortion? Here too, for Judaism, the immediate trumps the theoretical. The sages did not advocate abortion on demand. They just simply made it clear that when the choice is between saving a real human life, in this case the mother, or a potential human being, the unborn child, the real takes precedence over the potential. The prevailing Jewish view is that a fetus is not a fully realized human being until it is born. Since it is not human at conception or while in utero, a culture of life would imply, from a Jewish perspective, that the focus be on the life of the mother until the moment of birth. For many rabbis, that concept extends to less immediate but still perilous threats to the mother’s physical and mental health.  As long as the fetus remains in her body, it is the mother’s life and health that matter most, though as a pregnancy progresses toward birth, more consideration is given to the life of the fetus, much like Roe v. Wade.

To repeat, a culture of life would imply, from a Jewish perspective, that the priority be on the life of the mother.  And on this, there is little debate among the different Jewish denominations.

It is possible for our society to promote a culture of life, but only when there is first a culture of dialogue and consensus building. Rep. Rowe has courageously demonstrated that such potential exists, even in this polarized environment. Religious groups can set an example by engaging in vigorous interfaith dialogue rather than latching onto one political party or another and attempting to impose their own parochial vision on the state.  Where there is first consensus building, religious values can inform public policy-making.
There is a broad consensus that the state must protect innocent human life. No government should be guilty of allowing innocent human beings to die.  I think we can all agree on that.  It’s a good place for a respectful dialogue to begin, one where religious groups can be active participants, as voices of conscience and wisdom, promoting reasoned argument rather than partisanship.

But the state should not attempt to define conclusively when we become human beings, when human life begins, since there is no possibility of consensus on that issue. That is a matter between pastor and congregant, a question of personal conscience and faith rather than public law.  The government should never play favorites on matters of faith.
A culture that reveres life is a worthy goal. To get there, we must first cultivate a culture of dialogue.

America is ready for that.  In a recent CNN poll, only 15 percent of the population wants abortion to illegal in all circumstances.  88% say it should be legal if a woman’s life is in danger.  83% when the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest.  But only 35% say it should always be legal, under all circumstances.  So the majority is looking for middle ground, and there is middle ground to be had.  A Gallup poll reports similar results, and the numbers have not changed much going back to 2004.

We need to get beyond the notion of Pro Life and Pro Choice, as if those in one camp reject all choice and those in the other are insensitive to life.   After all, Deuteronomy included both sides in one phrase.  The verse says “Choose Life.”

Is there a middle ground on gun control too?  I hope to God there is, though no one seems to want to talk about it.  You know, in Israel there are hate crimes, there has been terrorism and war, there is more pent up frustration and fear than we can imagine, there are definitely crazy people, and you see soldiers with guns all over the place.  But you don’t see random mass killings of the type we see here.  Maybe it’s because, ironically, Israelis are happier – as surveys have shown.  Maybe it’s because they feel more connected, that their lives are more purposeful.  I don’t know, but we need for our society to choose life.

Is there common ground on other sensitive life and death issues, like euthanasia?  Fortunately, this is one issue that has receded from the realm of public hysteria.  There are no Karen Ann Quinlans or Terri Schiavos engulfing us at the moment in this country, and in Israel there is consensus on the proper course of treatment for Ariel Sharon, who has been comatose for 5 1/2 years – so maybe this is an opportunity for reflective conversation.

Brain death is one of the most discussed halachic issues of our times.  Tradition demands that we preserve life but also that we show reverence to the dead.  These values conflict, especially when other lives are at stake.  If a brain-dead patient is still considered alive but we harvest his organs, have we not killed him?  But if we don’t harvest his organs, aren’t we condemning someone else to death because of our inaction?  The Conservative Movement accepts medical definitions of brain death as sufficient to declare a patient dead, but recently there has been a growing dispute among Orthodox rabbinic groups.  (A recent article describes how) In 1991, the Rabbinical Council of America adopted the brain death standard, which America’s ultra-Orthodox Agudath Israel opposed.  And “in 2010 the RCA published a 110-page brief effectively reversing its previous position. Though the document declares that it is “not intended as a formal ruling,” its thrust is that an observant Jew should donate organs only after the cessation of breathing (by which time many organs are medically unusable).”

These halachic disputes can get pretty intense, but from a rabbinic standpoint, it is possible for more than one option to be acceptable.   That’s because our tradition recognizes something very important that every religious system and government should recognize: we aren’t God.  We really can’t know when life truly begins and ends.
That boundary.  That boundary between life and death.  Despite all our scientific advances, life remains the ultimate mystery.  The ultimate curiosity.  That rover we landed on Mars this summer is fittingly called “Curiosity.” It’s doing a lot of research but it really has one task and one task only – to see if life ever existed on that lonely planet, even billions of years ago, when its atmosphere might have made life there more sustainable.  Such proof will go a long way toward determining whether or not we are truly alone in this universe. 

Life is so hard to produce. Ask any couple trying to get pregnant.  It’s not so simple.  Think of that panda in Washington.  Maybe that’s why God had to make and destroy many worlds before settling on ours, to return to that Midrash I quoted last week. Maybe it was not a moral universe that God was striving and failing to achieve – but one that could simply sustain life.  The fact that we remain the only known speck in the universe where life exists serves as an additional reminder that life is so holy and precious. 

That is why we revere those who are willing to risk their lives for the sake of others. 
When we traveled out west this summer, Columbine was not the only place we visited where life and death have intersected.  In South Dakota, we decided to take a long detour, several hours out of our way, to a remote place near the Badlands of South Dakota.  A place called Wounded Knee.

On that spot, on December 29, 1890, the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment surrounded an encampment of Native Americans on the Lakota Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.  A shot was fired, we don’t know why, and in the ensuing melee, the 7th Cavalry opened fire indiscriminately from all sides, killing men, women, and children, including some of their fellow troopers.  A few of the tribal leaders had guns and fired away as well, emboldened, according to the marker at the site, by a tribal practice at the time called “Ghost Dancing,” where they believed that they were wearing magical garments that would protect them from the white man’s weapons.  They believed that they could defeat death, that a messiah would raise them all up from the dead.  By the time the dust had cleared, up to 300 Lakota were dead, and Army fatalities stood at 25.  When the surviving Lakota fled unarmed, many were hunted down and killed.

The bodies littered the ravine below the road, and although most were later removed and buried in a cemetery at the top of the hill, the ravine still has a lumpy, unnatural look to it, reminiscent of the mass graves of Maidanek…  Or maybe the banks of the Danube near Tommy Lapid’s Budapest.

This description of events on the sign at Wounded Knee was disturbing to me – it conveyed a sense of blaming the victim.  Was this massacre in fact caused by some primitive cult of death, this so called “Ghost Dancing?”  A local museum points the blame at the big city newspapers, which, looking to boost circulation, painted the tribe and this practice as bloodthirsty and savage for practicing what the called a “primitive cult of death.”  Other historical accounts downplay the impact of the ritual.  But the sign that I read, endorsed by the tribal leaders, makes clear that “Ghosting” will remain part of the official story of Wounded Knee.  In effect, they were taking some responsibility for a massacre perpetrated upon them. 

Wow.

What does that mean?  It means that the very descendents of the Lakota who were massacred were looking to teach their own children, about the need, above all else, to choose life, to avoid risky behavior, much like how we warn our kinds about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. The crimes done to Native Americans will forever be a stain on our nation’s conscience.  But despite it all, the message of that memorial, for all of us, is that we need to embrace a culture of life.  And a culture of life is a culture of responsibility.
“Lo ha metim yehalleu yah,” the Psalmist says, “The dead shall not praise God.” There is nothing that we can do to change the past.  But there is much that we can do for our children. That is what amazed me at Wounded Knee.  They chose life, so that their children may live.

Over the next 24 hours, this is that sacred place where life and death will intersect, where others have died but we have been granted a reprieve, the miraculous gift of more time here on earth.  Never forget the real cult of death that we experienced seven decades ago.

As we journey though this day, may we recall those sacred places - Tommy Lapid’s green lavatory, the classrooms of Columbine and the ravines of Wounded Knee. The Holy of Holies in Jerusalem, the crowded cabins of the ships that brought my grandparents across the sea, and wherever your life was saved, whatever brought you to this place and time.  For the next 24 hours, this sanctuary becomes our holy of holies.  It becomes that place where we rediscover the precious gift of simply being alive.

Legend has it that the Book of Life will remain open throughout this sacred day, only to be sealed at nightfall tomorrow.  And that sealing of the book will mark not our deaths but our return to the realm of the normal. But even as we reenter the day to day world, as we break the fast and end these Hunger Games, we will sit down to round foods, nourishing our bodies with the earth’s bounty.  The round foods, the egg, the hallah, the bagel, they will bring us back into the cycle of normalcy, of life.  And they will remind us, always, that ours is a culture of life.  And they will remind us, always, that – even as we protect the right to choose – we must choose life, so that our children may live.