Showing posts with label football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label football. Show all posts

Monday, January 9, 2023

Heschel’s audacity and Hamlin’s injury (Times of Israel)

 


FEATURED POST

Heschel’s audacity and Hamlin’s injury

With a young black player nearly dying in the 'blood sport' that is NFL football, might this be an hour that 'calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity'?Abraham Joshua Heschel
Abraham Joshua Heschel

A half-century ago, American Jewry lost arguably its leading spiritual light. There are others who deserve a spot on that Mount Sinai/Rushmore of moral beacons, but it’s hard to deny Abraham Joshua Heschel’s place in the pantheon. His influence approaches that of his friend, Martin Luther King, Jr., whom he outlived by four years, passing away in the winter of 1972. Heschel’s 50th yahrzeit (the anniversary of the death, according to the Jewish calendar) falls this Wednesday.

Rabbi Heschel did not hesitate to speak truth to power. The pleasing catchphrase for which he is often quoted and meme-d, The hour calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity, came as part of a much more confrontational telegram to President Kennedy on June 16, 1963. It was sent a few months following a special conference called to address racism in America and just weeks before the famous March on Washington, and his words seethed with impatience and prophetic wrath.

Here is the text (bold is mine):

I look forward to privilege of being present at meeting tomorrow. Likelihood exists that Negro problem will be like the weather. Everybody talks about it but nobody does anything about it. Please demand of religious leaders personal involvement not just solemn declaration. We forfeit the right to worship God as long as we continue to humiliate Negroes. Church synagogue have failed. They must repent. Ask of religious leaders to call for national repentance and personal sacrifice. Let religious leaders donate one month’s salary toward fund for Negro housing and education. I propose that you Mr. President declare state of moral emergency. A Marshall plan for aid to Negroes is becoming a necessity. The hour calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity.

I could not help but think of Heschel’s telegram as I read through this tweet-thread by an outspoken pastor in Massachusetts, who took on a Heschelian posture following the shocking injury to Buffalo Bills’ safety Damar Hamlin last Monday night. Thankfully, Hamlin’s condition has improved dramatically since then, but when she wrote this, millions of Americans were still watching the horror unfold before their eyes (24 million were watching the actual broadcast, the largest number ever for Monday Night Football on ESPN).

I admit to being a more-than-casual fan who would have trouble giving up football. But Everett’s comments, which I read as I watched the player continue to lie prone on the field, gave me pause. It should be noted that the game was not resumed, as Everett (and I) believed would happen at that time. The NFL thankfully did not go that macho route, which would have been foolhardy. Grown men were allowed to cry and the world did not come to an end.

But routinely, NFL games continue even as players are being carted off with life-altering (and sometimes life-threatening) injuries. For we fans, those moments are usually a good opportunity for a quick bathroom break, or a chance to zap some nachos. Catastrophic injury has been woven into the banal routine of sports viewing.

No one grabbed for the nachos last Monday. And those who did out of Pavlovian habit, had to wonder, at least for a millisecond, What am I doing??

As the games now go on this weekend, it will be hard for the narrative not to switch back to a cliched, football-centric “Win one for Damar!” as Rev Everett predicted it would in her tweets. Team spirit is all well and good, but the seriousness of what millions saw unfold before their eyes should not be allowed to be reduced to a motivational morality play. “Win one for the Gipper” has seen its day and that day is not now.

I also hope that God won’t be thrust to center stage here. I know that has already happened. But we need to bring religion into this with the same degree of care that the paramedics used in strapping Hamlin onto the stretcher last week, and with a modicum of humility. While I have no idea whether the prayers of millions helped save this one life (as opposed to the heroic work of a few emergency medical staffers), I would not want this incident to be wrapped around the flag of football’s righteous brotherhood or Buffalo’s postseason aspirations. God does not want to reward the Bills for their suffering – otherwise Scott Norwood’s kick never would have gone wide right in the Super Bowl. God had nothing to do with that – and this, at least as far as I know.

But what haunts me most right now – now that the most dangerous time seems to have passed for Hamlin – is Everett’s comment about the NFL being “blood sport” and Heschel’s blunt assertions on the failure of political and religious institutions to honestly address racism in America. Numerous questions spring to mind:

  • What role, exactly, does football play in our society? Does it enable us to address systemic racism in new and creative ways, or does it impede progress? By being dishonest in assessing the dangers to life and limb, are we perpetuating those very inequities that have existed in America for so long? Is there a racial element to this at all? Do certain lives not matter as much? Do we rush for the nachos and head for the bathroom when a quarterback or wide receiver lies on the field or just for the linemen?
  • Racist or not, why are we so inclined to pile human beings into that meat grinder? Are we no better than bloodthirsty Romans? Are we seeking pleasure through the physical punishment of fellow human beings? Is this some innate need that we have?
  • Was Heschel right in suggesting, in a different context, that by knowingly subjecting innocent people to danger – even with their full (and supposedly informed) consent – we religious leaders have ceded our moral authority? Churches and synagogues have failed, Heschel said bluntly, because they have subjected people to danger and therefore to humiliation. Our hypocrisy knows no bounds as we kneel at midfield and pray for good sportsmanship while failing to call out the NFL’s massive concussion cover up. Should religious leaders be speaking out more?

Hamlin’s injury can be tossed off as much more freakish than the more common football injuries that are now on the upswing, involving the brain, spine, hamstring and just about every body part. But that brings little comfort, as the memory loss seem contagious, numbing the spectator’s recollection of these episodes, nearly as much as the “dinged” participant’s. We quickly move on to the next rushed commercial as yet another player is carted off to the “blue tent,” a purgatory-like place where he can be out of sight and out of mind. We’ll get an update from a sideline reporter, which will help us to adjust our betting prospects and fantasy schemes, when instead, each late hit should slap our souls, and not only when the victim is on our team. Is our willingness to look the other way increasing as intensively as the severity of those injuries we choose to ignore?

Ultimately, all the questions boil down to this:

Are we placing people in grave danger – much graver than we realized – just so we can enjoy some popcorn, while away a weekend afternoon and perhaps make a few bucks? Is the primary problem racism, boredom or greed?

Last Monday night, America could no longer look the other way. Rabbi Heschel reminds us what’s at stake. This hour calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity, and we must ask the same question that Heschel had the chutzpah to ask the President of the United States, a president who desperately wanted to keep King from marching on Washington, who wanted the problem to go away. JFK never placed racism at the top of his agenda, until King’s moral message got through, with the help of Heschel’s telegram and a landmark speech that Heschel gave at the prior conference.

And so I ask, as Rabbi Heschel asked, have we religious leaders forfeited the right to worship God because we’ve knowingly, and with intent, brought pain and humiliation to fellow human beings?

I don’t know the answer to any of these questions, but I feel compelled to pose them because I’m shaken. I’m actually inclined to believe that at its root, the problem is not racism at all, because for most of us, the players aren’t even people. They are objects. This past week may have begun to change all that. I pray that it has.

I’ll still root for the Patriots on Sunday. How could I not? They’re my team. But I’m no longer sure what that means.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

In This Moment: Heschel's Audacity and Hamlin's Injury

In This Moment


This coming week is Abraham Joshua Heschel's 50th Yahrzeit,

Over the next couple of Shabbats,

we'll celebrate the powerful combined legacy

Of Rabbi Heschel and Rev. King

Heschel's Audacity and Hamlin's Injury


Shabbat Shalom.


A half century ago, American Jewry lost arguably its leading spiritual light. There are others who deserve a spot on that Mount Sinai/Rushmore, but it's hard to deny Heschel's place on the pantheon. His inspiration parallels that of his contemporary and friend, Martin Luther King, Jr. Heschel challenged us in a manner that American Jews were not used to being challenged. His famous catchphrase, "Moral grandeur and spiritual audacity," came as part of a much more caustic telegram to President Kennedy on June 16, 1963. He wrote, "We forfeit the right to worship God as long as we continue to humiliate Negroes. The hour calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity."


Heschel pulled no punches, excoriating American Jews for their worship of technical culture and materialism, which he equated with paganism. "Our disease is the loss of character and commitment, and the cure of our plight cannot be derived from charts and diagrams," he wrote. "Our institutions have too many beauty parlors. Our people need a language and we offer them cosmetics. Our people need style, learning, conviction, exaltation, and we are concerned about not being admitted to certain country clubs." He also said, "We may claim to be a success, but in the eyes of Jewish history, we may be regarded as a failure." He cried out like the ancient prophets he so admired - and his cry was heard. His message resonated especially in the intensely secular '60s, and, aside from the awkward lack of inclusivity in his language, his words have aged very well. if anything, they ring more true today. Although his influence has been keenly felt in the areas of social action and spirituality, our communities are still haunted by a pervasive stench of superficiality and hollowness. I hope we've made strides, but it's hard to say whether the advances I see are clouded by outbursts of wishful thinking.

Meanwhile, I was struck by a Tweet-thread by an outspoken clergy colleague in Massachusetts, who took on a Heschelian posture following the shocking injury to Buffalo Bills' safety Damar Hamlin last Monday night. Hamlin is showing signs of improvement, thankfully.


I don't agree with all that she says, and I admit to being a more than casual fan who would have trouble giving up football, no matter what how lethal it turns out to be. But these comments, made while the incident was playing out before our eyes, gave me pause. It should be noted that the game was not resumed, as we believed it would be at that time, based on confusing signals being sent by the league. The NFL thankfully did not take the macho route and continue the game. Grown men were allowed to cry and the world did not come to an end.


What role, exactly, does football play in our society? Why are we so inclined to pile human beings into that meat grinder? is there a racial element to this? Do certain lives not matter as much? Is this no better than the gladiator games of ancient Rome?


We know that the NFL minimized the dangers of CTE when they first were known, and that Hamlin's injury was much more freakish. But the dangers of concussions and spinal and other injuries seem to be on the increase, as does our willingness to look the other way.


On Monday night, America could no longer look the other way. Rev. Everett reminded us what's at stake. The hour calls for moral grandeur and spiritual audacity, and we must ask the same question that Abraham Joshua Heschel asked the President of the United States: Have we forfeited the right to worship God in how we've brought pain to our fellow human beings?

I'm going to reserve most of this Shabbat-O-Gram for Heschel's words today, as I share some of his most challenging pleas, calls that still ring true a half century later.









See below a photo of Dr. Heschel (extreme right) at a convocation in my home synagogue, with my father, Cantor Michal Hammerman (on the left)

leading the procession.


UPON ENTERING THE TEMPLE

Abraham Joshua Heschel

 

What does a person expect to attain when entering a Temple? In the pursuit of learning one goes to a library; for esthetic enrichment one goes to the art museum; for pure music, to the concert hall. What then is the purpose of going to the Temple?

 

Many are the facilities which help us to acquire the important worldly virtues, skills, and techniques. But where should one learn about the insights of the spirit? Many are the opportunities for public speech; where are the occasions for inner silence? It is easy to find people who will teach us how to be eloquent; but who will teach us how to be still? It is surely important to develop a sense of humor; but is it not also important to have a sense of reverence?

 

Where should one learn the eternal wisdom of compassion? The fear of being cruel? The danger of being callous? Where should one learn that the greatest truth is found in contribution? Important and precious as the development of our intellectual faculties, the cultivation of a sensitive conscience is indispensable. We are all in danger of sinking into the darkness of vanity; we are all involved in worshipping our own egos. Where should we become sensitive to the pitfalls of cleverness, or to the realization that expedience is not the acme of wisdom?

 

We are constantly in need of experiencing moments in which the spiritual is as relevant and as concrete, for example as the esthetic. Everyone has a sense of beauty; everyone is capable of distinguishing between the beautiful and the ugly. But we must learn to be sensitive to the spirit. It is in the Temple where we must try to acquire such inwardness, such sensitivity.

 

From "Existence and Celebration"

Abraham Joshua Heschel

From "The Sabbath"

From "Existence and Celebration"

From "No Religion is an Island"


One of the results of the rapid depersonalization of our age is a crisis of speech, profanation of language. We have trifled with the name of God, we have taken the name and the word of the Holy in vain. Language has been reduced to labels, talk has become double-talk. We are in the process of losing faith in the reality of words.


Yet prayer can happen only when words reverberate with power and inner life, when uttered as an earnest, as a promise. On the other hand, there is a high degree of obsolescence in the traditional language of the theology of prayer. Renewal of prayer calls for a renewal of language, of cleansing the words, of revival of meanings.


The strength of faith is in silence, and in words that hibernate and wait. Uttered faith must come out as a surplus of silence, as the fruit of lived faith, of enduring intimacy.


Theological education must deepen privacy, strive for daily renewal of innerness, cultivate ingredients of religious existence, reverence and responsibility.

Recommended Reading...

See this week's essay on Substack - and subscribe to my feed!


Popular Parsha Packets for Vayechi

In the Wake of the Asian Tsunami Disaster - Poems, prayers and reflections on the great natural disaster that killed tens of thousands.

How Antisemitism Distorts Our Vision - "I hate what antisemitism does to Jews. I hate the fear that it instills."

Patrilineal Possibilities - Joseph's sons Ephraim and Manasseh were products of intermarriage, and patrilineal descent. What gives?

Dying Desires: Jacob,, Joseph and the Five Wishes Letting your loved ones know what you would want for yourself and them, as the end draws near.

Why Was Joseph Snubbed? - A dialogue on why Joseph is not counted as one of the patriarchs of Genesis. includes my ideas.






Israel


  • For this week's Hebrew front page, below, we feature the visit to the Temple Mount by new minister and veteran flame thrower Itamar Ben Gvir. It employs a play on words, saying, Ben Gvir's visit to the Temple Mount: Harsh criticism from the world. The words for "visit" and "criticism" are nearly identical. Which makes sense. To visit (or in some cases, revisit) something is to inquire about it, and an investigation typically leads to passing some sort of judgment. Bikur - the word for visit, can be a mitzvah, as in bikur holim, visiting the sick. in this case it is a simple demonstration of power, and yet another reason why with this particular government, it can't be "business as usual" for those of us who love Israel. incidentally, the sidebar column (lower right) is by Avi Issacharoff, veteran journalist and co-creator of "Fauda." The headline? Before the storm.



  • And see just below the front page, the Rabbinical Assembly's statement responding to to the judicial reforms that the new government is already trying to enact.


  • Several hundred prominent U.S. rabbis have signed a letter pledging not to allow members of the Religious Zionist bloc to speak in their communities. “When those who tout racism and bigotry claim to speak in the name of Israel, but deny our rights, our heritage, and the rights of the most vulnerable among us, we must take action,” the letter stated. I am among the hundreds who have signed it. 
  
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