In
the 20th century, three new holy days were inserted to the Jewish
calendar based on the massively significant events of the Shoah and the
Establishment of the State of Israel: Yom HaShoah v'Hagveurah, Yom HaZikkaron,
Yom HaAtzmaut. Yom HaShoah v'Hagveurah is the Memorial Day for the Shoah and
the Resistance and was placed on the 27th Day of Nissan because that
was the day on which the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising started (1943). Yom HaAtzmaut (Independence
Day) is the 5th of Iyyar because Israel was declared a state on that
day in 1948, when the British Mandate ended. Yom HaZikkaron (Memorial Day for
Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terror) precedes Yom HaAtzmaut because how can
we celebrate Israel's independence without first stopping to remember those who
have fought for – or suffered as a result of – the existence of this land?
And
so the country stops today. We stopped at 8pm tonight (April 24) for a minute
while a siren sounded across the country. We stood in an outdoor theater with
roughly 4,000 people, who stood motionless and emotion-filled. The service
tonight was filled with readings and stories of people who died in terror acts
as well as in battles in Israel's wars. There was music, psalms, and prayers.
There were little blue and white lights. Everyone there knew why we were there.
No one needed an explanation. There were observances all over the country
tonight – and there will be tomorrow as well. Everywhere. Everywhere everyone
is touched. And the slogan of the group that organizes observances, marches,
and prayers during these intense eight days, "Between Yom HaShoah and Yom
HaAtzmaut, we are all Israelis." Just reading the quote brings tears to my
eyes. The life of an American living in Israel has been compared to kissing
someone through a sheet of glass. I can identify with that statement (and may
in another post). But for now, this week, I feel very Israeli. I am weighed
down by the complex history and uncertain future. I am filled with pride over
the efforts of so many whom I will never have known but who worked to make this
land available to me. I am so grateful that Israel exists, no matter how
perfect or imperfect. I feel deeply connected with the stories, the land, the
heroism, the need. I realize this land's future and mine have been inextricably
connected since my DNA test proved that I was here 2,000/3,000 or so years ago.
And I am here now and every time I leave here – I leave a part of myself here.
It is not that I don't find fulfillment and satisfaction elsewhere. Clearly I
do. But my complete self is in this land of my people and ancestors.
As
part of the commemoration tonight at the Sultan's Pool, a rabbi gave a d'var
torah. This week's Torah portion is Kedoshim (holiness) and he drew on the verse,
"You shall keep my statutes and my judgments…and live by them…" We
live by the mitzvot of Torah, he explained. We live holy lives based not on how
well we perform those mitzvot but by how well we take care of other people. Our
lives will be judged not on the length of our beard or how kosher our kitchen
is but rather on what kind of positive impact we have made in other people's
lives. We are to guard the commandments of Torah – and there is no greater
commandment than "love your neighbor as yourself," which also appears
in this week's Torah portion. Those who have fought for this land and died defending
the population here have done so without ever knowing how many lives they have loved,
touched, inspired, and saved.
May
we each have the chance to leave this world a better place through the
connections we make with our fellow human beings and all of God's creation. May
Yom HaZikkaron be a time to remember but also to celebrate life and to consider
our responsibility to one another.
May
those who have died in Israel's wars and fallen as victims of terror be bound
up in the bond of eternal life and may we work to preserve their memory as a
blessing.
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