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#BringThemHomeNow
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Jul 30, 2014
Major Israel Rally in San Francisco this Sunday, August 3, 12:00PM-2:00PM
Jul 29, 2014
A word about the current ripples of Jewish trauma.
Why are there more Palestinian deaths than Israelis?
in two weeks: "Overwhelmed by Argument: The Conversation I Want to Have Now" Convened by Josh Kornbluth
Jul 28, 2014
we haven't YET lost hope
Do We Stand With Israel?
Support JNF’s emergency relief efforts in Israel!
Below is a report of JNF's actions in the crisis. You can support JNF's important work online at www.jnf.org.
Responding to the needs of the people of Israel during Operation Protective Edge, JNF has taken immediate and decisive action since July 8.
Additionally, JNF's Rabbis for Israel have mobilized:
• Four synagogues have committed to purchasing bomb shelters at $30K each,
• Five rabbis have joined Rabbis for Israel since the Emergency Campaign began,
• Dozens of congregations have begun JNF fundraising pages (JNF will help you do this),
• Rabbis across the country are making pulpit appeals for JNF,
• Many rabbis and congregants are now in Israel on JNF's Solidarity Mission, July 27 - 31.
Participants will meet Knesset Ministers, visit an Iron Dome battery, pack food and supplies for soldiers and deliver them to the front, pack food and supplies for firefighters and deliver them to Be'er Sheva, work with kids at the Sderot Indoor Recreation Center, meet with Nefesh B'Nefesh olim making aliyah in the midst of the crisis, meet with American high schoolers at JNF's Alexander Muss High School in Israel, and much more.
This is JNF in action. Please share with your congregants all that JNF is doing at this critical time. We hope you and your community will join our relief effort. If you would like pledge cards, a fundraising web page for your congregation, or to get involved in any other way, please email us at education@jnf.org. #JNFalwayswithIsrael.
Aaron Parker
| Executive Director
Northern California and Pacific Northwest
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six must-read articles
- Noa (Achinoam Nini)'s "Open Letter to the Wind" (http://noa-the-singer.blogspot.co.il/2014/07/open-letter-to-wind.html)
- Rabbi Donniel Hartman's "The War in Gaza: What I Know and What I Do Not Know" (http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-war-in-gaza-what-i-know-and-what-i-do-not-know/)
- Etgar Keret's "Israel's Other War" (http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/israels-other-war)
- Naomi Chazan's "Tunnel Vision" (http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/tunnel-vision-2/).
- David Horovitz's "John Kerry: The Betrayal" (http://www.timesofisrael.com/john-kerry-the-betrayal/)
- Barak David's "Kerry's Cease-fire Draft Revealed" (http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.607379)
Jul 25, 2014
A Pre-Shabbat note: Dignity, Unity, and Pride
A Pre-Shabbat note: Dignity, Unity, and Pride
© Rabbi Menachem Creditor
Friends, I'm working on a follow-up piece to "I'm Done Apologizing for Israel," incorporating some of the language and reactions. I've made the decision to not link the articles/blogposts being written at me (barely any are actually about what i actually write in my article), so as not to give voice or exposure to the hatred. I'd much rather amplify the pride the Jewish world should take in our commitment to retain our humanity and act with restraint despite this terror onslaught and PR war.
When the carnage is smoldering in the rear-view mirror, as it hopefully will be soon, we'll have to do some personal/communal accounting about what we've learned, who we mean to be as a people, how we lead ourselves forward, the language we allow our leaders to use when speaking about Palestinians, and more. That work is an always-task, including now, which is why I'm so amazed at the Israeli Press' dynamism, even in the midst of war.
The focus of Diaspora Jews in this moment must be on the immediate, on countering the horrible lies, and acknowledging (as I myself witnessed yesterday from the mouths of other speakers on KQED Forum) that for Hamas, the "occupation" they are looking to end is 1948, the State of Israel itself. We have much work ahead, but if we can take a small teaching from this week's Torah Portion: The Israelites continued their journey "B'Yad Ramah", with “a raised hand,” which I understand to mean that they emerged from terrible tribulation with their pride intact, with unity, and with human dignity.
May it be so today.
Amen.
#life #blessing #joy
Jul 24, 2014
Why do I Tremble?
© Rabbi Menachem Creditor
cup of coffee in trembling hand,
I reflect: Why do I tremble?
I'm not under threat, am I?
my mother, my daughter, my son..
They'll be fine, won't they?
is only words,
isn't it?
couldn't change anything..
Could it?
We'll be fine.
Won't we?
That's why.
Jul 22, 2014
My Times of Israel piece : "The End of Theory"
OPS & BLOGS > MENACHEM CREDITOR
The End of Theory
The mission was designed as a progressive rabbinic mission, the first of its kind by AIPAC. We were to visit Israeli and Palestinian human rights activists, scheduled to engage in serious conversation about “the balance,” as Yossi Klein Halevi phrased it so eloquently during dinner our first night, “between the need to retain our humanity and the need to protect ourselves.” Well, as of that very evening, the theoretical conversation is over. I sat later that night with fellow rabbis in Jerusalem during a red alert. We were guided into the staircases of our hotel lobby when the siren went off, and then hotel staff distributed instructions for what we should do in case of another air raid siren. This was our new “normal” that night.
Once that moment passed, the hotel lobby became a mass of status-updating and family-contacting. I shared with my colleague Rabbi Dan Cohen a moment ofimpromptu pastoral counseling for a family of tourists from Colombia and Miami, asking us, “can you please tell us what’s happening” with eyes that spoke a fear and vulnerability they were only visiting but that Israel knows all too well. This vignette pales, though, when compared to a call my brother-in-law-to-be received from a neighbor, who was waiting in a bomb shelter with her two small small children, and didn’t know if it was safe to come out yet.
Friends, the theoretical conversations are powerful and significant. They are also radically far from the reality on the ground. As Halevi shared in his provocative presentation, an evening that feels like it occurred years ago already, the last few years of relative quiet for Israel have now come to an abrupt end. In one hour that night, and in every hour since, rockets were fired from Gaza, reaching Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Herzelia, and Binyamin. More than 1,000 rockets have struck Israel in the past two weeks & dozens were intercepted by the Iron Dome. Millions ofIsraelis, from Haifa to Be’er Sheva, are under threat and must be ready to take shelter within 90 seconds. (For those seeking the comfort of a small miracle, one rocket from Gaza exploded that night next to an Ashdod event hall hosting multiple weddings, and there were no casualties.)
My innocence was lost some time ago, but portions I’ve been desperately clinging to have been torn at yet again. When the terrorist kidnapping and murdering of three Israeli boys was met by the Palestinian Authority handing out treats in celebration and the Jewish terrorist kidnapping and burning alive of a Palestinian teen was met by global Israeli and Jewish condemnation, my hope for imminent peace evaporated. Theoretical constructs for reconciliation being bandied about on social media are good (and less-good) theories. Today, yet again, is the end of theory.
That first night in Jerusalem I sat in shock with rabbinic colleagues who came toIsrael to amplify the progressive Jewish values that define us as a People, values we will continue to work to amplify in our homeland. We will never abandon those sacred principles. As Halevi reminded us, they are the crucial balance to what we experienced first hand tonight: the urgent need to keep our People safe in the face of real threats to our very existence.
There can be a severe disconnect between the many conversations that take place in the abstract and the immediate reality on the ground in Israel. Back home in Berkeley, this often occurs in what I’ve come to feel is the “extreme-sport” of fierce anti-Israel rhetoric being met by the defensive posture taken by the Jewish community. That defensive posture ignores the necessity of Israel‘s military response to terrorism. Jewish tradition teaches that the true measure ofmight (“gevurah“) is restraint, to which I bear testimony tonight. Hamas, part ofthe Palestinian Unity government, positions its rocket launchers in civilian population centers because it knows Israel‘s historical restraint from firing at civilians. Halevi pointed out that, since 2000, Hamas has shifted its tactics: instead of a war against the Israeli army, it is conducting war against Israelicivilians. Israel‘s restraint is sorely tested, time after time, bus after bus, hotel Pesach Seders, youth discos, coffee houses and kidnapped and murdered teenagers. Israel‘s restraint in the face of terror is simply incalculable. Despite facing the monsters who intentionally murder civilians, we refuse to become monsters.
That Israel has not unleashed its power beyond defensive tactics is important to know, share, and applaud. I’d do more of that, if I weren’t so shell-shocked from hiding that night in a bomb shelter with scared friends and strangers, Jews and others, residents and tourists. We all felt like children, wondering if it was safe to come out yet. Two days later, I witnessed Iron Dome knock our a missile right above my head. There is nothing theoretical about me being alive to write these words. I am grateful to the United States for standing with Israel as it continues to struggle for its very existence.
While I pray that Israel continues to demonstrate the sacred strength of restraint, I stand in solidarity tonight with residents throughout Israel knowing that our national safety will tragically demand more than readiness from the 40,000 reservists called up, the more than 20 soldiers who have lost their lives to date in surgical strikes to decimate Hamas’ weapon-smuggling tunnels.
I’ve never been more determined to bring our family together, to be strong and stand together. I was so glad to be in Israel. Leaving was excruciating. How can I bear to be far from my family when it is under threat?
I feel to my soul these days that Israel is where I belong. With my family. With our People. And, if we do not live in Israel ourselves, standing shoulder to shoulder with our sisters and brothers, we have a duty to stand with her, speaking, posting, marching, weeping, celebrating, lobbying, and praying for her safety and peace.
Read more: The End of Theory | Menachem Creditor | Ops & Blogs | The Times of Israel http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-end-of-theory/#ixzz38F6C2Zre
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