|      Sivan 17, 5774   June 14, 2014        An amazing CNS Shabbat: Great davening and Torah, celebrating  an aufrauf of two precious souls, marking a sweet young person becoming  bar mitzvah, hosting the HIAS Country Director in Uganda to learn  about how we, as a Shul, can participate in refugee resettlement, and  standing together praying for three kidnapped Jewish boys to be  redeemed from captivity. It felt like the five years we prayed every  Shabbat for Gilad Shalit were back, and the pain was and is just so  deep.            We are a special kind of shul whose members support New Israel  Fund, AIPAC, J Street, Rabbis for Human Rights, FIDF, and others. But today we  all left our politics behind and just held our boys in our hearts and  wept as part of the larger Jewish family. All this is what makes our  community so amazing.         I knew, when I plugged back in, after Havdalah, that I'd  see some continued anti-Israel comments on my social media platforms.  But the magnitude, volume, and tenor was a harsh reminder that all is  not well nor stable for Jews in the world.         I deleted most of the hatred on my various media streams,  but took a screen shot of a random selection and saved it as a reminder  of an important point: there are some who believe that anti-Zionists are  not anti-Semites. I reject the dichotomy, not because (politically  speaking) a theoretical formula is impossible, but rather because the  reality is that the two are conflated and overlap and are inextricably  bound (which is how, as a religious Zionist I believe it should be in the first place). But my  point is that, even if I believed they were separate, that "careful  thinking" is eviscerated by the hatred of both.           I could point to the  Shoah as "proof" that the world sees Jews as an identifiable global  People, but we need not go that far for evidence. All I had to do was  turn my phone back on.              Even if we would (God-forbid), try to forget that Eyal , Naftali, and Gilad are our sons, their abduction and our hearts' collective ache remind us that their fates are bound with ours,  and that reality trumps theoretical constructs every time.          I highly recommend Ari Shavit's "My Promised Land," as its  pain is all our pain. He doesn't let anyone off the hook. And his  critique of the left's approach rang in my ears when I read some of the antisemitic  comments on my social media streams tonight. My personal commitment to Two  States for Two Peoples is well-addressed by his analysis, and I believe his  critique of the messianisms of the "right" and the "left" when it comes  to Israeli politics should be required reading for all Jews.           But really, what I want more than sympathy for my  discomfort at some online hate-speech is to #Bring Back Our Boys. We can soothe each other's wounds and sort out political theories later, once  they're home.         May Yaakov Naftali ben Rachel Devora, Gilad Michael ben Bat  Galim, and Eyal ben Iris Teshurah be returned safe and healthy to their  homes very, very, very soon.         May all children be safe.       Shavuah Tov - may it be a good week,   Rabbi Creditor               |