Monday, December 11, 2023

Report From Israel - Day 2 -November 28, 2023

 

Dear Friends,

In the Torah portion for this week, Vayishlach, Jacob wrestles with a mysterious being before he confronts his brother Esau.  Prior to this mysterious encounter we find the following in Genesis 32;11:

קָטֹ֜נְתִּי מִכֹּ֤ל הַחֲסָדִים֙ וּמִכׇּל־הָ֣אֱמֶ֔ת אֲשֶׁ֥ר עָשִׂ֖יתָ אֶת־עַבְדֶּ֑ךָ כִּ֣י בְמַקְלִ֗י עָבַ֙רְתִּי֙ אֶת־הַיַּרְדֵּ֣ן הַזֶּ֔ה וְעַתָּ֥ה הָיִ֖יתִי לִשְׁנֵ֥י מַחֲנֽוֹת׃

I am unworthy of all the kindness that You have so steadfastly shown Your servant: with my staff alone I crossed this Jordan, and now I have become two camps.

As I think about the remarkable individuals that we have encountered during the past two days, these words of Jacob take on a whole new meaning. Like Jacob, many of feel us as though we are split in two as we try to wrap our heads around the trauma that surrounds us. Those of us who have watched the events unfolding in Israel and Gaza feel a sense of horror as we learn about what happened on October 7th.  Here in Israel, that horror is multiplied a hundredfold as people experience it on a deeply personal level. Loved ones have been murdered or kidnapped. The waiting for news is exhausting. No one is unscathed – everyone is either related to or knows someone who has a connection to a victim, a soldier, or a mourner.

At yet, despite the pain – or perhaps because of it, life goes on in Israel. “Normalcy” is a relative term as over 150,000 refugees from both the Gaza envelope and the North are being resettled in hotels, kibbutzim, and temporary housing. But the beauty of Israeli society is also nremarkable.  Even in the midst of grief, fear and anger, children are going back to school. Babies are being born. Funerals are being held. Businesses, while suffering, are opening their doors. People are doing all that they can to create some semblance of routine. There is incredible beauty in resiliency.  At the same time, everyone seems to be holding their breath as they wait for the next chapter of this painful story to unfold.

On this second day of our mission, we met with many people who were directly impacted by the war. Our first stop was Kibbutz Mishmar Ha Emek in the Jezriel Valley.  This kibbutz has opened its doors to members of their sister Kibbutz, Nahal Oz which was attacked on October 7th. We sat with several members of Nahal OZ and heard their stories- some of which were triumphant, and others were tragic. For this post, Some  of you may have heard about Tami (Tamar) Raanan. She is a member of Kibbutz Nahal Oz and her daughter and granddaughter from the US had come to visit her in early October in order to celebratI will not share the e her 85th birthday. Both her daughter and granddaughter were kidnapped by the Hamas Terrorists. Due to the direct involvement of President Biden, both of them were returned safely – weeks before the current hostage and prisoner exchanges. Tami met with Biden and during her meeting she told him: “I am happy that my children were released, but you must do everything you can to release the rest - and I will help you.”

Tamar (Tami) Raanan

(Amir Tibon and Rabbi Josh Weinberg)

We also met with Amir Tibon - a reporter from HaAretz newspaper who survived the attack hidden in a safe room with his wife and two daughters – aged 1½ and 3. When it was clear that the IDF was not coming to help, he called his father, a retired general who got into his jeep with his wife and drove down from Tel Aviv to save them. Their remarkable story was widely reported in the news – most recently on 60 minutes.

Amir had some harsh words for the Netanyahu government who, he said, had abandoned his community. He told us that there was an agreement into which all of the impacted communities had entered:  They would serve as a first line of protection on the border – they would raise their childrenband create a meaningful life while the Government and IDF would ensure their protection. The failure promptly respond to the worst attack on Jews since the Shoah meant that, while Nahal Oz and its members kept their part of the agreement, the government had not.

And yet, while the government’s failures are widely known, one of the most remarkable aspects of life in Israel today is how society instantly came together to help those in need. Once again – we see the duality and resilience of Israeli society. Within 24 hours of the attacks, individuals, communities and groups from every side rallied to provide housing, clothing, food, counseling services and economic aid to the refugees who fled with little more than the clothes on their backs. Kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek literally tripled in size overnight as it welcomed members from Nahal Oz. They were not alone. Among the organizers of the aid were those, who just a few weeks earlier, had been coordinating the massive protests against the government. The NGO’s and volunteers who had created a remarkably effective system of protest, now rallied to provide vital services to those in need. They were able to do what the government could not. Not one government minister has come to visit, offer assistance or even check in with the refugees from the Gaza envelope.

At Mishmar Ha Emek we also met with several Israeli Reform rabbis who serve regional councils – traveling from kibbutz to kibbutz, village to village. Theirs is a rabbinate of personal connection.  They have no physical buildings, but they have been able to sit at the sides of their congregants – giving them a shoulder upon which to cry, a prayer to recite, a hug or a soft touch. They understand and embody the importance of being a calm, sacred presence.

(Israeli Reform Rabbis)


From the Jezriel Valley, we journeyed north to Haifa to meet with students and faculty of the Leo Baeck school. A pillar of Reform Judaism in Israel where (as an aside I studied for 4 months in 1975 when I was an exchange student in Israel during my Junior year), Leo Baeck is a remarkable institution. It prides itself in serving Jewish, Christian and Arab communities. Students at Leo Baeck shared with us how they volunteered in the community and helped to assimilate refugees from both the North and south. We met with Arab teachers and students, and learned first-hand how high school students volunteered in the community to help gather supplies for soldiers and welcome refugees into their midst.

We ended our very long day at Congregation Or Chadash in Haifa.  This is one of the oldest and most successful Reform Congregations in Israel.  Their rabbis, Na'ama Dafni-Kellen, and Gabby Dagan shared how their community rallied the day after the attack to prepare supplies, offer counseling services, raise funds and deliver collections to soldiers, refugees and individuals affected physically, emotionally and spiritually by the war.


(Rabbis Na'ama Dafni-Kellen, and Gabby Dagan )

This is only a small taste of a very long and powerful day.  Tomorrow we go to the Knesset and then to Tel Aviv where we will join with groups of the families of those who are still being held as hostages by Hamas.  Together we will pray, cry and call out to God for their release.

Shalom From Jerusalem!

Rabbi Joseph R. Black


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