Saturday, May 15, 2021

Israel and the Wilderness of the Present: Parashat Bamidbar

 

This week’s Torah portion, Bamidbar translates as “In the wilderness.”  God speaks to Moses Bamidbar Sinai – in the wilderness of Sinai.  This morning, I want to begin by unpacking the meaning of Midbar­/wilderness. Those of us who are blessed to live in the beautiful state of Colorado understand the beauty and power of spending time in the wilderness.  We know that a key feature of getting away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life is that when we are amid the beauty of nature, we remove ourselves from the past and the future and revel in the immediacy of the present.  When we walk in the wilderness, we are aware of what’s around us – our senses are highly tuned – alert to both the wonders and the possible dangers that surround us.

 

In the Midrash, we find the following passage relating to the fact that God gave the world Torah in the wilderness.


Adonai spoke to Moshe in the wilderness of Sinai...(Numbers 1:1): Why [was Torah given] in the wilderness of Sinai? From this the Sages taught: Torah was given to the accompaniment of three things: fire, water, and wilderness...Why was the giving of the Torah marked by these three features? To indicate that as these are free to all in the world, so also are the words of the Torah free...Anyone who does not make herself as open [hefker/ownerless] as the wilderness, is not able to acquire wisdom and Torah. (Numbers Rabbah 1:7

 

I’ve always loved that midrash. It speaks to me on a number of levels. But this morning, I want to recognize that there are different types of wilderness that we will encounter in our lives

 

First there is the natural wilderness – the wide open spaces that inspire us to be more open, creative and appreciative of God’s creation

 

But we also will encounter wildernesses of intellect and ideas. These emerge when we encounter individuals and movements that are based completely on the present – without any relationship to the past.  These are wildernesses without perspective. They are the result of a lack of desire to look deeply into the world around us – oftentimes because of laziness or preconceived notions based exclusively on how we wish the world would be – rather than how it really is.  We have see this in many places:

 

    • The Anti-vax movement that relies on half-truths and shoddy research to inspire fear and distrust.
    • The past year has shown us how deep, divisive and deadly racism can be.  Those who cling to a preconceived notion of racial superiority are blind to the history and devastating consequences of these beliefs.
    • We have seen the intellectual wilderness of a Mob mentality - the kind of wilderness that would cause a group of people to believe in a conspiracy theory that caused them to attack our nation’s capital and question the legitimacy of an election.

Today, we are seeing another example of the wilderness of ideas - playing out in the press, on social media and daily conversation as cries of condemnation rise up against the State of Israel in this tragic time of war and violence.

 

It is difficult to watch the scenes of carnage playing out in Israel and Gaza. I weep as I see my family and friends scrambling to bomb shelters as thousands of Hamas’ rockets are fly over their homes – 90% of which as disabled by the Iron Dome system – thanks to the partnership between our nation and Israel – but that still leaves hundreds of rockets that find their targets.  The psychological toll on parents and children – and even those of us who watch from afar – will be difficult to measure in the weeks, months and years that are to come.

 

I cry in horror as the IDF retaliates against Hamas in Gaza with air raids against strategic targets  - taking out terror cells, underground tunnels and ammunition depots – while, at the same time, killing innocents who were caught up in the carnage.

 

It is unbelievable to see mobs of angry Arabs and Jews fighting in the streets of Akko, Jaffa, Haifa, Lod – synagogues being burned, mosques looted, Jewish businesses that for decades stood side by side with their Muslim and Christian Neighbors – overnight torn down and destroyed….

 

And as we sit with baited breath on our safe perches here in America we hear the cries of condemnation and hatred emerging from Social Media

 where the clarion call of intersectionality is being used to manipulate and obfuscate arenas of injustice and hatred with those of a complicated and multi-dimensional conflict that cannot be reduced to tweets, memes and Instagram posts.

 

While the suffering of the Palestinian people is real, while the blood that is shed in Gaza is no different from that of Sderot, Ashkelon, Beer Sheva, Tel Aviv, Akko, Jerusalem or any other city in Israel where violence and terror is raging, in order to fully comprehend the evil that has caused this most recent conflict, we need a sense of perspective.  We cannot live in the wilderness of an Eternal Now – that has no ability or desire to explore how this current tragedy came to be in the first place.

 

Let me be clear: there is blame to be cast on all sides of this conflict:

  • The leadership vacuum caused by multiple elections, scandal and distrust in the current government of Israel has paved the way for extremists on all sides of the issue to have their hatred amplified.
  • The presence of avowed racists in the Knesset.
  • The powder-keg of the confluence of Ramadan, Jerusalem Day and the complicated and multi-layered court case around the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of Eastern Jerusalem all combined to provide extremely fertile ground for propagandists to promote their agenda of hatred – on all sides.
  • The tensions rising in the lead-up to and, subsequent cancelling of elections in the West Bank – where the Palestinian Authority’s increasing insignificance in the eyes of the Palestinian population and Hamas’ political gains all have played into the hands of those who wanted nothing more than to sow chaos
  • The refusal of the current Israeli Government to seriously engage the idea of a 2 State solution,

And these are only a few variables in what has become a Gordian Knot of a complicated equation of life and death, violence and a rapidly shrinking potential for peace.

For those who would defend Hamas’ actions – I want to read a section of the Hamas Founding Charter that speaks of the Jewish people and the Jewish State:

Our struggle against the Jews is very great and very serious. It needs all sincere efforts. The Islamic Resistance Movement is but one squadron that should be supported...until the enemy is vanquished and Allah's victory is realized. It strives to raise the banner of Allah over every inch of Palestine...It is one of the links in the chain of the struggle against the Zionist invaders...

....There is no solution for the Palestine question except through Jihad. Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are all a waste of time and vain endeavors. Palestine is an Islamic land.

Zionist organizations under various names and shapes, such as Freemasons, Rotary Clubs, espionage groups and others...are all nothing more than cells of subversion and saboteurs. The Islamic peoples should perform their role in confronting the conspiracies of these saboteurs.

Our enemies took control of the world media. They were behind the French Revolution and the Communist Revolution....They were behind World War I, when they were able to destroy the Islamic Caliphate, making financial gains and controlling resources. They obtained the Balfour Declaration, formed the League of Nations through which they could rule the world. They were behind World War II, through which they made huge financial gains by trading in armaments, and paved the way for the establishment of their state. It was they that instigated the replacement of the League of Nations with the United Nations and the Security Council to enable them to rule the world through them. There is no war going on any where, without [them] having their finger in it[i].

 

Let me be clear: those who are launching rockets onto Israeli soil are not seeking freedom and liberation. That could have been granted a long time ago if they had demonstrated a willingness to find a pathway to peace. Hamas’ goal is not to coexist with the Jewish State, they will never stop until Israel is destroyed. Period.


Israel has the military might to defend herself against this enemy – and others who sit poised on her border – supported by the terrorist regimes in Iran whose proxies promote the hatred and rhetoric of Hamas.


But the quandary that Israel faces is that every time the IDF is called on to defend her Israeli citizens - every time that soldiers stop an attack or act in retaliation, the cries of condemnation that reverberate through the wilderness of propaganda and social media expose a wilderness of intentional ignorance that is oblivious to the fact that a sovereign state has both the right and responsibility to defend itself against an existential threat to its people.

 

Israel is facing multiple crises today. The fact that the electoral process has failed to produce a viable coalition government  - while the current Prime Minister is on trial for corruption – does not bode well for either stability or the prospect of a negotiated peace leading to a two state solution. Crisis, as we know all too well, causes people to lose perspective. It plays into the hands of those who would sow chaos in order to gain power. I pray for all those whose lives are in balance. I fear for Democracy and hopes for peace in a land that I love and for whom I weep when I see despair.

 

Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. Pray for the peace of Gaza. Pray for the ability to gain perspective that will lead us out of the Wilderness into a promised land of understand, coexistence and hope.


AMEN - Shabbat shalom



[i] https://embassies.gov.il/holysee/AboutIsrael/the-middle-east/Pages/The%20Hamas-Covenant.aspx

1 comment:

  1. Beautiful and informative sermon,Rabbi Black. Thank you

    Harriet Fernandez. (steven Stark’s aunt)

    ReplyDelete