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Toward creating a national mitzvah day

 
 
 

On Sept. 9, the Jewish community will joyously welcome in the year 5771.

Although Rosh HaShanah is a time of celebration, the holiday also marks the beginning of the serious introspection and reflection undertaken throughout the Days of Awe.

Individuals will look at their actions over the past year to reflect on their achievements and shortcomings. Yet limiting the introspective nature of the High Holidays to individuals alone would be a serious error. The new year also presents an opportunity for group reflection and evaluation.

At this time, when we all engage with our own personal struggles toward improvement, the American Jewish community can also make group efforts toward a better future

So, where are our communal shortcomings? The answer points to considering ourselves not only as Jewish individuals but also as part of a larger Jewish community.

On Rosh HaShanah and other holidays, many Jews across America unite in collective celebration. This unity positively affects both the relationship among Jews and the relationship between Jews and their non-Jewish neighbors.

As a whole, the American Jewish community encompasses a broad range of geographic locations and religious interpretations. At times, these differences facilitate meaningful dialogue and discussion, but all too often they serve as barriers to mutual respect and collaboration.

Events that unite the national Jewish population, however, have the potential to provide temporary alleviation from internal conflict and contention.

On Rosh HaShanah, for example, American Jews celebrate in a variety of forms, but we really engage in a joint celebration. By recognizing that our individual actions are part of a larger celebration, we can recognize the commonalities of our behavior instead of the differences. Because the Jewish community is particularly visible during nationally recognized events, these occasions helps us view ourselves as members of a broad and diverse Jewish family. Thus, Jewish events ease tension and facilitate ahavat Yisrael — loving our fellow Jews.

These days of unity also lead to an increased Jewish profile throughout America. On Rosh HaShanah, major news stations will mention the holiday, newspapers will feature articles about the day’s significance, and non-Jewish friends will be likely to wish you a happy new year. Even the White House typically sends out Rosh HaShanah greetings.

This heightened national Jewish profile is beneficial because it is an opportunity for the American Jewish community to be recognized and respected. It’s also an opportunity to appear as a united group.

Given that nationally recognized Jewish events strengthen relationships and foster community, we can improve the American Jewish future by finding additional opportunities for group recognition of an event. The challenge to doing so, however, is to find common ground upon which we, as American Jews, can put aside our differences and disagreements to demonstrate who we are and what we can accomplish.

I believe this common ground takes form in the universal Jewish values of chesed (kindness), tzedakah (charity), and tikkun olam (social justice). The American Jewish community — noted for a commitment to community service, volunteerism, and philanthropic giving — already boasts an enormous number of Mitzvah Days that honor these values.

But the existing events are isolated in nature and thus do not foster a broad sense of cooperative strength and communal power. These benefits could be obtained easily through coordinating an annual event in which the American Jewish community demonstrates its continued commitment to mitzvot and gemilut chasadim — good deeds and loving kindness. Call it a national Mitzvah Day, if you will.

Let Britain’s nationwide Mitzvah Day serve as an example. The annual event, called UK Mitzvah Day, is “a day where Jews lead the way, one day a year enjoying giving back, making a difference, all together.”

The concept behind UK Mitzvah Day illustrates that the event transforms individual doers of good deeds into national leaders, representative of the Jewish community’s dedication and commitment to service and world improvement. In America, some efforts to establish a Mitzvah Day with national scope already have been initiated. J-Serve: Jewish Teens Serving the World is an annual national service event intended to engage Jewish youth in service. Big Sunday, an annual service event that attracts volunteers from throughout Southern California, grew out of Temple Israel of Hollywood’s Mitzvah Day.

Yet, for a national Mitzvah Day to achieve its highest potential, there must be an event that can incorporate everyone, regardless of age, location, or ideology.

The logistics of when to schedule the event, how to keep track of participants and how to incorporate Jewish values into service projects all present challenges, but these challenges are not insurmountable.

With 15 years of experience in the field of Jewish education, I had precisely these obstacles in mind in 2002, when I founded Areyvut, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping youth enrich their lives with Jewish values. Since then, the Areyvut staff has worked with passion and determination to develop programs that can successfully overcome these challenges.

As we celebrate and reflect at the start of this new year, I suggest we save a spot among our goals and resolutions for national Mitzvah Day development and participation. Doing so will provide the opportunity to overcome geographic and ideological differences and to celebrate the power derived from honoring the values of chesed, tzedakah, and tikkun olam. Certainly, that would be the start of a sweet new year.

JTA

Daniel Rothner
Daniel Rothner is the founder and director of Areyvut, which is based in Bergenfield. Mollie Feldman, a senior at Carleton College who served as an Areyvut intern and developed materials for Make a Difference Day 2011, also contributed to this piece.
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A public offer to Chabad

When Rabbi Shmuley Boteach approached me to read the manuscript of his newly published book “Kosher Jesus,” I was reticent and even a bit cautious, given the massive and diverse audience of people likely to be affected by his unique perspective on the subject of Jesus. Having now read the book, however, I can say that I was pleasantly surprised to find that his approach resolved many outstanding questions that I myself have struggled with in my religious studies, particularly as they relate to Christianity and its impact on Judaism throughout history.

Still, I felt the need to interrogate Boteach further in order to discover what his intentions had been for penning this latest work on a conspicuously controversial topic. As it turns out, his earliest efforts to uncover the real facts regarding the origin of Christianity stemmed from his exasperation by the treatment unsuspecting Jews received from Christian missionaries who would target them in an attempt to convert yet another Jew to Christianity. So alarmed was Boteach at the pervasiveness of this kind of missionary work that, as a young scholar learning in yeshivah, he was often memorizing long passages of the New Testament in his Hebrew Bible classes. After all, how could he counter the words of others if he had no real knowledge of what they were saying and why they were saying it?

 

 

Our stake in ‘Beit Shemesh’

BEIT SHEMESH — It is raining as I write — a rare, cold, hard rain that is welcomed by Jerusalemites who know that it is good for them and the country. Water, like patience, is a treasured commodity here in Israel: temporarily inconvenient, but better for you in the long run.

Rain is a blessing. We pray for it.

Patience is a blessing. We pray that we have enough of it for each other.

It is a good day to stay inside and reflect on my trip to Israel and to Beit Shemesh, a city about a half-hour west of Jerusalem. Beit Shemesh and the Washington Jewish community have been partners for many years, and partners share responsibility for each other.

 

 

Israel confronts its secular identity

Suddenly, it seems, gender segregation is everywhere in Israel — buses, army bases, Jerusalem sidewalks, Beit Shemesh schoolyards and, above all, the front pages. What is going on here?

Let’s start with the buses. In the late 1990s, at the request of some charedim, the Transportation Ministry created bus lines that served charedi neighborhoods and cities. On an officially “voluntary” basis, women would enter the buses and sit in the back. These buses were deemed legally permissible because Israeli law allows discrimination when it is necessary to provide access to public services and does not harm the common weal. All the fundamental questions (necessary? common weal?) were left wide open.

 

 

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Arab anti-Semitism, from indifference to complicity

WASHINGTON – Anti-Israel sentiment in the Middle East is not merely characterized by sharp political differences. It mimics and is fueled by the most defamatory and dangerous of historical anti-Jewish themes. For confirmation, we need look no further than a widely published political cartoonist, a Jordan-based Palestinian named Emad Hajjaj. His cartoons regularly feature blatant incitement, equating Israel with the Third Reich, crudely caricaturing Jews as bloodthirsty monsters, portraying menorahs as weapons, and showing the “crucifixion” of Palestinians on a cross marked by a Star of David.

None of this is exceptional. What is surprising, or should be, is the international indifference to — indeed, complicity in — vile and incendiary Arab anti-Semitism without parallel, quantitatively or qualitatively, on the Israeli side of the regional divide. Yet B’nai B’rith has found that among those claimed as clients by Hajjaj’s public relations firm Abu Mahjoob Creative Productions Company are not only several local government bodies, but also foreign organizations such as the British Council and the major corporations Visa, Orange, the German industrial giant Siemens, and others. If this was not bad enough, the firm’s client list features multiple agencies of the United Nations — including the United Nations Development Fund for Women (now merged into U.N. Women), the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Children’s Fund, or UNICEF.

 

 

Racism’s antidote

Over the past weeks, protests have spread throughout Israel calling for a response to racism targeted at the country’s Ethiopian community. Sparked by a Channel 2 story on discrimination in Kityat Malachi, citizens have taken to the streets to show their outrage at the status quo. Although the despicable slurs and actions that triggered these protests are blatant examples of these grievances, they conceal a deeper issue.

Beyond more overt examples, Ethiopian Israelis are often considered less desirable neighbors, and frequently have a harder time finding a job. They are perceived as a poor, underprivileged community, and face the stigma of lacking the capability to contribute equally, even if this myth is belied by reality. Some of this is outright racism, but the rest is symptomatic of a deeper and far more widespread prejudice: indirect or concealed racism.

 

 

A charedi hero’s plea

JERUSALEM — The recent violence in Beit Shemesh and in Jerusalem’s Mea Shearim neighborhood has led me to speak out against the so-called “sikrikim” in the harshest possible terms, equating their actions to terrorism. Sikrikim — Sicarii-ites — is the name given to a fringe anti-Zionist vigilante group, loosely linked to Neturei Karta and said to have been at the forefront of many of the recent violent attacks against innocent Israelis.

In my mind, there is a dangerous similarity in their actions and those of Islamist terrorists. I do not use this comparison lightly. As the founder of the ZAKA rescue and recovery organization, I know only too well the horror of terror.

 

 
 
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