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King_David

(14,851 posts)
Tue Apr 21, 2015, 07:39 PM Apr 2015

Strength and humility: the key to defending the Jewish State

On Memorial Day, consider that it is the tension between these qualities that gives Israel the power to defend our people and our ideals.

It would be all too easy to spend Yom Hazikaron (Memorial Day) and Yom Haatzmaut (Israel's Independence Day) debating the rights and wrongs of the complex political issues that have absorbed Jewish communities of late. I wonder, though, whether it would be possible to forego debates on these issues – from stopping Iran's rush to nuclear weapons, to the formation of a new Israeli coalition after a divisive election campaign – and instead spend these back-to-back observances reconnecting with the Israel we love.

Perhaps it's the first trip you took to Israel, or the first moment of deep solidarity you felt for its population. Whatever be the case, it feels to me that without the core connections between Diaspora Jews and the holy land, we get lost in politics. Don’t get me wrong, these political issues matter greatly. But underneath our intense arguments must be a true love and commitment to the Jewish State.

With the onset of Yom Hazikaron, the day of remembrance for those brave souls who died creating and protecting the State of Israel over the past 67 years, we enter a phase of darkness. This year, there are many fresh graves to visit, following last summer’s Operation Protective Edge. For those of us in North America, it is hard not to think of Max Steinberg z”l, the young man from Los Angeles whose love of Israel was kindled during his Birthright trip. He joined the Israel Defense Forces to express his commitment to the Jewish State and was killed in the Gaza Strip. He died as a lone soldier, meaning a young man who made the commitment to move to Israel without his family and serve in the military there. Thousands attended his funeral to mourn and to declare that, spiritually, there is no such thing as a lone soldier: he was and remains a part of the larger Jewish family.


http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.652906



Rabbi Jacobs is president of the Union of Reform Judaism, the largest movement of organized Jewry in North America and affiliated with the Israel Religious Action Center and the Israel Movement of Progressive Judaism.

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Strength and humility: the key to defending the Jewish State (Original Post) King_David Apr 2015 OP
Blech doxyluv13 Apr 2015 #1
Rabbi Jacobs is president of the Union of Reform Judaism, the largest movement of organized Jewry King_David Apr 2015 #2
Enjoy your stay. R. Daneel Olivaw Apr 2015 #3

King_David

(14,851 posts)
2. Rabbi Jacobs is president of the Union of Reform Judaism, the largest movement of organized Jewry
Tue Apr 21, 2015, 07:46 PM
Apr 2015

in North America


Guess he speaks for Majority of American Jews

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