Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Erev Rosh Hashanah 5785/2024: Jews in America: What's Your Noun?

 Jews in America: What's Your Noun?

             My tour guide in Vilnius is named Daniel.  Easy enough to remember.  We meet just after a heavy downpour on the outskirts of what was the Jewish quarter of Vilnius, Vilna in Yiddish, in Lithuania, and also the ghetto.  This is the place around which my Sabbatical travels centered, and Daniel was going to teach me about it.  I’m here particularly to learn a little bit more about where my grandparents, Leo and Sheva, their names listed in our Book of Remembrance, had come from, and the world that they had grown up in.  That world is disappeared.  Daniel teaches me a lot about Vilnius before the war as we walk the narrow alleys of the old town.  There were times where half of the city’s population was Jewish, he said.  Imagine, every other person on the street speaking Yiddish. 

We pass by the building that used to house the Ramm Printing Press, one of the largest Jewish presses in the world, famous for typesetting the Talmud in the way we’ve been studying it ever since.  From this building, Jewish thought and religious texts were spread like never before.  In this building were also printed Yiddish literature, Chassidic teachings, and an occasional Socialist pamphlet.  What a world that must have been, the world that brought my grandparents to life.  A world where Jews mixed and mingled with the society around them, and lived as Jews outwardly.  A world in which they were the society at large, and maintained connection to their identity, though not all in the same way.  Only remnants can now be seen, echoes of a distant past.   A street named for the Jews.  Faded shop names in a Yiddish that now almost no one on the street speaks or understands.

            Though I am certain I mentioned it, and it’s clear in my email signature, I learn at the end of my tour that Daniel didn’t know that I was a rabbi.  Which helps explain why he was somewhat taken aback at some of my questions as we meandered the cobblestoned streets and passed where the great Synagogue had stood, now a construction site awaiting possible rebuilding.

He seems a bit flummoxed when I ask him, because I am a rabbi after all, to define his Jewish identity for me.  He doesn’t seem to understand the question.  So, I elaborate.  “How do your Jewishness and your Lithuanianness work together?”  He shares with me that it’s complicated and that for him, they are two separate parts of who he is.  In fact, he moved to Israel when he was in his 20s, and gave up his Lithuanian citizenship, and now if he wants it back, he has to forfeit his Israeli citizenship.  The two cannot coexist, he seems to say.  And, he doesn’t have a problem with that, because in many ways that’s how it has always been: The Jews of Europe, no matter how integrated, no matter what percentage of the population, no matter how many shop windows were in Yiddish, were almost always other.

I don’t know why I asked Daniel that question right there, but I’m grateful he answered me and took me seriously, because I think that this personal heritage and history tour gave me an opportunity to reflect on my own identity in the face of my personal history.  Jewish Identity and what it means has been an interest since before I was even considering the rabbinate.  My Master’s Thesis was predicated on interviews of eighth-graders asking them about their Jewish identity.  Among the questions I asked my eighth-grade subjects was a question that I had been grappling with myself at the time, and which I imagine is also on many of our minds as well, as we navigate the interesting times we’re living through.

So, I’d like to ask all of us tonight to think about and answer for ourselves the following.  If you had to define yourself, would you say that you are a Jewish American or an American Jew?  Would you say that you are first and foremost an American or first and foremost a Jew?  I do recognize that among us are family and loved ones who are not Jewish, and so I ask for you to think about this question and how you would define someone in your life.  American Jew, or Jewish American?  What’s the difference?  As I see it, following standard grammar, it’s a question of which is your noun and which is the modifier?

Perhaps for you there is no distinction between the two.  The way I understand it, it’s the question of whether we feel that we are Americans who happen to be Jewish, the same way that our neighbors are Americans who happen to be Catholic.  Or are we Jews who happen to live in America the way we’ve lived in other places before?  Where does one part of our identity begin and the other end?  Can we, and do we, find balance between the two?  Has that balance changed in the last number of years?  Has that balance shifted for us since October 7?

Some of us had maybe thought for some time that we were Jewish Americans.  The last number of years, with the Tree of Life shooting, the Charlottesville rally, and the ugly antisemitic responses to the ongoing wars in Israel maybe made us feel more like Jew was our noun. We sense the increased antisemitism, and we feel it.  I’ve spoken from this bima before about the rising antisemitism coming at us from all sides.  This past year especially has forced us to ask whether this is the new normal: additional security assessments and hired guards just to send our kids to school.  We’re right to be skittish.  We’re right to be vigilant.  We’re not right to give up on Judaism in America.  And we’re not right to give up on fighting for the kind of America that made this nation a haven and a home for Jews unlike any history has ever seen.

This past year has seen much handwringing about the state of American Judaism.  In The Atlantic, Franklin Foer describes it as the end of the Golden Age of Jews in America. 

“America’s ascendant political movements—MAGA on one side, the illiberal left on the other—would demolish the last pillars of the consensus that Jews helped establish. They regard concepts such as tolerance, fairness, meritocracy, and cosmopolitanism as pernicious shams. The Golden Age of American Jewry has given way to a golden age of conspiracy, reckless hyperbole, and political violence, all tendencies inimical to the democratic temperament. Extremist thought and mob behavior have never been good for Jews. And what’s bad for Jews, it can be argued, is bad for America.”[1]

Joshua Liefer’s hot off the press book Tablets Shattered describes what he calls the end of An American Jewish Century.  “It is…no surprise that the prevailing emotions of contemporary American Jewish life are anxiety and division.  American Jewish life is marked more by conflict than consensus than at any point since the first half of the twentieth century because the foundations of American Jewish life that were built in the last century have begun to crumble.”[2]

Liefer here, and Foer in his article, look to the declining role of major Jewish institutions in America, like Federations and Jewish denominations, including the Reform movement, which have sizable endowments, and declining influence and membership.  On a smaller scale is the synagogue, with overall declining numbers of members and more mergers and dissolutions.  Foer and Liefer also put much emphasis on shifting and diminishing connections to Israel and Zionism.  They see it as on par with a crumbling institution in terms of the influence on the Jewish American community.  The rocky foundations were made evident on October 8.

I’m curious if Liefer considered subtitling his book “The End of a Jewish American Century.”  Either way, both of these works see the changes in American Judaism as indicators that we cannot trust that the life we have lived as Jews in America will continue in the same way.  On this I agree.  And, I believe that it will be the Jewish community’s ability to recreate itself which will hopefully give rise to a new Jewish American Century.

Nowhere in history, until the establishment of Israel, have Jews been able to even ponder that question that I asked us all to consider.  When Napoleon emancipates the Jews they must declare on oath that they are French first.  When Germany emancipates the Jews, many find that the only way to true equality is through conversion to Christianity.  My tour guide Daniel certainly couldn’t conceive of being a combination of Jew and Lithuanian.  And yet here, though imperfect, Jews have been able to ascend the social ladder in business, politics, and media in unprecedented ways.

We are a people of hope and a people that no matter the circumstances have always been able to adapt.  Though my trust in this nation has been shaken over the last years, I have come to disagree with my friends who say America and the West are completely lost and the only future for Jews is Israel.  I still believe in America, a nation as hopeful as our people.  A nation, like Judaism, which asks us to live up to high ideals.  It is these democratic ideals of this great nation, the norms established through fight and protest, and the expanding of rights to broader and broader groups of citizens which are the bedrock of why America has been different. 

We ought to pay attention when those norms are challenged.  We ought to pay attention when the liberal “small-d” democratic order is strained by those who would not agree to play by the rules, or who believe the rules don’t apply to them, or who fix the rules or the referees in their favor.  This is a danger to Jews in America because it is a danger to America.  We ought to pay attention and speak out when politicians use antisemitic images in mailers or mainstream antisemitic ideas.  We also ought to pay attention and call out when tactics that have been used against Jews in the past are used on other groups, accusing them of spreading disease, stealing jobs, or being responsible for missing pets or people. 

Things are also not always as bleak as they may seem, and it would be a disservice to our history to not acknowledge that though there are many, many faults and much work to do, America has made significant progress.  Earlier this year, Rabbi David Wolpe offered the following anecdote, imagining a conversation with his great-great-grandfather. “Great-great-grandfather,” he says, “There are antisemites at Harvard!”  The reply: “There are Jews at Harvard?”  “Yes, but some of them hate Israel.”  “There’s an Israel!”

Living outside the Land and now the State of Israel, there are what my friend Rabbi Josh Franklin describes as two reactions, each based in the Babylonian Exile.  When in the 6th century BCE, some 2600 years ago, our ancestors were sent away from their home by force, the Psalmist, as one reaction to the new reality, records that they offered a song of lament:

“By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat, sat and wept, as we remembered Zion.  There on the poplars we hung up our lyres, for our captors asked us there for songs, our tormentors, for amusement: “Sing us one of the songs of Zion.” How can we sing a song of Adonai on alien soil?  If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither…”[3]

The attitude expressed here in Psalm 137 is one of defeat, destruction, and exile.  One of being forced to give up traditions and worrying that a connection to the past, to that which provided a sense of identity and place would be lost.  In the aftermath of these last years, we can mourn, we can bemoan our lot, we can hang up our instruments and await redemption.

The second is a reaction like the prophet Jeremiah who, witnessing and living through the exile, offers the people the following advice from God:

Build houses and live in them, plant gardens and eat their fruit. You should take wives and give birth to sons and daughters; and you should take wives for your sons, and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and daughters. Multiply there, do not decrease. And seek the welfare of the city to which I have exiled you and pray to Adonai in its behalf; for in its prosperity you shall prosper.”[4]

We have experience living a Jeremian lifestyle.  In America’s prosperity, the Jewish community has prospered.  In America’s freedom, Jewish communities have been free to evolve, develop, improvise and experiment, to become less insular, or more. 

Additionally, Jeremiah teaches us that we are supposed to do two things, seek the welfare of the place and pray to God on its behalf.  We are accustomed, at least on the High Holy Days, to offering a prayer for our nation, though our Siddur does include it in its Shabbat section, and most siddurim around the world include a prayer for the government.

Prayer without action, we know, is in vain, which is perhaps why God first says to seek the welfare of the city: Doresh et Shlom ha’ir.  Seek the peace of the city.  Work toward peace, do what it takes to make the nation in which you live the best it can be, the most open to difference, the most tolerant, the most fair, the most merit-based, the most open to creativity, the most open to dissent, and the safest for all its inhabitants.  In this nation, we don’t just work toward it, we get a say, we get a vote.  We can use what we know is good for the Jews to make decisions about who will lead this great nation that allows us to hold on to both our Jewishness and our Americanness with pride and with a sense that they belong together, not bifurcated, not split from each other, not in opposition to each other.

It’s the end of my tour with my guide Daniel, and we are back in the center of old Vilnius, just a block from my hotel.  The skies have cleared.  The restaurants dry off their chairs and tables out in the plazas, awaiting the tourists for dinner.  I thanked Daniel for the wonderful tour and the good conversation.  I wish him well and take a moment to reflect on the history I have seen.  And as I look around, I imagine what it might have been like  for my grandparents, and their families and friends to have lived in this place.  And I wonder how they would have defined themselves as they walked these very streets.

Shanah Tovah.



[1] https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/04/us-anti-semitism-jewish-american-safety/677469/

[2] Liefer, Joshua. Tablets Shattered. Dutton, USA p 17.

[3] Psalm 137

[4] Jeremian 29:5-7

Rosh HaShanah 5785/2024 - A Community of the Shofar

 A version of this shofar was offered at Rosh HaShanah morning 5785 at Temple B'nai Torah - A Reform Congregation in Wantagh, NY.

The Community of the Shofar

As I began to speak about last night, and as you will hear more about over the course of these holidays and this year, this past summer, my sabbatical was, in part, a heritage tour.  I went to go see where my family comes from, specifically Lithuania and Germany.  During the month of making my way from Germany through Latvia and Lithuania, Finland, Estonia, and Poland, I saw powerful memorials to Jewish communities of the past. I stood in places of terrible atrocity, the kinds of actions that define the oft-repeated “man’s inhumanity to man.”  I stood in places that my grandfather may have stood and looked upon vistas that would have been familiar to him.  I walked through concentration camp gates, the same gates my grandparents would have walked through.  I went to almost any Jewish museum  I could find to try to see the faces of my ancestors.  I prayed joyfully in synagogues with active, if small, communities, and pensively in synagogues without communities, the refurbished buildings monuments to a people present now only in memory.  Each of these experiences stays with me and could, and probably will, open up to a sermon on its own.

Of all the places I went, of all the experiences I had, of all the beautiful and painful and surprising moments of this long tour, of the many miles I walked inhaling the breath of these places, if I had to say, probably the most powerful and spiritual experience for me was getting to see Taylor Swift in concert in Warsaw…

            It was an impromptu opportunity that I hadn’t planned on.  I landed in Warsaw, heard she was there, got on my phone, and bought a ticket for that night.  And my goodness am I glad that I did!  Because I’m not kidding you about the spiritual nature of the experience. 

            On my way in to the massive stadium, I stood in line next to a couple from DC, celebrating their first anniversary.  We chatted as we waited to walk through security.  And then on the way in, we were all handed a bracelet with light up LEDs. Just before the concert begins, we all activate the bracelet, and suddenly, we are no longer a disparate group of concertgoers from across the world.  Everyone’s bracelet worked with everyone else’s to turn the crowd into a part of the show, a luminous backdrop all around.  The lights changed color, sometimes in unison, sometimes choreographed or in undulating patterns, always tied to the beat, always setting a mood, from all of our wrists.  I only made small talk with the two young women who sat next to me, this strange, American man by himself at the Taylor Swift Concert in Warsaw.  And though no one gave me a friendship bracelet, I felt the power of being a part of something bigger.  It was the power of community.

            Maybe it was because I had just toured a series of communities that used to be, having already seen Vilnius and Kovno, that I needed a sense of belonging.  Maybe it was touring the destroyed communities in Israel last winter, and then seeing the playbook for what was done on October 7 all across Europe, that demanded some kind of remedy to the isolation that comes form being the only one at the Vilnius Holocaust museum, or the only one at the Riga Jewish Museum, home to perhaps the most beautiful stained glass Shma I’ve ever seen.  Maybe one other person saw it that day or that week.

            For almost three weeks I had been traveling by myself surrounded by the memory of our people, and suddenly here I was surrounded by lots and lots of people, living people, singing people, dancing people, people of all ages excited to be there.  The sense of joy was palpable from all directions and from all present.  I was enthralled and transported, radically amazed, by the sense of togetherness, and how restorative that was for me.  Taylor really can do everything.

            My friends, we have been carrying so much this last year, as Jews and those who love us.  We have been carrying a year’s worth of grief, a year’s worth of suspicion, a year’s worth of security bills, a year’s worth of division and fighting for our existence and right to self-determination, a year’s worth of images of suffering, a year’s worth of praying for a war to end that won’t and for people to come back home that don’t, a year’s worth of fighting, a year’s worth of mourning.  5784 will not be recalled as the best of times for the Jewish people.  And we’ve just made it through. 

This litany doesn’t of course factor in those many of us who lost someone close to us, or suffered illness, or disappointment, ruptures of relationships among families and friends.  For many, grief is compounded.  And while I cannot speak to whether 5785 will be the good year that we pray for on these holiest of days, I do know that at least for the short term, the images won’t be any easier to see and the news won’t be any easier to watch.  I pray with complete faith that 5785 will be the year that our dreams and hopes for peace may be realized.  And in the same way that I know that I won’t keep all my promises to God in the New Year, I know that not all my prayers will be answered, and I fear that this will be one of them.  It can be overwhelming.  Enough to give up.

What has given me, and I think many of us, strength over the last year is our community. In the midst of war and death and hatred and difficulty, in the midst of the isolation so many feel, we look around and see life, friendship, learning, and connection to traditions that have held us together for thousands of years. Community heals.  Community supports.  Community backs you up. 

As we make our way into the new year, with blessings of goodness and sweetness, let us feel the comfort in the community that is around us.  May the sense of goodness and togetherness we feel right now call us all to deeper engagement with our Judaism and our Synagogue community in the coming year, no matter what it brings. 

The Hebrew word for community is kahal, related to kehillah.  This root appears many times in the Torah.  The root itself is related to other ancient roots meaning assembly.  The origins of the word, however, are up for scholarly debate.  Some say that it’s related to a word for reproof, or rebuke.  Others however see in kahal the weak middle hey, which historically was often interchangeable with the vav. When replaced, we get kol, the word for voice or sound.  These scholars believe that the word for community derives from a word for the sound that would have been made to call the community to assembly.  In ancient days it would have required a loud instrument to call folks together from distant places.  What was the instrument of choice?  A shofar.

The shofar is commanded in the Torah as this day is defined with the words yom teruah.  Usually translated this means a day of blasting the horn.  Most of us know this word teruah as the third of the shofar blasts, the nine short blasts.  Yet, as much as this word can be translated that way, it can also mean joyous celebration.  The shofar calls us to celebrate our new year, and the way that comes about is through the assembling of the community. 

The shofar was a call to community in our past.  Today, hear its voice and let it call us to community again!  Let it call us to the healing that comes from togetherness and commonality.  In a few moments, and I promise, just a few, Cantor Timman will chant for us all the beautiful blessing for the sounding of the shofar.  The blessing is not on blowing the shofar, but on hearing it.  In order to hear the shofar, you have to be present.  Officially, you can’t hear it through a speaker or hear its echo and consider your obligation fulfilled.  You have to come to the place where the shofar is being blown and hear the actual sound.  The central commandment of Rosh HaShanah is to come together to listen to an instrument that tells us to come together.  I don’t know if God could be more obvious!

Because the sounding of the horn is a commandment from the Torah, we have the blessing formula: Asher kidshanu bemitzvotav, vetzivanu lishmo’a kol shofar.  We bless God who commands us to hear the voice of the shofar.  Kol shofar.  Let the voice of the shofar also inspire us to be a kahal shofar, a community of the shofar.  A community called by the shofar to be together.  A community called by the shofar to experience all the ways that community can be a salve to the many hurts we carry with us into this new year.

In her beautiful book The Amen Effect, Rabbi Sharon Brous, explaining the role of showing up, notes: “We experience, innately, joy at another’s joy, wonder at another’s wonder.  We have the natural capacity to be energized and inspired by someone else’s dream fulfilled, even when our own hearts are broken.”[1]  As evidence of this, she cites studies from the 1990s that resulted in the discover of mirror neurons.  As Rabbi Brous tells it:

[R]esearchers in a neurophysiology lab in Italy were studying neuron activity in monkeys.  At some point, one of the researchers took a break to grab a gelato, as one does in Italy.  As he began to eat, sitting across from his monkey subjects, he was stunned to see that the neurons in the pleasure center of the monkeys’ brains were firing…not because they were eating something delicious, but because they were watching him eat something delicious.[2]

We are a synagogue filled with joys, as young people are called to Torah, as they are named on our bima, as our students share their learning.  We are a community filled with joy as we celebrate our festivals and honor our members.  Being a member of a shofar community means you can come and experience that joy, too!

The shofar represents hopes for moving past violence, for putting down the weapons we wield.  In the Akeidah story we heard chanted so beautifully earlier, it ends with Isaac being saved from death by his father, and in his place the two sacrifice a ram.  The shofar, often a ram’s horn, reminds us of this story.  The ram steps in, as Amichai calls him, as the hero of the story, preventing the death of Isaac, an innocent child who didn’t even know what was going on.  I pray that these calls of the shofar may elicit the same in the new year.  May weapons be put down, may the instinct toward violence be abated.  May the innocents be spared.

The calls of the shofar move from the tekiah to the shevarim and teruah, and always back to the tekiah, from a whole note, through a series of broken notes back to a whole note.  No matter how broken things may feel, there is hope for wholeness, for shleimut, for shalom.

Sadly, I can’t afford to take us all to hear Taylor swift’s voice, and to feel the energy of that communal experience.  But man, do we have awesome shofar blowers here, ready to help you fulfill your obligation to hear the voice of the shofar.  And man, do we have an awesome community here, worthy of sharing joys and leaning on each other when times are tough.  The blasts of the shofar are next.  Our sacred duty to proclaim the new year will be fulfilled, that’s to be sure.  The sounds of the shofar will resonate through our ears and into our souls.  May the calls bring us only goodness and sweetness in the new year.  May the calls inspire us all to seek out the blessings of being a community of the shofar, called to goodness and justice and togetherness.  May the calls bring us all back to wholeness such that when we blow these horns one year from now, we may look back and revel in a year of togetherness and a year of peace.

Amen.

Shanah Tovah!



[1] Brous, Sharon. The Amen Effect. Averly Publishing, 2024.  p. 11

[2] Ibid. p 12