April 11th: Tzav and Shabbat Hagadol
THIS WEEK IN THE TORAH
Rabbi David E. Ostrich
There is an old joke often told at Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur—the time when everybody shows up at shul. “Welcome,” the rabbi or congregational president proclaims, “Welcome to the annual meeting of the Jewish people.” (I’ll pause while you chuckle.) While we may feel a sense of unity with other Jews (K’lal Yisrael), we do not actually get together that often. The High Holy Days therefore become a kind of annual reunion.
Rabbi Lawrence Kushner reflects on the deeper value of our sacred assembly in his essay “Wool Pants” (in Invisible Lines of Connection), “All those souls, together in that sanctuary, make something religious happen.” In many ways, he admits, “organized religion itches” (like the wool pants that boys in the 1950s had to wear), but what we may “fail to understand is the religious power of simply being seen and looking good…It is a way of appearing before God who we suspect is not beneath looking through the eyes of the community. Being seen by the congregation is like being seen by God.”
Though Passover is not so much a synagogue holiday, it is a holiday where pretty much everyone shows up for a Seder somewhere. Surveys suggest that it is the most observed Jewish holy day, and however long or involved one’s Seder may be, most Jews eat some matzah, horseradish, and charoset, retell the story, and reflect on the miracle of our ancient freedom. So, in a conceptual sense, Passover may be “the annual meeting of the Jewish people.” We re-enter the lives of our ancient ancestors and try to make the rituals and narrative transformational. In a sense, we all gather around the same Seder table, and we all eat matzah together.
Another kind of “meeting of the Jewish people” comes in the World Zionist Congress—held every several years since 1897 when Theodor Herzl convened us to consider our plight and our possibilities. The dream of a Jewish homeland was fraught with all kinds of doubt and conflicting opinions, but there was a consensus that the goal of restoring our ancient polity was worth the struggle. Whether moving to Israel or supporting the Zionist dream from afar, Zionists unite in the belief that Eretz Yisrael can shine as an expression of the holiness God commands us to bring into the world.
Since that meeting in Basel, Switzerland in 1897—and going back to a larger gathering at Mount Sinai some 3300 years ago, the challenge has always been twofold: (1) to draw the influence of heaven into our world, and (2) to lift up our world to the holiness of heaven. Or, as the Midrash on Psalm 122 explains, there are two Jerusalems—one in heaven and the other on earth. God’s goal—and ours—is to knit the two Jerusalems together: “She’chub’ra lah yach’dav.”
The challenges remain—and often occupy our concerns, our discussions, and the news. The issues are numerous, but, as Jerusalem itself is built stone by stone, the solutions to the challenges must be approached stone by stone, step by step, policy by policy, and program by program. This is why it is so important for us—Liberal Jews who yearn for the values of equality, justice, freedom, and peace to be manifested in Eretz Yisrael—to make our voices heard in Israel. This means registering and voting in the upcoming World Zionist Congress.
The Congress itself will be in October, but the election for delegates is going on right now, from March 10th to May 4th. Now is the time to register and vote—and help elect delegates from the Reform Movement and guide the World Zionist Congress and World Zionist Organization.
To vote, go to this website: www.vote4reform.org
Click the link to bring you to the American Zionist Movement Voting Website.
There you need to register.
Once you register, they will send you a voting PIN.
Follow the prompts to the ballot.
There will be a series of questions in which they ask about residency, whether you voted in recent Israeli elections, etc.
On the ballot, there are quite a few options.
Please vote for Slate #3: Vote Reform.
There is also a payment section in which they charge $5 for administration of the election.
They take credit cards or Venmo or PayPal.
The entire process takes about five minutes.
Remember, this is a simple way to positively affect Jewish life in Israel. By choosing the Vote Reform, Slate #3, you will be helping to send Reform representatives to the World Zionist Congress who will help set policies and allocate a $1 Billion annual budget that affects Israeli society and Jews around the world.
Sometimes we meet in shul. Sometimes we meet at the Seder table. At other times, we meet through representatives and congresses. In every gathering, however, we dedicate ourselves to our ancient and continuing mission: pursuing justice, lovingkindness, and holiness.
Please vote now. Slate #3: Vote Reform
www.vote4reform.org