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TIKKUN OLAM;
ORTHODOXYS RESPONSIBILITY TO PERFECT G-DS WORLD
JONATHAN
SACKS
Chief Rabbi of the British Commonwealth
Delivered at the Orthodox Union West Coast Convention
December 1997 Kislev 5758
Tonight
I have been asked to address a very difficult subject, a subject in fact
that I have not spoken about before:
Tikkun Olam -- perfecting, preparing or repairing the world-- which I
take to mean what part should we take as Jews, specifically what part
should we play as Orthodox Jews, in the wider concerns of the society in
which we live. I think that
is an important question, perhaps even in a strange sense the most
important question facing Jewish life today.
However, in order to even begin I must engage you in a series of
quite difficult propositions. I
ask you to join me in a difficult intellectual journey.
I want to begin with a fundamental problem, one that I really have not seen
spoken about or written about anywhere.
There are certain questions in Jewish life which in order to
answer, what do you do? You open a book; either a Shulkhan Arukh, or
Responsa literature or the Talmud and you elicit a ruling from the
sources. Why is that so?
The reason is that those issues never change.
Whether the issues regard shabbat,
kashrut, taharat mishpacha, it makes no difference if you asked the
question in 1897, 1997 or 2097. The
issues never change, and the answers never change.
I call this kind of Torah
by a very ancient name, and that is Torat
Kohanim because the kohen,
the priest, was the first
role model in Jewish history of the enduring structure of kedusha;
the eternity in the midst
of time. Torah as chayei olam -- eternal life-- in the midst of chayei shaah -- finite life.
That is one kind of Torah all of us are familiar with.
It is for most of us all the Torah
that there is.
However,
there is another kind of Torah
as well. It is much more rare, and the truth is that it is much more
rarely needed; I call it Torat
Niviim -- Torah
not of the priest but of the navi,
the prophet. While a kohen
represents eternity, a navi
represents history. We know
that the prophets were the first people in all of civilization and
certainly the greatest of all time to see G-d in history.
They saw history itself as a coherent narrative; a story with a
beginning, middle and end, a journey through time with a destination.
Kohanim were sensitive to
the things in Judaism which never change; while prophets were sensitive to
things which do change - things in which todays challenge are different
then the day before. Why? Because we are on a journey.
The destination never changes but we move, and where we are today
is not necessarily where we were yesterday so each day has a new
challenge. That is Torat
Niviim; it needs a special kind of sensibility to deal with
questions of that kind.
Tikkun
Olam, perfecting the world, sounds like a
big subject. It is a big
subject. However, if you look at the Shulkhan
Arukh and the Responsa, you
see that tikkun olam occupies a
surprisingly limited space. There
is not much there about this subject.
That is because the guide to dealing with such dynamic changes must
be sought not in Torat Kohanim but
in Torat Niviim. One ought not look in the literature of halakha, of eternity, instead we must review the literature of the aggadah,
which, I would say, is the literature of Jewish history seen through the
eyes of faith; of Jewish reflection on the challenges of specific moments. Tikkun Olam is a
subject we will only understand, especially as Orthodox Jews, if we are
prepared to use our historical imagination and sensibility.
So I want to begin with an exercise in historical imagination.
Let us begin by seeing what is happening now in the perspective of
the Jewish journey through time.
Let
me begin with, Genesis, the book of our beginnings, the book of our
destiny. What are the themes
of Sefer Beresheit?
There are two themes which predominate the narrative of Genesis.
The first is the promise of a land.
The first words to Abraham from G-d are lech licha meartzecha, memoladitcha, mebayt avecha el
haaretz asher ereka.
Again and again. Go to the
land; I will give you the land. There is the promise of the land of Israel
to Abraham, Issac, and Jacob, again and again the promise turned out to be
unbelievably difficult. Abraham
at the end of his life has to even struggle to buy a burial place for
Sarah.
Isaac, who never left Israel, has to contend with the Philistines
over the wells he dug.
Jacob wants a little plot of land to pitch his tent and has to buy
it for an inflated price.
Even the Torah ends with
Israelites still not having entered and taken possession of the land of
Israel, with that incredibly moving, poignant scene of Moses seeing the
land from afar and being told vshama
lo taavor
- you will not yourself be able to enter.
So there is the promise of the land, but it is a difficult promise.
What
is the second theme of Beresheit, if
the first is the promise of the land?
The promise of children. Again
and again, Abraham is told you will have many, many children.
Abrahams first message from the Almighty is I will make you
into a great nation.
I will make your children as numerous as the dust of the earth.
G-d took him outside and told him to look at the stars.
Can you count them? If
you can, so surely your children will be numbered.
Your children will be a great nation, as many as the dust, as many
as the stars. What happened? All his life Abraham prayed for just one child.
Sarah couldnt have children.
Rebecca couldnt have children.
Rachel couldnt have children.
By the end of the Torah, Moses is saying to the Israelites: Not because you are many did G-d choose you, you are the
smallest of all people.
There is a promise of children, a great promise but it turns out to
be a very difficult promise. These
are the two themes of Genesis: the land of Israel and the generations of
Israel. They are the two
themes set out 3,700 years ago, at the very beginning of Jewish time.
I want you to think now what has happened to Jewish life in the past 100
years. What are the themes of
Jewish life between 1897 and 1997? We
stand at the 100th anniversary of
the first Zionist Congress and the fiftieth anniversary of the State of
Israel. The gathering of the
first Zionist Congress in Brussels was extra-ordinary.
It was the first time Jews ever gathered together politically from
all parts of Europe to do something that was believed widely among Jews
and non-Jews alike to be impossible.
That a nation which had suffered exile for two thousand years would
return home, that a people that had been powerless for two millennia
should certainly once again have power.
It had never been done before.
Most people said it couldnt be done. One man, Theodore Herzel,
had the courage to say - if you will it, it is no dream.
For
generation after generation, Jews prayed more in hope than in expectation,
to gather our exiles back. In
our time and in our century, from more than 70 countries, from every part
of the world Jews have begun to come home.
Our ancestors prayed let there be one place in the world where
we are not ruled by others but we have the privilege of ruling
ourselves. Since 1948 we have recovered that power.
Our ancestors prayed to return to your city, Jerusalem, with
mercy, and since 1967 we have seen Jerusalem rebuilt and united.
The Sages say that the simple Jew saw at the Red Sea what later
even the greatest of prophets were not privileged to see.
We have seen, this century, things that even the great visionaries
of Jewish history could only dream of.
That is the first achievement of modern Jewish history - we have
returned to the land of Israel. What
is the second?
No
sooner did we acquire the land, Midinat
Yisrael, than did we see that something else was happening.
We were losing our children. In this part of the world, the extent
of this devastation is well documented.
You know of the 1990 National Jewish Population Survey showing
American inter-marriage rates of fifty seven percent; you also know of the
recent survey, in San Francisco, where intermarriage is now up to eighty
percent. You know that this is the contemporary realization of a
terrible happening once before in our history.
It says in the Torah vchamushim
alu bMitzrayim.
Rashi interprets chamushim
to mean - only a fifth, only twenty percent left Egypt.
The other eighty percent disappeared in the plague of darkness.
It is happening again. Once
again the Jewish people are saying Give me children, because with out
them how can I live, and thank G-d, here in the United States a handful
of people plucked from the fires of the Holocaust, came to the shores of
the United States-- figures like the late Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef
Soloveitchik, Rabbi Yaacov Kaminetsky, Rabbi Aaron Kotler, -- and they
built Jewish day schools and yeshivot, knowing full well what Jews have always known.
When you have to defend a land you need an army; when you are
defending a faith and Jewish continuity, you need schools. In the same
space of time it took to rebuild the state of Israel, fifty, so did those
individuals rebuild Torat Yisrael,
the strength of Jewish
learning and hence of the identity of our children.
You
are all familiar with those extra-ordinary figures cited in Alan
Dershowitzs book The Vanishing American Jew,
about the extent to which in the United States, Orthodoxy has finally
cracked the problem of how to pass our heritage to our children: 200
secular Jews, in four generations attenuate to 10; 200 Reform Jews to 27;
200 Conservative Jews to 48; 200 Orthodox Jews increase to 692; and 200
Hasidic/yeshiva Orthodox Jews to 5175.
We have seen two great miracles: the rebuilding of the land and the
rebuilding, among Orthodox circles, of Jewish children.
What has happened to the Orthodox community since the war is every
bit as remarkable as the rebuilding of Israel. This community, so
afflicted, has multiplied and repopulated itself.
It has come to pass that the two dominant issues of modern Jewish
life - building Israel and building Jewish children - are the issues
encoded in our national DNA at the beginning of time.
These issues that concern us are the very issues that concerned our
biblical forefathers. We have
confronted them magnificently and we have achieved, at least within Israel
and within Orthodoxy, the answer to both.
Now,
I want to ask the great historical question - what next?
What is the next challenge facing the Jewish
people if we have finally solved the problem of rebuilding the
State and discovered the key to Jewish continuity.
Of course, to answer this question I must ask another.
Were there really only two challenges, only two promises to Abraham
and the others? If so, we
have done all that we need to do. However, you and I know the answer. There were not two promises made to Abraham; there were
three. What is the third
promise? When G-d first
summons Abraham and Sarah to set out on the journey that becomes Jewish
history, after he said go to the land-- the challenge and promise of the
land, and after I will make you a nation-- the promise of Jewish children,
what is the third promise?
The
third promise of vnivrichu bcha kol
mispacha haadama
- through you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.
Abraham, at the end of his life, having all that time living apart
from his environment, nonetheless had a level of influence such that his
neighbors turn to him and say - we recognize the Prince of G-d in our
midst.
It was the very same challenge that Moses faced at the end of his
life. He said to the
Israelites, dont think this Torah
that I am giving you is for you alone, it isnt - this is your wisdom
and understanding in the eyes of the nation - because when they hear and
see this way of life, this Jewish way of life, they will say what a wise,
understanding people is this
great nation.
Or, in the simplest and most lucid of all formulations found in the
aleinu prayer,
it is the promise and the challenge ltakayn olam bmalchut Sha-dai - to perfect the world
under the sovereignty of G-d. It
is the last task of Jewish history, and it is the hardest task. It is perhaps the most paradoxical task that we are the
people who live apart and are not reckoned among the nations and should
nonetheless be the people of whom it is said the nations will see that
you are the people of G-d.
In other words, by transforming ourselves into a people we
transform the world.
Jewish
history is a journey through three destinations:
the destination of Jewish land, the destination of Jewish children,
and the destination of changing the world.
The question is how do we do it?
Here again I have to challenge you to think very hard about the
fundamentals. We often forget
that Judaism has a theology. Theology isnt written much about in our sources but it is
set out very clearly. It is
set out very clearly in the first chapters of the book of Genesis, Beresheit, in one of the most remarkable statements in all of
Judaism: The Torah was given beresheit,
for the sake of Torah which
is called resheit, and for
the sake of Israel which is called resheit.
The Torah is a book about
us, yet it doesnt begin with the Jewish people.
For the first eleven chapters all it talks about is humanity as a
whole. It tells a story about
humanity as a whole. It tells
a story of two orders of civilizations which began as covenants with all
of mankind and how they failed. The
first order began with Adam and and with the command, Be fruitful and
multiply and fill the earth and subdue it.
The second began with Noah and with the command Whoever sheds
the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed.
Both are explicitly founded on the concept of humanity as betzelem Elokim, in the image of G-d. Both fail.
The
era of Adam began with fractricide and ended with a world filled with
violence. Theis was
nemesis- man being less than human.
What happened to Noahs order of civilization?
That failed in the opposite way.
By human beings trying to create a self-sufficient universe immune
to G-d - let us build a city and a tower with its top in the heavens
- a polis, a self-sufficient city with a tower that reaches heaven.
That civilization failed because of what the Greeks call hubris
- man trying to be more than human.
After the failure of two universal orders of civilization, G-d
rejects the very concept of the universal order.
He doesnt cease the universal request that we call the seven
Noahide laws, but he does no longer hope to believe that all human beings
will worship G-d in the same way or will be a single culture.
He says at the Tower of Babel: look at them, they are one people
with a shared language and see what they have began to do.
From then on, until the end of history, there will be many
languages and many people, one of whom will carry a special burden and a
responsibility of being a blessing and the result of that will be
- all the families of the world will be blessed.
How does one nation fulfill this role?
Anyone
who has tried to teach will know the answer.
There are two ways of teaching morality; first is to teach
universal rules, and the second way is to give particular examples.
The Almighty tried twice to teach humanity universal rules: the
rules of Adam and then the rules of Noah.
They failed; because the most powerful way to teach is by
particular example. If you want to instruct someone on how to be good, identify a
role model and let him see how that person lives. So Rabbi Akiva learned from Rabbi Yehoshua;
so Hassidim learned from their Rebbe;
so do all of us learn from the stories of the great figures of the
past and our peers in the present. That
is the difference between law and narrative, between universal rules and
living examples. That became
the Jewish vocation; not to stand for some universal truth but to be a
particular, specific living example of how to live.
Somehow the Jewish people would be the people in whose daily lives
the will of G-d, and in whose collective history the presence of G-d would
be particularly evident. You
could look at Jews and see G-d. In
that magnificent phrase in Isaiah: you are my witnesses, says G-d
and so it happened.
We
were the people who were born in slavery to teach the world the meaning of
freedom. We were the people who suffered homelessness to teach
humanity the importance of every people of having a home. We were the people who were the quintessential strangers to
teach humanity that Thou shall not oppress the stranger.
We were the people who walked through the valley of the shadow of
death to teach humanity the sanctity of life.
We were the people who were always small but yet survived to teach
the world a people does not survive by might nor by strength but by My
spirit, says G-d.
Above all, we were the people that was always different to teach
humanity the dignity of difference. Against
all expectations it happened, and no other people before or since has had
the impact that we have had on the civilization of the world.
Paul
Johnson, a Catholic writer in Britain, has written one of the great
histories of the Jewish people. In
summing up the vast history of the Jews he says: one way of summing up
four thousand years of Jewish history is to ask ourselves what would have
happened to the human race had no Jewish people had come into being?
Certainly, the world without the Jews would have been a radically
different place, humanity might have eventually stumbled along the great
Jewish discoveries but we cant be sure.
All the great conceptual discoveries of the intellect seem obvious
and inescapable once they are revealed but it requires a special genius to
formulate them for the first time. The
Jews had this gift. To
them, writes Paul Johnson, we owe the idea of equality before the
law, both divine and human, the sanctity of life, the dignity of the human
person, of the individual conscience and possible redemption, of the
collective conscience, and social responsibility, peace as an abstract
ideal, and love as the foundation of justice, and many other items that
constitute the basic moral furniture of the human mind.
Without the Jews, the world might have been a much emptier
place.
I find that a very moving statement from a person who is not
Jewish. Sometimes non-Jews
understand us better than we understand ourselves.
Sometimes we envy other peoples way of life and fail to see the
beauty and majesty of our own.
The
late Rav Shlomo Carlbach, after a lifetime of traveling to countless
American university campuses, summed up his experience in these words:
I go to a campus
and I ask the kids what they are and a kid gets up and says Im a
Protestant, I know thats a Protestant; Kids get up and says Im
Catholic, I know thats a Catholic; Kid gets up and says Im
just a human being, I know thats a Jew. We have a problem understanding what we have given to the
world. Let me contrast those
remarks with this one: The Jew is that sacred being that was brought
down from Heaven, the everlasting fire and illuminates with it the entire
world. Who said that? Tolstoy.
Or this one you know because he is American: I will insist that
the Hebrews have done more to civilize men than any other nation,
former President John Adams.
Or let me take the English historian who died a couple of months
ago A.L. Rowes, a fellow at Oxford University.
Out of the blue he writes this sentence, it is the penultimate
sentence of a book, he says, if there is any honor in all the world I
should like it would be to be an honorary Jewish citizen.
Thats what the Gentiles say.
I wish I could persuade our children, Jewish children, out in the
streets to know that the greatest Shakespearean historian of the twentieth
century said what he would like to be is your inheritance.
Therefore we should not take lightly our power to be mitaken
olam - to transform the world.
Why
is it, therefore, that if you read the Shulkhan
Arukh, Gemara you find very little about this?
The answer is that for two thousand years what chance did we have? For two thousand years we were dispersed, scattered, exiled,
we were powerless, we were what Max Weber called the pariah people, who in
the world would think of learning from us?
We were the wandering Jew, Old Israel, displaced, superseded, we
were the people rejected by G-d. Thats
what the nations thought. Who
thought of learning from us? Thus, Tikkun
Olam which could not be implemented as a Jewish value, squeezed under
the door in some attenuated way. You
find in the mystical literature, for example, that by keeping the mitzvot somehow mystically we would change the world, or passively
like in the alienu prayer in
which we say al kain nikaveh lecha
Hashem Elokaynu ltakan olam. We
dont know how we will do it, but we hope You will do it.
Or in the Talmud itself where Tikkun
Olam functions as a mere concept of creating a social order, making
sure that there is no chaos in society.
It would have been absurd to raise our sights any higher than that
because who were we to change the world?
Then,
in the nineteenth century under the impact of the Emancipation and
Enlightenment the whole concept split apart; the essence of Tikkun
Olam is that by being particularlist, by being who we are, we have
universal consequences, we help change the world.
That very subtle idea split apart in the Enlightenment so that the
early Maskilim and extreme protagonists of the Reform Movement wanted the
universalism - we should change the world, like everyone else--and they
wanted to give up the particularism, the particularism of the commandments.
On the other hand there was the Orthodox community, very much
concerned with the particularism but they gave up on the universalism.
The result was that every phrase associated with the idea of Tikkun
Olam, phrases
like- light unto the nations, or the Jewish mission, or
ethical universalism, all those things became code words for
assimilation, reform, and the whole concept of Tikkun
Olam became suspect. What
a tragedy that is today.
Today
for the first time in two thousand years we have a chance to put it into
practice. We have a State of Israel, which is our first chance to
create a macro-society run on Jewish principles.
We never had a chance for two thousand years to create a global
society, and in the diaspora today for the first time ever we are part of
the mainstream of the democracies of the West.
We are able to speak and be heard; we are able to teach and be
heeded; we are able to sanctify G-ds name in public.
Let
me give you some very small practical examples in which I personally was
privileged to have a little share. Britain,
as you know, has both a monarchy and an official church.
Twice a year we have a formal message to the nation, each by one of
the leaders of these national institutions.
The Queen gives a ten minute message to the nation on the 25th of
December. The second message
is given by the head of the Church, the Archbishop of Canterbury, another
ten minute message to the nation on New Years.
When I became Chief Rabbi in 1991 the BBC came to me and offered
the same opportunity, you give a message to the nation a day before Rosh
Hashanna. Well, I did it; ten
minutes, face-to-camera message on national television.
The next year they said lets make it more interesting,
lets walk and talk at the same time.
They found it interesting and they increased it to fifteen minutes.
The next year they said lets go out and about and well
take a mobile camera crew. They
turned the segment into a twenty minute program that has remained ever
since, now, the Chief Rabbi delivers a message to the nation which is as
long as the Queen and the Archbishop of Canterbury combined.
The Times of London has serialized my last two books in its
national newspaper. We are a
tiny community, half of one percent of the national population. Yet, The Times
publishes editorials on Jewish values and their relevance to society as a
whole. It is a rare and
blessed moment of influence.
We
have had a situation in Britain, like you have had here in the United
States like every advanced state of liberal democracy has had, where there
has been a decline in societys morals.
Thank G-d, because of my close relationship with previous Prime
Ministers and Secretaries of State for Education, we now have every single
school in Britain teaching morality as part of the national curriculum.
It is a formal requirement in all schools in Britain.
People are taught responsibility, duty to others, importance of
family, etcetera. That came
about certainly not through me alone.
It came about through conversations Ive been having through the
media and with Ministers and other religious leaders, and the Jewish
community remained the major proponent in that initiative.
As of the most recent national election, we have a government for
the first time in many years that is actually taking the family seriously.
Taking some very tough decisions to favor stable two-parent,
nuclear families over any other kind of alternative.
It is a very courageous thing.
To take a very trivial example.
Last week, in Birmingham, which is another major Jewish community
in central Britain, a conference was help with people all from inner city
areas, all from high breakdown communities like you have here in most
major American cities. They
met together to have a seminar, a conference how to reconstruct
communities. The text for that meeting was my recent book The Politics
of Hope, the title of the
conference was Community of Hope and it was built around what I had
written. To think that these
community leaders were turning, to Torah
for inspiration for their work, was remarkable.
I tried to explain how Jews have done it through the ages.
It was a tremendous kiddush Hashem that in black communities, Muslim communities they
were able to say look, the Jewish community is helping us, showing us how
things are done.
Of
course, there are many other role models.
Let me give you some other examples.
Our leading fertility specialist in Britain, a man who has led the
way in treating infertile women, called Lord Winston, an Orthodox Jew, who
makes no secret of it, wears a yarmulke,
when talks, whenever he is given a newspaper profile, says he is doing
this for religious reasons, and he is showing the world what it is to take
seriously hava li banim vim ayin meta anokhi
- to cure the Rachels, Rebeccas, and Sarahs of our time.
Or take a Jew who is not religious at all but who never once gave
up on his pride in being Jewish, who
really was inspired by the fact that he used to conduct a Passover seder
every year, the late Sir Isaiah Berlin. He was known as the great British
intellectual of his day. Shortly
before he died, Sir Isaiah, a secular Jew, sent a message to me that he
would like me to officiate at his funeral and deliver his funeral address.
I felt proud to do so, because the concept of liberty which he
learned as a child through his sedarim and which he did more than any other thinker in the
twentieth century to defend against the blasphemy of totalitarianism was a
model of the Jewish ability to perfect the world.
For
many years, at least in Britain, Jews thought that if you wanted to go
into public life, you wanted to be accepted in society, you down-played
your Jewishness, you hid it. Or as a philosophy professor at Columbia University once put
it, the Jewish statement is incognito
ergo sum. However,
currently, because my predecessor Lord
Jacobovits and I have quite deliberately gone into the public arena, in
the press, on television, on the radio, and been very publicly
identified--I am now about to say these sentences and I must tell you that
whenever I say them to an audience however irreligious, they all agree
with me, I am able to
say to them without fear of contradiction--non-Jews respect Jews who
respect Judaism, and non-Jews are embarrassed by Jews who are embarrassed
by Judaism. That is a
powerful message that can only be delivered if we as Orthodox Jews, yarmulke-wearing, or sheitel-wearing
Jews are willing to play our part in the public domain of our shared life
as citizens of the nation and of the world, and therefore I come back to
the structure of Tikkun Olam.
Our
task is to become a particular living example of a set of universal
truths, and therefore the conflict between the universal and the
particular in Judaism is not a conflict at all because it is only by being
Orthodox Jews that we are able to mitaken haolam - it is only by being true to ourselves that we
can be true to other people. Only if we preserve the sanctity of Jewish
family can we talk with authority about the sanctity of the family to the
world. Only by studying Torah can we speak compellingly about the value of education and
human dignity. Only by having
the courage to be different can we be role models to the dignity of
difference. That is why Tikkun
Olam in my view is the special responsibility of we who are the
guardians of Torah.
Maimonides
says that when it comes to violating shabbat
in order to save a life you dont do it by employing non-Jews, children,
or slaves but it must be the great sages of Israel and the role models who
must violate shabbat in order to
save a life.
Why? Maimonides states
that in saving a life you are teaching the most fundamental Torah
of all, which is that the
judgments and laws of the Torah
are not vengance against the world, but compassion, kindness and peace in
the world.
That has to be done by the role models of Jewish life.
Friends,
there are great things left to do. Things
we never had the opportunity to do. We
have the chance today of shaping a society built on justice and compassion
in the State of Israel.
We have the chance to be an outstandingly authoritative voice in
the moral conversations of mankind.
If we do it the world will be a better place; if we do it, we will
be better Jews. Why do we say
in the festival prayers you chose us from all other nations, you loved
us, you showed us favor? Because
G-d was only interested in us? We say it in order to go on to say so
that one day everything that lives, every human being will acknowledge
Him. How will history
judge us if we had the opportunity and like Jonah, in the face of Ninveh,
ran away, and we thought only of ourselves?
We will not do that. We
have to have the courage to engage. That
is not only a task for the greatest leaders, it is a task for everyone of
us, a task for you and for me. Because
every single one of us, by the integrity with which we conduct our
business or professional lives, by the grace that we bring to our
relationship, by the beauty that radiates from our homes, by the way we
use words to heal and not to harm, everyone of us, day by day, is
sanctifying the name of G-d in the world.
I
repeat there is no formula, no Shulkhan Arukh, and no responsum governing how to be mitaken
haolam. For this the
Orthodox community needs not only masters of the law but also baalai
nivuah - people with
historical insight; that is the challenge of our time.
We have thank G-d done magnificently on the two great challenges of
Jewish history: Israel and Jewish children.
Now what stands before us is the third great, untouched challenge
of tikkun
olam that we, in a secular age, should become role models for
spirituality. That we in a
relativistic age should be able to teach people once again to hear
the objective Thou shalt and Thou shalt not.
In an age in which religion so often brings conflict we should
teach once again that Shalom,
peace, is the name of G-d
and that the mighty is one who turns an enemy into a friend.
If we do these things there will surely come to all of us that
experience of living a Jewish life and knowing that those around us, those
with whom we have dealings are blessed by that life, and they will return
to us saying: you have been a prince or princess of G-d in our midst. Do
that and we begin to perfect the world.
Notes
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