Friday, June 27, 2014

BDS and Chukat

BDS. It sounds like the name of a multi-national corporation or a sexually transmitted disease. In fact, it's been a buzzword in Israel for quite some time, but has recently taken over the American Jewish media as well. But what does BDS stand for? What is the excitement all about? Even stranger, how are the Presbyterians involved in the issue? Or more basically, why have I never heard of BDS?
BDS stands for Boycott, Divestments and Sanctions, specifically against Israel. This was a campaign begun in 2005 when over 150 Palestinian non-governmental organizations called for actions against Israel until Israel agreed to abide by international law and respect Palestinian rights. The BDS movement website, BDSmovement.net claims that they are against Israeli apartheid and want to fix this human rights violation before it emerges into a greater issue. The movement asserts they are placing these pressures on Israel in order to prompt Israel to enact the following actions in support of Palestinians/Arabs. 1. To end the Israeli occupation and colonization of Palestinian or Arab lands, 2. To ensure equality for Arabs/Palestinians in Israel, and 3. To allow Arab/Palestinian refugees to return to their homes taken in or after June of 1967. While this mostly refers to the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, it also applies to land and people currently living within the borders of Israel.
BDS. Boycott. Divestment. Sanctions. The Boycotts are against any products and/or companies that profit from alleged Israeli abuse of Palestinian rights. This includes but is not limited to companies, sporting events, and academic institutions within Israel. Motorola is an example of a company from which someone can do all three. By boycotting Motorola, you simply do not buy their products (the cell phones they produce). The particular grievance of Motorola is their production of bomb fuses and missile guidance systems. Divestment is mostly an economic and financial tool that involves reduction of an asset in order to achieve some kind of gain. In this case, the BDS movement encourages people and organizations to divest from companies benefiting from work they do in the West Bank that actively violate Palestinian rights (that profit from Israeli settlement). With regard to Motorola, this would simply involve removing oneself from the company as stockholders. Sanctions are actions taken to force a country to obey international law. In this case, the sanctions are against those same companies that profit from production that violates Palestinian rights. For Motorola, this entails not allowing Motorola to produce anything in Israel or not allowing them to export products.
Although this movement has been active for the past nine years with no major changes being implemented, the BDS movement claims that by not instituting the changes suggested, a peaceful solution between Israelis and Arabs will not be reached. The official statement of the URJ is directly opposite: only by supporting both Israelis and Palestinians can we bring about a viable peace option.
Many countries have denounced the movement as anti-Semitic, although the United States has not made a firm statement in either direction. However, the concept of BDS has re-emerged into American awareness as of late (after the American Studies Association urged Universities to Boycott Israel and cancel their Israeli exchange programs), with the recent Presbyterian Church vote, narrowly in favor of divestment from three companies said to abuse Palestinian rights. In order to support the BDS movement, the Presbyterian Church decided to divest from Motorola, Hewlett-Packard, and Caterpillar, after rejecting a similar proposition two years previously.
The Reform Movement, as an active presence at the Church conference, made a statement against this decision to divest, before the vote was taken. Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president of the Union for Reform Judaism, wrote a letter to the conference participants urging them not to support the resolution, and also spoke to the plenary. However, he did so in a way championing the similar ideology our two movements share. He wrote, "[the] Reform Movement has a long-standing policy of opposition to the Israeli settlements. We stand firmly on this—and for two states–and want to partner with you, but your support for BDS will make this much harder. We firmly believe that our Zionism…should not come at the expense of the Palestinian people who deserve freedom and dignity, in an independent state." He further went on to write that instead of strengthening support of peace, "support for divestment from Israel has only…harden[ed] the position of those who least desire justice for Israel."
In preparation for this Church's General Assembly, many materials were produced for general consumption. One such document, Zionism Unsettled, was a blatant attack on Judaism as well as against the legitimacy of Israel. It named Israel as an apartheid state, comparing her to South Africa. Although many Palestinians cannot vote in Israeli elections or enter Israel whenever they please, this is not apartheid. It is an issue that needs to be addressed, but cannot be labeled apartheid. Even more troubling though, Zionism was labeled as akin to racism and compared the Palestinian experience during the events of 1948 to the Holocaust. This work cheapens the experience of Israel as a country and Judaism as a religion, seemingly negating the importance of the State of Israel and the Jewish people as a whole.
Reading these documents, I am overcome with dismay, but more than that, sadness. I am deeply saddened by the results of this vote, and by the work that is being promoted throughout the Presbyterian Church. For many years, the Presbyterian Church has been hailed as one of the Reform Movement's most ardent supporters, making a Jewish-Christian dialogue both possible and fruitful. With this vote, these relations were set back. However, due to the close nature of the vote, the Reform Movement will continue to maintain ties with the Presbyterian Church, and will work with those supporters who do advocate a two-state solution within Israel. I agree with Rabbi Jacobs that we must continue to maintain close relationships with our local Presbyterian friends and neighbors. Not everyone within the Church agrees with the decision at the General Assembly and we must remember that. We must actively engage in dialogue with those supporters and applaud their support, while at the same time understanding why some of our friends voted in favor of divesting from Israel.
When initially learning about the BDS movement, I was taken aback. I knew that I supported the state of Israel, but did not support occupying another people or land. How could I be against the BDS movement, but also against settlements. Through much discussion I came to realize that I can be anti-settlement in addition to anti-BDS. BDS, as a movement, is boycotting Israel as a country, to which I am vehemently opposed. As we are taught in Deuteronomy 10, we must love the foreigner and our neighbor, because we too were strangers in Egypt. Taking this teaching to heart, I oppose the settlement movement because I cannot sit back and watch my Palestinian neighbors and friends lose their land. The settlements are so popular because of how relatively inexpensive it is to build and produce in the West Bank. Yet, we are not loving the foreigner, in this case our neighbor, by taking the small amount of land they possess and using it for our benefit.
Therefore, we must vocalize our concern over the vote in favor of divestment by the Presbyterian Church while at the same time supporting Israeli withdrawal from the settlements. Interestingly, this evokes images of the red heifer in this week’s parsha. The heifer is a rare, religiously pure, completely red cow that is to be used for the purification from sin. We are told to take the ashes from burning the cow and rub them on ourselves in order to become pure, while at the same time, anyone touching the ashes becomes impure in the process. The logic does not follow. This is the situation we have with the BDS movement. The logic of the movement is not rational and does not evoke a desire to see it to fruition. Like the ashes taking on two different functions, we can boycott Israel as a whole, which is pro-BDS, or boycott products produced in Israeli settlements and be anti-settlement while simulanteously anti-BDS.
We must continue to support Israel as a country and homeland of the Jewish people, simultaneously understanding that there is another people living in Israel who deserve equal opportunity to live freely. However, I also recognize that each person should learn about Israel and develop his or her own unique relationship with her, discovering that Israel is not perfect, that we must learn to live in partnership with her, loving her while also pointing out flaws and issues.
In short, a nuanced relationship with Israel makes this discussion much more complicated. Yet at the same time, we cannot claim to be supporters of Israel and support the BDS movement, especially with writings such as Zionism Unsettled being disseminated and championed here in America. We must actively stand up against Boycotting, Divesting, and Sanctioning Israel. We must actively strive to see the continuation of the State of Israel. We must actively work toward a two-state solution where both Israelis and Palestinians/Arabs can live in peace, in their own lands. We must work with our brothers and sisters here in America and in Israel to engage in dialogue and understand the perspectives, while at the same time maintaining these essential Jewish values. The values that we are all made b’tzelem Eloheim, in the image of God. That we must respect our neighbor as ourself. That of Shalom, of peace.

May this Shabbat find peace within our borders and within all borders, but most especially within the borders of Israel and the Middle East. May these two people find a way to live side by side, to work together in prosperity. Shabbat Shalom.

Chukat

Instead of writing my weekly blog, I engaged this week with the Torah portion everyday. I read it, reread it, discussed it, debated it, chanted it, wrote about it. I taught a Torah study on the red heifer, full of meaningful insights and fascinating perspectives. While writing a sermon for this Friday night, I perused the parsha for a good tie in. As I always do when the chance arises, I discussed with the people around me what the meaning of this rather strange parsha is. Regardless, I wrote a sermon for this Friday night, which I will post here as my weekly blog post. You can be the one to identify: BDS and Chukat: can they go together at all?

Thank you and Shabbat shalom.

Friday, June 20, 2014

Korach and kamp


These past two weeks, I have been working at the summer camp here at B'nai Jehudah. Called Machane Yehudah, camp yehudah, we have spent two weeks learning about Jewish values and people, exploring Judaism and having a blast. We've separated into families, learned about Israeli cities, and even drawn with chalk on the cement.

My morning responsibility was leading the Religious Leadership kibbutz job. Although not entirely sure what our plan would be, I slowly recognized that if I simply led the kids, we could look anywhere to explore Judaism. Our intention was to discover where we found God and how we experienced God. Most importantly, we were doing different activities to see how we connected to God through each one. We traced our bodies outside, we did havdallah and meditated, we celebrated Shabbat with the preschool. We fingerpainted with preschoolers and ran around in the rain, jumping in puddles. We walked outside, discovering our most Godly places outdoors and asked different people how they felt about God. No matter what we were discussing, we always felt or found God somewhere. We always had fun.

But unfortunately, there are people in this world who do not find God. Our explorations led us to believe that we can always find God if we search for God. Yet we know that some simply don't care enough to do so, or do not believe that there is a chance of them finding God. This week's Torah portion, Korach, seems to be a similar justification for this. If we ignore God's warnings that we see in our everyday lives, we will be punished. Just as God punished Korach, Datan and Abiram, swallowing them and the 250 dissenters against Moses and Aaron in a giant hole in the ground, God finds ways to punish us. God may not go to such extremes as swallowing people in the ground nowadays (unless you think tsunamis and other natural disasters are God's wrath-I absolutely do NOT), but God finds ways. We simply need to discover those ways. However, a better method is not to bring wrath upon ourselves at all, instead being good and walking in God's ways.

These past two weeks have helped me understand that God can be found in so many things, even if I wasn't aware or am not considering God at a particular moment. I've found God in the blue jay on my morning run, in the smile on a 5th graders face when I complimented her. In the rain during our kickball game or making a girl enjoy her Hebrew tutoring and actually start smiling and talking instead of moping. God was in all those places. Instead of being against God and attempting to fight others, we should work to make the world a better place and find our own connection to God.

May this week bring ways of feeling and finding God, of experiencing God. May you discover that it is better/more holy to come closer to God then to distance yourself from God (by distancing yourself from other people). May this week be filled with contentment and peace. Amen.

Shabbat shalom.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Breathing!

This week's parsha, shelach, BaMidbar 13:1-15:41 deserves a fair representation as one of the parshiot in the Torah. It's definitely interesting, containing the third paragraph of the veahavta as well as the spies going into Israel and seeing how wodnerful it is (and of course then telling the spies who then lied to the people that they are not allowed to enter the land, but that Moses and Caleb will).

Needless to say, we have some interesting stuff. But just as Moses was sometimes told to do something and not question God, I too experience that. In fact, this week that happened so often I've barely had a chance to breathe. I'm sAtisfied with the week, but like Joshua and Caleb, I cannot wait to enter the promised land, as Caleb suggests in 14:30 that the people can fight the amalekites and should just go and figh them right away, straight to Israel. But, just as Caleb is rejected, I too have been told to wait. So it's been a week filled with waiting, with stress and difficulty, but Shabbat has almost arrived, And with it, my taste of the promised land.

With that, I wish everyone Shabbat shalom!!

Friday, June 6, 2014

Provisional Providence

The Jews have always been a protected people. Yes, bad things tend to befall us, and we constantly have engaged in one struggle or another, but overall, we have survived. Somehow, God has allowed us to prevail and persevere, never failing to make that one last push in order to conquer or at least continue on.

This week's parsha, BeHa'alotecha, shares the beauty of how God made God's presence known to the Israelites in the desert. God would show up as a cloud during the day and then fire at night to light the way, as it is written in BaMidbar 9:16, כן יהיה תמיד הענן יכסנו ומראה-אש לילה, so it was always; the cloud covered it and there appeared fire at night When the cloud would go up from the tent of meeting-the Mishkan-that was the symbol that the people of Israel were to journey on. God provided an almost constant protection, keeping the Israelites from bad.

Even more important is the care that God gives us Israelites. God provides support, food, water, and even meat when the people beg and whine (or cry) for it. Tired of their complaining, God gives in and says the people will get meat for a month, so that they will get tired of it and not ask for it again (much like the way ice cream places let you eat all the ice cream you want when you work there, because you eventually grow tired of it and stop consuming). Yet still, God provides and protects.

The question is: does God still protect us? Is God still watching over us, even though we as Jews have the land of Israel (even if we don't necessarily live there)? Or, has God decided that we have the land of Israel, we made it, we can support ourselves. That it is now up to us to take care of ourselves and not rely on the kindness of that ethereal being.

The idea that God is responsible for the well-being of the Jewish people does not sit well with many Reform Jews. It defines a notion where God has the plan of our life, that God is in control. Many people want control of their own fate. This being the case, many discard the idea of God's hand in our lives. On the other hand, the idea that God is present is demonstrated in prayer, in how we speak to one another, in how we eat and choose to conduct our lives. Even if God is not directly providing the food we eat directly from the sky, God is responsible for making us and giving us the ability to produce the bounty we need to survive. In that regard, it is very apparent that God is still active in our lives, in protecting us. God makes the rains occur and allows the produce to grow, the animals to be prosperous. God is the impetus for all of this.

Yet, many of us stand in the middle ground. We do not believe that God holds all the control, nor do we believe that we hold all of the control. God is protecting us, maybe providing that cloud above our own personal Mishkan (whatever that might be in our own lives). Yet we are still firmly rooted in reality and we make the decisions that rule our lives. We hold destiny in our own hands.

Whatever your own beliefs, take this Shabbat to consider the ways in which God protects you, if God protects you. What does that look like? How do you open yourself up to those beliefs? What kind of relationship with God do you want to foster?

Shabbat Shalom