• Unity and Peace

    From Popping Mad@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 8 07:11:45 2024
    From the OU


    למען אחי ורעי – Elul 5784
    Greeting Every Person With a Smile and With Joy
    Within the OU and its departments, we intend to focus meaningful effort
    on considering and addressing the issue of sinat chinam, providing both
    food for thought and practical action points that can help us begin to demonstrate care for each other and ameliorate our nation’s divisions by adjusting both our thinking and actions. We invite you into this process
    in the hope that you may find it meaningful and helpful, add your own
    energies to this effort, and be in touch to contribute your own thoughts
    and ideas.

    Rosh Chodesh Elul is when we begin to undertake serious reflection on
    the challenges of the past year and the opportunities and goals of the
    future. The current discord and rifts within Klal Yisrael pose a huge challenge, undermining our fundamental identification as goy echad
    ba’aretz and visibly affecting our ability to work together, benefit
    from each other, influence each other, and stand together as a unified community to confront our many external challenges. Seeing what is
    happening, some have gone so far as to say we are choosing to
    self-destruct, Heaven forbid. And those are just the issues that grab
    the headlines, the dramatic discord bringing protesters to the streets
    and segmenting our communities.

    It does not end there – and it may not start there. We have no
    boundaries within ourselves; what we do in the public sphere we will
    also do in our personal relationships. A respected Rav once took an
    accounting of the time he spent counseling and supporting the members of
    his community and discovered that most of the issues he was helping them
    with were not heaven-sent occurrences of illness and death but man-made conflicts between spouses, relatives, neighbors, and colleagues. Moshe
    Rabbeinu bemoaned the fact that the interminable quarreling that we
    engaged in necessitated the appointment of a judge for every ten people
    (see Sforno Devarim 1:12). Too often we hear that it is hard to work
    with or do business within the community, that we may be insufficiently
    fair or gracious. We are voluntarily introducing difficulty and
    suffering into our lives.

    The second Beit Mikdash was destroyed even though Jews were engaged in
    Torah, mitzvot, and acts of kindness, due to the prevalence of sinat
    chinam, vain hatred. That hatred was manifest in matters both communal
    and personal, in the sectarianism that corrupted Jewish life, the
    political divisions between the peacemakers and the war-mongering
    baryonim, and the petty interpersonal arguments such as the infamous
    wedding invitation mistakenly sent to Bar Kamtza (Gittin 55b). Once we
    make the critical decision to embrace conflict, we will find it everywhere.

    It is therefore worthwhile to shift gears away from arguing and towards
    caring, to become students of Aharon who loved peace and pursued it,
    loved people and brought them closer to Torah (Avot 1:12). We need to
    grapple with the big and the small, refining how we deal with both the
    big picture ideological and political rifts as well as our personal relationships and interactions, understanding that improvement in one
    will enhance the other.

    I, for one, plan to start small, by putting away my ear pods when
    walking in streets and hallways and noticing and acknowledging the
    people around me. This seems like a good first step, an opportunity to demonstrate and authentically feel some of the love for people that is characteristic of Aharon’s passionate pursuit of peace.

    As a communal Rav, I developed a conscious and simple habit. When
    visiting hospitals and nursing homes, grim and busy places, I tried to
    smile at everyone I saw in the halls, whether medical staff or
    orderlies, patients or their family members. While some were too busy to
    notice or had their own earphones in, it was wonderful to see the impact
    on others of simply being noticed and acknowledged and it deepened my
    own care for others.

    There are two similar statements in Pirkei Avot, Shammai’s teaching
    (1:16) that one should be “mekabel kol ha’adam b’sever panim yafot — greet each person with a pleasant face,” and Rabbi Yishmael’s teaching (3:12) that one should be “mekabel kol adam b’simchah — greet every person with joy.” Which is it? With a pleasant countenance or with joy?
    Rav Leib Nekritz of the Novardok school of Mussar explained beautifully
    and simply that the pleasant face Shammai directed us to put on is to
    gladden and uplift the other, while Rabbi Yishmael guided us to feel the happiness of seeing a fellow Jew and to let the greeting bring us
    authentic joy.

    That is my first commitment to action. Rather than resolve the national
    debate over a hostage deal, I will start small, focusing outside of
    myself so I can try to notice and care for others a bit more. It cannot
    end there. There are serious issues that cannot be avoided. But perhaps
    by beginning to passionately pursue peace and show love for others, the
    greater peace we all seek will get a bit closer.

    And please, do me one favor. If you see me walking around with my ear
    pods in, I would appreciate if you would smile at me and remind me to
    take them out.

    Sincerely,

    Rabbi Moshe Hauer
    Executive Vice President

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)