CiviMail

This Election -- and Beyond (Both Now Dangerously Uncertain)

MLK + 50: In a Time of Danger, Creating a Year of Truth & Transformation

One month ago, it seemed clear who would be elected President. Now it is not at all clear whether beginning January 20, our President will be a politician with a checkered political past and an incrementally liberal /progressive present, or someone who has the personal characteristics of a bully and the political program of a fascist. (These are my own personal assessments, not those of The Shalom Center.)

That choice is so unprecedented and the election results are so uncertain only because our country is in a deep spiritual, cultural, and political crisis.  The crisis will not go away on Election Day or Inauguration Day.

But that does not mean we can ignore Election Day, or waste it with an irrelevant vote. The most important spiritual action that you who are members and friends of The Shalom Center can do in the next weeks is to plan with the Presidential and Congressional campaigns of your choice to get out the vote. Register voters. Canvass in person or by phone. Call on Election Day to remind them. Offer to drive people to the polls if they need help.

Are these really “spiritual” acts? Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel said of the Selma March that he was praying with his legs. And in 1972, he wrote the New York Times to ask how Amos, Isaiah, and Jeremiah would respond in the election of that year –- and he publicly embraced one of the Presidential candidates (George McGovern, rather than Richard Nixon).

Today, in this even deeper crisis of the American spirit, voting can be praying with our hands.

What to do after the election? Whoever wins the Presidency,

Five Steps into a Deeper Yom Kippur:

 How could Yom Kippur in our generation achieve the personal and society-wide transformations that evidently resulted from its observance when the Temple stood in Jerusalem and a million people gathered? Here are some suggestions --

 

1) As completion of and tshuvah (“repentance” or “turning”) for the two heartbreaking stories of 1st & 2d days Rosh Hashanah (the expulsion of Ishmael & the near-killing of Isaac), add a powerful tale of reconciliation to conventional afternoon Yom Kippur Torah readings. 
Add the story of the two brothers' reconnection to bury Abraham — Gen. 25: 7-11 --   after which Isaac goes to live at Ishmael’s well – Be’er Lachai Ro’i.  In our own generation, when many of the chldren of Israel and the children of Ishmael are so violently at odds with each other, this reading would  be especially powerful as a teaching toward compassion. 
 When Reb Phyllis and I have led Yom Kippur services, we have then asked congregants to pair off and to embody the two brothers at the burial of Avraham – having a 14-minute dialogue. Then we invite those who wish, to report the heart of their conversation to the kahal as a whole.

If you like, note also that the regular morning Torah reading -- the story of the two goats -- tracks Ishmael (the goat sent to the wilderness) and Isaac (the goat slaughtered on the Temple Mount, where according to tradition Isaac was bound and a ram was slaughtered as the substitute for sacrificing Isaac). Are these two events on Yom Kippur already a redress of the two stories — as if to say, “Not to humans but only to goats will we do these things” — and then the post-Temple, “Not even to goats will we do these things, but only tell the story -- “??  Even if we read them this way, also reading the explicit reconciliation of Abraham's two sons would have great value.
2) In the Avodah service, renew the ancient practice at the Temple by, if possible, taking people outside, inviting them to lie face-down on the grass, and asking them to melt into the adamah (Earth) for 18 minutes, then to be born as adam (earthling)As in Gen 2: 1, we lose the "— -ah"  of the breath from Mother Earth and then receive the Nishmat chayyim ("breath of life") from the Holy One Who is the Breath of Life.  This tells the mythic story of the birth of the human race by modeling it on an individual human birth — the fetus breathing thru the placenta till birth, losing that breath in being birthed, then beginning to breathe on her/his own.  A powerful reminder for this Shmita year and every year of the close relationship between Earth & Earthling, and of the need to heal the Breath that sustains us both — our CO2-saturated  atmosphere that is scorching our planet.

  3) For a slightly midrashic translation of the Isaiah Haftarah with music by Will Fudeman and Cantor Abbe Lyons
, and with flashes of  extraordinary graphics-in-motion by the renowned artist Michael Bogdanow  that carry its message, see <https://theshalomcenter.org/video/video-yom-kippur-haftarah-isaiah-5714-5814-midrashically-translated-rabbi-arthur-waskow> You can also draw on the written text of the translation, which you can find at <https://theshalomcenter.org/content/isaiah-breaks-official-liturgy-yom-kippur>.
 
4) For a new Martyrology/ Eleh Ezhereh,
in the video at <https://theshalomcenter.org/video/yom-kippur-new-meaning-new-martyrology>,
you can share some memories not in words alone but in the media of our generation – film and video  -- of  ten people who were killed during the last 50 years for Kiddush Hashem, because they were  affirming profound Jewish values.  This powerful film was made by Larry Bush, editor of Jewish Currents.  As part of the film,  Rabbi Liz Bolton chants some haunting melodies that evoke the ancient and the modern stories. And we see the faces and hear the words of these courageous men and women of our own epoch:  Schwerner. Goodman. Krause. Moffitt. Milk. Linder. Krichevsky. Rabin. Chain. Pearl.  A minyan of martyrs.
5) Hu Yaanenu /Hi TaanenuMay You Answer Us!

This more inclusive version of one of the traditional High Holy Day prayers can be sung to one of the traditional melodies. Shanah tovah!

Hu Yaanenu /Hi Taanenu
An Inclusive Version

You Who answered Sara in the palace — May You answer us;
You Who answered Avraham at knife-point — May You answer us;
You Who answered Rivka in her outcry — May You answer us;
You Who answered Yaakov at the river — May You answer us.
May You answer us, may You answer us,
May You answer us!
Hu yaanenu v'yom korenu, hi taanenu.

You Who answered Hagar in the desert — May You answer us;
You Who answered Ruth in the gleaning — May You answer us;
You Who answered Avimelech at the well-spring — May You answer us;
You Who answered Noach with the Rainbow — May You answer us.
May You answer us, may You answer us,
May You answer us!
Hi taanenu v'yom korenu, hu yaanenu.

You Who answered Miriam at the seashore — May You answer us;
You Who answered Moshe at Mount Sinai — May You answer us;
You Who answered Eliyahu at Mount Horeb — May You answer us;
You Who answered Chana when she whispered — May You answer us.
May You answer us, may You answer us,
May You answer us!
Hu yaanenu v'yom korenu, hi taanenu.

You Who answered Shifra and Puah — May You answer us;
You Who answered Yehonatan and David — May You answer us;
You Who answered Mordechai and Esther — May You answer us;
You Who answered B'ruriah and Me'ir — May You answer us.
May You answer us, may You answer us,
May You answer us!
Hi taanenu v'yom korenu, hu yaanenu.

You Who answered Nachman of Bratzlav — May You answer us;
You Who answered Henrietta Szold — May You answer us;
You Who answered Rosa Parks in Montgomery — May You answer us;
You Who answered King and Heschel — May You answer us;
May You answer us, may You answer us,
May You answer us!
Hi taanenu v'yom korenu, hu yaanenu.


May we all be written and sealed into the Book of Life, for a year of release from the burdens of domination or subjugation --
Shalom, salaam, peace; Earth, Earth, Earth! 

Beyond the Election

American society faces a spiritual, cultural, and political crisis. The crisis has taken especially visible form during this election campaign, through the emergence of both strong prophetic and transformative energies,  and a proto-fascist movement.

The crisis is liable to enter an especially hot zone during the first two or possibly four years of the US government following the 2016 election. For during those years  the conflicting energies that surfaced during the election campaign are likely to keep colliding – and therefore fruitlessly -- over whether and how to meet the conflicting desires that erupted during the campaign.

What should we be doing? I want to address that question by addressing honestly the intertwined crises we are facing that together make up a Super-storm of crisis –-- and then to suggest what we could do.

What are the deep crises we are facing?

(1) A planet where the very web of life in which the human species has lived for our whole history is in danger, threatened by the global scorching that has brought our climate into crisis.  American society and its profligate burning of fossil fuels is one of the most powerful contributors to the crisis, and our internal political and cultural crisis has so far prevented us from taking emergency action. Mother Earth herself, treated as a mere commodity, becomes a rebellious “left-out” in our politics, erupting in riotous floods and droughts.

(2) Although the civil-rights movement of half a century ago made possible the emergence of a much larger Black middle class –- precarious though it has been in the face of the “Great Recession” – it left still smoldering a large part of the Black community subject to mass disemployment, abject poverty, terrible schools, harassment and humiliation and sometimes unjust violence by police, and mass incarceration. In short, brutal racism creating another “left-out” community.

(3) Immigrants and Muslims face a wave of fear, contempt, and hatred. More “left-outs.”


(4) Women in large parts of the country

Would we tolerate an oil pipeline shattering the Dome, the Western Wall, & the Holy Sepulchre?

Then Why Do We Tolerate a Pipeline Destroying Sacred Lands of the Sioux Nation?

Dear friends,

At this very moment, the largest gathering of Native Americans in over a century, with over 90 tribes represented, is currently underway in Cannonball, North Dakota.

Why? Because Corporate Carbon Pharaohs, with permits from the US  Army’s Corps of Engineers,  are trying to string a huge long oil pipeline across sacred lands of the Sioux Nation, to bring out more oil and unnatural gas from the fracking fields of the Bakken Shale.


The Sioux recall an ancient prophecy that they will be threatened by a gigantic “black snake.” Their health and livelihoods are threatened by the poisoning of the water that leaks from this “black snake.” Their sense of connection with the Holy Spirit of all life is threatened as the pipeline diggers already bulldoze the graves of their forebears, to make the channel for this “black snake.”

I ask you to stop reading now and -- Watch what happened as shown on this video done by the TV program “Democracy Now!” Please click here and then scroll half-way down the page.

<http://qz.com/774585/at-north-dakotas-standing-rock-a-native-american-fight-to-stop-an-oil-pipeline-is-a-morally-embarrassing-reminder-of-americas-founding-says-lawrence-odonnell-on-msnbc/>

It is not only the Sioux who suffer.

We all will suffer as the burning of these fossil fuels scorches our planet, what Pope Francis called our “common home.” Melts the ice floes and raises ocean levels to flood our cities, threatening to make Miami and Tel Aviv and Norfolk and all of Bangladesh uninhabitable. Pushing “local” tropical diseases and their carriers, like the mosquitos that carry Zika virus, into much wider regions as the Earth heats up.  Pouring monsoons of two-feet rainfall on Louisiana.

What does the United States of America owe the Native communities, the First Nations of this continent that many of them called Turtle Island long before there was a USA or even European colonies upon these shores?

If the past were to control the future, the USA would keep right on with genocide.

DOES the past control the future? That is up to us -- now.

What was the past?

For centuries, the USA

“Genocide,” Torah, & “Black Lives Matter”:

Anguish & Debate in the Jewish Community

Last week a nation-wide network of “Black Lives Matter” activists, newly organized as "Movenent for Black Lives" (M4BL), published a remarkable platform for social change toward racial justice in America. Every American should read it --  see https://policy.m4bl.org/platform/

The platform has thousands of words that address both comprehensively and in great detail what it would take to fully end the legacy of slavery and the constant resurgence of racism in the US. It also addresses forms of oppression that echo racism in non-“racial” arenas, such as the oppression of sexual and gender minorities and the use of overwhelming US military power against various peoples around the world. Among these thousands of words is this one paragraph.

  • The US justifies and advances the global war on terror via its alliance with Israel and is complicit in the genocide taking place against the Palestinian people. The US requires Israel to use 75 percent of all the military aid it receives to buy US-made arms. Consequently, every year billions of dollars are funneled from US taxpayers to hundreds of arms corporations, who then wage lobbying campaigns pushing for even more foreign military aid. The results of this policy are twofold: it not only diverts much needed funding from domestic education and social programs, but it makes US citizens complicit in the abuses committed by the Israeli government. Israel is an apartheid state with over 50 laws on the books that sanction discrimination against the Palestinian people. Palestinian homes and land are routinely bulldozed to make way for illegal Israeli settlements. Israeli soldiers also regularly arrest and detain Palestinians as young as 4 years old without due process. Everyday, Palestinians are forced to walk through military checkpoints along the US-funded apartheid wall.

In the American Jewish community,  this paragraph and especially one word in it –-  “genocide” – has resulted in an explosion of a wide range of reactions.

I will come back to these reactions in a moment, but first I want to invoke a passage of the Torah reading for this very week just past that no one in the “genocide” debate seems to have noticed.

Part of the weekly portion was Chapter 31 of Numbers. It describes with great precision how near the end of the 40-year trek in the Wilderness,  God – the Breath of Life, the Wind of Change, now become a Hurricane of Fury -- commands Moses to take “vengeance” upon the Midianite people for “seducing” the Israelites into idolatry.

Moses decides this means committing genocide upon the Midianites. He orders a swiftly called-up army to carry it out – even though the Midianites were the community from among whom came his own wife, and his wise and fatherly father-in-law.

Here “genocide” is unmistakable  -- all males and all females except those who had never lain with a man were killed, and  those young girls and women were taken into Israelite captivity.

Almost everyone I know who reads this passage feels horror and revulsion – not only because it describes a genocide but even more because it names “us” – the ancestors whom we honor, the Moses whom we admire  -- as the perpetrators.

Did this really happen? Most modern scholars don't believe that the whole Wilderness tale is factual history.  They don't believe that 600,000 men of military age, plus their wives and children, could have marched through the Wilderness of Sinai for 40 years and have left no trace for archeologists to find.

Whether it happened or not, why is this story in our sacred Teaching? Why do we still honor its presence, read it every year?

For me, the most important reason, the one I learn from instead of just feeling disgusted, is this:

The story reminds us that any nation -- even if it were, God forbid, “we” -- might fall into the same murderous impulses that other nations have. That no people, not America, not the Jewish people, is free to say to itself, about itself  -- to ourselves, about  ourselves -- “It can’t happen here.”

The story is there to warn us that we, every "we," can be tempted to do this evil and that we must make sure not to allow ourselves to do so.  

The chapter also suggests there are at least two major reasons for this cruel outburst. One is that "we" ourselves feel and fear the tug within us toward violating our best version of our selves, and try to project the impulse outward, on those who would "seduce" us. In thus acting, we make our fears real: We do indeed betray our selves.

The second reason is sheer greed. The chapter records with numbing specificity the numbers of sheep, cows, earrings, bracelets that were plundered. (We know this from our own recent history as those the Nazis both murdered and plundered. And whose plundered property they numbered, numbingly.)

So now let us come back to “M4BL.” The specific allegations in the paragraph about the Israeli government's behavior and its effects in the US are largely accurate. The Jewish people, and the American people, need to face these truths.

BUT --factually, it is not true that the State of Israel has committed, is committing, genocide upon the Palestinian people. For “genocide” to be occurring requires that there be “the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.”

Oppression, yes. Genocide, no.

To say, as I think the Torah teaches, that any "we" might become genocidal is not the same as saying that any "we" is already committing genocide. 

The naming of oppressive acts and a warning that these acts are markers on a path that might become a genocide would beckon Jews, Blacks, and everyone else  into a committed engagement aimed toward change. The flat assertion beckons eveyone toward hatred.

We need to be clear that to make this false assertion -- "Genocide!" --  is not a critique, not a warning, but an all-out attack upon a part of the Jewish people. 

Many of us see that part of us -- the Government of the State of Israel, and some parts of its society and culture --  acting in ways that betray what it really means to be Jewish. We do not claim that part of us to have been "seduced." We own it and we struggle against it.

But for even that part to be falsely named in a way that will turn hatred on it -- not a commitment to transform it or defeat it, but a hatred strong enough to kill it -- that is a strand of anti-Semitism in a platform that in most other ways is radically humane. Menshlich.

It is anguishing to say this, even to name as anti-Semitic one dangerous strand in a larger fabric. Anguishing because M4BL  grows out of the movement of precisely those Black Americans who have in our generation been so brave, so committed, so adroit, so creative as to make our country face itself.

How shall we respond to that one dangerous strand? Let us look at the responses from a range of American Jewish organizations to the M4BL platform. (I hope you will indeed keep reading to see my assessment of those responses.)

Scratching Each Itch -- A Dangerous Pleasure in the Body Politic

Last week, I lived through both an intense medical experience and an intense socio-political experience. The spiritual meaning of the medical challenge suddenly taught me the spiritual meaning of the politics.  And let me emphasize, just as the medical challenge was my own, so my response to it is my own; in this essay I am not speaking for The Shalom Center.

The medical experience was a preventive mid-level surgery to deal with the danger of an umbilical hernia. For almost everyone, it seems to be not problematic. But for me, a medicine prescribed to deal with moderate pain unexpectedly turned on my body’s inflammatory system.

I ended up with a widespread rash that was extremely itchy. The temptation to scratch was intense, but –- as I discovered -- self-destructive. (And just to be clear, I’m over it now and all is well.)

The other experience was helping lead a prayerful multireligious service that began the March for a Clean Energy Revolution on the eve of the Democratic National Convention. The March itself had no commitment or opposition to any particular presidential candidate. Among participants I met were supporters of Hillary Clinton, of Bernie Sanders, and of diehard insistence on some other response if Clinton were nominated for president.

What does the one have to do with the other?  In the quiet of a night, I realized that each scratch of an unbearable itch was intensely pleasurable.  I could feel my brain and my body responding to that momentary pleasure.

But within seconds, each scratch multiplied the itching. I was creating an addiction to scratching that was solving each specific itch for a moment but multiplying the danger of an even greater inflammatory response in my whole body – – a disaster.

I think the same is true about the urge of some burning feel-the-Bern supporters to scratch the infuriating itch of their defeat. Each scratch brings with it the intense pleasure of “voting my conscience" – – the individual conscience like each individual scratch. Each scratch relieves for a moment the pain of failure, the pain of fury at the 1/10 of 1% who rule America and impose impossible debts on college students, mass incarceration on Blacks, contempt on Muslims, deportation that tears apart Latino families.

But each individual scratch ignores the larger danger of inflaming the entire body politic. It ignores the danger of electing to Presidential power an outright bully who wants and would be able to carry out a bully’s politics: fascism.

How Clergy & Congregations can Respond to the 2016 Election:

FACT: This election campaign raises some of the most profound spiritual issues in our history.

WORRY: Some clergy and some congregational lay leaders worry about what a tax-exempt group (501c3) can and can’t do, both legally and to preserve comradeship among the members.

FACT: only actual endorsement or opposition to a specific candidate or party is totally forbidden to a 501c3.  These are ten suggestions for legitimate actions. (For 3 to 10, click on the "Read More" line on the website):

  1. Getting out the vote in November will be very important, and is totally legal for synagogue, church, or mosque to sponsor. That could be strengthened by asking your congregation’s spiritual leader to give sermons – e.g. on Rosh Hashanah/ Yom Kippur  --  or earlier, depending on the registration deadlines in your own state  --  urging congregants to register, and to urge their children of voting age to register.
  2. To help make voter registration communal, not competitive, you might arrange a festive congregational potluck where the congregation provides, collects, and submits voter-registration forms, along with songs and food.

Praying with our Legs & Lips: March for a Clean Energy Revolution:

 

"Exhilarated, empowered, exhausted!" was what Dr. Barbara Breitman, faculty of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical  College, said was how she felt at the end of yesterday's powerful March for a Clean Energy Revolution.

 I think she was speaking for thousands -- perhaps 10,000 --  who gathered at Philadelphia's City Hall and then marched to the Liberty Bell to greet the Democratic National Convention and all our leaders, officials, and candidates with our demands for a Clean Energy Revolution.

The March began with a prayerful ritual in which the practitioners of many religious and spiritual traditions spoke. We began with a smudging and invocation by the Lenape Native Community, on whose earth we were gathering. Then I spoke on behalf of the Jewish community, wearing the Rainbow tallit that for me symbolizes our commitment to each other to prevent the Flood of Fire that threatens to decimate all life on Earth. 

Here, along with photographs of the March, are the words I prepared. (Because of the sweltering heat, I omitted some of them when I spoke.)  -- Blessings of shalom, salaam, peace, Earth! --  Arthur

We gather to walk in the footsteps of those who gathered 3,000 years ago to resist a Pharaoh who turned workers into slaves, immigrants into pariahs, and brought plagues --  all ecological disasters -- upon the Earth. We are walking, as did they, toward the creation of what Martin Luther King called a Beloved Community.

We gather to walk in the footsteps of those who gathered 2,000 years ago to resist Caesars and create two different forms of Beloved Community.

We walk in the footsteps of those who 1400 years ago struggled against the power elite of Mecca in order to create a Beloved Community.

We walk in the footsteps of William Penn whose statue is atop the City Hall where we are gathered, and who with other Friends strove 350 years ago to create here a Beloved Community free of slavery and war, a community mindful of the Jubilee that frees not only humankind but also all the Earth from overwork and exploitation: “Proclaim liberty throughout the land to all the inhabitants thereof,” says the Bell toward which we walk that quotes the Jubilee passage of the Bible.

We walk in the footsteps of Martin Luther King and Abraham Joshua Heschel, who 50 years ago said that in that walking, their legs were praying, and who called out to this nation the fierce urgency of Now.

(Photo by Nigel Savage)

Chant (using the melody by Joey Weisenberg for “Nishmat kol chai”):

 

The breath of all life

Praises Your Name

For Your Name Itself

Whispers Breathing of Life.


The breath of all life

Praises Your Name

For Yahhhh is Your Name,

 Whispering Life.

Hallelu-Yah,  Hallelu-Yah,

 Hallelu-Yah, Hallelu-Yah!

One of the most ancient biblical Names of God is Yahhhh –--  a Breath. It enters English through the word “Halleluyah!” which is really taken from two words in Hebrew: “Hallelu-Yah   -- Let us praise Yah, the Breath of all life. “

 So let us begin this prayer by pausing simply to Breathe:  -----------------------------

Now let us turn our attention to where our breath comes from and where it goes:

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - CiviMail