I had a very strange childhood, probably very unlike yours. I grew up in Apartheid South African and there was no TV and if you didn't like sports, there wasn't much to do except read. My sisters and I pretended we were the Bronte sisters and we would recite poetry for fun. One of the poems we really liked was this one by Yeats:
Things fall apart; the centre cannot
hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned.
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned.
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
It felt like that in South Africa then to
us. It felt like we had to hold tighter, run away or hide. Dialogue or change didn't seem possible then,
but who knew that behind the fear, it was there all along.
Although I still
feel echoes of the Yeats poem occasionally, I see there’s another way to see life,
rather than as a centre that cannot hold.
Life is
change. Despite how it looks, it’s not
frozen in time like frames in a movie. It’s a slow gradual process powered by a force
that we have no control over.
That’s the
theme in the portion we read this week, that life can change for any of us at
any moment- you can be very rich and powerful,
and then lose it all, but always be kind because it could be you, and it
was never really yours anyway. I wonder
about Donald Trump if he looks at his good fortune and believes he’s earned it
and that he’s entitled to it, instead of seeing it as dumb trust-fund luck.
In our
tradition too, there has been so much truth entitlement, and so much
change -
From a tribe of whining
ex-slaves marching around the desert for 40 years, receiving the Torah at Sinai,
and finally getting to Israel, we build the first temple, it goes down, we build the second temple; it goes down too, all is nearly lost. Good bye Essenes, Sadducees, proto-Christians,
hello Pharisees. We smuggle the essence out in a coffin, thank
you Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakai, and then we write the Mishna, then some of us go into
exile where we write the Babylonian Talmud. In the Babylonian Talmud (and in the Jerusalem
Talmud) many changes are made to the laws given at Sinai. The Babylonian Talmud wins out.
Then some of
us reject the Babylonian Talmud entirely, goodbye Karaites. We don’t follow that line. Our people take it with them along with the
Mishnah and the Torah and march around Europe, Asia and North Africa arguing
about God, faith and reason, Thank you Maimonides for making things so clear,
although God knows you annoyed the believers in magic.
In the 18
century, we cross a very narrow bridge but the main thing is not to be afraid -
thank you Rav Nachman of Breslov, thank you Hasidim. Mitnagdim object to Hasidim and they fight
like crazy. I believe there were all kinds of battles going
on in Germany too with the birth of the reform movement and modern orthodoxy as
a response to that, and there is more fighting involved. But unconcerned with the entire western European
enlightenment, my line are the Mitnagdim from Lithuania who go to South Africa
where we sang the national anthem Die Stem at school but we also sang Hatikva
because later my people up North were assigned the state of Israel in
1948. Anything is possible I tell you.
Many years after
leaving South Africa, I stand here today with you. I love it here, the people are lovely, the Kiddish
is good and because from what I can tell, our rabbis are particularly
outstanding people who see the big picture.
I wish it would stay like this forever, but I have no doubt there’s more
change on the way, but we’ll be ok. I
have hope.
Like life
itself that finds a way, Judaism is a living breathing thing that has evolved
slowly. Halacha evolves at the speed of a glacier, Takana after Takana,
adapting to life’s needs as it progresses, but it happens so slowly we don’t
even notice.
I think of
the priests in the Temple that blew their trumpets at the end of Beit
Hashoeivah, a fun-filled festival at the end of Sukkot that sadly we don’t have
any more. It sounded like a blast. The
Mishnah describes how the priests blew their trumpets at the upper gate and
then down the steps and then through the court of women, blowing their tekiah
and truah all the while, and then on to the East gate where they said “our eyes are
turned towards God”
Those
priests must have loved their procession and were probably not happy when it
ended. But it did. Things took a different turn and we carried
on the procession in a different way. Our
temple is no longer the literal temple encased in walls, and we no longer
celebrate with harps, lyres, cymbals and trumpets, but we keep finding new ways
to sound the notes and proclaim our place in the scheme of things. We don’t go backwards, we go forwards. Our eyes are still turned towards God.
What doesn’t
change in this Judaism project of ours? What
is the essence, the one core value? The
prime directive? It’s something I think
about a lot. Here are some thoughts…
1. Maybe it’s related to the full range
of the human experience Jewish practise supports, from grief to joy to desire
and to belonging
2. Maybe it’s related to the power of
the Talmud that holds a kingdom of conflicting opinions where no one human is
allowed to own the entire truth.
3. Maybe it’s related to emunah, the
flickering experienced and felt trust
in a force bigger than myself. In this
imagined place, any moment is suspended between two sky hooks, the creation of
the universe in the past and the possibility of an ideal future that we help
create.
4. One final possibility is suggested at
the end of Behar, the torah reading this week, although I’m open to any other
ideas. The main thing is not to make any idols to
worship and all the implications of human responsibility that radical
monotheism demands.
Not to
believe there is more god in some things than in others
Or to
believe your way has more god in it than the other ways
That your
land is more blessed by god than any other land
That your
good fortune is an indication of your special privilege, instead of seeing it
as just on loan.
Sometimes we
get to be the ones who look after others and sometimes we have to be the one
who needs a little help from their friends.
This I know
for sure, that in the moment of listening to another person without judgement, or
being really heard by another person, and in the moment of love and surrender, I've felt part of the intact, infinite space I call god. There is no action, no land and no language that
is not part of that. It is a safe, shared,
sacred space. It is a place of hope and
possibility.
It is the only
centre that holds and goes on holding…the rest is just to point the way.
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