Friday, March 19, 2010

A Note from Rabbi Creditor: "Our Family Needs Us"

A Note from Rabbi Creditor: Our Family Needs Us

4 Nisan, 5770

March 19, 2010

 

Dear Chevreh,

 

Netivot Shalom has taken important steps throughout its history to affirm our unconditional familial relationship with Israel. 


From the weekly prayers for the State of Israel, the Israeli Defense Forces (Tzahal), and for the release of Gilad Shalit to the presence of Israel and American flags in the library overlooking the sanctuary; from V'Zot Yisrael's Israeli cultural programming to their work to bring Consul General Akiva Tor to CNS this past Sunday; from past CNS Israel trips, to our participation in the recent Masorti Leadership Mission, to the next shul trip to Israel being planned for Summer 2011 - Israel is in our collective soul, and we have therefore had a very hard week.

 

As you may have heard, early yesterday morning, the UC Berkeley ASUC Student Senate passed a bill calling upon the UC Berkeley administration and the UC Regents to divest from companies due to their business relationship with the Israeli government.  We stand with and in support of our sister organization, Berkeley Hillel, who are working with student leaders to have this bill rescinded.  The official Hillel statement can be found on the Berkeley Hillel website (pages.berkeleyhillel.org). 


Netivot Shalom especially stands with the rabbinic leadership of Berkeley Hillel, Rabbi Adam Naftalin-Kelman (Executive Director) and Rabbi Dorothy Richman (Rabbi In Residence), both beloved members of our shul.   

 

If you would like to help Berkeley Hillel respond to the Student Senate bill, please be in contact with UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau  (chancellor@berkeley.edu), University of California President Mark G. Yudof (president@ucop.edu), and the Associated Students of the University of California elected representatives of the UC Berkeley student body (bit.ly/auu3mz).

 

This awful bill comes in the aftermath of two other problematic events in Israel that have galvanized a fiery diaspora response. 

 

  • One was the "Rotem Bill", introduced in the Israeli Knesset which proposed that anyone converting to Judaism in Israel would not be automatically eligible for citizenship through the Law of Return. This provision would also be applied retroactively, stripping any converts of their citizenship.  Read the Forward's account of the impact American Jewry had on the bill's being stopped.  (An analysis of the proposed bill by Masorti Rabbi Reuven Hammer is here: bit.ly/9ULaWD.)

  • The other traumatic event occurred Tuesday morning, when Women of the Wall gathered in the women's section of the Kotel for their monthly davening.  This time, a few Charedi men threw chairs over the mechitza (divider) at the women's group.  And, for me, this time was even more awful.  As can be seen on the YouTube video of it happening, my sister was in that group that morning.  They are all physically fine.  Our people's soul is not fine.  Mine is not either.

 

Of course, we've also been paying close attention to the recent tensions that arose when Vice President Biden visited Israel, only to be confronted with an Israeli decision to build in Ramat Shlomo, a contested area close to Jerusalem.  As an email from Seymour Kessler, CNS member and cochair of Bridges to Israel-Berkeley, put it in an urgent email this week: "Whether or not you are a J-Streetnik, AIPACer or neither, you need to be aware that the discourse in U.S.-Israel relations has hit a disturbingly new low."  There are important steps Israel must take, with the American Jewish community's needed support and critique, to strengthen itself in the community of nations and in the global Jewish community.

 

Chevreh, I write you this extended email in the hopes that you will be at least as engaged as you have been.  We are a shul with many strong opinions about everything.  But the framework for this particular conversation is that we labor for the body and the soul of Israel.  A group under the leadership of Rom Rosenblum is starting its work to help create a Bay Area network of Masorti supporters to strengthen the Masorti (Conservative) Movement in Israel, which is dedicated to pluralism and progressive social politics.


Our family needs us.  May we all feel the need to respond so that tomorrow we can transform hatred and mistrust into Ahavat Chinam, free-flowing love.  May Israel, her neighbors, and the world know peace one day soon.

 

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Creditor


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