On Wednesday evening Jewish communities around the world crossed the threshold. Into the New Year. The old year is behind us – though it isn’t really. It might be fading, but it hasn’t gone. It feels like this last year will never go, will never leave us. The New Year is beginning – but before we can move on into the new that opens up before us, perhaps we do need to pause and remember. The first day of the New Year is, after all, Yom Ha-Zikkaron, our liturgy says, ‘the day of remembering’.
But what are
going to remember from this past year? I imagine each of us in the Jewish community
will have their own take on what we want to remember, what we need to remember -
but that might be complicated by what we can’t help but remember, that we might
prefer to forget. We can’t necessarily control what we remember. Some images of this past year – if we chose to
look, and not everyone did – became indelible: ineradicable traces of what
humanity is capable of. For good and ill.
I know that
if one was Israeli-born, or have family in Israel, or friends there, this last
year has been an agonising time, a time of heart break, of fear (which is
ongoing), of being profoundly shaken up by this latest chapter in the fraught
saga of a Jewish homeland. This conflict – and this is the case even if a
person had no immediate personal connection with those in Israel who have been
living through this traumatic year on a daily, an hourly, basis - this conflict
has effected us all.
It’s been about
identity, and history, and belonging, it’s involved soul and feelings, it’s
been about anger and guilt, hatred, humiliation
- and a terrible sense of vulnerability. It has been, in a way, unbearable –
but it has had to borne, lived through, survived.
We’ve had no choice, this last year, but to go through and witness these events, in Israel, in Gaza, with as much of our humanity intact as we have been able to muster. This last year will never go, will never leave us. It has scarred the Jewish people collectively – in multiple ways. Scarred and scared. It’s awoken ancestral memories, and re-activated hidden wounds. There’s been so much hurt, and so much need for others to know our hurt - and, sometimes, for them in turn to feel the hurt.
So as we
cross the threshold into the New Year, Jews acknowledge all this. I work in a Diaspora
community - which means our ties to Israel vary from person to person: for some
in the community those bonds are as strong as steel, as deep as life itself;
and for others the ties have felt different, sometimes looser, more like chords
of silk, entangling us, reminding us that we are bound together in ways that
might not always be welcome, but that can tie us in knots, emotionally,
intellectually, morally, spiritually.
For some in my
own community - and this is of course true of the wider Jewish community in the
UK - it has been a year of pride, and resolve; for others it has been a time of
troubling self-questioning, or shame, a year of wondering what our Jewish
identity is rooted in, what values do we hold dear, and why. Sometimes, sadly,
disturbingly, it’s also been a year of self-censorship for those who felt they
were not being sufficiently ‘on message’. All this has happened to us.
And whatever
one’s stance on what has unfolded this last year, and what is still unfolding hour
by hour, Jews have all watched, sometimes appalled, at how the outside world
conflates Zionism and Jewishness as if they are the same thing. Which they are
not. And whether it’s been in the
workplace or at school or on a university campus, or just on the street, on
public transport, in shops, Jews have all had to manage this latest turn in the
long, jagged arc of Jewish history.
There has
been a lot of suffering this last year, this year that is now past, but has not
passed. We have suffered as a people – and we have caused suffering as a
people.
The Jewish
people are historically used to suffering, we know it in our souls; but we are
not so used to thinking of ourselves as causing others to suffer. And this is
something else we have had to bear this last year. Please understand me here –
I am not making a political point, I am not talking about the necessity or
otherwise of the suffering we have caused. I am talking about what our souls
have had to bear, I am talking about the emotions we have had to go
through, I am talking about the spiritual cost to our psyches, our minds, our
hearts.
So, yes, the
old year is still inside us – but now the year is turning, the New Year is
opening up and Jews come together to celebrate that opening up, and what it
offers us. This day in the Jewish year is a great gift, along with the ten day
period they open up – they’re ‘Heaven sent’, so to speak – they are an extraordinary opportunity because
they offer us the chance to exorcise some of our pain, our confusion, our
doubts; and to question our certainties. Certainties are psychic retreats –
they make us feel safe.
Professor Eugene
(‘John’) Heimler survived Auschwitz and Buchenwald, and thirty years later
wrote a verse drama, ‘The Storm’, in which he said: “Uncertainty is our only certainty”. He worked
with people as a psychologist, helping people discover where hope lay in the
journey ahead, not by looking back but by looking forward, looking around at
community, at family, at friendship, at what life could offer now. At the gifts
that life offers every day.
So in spite
of all the uncertainties with which Jews are faced, the New Year offers us the
chance of a re-set. There’s a Biblical verse that is sometimes quoted on the
morning of Rosh Hashanah, our New Year. A verse of radical hopefulness.
It’s the
voice of Isaiah channelling the divine consciousness within him: “For now I
create new heavens and a new earth, and the past need not be remembered, nor
ever brought to mind” – Wow, what an idea! – “Be glad and rejoice in what I
can create” (Isaiah 65:17-18).
This is
extraordinary, this prophetic vision – that whatever we have gone through, we
can move on, we can move into the new, we can celebrate a new beginning. We acknowledge that yes, everything is in a
state of flux, of change, of chaos – all predictions you hear by all the
so-called experts about these next few days, or this next year, are just fairy
stories, to comfort us or scare us, but they are fictions because none of us
knows what the next day will bring, never mind the next year.
“Everything,
everywhere is always moving. Forever. Get used to it” – Brian Cox, playing
Logan Roy, barked it out to his daughter Shiv in that great TV drama Succession.
The character is a monster and a bully – but he is given some great lines. We
can recognise the truth of the lines, as we do with Shakespeare: “Everything,
everywhere is always changing, forever” and yes, we better find a way to “Get used
to it”.
And yet,
maybe there are some things that don’t change, some values that endure, some
truths that endure, from generation to generation. Our Jewish liturgy points
the way to that. Something in it remains unchanging. It offers us a different
frequency of existence to tune in to, a different world to live in, for a few
hours, a few days - a different angle of vision that focuses us on what is
unchanging in a world of uncertainties. It reminds us of our vision, our
ancient vision that is the justification for our existence as a people.
The liturgy
reminds us that kindness matters, compassion matters, justice matters. It
reminds us that Jews have not been put in the world to create more suffering.
Our task remains unchanging: to alleviate suffering, to avoid harm, to struggle
with our innate destructiveness and allow our gifts for creativity and goodness
to shine through.
We have this
potential grafted to our souls – this is the radical hopefulness of the Jewish
story. Whether it is in our own lives - at home, in our families, in our
communities, in our society - or on the world stage, the relationship we have
with others allows us to express our divine potential for making a difference
for the better.
Our New Year
summons us and reminds us – this is also what Yom HaZikkaron means – we
are reminded that the potential for making a difference is our Jewish task and
our destiny.
[based on
a sermon given at Finchley Reform Synagogue, October 2nd, 2024]
Good stuff that extends beyond the Jewish community
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