My drash - Torah sermon - at Temple Beth El-Mekor Chayim, this Shabbat.
The Parasha (Portion) is "Masei," Numbers 33:1-36:13
But I’m here, and this is my home. I love New Jersey.
The Parasha (Portion) is "Masei," Numbers 33:1-36:13
TBEMC Dvar 7/26/14 Parashat
Masei
Numbers 33:1 - 36:13
Shabbat shalom
I have been clearing out my
office and packing up my things.
As some of you may know, I am
leaving my job at "the Joint", the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Next
week is my last week.
Leaving the Joint was a very
difficult decision. I’m proud to be the next CEO of our Jewish Federation.
Proud and honored. We do amazing things, with amazing professionals and volunteers.
But leaving the Joint was a
very difficult decision.
And one of the things I've
been doing these past few weeks is clearing out my office.
Some things I’m going to keep,
some things I haven’t quite decided yet what to do with them. Some things - like a particularly strong bottle of horseradish vodka - are here today for our kiddush.
And some things went pretty
quickly into the trash. For example, I don’t know why, I had a huge collection
of itineraries and boarding passes from Continental Airlines.
Long-forgotten journeys from a
long-forgotten airline. Although to be honest, I do miss Continental.
I’m not entirely sure why
I kept all these boarding passes and itineraries. Maybe it was to reassure
myself that I’d been somewhere.
Believe me, I've been to lots
of places these past few years. More than most people would ever want to go
anywhere. And I have no complaints. None whatsoever.
I've seen amazing things, met
with incredible leaders, and have felt at every step of the way that I was
serving the Jewish people and doing something good.
But … at the end … here I am.
Right back where I started.
Normally, on itineraries and
boarding passes, you’d see that the journey is marked by the destination.
Not the point of origin. Normally, when we talk about our journeys, we talk
about where we’re going. Not where we’re coming from.
So it says, at the beginning
of this week’s parasha, that these are the journeys of the Children of Israel
who went to the Land of Israel,” right?
Nope. It says “these are the
journeys of the Children of Israel who went out of the Land of Egypt.”
This isn't your usual kind of
masa, your usual journey. This is a journey defined by the point of origin. Not
the destination.
I was thinking a lot about
this concept of journeys this last few weeks.
Now, for all intents and
purposes, I am an American Jew. True, an American-Israeli-British Jew with an
accent that isn't precisely ‘New Jersey.’
But I’m here, and this is my home. I love New Jersey.
Fortunately, I love diners and I don’t see the need to pump my
own gas. So that’s worked out quite nicely for me.
And like a quarter of Jews
alive in the world today, I now live in a country other than the one in
which I was born. My journey was – and is – defined by my origins.
Not by my destination.
My identity is mixed, and
complicated, and somewhat messy. Which is why this concept of the origins of
journeys in the parasha means so much to me.
There was a PBS show on
recently about American-Jewish identity and the journeys we make. And in the episode
that I watched was a fascinating quote by Rabbi Harold Schulweis of Los
Angeles.
His grandfather, he said, came
to synagogue because he was Jewish. His grandchildren go to synagogue because
they want to become Jewish.
We've become about the journey.
About becoming.
And that's not necessarily a
bad thing. When I traveled around the world for the Joint I would frequently
meet young people who were just now discovering their Jewish identity.
Just now discovering what it means to be
Jewish.
Once, in a far-off post-Soviet
country, I was watching a young woman participate in an educational shabbat
service. It was a teaching seminar, and there were hundreds of 'new' Jews. All
halachic. All "Jewish" by any definition. But they didn't know
what it meant to be Jewish and they wanted to learn. They wanted to 'become’
Jewish.
So … on the stage there were
several educators from the local community. And one was doing the kiddush, one
was doing the motzi. And this young woman was lighting the candles and
explaining what she knew about them. And she was wearing a crucifix. The
whole crucifix - not just the cross itself.
I was sitting in the front row
looking at the big gleaming crucifix. And I leaned over to my colleague who was
the netzig, the JDC Country Representative. "Nu?" I said.
"Give her time," he
said. "She doesn't yet fully understand what it means to be Jewish."
He was right. It's a journey.
We're all on this journey.
We’re all on a journey, like
the masa of this week’s parasha, that’s defined by the starting-point.
We're all becoming
Jewish.
Shabbat shalom.
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