Rabbi Kort
Rabbi Kort created this video to share with our Small Groups.
Rabbi Rachel Kort
Temple Beth Or, Everett
Rosh HaShanah Morning 5781
There is something special about this sermon. I wrote it in the forest at Deception Pass. I did something I’ve never done before. I went camping by myself. Just me, my laptop and a really long extension cord. It was so nice to be surrounded by lush, majestic pine trees.
Barukh Atah Adonai Eloheinu Melekh Ha’olam oseh ma’aseh b’reshit.
Blessed are You, Adonai our God, Ruler of the universe, who continually does the work of creation.
These difficult times we are living in have given me a greater appreciation for nature. They also make me feel closer to people I have lost in life, especially my dad.
Before I left to go camping, my mom asked inquisitively, “When did you discover you like camping?!? The Kort Family is more of an indoor family, enjoying concerts and museums. But I think my dad would have understood why I like camping and why I went into the woods to write and revive myself. We grew up minutes from Lake Washington. I remember playing for hours along it’s sparkling shore. My dad would snooze. Every so often, a breeze would come along, rouse him from sleep and he would declare: ‘This breeze is a mechaye.’
‘Mechaye’ is one of those Yiddish words, rich with meaning, impossible to translate into just one word in English. A delight, a pleasure, from the Hebrew ‘mechayei’ meaning something that vitalizes and rejuvenates. Think of the Gevorot, the second prayer of our Amidah that declares God’s Power. Baruch Atah Adonai, mechayei ha-kol. Blessed are You, the One who gives and renews all life. (Miskan HaNefesh)
Dr. Quing Li, is an expert on traditional Japanese art and science of forest bathing, or shinrin-yoku. Li describes Shinrin-yoku as a bridge to the natural world. She teaches:
The key to unlocking the power of the forest is in the five senses. Let nature enter through your ears, eyes, nose, mouth, hands and feet. Listen to the birds singing and the breeze rustling in the leaves of the trees. Look at the different greens of the trees and the sunlight filtering through the branches. Smell the fragrance of the forest and breathe in the natural aromatherapy…Taste the freshness of the air as you take deep breaths. Place your hands on the trunk of a tree. Dip your fingers or toes in a stream. Lie on the ground. Drink in the flavor of the forest and release your sense of joy and calm. This is your sixth sense, a state of mind. Now you have connected with nature. You have crossed the bridge. (Forest Bathing: How Trees Can Help You Find Health and Happiness)
Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, the 18th century Hassidic master, had a similar practice: “Grant the ability to be alone” he would pray. “May it be my custom to go outdoors each day. Among the trees and the grasses. Among all growing things. And there I may be alone and enter into prayer. To talk with the one that I belong to.”
When I have connected with folks these past months, so many people have shared how much they are appreciating nature. Camping, gardening, birdwatching, hiking, kayaking, walking, even if it is just around the block, or enjoying a sunset at the end of your driveway, we’ve experienced and appreciated the revitalizing power of nature while physically distancing.
In the midst of a health pandemic, we are experiencing a climate crisis. I was remembering the beginning of the secular New Year. Folks all over the world enjoy bringing in the New Year with fireworks. But this January the show in Sydney Harbor was canceled due to poor air quality caused by the most horrific bushfire season on record in Australia. We spent the final days of our Jewish year, unable to go outside with poor air quality caused by the worst wildfire season on the West Coast. Climate change is fundamentally damaging the quality of our air and our lives.
I want to share a Midrash and teaching from my friend and environment thinker Rabbi Kevin Kleiman.
When the Holy Blessed One created the first human, God took Adam and led him around all the trees of the Garden of Eden. And God said, “See My works, how good and praiseworthy they are! And all I have created, I made for you. [But,] be mindful then that you do not spoil and destroy My world. For if you spoil it, there is no one after you to repair it. (Kohelet Rabbah 7:13)
The message embedded in this midrash acknowledges and praises God as the creator of the earth and then charges the human race with the task of using our planet’s precious resources wisely. The last line in this text is a forewarning: we must be responsible caretakers of the planet’s resources, to use only what is necessary, and to be conscious of the negative impact that human beings can have on the ecosystems of the earth if we are not careful. God reminds Adam, the first human, that there is only one world to provide for the needs of human beings, plants, and animals. Then, God leaves the fate of the world in our hands.(“Curb Your Consumerism: Developing a Bal Tashchit Food Ethic for Today” in Sacred Table)
Rosh Hashanah celebrates the creation of our universe and humanity. In a few minutes, together we will read the story of Creation from our Torah:
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God created the universe out of chaos. In this time of chaos we find ourselves very much needing to recreate our world right now. Our tradition calls upon us to be stewards for our natural environment and we must do a better job of caring for our earth. Nature has the ability to revitalize us. We must work to revitalize our earth now!
This is not an easy time to say ki tov–it is good. There is power in naming what is lo tov–not good. And yet we rise to the challenge of this new year with the yearning and commitment to not only say, but to create ki tov–that good. (From ‘Reconstructing Judaism: High Holy Day Resources,’ 5781)
**To learn more on how to advocate for our environment through a Jewish lens, here are great resources from our Reform Movement’s Religious Action Center.
Words are powerful in our Jewish tradition. The Torah begins with God creating the universe through words: “God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light” (Genesis 1:3). The 15th century German text The Ways of the Righteous explains “with the tongue, one can perform limitless acts of virtue…[and] can commit numerous great and mighty transgressions.”
The way we communicate with one another has changed drastically over my not-so-long lifetime. I started to email in high school to communicate with camp friends; I shared a Pine account with my mom. I rented my first cell phone during my junior year abroad in Israel and immediately started texting.
The preeminent Jewish writer on the ethics of speech and language, the Chofetz Chaim, experienced similar innovation in communication during his lifetime. He was born in 1839 just after the invention of the electric telegraph and lived to experience telephones and radio before he died in 1933. He famously reflected: “When people are preparing a telegram, notice how carefully they consider each word before they put it down. That is how careful we must be when we speak.” Perhaps it was adapting to new technology that inspired his dedication to the subject of communication. Scholars also suggest that he was responding to fierce tension and lack of civil discourse within his Jewish community of Lithuania.
The current political climate and pandemic have taken a toll on healthy communication. Division and lack of civility not only play out in the public arena but also on our social media accounts and family Zoom gatherings. I have to admit that over the past months my temperament has been cranky at times and my language has been terse and even salty.
Our Temple President, Melanie Field, has prioritized fostering a culture of kindness in our community. We agree that in order for us to infuse our synagogue with kindness we first must look at how we communicate. For the past two months I have worked with Temple leaders Melanie Field, Vicky Romero, Bob Goodmark, and Sonia Siegel Vexler on Beth Or Communication Norms. We hope these norms will be a tool and a resource for all Beth Or meetings and discussions, from board meetings to book club. Our Small Group Initiative and Governing Board have already begun to adopt these norms and Melanie Field will introduce them to committee chairs in February. Our tradition holds that words have the power to create and it is our blessing that these norms will build and support Temple Beth Or as a k’hilah kedoshah, sacred community.
Rabbi Rachel Kort
Temple Beth Or Communication Norms
B’tselem Elohim ∙ בצלם אלהִים ∙ Each of us is created in God’s image
Listen to understand/not to respond.
Express disagreement with ideas, not individuals.
Maintain confidentiality about the conversation and who said what, unless given permission to share.
Tzimtzum ∙ צמצום ∙ -The art of contraction and expansion
Step Up/Step back – make room for others to speak. Consider challenging yourself to participate.
Our Definition of “Jewish” Time
Start and end meetings on time.
Respond to emails or phone calls within three days (unless otherwise requested). When this time frame isn’t doable simply acknowledge that communication was received and share when you will be able to respond.
Do you think Rosh Hashanah is a Jewish holiday?i Yes, we are sitting here in the sanctuary. Tomorrow we’ll skip work, and miss school, separating ourselves from the non-Jewish world. But unlike other holidays we celebrate as a Jewish community such as Passover, Purim and Hanukkah which talk about our particular history as a Jewish people, Rosh Hashanah celebrates the creation of the world. And more specifically, today is the day that God finished creating the world. Today, Adam, the first person was created. Rosh Hashanah encapsulates a tension that exists in our tradition between universalism and particularism. In this way, Rosh Hashanah is not a Jewish holiday; rather, Rosh Hashanah is our Jewish way to celebrate humanity.
Our particular Jewish stories about the birth of humanity focus on the idea that we are all siblings and that no one is superior to the other. According to a Midrash, God decided to create the world from two people, Adam and Eve. God did this so that everybody would know that we have common ancestors, and nobody would feel superior to another. If the point wasn’t clear enough, ten generations after Adam and Eve, after violence and corruption take over the world and God feels the need to start over, once again, God creates the entire world from just two people, Noah and Naamah.
Our tradition’s emphasis that we are all from the same source and no one should feel superior to the other seems so simple. But humanity struggles with this concept. It hard not to be carried away by a wave of hopelessness when looking at the way our human family treats one another.
We, as an American Jewish community, felt this struggle over the past year like never before. Seventeen members of our Jewish family were murdered in Pittsburgh and Poway, simply because they were Jewish. We are by no means the only community targeted by supremacists. Just last month, 22 people were killed in El Paso, Texas by a young man authorities suspect of harboring a violent hatred for immigrants and Latinos. And these are only the most extreme examples of the manifestation of hate in our country. Thousands of hate crimes happen annually in the United States, in which people are targeted for the way they look, the religion they practice, the people they love and the languages they speak.
Another Midrash imagines God minting human beings from the same mold: “A human being mints many coins from the same mold, and they are all identical. But the holy one, blessed be God, strikes us all from the mold of the first human and each one of us is unique.\”ii In this version of creation, our human tendency to favor the identical is described, but it is our differences that are Divine.
Our people have been the target of hate and supremacy for thousands of years of our history. While the displays of supremacy against our people remain the same, we see positive change in the communal response to these acts of hate. Bari Weiss, columnist and editor at the New York Times, had a personal connection to Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburg. It is her childhood synagogue where she became a bat mitzvah. In her new book, How to Fight Antisemitism, Weiss highlights what she calls the “Pittsburgh Principle” as a seed of hope in our fight against antisemitism.
In many ways the massacre that occurred in Pittsburgh was different than other attacks on our people. Our neighbors, citizens on the street were not cheering it on. The response to Pittsburgh was, by the vast majority of our neighbors, solidarity. Weiss shares “the fact that the Pittsburgh Gazette printed the Kaddish on the front page of the paper that is just an unbelievable anomaly in Jewish history.” For Weiss this is an incredible bright spot and “one we should be talking about and elevating so other people can emulate it.” Neighbors over the world are standing with us in solidarity against antisemitism.
This past May, in response to a rise of antisemitic incidents in Germany, the German tabloid, Bild printed a cut-out of a kippah on the front page that said, “cut this out and wear in solidarity with the Jews.” \”Wear it, so that your friends and neighbors can see it. Explain to your children what the kippah is,\” wrote editor-in-chief Julian Reichelt. \”Post a photograph with the kippah on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter. Go out onto the streets with it.\”
These responses are important. It is not a call from our neighbors to conform in order for acceptance. It is an honoring of our right to particular customs like kaddish and kippot. At the same time that our neighbors are recognizing our particularities, they are also connecting to us on a universal level. Our neighbors in Pittsburgh and Germany and Snohomish County have showed with their actions and statements of solidarity that: “an attack on the Jewish community was an attack on them, too.”
Antisemitism is one of many forms of supremacy. For Ibram X. Kendi, one of the leading antiracist voices in America, the struggle to see every human being as a sibling is core to fighting racism. This summer, Kendi published a book, an approachable piece, that has been getting a lot of attention, called How to Be an Antiracist. Kendi embraces an idea similar to our concept of teshuvah, repentance: individuals have the ability to change and transform their behavior. An important takeaway from How to Be an Antiracist is a focus on behavior as opposed to labeling. In order to believe we can fight racism, bigotry, and hate (including antisemitism) we must believe that individuals have the ability to change. Kendi teaches that it is counterproductive to view “racist is a fixed category.” He shared in a recent interview “[if] it’s a tattoo, [if] it’s a label. Of course they’re going to say, ‘I’m not a racist, I’m not a bad person.’ But racist is describing what you’re saying in the moment.”
In Jewish tradition, we usually think of B’Nai Noach, the children of Noah, in reference to people who are not Jewish. It was Noah who God chose, with Naamah and their family, to repopulate the world after the flood. We too are connected to Noah. He is our grandfather, albeit a thousand generations removed.
Noah is a controversial figure in our Jewish tradition. The Torah describes Noah in three ways: Noah “walked with God,“ was “blameless in his generation” and “was righteous.” But our Sages ask ‘why wasn’t Noah more like Abraham?’ When God was about to destroy the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham argued with God. In contrast, Noah dutifully followed God’s instruction and did not express concern for those around him who God would destroy. The Zohar, our preeminent mystical teaching, believes that Noah did not question God because he was out to save himself and family. The contradictions of the character Noah resonate with me. On the one hand, we all have the ability to be righteous and walk with God, on the on hand, we all have a tendency towards self-interest.
In the story of Noah, after the flood, God establishes a covenant with him and sets the rainbow as a sign of this covenant and says: “When I bring clouds over the earth, and the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will remember my covenant between Me and you and every living creature among all flesh, so that the waters shall never again become a flood to destroy all flesh.”iii Contemporary Rabbi and scholar Noah Arnow teaches “a rainbow is the refraction of light through water drops, breaking up the white light so that we can see the various colors in its visible spectrum. A rainbow allows us to see something that we cannot usually see. And we see a rainbow at the liminal moment when the rain has ended but the air is still damp with moisture, when we can sense both the rain and the sun, both danger and opportunity.”
Rabbi Arnow emphasizes that the rainbow is meant to remind us that the world we live in is not black and white, but many shades of color, of nuance. Similarly, Ibram X. Kendi teaches that people are neither racist nor not racist. Rather, we are all B’Nai Noach. We are all a nuanced combination of righteous and self-interested.
Just as our local leadership and interfaith neighbors stood with us this past fall, in order to truly embrace our tradition’s value that no one is superior to the other, we as a Jewish community must stand in solidarity with our neighbors against all forms of bigotry and supremacy. We too must struggle to see every human being as a sibling. We too must struggle with our own bias. We too must feel that an attack on our marginalized neighbors, is like an attack on our own Jewish community.
How do we balance our particular needs as a community with the desire to see ourselves as a part of a universal family? How can we be both a welcoming community and a secure community? How can we work to address our own communal needs and concern ourselves with supporting all who are vulnerable in our greater community? These are the essential questions we are invited to wrestle with on this Rosh Hashanah, this particular Jewish holiday that celebrates our shared humanity.
i Rabbi Rachel Nussbaum, “Melekh al Ko Ha’aretz.” In All the World: Universalism, Particularism and the High Holy Days. Ed. Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, 2014.
ii Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin 37a
iii Genesis 9:14-15
Building Community: Looking Back, Looking Forward, While Focusing on the Present
[February 22, 2019 Installation Service]
In the February edition of the ORacle, our monthly newsletter, I shared one of my favorite Jewish stories, Honi the Circle Maker, a Jewish Rip Van Winkle tale.[i] While traveling along a road, Honi the Circle Maker saw an old man planting a carob tree. He asked the man how long it would take for the tree to bear fruit, and the man told him seventy years. Honi sat down to rest for a while and fell asleep. “Are you the man who planted this tree” Honi said when he awoke. “No, I’m his grandson,” the man answered. Honi had been asleep for seventy years! Honi returned to where his home had been. He knocked on the door. “Is the son of Honi the Circle Maker still alive?” he asked the people there. “His son has died,” they said. “But his grandson is still living.”
Wow! L’Dor Vador. From Generation to Generation. Honi the Circle Maker had come full circle. A bit like me on my return to Washington State. It is powerful for me to introduce you, my new community, to my family and extended Jewish family who raised me here in the Pacific Northwest. While I do believe that deep roots build strong community, roots and history and even planting seeds for the next generation only go so far in building community. The story of Honi doesn’t end with him enjoying the sweet ripened fruit, our Sages in the Talmud continue Honi’s story.
Honi introduced himself to his grandson’s family, but no one believed it to be him. Honi left his family and went to the house of study where he had spent so much time as a student and as a teacher. He saw the students studying, he could hear his teachings being taught, “the law is as clear to us as in the day of Honi the Circle Maker.” “I am Honi!” he called to the students. But they, like his family, didn’t believe him.
While Honi lived to see the carob tree, his family, and his legacy as a scholar flourish, Honi himself was lost. No one knew him. He was deeply hurt. Honi prayed for his death: “o chavruta o mituta.” God heard Honi’s prayers and he died. We are taught that from this tragedy comes the saying, ‘either companionship or death.’ For what is life without relationships? What is community without the joy and benefit of relationships?
Jewish tradition and the rich history of Jewish continuity in Snohomish County lays a strong foundation here at Temple Beth Or. Together, we are planting the seeds of our future in many ways. We celebrate our children and are blessed to have the strength and leadership of our amazing Director of Education, Amy Paquette. We are also investing in our future through our Atideynu leadership program driven by Sonia Siegal Vexler and are developing a strategic plan–thank you Paul Vexler for offering your energy in this area. But as important as roots and seeds are in our endeavor of creating sacred community are the care and attention we give to one another in the present: right here, right now.
I have to say, while it may seem a bit late for some, I love that my installation service is taking place more than a few months into my relationship with our Beth Or community. I have been overwhelmed the past months by your openness to letting me into your lives. You have allowed me to support you and rejoice with you. I’m not only thinking of big milestone moments, but the everyday stepping stones too: discussing how to integrate loss or chronic illness into life, saying goodbye to a beloved pet, beginning new jobs and new relationships, or simply spending time together laughing late into a Friday night oneg. You have graciously allowed me space to make mistakes and grow and learn with you.
Relationships need continued nurturing. Of course, there are members of our Temple family who I have come to know better than others since July. I’m trying hard to share my attention, but hope that you will feel comfortable reaching out to me too. Send me an e-mail so we can set-up a meeting or a coffee date or try to make it services or a class so we can spend more time together. This Shabbat, we are not only looking to our future together, we are honoring the committed relationship that we are actively forging together. Right here, right now.
“O chavruta o mituta–either companionship or death.” Honi’s prayer is powerful but a little stark. Kohelet offers this teaching with poetry. “Secure yourself a friend; two are better than one. Do not work alone, and learn to rejoice in another’s company. If one of you falls, the other is there to help you rise. If it is cold, you can huddle together for warmth. If danger threatens, two can face it better than one. And three better still; the cord of three strands outlasts the cord of two. Seek out companions for work. Seek out friends for life. Make room for yourself and also for others.[ii] Thank you for making room for me, as your rabbi, in this beautiful community.
I must have had the story of Honi in mind when I asked our member, Rabbi David Fine, to offer me my Installation blessing. Rabbi Fine is a link to my past, in particular my dad, may his memory be for a blessing. My dad was a synagogue leader at Temple Beth Am and David and my dad got to know each other through David’s role at the Union for Reform Judaism. They also both happened to be from Oak Park, Michigan. Rabbi Fine knew me a bit as a child and I have caught him rubbing his eyes wondering how I seem to have grown up into a rabbi, just over night. In addition to our history, Rabbi Find and I share a deep commitment to the future of Temple Beth Or and Jewish life in the Pacific Northwest.
But what will make Rabbi Fine’s blessing even more meaningful is our present, multi-faceted relationship we are developing. Rabbi Fine is an empowering mentor and also wonderful colleague. This evening, Rabbi Fine will offer me his blessing and I am thrilled that in just a few weeks, I will have the privilege of offering blessing to David and Beth and their entire family celebrate the upcoming wedding of their son Avi to his bride, Erin. My pleasure to invite my rabbi and friend, Rabbi David Fine to the Bima.
Rabbi Rachel Kort
[i] Talmud Bavli, Ta’anit 23a
[ii] Secure Yourself a Friend (Rami Shapiro) Ecclesiastes 4:9-10
Celebrating Bar and Bat Mitzvah As a Beth Or Community
The ORacle, February 2019 Issue
Did you know that Madonna’s son, Rocco, had a bar mitzvah!? The party was lavish. That was to be expected. There were some beautiful touches to the event that would make anyone’s rabbi kvell, like having a Torah scroll commissioned for the occasion. But there is a surprising fact about Rocco’s bar mitzvah that entertainment media seemed to miss. Rabbi Jeffrey Salkin, author of Putting God on the Guest List: Reclaiming the Spiritual Meaning of Your Child’s Bar or Bat Mitzvah, noticed this bar mitzvah “might be the first…in history in which none of the cast of characters is Jewish. Madonna isn’t. Guy Richie isn’t. Rocco surely isn’t.” What does it mean to become a bar or bat mitzvah outside the context of Jewish community?
In Hebrew, bar/bat mitzvah means “son/daughter of the commandments.” Our tradition teaches that at age thirteen young adults take on responsibility for their own commitments to observing the foundations of Jewish life. The bar or bat mitzvah ceremony centers around the student offering their strength to their Jewish community by leading worship, reading from the Torah, and sharing one’s unique teaching of the weekly Torah portion. If an essential element of becoming a bar or bat mitzvah is a celebration of leadership within one’s Jewish community, then the community must play a critical role on a child’s bar or bat mitzvah journey.
Some of the first services that I had the privilege of enjoying with our Beth Or community this past summer were beautiful Shabbat worship led by our newest b’nei mitzvah: Annabelle Heiman, Maya Douglass, and Aron Seigal. I was not only struck by the hard work and commitment exhibited by these three young adults, but also by the pride our Beth Or community took in these thirteen year olds’ achievements.
I want to take the opportunity in this month’s ORacle to invite our Beth Or community to enhance the meaning of bar and bat mitzvah in the lives of our students. We are blessed to have five students who will be called to the Torah as b’nei mitzvah over this coming summer: Izabell Russakoff, Ilana O’Neal, Ben Feinberg, Maggie Feinberg, & David Zieve. When you see these students practicing their prayer leadership skills at services over the next few months, take time to get to know these amazing 7th graders by asking them about their Tikkun Olam Projects or their thoughts on the weekly Torah reading. These are simple ways to show our emerging adults that they are a part of an extended Jewish family through our Temple.
I am excited to share that our upcoming b’nei mitzvah cohort at Beth Or is one of the largest in our history! As these 5th & 6th grade students and their families begin their journey towards bar and bat mitzvah, I would like to ask for your help in joining with me to offer this cohort a special blessing from our community at Shabbat Services on March 8, 7:30 pm.
I wish all of our b’nei mitzvah students and their families ‘mazel tov.’ May we as, a community, help provide each of our young adults becoming bar and bat mitzvah meaning, perspective, and a lasting connection to our timeless traditions.
L’shalom,
Rabbi Rachel Kort
A Little Torah on a Snowy Shabbat
Returning to My Roots - Planting Together for Our Future
[The ORacle, February 2019 Issue]
The motto of my rabbinic school was “Do what you love.” When people ask, “How did you decide to become a rabbi?” I instantly think of the loving Jewish community that helped raise me. Growing up, I saw my community caring for one another, learning and praying together, enjoying one another\’s company, and most of all, collectively caring for the children in our community.
One of my favorite stories from the Talmud is one you may know. It’s a Jewish Rip Van Winkle tale. Honi the Circle Maker went for a walk and saw an old man planting a tree. “Why would such an old man plant a tree?” Honi wondered, “It takes a very long time to grow. He might not even be around when the tree is big enough to produce fruit.” As Honi walked on past the man planting, he began to feel very tired, so he decided to stop and take a nap. When Honi awoke, he noticed a beautiful mature carob tree and someone was picking the fruit. “Excuse me sir, did you plant this tree?” Honi asked. “Not me, my grandfather planted it seventy years ago.”
Sometimes returning back to the Pacific Northwest after 20 years away feels like I have only just awoken from a really long nap. Working in the Jewish world and having my daughter attend preschool at the synagogue where I grew up, I run into someone I haven’t seen since I was a child about once a week. They rub their eyes, standing in amazement. The shy young girl they knew seems to have grown up into a rabbi just overnight. They share their pride that a child that they helped raise in their community is now a Jewish leader in the Pacific Northwest.
On Friday, February 22, our community will come together for a special Shabbat. I will have an opportunity to offer our Board leadership and Beth Or’s new president, Vicky Romero, a Blessing of Installation, and the community will offer me your Installation Blessing as well. As rabbi of Temple Beth Or, I truly get to “do what I love” as my profession. While there are many blessings I get to enjoy in the moment, I am excited to have this opportunity to move back home and join with you as a community in continuing to strengthen Jewish life here in Western Washington. While I am enjoying this special time being your new(ish) rabbi, I look forward to being together for many years to come. I imagine being together with you in the distant future, rubbing our eyes, and standing in awe and pride of the Jewish community and leaders we have worked to grow together.
L’shalom,
Rabbi Rachel Kort
Engaging with Israel
[The ORacle, January 2019 Issue]
It was easy for me to fall in love with Israel, coming of age in the 1990s. I was inspired by the egalitarian army service and the rescue of Ethiopian Jews. I mourned when Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated and joined with the majority of Jews in the US and Israel in keeping hope that Israeli and Palestinian leaders could achieve peace in the near future.
I’m not exactly sure how it happened, but despite identifying as a Zionist my entire life and even having worked for the Israeli government as an emissary, it has been a decade since I’ve been to Israel! While I have used beginning a career and a family as an excuse, I recently read an essay that made me reevaluate my relationship with Israel. Dr. Joshua Holo, Dean of Hebrew Union College in LA, suggests in “Peering into the Nationalist Mirror” that American Jews are increasingly conflicted between their Zionism and liberalism and are increasingly choosing to identify with the later. If you were to ask me if my Zionist identity has dwindled, my knee jerk reaction would be “absolutely not,” but my actions show my favoritism. My engagement with Israel has decreased while my involvement in social justice causes here in the US has increased. I wonder how many of you have experienced something similar?
As a rabbinic leader committed to ahavat Tzion — love of Israel — as a core Reform Jewish value, I have to be honest with myself and think deeply about why I have not prioritized Israel more in my life. In addition to ahavat Tzion, our Reform Movement embraces informed choice. If you are like me and may have lost some connection with Israel and Zionism, I want to invite you to engage with Israel along with me this month.
I’m proud to travel to Israel and represent Temple Beth Or and all of Washington State on an intimate delegation through the Jewish National Fund with Consul General of Israel Shlomi Koffman who serves Northern California and the Pacific Northwest. I’ll post regularly while traveling and share articles and resources to help us better understand the beauty and complexities of Israel at age 70. Friend me on Facebook if you would like to “join” me on this journey to Israel.
L’shalom,
Rabbi Rachel Kort
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