Days of Commemoration
The
challenge of the Shoah in our generation is more than to remember. It is to begin to repair the damage to our
communal psyche and our faith in the God of Israel. Author David Roskies created a special service for Yom Hashoah
that began to face this wound in our souls. Our use of this liturgy led to his revival and reediting of the
piece. We have made it a regular
service.
Shavuot celebrates the first fruit
harvest but comes in the middle of the harvest. Sometimes the holiday was overlooked and even the Israelite
farmers didn’t stop working. Today the
holiday is tied to the covenant at Sinai.
Since a sense of responsibility to God and community is almost counter
cultural in the modern era, we feel a special responsibility to make Shavuot
work. One of the ways we do this is
with a “wilderness” retreat. We’ve
slept in tents at Camps Beber and Olin Sang Ruby. Last year we had a virtual tour of Israel for families with Itai
Tennenbaum and upgraded our music with LA’s Dale Schatz when we were at Camp
Henry Horner. We lived out the covenantal agenda with workshops on dealing with
death and heard an update from our representative at the White House.
On Tisha
B’Av we formally mourn the destruction of the Temple and our need to
recreate Judaism in the form of rabbinic Judaism. Every year we explore a different theme of Jewish transformation
that affects us. We have looked at the
death of Jewish hospitals, the end of classic reform Judaism, the evolution of
conservative Judaism, the loss of Zionism as an
intellectual
force in American Jewish life and the changing definitions of what it is to
measure
what Jewishness is. Rabbi Joseph Tabachnikz’l shared his own life’s
journey to illustrate the changing role of the rabbi. And this year, Aaron Freeman explained and demonstrated how significant
humor is in mourning and thereby in sustaining the Jewish people through
centuries of triumph, turmoil, and trauma.