Monday, September 06, 2010

GOOD WISHES FOR ROSH HASHANA

On Wednesday evening September 8th Jews everywhere in the world begin a ten day period starting with Rosh-Hashana (New Year) and culminating with Yom Kippur (a Day of fasting, atonement and reflection). This ten day period is called the “Days of Awe”.
This year I personally call it days of shock and awe.

I am shocked that Israel, alone, among all nations of the word, must still be asked to commit suicide to gain the recognition of “its right to exist.”

I am shocked that even supporters of Israel are still duped by the two state dissolution of Israel. As my friend the brilliant journalist Nidra Poller writes:
“Once something gets into the media head, it's worse than lice. No matter what you do, you can't get them to stop thinking around that point, even though that point invalidates everything else they say. People who live by writing words--rather carelessly in most cases--can end their articles with a flourish that is so idiotic it should fall off the screen of its own weight. Whatever kind of state, they say, it has to be sure to not be a Hamas state.

But that's the point. Was Gaza a Hamas state before Israel pulled out? So if Israel pulls out of Judea-Samaria it too will become a Hamas State. So that's why Israel mustn't pull out. And that's why the peace process has nothing to do with peace.”

I am, however really awed by one thing. This year marks 5,771 years of Jewish existence that began in Hebron.and, in spite of unspeakable persecution, harassment, forced conversion, and the Holocaust where one in every three Jews in the world was killed...we are here and the chain has not been broken and a brave Jewish community resides in Hebron today.

I am still awed by Israel which is a freewheeling democracy: where Hebrew, once a nearly extinct language is spoken as a “first language” by millions of modern and wonderful and patriotic people; where a state-of–the-art mighty military protects those people, and, by default, protects the dignity and pride of every sentient Jew in the world.

Many years ago on Rosh Ha’Shana my kid brother and I would walk to the Bronx River near West Farms Road, following the Rabbi and hundreds of adherents for a “Taschlich” a tradition many centuries old in which Jews gather on the first day of Rosh Hashana to throw their sins into bodies of water and recite Psalms.

I am awed now that every year I see hundreds of kids and parents from local synagogues who go to perform “ Tashlich” in the East River.

I am awed to live in the great United States of America where the Ten Commandments grace the façade of the Supreme Court; where we live in peace among Christian friends and enjoy the freedoms and protection granted by our Founding Fathers who were all familiar and influenced by our Scriptures and Prophets.

Jews wish each other a happy and sweet year and a wish that one be inscribed in the Book of Life.
In the Bronx, after the first day we always abbreviated and said “A happy and a healthy….” as a greeting.
So, to all my e-pals, of every faith I wish you all “A happy and a healthy…..”
Most sincerely yours,
Ruth King

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