Thursday, September 13, 2012

Parshat Nitzvim and Thanks for Coming

Parshat Nitzavim 2012

I am so happy to see you all here today.  With the holidays upon us-Rosh Hashanah begins tomorrow night, it is inspiring to remember that what makes a synagogue successful or blessed is not what happens on those days, but every other day, every other Shabbat of the year.

In the Torah reading today we read:

Deuteronomy 30:1111 Surely, this Instruction which I enjoin upon you this day is not too baffling for you, nor is it beyond reach. 12 It is not in the heavens, that you should say, "Who among us can go up to the heavens and get it for us and impart it to us, that we may observe it?" 13 Neither is it beyond the sea, that you should say, "Who among us can cross to the other side of the sea and get it for us and impart it to us, that we may observe it?" 14 No, the thing is very close to you, in your mouth and in your heart, to observe it.

One of the most famous stories in the Talmud includes this line, “The Torah is not in heaven.”  Without getting into the specifics of that story, I think the verse is a powerful one.  What does it mean that the Torah is not in heaven?  Without knowing too much about Martin Luther, I would imagine that this line was inspiring for him.  When he nailed his 95 theses against the door of his Catholic Church, he was saying that the Bible should not be limited to the clergy, but should be known and read and lived by all.  In that way, he expected that the Jews would agree with him, and his anti-Semitism came when they said, “No, we’re perfectly happy as Jews!”

Stepping away from a history lesson, the parsha is a reminder that we all have the capability of understanding and living Torah.  Rabbis are helpful.  I am helpful, but I cannot live your Jewish life for you.  Of course, saying that today is preaching to the choir.  You chose to be here on an average, ordinary Shabbat, albeit one which immediately precedes Rosh Hashanah.

Yet to me, the average, ordinary Shabbat is the most holy time of year.  More holy than Rosh Hashanah, more holy than Yom Kippur.  The average Shabbat is a time when we can pause from our week.  It is a time when we can celebrate our time together, when we can celebrate the blessings of Gd in our lives.  Having Shabbat meals, having Kiddush in shul, schmoozing, reading, talking, laughing.  These are the gifts of Shabbat.  They are not in heaven.  They are right here.

Yes, Shabbat has rules and regulations.  So does everything else in life.  When you get married; when you live in a family; when you live in a community; you have rights and responsibilities.  When creating a partnership or a company, different people have different jobs and requirements.  For those jobs and efforts, they also receive rewards--whether through a paycheck or a whispered “I love you.”  Many Jews today have difficulty with being obligated to do things.  Some days, I do, too.  Yet at the end of the day, at the end of the week, when Shabbat comes, I am thankful for the time to unwind--once I finish services.  I am thankful for the time to be with you, to be with Rebecca and Levee, and have no other place I need to be, nothing else I need to do.  That is the greatest gift of Shabbat.  

Could I have Shabbat if I used my computer all day?  Maybe?  I don’t know.  I know the temptation to look at one email is very great.  And then to respond? And then to write another?  And then suddenly three hours later I realize I’m working and not thanking Gd and not resting and not talking and not taking a Shabbat nap.  Today we live in a world that is very similar to that of our parents and grandparents and yet, very different.  For them, even if they took work home, it was much clearer when they were working and when they were not.  With iphones and droids and blackberries, no matter where we go we can work.  We are more productive than ever before, but we need a true break more than ever before.  We need to power down, shut off and breathe without the buzzing and ringing and pinging and beeping.  On Labor Day, we visited my uncle at his “cabin” in the woods.  I noticed for the first time that there was just a hint of a cell signal.  Apparently Verizon put up a new tower.  I cannot tell you how unhappy that makes me.  It was beautiful to go somewhere and know you are unreachable.  I guess next time I’ll just have to leave the phone in the car.

In short, the restrictions of Shabbat are a blessing, too.  They, too are a gift of Shabbat!



Torah reading quote from: http://www.jtsa.edu/PreBuilt/ParashahArchives/jpstext/nitzavim.shtml
Thanks to the Jewish Publication Society and the Jewish Theological Seminary for sharing.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Unveiling on Yom Kippur!?

http://www.jewishvaluesonline.org/790
For Jewish Values Online, I was asked the following question:
My uncle's family is holding a 1-year memorial and stone unveiling honoring my uncle... on Yom Kippur! I was not close to my uncle but my mother was, and she is urging me to go to this event. I am thinking I should be at services, including Yizkor to honor my father, whom I was extremely close with. They are even planning to make it into a celebration of my uncle's life and have food afterwards. My uncle was Jewish and my mom is, but these family members arranging the event are not. What are the principles I should consider and is there a clear imperative in what I should do? What would Jewish law and thought tell me is the way to proceed?

I wrote:
Before beginning, have you asked them if they could move the memorial one day earlier or later?  Is your uncle buried in a Jewish cemetery?  If so, they may find the gates locked on Yom Kippur, as no one will be working to unlock them.

If I were in your shoes, I cannot imagine going to an unveiling and meal on Yom Kippur.  The proper memorial for your uncle would be to say Yizkor for him, as well as your father, in synagogue on Yom Kippur.  Fasting and prayer go together.  If you are with non-Jewish relatives who will not be fasting, it will make your fast far more difficult, as well as take you away from the spirit of the day.

Yom Kippur is clearly an important and holy day which includes aspects of repentance, prayer, fasting, and also great joy.  It is not appropriate to be in a cemetery on such a day, much less have an unveiling on that date.

As a side note, if you offer to host the meal after the unveiling, they might be more receptive to change.  I would hope that once they understand that it is not appropriate to have an unveiling on Yom Kippur for a Jewish man, they would move the ceremony.

In short,
Step 1: Ask them to move it.  If they say yes, great!
Step 2: If they are committed to that date, apologize that you will be unable to join them and go to synagogue instead.  There you can offer Yizkor prayers for your uncle, as well as your father.
p.s.  Doesn’t your mother want you in shul saying Yizkor for her late husband??




I thought:
Isn't Yom Kippur on most secular calendars? Why would anyone schedule a memorial for a Jewish person on Yom Kippur???

Friday, September 7, 2012

Quick thoughts on Elul

For a rabbi, this is possibly the most stressful time of year.  When I explain to Christians, I say, imagine that Easter and Christmas were a week apart.  I'm not sure if that helps them understand or not, but it is a busy time.  While trying to make sure that everyone else has a spiritual experience on Yom Tov, we spend hours and hours trying to get ready.  Hopefully, we also prepare our own bodies and souls, eating healthfully, exercising and praying and studying regularly.

This is an AWE-some time of year.  It is an exciting time of year.  It is wonderful.  It is a time of reflection, consideration and pausing to think about the consequences of our choices and actions.  Every part of Rosh Hashanah, of Yom Kippur, of the preparatory time of Elul is screaming STOP! THINK! LOOK! OBSERVE!  RECONSIDER!  What is the Shofar but I giant spiritual stop sign?

And yet, for rabbis, this time can be the opposite.  When we are rushing to get everything done to help everyone else pause, we can drink too much coffee and forget to stop and smell anything.  As I go to get the dog from the groomers, make dinner and get back to my sermons, I'm forcing myself to take one deep breath.  Before we know it, it will be Sukkot and time to rejoice or Simchat Torah, time to dance and sing with our Holy Torah.  But first, it is Shabbat.

Thank Gd for the commandment to rest.  I look forward to catching up on todays' Daf Yomi tomorrow.  No tweets today (probably), but Sunday or Monday look for more @tweetedtalmud to see some of the powerful, interesting, strange, awe-inspiring, ideas I find in my daily Talmud study.
http://twitter.com/TweetedTalmud

Yesterday I noted:
36b: rava says dried peppers (not normal way of eating them) don't need blessing and can eat on YK. I don't think would help fast
Not all agree with Rava, but I think that eating dried peppers on Yom Kippur would only make the fast more difficult, not easier!!

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Parshat Ekev and @tweetedtalmud


Rabbi Philip Weintraub
Congregation Agudas Israel
Parshat Ekev
August 11, 2012

Last week we heard the Shema and the Ten Commandments.  Powerful material! From there, Moses wonders how do we live our lives?  He asks:

יב  וְעַתָּה, יִשְׂרָאֵל--מָה ה"  אֱ-לֹהֶיךָ, שֹׁאֵל מֵעִמָּךְ:  כִּי אִם-לְיִרְאָה אֶת-ה" אֱ-לֹהֶיךָ לָלֶכֶת בְּכָל-דְּרָכָיו, וּלְאַהֲבָה אֹתוֹ, וְלַעֲבֹד אֶת-ה" אֱ-לֹהֶיךָ, בְּכָל-לְבָבְךָ וּבְכָל-נַפְשֶׁךָ.
12 And now, O Israel, what does the Lord your God demand of you? Only this: to revere the Lord your God, to walk only in His paths, to love Him, and to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and soul,
יג  לִשְׁמֹר אֶת-מִצְו‍ֹת ה", וְאֶת-חֻקֹּתָיו, אֲשֶׁר אָנֹכִי מְצַוְּךָ, הַיּוֹם--לְטוֹב, לָךְ.
13 keeping the Lord's commandments and laws, which I enjoin upon you today, for your good.
יד  הֵן לַיהוָה אֱ-לֹהֶיךָ, הַשָּׁמַיִם וּשְׁמֵי הַשָּׁמָיִם, הָאָרֶץ, וְכָל-אֲשֶׁר-בָּהּ.
14 Mark, the heavens to their uttermost reaches belong to the Lord your God, the earth and all that is on it!
טו  רַק בַּאֲבֹתֶיךָ חָשַׁק ה", לְאַהֲבָה אוֹתָם; וַיִּבְחַר בְּזַרְעָם אַחֲרֵיהֶם, בָּכֶם מִכָּל-הָעַמִּים--כַּיּוֹם הַזֶּה.
15 Yet it was to your fathers that the Lord was drawn in His love for them, so that He chose you, their lineal descendants, from among all peoples — as is now the case.
טז  וּמַלְתֶּם, אֵת עָרְלַת לְבַבְכֶם; וְעָרְפְּכֶם--לֹא תַקְשׁוּ, עוֹד.
16 Cut away, therefore, the thickening about your hearts and stiffen your necks no more.
יז  כִּי, ה" אֱ-לֹקֵיכֶם--הוּא אֱלֹהֵי הָאֱלֹהִים, וַאֲדֹנֵי הָאֲדֹנִים:  הָאֵל הַגָּדֹל הַגִּבֹּר, וְהַנּוֹרָא, אֲשֶׁר לֹא-יִשָּׂא פָנִים, וְלֹא יִקַּח שֹׁחַד.
17 For the Lord your God is God supreme and Lord supreme, the great, the mighty, and the awesome God, who shows no favor and takes no bribe,
יח  עֹשֶׂה מִשְׁפַּט יָתוֹם, וְאַלְמָנָה; וְאֹהֵב גֵּר, לָתֶת לוֹ לֶחֶם וְשִׂמְלָה.
18 but upholds the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and befriends the stranger, providing him with food and clothing. —
יט  וַאֲהַבְתֶּם, אֶת-הַגֵּר:  כִּי-גֵרִים הֱיִיתֶם, בְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם.
19 You too must befriend the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.  

Deuteronomy Chapter 10

I remember when I was in Israel during the Gaza War, I visited Sderot and Ashkelon.  With Israeli ingenuity, business sense and Biblical humor, one could buy bumper stickers that said, Am Kashe Oref, we are a stiff-necked people.  Playing on the similar letters as Ashkelon, the residents said, no matter how many rockets fall from Gaza; this is our home.  In recent months, as rockets fall once again (thankfully not as frequently), I wonder about that.  I saw a facebook photo Thursday that said, the fastest Olympic sprinter runs 200m in under 20 seconds, but in Sderot they have only 15 seconds from when the siren sounds to when a rocket falls.  The implications are clear.  (Note, for our Israel trip, we will not go anywhere where there is the possibility of danger!  The tour company is in constant contact with the threat center of the Israeli government, tweaking our route if there were any security concerns!)

Returning to our text: How do we keep Gd’s commandments and laws if we do not know what they are?  To answer that question, I have begun a journey that will take me the next 7.5 years.  For the last week, I have spent 30-90 minutes per day studying Talmud.  Gdwilling, I will continue this and along with tens of thousands of Jews around the world, will read/study the entire Talmud, all 2711 pages.  While the first time this began was Rosh Hashanah 1923, there were already thousands of Jews that signed on.  At the conclusion of the 12th cycle of Daf Yomi last week, there were over 90,000 people at MetLife Stadium (Giants/Jets Stadium) and hundreds of thousands more around the world.

Now in my Hebrew class the other day we discussed Talmud.  Because the logic tends to be associative AND the rabbis were trying to teach, there are few simple answers.  Even the question of where one sentence begins and another ends is a matter for debate.  The basic structure is that the conversation begins with a Mishnah, a Hebrew text that articulates a law or question.  The Gemara then debates the issues, offering biblical prooftexts, alternate material from the time of the Mishnah, known as Baraitot or Toseftot, depending on the content.  The authors of the Talmud we mainly study today lived in Babylonia, modern-day Iraq, which for hundreds of years had a thriving Jewish community.  This Talmud is more authoritative than the Jerusalem Talmud, which was completed sooner and is much less edited!

The Mishnah opens with a simple question, from what time do we say Shema in the evening?  Yet the answer is anything but simple.  It says we say Shema from the time the priest eat their Terumah.  The Gemara, the Talmud, says, where do you get this question from?  You have made several assumptions.  How do we know we are supposed to say Shema?  Why not use a specific time?  ie sunset or when the stars come out?  What about the cohanim? Why are they mentioned?  The list goes on and on.

In the last week, I have thought about theodicy, why bad things happen to good people, demons and spirits, prayer, the meaning of prayers, visiting the sick, the importance of community, the importance of a minyan, where we find Gd in the Jewish tradition, when the heavenly spirit spends time with us, the importance of staying away from sin.  

It has been an incredibly rewarding and frustrating experience and it has only been a week!

In the past to study Talmud, you needed to spend time studying Aramaic, Hebrew, grammar.  Today it is far more accessible thanks to Artscroll and Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz.  Rabbi Steinsaltz wrote notes and translated the Aramaic to Hebrew.  Today his translation and commentary is being translated into English, with notes and photographs.  When I am not studying directly from the Hebrew and Aramaic, I use these translations--one is even on my iPad to assist me.

I have been studying some of this material with Irwin and with Sherree in different ways.  If you are interested in joining me, please let me know!  As one of my teachers at JTS taught me, from his teacher, Rabbi Louis Finkelstein, study is where Gd speaks to us, and prayer is where we speak to Gd. or in the reverse: Prayer is where we speak to Gd, study is where Gd speaks to us.

To be a Jew is to question, to wrestle, to argue.  Our texts are the exact same way.  As I mentioned before there are different layers of commentary and arguments, but they continue for generations.  In addition to the Talmud, there is the commentary of Rashi and the Tosafot, many of whom are his descendants.  Printed on the same page of the Talmud, they continue the argument, hundreds of years later.  In the back of standard editions of the Talmud are many more pages of commentary and books are written to discuss those.  So how do we continue the conversation today?  ONLINE!  I am tweeting, contributing to the “unOrthodox Daf Yomi” Facebook group, posting on Facebook and bringing thoughts here.  I hope that you will join me in this conversation.  When I post something on Facebook or Twitter, respond to it, share it, talk about it.  I’ll give you some examples from this week’s study:

What have I learned in the first week???  @TweetedTalmud

Bavli Brachot 2a/b. I still don't know what time to say Shema in the evening.

Brachot 3a: Sometimes two students hear different things. Trei Tanai Aliba Drabi Meir and same with R. Eliezer. What can we do to listen more closely to one another? Is life always a game of telephone?

Bavli Brachot 3a: Sometimes a short prayer is better--don't enter a ruin to pray or put yourself in danger.

Bavli Brachot 3b: King David didn't sleep much.

Bavli Brachot 4a: Our Master said: Teach your tongue to say: "I don't know, lest you become entangled in a web of deceit." (Steinsaltz)

Bavli Brachot 4b: You can tell an angels power by how many trips it takes to get around?

Bavli Brachot 4b: We say Ashrei thrice daily b/c it's a Hebrew alphabetical acrostic AND b/c it mentions Gd sustaining creation.
Bavli Brachot 5a/b: The rabbis think about suffering: sometimes you need a chaplain! "A prisoner cannot free himself."
Bavli Brachot 6a The Shechina is present whenever 10 gather to pray, 3 judge a case, 2 discuss Torah or 1 studies Torah!

  • Bavli Brachot 6a It was taught in a Baraita, Abba Binyamin says if we could see the demons around us, we couldn't face them! Oy vey

Brachot 6b: Gd asks about someone who stops showing up to minyan. Do we? First criticism I ever got as rabbi was this! #DafChat#dafyomi
@TweetedTalmud Now I try harder to see who is and isn't in shul! Do you?

brachot 6b: Don't rush out of shul. Or in Talmud speak, אל יפסיע פסיעה גסה. Don't take big steps. #DafChat #dafyomi


6b: R' Zeira says you can run to shul on Shabbat! It's a mitzvah to rush to do a mitzvah. #DafChat #dafyomi

Brachot 6b: the best things in life come from hard work: entertaining at weddings, studying, comforting others. . . #dafyomi #DafChat
Brachot 6b: if you ignore a friend's hello, you are called a robber. Makes me think of Hadar Yom Iyun on respect. #dafyomi #hadar

When offered a blessing, take it! If Gd accepts our blessings, shouldn't we receive others? Says R' Yishmael (7a) #dafyomi#DafChat
Brachot 7a: Don't try to reason with a person in throes of anger. You won't get very far. Good idea: think 1st, speak 2nd #DafChat#dafyomi
Brachot 7a: the righteous shouldn't curse even those who deserve it (sinners/wicked) since Gd's compassion is for all. #dafyomi #DafChat
Brachot 7a: in the name of r' Yosi: one sincere regret is better than many lashes. Talmud:Yes to guilt, no to spanking. #dafyomi #DafChat

in the name of r' Yosi: one sincere regret is better than many lashes. Talmud:Yes to guilt, no to spanking.
Brachot 7a: Moses, Gd & theodicy. No easy answers, but lots of good questions. #DafChat
Brachot 7a: timing is important. Gd and Moshe sound like missed lovers. When one wanted the other didn't and vice versa. #DafChat#dafyomi

Brachot 7b: Our mother Leah was the first to truly offer thanks-to both thank and appreciate the gift. #daf
Brachot 7b: if you can't physically get to minyan, see if the minyan can come to you. If not, pray at the same time. #DafChat #dafyomi


Friday, July 27, 2012

Dvarim and Tisha B'Av, Telling and Retelling

Rabbi Philip Weintraub
Congregation Agudas Israel
July 28, 2012
Parshat Dvarim/Tisha B’av

Telling and retelling.

This week we begin the book of Devarim/Deuteronomy/Words.  In many ways we hear the story of the Exodus and the journey to the cusp of the Promised Land.  Yet in this telling, we hear the story from Moses’ perspective.  We hear the struggles he had with the people Israel. We hear of rebellion and mitzvot.  

Our Haftorah is from the book of Isaiah.  We hear a vision of destruction and a vision of hope.  We hear Gd angry, and we hear Gd compassionate.

In one of the unique twists of Jewish law, right now, at this moment, it is Tisha B’av, but its observance is moved until tonight. On that note, if you come to tonight, you can read the book of Lamentations and see some of the same people again!  Tisha B’av is the saddest day on the classical Jewish calendar, remembering the destruction of both the 1st and 2nd Temples, the false report of the spies in the Bible, the crushing of the Bar Kochba revolt, and the destruction of the Temple site.  Later on, we added the start of the First Crusade, the expulsion of Jews from England and Spain, the start of WWI and the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto.  Yet with all of that, we still do not fast on Shabbat.  We move the entire commemoration to tonight, to the 10th of Av!

For many modern Jews though, Tisha B’Av is difficult.  Some of you have walked the streets of Jerusalem.  You have seen high rises and kosher restaurants.  You have seen a Jewish government and a Jewish military.  (For those that haven’t, it is not too late to register to join us in Israel next year.)  So how do we mourn for the destruction of Jerusalem when it seems just fine?  How do we cry when we can go to Burger Bar or even a Kosher McDonalds?

To me the answer is quite simple.  We aren’t there yet.  Tisha B’av is still relevant while there is hate in the world.  Tisha B’av is still important when peace is not universal.  Tisha B’av is still essential when Jews cannot speak respectfully to Jews, when not all serve their country or pay their taxes and when there is still no Temple.

Last night was the opening ceremonies of the Olympics.  This year is 40 years since the tragedy of the Munich Olympics when Palestinian terrorists killed 11 Israelis and a German policeman.

There has been a worldwide movement to have a moment of silence in their memory at the Opening Ceremonies.  While I do not know what happened last night, as of yesterday afternoon, there was no indication that in the spectacle of the opening ceremonies that any tribute would be made.  While hundreds of thousands of signatures were collected by the Rockland County JCC and Federation, calls were made by President Obama and Governor Romney, the Israeli government, the German government and numerous others, the IOC did not seem willing to bend.  Outrageously, the chairman of the Palestinian Olympics Committee, Jibril Rajoub, sent a letter to the IOC saying that acknowledging the Israelis killed would be racist!  He wrote,  “Sports are a bridge for love, communication and the spreading of peace between nations and should not be used for divisiveness and the spread of racism.”
http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/107570/palestinian-olympic-rep-sees-racism-in-munich-moment-of-silence

One success was that yesterday morning in London, in gatherings around the city in their memory, more than 20,000 Londoners held a moment of silence to remember the Munich:
More than 20,000 people in various venues in London attended the British Zionist Federation’s “Minute for Munich” program that was promoted via social media.
A short memorial service at the Israeli Embassy that was organized by the Zionist Federation was streamed live online Friday, according to the London Jewish Chronicle.
About 200 people marked the Minute for Munich in Trafalgar Square, reciting memorial prayers and lighting memorial candles. Afterwards, they waved British and Israeli flags in front of media covering the event
http://www.jewishjournal.com/world/article/more_than_20000_londoners_hold_munich_moment_of_silence_20120727/

See also:
http://www.jewishjournal.com/nation/article/jewish_summer_campers_terrorized_20120727/

Destruction of temple continues since people still don't acknowledge

http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/the-jewish-thinker/the-munich-massacre-bulgaria-attack-and-tisha-b-av-1.453012

http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/107240/no-open-zion-deborah-lipstadt-won%E2%80%99t-shut-up


Deborah Lipstadt, the esteemed professor at Emory, a teacher of Holocaust studies and anti-semitism wrote a powerful piece in Tablet Magazine online, entitled, Jewish Blood is Cheap,

In the years since, the families of the victims have repeatedly told the IOC that all they want is a chance to mark the murder of athletes who had traveled to the games to do precisely what athletes do: compete at their very best. These victims deserved to be remembered by the very organization that had brought them to Munich.
Why the IOC refusal? The Olympic Committee’s official explanation is that the games are apolitical. The families were repeatedly told by long-time IOC President Juan Samaranch that the Olympic movement avoided political issues. He seemed to have forgotten that at the 1996 opening ceremony he spoke about the Bosnian war. Politics were also present at the 2002 games, which opened with a minute of silence for the victims of 9/11.
The families have also been told that a commemoration of this sort was inappropriate at the opening of such a celebratory event. However, the IOC has memorialized other athletes who died “in the line of duty.” At the 2010 winter games, for example, there was a moment of silence to commemorate an athlete who died in a training accident.
The IOC’s explanation is nothing more than a pathetic excuse. The athletes who were murdered were from Israel and were Jews—that is why they aren’t being remembered. The only conclusion one can draw is that Jewish blood is cheap, too cheap to risk upsetting a bloc of Arab nations and other countries that oppose Israel and its policies.
I have long inveighed against the tendency of some Jews to see anti-Semitism behind every action that is critical of Israel or of Jews. In recent years some Jews have been inclined to hurl accusations of anti-Semitism even when they are entirely inappropriate. By repeatedly crying out, they risk making others stop listening—especially when the cry is true.
Here the charge is absolutely accurate. This was the greatest tragedy to ever occur during the Olympic Games. Yet the IOC has made it quite clear that these victims are not worth 60 seconds. Imagine for a moment that these athletes had been from the United States, Canada, Australia, or even Germany. No one would think twice about commemorating them. But these athletes came from a country and a people who somehow deserve to be victims. Their lost lives are apparently not worth a minute. http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/106409/jewish-blood-is-cheap


This week also included a disturbed young man massacring people in a movie theater.  It included Israelis killed in Bulgaria, while on their way to a beach vacation.  While the former has no anti-Semitic ties, the latter surely does.  Regardless, of their connection to Judaism, there is far too much needless loss of life in this world.

We pray for the time when the Talmud says that our fast days will become feast days.  In that time, we will live in peace.  In that time, people will not be killed simply because they are Jewish or simply because they went to the wrong movie.  

We live in an imperfect world.  We pray that our actions make it better.  We mourn on Tisha B'av for the Destruction, but we also pray for redemption, as we learn in a midrash: the Messiah will be born on Tisha B’av.  May we see a day when war and bloodshed cease, when a great peace will embrace the whole world.  That is what I will be thinking about as I fast tonight/tomorrow.

I now ask you to stand as we remember those lost in Munich.

From the Chief Rabbi of the UK, Lord Jonathan Sacks
http://www.chiefrabbi.org/2012/07/17/prayer-to-commemorate-the-40th-anniversary-of-the-massacre-at-the-1972-olympic-games-in-munich/#.UBLdtGGe6So

“The massacre of eleven Israeli athletes and coaches at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich was a tragic event in the history of the Olympic Games. But for the Jewish people, Munich 1972 is more than history. It is an event forever etched into the hearts and minds of our collective Jewish memory. History is his story – an event that happened sometime else to someone else. Memory is my story – something that happened to me and is part of who I am. History is information. Memory, by contrast, is part of identity. The eleven Israeli athletes and coaches were targeted not just because of their nationality, but because they were Jews. The attack was carried out on a world stage because it had a global target: the Jewish people. We are a people whose faith is central to our identity. It is therefore not sufficient for the Munich 11 to be remembered simply in the secular setting. It requires an expression of religious remembrance as well. That is why I have composed a special prayer of remembrance to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of the massacre and to ensure it has a place on the map of Jewish memory. Coming at a time in the Jewish calendar when we recall the many tragedies that have befallen our people throughout history, the fortieth anniversary of the Munich massacre is also a moment when we can recall how, despite the many attempts to destroy our people, our faith has remained intact and the Jewish people, together with the memory of those lost, lives on.”
Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks

The eleven Israeli athletes murdered at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich
The Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks has composed the following prayer in memory of the 40th anniversary of the massacre of eleven Israeli athletes who were participating in the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. Please click here to download a PDF copy of the prayer, together with Hebrew memorial prayer including the names of the eleven Israeli athletes.

Almighty God:
We, the members of this holy congregation,
Together with members of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth,
Join our prayers to the prayers of others throughout the world,
In remembrance of the eleven Israeli athletes
Brutally murdered in an act of terrorism,
At the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich,
Because they were Israelis,
Because they were Jews.

At this time in the Jewish year,
When we remember the destructions of our holy Temples,
And the many tragedies that have befallen our people throughout history,
We mourn their loss
And continue to protest against those who hate our people.

We pray to You, O God:
Comfort the families and friends of the Israeli athletes who continue to grieve
And grant eternal life to those so cruelly robbed of life on earth.
Just as we are united in grief,
Help us stay united in hope.
As we comfort one another under the shadow of death,
Help us strengthen one another in honouring life.

The Olympic message is one of peace, of harmony and of unity,
Teach us, Almighty God, to bring reconciliation and respect between faiths,
As we pray for the peace of Israel,
And for the peace of the world.
May this be Your will and let us say: Amen


אֲ דוֹן הָ עוֹלָמִ ים זְ כוֹר אֶ ת נִשְ מוֹת
(David Berger) דוד ברגר
(Yossef Gutfreund) יוסף גוטפרוינד
(Moshe Weinberg) משה ויינברג
(Eliezer Halfin) אליעזר חלפין
(Mark Slavin) מרק סלבין
(Yossef Romano) יוסף רומנו
(Kehat Shorr) קהת שור
(Andre Spitzer) אנדרי שפיצר
(Amitzur Shapira) עמיצור שפירא
(Yakov Springer) יעקב שּפרינגר
פרידמן זאב (Ze’ev Friedman)