Saturday, March 22, 2014

Hashkiveinu - Let us lie down in peace

הַשְׁכִּיבֵנוּ יְיָ אֱלֹהֵינוּ לְשָׁלוֹם
Hashkiveinu Adonai Eloheinu L’shalom
Let us lie down in peace O Eternal our God


As anyone who has children knows, bedtime is one of those both sacred and scary times for kids.  And I think the same is true for adults.  We all have some sort of bedtime ritual, whether it is falling asleep in front of the TV, or reading a book, or practicing some sort of relaxation exercise.  Yet, the experience of going from a state of wakefulness to sleep can be a difficult time for many of us whether we are children or adults.

Recently, a dear friend who has been ill shared just how comforting an acknowledgement of God’s presence has been to her at bedtime.  During her stay in the hospital she has recited the traditional prayers before sleep not only at night but also as she was being put under anesthesia.  Praying the words, and making this part of her nightly ritual, had helped her to not only be less fearful, she told me, but also to recognize an opportunity for blessing – that God was with her as she went from wakefulness to sleep. 

These moments of connection with God, which exist in the lull between the hours of a busy day are the most precious and the most prayerful.  As we drift off to sleep, we are all linked to the divine source of life, and ask God to bless and watch over us as we find comfort and shelter in a night of rest.


(cross-posted in Moments of Inspiration -  Lafayette Journal and Courier - March 22, 2014)

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Like Dreamers

So much has been written about the history of modern Israel, a place we love, and whose politics we also sometimes struggle to understand.  I recently finished reading Yossi Klein Halevi’s new book, "Like Dreamers: The Story of the Israeli Paratroopers Who Reunited Jerusalem and Divided a Nation”.  “Like Dreamers” tells the story of modern Israel through the personal stories of seven men who served as paratroopers in the elite 55th brigade, who were part of the miraculous victory of the war of 1967 and the recapturing of the Old City of Jerusalem.

Yossi Klein Halevi spent the past 10 years following the lives of the paratroopers who liberated the Kotel in 1967.  Not long after making aliyah in 1982, he decided that he wanted to write a book interviewing veterans of the battle of Jerusalem.  “How had the war changed their lives? What role did they play in trying to influence the political outcome of their military victory?"  Through ten years of research and developing relationships with seven of these men, each of whom took distinct paths.  As he follows their stories, Halevi tells the story of Israel through their eyes and gives us a greater understanding of the political dilemmas, different ideologies, and myriad personalities that have shaped Israel today.

1967 paratroopers with 2013 Women of the Wall (Anat Hoffman - chairwoman (right) and Lesley Sachs - executive director (left))
The characters in the book are not characters, they are real people with real lives and real dilemmas and that is what can give us a greater understanding of many of the internal debates that are a very real part of life in Israel today. Of the seven paratroopers profiled, some became religious settlers, others secular kibbutzniks, musicians and artists. They had careers in high tech, and politics, and industry. Some became active on the left, others on the right. And in this small country, being part of the same small elite brigade connected them together for life in spite of their differences. Their stories serve as a metaphor for the challenges both internal and external that Israel faces today.
David Rubinger’s famous photo of the IDF paratroopers at the Western Wall in 1967
When I was in Israel in November for the  Women of the Wall 25th anniversary solidarity mission, I was overcome with emotion at the Wall, in being there together with so many women from so many disparate Jewish backgrounds, yet bound together by a single purpose.  After reading "Like Dreamers", I now look at the iconic photograph of the young soldiers standing at the wall in a different way. The young men of the 55th brigade, like all Israelis in 1967, had dreams and visions and hopes. Yet they too came from disparate backgrounds and went on to live different lives all in the same small country, all struggling with the same questions of Israel’s survival, and a quest for “normalcy” within what Halevi describes as "the agonizing complexity of Israel's dilemmas."