My dear friend, Dr. Mordechai Kedar once told me,
while co-authoring an article with him, "we cannot fight that which is Right
by using and employing that which is Wrong."
These words have resonated with me always, more so in recent
days.
Last week, we Yisraelis, commemorated Yom Hashoah
and paying tribute to our six million brothers and sisters who perished in the
Shoah. Today, we honour the fallen heroes who gave their lives during Yisrael's
unending wars of existence. We also remember the victims of Terrorism.
Each year, on both occasions, our nation stops whatever it is doing and stood united while the sirens are wailing, reminding
us how the shared pain and suffering inflicted upon our People has joined us
together and forged us into one cohesive group.
It is these brief moments that I longed for and
would have given anything to experience and relive during all the long years
that I resided in the Galut. It was not the pain, neither the mourning nor the grief
that I longed for. Rather, it was the unity that they sowed and produced even
for a brief moment.
Last week, just like yesterday and today, as I was
standing still, along with the millions of my Yisraeli brothers and sisters, sharing
the sense of togetherness and devotedness, I asked myself, "why can't it
be like that always? Why do we need bereavement to remind us of the need to
remain united? Why not let our shared history, glorious present and promising
future be the criss - cross threads in the fabric of our nationhood?"
It is at moments like these, that I recall Dr.
Kedar's wise words.
It is then that the troubling gnawing questions keep
surfacing. How can we be united when many of us continue to use language which
contributes to nothing but merely to deepening the divide? How can we expect
unity and Peace among us when in order to achieve these desirable RIGHT and
wishful results we use, instead, the WRONG means and the WRONG compass to
negotiate the challenging terrain that could get us there?
Rather than dignifying differences, we shun and
humiliate that which is foreign to us. At every opportunity, we wage war on
anyone and anything that disagrees with us.
How can we live with each other when instead of exchanging, some resort to
insults and name calling? How can we allow Peace to settle among us when each
time we run out of good and logical arguments, many start throwing curse words and using foul
language at each other?
After all, isn’t that what those who we commemorate today had in their essence when they rushed to defend us in war? Did they not choose that which is RIGHT to beat that which is WRONG when they entered the battlefield? Did they not put themselves, as Arevim for us, before all?
May Am Yisrael finally learn the lesson of the old adage “United we stand, Divided we fall.”
Happy Birthday Medinat Yisrael
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