Showing posts with label Chanukah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chanukah. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

From the Editor: We’ve seen far too much antisemitism in recent years


Michael Regenstreif
By Michael Regenstreif
Editor

My wife, Sylvie, and I were on vacation in Clearwater Beach, Florida in December. On December 23, the second night of Chanukah, we joined several hundred other people – locals and tourists alike – at the Chanukah party and giant menorah lighting organized by Chabad of Clearwater.

Held outdoors on the main drag on Clearwater Beach, less than a five-minute walk from where we were staying, it was a typical Chabad Chanukah event with speeches, songs, a magic show, latkes and sufganiyot. One of the big hits of the event was Rabbi Levi Hodakov singing his updated version of Adam Sandler’s “Chanukah Song.” Local politicians, including Mayor George Cretekos and several other members of Clearwater’s city council, joined in the celebration.

There were a couple of police officers who stood on the edge of the crowd observing the event and the comings and goings but, thankfully, there were no incidents that required their attention.

However, less than two weeks before Chanukah, there was a mass shooting at the JC Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City, New Jersey carried out by a pair of antisemitic extremists. They murdered Mindy Ferencz, 33, an owner of the market; Douglas Miguel Rodriguez, 49, an employee; and rabbinical student Moshe Deutsch, 24, a customer. Three others, including two police officers, were also wounded in the incident. The assailants arrived at the market shortly after they killed a police detective in a separate incident.

Then, on December 28, the seventh night of Chanukah, a masked man invaded the home of Rabbi Chaim Rottenberg in Monsey, New York – a small community north of New York City with a largely Chasidic population – and randomly stabbed five Chasidic Jews attending a Chanukah party. Other guests fought back and the suspect escaped in a car. He was arrested by police later that night in Harlem. In the investigation, police found his handwritten journals filled with antisemitic views.

Thinking of those incidents just before and during Chanukah – as well as the antisemitic murders earlier last year at Chabad of Poway in California and at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018 – made me stop and think about whether we were safe attending a Jewish event in an accessible public space in Florida, a state where it is easy to acquire weapons and a state with a history of mass shootings – including the high school massacre in Parkland in 2018 that killed 17, and the nightclub massacre in Orlando in 2016 that killed 49.

Although, as already mentioned, there were a couple of police officers present at the Chanukah event on Clearwater Beach, there was no security screening. Anyone and everyone had unfettered access to the event. What would have happened if someone like the attackers from Jersey City or Monsey or Poway or Pittsburgh had been there that night? (By contrast, when we attended a couple of concerts in December at theatres in Clearwater, we could only enter after emptying our pockets and being searched with metal-detecting wands by security guards.)

The sad fact is that we live in a world rife with resurging antisemitism – and antisemitism is coming from so many different directions: from the extreme right, from the extreme left, from Islamist extremists; from some parts of the anti-Israel movement; and from elsewhere. But as Professor Deborah Lipstadt, a world-renowned expert on antisemitism, explained during her visit to Ottawa in November, ultimately “they all sound the same.”

While the internet and its various social media platforms are a great tool to bring people of common interests together and to create and build communities, the internet and social media are also a tool for spreading misinformation – often through conspiracy theories – and hatred.

Sadly, statistics show that there are more hate crimes committed against Jewish targets in Canada than any other minority group. Thankfully, few of those crimes have been violent, but every hate crime is traumatic nonetheless. Who in this community can forget the string of antisemitic graffiti attacks on Jewish buildings in 2016?

In many ways, we’ve made great strides over the years in the fight against antisemitism. On many levels, antisemitism, racism and other forms of bigotry, are no longer acceptable. While just before and during the Holocaust, Canada had a government whose policy toward Jewish refugees was “none is too many,” we now have a government that has apologized for that. Not that many decades ago, the Montreal suburb of Hampstead would not allow Jews to own property in the town, while now the majority of its residents are Jewish.

At the political level, antisemitism has almost ceased to be a factor in Canada in the years since the late Herb Gray became Canada’s first Jewish cabinet minister in 1969. Gray, himself, eventually served as deputy prime minister for four-and-a-half years between 1997 and 2002, and here in Ottawa, where we once had an antisemitic mayor, we have since had two Jewish mayors. There are countless other examples I could cite.

But that doesn’t mean we can stop being vigilant about antisemitism (and all other forms of racism and bigotry) in Canadian political life. The province of Quebec recently passed Bill 21, a law banning civil servants in positions of authority from displaying symbols of their religious belief – including the wearing of a kippah.

Meanwhile we can look to the United Kingdom for lessons on what might happen when variations of antisemitism become mainstreamed. The Labour Party – long the political home to the majority of British Jews – spent the last several years under the leadership of the once-obscure far-left anti-Zionist Jeremy Corbyn, who allowed antisemitism to flourish in the party. Much of British Jewry regarded a potential Corbyn government as an existential threat to the community and breathed a collective sigh of relief in December when Corbyn led Labour to its worst election defeat since 1935 – with most British analysts agreeing that perceived antisemitism was a significant factor in turning many traditional Labour voters against the party.

As much as we need to remain vigilant against antisemitism and stand up to it and fight it whenever it rears its ugly head, we cannot, as Lipstadt warned, allow antisemitism to become central to our identity as Jews. “Then we turn Jews into an object – what’s done to Jews, instead of what Jews do,” she said.

We live in a free and democratic society and while being mindful of the security of our persons and our institutional buildings, we must remain free to live Jewishly – however we each may want to do that. 

Next December, it’s likely that Sylvie and I will be back on vacation in Clearwater Beach. And, as usual, we’ll be at the Chabad of Clearwater Chanukah party.

Monday, December 2, 2019

From the Pulpit: ‘It is never too late and it is never too dark’

Rabbi Eytan Kenter, Kehillat Beth Israel

By Rabbi Eytan Kenter
Kehillat Beth Israel

With a five-year-old and an 18-month-old, the time that I wake up in the morning is largely not of my own choosing. Yet, even when I can wake up on my own, we are still in the most depressing time of the year, when we wake up in darkness and return home from work in that same darkness. Shabbat starts earlier and earlier as it grows cold, snowy, and dark.

This annual reality can serve as an apt metaphor for the challenges that we all too often encounter within our world. Whether it be the problems of climate change or increased tribalization and polarization, there are immense problems that we are encountering and the fear of their growing impact permeates within us. These huge global problems can’t help but worry us and the darkness of hopelessness and fear for the future can, all too often, consume us.

But then, as the end of December approaches, something remarkable happens: the light begins to return and days start getting longer. It is not a coincidence that Chanukah, the festival of lights, falls at this time of year. Not only is the lighting of this candelabra our attempt to remember the miracle of the oil from the story of Chanukah, but it also serves as a reminder, that light can and will return in the face of great darkness. While the situation looked bleak for the Maccabees, they were still able to be victorious. So too, can light overcome darkness in our lives as well.

Martin Luther King Jr. taught, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” No matter how dark it may seem, light can overcome it. No matter how bad our problems may seem, our light and our love can face it, if we are willing to do what it takes to fight back. The Maccabees didn’t simply hope for a better future, they made it happen. They stood up against seemingly insurmountable odds, and with God’s help, were able to win the day.

There are days when I fear the challenges we will face in the years to come will be too difficult to overcome. There are times when I worry that it is already too late to change course, that the darkness has already overwhelmed us. But then I remember the story of Chanukah, then I remember that lighting of the candles in the face of the creeping darkness. If we can find the love deep in our hearts. If we can reclaim the dedication and commitment of the Maccabees. If we can remember that light can always conquer the darkness, we know that the better future we need is still possible. Through our hard work and dedication (literally the meaning of Chanukah), we will be able to repair our world. It is never too late and it is never too dark. As long as every day we add a little more light, one candle at a time, we can once again take pride in returning the world to where it ought to be. One light, one act, and one person at a time.