Issue: 2.09 | September 16, 2001 | by:
Gayle Belin and Rabbi Arthur Waskow
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A Daughter's Letter to Her Dad Hi Dad, By all means, please share the message of Rabbi Waskow with Mr. Fein and let
him know that he could either use it directly or contact Rabbi Waskow. It came
by email and it is credited to him. I would imagine that if given the credit,
Rabbi Waskow would not mind. I personally think that anything that goes out over
email is fair game. I got it from someone who got it from someone at Champlain
College who got it from Rabbi Waskow. I've included it again below. As I sit here at 11:00 p.m. in my study so safe from the tragedies of NYC,
Washington, and Pennsylvania, I hear the loud roar of the F-16 fighter planes
overhead. They've dotted the atmosphere on and off since Tuesday morning. I have
heard rumor that our F-16's (in VT) are the ones that shot down the plane in PA.
But rumors abound. I guess I should feel safe that the F-16's are here, but it
is only a false sense of security. It has been exceedingly hard for me to deal
with the realities of this tragedy. All day, I have felt an inner dread fill me
and incredible sadness wash over me. I cannot understand the hate that could
cause one people to do this to another. But I have never understood war. Today, here in VT, people have attempted to go back to their lives as best
they could. But the realities are not far from our minds. I feel helpless in my
desire to help the victims. I cannot go to any of these places. I cannot give
blood since I just gave last week. Though, in fact, the Red Cross was
overwhelmed by the response of Vermonters and have turned people away in droves.
The wait to given blood was between 2 and 7 hours. People had to come, fill out
the paperwork, and take a number which had a time on it. Even with the numbers,
the wait was long. Temple is having a blood drawing on November 11th, a date we
chose a month ago. If people give by Sunday they can give again on the 11th. We
were going to run it from 9-2:00. I think we will have to open our doors all
day. I am getting clothing together to send to NYC if it is needed. I'm hoping
that Temple will respond by donating money to the effort or a food drive (which
we usually do on Yom Kippur to aid the food shelf), or something. Sending money
to the Red Cross or Salvation Army or wherever is also an option. Love from me, as always, Gayle We focused on the line from the evening prayers -- "Ufros alenu sukkat
shlomekha" -- "Spread over all of us Your sukkah of shalom." And we asked, "Why a sukkah?" -- Why does the prayer plead to God for
a "sukkah of shalom" rather than God's "tent" or "house" or
"palace" of peace? Because the sukkah is just a hut, the most vulnerable of houses.
Vulnerable in time, where it lasts for only a week each year. Vulnerable in
space, where its roof must be not only leafy but leaky -- letting in the
starlight, and gusts of wind and rain. For much of our lives we try to achieve peace and safety by building with
steel and concrete and toughness. Pyramids, air raid shelters, Pentagons, World
Trade Centers. Hardening what might be targets and, like Pharaoh, hardening our
hearts against what is foreign to us. But the sukkah comes to remind us: We are in truth all vulnerable. If
"a hard rain gonna fall," it will fall on all of us. Americans have felt invulnerable. The oceans, our wealth, our military power
have made up what seemed an invulnerable shield. We may have begun feeling
uncomfortable in the nuclear age, but no harm came to us. Yet yesterday the
ancient truth came home: We all live in a sukkah. Not only the targets of attack but also the instruments of attack were among
our proudest possessions: the sleek transcontinental airliners. They availed us
nothing. Worse than nothing. Even the greatest oceans do not shield us; even the mightiest buildings do
not shield us; even the wealthiest balance sheets and the most powerful weapons
do not shield us. There are only wispy walls and leaky roofs between us. The in fact one
interwoven web of life. I MUST love my neighbor as I do myself, because my
neighbor and myself are interwoven. If I hate my neighbor, the hatred will
recoil upon me. What is the lesson, when we learn that we -- all of us -- live in a sukkah?
How do we make such a vulnerable house into a place of shalom, of peace and
security and harmony and wholeness? The lesson is that only a world where we all recognize our vulnerability can
become a world where all communities feel responsible to all other communities.
And only such a world can prevent such acts of rage and murder. If I treat my neighbor's pain and grief as foreign, I will end up suffering
when my neighbor's pain and grief curdle into rage. But if I realize that in simple fact the walls between us are full of holes,
I can reach through them in compassion and connection. Suspicion about the perpetrators of this act of infamy has fallen upon some
groups that espouse a tortured version of Islam. Whether or not this turns out
to be so, America must open its heart and mind to the pain and grief of those in
the Arab and Muslim worlds who feel excluded, denied, unheard, disempowered,
defeated. This does not mean ignoring or forgiving whoever wrought such bloodiness.
Their violence must be halted, their rage must be calmed -- and the pain behind
them must be heard and addressed. Instead of entering upon a "war of civilizations," we must pursue a planetary
peace. Shalom, Arthur |
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This letter was originally sent to Leon Belin from his daughter Gayle |
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