| Is Jewish Unity Achievable? |
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| Written by Rabbi Levi Brackman | |
| Friday, 25 September 2009 13:32 | |
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This is the time of year when we are supposed to introspect as individuals. No doubt, however, it would be a good time to examine ourselves as a nation as well. There are many problems facing us as Jews. Anti-Semitism is on the rise all over the world. Iran is getting closer to developing a nuclear bomb and no one seems to have the ability to stop them. The White House is inhabited by a person who is pressuring Israel to act contrary to its long term interests. Jews have been hurt by the fallout of the financial crises and the massive fraud of Bernard Madoff. The list goes on.
But arguably the biggest challenge facing world Jewry today is our lack of unity. We all seem to come with a label. Either you’re a Haredi Jew, a Reform Jew, a Religious Zionist, a Conservative Jew, a Hassidic Jew etc. etc. We are constantly trying to find a pigeonhole to place each other into. This creates divisiveness. Why shouldn’t the title ‘Jew’ be good enough for us? The answer is simple. We humans have a tendency to always try and accentuate our differences rather than the things that we have in common. This is what allows one human to kill another. If all we saw was the common humanity in the other person we would never be able to go to war against others, we wouldn’t fight with each other. Instead we focus on what is different and why the other person is wrong and we are right.
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| Last Updated on Friday, 25 September 2009 13:35 |