Skip to content
Levi Brackman (Rabbi, PhD)

Scholar, Podcaster. Author, Seeker, Social Scientist, Entrepreneur

Levi Brackman (Rabbi, PhD)

Scholar, Podcaster. Author, Seeker, Social Scientist, Entrepreneur

A Battle Between Good and Evil – Evil Won

Levi Brackman, November 28, 2008May 7, 2017

It seems so surreal. I have been watching the news that has been coming out of Mumbai, India in virtual horror. Any terror attack targeting innocent people is nothing short of evil. However, this attack has been especially troubling for more reasons than one. We have become accustomed to terror attacks that are over within a few moments. These attacks have lasted days instead of minutes. Those of us who are following the news coming out of Mumbai are witnessing horror happening in slow motion.

The fact that one of the locations targeted by the terrorists is a Jewish center makes these brazen and malevolent attacks more significant for us as Jews. That the Jewish center is a synagogue run by a fellow rabbi makes this terror attack even more personal for me. I have been deeply affected by this attack not just because it has targeted a colleague, his wife and family, but because it has pitted good against evil in the clearest manner possible.

What motivates a young ultra-orthodox Jew to move with his young wife from a religious enclave in Brooklyn, New York to Mumbai in India? Clearly it wasn’t a lucrative contract. It was done with one aim in mind: to help his fellow Jews. There is little material reward for a religious Jews to move to a developing country where they may end up in harm’s way.

Despite the dangers, for Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivkah, living in Mumbai was worth it simply because it provided them a unique opportunity to serve the needs of others. The selflessness inherent in the work the Holzberg’s were doing and in the way they lived their lives is staggering. 

Contrast this with the terrorists. These evil people are completely self-serving. They are only concerned with their own needs and desires. The fact that their selfish requirements hurt the lives of others is of little concern to them. They are comfortable killing innocents if it fits in with their own nefarious aims.

 According to Judaism murderers must be put to death because they blight civilized societies. The act of murder maintains that the murderer’s life takes precedence to that of the murdered person. Thus, taking another’s life is the ultimate act of ego. It is saying, “My life is more important than yours” when in fact no human has the ability to make such an assessment. People who feel that they and their cause are so important that they are willing to kill for it are the essence of evil and pose a severe danger to all civilized societies.

This is what terrorists are. They think that their cause trumps innocent people’s right to life. As a result of this ego-centric and evil mindset they are motivated to kill innocent men, women and children in cold blood so that their self-centered cause can be served.

Over the last few days we have seen an encounter between the forces of evil and destructive egotism and people who represent goodness, kindness and selflessness. That these beacons of light, positivity and altruism have now been prematurely extinguished is beyond tragic and is another blow to humanity and a heartbreaking victory for the forces of terror, destruction and darkness. That the inspiration the Holtzberg’s have left us will live on is little consolation. Real courage is in short supply and clearly the Holtzberg’s had that in large quantities.

The day evil triumph’s is a bleak and dark day for the world. I refuse to be consoled. May God have mercy upon all the victims of this senseless display of malevolence. 

(First published on YNETNEWS.COM)

Terrorism

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Managing the Fallout of the US Terror Plot

May 10, 2007May 7, 2017

After six Muslims were arrested this week for plotting a terrorist attack on an American army base I heard an interview with a representative of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). He was expressing concern for the safety of his community and thus stressing that these six were in no…

Read More

Should We Hate Them?

March 19, 2006May 7, 2017

Many of us are not quite sure how to react towards terrorists who have no qualms about killing huge numbers of people. Should we feel sorry for them because manipulative, demagogic religious leaders have indoctrinated them into these acts of killing? Or should we hate them for the terror, fear…

Read More

Neighbors Who Lack Humanity

November 20, 2014May 7, 2017

We Jews have cried many bitter tears over the last six months. From the brutal murder of the teenagers killed by Hamas terrorists earlier in the summer to the terror attack this week which killed five including rabbis praying at a synagogue and everything in between, this past half year…

Read More

About Me and this Site

  • Navigating My Writing
  • Short Bio
  • Join Newsletter

Three Latest Posts

  • Before Bezos and Amazon: The Biblical Covenantal Relationship Had an Inbuilt ‘Day One’ Mindset September 20, 2024
  • Rabbinic Reinterpretation of the Torah: Ethical Adjustments in the Oral Law – Ki Teitzei September 16, 2024
  • Navigating Nepotism and Divine Choice in Torah Portion Tsav March 29, 2024

Writing in Chronological Order

Writing by Category

Search the Site

©2025 Levi Brackman (Rabbi, PhD) | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes