Kehilath Jeshurun Bulletin - Spring Issue

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SPRING ISSUE

KE H I LAT H JESH UR UN VOLUME LXXXVIII, NUMBER 3

BULLETIN

APRIL 3, 2019

|

27 ADAR II 5779

What Happened to Dov? YO M K I P P U R S E R M O N 2 0 1 8 | BY RA B B I C H A I M S T E I N M E T Z

THE ONE THING I WAS CERTAIN OF WAS THAT THE WORLD WOULD NEVER BE THE SAME.” TWENTY-ONE YEAR OLD HAIM SABATO GOES TO THE BATTLEFRONT IN THE

YOM KIPPUR WAR, BRIMMING WITH CONFIDENCE. ISRAEL HAD DEFEATED THE SYRIAN ARMY IN JUST SIX DAYS A FEW YEARS EARLIER, HE HAD GOTTEN A BLESSING THE PREVIOUS NIGHT FROM AN ELDERLY CHASSIDIC REBBE, AND HE WAS TRAVELING TOGETHER WITH HIS CHILDHOOD BEST FRIEND AND STUDY PARTNER, DOV INDIG.

IN THI S I SSU E FROM OUR SYNAGOGUE OFFICIALS: RABBI STEINMETZ__________________ 1 RABBI WEINSTOCK_________________ 4 RABBI LANIADO___________________ 6 RABBI DANIEL KRAUS______________ 8 RACHEL KRAUS____________________ 9 RABBI DR. JEREMY WIEDER________ 11 OUR KETER TORAH AWARDEES_____ 14 IN THE COMMUNITY________________ 1 6 UPCOMING EVENTS________________ 25 THINGS TO KNOW__________________ 26 CLASSES__________________________ 27 BNEI MITZVAH_____________________ 29 WITHIN OUR FAMILY_______________ 31 HOLIDAYS_________________________ 35 SPRING SHABBAT CALENDAR______ 40

Haim expects everything will follow according to plan; the good guys will win, the righteous will be protected, and he and Dov will continue to study Talmud and Bible together. In Adjusting Sights, published in 1999, Sabato relates what happens next. As Dov and Haim arrive in the Golan, panic and disorder meet them at the door of their bus. Even though they had always been in the same tank, desperate commanders were grabbing soldiers right off the buses adding them to makeshift crews. Haim goes with one crew, Dov with another, and both enter into one of the most violent tank battles in the history of warfare. Haim’s crew is saved from certain death at the last moment; but Dov never returns from battle. The rest of the book is filled with Haim’s singular quest to find out “what happened to Dov?” Haim has lost his best friend, and in his grief, searches for a way to reconcile his own optimistic faith with an ugly, ungodly world that can instantly claim the life of a righteous man like Dov.

I read Adjusting Sights during a painful period in my own rabbinate. In the course of 18 months, I had officiated at 6 tragic funerals: A 9-year-old who died of an aneurysm, a 27- year-old newlywed who died after routine surgery, and four young people in their thirties with cancer. The pain that these families endured was indescribable. As a Rabbi and a friend, I felt like I had nothing at all to offer the mourners. Answers? There is no such thing. Optimism? It is deeply insensitive to offer positive thinking to the victims of tragedy. As a Rabbi I felt like a fraud; as a human being, I felt insecure. I was lost. As I sought to regain my bearings, I was pulled in two directions: towards life and towards death. Yes, they are opposite directions; but in many ways, they actually complement each other. The Jewish instinct, honed through generations of persecution, is to immediately grab hold of life. Even the first shiva meal is a reminder to look for life. The tradition is that this meal is


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