Federation Star - December 2021

Page 36

12A

Federation Star

COMMENTARY

December 2021

Be careful what you wish for

SAVE THE DATE

Sunday, March 13, 2022 The Club at Grandezza • Estero

Rabbi Howard S. Herman DD

11:00am – 1:00pm

Collier/Lee HADASSAH presents

C Join us as Hadassah honors women whose leadership skills, dedication, experience, generosity and time make a difference in their organizations, our communities and the quality of our lives. FO R MORE INFO RM AT I O N , P L E A SE C O N TAC T:

Proceeds benefit the Hadassah Medical Organization.

Susan Gold Falkenstein sweetsusan62@gmail.com Marianne Lambertson mariannelambertson@gmail.com Diane Schwartz dianepschwartz@gmail.com

hanukah comes early this year — a good time to reflect on its meaning for us, just as we have finished celebrating Thanksgiving. I am writing this piece in the middle of the Jewish festival of Sukkot, our quasiJewish celebration of Thanksgiving without the turkey. It dawns on me that being thankful or grateful is as much about what we have as what we don’t have. We are thankful for our abundance, health, freedoms and the love of our families. We are equally grateful for our lack of illness, stress and enemies. I often find that what we don’t have is as meaningful and perhaps even more important than what we do have. There is an old Chinese proverb that says, “Be careful what you wish for.” In other words, think twice before wishing for something you don’t have. In the end, you may not necessarily want or need it. It might even be better to lack it. In Hebrew, the common word for gratitude is “hakarat hatov.” It literally means recognizing the good. Practicing gratitude means recognizing the good that is already yours. Here is something to think about when it comes to your Jewish identity. What does the word “Jew” actually mean? To answer this, we need to ponder the story of Leah (one of Jacob’s wives). In Genesis 29:35, it says, “And she conceived again and bore a son, and she said, ‘this time, I will thank God!’ Therefore, she named him Judah…” The word Jew or Judah comes from the name Yehudah, which means “thanks.” It is just like the Hebrew word “todah.” So, the etymology and the essence of a Jew is to be thankful. This is why gratitude and blessings are a substantial

part of Judaism. It is not just a value that we append to our being. It is not just something rabbis teach. It is the essence of who and what we are. Gratitude is at the very core of our existence. I also believe part of the fiber of gratitude is that it recognizes we are not the sole authors of what is good in our lives. Thankfulness has an inner connection with humility. It recognizes what we are and that what we have is due, at least in part, to others, and above all, to God. The French philosopher, André Comte-Sponville, said, “Those who are incapable of gratitude live in vain, they can never be satisfied, fulfilled or happy: they do not live, they get ready to live, as Seneca puts it.” Twentieth-century philosopher, theologian and activist Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel taught us, “I can no other answer make but thanks, and thanks, and thanks and ever thanks.” Rabbi Shmuel Hanagid, the 10th-century Spanish sage, teaches us, “Ingratitude to a human being is ingratitude to God.” And a popular Yiddish proverb instructs us, “If you cannot be grateful for what you have received, then be grateful for what you have been spared.” How we approach the world determines whether we are grateful for our many gifts as well as whether we exhibit the virtues of humility and are generous or tight-fisted. In this way, the virtues of gratitude, humility and generosity are interrelated. If these virtues are highly developed and utilized, we discover a deeper meaning and a well-honed happiness in our lives. Perhaps this is one of the most important gifts of Chanukah as well. Chanukah means to dedicate, so we need to dedicate ourselves to making sure our gratitude is always active in a generous and ongoing way. Giving the gift of self is something that helps improve not only us and our relationship with God, but our community as well. Rabbi Howard S. Herman DD serves at Naples Jewish Congregation.

Candle lighting times Dec. 3: 5:16 p.m. Dec. 10: 5:17 p.m. Dec. 17: 5:20 p.m. Dec. 24: 5:23 p.m. Dec. 31: 5:27 p.m.


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Articles inside

Welcoming Jews from all backgrounds

2min
page 42

A return to normalcy

1min
page 41

See Israel 2022

2min
page 40

JCMI members look to December activities

1min
page 39

Being part of one family

2min
page 39

So much happening

3min
page 38

Lessons from the past

3min
page 38

Affirming our identity

3min
page 37

Be careful what you wish for

3min
page 36

More than 1,500 gather virtually for U.S.-Israel conference aiming to help solve social crises

3min
page 34

FIDF conducts first live community town hall with IDF officers

1min
page 33

Our immigrant relatives brought “Happy Sylvester” to Israel!

3min
page 32

The best thing about Hanukkah

4min
page 30

“West Side Story” and other new flicks, a TV show, recommendations

3min
page 29

Musicians wanted

1min
page 28

“Bordello, The Musical”

3min
page 28

Can a clandestine critic overcome his crippling fear of Shakespeare?

3min
page 25

Bringing the community together

2min
page 23

Shalom Naples!

1min
page 22

Five fun facts about Chanukah

2min
page 21

Working together for the common good

2min
page 20

Who we are

1min
page 18

Moments in history

2min
page 18

Holocaust Museum’s 20th Anniversary celebration begins

3min
page 17

Temple Shalom events open to the community

1min
page 16

Taking care of our seniors

1min
page 16

Pomegranate Society’s new season officially underway

2min
page 14

WCA welcomes new members, expanding our community of friendship

3min
page 13

Have fun! (MCA style)

3min
page 12

PJ family spotlight

1min
page 10

PJ Library news

1min
page 10

Your support brings our new cultural center closer to reality!

6min
pages 8-9

Next phase for the Capital Campaign

1min
page 6

Books make great gifts

3min
page 5

Two upcoming Catholic-Jewish Dialogue events

1min
page 4

The “Pope’s Rabbi” is coming to town

1min
page 4

Happy holidays!

2min
page 4

Good news from Israel

1min
page 3

“Anti-Semitism: Ancient Threat in a Modern World”

1min
page 3

Construction has begun

2min
page 2

Celebrate campaign and community

2min
page 1
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