Yom
Kippur eve. At the very same hour that leftwing activists clashed with
religious worshippers in Dizengoff Square, I was praying in the synagogue on my
moshav. I was a secular Ashkenazi Jew standing alongside religious Sephardic
residents of my community. Listening to melodies I wasn’t familiar with, I was
very much out of my comfort zone, yet I felt very welcome. Isn’t this what
Judaism is supposed to be like? The news from Tel Aviv suggested we are far
from that.
The
more I think about those events, the more I am abhorred. After the Supreme
Court ruled that the Tel Aviv Municipality has the right to ban
gender-segregated prayer services in public spaces, a provocateur gathered
likeminded right-wingers and set up a mechitza divider of Israeli flags so that
they could conduct Yom Kippur services there.
Yisrael
Zaira, head of the extremist Rosh Yehudi Orthodox group, insisted on violating
the court ruling to pray in public with men and women separated. Zaira has
said, “When you see the secular world, you have to think of how to change it.”
Instead of allowing him to freely act against the secular world, he should be
arrested for his infractions.
On
the other hand, leftwingers who have played a major role in the 38-week-long
protests against the government, a battle to keep Israel’s democratic values
that I completely support, took the law into their own hands and clashed with
the religious Jews. They screamed at the worshippers, swore at them with cries
of ‘Shame!’, physically assaulted them, and spouted hatred at their fellow
Jews.
Left
versus right. Religious versus secular. Jew versus Jew. And all this on the
holiest day in the Jewish calendar. Two wrongs don’t make a right. In these
clashes there were no winners. We are all losers.
Where
is the government?
You
would think that in a time of clashes in our society, there would be an adult
in the room to referee between the sides and calm everything down. In normal
times we would assume that this role should be played by the prime minister.
But these are far from normal times. Our prime minister declared that “leftists
had rioted against Jews”, implying that he doesn’t consider leftists to be
Jews. By siding with the rightwing extremists he brought into his government,
Netanyahu has become a rightwing extremist.
There
is a government outcry now, when secular Jews attacked religious Jews, but why
is the government silent when religious extremists attack Women of the Wall
prayer goers at the Kotel, Judaism’s holiest site? Where is the government when
religious Jews attack Conversative and Reform Jews celebrating family events
and prayers near the Kotel plaza?
Ask
for forgiveness
We
are all Jews, yet we are far from living up to what is expected of Jews.
Yom
Kippur is the holiest day on our calendar, when we are supposed to come
together as a people and beg forgiveness for our sins. In the violent acts we
have witnessed, we have sinned against our fellow Jews, our religion, and our
God. We need to ask for a lot of forgiveness.
Meanwhile,
on my moshav, Yom Kippur prayers went on. I was entranced by the Sephardic
melodies and customs, so different from the Kol Nidre services I have attended
in the past. There are many types of Jews, with different backgrounds and
customs, and yet we are all one people. I felt welcome praying on my moshav. I,
too, was asking forgiveness. We should all be praying.
Originally
posted on the Times of Israel
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