Sunday, September 30, 2012

Parashat Bereshit



Parashat Bereshit
Tishri 27, 5773 ~ October 13, 2012
by Boris Burshteyn  

Dear Members,

It always gives me joy to see our community members share thoughts of Torah with one another.  Thanks to the tireless organizing work of Joel Ackerman, we already have several years behind us of member derashot offered to the community.  The people in our shul are fascinatingly different, and approach the weekly parasha from remarkably varied perspectives and write with unique styles.  Kudos to all the mini-derash contributors!  And if you are possibly interested in giving it a shot yourself, please contact Joel at jrsackerman@earthlink.net.

You can also find some pointers & tips on writing a derash that I wrote up at:  

All of our archived member derashot can be read on the web at www.bethjacoboakland.org/minidrash.  

This week we have a special offering, a more extended manuscript of thoughts on Creation that our member Boris Burshteyn has been working on for quite some time.  I wanted to get it to you before Sukkot, so that you would have time to dive into it before we start the Torah all over again in a couple of weeks.  Enjoy!

You can find the text that Boris has written here:  

Wishing you a wonderful yom tov,
Rabbi Dardik

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Parashat Nitzavim


Parashat Nitzavim
Elul 21, 5772 ~ September 15, 2012
by Danielle Elkins

My husband has always asked me, “How does a girl from South Carolina with your background end up here?” The “Here” is always meant as a positive place. The answer I always give him is “Hashem”, and as a Reform Jew, I used the word G‐d. Today, I’m so happy to know the concept, Hashem, because it expresses the compassion of G‐d, which is what I feel Hashem has given me on my journey toward observant Judaism.

This week’s parsha, Nitzavim, means “standing”, and after studying this parsha I understand how I am still standing. Moshe begins the his last speech on earth describing those standing before Hashem on this day to renew the Covenant, and like at Mount Sinai it explains it is not just those living at that time, but the future souls to come.

“Not with you alone do I seal this covenant and this imprecation, but with whoever is here, standing with us today before Hashem, our G‐d, and with whoever is not here with us today.” (29:13)

In my opinion, this is allowing for the individual soul to witness and know in his heart the truth, no matter how far the life of exile and persecution takes him. Hashem is arming each individual soul with the ability to know the truth.

The parsha then goes on to describe how we will stray and be exiled, but it is not the focus, like past parshiot. The emphasis and the beauty are on how we will return to Hashem, no matter how far away we have drifted.

“If your dispersed will be at the ends of heaven, from there Hashem, your G‐d, will gather you in and from there he will take you.” (30:4)

Rashi explains beautifully that the return of the exiles “will come about with so much difficulty as if He Himself must actually hold each and every person with His hands to take Him from His place in the exile.”

Just before possuk 2: “And you will return all the way to G‐d, your G‐d” which Rav Samson Raphael Hirsch explains is not a partial return. He writes, “You will not stop halfway; your return will be so complete that you will come back all the way to G‐d.”

In just the past five years, my life and my family’s life have had so many forks or you could even say stopping points on our path to observant Judaism, but with each challenge or obstacle we were propelled forward toward observance. Something beyond logic moved us forward.

As a child, I knew I was Jewish. With the last name Goldstein, the Christian world that surrounded me knew it too, so my whole life was a target for good meaning Christians trying to save my soul. The first time I was confronted with this idea was when the Baptist minister’s family moved next door. I was only five. Unfortunately or maybe fortunately, I could not tell them what being a Jew meant. The ten‐year old daughter of the minister took it upon herself to save my soul from the fires of hell, and she did save me. By making me play a game walking through the fires of hell by day with the crucifix on the wall, it brought the fires of hell to life in my nightmares. I would wake screaming from what seemed real to my young imaginative mind, but I was given the gift of knowing my heart and soul. My soul was Jewish. I had no logical explanation; I just knew it was who I was, if it meant walking through the fires of hell for all eternity, that was my fate. That little girl saved me from ever doubting who I was, no matter what individual or authority questioned the correctness or validity of my identity.

Moshe explains how I could know without specific education. “For this commandment that I command you today‐it is not hidden from you and it is not distant. (30:11) “Rather the matter is very near to you‐in your mouth and in your heart‐perform it.” (30:14) The sages teach in Niddah 30b that the fetus is taught the Torah, but forgets it at birth. Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik writes that this can allow a person an innate familiarity with Torah even without formal education.

Hashem has given us the tools to return, but we must take an active role. For me, the best expression of this is Seek your G‐d and you shall live, which is found in numerous ways throughout the Tanakh. It seems so simple but “Seek” is not a passive word. To truly seek you must use every aspect of your mind, heart, soul, and body. Only by doing this can you find the strength to choose “the life and the good”, over “the death and the evil.” To Seek your G‐d is personal and for every person this journey is different, but hopefully in the end we will “SEE” which is the first word in the last paragraph of this Parsha.

It seems perfect that the mnemonic (the numerical value which correlates to a word) for this Parsha means “His Heart”.