Should we celebrate when the pandemic is over? As the vaccinations ramp up, there is finally a sense of optimism. After over a year of anxiety and isolation, we can reasonably predict the end of this pandemic and expect life to return to normal. But is it appropriate to celebrate our triumph over the coronavirus?
The coronavirus has caused exceptional suffering. There have been
millions of deaths worldwide, and many more have been impacted by the psychological
and financial effects of the pandemic. However, the impact of the pandemic has
been uneven. The metaphor used, that we are all in the same storm but not in
the same boat, is very accurate. Some have suffered greatly, and others have
actually had a very good year. But that makes the moral foundation of this
question even more profound: Is it appropriate for anyone to rejoice while so
many people are still heartbroken?
Halakhah makes a sharp separation between mourning and celebration.
The Bible tells us that “there is a time for weeping and a time for laughing, a
time for wailing and a time for dancing”- and Halakhah codifies this into
practice. When a holiday arrives, we cancel the 7-day mourning period of shiva.
When a burial occurs during a holiday, the shiva is deferred until after the
conclusion of the holiday. Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik explains that these two
emotions of joy and mourning are in direct contradiction with each other; for
this reason, Halakhah separates mourning from joy and gives each their own
stage. Ideally, we should experience joy
and mourning separately, each in their proper time.
But we cannot always disentangle the moments of joy and grief. A child
who loses a parent and inherits an estate makes two blessings, one to reflect
their heartbreaking loss, and the other thanking God for their good fortune. On
the holidays, we recite the Yizkor prayer, which remembers family and friends
who have passed away. Rabbi Moshe Mordechai Epstein asks the obvious question:
How is it permissible to say Yizkor on the holidays, which are meant to be
joyous? The answer, he says, lies in a deeper understanding of human emotions.
There is permission given for mourners to cry on the holidays if it will give
them comfort. It is unreasonable to expect a person to seal off their grief,
even on a day of joy, and the tears of a mourner can bring them a sense of
relief. For this reason, Yizkor has a role to play during the holiday, even
though reciting this prayer will bring us to tears.
Joy and sadness are frequently intertwined. The abundance of joy at a
Pesach Seder will never fill the empty chair of a beloved grandparent. The
abundance of grief at a shiva will never erase joyous memories. When the family
brings out old photo albums, there is a mixture of laughter and tears, as joy
and grief sit side by side. And this is true of life in general; to live an
authentic life is to carry sorrows and joys together, with both sharing space
within the same heart.
Yizkor is always filled with mixed emotions, a painful pause embedded
in a day of celebration. Right now, those mixed emotions are more jarring than
usual. It is Pesach, the festival of redemption, and this year, it is truly
filled with hope for a better future. Seats in the synagogue are filling up,
and people are happy to return now that they have been vaccinated. But there
are some seats that will remain empty, and we have good friends who will never
return. So, during Yizkor we will be remembering all of those who will never
come back to our synagogue. And then we will have to return to our celebration.
This is an emotional roller coaster.
Throughout its history, Israel has always had to navigate this clash
of emotions. On June 7, 1967, the Israeli army captured the Temple Mount,
returning Jewish sovereignty to the holiest place in Judaism for the first time
in nearly 1900 years. The paratroopers joyously shouted recited the shehecheyanu
prayer, and Rabbi Shlomo Goren sounded the shofar; audio of both are replayed
in Israeli media every year. But when you listen to the full recording of that
you hear something else: Rabbi Goren reciting a memorial prayer for the
soldiers who had fallen in battle. And as he does so, you can hear the sound of
weeping in the background, the victorious paratroopers crying for their fallen
brethren. Even the greatest of miracles arrives with tears and heartbreak.
For this reason, Israel has placed its Memorial Day, Yom
HaZikaron, on the day before its Independence Day, Yom HaAtzmaut. Without the
courage, bravery and sacrifice of its soldiers, Israel would not exist. At the
same time, the greatest way of honoring the legacy of those who have fallen is
by building a vibrant country, one worth celebrating. Putting a day of mourning
right before a day of rejoicing certainly brings out mixed emotions. That is as
it should be, because carrying both of those emotions is our responsibility.
The Israeli paradigm is an appropriate one for the end of this
pandemic. Life includes both the honey and the sting, the bitter and the sweet;
we must embrace them both, because we cannot edit reality. Israel
recognizes both, and even puts them together. And so it should be for us as we
celebrate our triumph over the coronavirus.
Yes, we will celebrate when the pandemic is over, but we will not
forget the pain, suffering and loss. Every holiday will have its Yizkor. Every
Seder will have its empty seat. When we celebrate the reopening,
we will remember those we have lost as well. The celebration would be incomplete
without it.
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