On
April 14th, 2000, the New York Times wrote a moving article about two families,
one in Brooklyn and one in Italy.
Miriam
and Rabbi Ronald Barry had gotten tested in 1991 to see if they could be bone
marrow donors. A few months later, a match came up for Rabbi Barry. There is a
small risk, 1 in 20,000, associated with giving bone marrow. It is a small
risk, but it is a risk nonetheless. Rabbi Barry decided to be a donor. As the
New York Times wrote:
''How
many people,'' Mrs. Barry asked, ''get the opportunity to say, 'I saved a
life'? What a thing to take up with you at the end of days.''
After the bone donation, the recipient's family decided to reach out
to the Barrys. The donation had gone to a 9-year-old boy named Nicola Trevisan
in a small village of Tonco in the Asti region of Italy. The families began to
correspond and to become friendly.
And then in 2000 the Barrys went to visit Italy.
The Trevisans, who had never met Jews before, took a crash course on
the rules of Kashrut in order to host the Barry's. The Trevisons set up an
entire day's tour for the Barry's, and located a nearby historic synagogue and
had it opened. In the synagogue's guest book, Armando Trevisan wrote:
''This is the
reunion of the Barry family of Brooklyn and the Trevisans of Tonco..".
And that night, at the Tonco city hall, the entire village came out to
welcome and thank the Barrys. One act of kindness had touched hundreds of
people on the other side of the world.
This is a story of Kiddush Hashem. This commandment is in our week’s
Torah reading. To my mind, it is the central commandment of Judaism.
Let me explain why.
As you go through life there are three questions that you will ask
yourself on a regular basis.
The first is what do I need?
How do I ensure that I am nourished, clothed, and sheltered.
The second is what do I want? How
do I find friendship, respect, love, and success.
The final question is why am I
here? This is a question that we don't ask ourselves often enough, and it's
a question we ask more frequently as we get older. We ask it more often at 18
than at 13. And we certainly ask it more often at 28 and 48.
Kiddush Hashem is the Jewish answer to the question of "why am I
here?"
Through the ages, there have been two ways that kiddush Hashem has
been practiced, what I would call “Yitzchak Kiddush Hashem” and “Avraham Kiddush Hashem”.
Sometimes Kiddush Hashem demands a difficult sacrifice, like the
Akeidat Yitzchak.
And since then, Jews have made enormous sacrifices to retain their
Jewish faith; at times being called to make the ultimate sacrifice, and at
other times giving up jobs and opportunities to maintain their observance of
Shabbat and mitzvot.
But at other times, Kiddush Hashem has been about finding our mission
in life, and sharing that mission with the world; this is what Avraham did his
entire life, bringing spirituality and kindness to those around him.
In 2013, Rabbi Noah Muroff, then a Yeshiva High School teacher in
Connecticut, bought a used desk off of Craigslist. It was too large to fit
through the doorway of his office, so he had to disassemble it. And when he
did, a large envelope of cash fell out. In it was $98,000.
Rabbi Muroff didn't hesitate and didn't wait; he immediately called
the previous owner and returned the money. The previous owner had forgotten
where they put the money, and thought it was lost forever.
This story made national news, and it made a Kiddush Hashem.
Rabbi Muroff wasn't thinking about what he needed, he wasn't thinking
about what he wanted; He was thinking about the question of Kiddush Hashem: why
am I here?
We are living in complicated times. I know that many of us are focused
on what we need and what we want. That is absolutely necessary. We need to take
care of ourselves first. But just as necessary is finding an answer for why I
am here.
And that is what we must do.
I take enormous pride in how so many in our community have been making
a difference in people's lives. Doctors, nurses, and healthcare professionals
fighting on the front lines against the coronavirus. Initiatives like
collecting iPads, sending meals to healthcare workers, and helping the
unemployed find work have been organized. And multiple acts of kindness in our
own community have been coordinated by our Chesed committee.
This difficult time has brought out the best in our community. And
when we look back at this time, what we will remember most are these acts of
kindness; how dedicated people made a difference and made a Kiddush Hashem, and
reminded us what our mission in life is supposed to be.
1 comment:
Thanks, great post.
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