It’s Time to Come Home
This week, we enter the Three Weeks, a period unlike any other on the Jewish calendar, a time of mourning for events that took place centuries ago. It is a time to remember what we have endured as a people, to miss what we no longer have, and to recognize that the absence we have grown accustomed to was never meant to be normal.
The Bais Hamikdosh was the
place where Heaven and earth met. It was where the Shechinah rested
openly among Klal Yisroel, where every korban expressed our
yearning to draw closer to Hashem. The Bais Hamikdosh was where tefillos
ascended with a clarity we can scarcely imagine. It was the beating heart of
the Jewish people, the place from which holiness radiated to the entire world.
Its destruction marked the
beginning of a long exile in which Hashem’s presence became hidden and our
nation was scattered across the globe. We have built communities, yeshivos,
and homes of Torah that are sources of great pride. Yet, every simcha
remains incomplete, every home bears a zeicher l’churban, and the center
of Jewish life remains in ruins.
Perhaps the greatest tragedy of golus
is not merely that we have lived so long without the Bais Hamikdosh, but
that we have become accustomed to living without it. We have learned how to
navigate golus. We have learned how to flourish in foreign lands. We
have become comfortable in a world that our ancestors never mistook for home.
The Three Weeks insist on
awakening us from that complacency. They remind us that no matter how secure we
feel, no matter how prosperous our communities become, no matter how much Torah
is learned and how many beautiful shuls are built, something essential
is still missing. We are a people waiting to come home.
Lately, we have received several
reminders of this reality. We became comfortable in our golus in Western
Europe, in the United States, and, dare we say, even in Eretz Yisroel. Each of
these places has recently reminded us of the true nature of golus,
leaving us shaken and concerned.
There was a time, not very long
ago, when support for Israel was one of the few issues that united Democrats
and Republicans. From President Harry Truman’s recognition of the Jewish state
in 1948 through decades of bipartisan congressional support, standing with
Israel was viewed as both a moral obligation and an American strategic
interest. Republicans and Democrats disagreed on taxes, spending, foreign
policy, and countless domestic issues, but support for Israel remained a
bipartisan constant.
For decades, New York stood at
the center of that consensus. It was home to some of America’s strongest
pro-Israel Democrats. Men such as Senators Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Jacob
Javits defended Israel unapologetically on the world stage. The city’s large
Jewish population helped create a political culture in which support for Israel
was considered both morally right and politically prudent.
Those days are changing. Last
week’s Democratic primary elections in New York may ultimately be remembered as
a turning point. A slate of socialist candidates defeated established Democrats
while campaigning on democratic socialism, class warfare, and promises of
dramatically expanding government.
More importantly, woven through
nearly every successful campaign was a common thread of hostility toward
Israel.
These candidates were not merely
critical of Israel. They attacked their opponents for supporting Israel.
Progressives have created a political environment in which, to survive
Democratic primaries, candidates increasingly feel compelled to distance themselves
from support for Israel.
That is an extraordinary
political reversal.
Ultra-liberal Congressman Dan
Goldman was condemned for being too close to Israel and for his relationship
with AIPAC. His victorious challenger, Brad Lander, repeatedly attacked those
ties, making opposition to AIPAC a defining issue of his campaign.
Lander accused Israel of
committing genocide in Gaza, pledged to oppose American arms sales to Israel,
and declared after his victory that he intends to become “one of the Jewish
members of Congress most willing to stand up for Palestinian human rights,”
while insisting that American taxpayers should no longer finance “Netanyahu’s
wars.”
Elsewhere, Darializa Avila
Chevalier defeated veteran Congressman Adriano Espaillat after campaigning on
ending military aid to Israel. Her political résumé includes organizing
Columbia University’s pro-Palestinian encampments and participating in
anti-Israel activism dating back to her years as part of Students for Justice
in Palestine.
Her victory celebration was
punctuated by chants of “Free Palestine” as she proudly repeated her promise to
block military assistance to Israel.
These were not isolated races.
They were victories by candidates
backed and promoted by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, whose political rise
has become emblematic of a movement that increasingly views opposition to
Israel not as a liability but as a badge of ideological purity.
Only a few years ago, rhetoric of
the type these people employ would have ended a mainstream political career.
Today, it helps build one.
But something deeper is taking
place.
When these people talk about
Israel, they do not merely mean Israel. They mean us. They mean the Jews - the
rich Jews, the greedy Jews, the Jews who throughout history have been made the
scapegoats for society’s ills. Yet, they cloak their antisemitism in language
that denies the Jewish people’s right, after centuries of persecution, exile,
expulsions, pogroms, and the Holocaust, to live safely in their ancestral
homeland.
We do not need to agree with
every decision of the Israeli government - and we don’t - to recognize that
relentlessly portraying the world’s only Jewish state as uniquely evil both
feeds, and is fed by, antisemitism.
The line between anti-Zionism and
antisemitism becomes increasingly blurred when Jewish students are harassed,
Jewish businesses are targeted, and elected officials are ostracized simply
because they support Israel’s existence.
Moreover, politicians, as well as
podcasters and media talking heads, have discovered that attacking Israel
energizes activists, excites donors, dominates headlines, and increasingly wins
elections in urban districts.
As hostility toward Israel
becomes a reliable path to clicks, ratings, and higher office, more politicians
and media figures will adopt similar rhetoric. It is noteworthy that virtually
none of the Democratic Party’s leaders or elected officials has condemned the
statements and beliefs of these progressive candidates. You can count on the
fingers of one hand those who have declared that such individuals do not belong
in the Democratic Party, in Congress, in the Senate, or in any position of
public responsibility.
As America celebrates its 250th
anniversary as the bastion of liberty, this trend should concern not only Jews,
but all freedom-loving people, both in the United States and around the world.
History has repeatedly shown that
societies that normalize hostility toward Jews rarely stop there. Antisemitism
has often served as an early warning sign of broader civic and moral decline.
The issue facing America is
larger than foreign policy.
It is whether we remain capable
of distinguishing between a democratic ally defending itself against terrorists
and organizations that openly celebrate the murder of civilians.
It is whether ideological purity
will replace moral clarity.
These elections, together with
the recent primaries that have produced similar candidates in Maine, Michigan,
New Jersey, and elsewhere around the country, should serve as a warning.
Ideas once confined to the
political fringe have steadily entered the mainstream.
Language once universally
condemned is now increasingly accepted and applauded.
Hostility toward Israel is no
longer merely tolerated in parts of American politics. It is rewarded.
Chazal tell us, “Halacha
hee b’yodua she’Eisov sonei l’Yaakov.” Throughout history, that hatred has
worn many disguises. Sometimes it came draped in the robes of religion.
Sometimes it marched beneath the banners of nationalism. Today, it often
presents itself clothed in the language of human rights, anti-colonialism, and
social justice.
The vocabulary changes. The
animosity remains the same.
History teaches another lesson.
Every empire, every ideology, and every movement that sought to marginalize or
erase the Jewish people eventually passed into history.
Klal Yisroel endured.
We do not place our trust in
political parties or election returns. We appreciate our friends, recognize
dangers when they arise, and speak honestly about the challenges confronting
our community. But ultimately, our confidence rests where it always has - in
the Ribbono Shel Olam, Who has sustained His people through every
generation.
During this period of the Three
Weeks, we think of the churban of the Botei Mikdosh and of the
many Jewish communities that existed for centuries, only to vanish almost
overnight.
If you travel today to Vilna, you
will find weathered gravestones whose inscriptions are slowly disappearing
beneath layers of moss. You will see a vast, historic cemetery with a sports
complex at its center, and you will read about plans to further develop the
resting place of thousands of our ancestors. It is not enough that they did
their best to destroy Jewish lives, torturing and tormenting them beyond
imagination. They now feel compelled to disturb them even in death, denying
them the most basic human dignity of resting in peace.
And in Vilna, and all across
Europe, on streets where every Friday afternoon women once hurried home
carrying fish, where fathers returned from the market and children ran to greet
them, today there is only silence. Where there were once shtieblach, shuls,
and botei medrash pulsating with life, filled with the sounds of Torah
and tefillah that sustained the world, today there is emptiness and
desolation, as many locals have done their best to ensure that those places are
- and remain - Judenrein.
The Nazis, their collaborators,
and all those who sought to erase Jewish existence succeeded in destroying
bodies and buildings. They succeeded in emptying streets and silencing
communities. But they did not succeed in silencing the Torah.
Auschwitz, Birkenau, and the
forests of Ponary and Kelm, as well as Bialystok and Babi Yar, where the voices
of Jews were cut short, still stand as haunting reminders of that destruction.
But in cities and towns throughout the world, those voices are once again
heard, loudly, proudly, and unmistakably.
Today, young people sit in botei
medrash, struggling over the very same difficult line of Gemara that
a child in Tashkent, Brody, or Warsaw struggled with a hundred years ago.
Mothers light Shabbos candles, covering their eyes and swaying with
emotion as they recite the same tefillah their grandmothers whispered in
small wooden homes across Eastern Europe. Jews everywhere are opening seforim
and continuing conversations that tyrants tried to bring to an end.
There is a profound thought from Chazal
(Taanis 5b) that offers a powerful response to the tragedies of our
history: “Rabi Yitzchok said in the name of Rabi Yochonon, Yaakov Avinu lo
meis - Yaakov Avinu did not die.” The Gemara explains that just as
Yaakov’s children are alive, he, too, is alive. The continuity of his
descendants, their loyalty to Yiddishkeit, and their commitment to Torah
and mitzvos are themselves a form of eternity.
Nowhere is that more evident than
when we reflect on the Jewish communities of the Diaspora that have been lost
since the churban.
Think of the men who sat in
little shtieblach in Kishinev and Galicia, worrying whether their
grandsons would know a Tosafos. Think of the mothers in Germany, Spain,
and Portugal who recited Tehillim, praying that their children remain
faithful Jews. Think of the millions of simple Yidden who owned little,
endured much, and measured success not by wealth or honor, but by whether their
children would continue the chain that stretched back to Har Sinai.
Their worlds were consumed by
fire. Their homes were burned. Their botei medrash were emptied. Entire
towns, cities, and even countries were emptied of Jews. And yet the chain was
never broken.
The bochur wrestling with
a difficult Rambam. The father walking to shul on a Shabbos
morning with his little son. The family gathered around the table singing zemiros.
The child in cheder reciting, “Torah tzivah lanu Moshe morasha
kehillas Yaakov.” These are not merely echoes of the past. They are the
answer to those who believed they could erase us.
Our president is fighting with
his opponents over the construction of a giant arch at Arlington National
Cemetery. Civilizations build their monuments out of stone and marble. Ours are
built of children, Torah, and memory.
The great cities of Europe once
contained magnificent shuls whose walls seemed to touch the heavens.
Many are now museums, ruins, or empty shells.
The enormous botei medrash
in Lakewood, the crowded shtieblach in Boro Park, and the yeshivos
in Eretz Yisroel, filled with thousands of people learning Torah, are our
memorials to the generations that came before us.
The signs of the churban
are everywhere. You can walk through Yerushalayim and still see walls scorched
by the Romans as they destroyed the Bais Hamikdosh. You can see the
massive stones they hurled from the walls surrounding the Bais Hamikdosh.
You can walk along the very paths trod by millions of olei regel. And,
of course, you can daven at the only remnant we have of the Bais Hamikdosh,
the Kosel, from which the Shechinah has never departed. It still
stands, beckoning us to come home, to return to what we once were and what we
can once again become.
We have lost so much. We are a
wandering people, and now we enter three weeks of mourning, three weeks of aveilus,
to reflect upon what we have lost and what we continue to lack.
The headlines change. Political
parties rise and fall. Empires come and go, just as they always have. But the
Jewish story has never truly been about them. It has always been about a people
carrying the memory of their true home, refusing to mistake golus for geulah.
As the Three Weeks begin once
again, we remember what was destroyed and what still must be rebuilt. We
remember that we are a people waiting to come home, and that we can never be
comfortable until we do.
I remember as a young child, we
would be playing outside by a neighbor and my mother would call for us and say,
“It’s time to come home. It’s time to have supper and do homework.”
The Three Weeks is like that
call, reminding us that we have work to do and we have to come home.
Every day, we await the arrival
of Moshiach. Every day, we daven for him and hope that this will
be our final day in golus. May these be the last Three Weeks we observe
in mourning, and may we soon merit to witness the fulfillment of the tefillah
we recite three times each day: “Vesechezenah eineinu beshuvcha l’Tzion
berachamim.”
Amein.


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