My friend and
congregant, Andy Molinsky, who teaches Organizational Behavior at Brandeis
University, has been posting a lot about the subject of reaching outside your comfort zone as he prepares to
publish his second book, Reach in
January. The Kenyon Writing Conference last summer, my first, was a stretch. So
too was my initial foray to Kripalu which was really new terrain for me.
This summer
offers holds a different kind of “reach.” This weekend I am flying to Berlin,
Germany. It’s my first visit in Germany. As a Jew, raised on a healthy dose of
Holocaust education, and during the early years of the modern Israel, Germany
has felt like a destination that would never find its way onto my bucket list.
The years have softened that a bit. The impetus to make this trip now came from
a notice I saw this past Spring in the newsletter of the Central Conference of
American Rabbis. It noted an August Rabbinic Mission to Berlin. The first, and
main purpose of this mission is for
participants to engage with IsraAid, an Israel NGO deeply involved in responding to many humanitarian crises over recent years. IsraAid is very much on the front lines of addressing the large number of Syrian refugees who have made their way to Germany as they flee their war-torn homeland. My colleagues and I are going to see first-hand the work of IsraAid and learn about this humanitarian crisis with our own eyes. A secondary focus of the mission will allow us to engage with members of the Progressive Jewish community in Berlin, our brother and sisters, who have built a vibrant liberal Jewish community in a land once hostile in the extreme to its Jewish residents.
participants to engage with IsraAid, an Israel NGO deeply involved in responding to many humanitarian crises over recent years. IsraAid is very much on the front lines of addressing the large number of Syrian refugees who have made their way to Germany as they flee their war-torn homeland. My colleagues and I are going to see first-hand the work of IsraAid and learn about this humanitarian crisis with our own eyes. A secondary focus of the mission will allow us to engage with members of the Progressive Jewish community in Berlin, our brother and sisters, who have built a vibrant liberal Jewish community in a land once hostile in the extreme to its Jewish residents.
The juxtaposition
of traveling to a country and city which holds many challenging images and such
dark history for our people is daunting. At the same time, modern Germany has worked hard to confront its past. Their response to this current humanitarian crisis, not of its own making, is noteworthy. In my eyes it's worthy of investigation. That is why I will spend my first week of vacation on what will undoubtedly be an eye-opening, and emotionally challenging mission. I expect it will also be an inspiring mission. To be sure, the issues of refugees and how our nation should response is complicated It is deeply ingrained in our current political turmoil. I want to go beyond headlines and the position-taking. I want to meet refugees, hear their stories, and see our Israeli brethren's response to this devastating crisis first-hand.
dark history for our people is daunting. At the same time, modern Germany has worked hard to confront its past. Their response to this current humanitarian crisis, not of its own making, is noteworthy. In my eyes it's worthy of investigation. That is why I will spend my first week of vacation on what will undoubtedly be an eye-opening, and emotionally challenging mission. I expect it will also be an inspiring mission. To be sure, the issues of refugees and how our nation should response is complicated It is deeply ingrained in our current political turmoil. I want to go beyond headlines and the position-taking. I want to meet refugees, hear their stories, and see our Israeli brethren's response to this devastating crisis first-hand.
I depart prepared
to confront the complexity of Berlin and Germany as a Jew, the brokenness of
our world today, our Jewish values, and my own views on what will surely be a
roller-coaster ride of emotions. Yes, this is my "reach" for this
summer. I find myself curious as to how I will return after all I am about to
see, experience and engage.
* * *
If you’re
interested, watch this video which mission participants were sent as part of
our preparation for our journey: The Island of Tears
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