Are
we going to change the way CNN covers the story in Gaza? Probably not.
But that doesn’t excuse our not making the effort to get our side of the
story out there. If you had a time
machine and could go back to 1938, wouldn’t you be writing letters to every
newspaper about what was happening to the Jews of Europe, wouldn’t you be
pounding on the door of every Congressman or Senator who would listen to you,
wouldn’t you be holding rallies and protests everywhere and all the time? Well folks, 1938 is not something we can turn
the clock back on and do something about, but 2014 is. If you haven’t gone to a rally, written to a
representative in government, made your voice heard somewhere, somehow, what exactly
are you waiting for? How bad does ithave to get?
The
old cliché is that showing up is half the battle. When you need to ask for help for any
worthy cause, Thank G-d in our community there is no shortage people will immediately take out a
check book and ask who to make the check out to. We are gomlei chassadim and know how to
give. And that’s important – whether it
is for Israel or causes in our own communities.
But sometimes it’s not a check that’s needed, and here maybe we (myself included most of all) need a
little chizuk. Sometimes it’s showing up
that is the battle. It’s not hard. You can just stand in the street -- holding a
sign or banner is not m’akeiv -- and you don’t even have to stay until the
end. Open a sefer and learn. Mingle through the crowd ask people if they want to put on tefillin like the three Chabad sheluchim did last night. But be there. We are so used to showing support by giving
that we often don’t think about the many other opportunities
we have to show support that are just as critical and crucial and which need our
participation -- not just our dollars.
Rabosai,
it’s time to show up. I
don’t know of anyone who is such a ba’al bitachon that they don’t seek medical
help when ill. I don’t anyone who is relies
on G-d alone (not a parent, an in-law, or a wife’s salary) to pay their rent. I don’t know anyone who thinks food will come
to their table without their shopping in the supermarket. As critically important as the tehillim and Torah are, we also need to make a hishtadlus.
G-d will help us get the job done, but we have to do our part as well. It’s time for the
rallies to not just have a few hundred people who show up, but to have
thousands and thousands.
“Atem ha’me’at
m’kol ha’amim” – we are outnumbered in terms of sheer population, but the number that really matters is the number of people who care and who make their voice heard. Every single one of us can make a difference.
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