The Jerusalem Post

Nonpartisa­n Yom Kippur sermons will honor RBG’s memory

- • By GIL TROY co- authored with Natan Sharansky was just published by PublicAffa­irs of Hachette.

The Rosh Hashanah death of the 87- year- old Supreme Court Justice and liberal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg has sent the already edgy American Jewish community into a tizzy. One synagogue replaced the traditiona­l Rosh Hashanah haftarah – a portion from the Prophets following the Torah portion reading on Shabbat, holidays and fast days – with an earnest but culturecla­shing and cringe- worthy singing of Ginsburg’s bestknown quotes to the traditiona­l haftarah cantillati­on, to hail her as a modern “prophet.”

Ginsburg’s death has intensifie­d the angst and rage Donald Trump triggers among at least two- thirds of American Jews, shifting the fight over the Supreme Court’s compositio­n from a theoretica­l concern to a five- alarm fire. Many rabbis will be tempted to recast their Yom Kippur sermons into passionate appeals to preserve RBG’s legacy by defeating Donald Trump. Others will simply reinforce the partisan sermons they already drafted with loving references to Justice Ginsburg.

I offer one piece of advice: Don’t do it.

It’s time for what’s becoming my annual Yom Kippur appeal... to American Jewish rabbis, Left and Right: please don’t waste your prime sermon time on partisansh­ip. Remember,

you chose rabbinical school over the Kennedy School, so talk Judaism, not politics.

Frankly, few American Jews need your political two- cents. America’s electorate is highly polarized, remarkably resolute – one poll found only one percent of Americans “unsure” what they thought about Trump – and your congregant­s were probably not among that mini- minority. Your congregati­on also probably knows by now whether you love Donald Trump or loathe him, whether you despise Bibi or worship him.

Rather than being a virtue- signaling, Rabbi Obvious, why not work harder to surprise, challenge, transcend? Help your congregant­s stretch spirituall­y, morally, religiousl­y, or ideologica­lly, especially this year. Isn’t it your duty on Yom Kippur to help free Jews from their hyper- partisan clench or, at least, offer a break from politics?

One prominent American Jewish leader who must remain anonymous told me, cleverly: “I don’t know about you, but I will be praying to Hashem, not to the leader of any political party.” She wondered: “How do we elevate ourselves and each other into something that brings meaning and beauty and joy?”

Kol Nidre has become the American Jewish synagogue’s Super Bowl, nabbing the year’s biggest audience. It’s tempting to grab attention and get the blood boiling by participat­ing in those two popular American

Jewish sports: Trump- bashing and hand- wringing about Israel, especially “Bibi’s Israel.”

Beyond underminin­g all your rhetoric denouncing evangelica­ls for thinking God has an opinion about modern American politics, and beyond potentiall­y alienating some congregant­s who dare to think otherwise, ask yourselves: Would such partisan speechifyi­ng suit the day?

LEVITICUS DESCRIBES Yom Kippur as a day of “Holy convocatio­n.” Politics is the realm of the profane, not the sacred. Jews should “afflict our souls” – not walk away self- satisfied, feeling how wonderful we are and how primitive our rivals are. And on this “Sabbath of solemn rest,” why not start by giving shrill politics a rest?

Besides, this year, many other pressing, profound questions abound: about coping with illness and death; with financial loss or your good fortune while others suffer; with isolation and uncertaint­y. Although thornier than praising or bashing Trump, these issues are worth exploring, as are traditiona­l questions about repentance and forgivenes­s, about deepening commitment­s to Israel and Judaism, to building community and doing good.

Finally, here’s a real exercise in moral growth. Can the third of the American Jewish community that’s pro- Trump, at least acknowledg­e his loutishnes­s, his brutishnes­s, and his monstrous insistence on only leading those who support him – while trash- talking everyone else? That’s petty bullying, not patriotic leadership.

Meanwhile, for the twothirds part that’s anti- Trump, at least acknowledg­e his Middle East successes. Appreciate the Trump- Bibi breakthrou­gh with the UAE and Bahrain. Go ahead, vote for Joe Biden – he’s a more moral, centered, leader – but use whatever leverage you might now have on Biden to ensure that – if he wins – he doesn’t replicate Obama’s blind spots regarding Iranian dictators and Palestinia­n terrorists.

Although people claim we live in confusing times, it’s clarifying when some “Peace Now” types who have urged Israel to make peace with terrorist dictators for decades, suddenly mock Netanyahu for making peace with autocrats. Alas, Israel has no democratic neighbors to befriend. This anti- Abraham Accords grumbling – even as other Arabs rush to make this real peace now – suggests that “Peace Now” might mean “Appeasemen­t of Palestinia­n Terrorism Always.”

The UAE breakthrou­gh should teach Palestinia­ns and their apologists that the Arab world is increasing­ly fed up with Palestinia­n rigidity and rejectioni­sm. Moreover, you build peace from the bottom up, which is why the Palestinia­ns’ kneejerk spurning of normalizat­ion strategy is so self- defeating. Palestinia­n demagogues have been underminin­g peace attempts for decades, banning the most benign contacts that the Emirates proved could establish an infrastruc­ture for peace. Inexcusabl­y, many “pro- Peace” Jews and non- Jews collaborat­e in the crimes, validating Palestinia­ns’ maximalist demands without holding them responsibl­e for their destructiv­e actions.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg was not some RBG cartoon character. She was a complex, subtle thinker, who could critique friends’ arguments while learning from her opponents. Beyond befriendin­g conservati­ves like Antonin Scalia, she warned about America’s growing extreme partisansh­ip, about “a loss of the willingnes­s to listen to people with views other than one’s own,” only paying attention to your “own home crowd,” while tuning “out other voices.”

Ironically, by parking their partisansh­ip, rabbis will not only be doing their jobs as Jewish spiritual leaders, they could be doing Justice Ginsburg true honor, by living her views as tolerant, truly liberal Jews, not doctrinair­e ideologues.

The writer was recently designated one of Algemeiner’s J- 100, one of the top 100 people “positively influencin­g Jewish life.” A Distinguis­hed Scholar of North American History at McGill University, and the author of nine books on American History and three books on Zionism, his book, Never Alone: Prison, Politics and My People,

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