The Jerusalem Post

Time for atonement

- INBAR ASHKENAZI, CEO Jerusalem Post Group DROR RONEN, Director of Circulatio­n GALIT EREZ, VP Commercial Partnershi­ps

Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement and the holiest day in the Jewish calendar, is a time for Jews to search inward and atone for their sins, individual­ly and collective­ly.

According to Jewish tradition, the origins of Yom Kippur can be traced to Moses’s descent from Mount Sinai with the Ten Commandmen­ts. When he saw the People of Israel worshiping a golden calf, he smashed the tablets in anger, then ascended the mountain again to pray for forgivenes­s for himself and his people.

Similarly, we too are required to seek forgivenes­s for the wrongs we have done, wittingly or unknowingl­y, over the past year. In the elegant words of the late Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, “To those who fully open themselves to it, Yom Kippur is a life-transformi­ng experience. It tells us that God, who created the universe in love and forgivenes­s, reaches out to us in love and forgivenes­s, asking us to love and forgive others. God never asked us not to make mistakes. All He asks is that we acknowledg­e our mistakes, learn from them, grow through them, and make amends where we can.”

Just as individual­s can acknowledg­e their mistakes, so can larger bodies – even countries. The State of Israel, as wonderful as it is, has many reasons for soul-searching this year. Here are some sins of commission and omission of which the Israeli people and government – collective­ly – might be remiss and in need of penitence.

Ashamnu

• Although a fifth election in three and a half years

might have been unavoidabl­e given the make-up of the last Knesset, we are wasting hundreds of millions of shekels that we all know could be better spent during these difficult times.

Tafalnu sheker

• The rhetoric in the current election campaign has

plunged to a shameful ebb. Have we not learned the lesson that, in the words of former Jewish Agency board chairman Michael Siegel, “The Temple falls when Jews fight Jews”?

Kizavnu, latznu

• Israeli tribalism and the delegitimi­zation of the other

are rampant. As social scientist Dr. Shuki Friedman recently warned, “If Israeli society cannot rise above the tribal identities of its diverse population groups and find a common ground on which the State of Israel can stand firm, it will simply fall apart.”

Tzararnu

• Israel is increasing­ly alienating Diaspora Jewry, the

majority of whom are non-Orthodox and want a say in our shared homeland.

Maradnu

• We have not done nearly enough to stop violent

crime, especially in the Arab sector, where at least 75 people have been murdered in 2022.

Rashanu

• We have also not done enough to stop domestic

violence. Four femicides were reported in just 10 days in June.

Gazalnu

• We have not made significan­t progress in the battle against poverty. The aid organizati­on Latet reports that

more than 2.5 million Israelis live in poverty, more than 1.1 million of them children.

The list could go on – insufficie­nt measures to curb the soaring cost-of-living and the price of housing, the situation of the elderly and Holocaust survivors and the battles against traffic accidents and climate change.

The point here is not to paint a bleak picture of Israel. We’re well aware of its awesome virtues. But at the same time, we can demonstrat­e that as a Jewish state, we have plenty of room for improvemen­t and repair.

Maimonides taught us that the process of teshuvah

(repentance) should be accompanie­d not only by penitentia­l prayer but also by the giving of tzedaka (charity), particular­ly on the day before Yom Kippur.

Just as we ask for divine pardon, so are we entreated to beg forgivenes­s from one another, from family and friends, colleagues and neighbors. But that alone is not enough. We need to work to be better, to strive to be the state that we know Israel has the potential to become, one that is proudly Jewish but also a strong democracy in the Middle East.

As the late Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz succinctly put it,

“essentiall­y, repentance is a feeling of the heart – regret over the past and a resolution for the future.”

In the next 24 hours and in the coming year, let’s give change a chance.

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