The Jewish Chronicle

Movedbymil­lennialmes­sage

- Yoni Birnbaum Dayenu”.

the sort of thing a kid would actually ask a rabbi. So my question remained unanswered for years.

Today, however, I am privileged to serve as a community rabbi myself of a young and growing United Synagogue shul. Nowadays, I am the one who faces west rather than east at the front of the shul. So now I have a chance, at last, to answer my own question: What does the busy season look like from the other side?

There are two possible perspectiv­es that rabbis can take on this annual frenetic focus on shul. Some might choose to look around the shul and wonder where all these people are on the other 362 days a year. Some might wonder whether their attendance is anything more than simply fulfilling a yearly chore of showing up on the right day at the right time (not before 11am).

But there is an alternativ­e approach, and it is this that I personally choose to adopt on the High Holy Days. To me, these three days a year are a source of profound inspiratio­n. Each year, I look around the shul and marvel at the strength of the Jewish spirit. I think about what a true celebratio­n of community it is, how people of all ages, personalit­ies and levels of religious observance come together as one in order to affirm their Jewish identity.

Their presence alone on these days, in a world in which identity itself seems evermore fluid, is a serious and meaningful statement of commitment to Jewish heritage and tradition.

Now, if this was the sum total of the inspiratio­n that these days have to offer a rabbi, I could comfortabl­y say “But it isn’t.

My own highlight of the High Holy Days actually arrives during the Torah reading on Yom Kippur. The shul itself is as full as it gets. But in a side room at this point in the service, I lead an open forum for young adults at which they are able to raise, question and debate any issues about Judaism they want.

The accountanc­y firm Deloitte predicts that, by 2025, “millennial­s”, the group of young people born between 1980 and 1999, will make up 75 per cent of the global workforce. Yet, survey after survey shows that millennial­s want something very different from the workplace culture than that of previous generation­s. According to bestsellin­g author and communicat­ions coach Carmine Gallo, millennial­s, “place far greater emphasis on purpose, passion and meaning. They want to work with teams of like-minded people who are connected to something bigger than themselves.”

I believe Gallo is correct in his assessment because I am a millennial myself. What’s more, that search for “purpose, passion and meaning” isn’t limited to the workplace alone; it pervades every aspect of the thinking and lifestyle of today’s young adults.

The High Holy Days simply provide a unique opportunit­y to see it in a Jewish context. The questions they ask me are invariably moving, inspiratio­nal and reveal an entire community of future leaders of British Jewry who reflect deeply on life and its meaning. Each year, I leave the session with them on Yom Kippur more humbled and inspired than the year before.

That, to me, is the view from the High Holy Day pulpit. And it is one that gets better, not worse, every year.

These three days a year are a source of profound inspiratio­n

Rabbi Yoni Birnbaum is Rabbi of the Hadley Wood Jewish Community

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