Monday, May 30, 2016

What are you remembering today?

What first comes to mind when you think of Memorial Day? 



Many people would respond the long weekend or the beginning of summer.  This is no accident.  In 1971, Congress passed a law to schedule four national holidays on Mondays to give federal workers a three-day holiday weekend. 

Over the weekend, I heard a number of people comment on the contrast between Israel’s Memorial Day, Yom HaZikaron, and ours.  In Israel, it seems to be much more meaningful.  The whole country stops and remembers.  In the US, the closest we seem to come to national commemoration is by attending a parade or attending a barbecue.

While Memorial Day in the US may have morphed into the opening of summer, it has a long history of reflection and commemoration.  Did you know that Congress authorized a national moment of remembrance to take place at 3:00 pm?

Personally, I have vivid memories of watching the scenes from Arlington National cemetery including the laying of a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.  (I’m actually watching it right now with my family.)  There is something powerful about the formality, dignity, and gravity that mark these memorial ceremonies.  We encounter the sacrifice of those who allow us to live freely, and we have the chance to ponder those events and ideals which are greater than ourselves.  Even if we did not serve to defend our country or even know people who did, we are clearly the beneficiaries of their sacrifice.

Such is the power of memory.  Memory connects us with the past and unites those with a shared experience or history.  Think of a conversation you may have had that brought to mind something from the past.  All of a sudden, you are transported back to that place or time to relive a formative experience or reconnect with people who made an impact on you.

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks captures the power and essential role of memory:

There is a profound difference between history and memory. History is his story – an event that happened sometime else to someone else.  Memory is my story – something that happened to me and is part of who I am.  History is information.  Memory, by contrast, is part of identity.  I can study the history of other peoples, cultures and civilizations.  They deepen my knowledge and broaden my horizons.  But they do not make a claim on me.  They are the past as part. Memory is the past as present, as it lives on in me.  Without memory there can be no identity.

The Chief Rabbi’s Haggadah (Essays) p. 29

We are blessed to live in the United States.  As Jews, memory is not only a function of the mind, it is a sacred obligation.  We invoke memory in our religious observances and to connect with our past.  We recently observed Yom HaShoah and Yom HaZikaron, two modern days of memory and purpose. 


The image above is of my grandfather’s discharge from the US Army following his service in World War Two.  I know it is not Veteran’s Day.  (Even fewer people commemorate that one.)  My grandfather was able to leave Germany and come to America in 1938 and bring over his parents and siblings in 1940 before serving his new country honorably.  This family memory is part of my Memorial Day observance.  Without my grandfather’s experience, I would not be here.  Without so many other experiences, none of us would.

Today, we have another opportunity:  To honor the sacrifice of so many in shaping and maintaining this great country and to reflect upon the power of memory in helping us lead more meaningful lives.

God bless America!

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