Today
is Veterans Day. We all owe a huge debt
of gratitude to all of America’s veterans.
Veterans
Day on Friday allowed the Ramaz Lower School to honor and thank our veterans
while celebrating their pre-Shabbat Oneg.
Veterans were invited to attend and participate. It was a rocking, moving, and meaningful
experience.
I was tasked with connecting
Avraham Avinu (our patriarch Abraham) with Veterans Day. Here is the message I shared.
Avraham
was the first veteran. He joined the
battle of the five kings versus the four kings to rescue his nephew, Lot. Avraham did not want to fight, but he felt
the need to stand up and do battle for what was just and to protect his family.
The
Torah says (Bereishit 14:14) that Avraham armed his “disciples,” and they went
off to battle. What is the significance
of the Torah describing these soldiers as disciples?
Avraham
did not merely impart information to his students. He did not just teach them information. Avraham taught them to act. His students didn’t just absorb lessons and
values. Avraham impressed upon them the
need to fight for those values.
Students
and young children are not the ones who go off to battle. Most of us do not fight with weapons. Each and every one of us, though, has a
mission. We have orders to follow and
battles to win. Our mission is to follow
Avraham’s example and stand up for what is right. Our battle is to fight for goodness and
respect and kindness. It is a battle to
be a mensch, a good person and a good Jew.
We don’t
have weapons with which to fight. We have
our smiles, our acts of kindness, and our commitment to do what is right.
On
Veterans Day, we say thank you to those who served our country. This Veterans Day, being so close to Parshat
Lech Lecha, we also remember the Torah’s first veteran, Avraham. We remember that he led his students to
battle. Each and every one of us is a
student of Avraham. Let’s do our best to
win the battle for what is right.
The best part of the
Oneg came a little while later. Mr.
Manny Gross, a Ramaz grandparent and one of the veterans in attendance, asked
to say a few words. He message was
absolutely incredible and so powerful. I strongly suggest you watch it!
Mr. Gross described his army
experience. He focused on how he
maintained his Judaism throughout his time in the military. He put on tefillin EVERY SINGLE DAY. He described keeping kosher and how he would
trade his rations with other soldiers for food that he could eat like crackers,
jam, and tuna fish. Mr. Gross is a military
veteran as well as a veteran – and a victor – in the battle for Jewish identity
and values.
We can learn a lot from our
veterans. We learn a lot from Avraham
about what it means to stand up for our values.
We can all learn a lot from Mr. Gross about what it means to be
dedicated and committed to maintaining our Judaism.
We pray to God that we are
successful in all of our battles.
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