Thursday, November 24, 2016

How is this Thanksgiving different from all the rest?


 


This year, we should ask: How is this Thanksgiving different from all other Thanksgivings?

The answer:  We desperately need it.

As we enter the holiday season and leave behind what seemed at times to be an endless election cycle full of negativity, taking a moment to reflect about all that we have to be thankful for is exactly what we all need.  These are not easy times.  There is a palpable sense of heightened unease.  In the weeks since the election, the volume of the discussion has grown shriller and louder.  We have seen protests; hatred; blatant displays of anti-Semitism, anti-Muslim and bigoted behavior; movement for the mass deportation of illegal immigrants and an energized white supremacist movement.   The frenzied media coverage along with the increasing frequency of volatile statements and actions make my head spin.  So many people in American society - and in the Jewish community - have serious needs, while the country and our neighbors and friends seem so divided about how to best address them.

What can we do in response to the very real challenges we face today?

In the Jewish community – as with the general population, there are so many voices.  People legitimately have different views, but it feels like we are coming apart at the seams.

What do we do to make things better?


Do you remember the line in the Mel Brooks’ movie, History of the World, Part One?  In our case, the nuns we need were part of the famous “Nun Study,” a continuing longitudinal study to examine the onset of Alzheimer’s disease which began in 1986.

678 American nuns between the ages of 75 and 102, all members of the School Sisters of Notre Dame in the United States, agreed to allow their records to be accessed by a research team investigating the process of ageing and Alzheimer’s disease.

What gave this study its unusual longitudinal scope is that in 1930 the nuns, then in their twenties, had been asked by the Mother Superior to write a brief autobiographical account of their life and their reasons for entering the convent.  These documents were now analyzed by the researchers using a specially devised coding system to register positive and negative emotions.  By annually assessing the nuns’ health, the researchers were able to test whether their emotional state in 1930 had an effect on their health some sixty years later.

The results, published in 2001, found that the more positive emotions – contentment, gratitude, happiness, love and hope – the nuns expressed in their autobiographical notes, the more likely they were to be alive and well sixty years later.  The difference was as much as seven years in life expectancy.  This finding has led to a new field of gratitude research, as well as a deepening understanding of the impact of emotions on physical health.  (Rabbi Jonathan Sacks references this study in a Thanksgiving Message.)

The bottom line?  Gratitude is the key to happiness, a positive outlook, and a more fulfilling life.  This year, we need Thanksgiving more than ever.

Think about it.  Thank God, we have so much!  Take a moment to compile a list of the things we each have.  I would hope things like food, shelter, health, and family are on many of lists.  Even if we face challenges to some of life’s essentials, we are the beneficiaries of living in an incredible time in an amazing country.  There are so many opportunities.

What about the negatives?  I do not deny that there are many items we can put on our list.  At the same time, let’s try to be honest.  The pros crush the cons!

What can we do?  Be thankful. This will help us stay positive and remain hopeful about our country and our future. 

We should consider concrete steps to counter all the negativity out there. 

One person started a campaign to provide each of the 535 members of Congress with a pin that had George Washington’s famous words (written to the Jewish community in Newport): "To bigotry, no sanction; to persecution, no assistance."  He felt now is the right time to reinforce these sacred sentiments.

We can start our days with a daily affirmation of tolerance and respect for all.  Of course we believe it, but we also should say it so our ears – and those of our children, friends, and community – hear it so that our hearts and minds feel it.  There is a reason we say the Shema prayer out loud.  It is not enough to think about our commitment to God.  We must articulate it loudly enough to hear it.

We need to call out and condemn bigotry and intolerance.  We have seen and heard numerous disturbing examples of hatred in recent weeks.  I think they were always present and may just be getting a little more attention now.  It doesn’t matter.  It is important to strongly condemn and express outrage at displays of hate against any individual or group. 

We need to call on all of our country’s leadership - from our elected officials on the city state level, to members of the House and the Senate, to President-elect Trump, to vigorously condemn all hateful remarks – including those of those who claim to be admirers and supporters.  Abe Foxman, former National Director of the ADL, and Alan Dershowitz both recently made this point.  This week, President-elect Trump expressed his “disavowing” the alt-right and called on the country to come together.  These are encouraging sentiments.  Hopefully, we will hear more rejection of all forms of hatred and more calls for unity from all those in positions of responsibility and power.  We know evil when we see it, and we need to remain vigilant so that our leaders do the same.

Each of us should find ways to help move our country forward.  We can each have different ways to respond to the election and the state of our community and our country.  The most important thing is to stay positive. 

Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the first Chief Rabbi in Israel, famously taught: “If we were destroyed, and the world with us, due to baseless hatred, then we shall rebuild ourselves, and the world with us, with baseless love — ahavat chinam. (Orot HaKodesh vol. III, p. 324)

Let’s religiously and vigorously celebrate this Thanksgiving.  Let’s be supremely grateful and, in turn, become more optimistic about the world around us.  Let us transform hatred into love; darkness into light.

We need Thanksgiving now more than ever.

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