Wise Words
Writings of reflection by the Stephen Wise Temple clergy.
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Daily Kavanah – Monday, April 21, 2025
Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, is observed this Thursday, April 24. This week’s columns are about the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel: There are No Words The great humanitarian, survivor of the Holocaust, prolific writer, speaker, storyteller, and student of Torah did not speak about the Holocaust until ten years after his liberation from Buchenwald. Elie Wiesel had taken a ten-year vow of silence. Why? He knew that he had to bear witness. He also knew that he did not have the words to express what he had endured and witnessed. In his preface of the 2006 edition of his book, Night, he wrote, “Painfully aware of my limitations, I watched helplessly as language became an obstacle. It became clear that it would be necessary to invent a new language…” Night was Wiesel’s first book and it brought the personal aspect of the Holocaust to a wide readership. It was originally a nearly 900-page [...]
Daily Kavanah – Saturday, April 19, 2025
Passover marks the beginning of a nation. Many nations emerge after a triumph in battle, a revolution, the conquest of a land, or a fight for independence. Not so for the Jewish people. Our people were in the midst of physical and spiritual ruin. They were the most powerless of people. We were slaves, with seemingly little hope for a future. Through the power of God, a people ultimately emerged from what might have been the dustbin of history. They were tasked with bringing a set of values, given to us at Mt. Sinai, which became the basis of Western Civilization. Passover centers around an event which took place early in our people's history. Just as a people's earliest experiences can shape their development and destiny, an individual's earliest experiences can shape their development and future. Lest we forget what God did for us and what God did to the Egyptians, [...]
Daily Kavanah – Friday, April 18, 2025
“This is halachma anya—the bread of affliction—which our ancestors ate in the land of Egypt. Let all who are hungry, come and eat.” (Passover Haggadah)Every year, we begin telling the Passover story with these words. Rabbi Eliezer Davidovits (Slovakia, 1878–1942) reads this line as a kind of mini-sermon. He teaches that halachma anya symbolizes our suffering in Egypt. To the Egyptians, we were a people “dwelling in their shadow,” thus, they were obligated, he writes, to treat us with justice and compassion. Instead, they increased our pain.The Egyptians’ treatment of us was not only morally wrong, but also a profound misunderstanding of how God wants the world to be.The Torah tells us that God brought us out of Egypt with chozek yad—a mighty hand. This phrase appears three times in Exodus 13. Why?Davidovits teaches that chozek yad reflects the Egyptians’ mistaken view of power. They valued only yad yamin—the right hand, the strong hand. To them, power [...]
Daily Kavanah – Wednesday, April 16, 2025
When I think about Passover with my family growing up, I immediately smile. Passover seders have always been a big to-do; sometimes they were celebrated by having family and friends gather around the table at my parents’ house, other times by taking road trips to visit cousins up and down the East Coast. No matter where we were for seder though, I was always the youngest child. As the youngest child, I have been responsible for the Four Questions for as long as I can remember. Year after year, it has been my job and year after year, I hope that some guest will be younger than me and take over. There have been years when I have been more enthusiastic to chant by myself as well as years when I have tried, usually unsuccessfully, to encourage others to join me so that I didn’t have to sing alone. Finally, [...]