While we have been having a relatively warm winter in the
United States, it cannot compare to what winter is like in Israel. It
is the rainy season there, the time of year that Israel greens up, with
cooler temperatures and rain (which feels like a miracle every time I
experience it) in between wonderfully sunny days. In Israels climate,
it is easy to understand how Tu BShvat, this year starting on the
evening of February 7th, is celebrated as the birthday of the trees.
By Tu BShvat, trees throughout Israel are blooming, getting ready to
set fruit and there is a festive, hopeful feeling in the air.
There is a lot to feel hopeful about in Israel, a western
democracy with positive values, yet it seems like every day we hear
about gender issues and racist incitement there. As disheartening as
it is to get this news, there is a very positive side to this; we are
hearing about it! We are hearing about it because we planted seeds.
For years we, as a movement, have been helping to grow a community of
people who care about womens equality; who care about living in peace
with our neighbors; who want people of all faiths to be treated fairly,
who believe in democracy; who are working hard for sustainable,
ecological living. We have been helping to grow a community of people
who care enough to speak up and take action when they see injustice.
The Reform Movement in America, through ARZA, has been helping to grow
this community by investing in the Israel Reform Movement.
On a recent trip to Israel, this hopefulness, amidst the
worry and concern, was palpable. People came together in Beit Shemesh
to stand witness to the value of derech eretz (civility) in the face of
brutality toward a female child. People came together at the Israel
Reform Movements home, Beit Shmuel in Jerusalem, to raise their voices
against the suppression of women in the public square of Israel. While
each one of us who cares about justice in Israel could not be there,
the community we have helped to build was, front and center.
When you have visited Israel, have you really met our
Israel, the one you helped grow? Have you been to Darchei Noam, which
won the right for all congregations, not just Orthodox ones, to be
allocated land to build synagogues? Have you been to Kiryat Ono, or
Birkat Shalom, or Or Chadash, or Ohel Avraham, all of which work with
and promote good relations with their Arab, Druse, and Bedouin
neighbors? Have you been to the Daniel Centers, which are helping to
revitalize Yaffo, prepare the next generation of social
justice-committed Jewish leadership, and have programs serving the
youngest to the oldest? Or Kol HaNeshema, which is reaching out to our
gay and lesbian family members and helping the Israeli Reform community
understand what it is to be open and affirming? Have you been to
Kibbutz Lotan to see what it looks like to live day in and day out as a
Reform people?
While government officials have been speaking out against
the mistreatment of women and girls, it is important to know that this
response is the fruit borne of the deep roots progressive Jews have in
Israel that we all helped plant. The early Zionists came wanting to
help build not only a State, but a New Jew; strong, free, part of the
world community. These seeds sprouted and are expressed in the
Declaration of Independence. Our Reform Zionist seeds are also
sprouting. More and more Communities are being formed. Our Communities
have become a movement. The Israel Reform movement is spreading the
word, in the Courts, the Knesset, the bimah, and the streets. The sap
rose this summer in the tent cities born of frustrated ideals, vision
and hopes that have been kept alive in our Reform communities. The sap
is rising this winter as people across the country respond to the Beit
Shemesh incidents. The Israeli government cannot say that the events in
Beit Shemesh were an aberration because of the cases, the depositions,
the studies on gender discrimination done by the Israel Reform Action
Center. People had the words to speak, the facts to lay out, the spirit
to do so because of all the growth ARZA, as the American Reform voice
for Israel has been able to nourish.
Hope is in the air. Tu BShvat is coming. The trees, the
community you nourish, are bearing fruit. Eat. Celebrate. And lets keep
growing.
Barbara Kavadias, the
Director of Development for ARZA: the Reform Israel Fund, was
previously the Director of Field Services for the Religious Coalition
for Reproductive Choice. Barbara is widely considered a leader in the
business of making the world a better place.