Loving others will not make you popular.
Pursuing peace will not make you safe.
Choosing life will not protect you from death.
But, if you do not love others, if you do not seek peace, if you do not choose life, who will you be?
When Moses ascended Sinai, he found God adding flourishes to the Torah’s letters, which only Rabbi Akiva would ever be able to read. Moses asked to see what became of Akiva.
The Holy One showed Moses how the Romans flayed Rabbi Akiva’s skin as they martyred him, then sold his flesh in their marketplace.
Moses threw his hands in the air and demanded: “Is this Torah, and this its reward?”
“Silence,” said God. “Such is My will.”
This is Torah. This is its reward.
Vivian Silver was murdered by Hamas on October 7th.
Vivian Silver founded the Israeli peace organisation, Women Wage Peace. She worked for human rights groups like Btzelem and ALLMEP. She lived on Kibbutz Beeri, near the Gaza border, where she engaged in solidarity work with Bedouins, Gazans, and Palestinian construction workers.
Three days before October 7th, she organised a march of 1500 Israeli and Palestinian women for peace.
On October 7th 2023, terrorists broke into her home and murdered her.
Even as she hid from the militants, she gave an interview to Israeli radio, where she said the very fact that she was under attack showed the need for a peace deal.
A year later, her son, Yonatan Zeigen, eulogised her. He said:
“Being a peace activist is not something to save you from being killed in war. It’s something to prevent a war from happening. And to create a reality where war is not an option.”
Silver’s love of others did not make her popular.
Pursuing peace did not make her safe.
Choosing life did not protect her from death.
But it made her fully human.
This is Torah. This is its reward.
On Monday evening, as my community sat down to listen to poetry in preparation for Tisha B’Av, I received a text to say that a Palestinian peace activist I knew had been murdered.
Awdah Hathaleen was shot in the chest in his home.
Awdah lived in the village of Umm al-Khair in the south Hebron hills. I visited his village twice last year with Rabbis for Human Rights. The second time, I stayed in the bunk beds adjacent to his home. In the morning, he brought breakfast to me and the other solidarity activists.
A delegation of Progressive rabbis met Awdah earlier this year when they went to the West Bank with Yachad.
Awdah was an English teacher. He was born in the south Hebron hills and had known tanks, guns and occupation all his life. He worked with Israelis to protect his home and build a peaceful future.
This did not make him popular. For some Palestinians in neighbouring villages, this meant that he was engaged in normalisation with the Israeli occupier.
Indeed, after the Oscar-winning movie about his village, No Other Land, gained international recognition, the BDS movement called to boycott it, because it showed Israelis and Palestinians working together.
Awdah chose the path of non-violence. Even after his uncle, Haj Suleiman, was crushed by an Israeli police tow truck; yes, even after his elder was cruelly murdered; and yes, even after those who killed his uncle were never brought to justice; after all that, he still chose the peaceful path.
For the settlers who wanted to capture his home and ethnically cleanse his village, his activism made him a target.
He and his family never knew safety.
Awdah wrote for 972 Magazine, a joint Israeli-Palestinian publication, about the struggles of raising his traumatised son in this village under attack. He wrote: “He even knows some of the settlers by name. Sometimes I tell him that they went to jail; I’m lying, but I want to make him feel safe.”
He was lying. Settlers who carry out murders do not go to jail.
The man who murdered Awdah was called Yinon Levi. He was filmed doing it. Still, the only person who has been taken into custody by the Israeli police is Awdah’s cousin, Eid, a fellow non-violent activist.
Yinon Levi was already subject to EU sanctions and recognised internationally as a terrorist. But he is protected by government minister, Ben Gvir, who has dedicated his life to helping settlers get away with murder. Even before the far right coalition took power, plenty of settlers had been able to perpetrate atrocities with impunity.
Loving others did not make Awdah popular.
Pursuing peace did not make him safe.
Choosing life did not protect him from death.
No; you will not be better off if you do the right thing.
But God does not ask us to live lives that are comfortable.
There is no commandment in the Torah that we should be popular.
All of us, regardless of religion, are placed on this earth to be God’s stewards; to uphold God’s most sacred commandments; that we must choose life, pursue peace; seek justice; and love the stranger.
This is Torah. This is its reward.
This sacred work comes with no promises. But who else would you want to be?
It is a charge often laid against woolly moralists like me that we do not really get how militants like Hamas think; that we just cannot understand the mentality of the settlers.
That is true. I do not want to think like them. I do not want to become like them.
Who will we be if we let our hearts become warped and set our minds to cruelty?
Loving others will not make you popular. But it will make you loving. And pursuing peace will make you peaceful. And seeking justice will make you just. And that is what your God asks of you.
We are approaching Tisha B’Av, when we recall every catastrophe that befell our people. If you believe that peace is possible and that these assaults on basic humanity are wrong, you can add another disaster to the roster. On Monday, Awdah was murdered.
Yes, a Muslim murdered by a Jew is a tragedy for us all.
A man who was committed to non-violence was shot in the chest by a settler, leaving behind 3 children. He was 31.
Do not give in to cynicism or try to calculate what you might gain for kindness. This world has no guarantees. And we know nothing about the hereafter.
You do what is right because it is right. Because if you do not, who will you be?
This is Torah. This is its reward.
May God have mercy on us all.
