Each year prior to Pesach, we have four special Shabbats each named for their special maftir readings. The first of the four is this Shabbat and it’s called Shekalim. The reading recalls the practice of a mandatory yearly tax of half a shekel for each adult male. This served two purposes: to raise funds for the Temple and to attain a census of the people. As always, we are called upon to dig deeper and examine the text more closely. In this case we should ask why half a shekel and not a whole one?
Each half shekel is to help to ascertain how many people there are in the Nation of Israel. If 200,000 shekels are collected, then we could state there were 400,000 adult males, and then extrapolate from that the whole number of Israelites including the women and children. But why not have each male give one whole shekel? Why necessitate the doubling of the number? One very clear answer is it was designed so that all could contribute on an equal level. The amount was so miniscule that nobody would be unfairly affected by the tax. But at a deeper level, there’s a much nicer understanding and that’s no person stands alone. We all need to be with other people. Our nation isn’t made up of individuals but of a group. Think of the best friend trinkets we had when we were kids. Two friends would each have a half and would be able to visualize their connection to each other. It’s the same concept; without the other we are incomplete. Without our community and those around us we lack too much.
The Jewish people are a diverse people. For some time, we’ve made it a point to place ourselves and others into groups or camps. These groups have become more and more all-consuming, and rather than uniting us, they tend to divide us. We think of ourselves as Sephardic or Ashkenazic. Israeli or American or any other country. We think of ourselves as Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, Hasidic, Reconstructionist or secular. This summer camp or that youth group. We belong to this synagogue but never that other one. We divide and divide and what do we have we to show for it?
The Talmudic dictum of “All of Israel is responsible for each other” seems to be empty and hollow in the divisive world we live in. All our destinies are linked together. All of us have a common origin and a shared history. We can either continue to place ourselves into more and more silos, or we can recognize the importance of the Jewish people and our role in that ancient identity. We are each a half of a shekel and we need the other half to continue our people and our identity. There’s so much we disagree on and yet there’s so much more that unites us on a daily basis. The non-Jewish world lumps us all together in one pile so why not allow ourselves to benefit from the collective the whole world sees us being?
As we continue to work our way towards Purim and then Pesach, may we each pause for a moment and recognize that our Jewish world is vast and large and is made up of many pieces that are needed. May we each find the ability to reach out to fellow Jews who might not be in our “group” but are nevertheless a piece of each of us. May we each recognize that the same Haman we’ll be booing will be booed by people who we don’t have much in common with, but nevertheless have everything that matters in common. May we see the Haggadah we’ll sit and learn and read from is the same book in its essence that all Jews use which demonstrates our shared common heritage.
The time has arrived for each of us to care more about unity than our own vision of the world. The time has come for us to see we are each are only half a shekel and we need to make ourselves and our community complete.
Shabbat Shalom, Rabbi Hearshen
Candlelighting on February 17 is 6:05 pm.
SAVE THE DATES!
Shabbat March 3 & 4
BIRTHDAYS
Shabbat Joshua Stolow Victoria Killeen
Monday Iris Esther Birman
Tuesday Leo Benatar Rafael Oquendo
Wednesday Audrey Arogeti Joey Galanti Neil Galanti Scott Galanti
Thursday Anna Felice Tuck David Falkenstein Madeleine Kaplan Marilyn Mitchell
Friday Rebeca Selber
ANNIVERSARIES Shabbat Daniel and Leah Koch Jared and Noushine Palatchi
Monday Daniel and Hannah Habif
Tuesday Matthew and Andrea Oppenheimer
Meldados
Shabbat Renee Stein Ben Rabinowitz Jason Eric Greenberg Phyllis Maslia Sylvia Rich
Monday Dr. Victor A. Benator
Wednesday Avraham Rabenu Galanti Morris Benveniste Julian Jacobs George Rosenberg
Thursday Samuel Shafferman Eli Bobo Joe Bobo
Friday Robert Dreyer Ned B. Cohen Esther Mayson Karp
Jonathan Sacks Study Group Book 1 Tuesday, Dec 5th 7:00p to 8:00p Rabbi Hearshen will lead a three-book series on works by Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks. Three sessions will be held for each book. The December book is The Great Partnership. Classes are free of charge. Book purchase, from the bookseller of your choice, is required.
Hanukkah Party 2023 Shabbat, Dec 9th 5:30p to 7:30p Join us for a Hanukkah celebration including Havdalah, make your own falafel with Rabbi Hearshen for dinner, Israeli dancing and more.
United Against Hate Classes Sunday, Jan 7th 2:00p to 4:00p United Against Hate Classes will take place on:
January 7 at St. James United Methodist Church from 2:00 - 4:00 pm and
January 9 at Congregation Or VeShalom from 7:00 - 9:00 pm.
Classes are free of charge and open to the community.
Shabbat Services, Dinner & Discussion will be held on Friday, January 12 at Congregation Or VeShalom. We'll start with services at 6:00 pm followed by dinner, discussion and reflection at 7:00 pm. In partnership and discussion with St. James United Methodist Church. RSVP required for dinner at orveshalom.org/event/nohatedinner.
United Against Hate Shabbat Friday, Jan 12th 6:00p to 8:00p Erev Shabbat at Congregation Or VeShalom begins with services at 6:00 pm followed by dinner at 7:00 pm. In partnership and discussion with St. James United Methodist Church.
$35 per person for 3 course dinner. $10 per child ages 10 and under for chicken fingers and fries. Register for Shabbat at orveshalom.org/event/nohatedinner.
United Against Hate Classes will take place on January 7 at St. James United Methodist Church from 2:00 - 4:00 pm and January 9 at Congregation Or VeShalom from 7:00 - 9:00 pm. Sign up for classes at orveshalom.org/event/nohate.