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Even as we begin the book of Leviticus, va-yikra,  I felt it was important to focus on this moment of plague even as we prepare for Passover/Pesah. Every day this week it felt like that first Passover eve, when the Israelites stayed in their homes while death struck all around them. They must have wondered whether the night would end in liberation or catastrophe. Our hope is that we too will go forth free from this plague.
                                                                      Michael (mjstrassfeld@gmail.com)
 

A vision of hope expressed in a beautiful song

Hineh yamim ba'im ve-hishlahti ra'av ba-aretz
lo ra'av la-lehem ve-lo tzama la-mayim
ki im lishmoa eit divrei adonai

Behold the days are coming,
that I shall send forth hunger in the land,
not hunger for bread,
nor thirst for water,
but a desire to hear the words of God
          Amos 8:11

The practice this week and for a number of weeks is to not be afraid, to surround yourself with love and to not lose sight of your fellow human beings or the vision of hope of the prophets of Israel. Use this new song and last week's for this practice.

 

 
Still a song for our time

Al tira mi-pahad pit’om u-mi’sho’at rishaim ki tavo

Haboteah badonai hesed yisoveveinu

Ufros sukkat shelomekha alai ve-al ohavei

Do not be afraid of a sudden danger or a catastrophic disaster that appears. (Prv. 3:25)
If you approach life (God) with trust, then you will be surrounded with love.
  Spread your shelter of peace over me and my loved ones.
 
 
To listen to the song

 A word of Torah:

      There is a plague of darkness that has fallen not only on our land but upon the world. Actually, there are many plagues—just as in Egypt they seem to come in groups even though just one plague would be more than enough—dayyenu. The coronavirus is certainly a plague that has affected every family, passing over some homes but striking too many others.

There is also a plague of scarcity:
A shortage of ventilators, protective gear and hospital beds.

There is also a plague of abundance:
Too many people who can’t shelter in place because they are homeless
and an abundance of false promises about millions of tests “on the way.”

   Now a plague of darkness has fallen, as it is written: “People could not see one another, and for three days no one could get up from where he was.”(Ex.10:23). Darkness is the penultimate plague, coming right before the death of the first born. Is darkness really worse than the plagues that preceded it, like killing all the animals and destroying all the crops? Yes, because this plague doesn’t mean that there was a blackout. The plague was that people didn’t see each other. By the time of the ninth plague, people stopped helping their less fortunate neighbors and didn’t join together to mitigate the situation. The plague of darkness was every person for themselves. It was the end of any sense of society.
   I live in the “greatest city in the world” (according to the musical, Hamilton). In New York City, there are people who have no symptoms or close contact with infected people who have managed to get tested. How? By paying enough money for a private test. There are thousands more people who have lost their jobs and couldn’t pay for such a test. In fact, they don’t have enough money for food or rent.
   This is the plague of darkness that has been increasingly spreading across America. There are the people who count and the many who don’t. There is the 1% who get the breaks, the shrinking middle class that get a few breaks and the ones at the bottom who get broken.
   I worked hard during my life for what I have. Yet that doesn’t mean I should get the test or the ventilator before those with less. Much has been said about the increasing gap between the rich and everybody else. But the coronavirus makes clear what is at stake is not just privilege but life and death.
   The plague of darkness is the ninth plague because it is the last warning to a society that has become hardhearted and doesn’t see its fellow citizens. It comes right before the final plague—the death of the first born, a plague that struck down “every first born from the first born of Pharaoh who sits on the throne to the first-born of the slave girl who is behind the millstones.” (Ex.11:5).
   Ultimately, what the Coronavirus has reminded us is that we are all connected. What happens on the other side of the world affects us here. What happens to those who have been ground down by the millstones of prejudice and inequality makes all of us vulnerable even the first born of Pharaoh.
   “People could not see one another, and for three days no one could get up from where he was.” The question is who will stand up in this darkness and bring light to whoever wherever they dwell.

Thus, God says: Let not the wise glory in their wisdom; let not the powerful glory in their strength; let not the wealthy glory in their financial success. But only in this should they glory: Only by mending your ways and deeds wholeheartedly, only if you bring justice between one person and another. Only if you do not oppress the stranger, the orphan and the widow... (Jeremiah. 9: 22-23; 7:5-6).

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