Monday evening I attended a vigil for victims of the Tree of Life Shooting. The lawn outside the Arnstein Jewish Community Center was bright with the light from hundreds of candles.
It was reported that between 700 and 800 people attended, and I believe that. I am happy I went, happy to have gone with my step-daughter and grandson, happy to see so many people there, people from many different faiths, coming together in love. And it was an evening filled with warmth, where one felt that love could indeed prevail.
I don't always attend vigils and marches, and from a purely intellectual perspective I struggle with their effectiveness. But I also know that one of the most important things we can do as humans is simply to show up. Showing up was what was needed, sharing our love with our neighbors in their grief was what was needed.
We are all Jews. First of all, if you are Christian, Jewish, Muslim, your faith tradition stems from the same root. But I am not speaking of that. And I am not denying that this is a hate crime, an anti-Semitic act in a country that is becoming increasingly anti-Semitic. I feel sad for my Jewish family and friends. But I also feel sad for all of us.
We are all Jews. Every single one of us is someone else's other. Every single one of us can become a victim in a moment. Yes, I admit to stating this from my position of white protestant privilege. But it doesn't matter if you are white, black, Asian, Christian, Muslim, Sikh, Jewish, Atheist, heterosexual, homosexual, blue-eyed, masculine, feminine, rich or poor. We are all Jews and we all live in fear. Most of the time, however, we are adept at denying that fact, even from ourselves.
All of our lives hang on a thread. We can bind ourselves together in love, or we can let the fabric of our society and our humanity ravel away. Yes the shooting in Pittsburgh was the act of anti-Semite. He may even be a madman. Evil and mental illness will always be with us. Apparently so will denial. When we can label a person, a place, an event, we make it smaller. We put it in a box and store it away on a high shelf in our mental and emotional closet. And another thread in our societal fabric breaks.
An act of violence in a place of worship, a sanctuary, is an act of violence against each and every one of us. A shooting in a school is an attack on every one of our children. Any shooting of innocents, any shooting at all, is an act of violence against each and every one of us. And we all carry the scars whether or not we acknowledge that fact.
We are all Jews. We live in a world increasingly marked by fear and hate. And we are afraid. Because we are afraid we turn our backs, although we tell ourselves other stories, stories meant to deny any thought that we may live in fear. When we close our doors and turn our backs we are building our own ghettos.
How can we claim to be a country that respects religious freedom when we lock our sanctuaries? Not just synagogues and temples, but churches as well. How can we say all are welcome, all are loved when we are so frightened we have to lock our doors? How can we claim to live in freedom when none of us is free? We cross the street to avoid the homeless person, the group of unfamiliar-looking young people. We build walls. We treasure our safe neighborhoods, our schools with gates and alarms on doors. We practice denial daily. We try to blend in. "it is not about me", we say, trying to convince ourselves. Denial is about fear. And denial is a powerful drug. It never is, you know, about me. Until it is. And then it will be too late.
And although I am thrilled that so many came to the vigil Monday night, I also know that there should have been ten or even one hundred times as many, even though there would never have been enough candles. I would like to live in a world where the 700 people standing on a lawn holding candles is not the remarkable thing. I would like to live in a world not marked by hate, but by kindness and acceptance, and yes, even love. I would like to live in a wold that stops and comes together to stand against violence, where coming together to mourn the loss of another innocent is the norm.
Wishful thinking I know. But then perhaps then we really would be "the land of the free and the home of the brave".