Note: The following Drasha/Sermon was
written before the extraordinary (and miraculous) rescue of the four hostages
from Gaza on the morning that I delivered the sermon (I only found out about
the events after the termination of Shabbat). The courageous joint operation by the IDF,
Shin Bet (Security Services), Yamam (National Counter-Terrorist Unit and
Police) emphasised the message that I am conveying in these words.
This Drasha is dedicated to the memory of
Police Chief Inspector Arnon Zamora, zichrono livracha (of blessed memory) who
was tragically killed during the rescue.
Twenty-four
minutes.
If you’ve
seen the film ‘Saving Private Ryan’, this is the length of the vivid recreation
of the D-Day landings that introduces the
story. It is so graphical in its depiction
of the horrors of war, that once witnessed cannot be easily forgotten. At the time, one of the veterans of the 101st
Airborne Division was quoted as saying, “it felt like I was right there again. It was so damned real.” Another one said, “That’s as real as a movie could
get without the smell of gunpowder and putrefying bodies.” A third, representing
the views of many, spoke to CBS News and said how, “watching the movie was like
being back in battle.” (https://tinyurl.com/y6z5dewn)
In fact, the
depiction of the Normandy Invasion (and the subsequent story) was so accurate that
the United States Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) provided a free telephone hotline
to help any veterans who had viewed the film cope with the PTSD (post-traumatic
stress disorder) they experienced from watching the film. Some veterans found it difficult to sleep and
found solace in the fact that the screen they were watching it on ‘could block the
barrage of bullets that were coming their way’.
Those twenty-four
minutes are, at least in my mind, some of the most harrowing scenes I have ever
witnessed on the silver screen.
For the uninitiated, the film, though fictional in nature, tells the story of a group of soldiers led by Tom Hanks’ Captain John Miller, who are sent on a mission in occupied Europe to rescue Private James Frances Ryan. Following the battle, we are told that two of his brothers were killed on the beachhead and a third had been killed in action in New Guinea. Subsequently, their mother would receive three of the dreaded telegrams on the same day. To alleviate the grief she would be feeling, it is known that there is a fourth son and that their mission is to bring him back home. At this time, it is not clear whether or not Private Ryan is still alive.
The tagline
for the film was: ‘In the Last Great Invasion
of the Last Great War, The Greatest Danger for Eight Men was Saving...One. The mission is a man.’
The true story
which inspired the film derived from a 1944 application of the ‘sole-survivor policy’
with regard to repatriating to the United States Paratrooper Frederick Niland who
had lost his three brothers in the war. To
spare his parents the agony of losing all four of their sons.
On Thursday,
we commemorated the eightieth anniversary of that invasion. The US National D-Day Memorial Foundation has
calculated that 4,414 allied personnel were killed on 6th June 1944. This included 2,501 Americans, 1,449 British,
391 Canadians and 73 from the other Allied contingents.
Wednesday
marked the fifty-seventh anniversary of another battle and one that was arguably
just as significant to our people. I am of
course referring to the liberation of Jerusalem on 7th June 1967 (corresponding
with 28th Iyar 5727).
776 IDF soldiers
were killed in action over the course of the Six Day War which is less than 20%
of those who fell on D-Day. However, the
reunification of Jerusalem is as significant a part of our Jewish history as D-Day
was to the countries fighting each other over the course of the Second World War. In both cases, the outcome led to the eventual
defeat of nations who were sworn enemies of the Jewish people (setting aside the
Japanese who are not included here).
The Nazis
wanted to rid the world of its Jews. The
Egyptians, Syrians and Jordanians wanted to rid Israel of its Jews. Their methods may have been different (and I am
not comparing the Arab Armies to the Nazis and their allies) but they were united
in their hatred of our people.
Fortunately,
after nearly a hundred years, we are at peace with all our former enemies (aside
from Syria).
I haven’t
come across a film called ‘Saving Private Cohen’ set in a period which would recreate
events from the first few weeks of June 1967.
I also can’t recall sitting through a twenty-four-minute depiction of what
it must have been like to liberate the Old City as an IDF Paratrooper (for the record,
it was the 55th Paratrooper, Jerusalem and Harel Brigades along with
armoured support that liberated the city…and of course Gd’s Divine Assistance!)
I have however
found something else and you can read it in this week’s Parasha.
Bemidbar starts
with Gd telling Moshe to take a census of the Bnei Yisrael just over a year after
they had left Egypt. Rashi tells us that
Gd told Moshe to count the nation several times including a tally that took place
following the sin of the Golden Calf followed by a further two in the desert. The first census is detailed in this week’s Parasha
near the start of the forty-year period and the second, later in the book, as they
were about to enter the Land of Israel.
Rashi states
that the reason why Gd wanted to count us was because of his love for the Jewish
People. As anyone who values something will
tell you (such as a collector of artefacts), you derive a great deal of pleasure
from numbering the items you own. So it is
with Gd who loves us so deeply that he wants to know how many children (in the widest
sense of the word) He has fathered.
We are those
‘children’.
It is well-known
that the IDF has a policy that they will never leave an injured or dead soldier
on the battlefield. To Tzahal (army), every
soldier counts. Every single chayal (soldier)
is an extended member of the IDF family.
So, if Hollywood ever made a ‘Saving Private Cohen’ film, it’s accurate tagline
would be: ‘In Every Israeli War, The Greatest
Danger for Eight IDF Soldiers was Saving...One.
The mission is a man or a woman.’
We have witnessed
this time and again in these last impossibly challenging and heartbreaking months
where soldiers are being killed in their efforts to find our hostages. Which other nation would see its nationals rushing
to a war zone from every corner of the world as happened following the massacres
of 7th October?
On a daily
basis in Gaza, our teenage brothers and sisters, accompanied by older soldiers,
are literally risking their lives to save ‘Privates Berman, Ohana, Bibas, Sharabi,
Bohbot, Goldberg-Polin, Shem-Tov’ and over a hundred other hostages. They are fighting against an enemy who eagerly
embraces the ideologies of those who brought savagery and evil into our world for
the six years between 1st September 1939 and 8th May 1945
and the six days between 5th and 10th June 1967.
They do so
because they understand that, in the words of the Talmud (Sanhedrin 37a):
‘Anyone who sustains one soul from the Jewish people, the Verse ascribes him credit as if he sustained an entire world.’
The fictional
soldiers who risked their lives to save Private Ryan might have been based on those
who brought Paratrooper Frederick Niland back to the bosom of his family.
Over 290 IDF
soldiers have been killed trying to save the notional privates that I listed above. Not to forget those who lost their lives trying
to protect civilians on 7th October itself.
In the past,
it was easy to distinguish between the oppressor and the oppressed. That Israel, the true victim of Hamas’ genocidal
policy, is treated as the enemy by some that we mistakenly considered to be friends
is both shocking and deeply worrying.
We are so
proud of our boys and girls in the IDF who are continuing the tradition that every
single person counts.
We don’t need
another 6th June or 7th October to remind us of what happens
when evil is allowed to flourish.
May Gd who
loves His people so much that He wanted to count us, take another census and help
them to save our real ‘Private Ryans’ and hopefully, this will be the one which
precedes the coming of Moshiach.
May he come
speedily in our days and bring and to war forever.
Amen.
Shabbat Shalom.
No comments:
Post a Comment