Tapestry #4 Tevet:Chanukat Ha-Bayit –
Dedication to the Home/Temple
by Rabbi Amy R. Perlin
Sermon for the Chanukah tapestry at TBS 12/16/06
Look
through my window with me. This is my tapestry, and the one that truly
reflects my personal Jewish perspective. It is the way I see the world
in hues of purple and filled with light that we kindle for God. I stand
within my home, beside my family, fulfilling the mitzvah of Chanukah.
We are commanded in the tradition to place our menorahs on the
windowsill, to show the world we are Jews. The dreidels and gelt and
jelly-donuts (Israelis don’t do latkes, they do jelly donuts… as long
as it is fried… the oil and cholesterol remind us we are Jews!) The
candles burn brightly on the window ledge showing the world our
festival of light and our Jewish pride. It is a miracle that we are
here in freedom, celebrating the miracles of our freedom and survival
from Judah Maccabee until now.
Chanukat Ha-bayit is
the Jewish value we gave to our artists, Bracha and Menachem Lavee, for
this tapestry. Normally, this value is the obligation to have a mezuzah
on the doorpost of a Jewish home, a command straight from the Shema in
the Torah. Deuteronomy 6:9 “And you shall write them (my commandments)
on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.” In its broadest
Hebrew interpretation, this value of Chanukat Ha-bayit means
“dedication to the Home with a capital “H”. Let me explain.
The
Temple in Jerusalem at the top of the tapestry is the Mikdash, God’s
dwelling place in our midst, historically, God’s home. “V’asu li
mikdash, v’shachanti b’tocham” – from Terumah (Exodus 25:8) “ You shall
make me a tabernacle that I may dwell among you.” We build a place for
God to dwell. This is one of the most important Torah phrases of my
life. It was the portion for my son, Jonah’s Bar Mitzvah. It guided me
as we created B’nai Shalom and struggled to raise the funds to build
this temple. I have dedicated my entire life to building a home for God
… in my own life for my family, and for this amazing congregation. I
have always heard this command from God as the mission statement for my
life’s work. I wake up each morning to build God a tabernacle in the
minds and hearts and lives of those I serve and for those I love.
Temple
B’nai Shalom is in the center of the tapestry, as it is the center of
most of our Jewish lives. We see the outside world from the “mikdash
me’at”, the small sanctuary we create for God, that is our own home.
From our home we see our second home, our temple which is a direct
descendent of the Temple in Jerusalem located above. The two homes
center our lives and ground us. When we are dedicated to both homes,
and only when we are dedicated to both, can we consider ourselves good
Jews. Many can be good people, but I truly believe that a good Jew must
have a Jewish home and must belong to a synagogue. To fail to create,
support, and sustain either home for God, diminishes Judaism and the
Jewish people.
“Or Zarua latzaddik –light is sown for
the righteous” is the phrase on the left. How can you call yourself
righteous if you do not have a Jewish home with exclusively Jewish
symbols and practices, a mezuzah on the door, and have your home an
extension of the spiritual home that you support financially and in
every other way? You can’t really be a good and righteous Jew unless
you sustain those institutions for which generations have fought and
died. It is that simple in my mind. There are three synagogues that
were destroyed in the Holocaust between B’nai Shalom and the Jerusalem
Temple. Their destruction has become our imperative to support and
sustain Judaism in the free world. Every study of American Judaism
teaches us that the synagogue, even more than the Jewish home, is the
foundation stone of Jewish survival in American Jewish life. Once upon
a time, the Jewish home was the cornerstone, but as we age, and many do
not have traditional families, the synagogue has become the centerpiece
of Jewish survival. Those who don’t belong and sustain will not be
around in another generation or two. Those who don’t live exclusively
Jewish lives of Torah and practice will not have Jewish descendents for
grandchildren. Every recent study makes this perfectly clear.
What
makes this a uniquely B’nai Shalom tapestry are the families in the
dwellings – American dwellings with square windows or Jerusalem
dwellings with rounded windows according to our artists… (or newer
Fairfax County home dwellings with rounded windows if you choose!). We
specifically asked for every kind of family to be depicted – singles
and couples, those with children and those without. We offer our
blessings to those with traditional mixed gender parent households, and
those where same gender couples sow the light of righteousness, even in
the darkness of prejudice and ugliness of self-righteous bigotry. Light
shines in every home with God’s blessing at TBS.
Even
my beautiful tree, which the Dettelbachs planted for me when we moved
into this temple, is in the tapestry. Once again a tree of life and
growth symbolic of how our community has grown from a small sapling
supported by a stick into a thriving tree towering over the temple
offering shade and beauty. This is the tree for me.
Chanukah
begins on the 25th of Kislev and has since the second century BCE. It
ends on the 2nd of Tevet, so we have used the month of Tevet in this
tapestry. This year, Christmas and Chanukah come on the same day. It
happens very rarely, but when it does it offers us a unique opportunity
to affirm our Judaism, and to offer blessing and love to neighbors,
friends, and relatives who will be celebrating their holiday. We must
be ever mindful that their holiday is not our holiday. Their trees or
lights cannot be on our temple, nor in our homes,which are also Jewish
sanctuaries to God. The Jewish home is a sacred dwelling, and the
greatest gift we give to ourselves and our children is helping them be
safe and secure in a home rich with exclusively Jewish symbols. We are
ever mindful that not all choices Jews make are Jewish choices. One
only had to read about the perversion of Bar and Bat Mitzvah parties in
the Washington Post this week, or be upset by the dual religious home
featured as an example, to see that symbols and choices do matter. The
national Christmas tree will never be a holiday tree, my tree, or
something that should be paid for with tax dollars in my rabbinic
opinion. It is another reminder that we are a minority in a culture
that has loudly voiced its disapproval with the separation of Christmas
from our schools and our states. We still have our work cut out for us.
Just when we think we have won the war, new battles arise in the
workplace, mall, or school that remind us that like Judah, the battles
continue even after we win freedom to worship in our sanctuary. This
nation does not belong to any one religious majority. We must be
diligent in our efforts to survive the season of joy and light with joy
and light in our hearts for all. It is not always easy.
Some
of our members don’t want to put menorahs in their windows as the
tradition demands. We need to show the world we are proud. The light
must shine forth from the sanctuary and light the darkness of
injustice. We, who have known our sacred Temple to be desecrated and
destroyed, must work to insure that all may practice faith or the
choice not to have one, in safety, freedom, and the light of justice.
And this tapestry hangs all year round to remind us that we are
obligated individually and as a religious movement to be a “light unto
the nations”, every day of our lives.
What I love
about this tapestry is the fact that home and synagogue, family and
faith community are one. We are a seamless “home for God.” Chanukat
Ha-bayit. May we always dedicate our homes to God, Torah, and the
survival of the Judaism and the Jewish people, here and around the
globe. May your homes glow with pride and the lights you kindle burn
brightly with God’s blessings of love and the hope of lasting peace.
Shabbat Shalom.
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