The other day, I experienced one of those moments that reminds me just how blessed we are to be living in these historic times.
I found myself dancing with a 92-year-old veteran resident of Kibbutz Nahal Oz during the first ever Torah scroll dedication ceremony for the kibbutz.
Think about that for a moment.
Nahal Oz never had a synagogue. Yet after the horrors of October 7th, something awakened. Kibbutz residents who experienced the unimaginable on Oct. 7th, with family and friends massacred and kidnapped into Gaza, felt a deeper connection to their Jewish identity, heritage, and roots. They asked for a Torah scroll to be brought into their community.
For decades, many believed that modern Israel could thrive disconnected from its Jewish soul. But tragedy has a way of stripping away illusions and forcing us to rediscover what truly gives us strength.
Standing there, dancing with Jews from all backgrounds around a Torah scroll in a kibbutz that never had one before, I couldn't help but feel that we were witnessing something much bigger than ourselves.
This is not just a Torah scroll entering a kibbutz. This is a Torah scroll with the names of the kibbutz members murdered on Oct. 7th etched into the Torah scroll covering, representing a change overcoming Israeli society.
This is another chapter in the incredible story of the Jewish people returning home, not only physically to our ancestral homeland, but spiritually to our identity, our heritage, and our destiny.
The Jewish people are awakening.
What a privilege to witness it. What a blessing to be part of it.
Am Yisrael Chai!!!
The Torah was donated thanks to the great work of Ken Freedman and Judy Freedman Kadish, following in the footsteps of their unbelievable mother, Helen Freedman, founder of AFSI/Americans For A Safe Israel.
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