Oh, what week it was on the Jerusalem streets to end the months of October and Tishrei!
Many times this past year, RJS repeated it was a”roller coaster” and “up and down” week.
Exhausting and wearing are words that come to mind from the experience of getting up from the lows.
After a slow start to the last week in October, here are highlights from the Jerusalem streets.
The Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem hosted an academic symposium on October 29, 2024.
The ‘KUMA‘ exhibition that opened in May is closing soon. The legacy of the brilliant young artist Eitan Rosenzweig, hy”d, who fell in battle, should be shared worldwide.
The Jerusalem streets have been much quieter than the north and south of Israel, but the signs for shelters are posted in the museum.
A well-researched presentation by the impressive Dr. Izabella Tabarovsky at the Indigenous Embassy Jerusalem Academic Symposium focused on the Denial of Jewish Peoplehood and Jewish Connection to the Land of Israel in Late-Soviet Propaganda.
The former Soviet dissident who spent 9 years imprisoned by the Soviet authorities, Natan Sharansky was a keynote speaker.
He was highlighted along with Professor Gil Troy, who presented “The Promised Land versus “Settler Colonialism”: Land, Indigeneity, Identity and Creativity in Zionist Thought.” A study of how and by whom the term “settler-colonist” developed.
Maori Sheree Trotter, PhD in history from the University of Auckland, is a founder and co-director of the Indigenous Embassy of Jerusalem which had an impressive event in February.
Multiple speakers and delegates could not attend because of air travel cancelations.
Shadi Khalloul from Kfar Birem made his presentation on Zoom because of illness. An Israeli Aramaic Maronite born near the border of Lebanon who served in the IDF as the first Christian paratrooper in 1995, he founded the NGO – ICAA. Who knew that Aramaic is still being taught?
As the full-day program continued late in the afternoon, Dr Charles Asher Small spoke on “The Implications of Antisemites Defining the Jew: From Indigeneity to Colonial Settler.”
To close the day, co-convener Prof. Wayne Horowitz lectured on “Indigenous Narratives of Land and Sky-Modern and Ancient, Arctic Canada and the Land of Israel.” From this graphic of Abraham’s hometown of Ur, he developed the connection of Indigenous Peoples’ narratives to their land by song and dance.
Think of the Jewish agricultural holidays we recently celebrated and the words of “Hatikvah.”
It was a very thoughtfully presented program with much information and videos to be published.
On Wednesday night, at Beit Hanasi, the Israeli President’s Residence the first award ceremony for Civilian Heroes of October 7, 2023, was held.
A large screen and stage were constructed in the back garden. With the clock and season change, it was dark and colder than recent nights.
The President awarded cousins Ismail, D’Haish, Hamed, and Rafi Alkarnawi for their bravery in rescuing Israelis on October 7 under heavy fire from Hamas who had invaded Israel.
The set was elaborate and the program included musical interludes slow and solemn.
Most of the awards went to the relatives of deceased civilians who acted quickly on October 7 to save others, like Moshe and Eliyad Ohayon hy”d, from Ofakim.
The President wanted not only Jews, Druze, and Bedouin heroes honored, but children as well.
Former Supreme Court Justice Elyakim Rubenstein’s committee was tasked with investigating and selecting from 200 nominees down to 60 then 20 finalists.
One bright point of the evening were the young children present.
Their presence conveyed the feeling – Am Yisrael Chai – the People of Israel Live.
But always present is the yellow chair and the faces of the hostages still in Gaza for over a year.
On the Jerusalem streets, it is hard not to remember the 101 remaining hostages.
The Shiva of Rabbi Avi Goldberg hy”d concluded with thousands coming to pay condolences to the family of the latest Jerusalem resident fallen. They came all week and late into the night after Shabbat.
One woman who came to offer words of comfort to Rachel, the young widow, was Hadas Loewenstern, mother of six children under bar mitzvah age. Her husband Elisha Lowenstern hy”d was the 405th to fall in Gaza “fighting for our lives”. She has repeated her story in numerous recorded messages to give strength to others, especially those who have received the dreaded “knock on the door” from the IDF.
It’s a good day when “cleared for publication” is not the first item on the news, as the number of fallen rises toward 780.
A favorite sight this week on the Jerusalem streets was a young border policeman taking flowers home with his talit bag over his shoulder.
So as the sirens sound north and south, and Israelis run for shelter, in Jerusalem, Israel life moves along.
The new signs are posted for the end of November Jerusalem Oud Festival.
The oranges are full on the trees along the Jerusalem streets. And if you look closely you could even find Halloween decorations.
Oh, what a month October was!
Hoping November is a quieter, less rampageous month.