Parashat Ekev
Wholeness of a Broken Heart
True repair begins when we acknowledge the impact of broken relationships
on this planet.
By Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla
This commentary is provided by special arrangement with
American Jewish World Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
I recently had the honor of serving as a
chaplain to a woman named Maggie in the last weeks of her life. In those long,
painful days in the hospital, Maggie was constantly surrounded by her three
childhood best friends. One day I asked what it was that has kept them so
connected. "Well," sighed one of her friends, "we are so close
now because she broke our hearts many years ago."
The
friends had been inseparable since grade school. In their last year of high
school, Maggie had become pregnant and shortly thereafter suffered a painful
miscarriage. Paralyzed by shame and sadness, Maggie was unable to share her
grief with her friends. Instead, she withdrew completely. The friends were
deeply hurt, but they refused to let her go. They kept calling, kept wanting a
relationship. Slowly Maggie began to share her pain with them and they rebuilt
their shattered friendship.
Healing Brokenness
"There
is nothing as whole as a broken heart," said the Kotsker Rebbe. It was in
healing the brokenness of their relationship that made the friends so close.
And it was clinging to the heart-break within Maggie that allowed them to build
a relationship so strong that it could last a lifetime. This healing of past
hurts is the process of teshuvah, continually
moving closer to one another and to the world by living by our values.
This Shabbat is one of the special weeks of nechemta,
comfort, that follow Tisha B'Av, the primary day of communal Jewish
mourning. Tisha B'Av marks some of the most profound moments of loss in
Jewish history, such as the destruction of the Temples in ancient Jerusalem and
the subsequent violent displacement of our people.
It
would be tempting to forget the pain and grief that Tisha B'Av marks and
obscure the moments of shattering within our Jewish past, just as Maggie, as a
young woman, was drawn to hide her brokenness. Yet, it is in the creation of
holy spaces, where we can share and name our grief, that the possibility of
healing begins. These weeks of nechemta
following Tisha B'Av lead directly to the High Holidays when we draw nearer
to one another through teshuvah. The healing
of the High Holidays is most possible when we first allow our hearts to break
in grief on Tisha B'Av.
Damaged Relationships
This
week we read Parashat Ekev. In this
portion, Moses speaks to the people and reminds them of all the suffering that
they experienced on their journey out of Egypt and the way that their
relationship with the Divine was shattered over and over again. We read:
"Remember, don't forget, how you brought on the Eternal One's anger in the
wilderness. From the day you left Egypt until you came to this place you have
been fighting against the Eternal One (Deuteronomy 9:7)."
Why is Moses reminding them of this history? It seems like on the eve of
entering the Promised land it would be tempting to try to forget. However, as I
learned from Maggie, if we don't first grieve over our losses and acknowledge
our broken relations, we cannot begin to heal. The people could only start anew
in the Promised Land after naming the pain that brought them there, they could
only rebuild their connection with the Divine after recognizing the damage that
had been done in that relationship along the way.
Today's planet has also been shaped by a history of suffering and by damaged
relationships. In early May a cyclone hit Burma leaving nearly 150,000 people
dead or missing and one million homeless. This latest natural disaster reminds
us that the impact of disasters is not just about nature. It is deeply
entrenched in inequality and broken relationships--violence, war,
global racism, and an imbalance of wealth--that lay the foundations for tragedy and
disaster.
Professor
Martin Espada said in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, "We tend to think of
natural disasters as somehow evenhanded, as somehow random. Yet it has always
been thus: Poor people are in danger. It is dangerous to be poor. It is
dangerous to be black. It is dangerous to be Latino."
It feels overwhelming to discuss this reality, all the more so to allow
ourselves to grieve over the state of the world. But teshuvah, true repair, begins only when we
acknowledge the impact of shattered human relations on the life of this planet.
This week, as we read Parashat Ekev, may we
publicly name all the brokenness of our world in our holiest places--in our homes,
our synagogues, and our streets--so that our tears can begin to bring healing and
the true wholeness of a broken heart.
Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla is an activist, writer,
organizer, and educator.