The Four Questions of Hope
With Pesach just around the corner, let's stop complaining at a distance and refocus our observations.
Like many of you, I have migrated my office to the dining room table for the last two weeks. Somehow, all the time I should have available to learn a new language, take up coding or catch up with old friends have yet to materialize. Between Zoom calls, homeschooling my children and keeping up with all the WhatsApps, I am yearning to return to the sense of order, peace and quiet by the proverbial office water cooler.
But something else is bothering me. With all of us at home socially distancing ourselves, we have perfected a new skill: complaining at a distance. We all lament (to ourselves, to family, or on social media) about those not pitching in, staying out of the societal effort to end this plague. The group at the beach or the protesters standing too close to one another, the shul that didn’t close soon enough, or the funeral with way too many people. And we are right.
But let’s put our focus somewhere else. Let’s focus on hope. Let’s focus on the positive. With Pesach just around the corner, here are four questions I put together to help us refocus our observations and the resulting reactions.
Leket:
The IDF:
Philadelphia’s Kohelet Yeshiva High School
GESHER
If you ask me, this should be our focus during these crazy times: Leket, the IDF, Kohelet and Gesher. And these are just four small examples of so much good taking place.
This crisis will end at some point. And then what? On the one hand, we can channel our feelings to distrust, critique and despair. But there is another option. We can use this time to hope for – and more importantly, plan for, a better tomorrow. Hopefully, in the years ahead, we can look back and say that we used “Corona time” to build a future in which we all rededicate to giving more of ourselves to others. Now, if we can truly say that, Dayenu!
The writer is the International Director at Gesher, which is building a cohesive Israeli society that embraces the vibrancy, diversity and shared heritage of the Jewish people.