Daily Life Lessons from Rabbi Heschel
Year 3 Day 219
“Inequality is the ideal setting for the abuse of power, a perfect justification for man’s cruelty to man.” (Insecurity of Freedom pg. 94)
Today is the 80th anniversary of D-Day, the invasion of France that turned the tide of World War II. It was a day on which over 4000 Allied Soldiers died and some estimate 9000 German Soldiers and personnel died. World War II was a war determining if freedom would win out in Europe and the U.S. Freedom is lost whenever “inequality” rules is what I am hearing Rabbi Heschel tell us. In the words above, given the time and setting in which they were spoken and given our current time and setting, Rabbi Heschel is calling to us to guard our freedom by ensuring equality is our way of being in the face of “inequality’s” tremendous pull for some, especially those in power or those wanting to be in power.
Looking across history and across the globe today, we witness the truth and validity of Rabbi Heschel’s words “inequality is the ideal setting for the abuse of power”. Whether it is Putin, Xi, Orban, Trump, Bannon, Thomas, Alito, Leo, Ben-G’vir, Smotrich, Netanyahu, Johnson, Taylor-Greene, and their co-conspirators, all of these ‘strongmen/women’ constantly seek to exploit people using lies about how the ‘other side’ is practicing “inequality”, how the ‘other side’ is denying freedoms, etc. They use the Goebbels playbook: “accuse others of that which you are guilty of” and many people believe their mendacious statements, go along with them and, when it is too late, find out they were duped and are now under the thumb of these dictators and authoritarians. Be it Hitler and Goring, Stalin and Lenin, King George, Trump and Miller, Gingrich and his cronies, Sinwar and Hamas, Qatar and MBS, all of these people in their own ways have pushed for “inequality’ to be “the ideal setting for the abuse of power” that they engage in. Isn’t it time for we, the people, to say STOP? Isn’t it time for we, the people to honor the sacrifice of the soldiers who died on D-Day so we could live in freedom?
“Inequality” has always been “a perfect justification for man’s cruelty to man”-full stop. The only way human beings have been able to perpetrate the evil and the cruelty we have upon one another is by ‘seeing’ another as unequal to us. Be it Jews since antiquity till now, Blacks in America, “heathens” in the countries that Britain and/or Spain conquered, the powerful have made a separation between the ‘us’ and ‘those people’. While the Bible proclaims “one law for the citizen and stranger alike”, the ‘good religious folk’ in power seem to have missed that commandment, just as they missed the verse that says we are all created in the image of the divine and have equal worth and dignity! We have witnessed throughout the millennia the truth of the second phrase above and we seem incapable or unwilling to end our cruelty towards one another, we seem to be incapable or unwilling to end our abuse of power once we have it, we seem to relish both our abuses and cruelty while decrying the same when aimed towards us!
How many people today learn about and remember James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner? It is almost 60 years since their murders by KKKlansman because they were “Freedom Riders”, registering Black people to vote in the Presidential Election that year. They were ‘riding’ for freedom and equality for all-and were murdered by those who believe in “inequality” as the only way to hold onto power, to abuse their power, and to justify their cruelty to ‘those people’. It is ironic to me that 20 years after D-Day, three young men seeking to bring freedom and justice, equality and dignity to all people were murdered in the fight for freedom and equality that their ancestors and the ancestors of those who murdered them fought in WWII. We seem to be unable to learn from our history, we seem to be unable to live into Lincoln’s words: “that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion-that we here highly resolve that these dead will not have died in vain”. Is it not time to honor those who died on D-Day, in the entirety of WWII, in the Civil War, the Revolutionary War, Vietnam, the “Freedom Riders” above and the myriad of Blacks and Jews who were targeted by the KKK? Isn’t it time for We, The People, to bring about “a new birth of freedom”, a rebirth of our pursuit of justice and equality?
I am overwhelmed by the quote, by D-Day, by my family’s service in WWII, by the deaths of family members whom I never met in the Shoah, by the people I knew who died in Vietnam, by the inequality that is so prevalent and subtle. People with wealth get better treatment, often, in the medical system, in restaurants, in everyday life. Elon Musk is a treacherous human being who cares only about how he can exploit and abuse his power as he is doing against Ukraine. Trump and the Republicans in Congress who are supporting him put treasonous people who participated in Jan 6 insurrection onto the Intelligence Committee, they invoke the filibuster when asked to vote for the right of women to take contraceptions, etc. I am enraged by the inequality we are seeing perpetrated by those were abused. I am so saddened by the lack of memory and our unwillingness to learn from our history, our stubbornness towards living into the spiritual texts we have been bequeathed. I am angry with myself and apologize for the abuses of power I committed and I am constantly on guard against committing any more. I am hearing the reverberation of Rabbi Heschel’s words above in my head and recommitting to justice and equality FOR ALL, not just ‘my people’. I am recommitting to seeing everyone as ‘my people’, knowing we all need one another to make our world better. God Bless and stay safe, Rabbi Mark