A particularly somber Yom Kippur


Hello, friends. I hope you are well.

I am checking in on the eve of Yom Kippur with a heavy heart and an upset stomach. The ongoing, seemingly never-ending war in Gaza is making me want to throw up.

Earlier in the war, I attended events at my synagogue to discuss it, but I have stopped. They held a discussion about Zohran Mamdani, and I didn’t attend that either because the major headline about Mamdani is where he stands on Israel.

I wish we had more space to talk about other things.

I had been trying (unsuccessfully) to hide my politics from this newsletter and from my professional life, but I’m gonna let it all hang out for a minute, with the disclaimer that I am open to your disagreement.

Bibi Netanyahu is like my deranged, tyrannical uncle. We have removed him from the group chat and no longer invite him to holiday dinners, but he is still family, and what he does impacts the family name.

I’ve been thinking about the saying “kol Yisrael arevim zeh bazeh.” In the grand Jewish tradition, there are disagreements about what this means, but the loose translation is “all Jewish people are responsible for one another.”

For better or for worse, Jews around the world are connected, and our actions impact one another.

Rather than inspiring me to take action for peace and against tyranny, the war in Gaza has made me want to sit on the cold tile floor of my bathroom, next to my toilet. I find it frustrating to witness those who seem to relish their righteous indignation, who will burst into a “Free, free, free Palestine” chant at the drop of a hat.

People are obsessed with this war, and they like to make it known. But no matter how loud they are, what’s happening on the ground on the other side of the world remains the same.

I don’t know where this leaves us as Jews. Hopefully my rabbi has some wise words for us tomorrow. If yours has any wise words, feel free to share them with me.

In the meantime, I will leave you with this beautiful, nuanced piece by Jay Michaelson in the Forward. It's a contemporary take on the Al Chet prayer, in which we list our collective wrongdoings.

Gmar chatimah tovah. Talk to you soon.

Rachel


Want to share this with a friend? You can find this and previous newsletters at https://purplegoatcollegeconsulting.kit.com/.


113 Cherry St #92768, Seattle, WA, 98104-2205
Unsubscribe · Preferences

Purple Goat College Consulting

Hi! I'm Rachel Oshinsky. I help students and families with the college process, and I particularly love working with LGBTQIA+ and Jewish folks. If you are looking for insights into the college process and beyond from an LGBTQIA+ and Jewish perspective, welcome!

Read more from Purple Goat College Consulting

Bend the Arc is a US-based progressive Jewish organization with an interesting take on antisemitism. I would recommend their Dismantling Antisemitism Message Guide for its refreshing perspective that challenges popular notions of antisemitism, but I’m not going to make you open another window. I’ll just summarize. Basically, they teach that antisemitism is manmade and therefore can be man-destroyed. They teach that we can end antisemitism, and they criticize folks who talk about antisemitism...

I’ve been trying to wrap my head around the devastating acts of violence against American Jews in Boulder and DC. I’m sure you have too. The Boulder attack was an act of cruelty in which the assailant set demonstrators, including the elderly, on fire. In DC it was an act of murder. These were targeted attacks against Jews. People are furious at Israel for its destruction in Gaza, and this is reasonable. I am too. But being furious at Israel doesn’t cause a reasonable person to wield a Molotov...

In my last newsletter, I highlighted the extreme polarization between certain factions of Zionist and anti-Zionist Jews on college campuses. The examples were intense. Each side literally thought the other side was trying to kill them. We see this polarization in the Jewish community outside of college campuses as well. On the extreme ends of the debate, one side thinks Israel can do no wrong, and the other side thinks Israel is a scourge on the Jewish people and the world at large. I’d...