“Love thy neighbor as thyself” – Lev. 19 “When a stranger resides with you in your land, you shall not wrong him.” – Lev. 20 “[God] upholds the cause of the orphan, the widow, and befriends the stranger” – Deut. 10
Shalom everyone,
As I watch the images of young children being separated from their parents flash across the screen, I find myself pausing to reflect on the power and poignancy of those meaningful texts above from Torah. As a Jew, I am compelled to “love thy neighbor…” . I believe this means that I must strive to treat others how I wish to be treated. The second text above teaches me that, as a Jew, I should recognize that “strangers” can and will reside in my community. The Torah goes on to simply and directly command me to "not wrong them." The third text above reveals to us that God defends the cause of those powerless. Simply, Torah commands us to have compassion for the disempowered in our community.
It is because of those texts and all that Judaism teaches at its core, that I encourage each of you to follow some of the suggestions from Rabbi Jonah Pesner, Director of the Religious Action Center (The RAC). The RAC is an organization that our congregation supports through your dues, which puts into action the values above on a daily basis in Washington D.C. They also help organize all Reform congregations around the country to do the good work that needs to be done. Yesterday, Rabbi Pesner shared this message. I hope you will take the time to read it and respond in what every way you can.
B’shalom, Rabbi Robert Weiner
[Message from Rabbi Jonah Pesner]
Tomorrow, I am going to the border. … With a group of 40 faith leaders – 10 each from the Jewish, Muslim, Catholic and Protestant faith traditions – I will be meeting with, and bearing witness to, the families torn apart by the Trump Administration's family separation policy. Standing together, we will call on the Administration to end this morally abhorrent practice.
In May 2018, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that the federal government would adopt a zero-tolerance policy for unauthorized border crossings, officially instituting practices that separate children from their families. This policy applies to all border crossings, even to those people seeking asylum. We are heartbroken and horrified by family separation. We join the wider Jewish community, faith community and others in calling upon the Administration to put an end to this shameful policy.
Tomorrow, Barbara Weinstein, Rabbis David Stern, Leora Kaye, Nancy Kasten, and David Segal, Cantor Jason Kaufman, and I will represent the Reform Movement in McAllen, Texas, the site of the United States’ largest border processing and detention center. McAllen has become ground zero for the Trump Administration’s family separation policy that, in a six-week period, has left approximately 2,000 children separated from their parents. This is just one way we are getting involved, and we hope you will join us in shedding light on this urgent issue and bringing justice to the center of this nation's immigration system.
Many have reached out searching for ways to help end this family separation policy and support the children and families being torn apart. Here are six ways you can help:
1) Provide tangible support to detainees and separated families by gathering and sending toiletries and toys to the border. Send care packages to: Michael Blum Social Action Chair, Temple Emanuel, 4300 Chai Street (North C Street) McAllen, Texas 78504.
3) Bring a congregational delegation to McAllen, TX home to the United States' largest immigration detention center. To do so, reach out to Rabbi Claudio Kogan of the URJ's Temple Emanuel in McAllen, who is eager for visitors to see this border community first hand.
4) Send a letterdemanding that President Trump, Secretary of Homeland Security Nielsen, and Attorney General Sessions end family separation now.