Every year on Tisha b’Av we begin a 7-week journey of
preparation for Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur. Like most significant experiences
in life, for the Jewish Holy Days to have the potential for transformation,
they require preparation. So we started a few weeks ago by looking at the
broken-ness of our physical, ethical, and spiritual worlds signified by Tisha
b’Av, moved towards the hope of a world filled with love 6-days later at Tu
b’Av, and are now in the midst of a month of working on Heshbon HaNefesh
(our soul accounting), reflecting on our past year, righting the wrongs we can,
softening our hearts enough to apologize where needed, setting new goals, and
beginning again the work of rebuilding relationships with family, friends, G-d,
and our selves.
This year my journey of reflection and rebuilding started in
Detroit, a city ravaged by decades via an exodus of jobs from the city after
WWII, then white flight and abandoned property, then riots, crime and outrage,
then political mismanagement and neglect, and most recently the recession of
2008, followed by Emergency Management’s systematic undermining and
deconstruction of many basic vital services such as education, city pensions,
and access to water for the city’s poor residents. It’s devastating to hear and
watch. However, amidst all of that, what was even more powerful is the way that
the Detroit ’s
residents are sowing seeds of hope and life. Street Art such as the Heidelberg Project are giving residents a
way to express their grief and dreams, while beautifying their neighborhoods.
Residents surrounded by the blight of empty lots and decrepit buildings, are
getting their hands dirty and learning how to grow food. Places like The Georgia Street Community Center
are putting Detroit at the top of urban
agriculture in the U.S. ,
a part of the city’s approximately 1,300
urban gardens and farms, while building community, the local economy, and
resilience in the process.
Moshe Givental is a former psychotherapist, currently an activist and in his last year of Rabbinic school at Hebrew College.
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