Following the events of August 11-12, when white supremacist and neo-Nazi protestors marched in Charlottesville, VA, many organizations I support issued condemnations of these actions and criticisms of Donald Trump's response.
I am professionally affiliated with a number of these organizations; there are other groups who issued statements to whom I have no formal connection, though I support their ideals. For groups that have thousands of members or constituents, such statements are undoubtedly important to "rally the troops" and assure them that such affronts to decency do not go unnoticed. But many of the statements, as well crafted and strongly worded as they may be, merely sit as words. Beyond the condemnation, a formal call to action may be lacking.
In the 1940s, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (UAHC), the umbrella organization for Reform Jewish Congregations in the United States, hosted the "American Jewish Cavalcade," a series of tent meetings featuring rabbis such as Abba Hillel Silver and other orators of his ilk who spoke to Jewish and non-Jewish audiences in major cities about the tenets of Reform Judaism. It was apparently very successful in helping to double the number of movement congregations, and--most significantly-- in educating curious non-Jews about the Reform movement.
It seems to me that it is time for a new cavalcade. Not to promote Reform Judaism (though that could be a side benefit) but to expose individuals to the ideas and ideals of people different from their own backgrounds. A bus tour or the like could go into rural communities with the promise of an opportunity to meet Jews, Muslims, African-Americans, and others with whom the local citizenry had never had a chance to interact. Not for lectures or platitudes but for real relational conversations. I don't in any way mean to be an apologist for the vitriolic hate that is being espoused in Charlottesville and elsewhere, but how many of those folks joined up with those groups in the first place and swallowed their hogwash without ever having met a Jew or an African-American or a member of the LGBTQ community?
There are organizations and individuals who are already doing similar things. For instance, click here for a great story about a jazz musician named Daryl Davis, who befriends Klan members and has convinced more than 200 to drop their affiliation.
Condemnations and retweets and Facebook posts are all good (and sometimes, honestly, all that we have the time or energy for). But if we ever want to see change come to our world, we must learn to ACT. As the sages teach us, "It is not up to you to complete the task, but neither are you at liberty to abstain from it." (Pirke Avot 2:15)
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