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Jews are back as everyone’s go-to target, but I’m looking for a glimpse of light

Although I habitually squash thoughts about peace, I also know I have to envision a future in which there might be steps towards it

November 27, 2024 15:00
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There's a crack in everything Photo: Getty
3 min read

No one would call me an observant Jew, or even award me a small gold star for effort, but I definitely used to go to shul sometimes. Not just for High Holy Days and yahrzeits. Not only to keep The Husband company. In the past, we sometimes went on Friday nights simply because we felt like it but of late it has become something of a rare event.

We are not motivated by faith because we don’t have any; we do not like to go as a habit as that seems to devalue it. Our reasons for going are not clearly delineated so they are all too easily lost in the press of busy lives and competing distractions, but perhaps it is something to do with a yearning for that feeling of belonging, the opportunity to feel connected to something bigger than ourselves, or even to know that, in dark times, at least we have each other.

Before The Husband retired at the end of last year, going to shul on Friday night often felt like a perfect way to reset, to draw a line under the relentless demands of his working week and set the tone for a slower pace. As the music began and the congregation came together in song, I could see his shoulders start to descend from being scrunched up to his ears, and by the time we reached kiddush, he would have left the stresses of the week behind him and I would have a brand shiny new husband, all relaxed and ready to enjoy the weekend together. I’d be somewhat less relaxed trying to chivvy him to hurry up and stop chatting to everyone after the service as otherwise the chicken would be overcooked.

But then came the pandemic and, even though we tried to participate in services online, of course it couldn’t recreate the atmosphere of being there in the flesh, so we joined in only occasionally. The first time I attended in person post-Covid after a huge gap was unexpectedly affecting; when I walked in, to be greeted by our rabbi and the chair of the synagogue, tears sprang to my eyes. I couldn’t quite understand why – could it be that going to shul meant more to me than I realised? But still, instead of hanging onto that feeling, I found I was attending less and less often.

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