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Yoni Birnbaum

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Yoni Birnbaum,

Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

Helping others makes us a closer community

'In these worrying times, we have fallen back on the core of who we are, upon what matters to us most in life. These times have stretched all of us to the limit.'

April 17, 2020 11:24
The statue of Maimonides in Cordoba, Spain
3 min read

The title of this column is “View From the Pulpit”. But the pulpit itself, at least in a formal sense, is currently inaccessible. So, what is the view from the rabbi’s home, his private pulpit, during these scarcely believable times? What can a rabbi say, amidst the personal pain of seeing his shul shut its doors, the place he sees as his second home, the beating heart and soul of the community? What is left when the word “Pulpit” is removed — and all that is left is the words “View From”?

As individuals have scrambled to reorganise and refocus their lives in this new world, so too has the Jewish community on an organisational level. And if there is one thing that people have remarked upon, both nationally and internationally, it is the fact that in these worrying times, we have fallen back on the core of who we are, upon what matters to us most in life. These times have stretched all of us to the limit.

And yet, they have also enabled us to see things differently, to see things in a clearer light, somehow, than was possible previously. This, then, is a view of the community from the private pulpit — a pulpit which may not be operating in a normal manner, but is perhaps returned to its original, simpler form — a pulpit of a bygone era.

In his classic halachic compendium, Mishneh Torah, Maimonides discusses what one should focus on more during the festival of Purim — sending gifts of food to friends, known as mishloach manot, or supporting the needy, matanot laevyonim. But Maimonides goes much further than simply ruling in favour of the latter. Instead, he expresses a crystal-clear view of priorities in life: “There is no greater and more splendid happiness than to gladden the hearts of the poor, the orphans, the widows, and the converts. One who brings happiness to the hearts of these unfortunate individuals resembles the Divine Presence, which is described as ‘reviving the spirit of the lowly and reviving those with broken hearts’ (Isaiah 57:15).”