A Bridge to Tikkun Olam
Last month, more than 20 AJC interns met with executive
director David Harris for a meet-and-greet. After a short debrief about AJC’s
history, Harris dove into a more serious conversation. He asked us, the
intimidated and somewhat shy interns, to rank the most significant facet of
Judaism in our lives. The options were community, culture, faith, tikkun olam, and
Israel.
My first thought was, well, all of them.
But after reflecting for moment, I realized that at the helm
of all of these elements is my faith—my all-encompassing, abounding faith –
that helps me find meaning and purpose in the other aspects of Judaism and in
everyday life.
My first runner-up was an easy choice: tikkun olam, which in
Hebrew means “repairing the world.” It is a phrase, a concept, and a lifestyle
stemming from Lurianic Kabbalah, a major strand of Jewish mysticism. Today, the
term connotes social action and the pursuit of social justice.
By the end of the meeting with David Harris, it dawned on me
that this Jewish principle subconsciously drove me to seek an internship AJC. Elated by this new perspective on my work, I hurriedly
debriefed my boss about the meeting. To my surprise, he said he never
considered AJC’s work to be tikkun olam. I respectfully disagreed.
It’s true that AJC isn’t microfinancing in Africa, rebuilding
Haiti, or donating food to soup kitchens. It isn’t sending rescue teams to
Syria or teaching English to migrant workers. “But it is definitely tikkun
olam,” I insisted. “It is a different type of tikkun olam. It’s preventative tikkun olam.”
As the AJC website notes, the organization works to
“identify trends and problems early” in order to “take action.” But what is
“action” if it isn’t hands-on action?
At the start of my internship, I asked myself that very question.
It was hard for me to understand what AJC is all about. But after the ACCESS
Summit and the Global Forum conferences in early June, I learned that the
“action” AJC undertakes involves educating the public, meeting with diplomats,
influencing policy, and most notably, building bridges to connect the Jewish
community with the rest of the world.
Over the course of four days in Washington D.C, I schmoozed with
Jewish peers from around the world, who shared with me the joys and struggles
of a small Jewish community. I attended
panel discussions with rabbis and scholars, who highlighted the necessity of
Muslim-Jewish bridging. I heard speeches
by influential politicians, including U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Israeli
Justice Minister Tzipi Livni. I dined with foreign ministers, AJC lay-leaders, and
social entrepreneurs, with whom I engaged in meaningful conversation about Iran,
energy, Israel, anti-Semitism, and global threats.
During both conferences I was chameleon of sorts; a student
in one panel, an advocate in another, a leader of Israel activism in one, and a
young professional in all of them. ACCESS and GloFo stimulated every aspect of
my professional life and academic interests—which is more than I can say about
any other conference I’ve attended.
On day four I was sad to bid D.C farewell, but certain I was
taking with me new knowledge, friends, and
business connections. I boarded my bus to New York—full with inspiration and kosher
food—glad to have experienced bridge-building firsthand.
When I returned to work that drowsy Wednesday, I had a
greater understanding how bridge-building
is done and why it is so vital to
the Jewish people. Quite simply, when AJC champions immigration rights, the
Latino community is there for us, too. When AJC ACCESS hosts interfaith
Passover Seders—during which Christians, Jews, and Muslims bond over wine and persecution—the
likelihood for future discrimination lessens. And when AJC invites German
military officers to private luncheons, it reinforces the Jewish commitment to
forgiveness and respect – which we hope to receive in return.
A true bastion of enlightened self-interest, AJC is
committed equally to supporting democratic values for all peoples as it is
committed to Jewish continuity. By
forming connections over common interests and democratic values, the bridges it
builds have sturdy foundations. These bridges will serve – and have already
served—to prevent world Jewry from drowning in the rising tides of anti-Semitism. By exposing world leaders to AJC’s concern for
the rest of the world, the world will return the favor. It’s this beautiful and
simple formula that I've come to truly believe in during my time here at AJC.
However much I carry this idealism with me, I also realize
that AJC’s mission isn't easy. And it isn’t working everywhere. In the last
year, anti-Semitic acts in Europe increased by a staggering 30%. The world is
still severely broken. But AJC is working to pick up the pieces – to “repair
the world.” It is carrying out its unique tikkun olam, and I’m proud to be on
board.
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