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SHABBAT NITZAVIM-VAYELECH
September 8, 2007
Libby Gutterman
I could show you
the exact spot in Chapel Hill, North Carolina where, thirty-one years
ago, I experienced my first attraction to my husband. The attraction
was deeply spiritual and grew out of his simple statement that he was
Jewish. There we were – two people, products of different religious
heritages – with a spiritual bond that has endured to this day, and is,
in fact, the basis of our marriage.
For six years, we
considered the wisdom of marriage between two people deeply rooted in
their faith communities. What about the children? We decided they
would be Jewish.
Over the
twenty-two years since the first of our three children was born, our
decision has been reaffirmed and strengthened on many occasions. I now
stand here before you on yet another of those occasions. As a Christian
mother of a Jewish child who has become a Bat Mitzvah, what do I feel?
I feel my child
being swept up into the great river of Judaism that sprang from Abraham
and flows through history down to this very moment in time and this very
place and this very people.
I feel honored –
honored that G-d chose me to raise Jewish children. I rejoice in the
task fully. It strikes a strong chord of harmony in my heart.
I feel the
presence of a woman I never knew, Rachel Tribble, my great, great, great
grandmother who was Jewish and whose heritage has been recovered in her
descendant, my daughter.
I feel defiant.
One more Jew has claimed her inheritance in spite of history’s attempts
to wipe out her people.
I feel hopeful. I
hope, my daughter, that you will grow every closer to G-d even as you
struggle with G-d as did Jacob-Israel. Remember, you shall love Adonai
your G-d with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your might.
I feel the unity
of the One G-d. I believe today we are one step closer to “… that day
when the Lord shall be King over all the earth; on that day, the Lord
shall be One and His name One.”
I feel thankful.
My daughter did not become a Bat Mitzvah as a result of my efforts
alone. Many in this sanctuary have nurtured her in some way, and I
thank you. Most importantly, I thank G-d who grants us life and
sustenance and has permitted us to reach this occasion.
Shabbat Shalom.
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