This past Shabbat morning, my kids were playing together. Suddenly, in the middle of their game, my five year old daughter got upset at my three year old son and she literally attacked him. She flew into a rage, totally lost control of herself, and started hurting her little brother. Luckily, I was present and I quickly put her in timeout before any serious damage was done. A mere half hour later, I took both kids to shul with me and lo and behold, I saw them playing together happily as if they were eternal best friends. I thought to myself who are my children truthfully? The ones fighting with each other, or the ones who are best friends? What do they really feel for each other? Hate or love? Animosity or friendship?
I have been listening to the news in Israel the last couple of days and my heart is in pain. There is no excuse whatsoever for a “charedi” man to spit at an 8 year old girl. It is totally and utterly shameful. There is no excuse whatsoever for a “charedi” to call a female soldier a “whore.” This has absolutely no place in our society. There is no excuse whatsoever for a “charedi” to wear holocaust garb and a yellow star. There is also no excuse whatsoever for the hate and animosity being spewed from the “secular” side of the argument. The poisonous venom that is being spread palpably across Israel and the entire Jewish world is totally and utterly unacceptable.
Israel seems to be torn apart by hate and violence, and my heart is aching. But there is another scene that I cannot forget: October 18, 2011, the day Gilad Schalit came home. The unity that prevailed then was indescribable. For one day there were no more “charedim” or “chilonim,” “settlers” or “leftists.” There were no more barriers, no more labels, and no more political parties. For one day we stood as a nation - as one family. As siblings, as one family. Yes, people argued about the heavy price paid for his release, but as Gilad embraced his father Noam, every heart melted, and every eye shed a tear.
So I ask myself – who is the true nation of Israel? Is it the nation that stands divided? Fighting? Arguing? Demonizing each other? Committing vile and offensive actions? Or is it the nation that shows such a deep love and compassion for just one soldier? The nation that ultimately stands together through thick and through thin? The nation that shares loves, hopes, and dreams?
Deep down inside, every single one of us already knows the truth. The “quintessential Israeli moment” was the moment of love, of unity, of oneness. That is when “Am Yisrael Chai,” and we reached our deepest core. The peak of Jewish greatness is when we feel for each other, celebrate, and even cry together. This is the heart of the Jewish nation, and the heart of Israel. The nation that is tearing each other apart before the eyes of the entire world is not. It is time to embrace our true selves.
The disciples of Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi asked their master: "Which is the greater virtue, love of G-d or love of one's fellow?" Rabbi Schneur Zalman replied: “True love means that you love that which your loved one loves. G-d loves every single one of His children. So ultimately, the two loves are one and the same, and when one truly loves G-d, s/he loves with equal intensity every single fellow Jew.”
We are currently in the week that we fast and mourn for the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. The Temple was destroyed due to a lack of love, to senseless hatred. It is time to fix this mistake – it is time to reveal the true unity and love that Am Yisrael is capable of. It is time to reach across divides and differences, and care about each other simply as brethren, and as family. We may not always agree, but we always must remember and feel that we share an inner bond that is unbreakable, and that our foundation forever is a shared love of G-d and shared love for each other.
My thanks to Avi Shlomo for editing this article

Josh wrote...
alex wrote...
Pinny wrote...
He did not call her a whore. He called her "immodest" and religious people use the same term for immodest as secular Israelis use for "whore." (actually started as a euphemism...)
(not that I condone any action of any party involved in those insane and bizarre stories...)
Hadassa Margolese wrote...
Barbara wrote...
Vanessa wrote...
What a beautiful article you wrote about "Spitting? A Whore? A Yellow Star? I Love Israel"!
Truly inspiring! I wish everybody would read it!
All the best to you, Shevy and the kids !
Lorien Balofsky wrote...
Orna wrote...
Your community is lucky to have you as their rabbi ...
Shabbat Shalom from Israel,
Mendel Silberstein wrote...
Great article.
When you talk about the pain you feel one can see that your pain is real. and when you talk about the love for every Jew one can feel the burning love you have for every jew.
You are a great man and a shining example for all of humanity.
Joseph wrote...
It would great to extend your unifying,profound message.
I well agree and applaud your words of wisdom
Kfir wrote...
I think this article should be translated to Hebrew and sent to ynet news under guest writers. It will bring some peace and some thoughts in the head of the people there.
Shabat shalom!
alex wrote...
With all due respect, the religious man who verbally assaulted the soldier is wrong as is the religious man who spat on the child, as are the religious men who condemn women to the back of the bus. One needs to take a stand against this barbarism and primitivism which is being attributed to our religion and our Torah. You should say it LOUDLY and CLEARLY and not simply write warm fuzzy thoughts.
Yaara wrote...
Aleksandra wrote...