Answers for the People of Chelm and Any Other Curious Souls - Year 2002

 

December 2002

1. There is nothing quite like a wedding for a good time. And to think we are doing a mitzvah at the same time; this is a very happy situation indeed. So why is a sad element introduced, at very end of the ceremony, with the breaking underfoot of a symbolic glass? The most common reason given is that this is a reminder that even during celebration we should not forget the destruction of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem. Another very similar explanation is that a person must temper life's joyous moments with the realization that we still live in an unredeemed world. So how do people respond to this bittersweet moment, so imbued with solemn meaning? They cheer and yell "Mazel Tov"! Go figure…..

2. The attempt to explain and unravel the meaning of Biblical passages is called Midrash. Midrash also refers to a specific exposition or rabbinic commentary on a Biblical story, usually emphasizing a lesson or point of law. Finally, the word Midrash is applied to the entire collection of literature to which this interpretive activity gave rise. The rabbis of old, assuming that no word of the Biblical text was superfluous, generated a vast midrashic literature, including most of the Talmud. However, the work is never done and Midrash continues to be created, as we interpret the Scriptures in the light of modern experiences. The word itself derives from a Hebrew root meaning "to inquire, study, investigate". A synagogue is to serve as a "Beit Midrash", a house of study, as well as a house of prayer (Beit Tefila) and a house of assembly (Beit Knesset).

3. The Hebrew word "kadosh" - holy - is first used in Genesis 2:3 in reference to the Sabbath. "And God blessed the seventh day and called it holy ….". So the first application of "kadosh" is invoked by God, but not to describe God's uniqueness. Nor is this first reference to any person, place, or thing; examples of all these will come later. The first holy entity named in the Bible is a time, the special time of Shabbat.

 

November 2002

1. "Anyone who destroys a single soul destroys a whole world… and anyone who preserves a single soul has saved a whole world". This familiar but elegant statement expresses a complete worldview. It comes to us from the storehouse of so much wisdom, the Talmud. This thought is especially compelling when presented by Rabbi Greenberg, whose son recently died in Israel. Despite his own loss, this deeply humane man urges all of us to maintain our faith. The rabbi, a product of devout Orthodox upbringing, asked his audience to show compassion for the Palestinians also.

2. There were twenty-one kings of the House of David. Starting with David himself, this dynasty ruled first the combined Israelite state and then the kingdom Judah for almost five hundred years. The Second Book of Kings minces no words about its assessment of successor kings, most of whom it despises. Hezekiah, the monarch who built the ancient water tunnel under Jerusalem to withstand the Assyrian siege, was very highly esteemed. His son Manasseh, though, was reviled for many practices in his fifty-five year reign, especially for reinstating pagan worship. The very highest praise was reserved for Manasseh's grandson, King Josiah, a great religious reformer. The kingdom's spiritual fortunes recovered under Josiah, who commanded the ritual cleaning of the Temple. But then Judah reverted to a downward course toward punishment and exile when Josiah's son Jehoakim became king. Ignoring the prophet Jeremiah's warnings, Jehoakim led an unsuccessful revolt against his Babylonian overlord King Nebuchadnezzar and was banished. Not long after, Judah was crushed, Jersulem sacked, and the Temple destroyed by the Babylonians.

3. In our country, Chanukah, the Festival of Lights, is now the third most widely observed Jewish holiday, after Pesach and Yom Kippur. Naturally a lot of glorious traditions have grown up around it. Yes, it's true that the first eight-day period was specified by the priests and elders, the Sanhedrin, for the rededication purification of the Temple after its desecration by the Greeks back in 165 BCE. This account is found in both the Mishna and the Books of the Maccabees. These books are not, however, are not included in the Hebrew Scriptures, though they are in the Catholic Bible. These works, written shortly after the events they describe, make no mention of the miraculous oil, though the Talmud, written centuries later, does. The coincidence with Sukkot is no accident for one of the themes of Sukkot was the annual rededication of the Temple, which normally occurred at this time. Since the Temple was in Syrian hands at Sukkot, it could not be rededicated. But when the Temple was retaken from the Greeks, the Maccabees used Sukkot as the example for rededication. As Sukkot lasts eight days - so does Chanukah. But unlike Sukkot, this festival is not mentioned in the Torah - or anywhere in the Tanakh for that matter. Chanukah recalls events that occurred after the periods described in the Jewish Bible.

 

October 2002

1.. In James Carroll's view, the near omnipotent "enemy" of the early Christian Church was Rome, not the diverse Jewish world into which it was born. The Gospels of the Christian New Testament were written between 68-100 C.E., several decades after the events they chronicled, but during the period when the land of Israel was experiencing the first of the devastating Roman Wars. (The Epistles of Paul were written somewhat earlier). Rome's victory was complete and her civilization absolutely dominant in this period. The Jewish world was traumatized. As Carroll says "to read the New Testament apart from the Roman war against the Jews - as it almost always is - amounts to reading (Anne Frank's) The Diary of Young Girl without reference to the Holocaust". At this time Christianity was a marginal persecuted upstart sect. It did not become the official state religion until many centuries later, early in fourth century of the Common Era when Constantine reunified the Empire.

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2. There is always a special prayer for rain that occurs during the Shemini Azeret service. Not long after the rainy season begins in Israel and rain is of course essential to an agricultural community. But if you must spend eight days in a roofless sukkah, you would naturally prefer good weather during that time and only start praying for rain at the conclusion of your sukkah stay. Thus the prayer for rain is first heard on Shemini Azeret. The diminution in importance of this holiday may stem in part from the fact that we are not as tied to the land as previous generations or as dedicated sukkah builders. It is also worth noting that Shemini Azeret is not even mentioned in Exodus 23 and Deuteronomy 16 as the conclusion of the seven-day Sukkot holiday. Its observance as a full festival day, complete with cessation from work, is however commanded in Leviticus 23:26 and Numbers 29:35-38.


3. Of all the prophets, Ezekiel stands out for his bizarre visions, like the valley of dry bones which awake on hearing the word of the Lord and self-assemble into a great army. In another image, Ezekiel himself is bidden by the Lord to eat a scroll, which he found "tastes as sweet as honey". Ezekiel wrote his haunting but ultimately hopeful visions while in exile in Babylon, where he was sent in 598 B.C.E. when the new conquerors annexed Jerusalem. He was thus the first prophet to write outside the land of Israel. He also predicted the destruction of the (First) Temple, which occurred at the hand of the Babylonians in 587 B.C.E. For all these things, he is justly renowned. But in the opinion of the scholar Paul Johnson, his most lasting contribution was to move individual accountability to the very essence of the Jewish religion. Ezekiel departed from Jeremiah , Isaiah, and the great nevi'im who went before; they emphasized collective guilt, often for the sins of a leader, while Ezekiel preached that each individual was responsible directly to God.

 

September 2002

1. During the 1960s and 1970s Soviet Jews brought the celebration of the holiday of Simchat Torah to new heights. This is for all a uniformly positive holiday, with no connotations of sorrow or atonement. It is a truly joyous celebration of the completion (and beginning) of the annual cycle of Torah reading. Here you will see grown people, even rabbis, dancing jubilantly. But apparently none of these matched the intensity and sheer jubilation of the Russian celebrations, the only day of the year on which the authorities permitted any public Jewish exhibitions. Thousands poured into the streets around the synagogues in Moscow and other main cities to sing Jewish and Yiddish songs and dance for hours, often until Russian police brutally dispersed them. Some commentators feel Simchat Torah became a major event in the calendar for Jews in the Soviet Union not only for rejoicing of the Torah cycle but more so as a day of identification and unity with fellow Jews around the world from whom they had been separated for decades. Our congregation is blessed with a few Russian families who experienced these Simchat Torah celebrations first hand.

2. Tashlich is performed on the first afternoon of Rosh Hashanah (unless this falls on a Saturday - as happens in 2002 - in which case it is postponed to the next day). A rabbi usually leads the congregation to a nearby body of water, where all toss in crumbs of bread, and watch the current take their sins away. This is usually done while reciting verses from the prophets Isaiah and Micah; Micah 7:19 states "you will cast [tashlich] all their sins into the depths of the sea". This custom seems to be medieval in origin, and the earliest reference is found in the 15th-century Germany. Originally it was resisted by the rabbis as a frivolous practice, but eventually the common people's need for tangible actions prevailed and Tashlich became an integral part of both Ashkenazi and Sephardic custom. This need to do something physical in response to a spiritual need is deeply rooted. Do you remember the impromptu memorials of last September 11th?


3. It is indeed impressive how much of everyday English speech can be traced to Shakespeare and to the Bible. The playwright's insights into human nature come through crystal clear to us more than four hundred years after he wrote. It is even more amazing that the Bible's wisdom also resonates so deeply, across our much different cultures and a temporal distance of more than two thousand years. Of the examples given, A. matches to 4. - "There is nothing new under the sun." (Ecclesiastes 1:9); B matches to 3 - "Man does not live by bread alone." (Deuteronomy 8:3); C matches to 1 - "A voice crying in the wilderness..." (Isaiah 40:3); and D matches to 2 - "Pride goes before a fall." (Proverbs 16:18).

 


August 2002

1. There is not complete scholarly agreement on the origins of the synagogue, the most central religious institution of Judaism. However, of the answers given, the best approximation is that the first proto-synagogues began develop either during or shortly after the Babylonian Exile in the sixth century BCE. The Jews there clearly maintained their religious practices and scriptures. On his migration to Israel, the great teacher Ezra brought the sacred books and introduced their public reading. Some see a reference to Babylonian synagogues in this passage from Ezekiel 11:16 when God says "…I have become to them a small sanctuary in the countries to which they have gone". The Talmud also speaks of hundreds of synagogues in Jerusalem BEFORE the destruction of the Second Temple. By then they were commonplace in adjacent locales like Alexandria, Cyprus, and Turkey. And there is solid evidence of a synagogue in Egypt in the third century BCE. Though it has always been the focus of religious activity, during the Middle Ages the synagogue developed its central role in all aspects of Jewish life - as school, study, social center, assembly hall. Clearly by the time of the Roman repression and expulsion from Israel, there was in place an alternative to the Temple in Jerusalem, and thus Judaism was able to survive and even prosper during the enforced exile from its homeland.

2. Today Ohabei Shalom is at home in a magnificent Byzantine building on Beacon Street in Brookline. This is Boston's oldest congregation, founded in 1842, in what is today the Theatre District of the South End. They built Boston's first synagogue in 1852 on Warrenton Street (then called just Warren Street), which runs off Stuart Street between Charles and Tremont. The next home for Ohabei Shalom, from 1863-1886, situated diagonally opposite from the first synagogue, was the building that now houses the Charles Playhouse on Warrenton Street. In 1887 the congregation moved to still larger quarters further into the South End. And in 1928 they moved to their current site in Brookline. The Touro Synagogue was found by descendants of Spanish and Portuguese Jews, who had arrived in Newport as early as 1658. Boston's was established by recently arrived German and Polish Ashkenazic Jews.


3. It seems the ancients needed time to warm up to the idea of incorporating any part of God's name into those of their children. In time, however, it became quite common not only among the Israelites but also among their neighbors. The Canaanites frequently used Baal ("Hannibal") as part of a name; Egyptians Pharaohs were named after gods. And for Israelites, commoner and king alike, the Jehu (Jehosephat) or Josh (Joshua) root was a reference to Yahweh. Elisha, Elijah, and Elihu relied on the other ancient name for God, El. But the first appearance of a prominent name incorporating a root for God does not occur until the middle of Genesis, at the time of the Patriarchs. The name is Judah or Yehudah, Leah's fourth son, the progenitor of the tribe of Judah and ancestor of King David and his 20 successors. And Yehudah also gave rise to "Jew" and that's very good lineage indeed.

 


May 2002


1. As many Gimel students know, all of these events provide an opportunity to say the brakhah of the Shehecheyanu, ("Who has kept us alive") the name given to the blessing recited over something new or special in time. The English translation and spelling of the blessing itself vary but the sense is always very close to this. "Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has kept us alive [She-hecheyanu], sustained us, and brought us to this time". The events range from lighting a candle on the Hannukiah to eating the first fruits of a season and celebrating holidays; the Shehecheyanu always marks the special moment in time. The tractate in the Mishnah dealing with blessings, Berakot, prescribes several situations when this blessing is to be recited, such as moving into a new house or getting new kitchen utensils. Given that the Mishnah was codified almost two thousand years ago, this brakhah is woven very deeply into the fabric of Judaism, and that is indeed a blessing.

2. Although it is hard for us to imagine there was a time when written prayer books were completely discouraged. During the early centuries of the Common Era, the recently canonized Jewish Bible constituted the whole of sacred writings. Prayer was part of the Oral Tradition, which was at that time exclusively oral. The early Talmud writers speak exclusively of memorized prayers. The written and oral codes were not to be mixed. After the Roman persecutions and the threat of complete dispersion of the Jewish people, later generations relented. Prayer books - for the prayer leaders only - began to appear in late Talmudic times. The first prayerbook for general use by community leaders was complied in the ninth century in the then greatest center of Jewish learning in Babylon. A century later, another Siddur, this one intended for general use, was developed in Egypt. Parts of it were written in Arabic. Since then, the many movements and traditions have evolved an astonishing variety of Siddurim. It is also interesting to note that the root meaning of Siddur is the same as that of Seder - order. One describes the order of prayers, the other the order of a traditional meal. In fact, to indicate "OK" in Hebrew, you say "B'Seder", or more literally all is in order.


3. One of the closing verses of Ehad Mi Yode'cha is "Four are the Matriarch mothers of Israel". And of course, these four are Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rachel. Genesis relates the stories of each of them. First, we learn how Sarah finally conceived her only child Isaac (at the ripe old age of ninety!). Rebecca and Isaac also had trouble conceiving, but in time she became the mother of twins, Esau and Jacob. The younger twin Jacob went to work for his uncle Laban and returned to Canaan years later as the husband of Leah and Rachel. Leah was very fertile and bore six sons (Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulon) and Jacob's only daughter, Dinah. The lineage of Leah's fourth son, Judah, includes King David and his successors, who ruled Judea for almost five hundred years during the First Temple period. Jacob's most beloved wife, Rachel, also had trouble conceiving but did have two sons, the famous Joseph and then Benjamin. While giving birth to Benjamin, the youngest of Jacob's twelve sons, Rachel died and was buried in Bethlehem at the site now known as Rachel's Tomb. Tradition holds that all the other matriarchs and patriarchs are interred at the Cave of Machpelah in Hebron". Some suggest that in fact we should have six matriarchs. During their infertile times, both Leah and Rachel "gave" Jacob their handmaids to increase the children attributed to them. Bilhah (Rachel's maid) gave Jacob sons Dan and Naphtali and Zilpah, (Leah's maid) gave him Gad and Asher.

 


April 2002


1. Only the second of the statements is true. The first Passover does mark, in a very real sense, the creation of the Israelite people since it defined the "community" as those who took part in this observance. In fact, Exodus 12:19 states that the person who eats leavened food during this time "shall be cut off from the community of Israel". The commandments about the observance of Pesach (such as the obligation to eat matzah) are not the first ones in the Torah, but they do include the first COMMUNAL mitzvot, like the requirement to eat together. The very first mitzvah, found in Genesis 1:28, is simply to procreate. Chapter 12 of Exodus stipulates that the meal be held on the fifteenth of the month, at the time of the full (not the new) moon. In the Hebrew calendar, the "day" begins at dusk and the months are lunar months, so Pesach was then and is now celebrated on the evening of the first full moon in spring. We should recall that the very first Passover took place while the Israelites were still in Egypt, just before the tenth plague and the Exodus itself, so the first Passover did not take place in Canaan. This is the Pesach Mitzraim, the Passover in Egypt. However, the Exodus ended forty years later with the celebration of the second Passover at Gilgal, just outside Jericho, as recounted in Joshua 5:12.

2. All but one of the events cited in this question happened on that one momentous day back in May 14, 1948. Only the UN General Assembly vote for a partition plan for Palestine preceded the other events mentioned. The vote was taken on November 29, 1947 and, thanks in a large part to U.S. President Harry Truman's urging, passed 33-13. Nonetheless the tension and guerilla warfare continued in the region until May 14, when a series of events unfolded quickly though not unexpectedly. And the sequence was the same as in the question. Though the British colonial mandate over Palestine was due to end by the 15th, the Union Jack was lowered in Jerusalem early on the morning of Friday the 14th. Hours later, Arab armies were on the attack, with soldiers from Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and highly trained crack Jordanian troops. The actual establishment of the new state of Israel was marked by David Ben Gurion's reading of the Scroll of Independence in the Tel Aviv Museum at 4PM that afternoon. Very soon after, President Truman recognized the new country. So as we remember the birth pangs of our country during Patriot's Day this April, we can also be reminded of Israel's struggle as well.


3. Leo Trepp's The Complete Book of Jewish Observance inspired this question. He explains the logic that guided the rabbis of old in interpreting the key commandment to abstain from work on the Sabbath. The 39 prohibitions and 7 major categories covered very well the situations and options available several centuries ago. In most cases, their thinking applies quite directly to conditions a very observant Jew could encounter today - like those mentioned in this question. No, it is not strictly acceptable to open an umbrella - even while walking to the synagogue - because that is "building shelter" and too much like work. Yes, it is fine to let that pot simmer on the stove, just as long as you turned on the stove ("lit a fire") before Shabbat began. Sorry, in the most meticulous practice, one should not carry anything outside the home on the day of rest, even a Tallit bag. That's work. If, however, you wear the Tallit, that is acceptable since it is then a garment. (To be more precise, the prohibition applies to carrying items from one "domain" to another. That is why orthodox Jews often construct an "eruv", which creates a single domain out of a neighborhood and thus allows people to "carry" on the Sabbath.) The rabbis would always advise you to read a letter from your mother, provided it is not about business; but make sure the letter is already opened. There is one principle governs all situations is that any mitzvah may be broken if a life is in danger. That would seem to cover giving medicine. Trepp closes this section with a discussion that is respectful of all the various traditions of Judaism. Most do not advise or insist upon the scrupulousness of observance suggested above, but all are "united in the emphatic affirmation of the Sabbath as the cornerstone of Judaism".

 


March 2002


1. Amos was one of the true prophets. Describing himself as a simple shepherd and tender of fig trees, he is called away and told by the Lord "Go prophesy to My people Israel (Amos 7:15)". Though he was from the town of Tekoa in the southern kingdom of Judah, most of his prophesies are set in the northern kingdom of Israel, especially in the shrine at Bethel, not too far north of Jerusalem. There he confronted Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, predicting the fall and exile of the sinful kingdom. A few decades later the Assyrians did in fact plunder the northern kingdom and send its population into exile. Speaking through Amos, the Lord found no comfort in the sacrifices and rituals offered in his name. In Amos 5:22-23, He says "I will pay no heed to your gifts of fatlings. Spare Me the sound of your hymns….". The God of Israel demands justice above all; through Amos, he addresses the House of Israel in 5:10-12 as "You takers of bribes, you who subvert in the gate the cause of the needy". Amos derides the empty rituals of the Temple and has only scorn for those who oppress the poor. He remains perhaps the earliest, and most forceful, spokesmen for social justice.

2. Pesach is indeed a wonderful holiday. It captures a timeless message of liberty for all of us. Each year we ourselves, not some remote ancestor, are the ones escaping from Egypt and slavery. So when was the first Passover celebrated? After a little reflection, you may remember that day got its name when the avenging hand of the Lord passed over the homes of the Israelites. As instructed, they had smeared their doorposts with lamb's blood to avoid the consequences of the tenth plague, the death of the first-born. Chapter twelve of Exodus recounts all this and also includes the details of how the Passover lamb is to be selected and prepared. Then in verse 11, the community is commanded to "eat it hurriedly: it is a Passover offering to the Lord". So the first Passover occurred in Egypt, on the night before the Israelites fled from Egypt. If we accept the historicity of this event and the scholars' best guesses on dates, this first Pesach occurred sometime before the end of the reign Pharaoh Rameses II in 1225 BCE, over thirty-two centuries ago.


3. Since their takeover in 1939, the Nazis had been systematically shipping off most of the Warsaw's half million Jews and starving those who were left. Their numbers had been reduced to about 60,000, or less than an eighth of the pre-war population, when the revolt began in a response to a 3AM invasion on Passover night of 1943. The Germans retreated, but soon their deadly counterattack began. Despite being completely outgunned, facing tanks and machine guns, the Warsaw Jews managed somehow to resist for almost an entire month. Until this time, no civilian urban population had offered any resistance to the mighty Nazi war machine. The tenacity and heroism of these starving people was quickly reported throughout Europe and the world, no doubt inspiring further resistance.

 


February 2002


1.Per the advice of Hillel, the festival of Tu B'shevat was fixed as the day of the full moon of Shevat, the fifteeth day of the month. It was celebrated in the time Hillel, almost two thousand years ago, but then ignored for many centuries. The holiday was revived in Israel in the early 1900s when Jews began repopulating the land. Deuteronomy 8:7-8 emphasizes the connection with the land when Moses speaks of "a land with streams and springs and fountains issuing from plain and hill; a land of wheat and barley, of vines, figs, and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey…". These are the seven species, all were found in Israel more than three thousand years ago. Corn, lemon trees, dates, apples, and tomatoes may grow there today but do not have the distinction of being mentioned in the "seven species" passage of Deuteronomy. There is a growing tradition of a Tu B'shevat seder, where the table is set with these diverse agricultural products of Israel. Incidentally, both corn (maize) and tomatoes are New World plants, although Max Israelite notes that the term "corn" was commonly applied to the principal grain of a country in the centuries before the discovery of the Americas. Thus Biblical references to corn actually refer to barley.


2. Shabbat Shirah ("The Sabbath of the Song") is the Sabbath in which the Song of Moses ("the" song) is the assigned Torah reading. The song is found in Chapter 15 of Exodus. Just after crossing the Sea of Reeds, Moses sings to the Lord in praise and thanks for saving the Israelites from Pharoah's chariots. This chapter also records how Miriam, Aaron's sister, took a timbrel in her hand and danced with all the women in celebration. Moses' song is clearly meant as a song, as the words, phrasing, and its very special layout in the Torah scrolls attest. This song, the Shirah, is of course prominent during Passover but also has become part of the daily service in the familiar "Mi Chamocha". In this manner, reading the Song of Moses every day fulfills the biblical injunction of Deuteronomy 16:3 to "remember the day of your departure from the land of Egypt as long as you live".


3. Today's fundamentalists may wish to ignore the long common history of Judaism and Islam. There have been periods of great tension as today, but also there have been times of great mutual prosperity and tolerance, as in the flourishing Muslim-dominated societies of medieval Spain or the hundreds of years when the Ottoman Empire was ascendant. However the history is interpreted, however, the common Semitic origin of the Qu'ran's Arabic and the Bible's Hebrew is indisputable. Mary LaHaj, an American Muslim woman who spoke at the brotherhood breakfast last month, pointed out two very striking examples of this common linguistic heritage. The consonant group ShLM (Shin, Lamed, Mem) appears as the greeting "Shalom", or peace in Hebrew and also forms the core of the word Islam, the religion of peace or surrender to God's will, and of the word Muslim, one who surrenders. You can also recognize the same root in the Arabic name for God, Allah, and our own "Elohim". El is the generic Semitic name for God. Even before the periods of Abraham and Moses, back in the Akkadian language of the very early second millennium BCE, there are references to Ilu..

 


January 2002


1. The Mourner's Kaddish is said not only at every Jewish funeral service, but it is also part of every daily service as well. Though recited in memory of the departed, it says absolutely nothing about death, and focuses only on the greatness of God. To many, this is very humbling and beautiful. Scholars believe the Kaddish is over two thousand years old, and sometime during the Middle Ages its current usage evolved. In any case, if you read the translation The translation, it is plain that there is but one answer to this question; the theme is simply praise for God.


2. When the Zionist movement emerged in the late nineteenth century and the Jews of Eastern Europe began coming to Palestine, there was no national language. The newest arrivals spoke Yiddish and a mix of European tongues, while the Sephardic Jews of the Mediterranean lands spoke Ladino as well as the language of their original countries. One man is generally credited with the revival of Hebrew and its establishment as the national language of Israel. When Eliezer ben Yehudah arrived in Palestine, he and his wife vowed to speak only Hebrew in their home. Along with his tremendous enthusiasm for this cause, his major contribution was the publication of a Hebrew dictionary, incorporating hundreds of new modern words. It was first published just before his death, in 1922, and has been updated and reissued more than a dozen times since.


3. . Reverend Martin Luther King had a very special affection for Jewish people, and the feeling was mutual. In fact, during the heyday of the civil rights movement in the 50's and 60's, it is estimated that Jews contributed about half of the support funds - far out of proportion to their numbers in the general population or even the progressive community. It is worth noting that Dr. King also had a special connection with the Boston area. He received his doctorate at Boston University. His use of nonviolent civil disobedience to achieve social goals earned him a Nobel Prize as he further developed this great tradition, rooted in the writings of Concord's Henry David Thoreau, that India's great Mahatma Gandhi brought to the world's attention.