Thanksgiving Mix Continued from preceding page Indeed, we insist on the right of self-separation with reference to religious worship, religious education and the observance of the sacred events and seasons of Judaism. There are other areas in which we insist on being together with other Americans as the right of our American heritage. These include general education, the right to vote, the right to defend our country, the right to live where we choose. It also includes the observance of American festivals of which Thanksgiving is the foremost example. What lessons does Thanksgiving teach us as Jews and Americans? In the Talmud, it is written that in the days to come, when man shall have been redeemed, and the kingdom of God will be at hand, much of the ritual of our faith will no longer be Thanksgiving Word Jumble YKTREU NKTHAS DOFO GBLSENSI APHPY "Thanks A Lot" in Hebrew: itOk5 Thanksgiving Is A Daily Activity By RABBI ELIMELECH GOLDBERG Young Israel of Southfield Thanksgiving is a word normally associated with deliverance from the insecure seas of life. In the non- Jewish world, Thanksgiving speaks to the vicissitudes of settlers facing the struggles and very uncertainty of their survival and the joy they recognized in their ability to carve Succah Prize Winners Listed The Jewish Community Center has named the winners in its second annual Succah contest. Families who were named winners include: natural decorations, first prize, The Brandvain Family; second prize, the Graham Family; third prize, The Stoler Family; most colorful; first prize, tie, Roberg and Katzman Families; most child-made decorations, first prize, the Elkus Family; second prize, the Storchan Family; most traditional, first prize, The Lowenthal Family. Organizations who won prizes included: largest succah, Hashachar/Hadassah House, first prize; most colorful, first prize, Jewish Parents Institute; smallest succah, Jewish Federation Apartments in Oak Park, first prize; most child-made decorations, Hillel Day School, first prize; natural decorations, Ann Arbor Jewish Community Center and Day School, first prize. L-2 FRIDAY, NOV. 20, 1987 out a niche for themselves in a brave, new world. The occasion is marked by a day that urges a remembrance of things past. The Jewish experience of thanksgiving is a different one. It is woven into the fabric of our every day relationship with the Holy One. The insecurities that spark our need for thanksgiving are not exclusively the storms of a precarious physical existence. Our spiritual survival and individual growth are as much a part of the equation as our life and breath. Our Patriach, Abraham, is referred to by the Rabbis as the Man of Faith. As the Father of the Covenantal Community, it is surprising to find him frequently insecure about his covenant with God. Abraham questioned and asked for signs and proofs that the promises of the Lord would be fulfilled. Why was he uncertain about the outcome of God's relationship to His nation? Abraham was a man of total faith in God. His task however, was to develop a faith in himself. This Biblical hero who singly proclaimed the Oneness of the Creator to an idolatrous world community despite the threats to his very life was not certain what merits he could possibly muster to deserve the blessings of Heaven. This man of total dedication could not fathom the faith that God had in him to place Abraham at the helm of the Jewish nation. Abraham's thinking was sound. What would I give up for the privilege of sight, had I no eyes with which to see? How many good deeds would I be willing to perform if that would allow me the capability of walking or talking, of hearing or feeling. Yet, Abraham said, I have been granted all of the above and more, blessings too numerous to be counted. What could I possibly do to deserve what I already have? Abraham was a man of thanksgiving. He recognized in the everyday qualities of human existence the special blessings granted to man. In those blessings reside that seemingly overwhelming task of responding to that which we have been given. In a word, our process of thanksgiving is not merely a response to the past. Ours, is a statement of faith in ourselves towards the future. When a Jew arises in the morning, we are taught to utter at the first hint of stirring the beautiful prayer, Modeh Ani. It is a statement of thanks before the King that we are again renewed and alive. It concludes with the theme of faith. "Great is your faith," we say to God. Great is the faith that He has in us. No matter who or what we were the day before God, still believes that our today can shape a different tomorrow. He believes in us and grants us that new day with which to prove ourselves and reshape our destiny. This is how a Jew responds to thanksgiving both communal and individual: `Shehechiyanu, V'kiymanu, V'higiyanu Lazman Hazeh." "He has kept us alive, and uplifted us and allowed us to reach this time." He has kept us alive physically, and uplifted us spiritually. And finally he has allowed us to reach this time to sanctify the moment with the strength of His commandments. It is the ultimate faith that God has in us that is the cause of our travels through the pathways of the millenia and thus our greatest thanksgiving. necessary. What manner of sacrifice shall men then offer? The sages agreed that in the end of days, all sacrifices will be abolished. They conclude, however, that one sacrifice alone would be mandatory — the thanksgiving offering. They realized that a formal expression of gratitude to God would ever be essential to man, even in a perfect society. The implications of these words are significant. Without a grateful spirit, man only exists. He does not truly live. As Americans, we have such great reason to offer thanks. The freedom that we enjoy continues to be the flame of hope for millions around the world. We look upon our liberty as our natural prerogative. But it is an opportunity and privilege which ought never to be taken for granted. In the last four decades and more since the end of the Second World War, the flame of liberty has gone out in many lands, yet we remain free. Freedom was not natural in the Russia of my father, or in the Soviet Union of today. It is not provided in the greater part of the globe. Every moment we live without the oppressive consciousness of being watched and regimented, a great gift is ours. We are the recipients of a great benevolence which ought to evoke from us constant appreciation. We as Jews should be grateful that we, the American Jewish community, have been so privileged with freedom and opportunity. We are grateful that we have been able to grow in quality as well as size, in spirit as well as numbers, for we have established in this land Jewish institutions of worship, learning, culture and communal life. Our gratitude to America is expressed as Jews in many ways. We take pride in the industrial, artistic, commercial and cultural achievements and excellence of Jews, that have been part of the story of American civilization. But our gratitude as Jews should also be collective and communal. As we preserve our tradition, as we affirm our faith, as we add our distinctive voice to the chorus of American life, we are preserving for this entire nation that religious heritage which has been the source of so much that is good and great in this country. A writer once declared: "America is a tune, it must be sung together." We remember the song of the Jewish people, marked by faith, moral passion, a longing for freedom, and hope for man. Let us be grateful that its melody has been preserved by the generatons who have preceded us to brighten and uplift the music of America.