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Our commitment to quality, prompt, courteous service and no-hassle return policy assure your complete satisfaction. 0 Visit Our Beautiful New Store Located in the ORCHARD MALL Diamonds and Fine Jewelry 6337 Orchard Lake Road at Maple Road • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (810) 932-7700 • Outstate 1-(800) 337-GIFT AVAILABILITY IS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE THROUGH SPECIAL ORDER IF NOT IN STOCK. Spiritual Rededication Of Our Liberation Shabbat Second Day Shavuot: Deuteronomy 15:19-16:17; Numbers 26:26-31; Habbakuk 3:1-19. RABBI RICHARD C. HERTZ SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS S ince the festival of Shavuot falls on this Sabbath, this week's portion is prescribed as a special reading from the Torah. It deals with the giv- ing of the Ten Commandments. Shavuot assumed major sig- nificance in Jewish life and the Jewish religion because it com- memorates the proclamation that liberated the Israelites from Egyptian bondage. Until that mo- ment, when the Israelites gath- ered at the foot of Mount Sinai, they were not truly free. The festival, 50 days after the first day of Passover, signifies that the revelation at Sinai was the crowning climax of the Exo- dus. The Israelites had become spiritually emancipated from all the immoral standards that dom- inated the ages before Sinai. Thus Shavuot marked the birth of a spiritual and moral law that has characterized Western civi- lization since the days of Moses. According to the Bible, the three pilgrimage festivals that are central in the Jewish religion were once all seasonal holidays. When the spring season ar- rived, it meant the soil was ready for planting. Our forefathers thanked God not merely for their liberation from Egyptian bondage, but also they prayed for the liberation of the earth from the cold grip of winter. In later times, their livelihood and well being depended upon their suc- cess in planting seeds that they were later to harvest. The word Shavuot means "weeks." It denotes that after the first day of Passover, there were to be seven weeks of toil and strain, 50 days of watching, wait- ing. Hence the celebration of Shavuot expressed the sense of gratitude for the success of the spring crops. The 50 days were counted; the English term, de- rived from the Greek, is Pente- cost, which means 50. Tradition tells that the ancient Jews counted hopefully each day that brought them closer to the moment when they were to be lifted up to the spiritual heights of the Torah. The counting of these days was regarded as preparation for the great event of receiving the Torah. Shavuot thus celebrates not only the reaping of the spring Richard C. Hertz is distinguished professor of Jewish studies at the University of Detroit-Mercy. harvest; but, more importantly, it emphasizes the spiritual growth of the religious heritage of Judaism. The giving of the law and the Ten Commandments read in the synagogue recalls the ripening of the first fruits of free- dom and the beginning of Israel functioning as a light bearer to mankind. The Torah says that lightning and thunder accompanied the revelation at Sinai. Maybe these were symbols of the illumination and the message which Judaism was to bring to the world, the message of justice and brother- hood. The rabbis of the Talmud em- phasized that our forefathers be- came one people, a free and dedicated people, only when they recited their pledge, 'We shall do and we shall hearken." Only then were they free, for freedom can be had only within the law. The rabbis stressed that every Jew, even the generations yet un- born, personally accepted the Torah at Mount Sinai. Because of this historic back- ground, Shavuot has been desig- nated in many Reform and Conservative congregations at the time for confirmation exer- cises. The ancient covenant be- tween God and Israel is renewed, especially at Shavuot as children listen to the Decalogue read. They re-affirm their loyalty to the faith of our fathers. The young people rededicate themselves as they complete their basic reli- gious school education and their understanding of basic Judaism and its teachings. Shavuot becomes an act of rededication to the Torah — "a tree of life to those who hold onto it" — and those who uphold it will find themselves enriched. ❑