Taking The First Step chickens and not eat the eggs, but shall sell them and buy me a heifer. And I'll not eat the heifer, but shall We resolve to be better people, raise it to a cow and not eat the cow to study Torah more often, to grow until it calves. And I'll not eat it then, closer to God. Yet, like so many fad diets, as either; and we'll have cows and calves. Yom Kippur fades into distant memory, we For I'm a wise woman! all too often forget those lofty resolutions and "And I'll sell the cows and the revert to the same behavior we exhibited calves and buy a field, and we'll have before Rosh Hashanah. How then do we fields and cows and calves, and we ensure that we transform our resolutions from won't need anything any more!' The fantasy to reality? countrywoman was speaking in this Rabbi Hayyim of Zans answered this ques- RABBI REUVEN fashion and playing with the egg when tion with the following parable: SPOLTER it fell out of her hands and broke." "There was once a poor countrywoman Special to the Said Rabbi Hayyim: "That is how who had many children. They were always Jewish News we are. When the holy days arrive, begging for food, but she had none to give every person resolves to do teshuvah them. One day, she found an egg. She called (repentance), thinking in his heart, 'I'll do this, and her children and said: "'Children, children, we've I'll do that.' But the days slip by in mere delibera- nothing to worry about any more; I've found an egg. tion, and thought doesn't lead to action." And, being a wise woman, I'll not eat the egg, but Our sages teach us that God dedicates the Aseret shall ask my neighbor for permission to set it under the Ten Days of Repentance Yemei Teshuvah, her setting hen until a chick is hatched. And we'll between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, for not eat the chick, but will set her on eggs; and the repentance, self-evaluation and self-improvement. eggs will hatch into chickens. And the chickens in During this time of year, feelings of compassion and their turn will hatch many eggs, and we'll have many forgiveness are awakened; and God extends His chickens and many eggs. hands to us. During this time of year, each of us "'But I'm a wise woman, I am! I'll not eat the it osh Hashanah, the Jewish new year, is a time for resolutions. must ask ourselves: "Do I seize the moment and take advantage of this opportunity? Do I treat the egg with care, making sure that it grows and prospers? Or do I play with it casually until it falls from my hands and breaks?" When we take the time now to examine the mitzvot (good deeds) that we perform and the way we interact with our fellow man, not only must we resolve to change. We must make that change now when our resolve is strong. While it begins with a small act, it has the potential to grow into some- thing much greater. As we approach Rosh Hashanah, we hope and pray that God sees in our thoughts and actions of teshuvah a desire to continue to grow ever closer to Him. To that end, we take that step — perform an act that will put us on the road to growth and improvement. Finally, we ask God to bless each of us, and the entire Jewish people, with a year of peace, happiness and health, so that we all end up with much more than scrambled eggs. ❑ Rabbi Reuven Spolter is a spiritual leader at Young Israel of Oak Park. A Great Legacy acknowledged and nurtured if life is to be holy. The philosopher Robert Nozick wrote that, after the Holocaust, human life became desanctified. No longer is society surprised by mass murder — it has become a regular feature of our bloody century. This trend is exemplified all too often as the violence continues to mount. We must respond with an urgent message: Life is holy, and the habits and tools of violence must be elimi- nated. This conviction must radiate from within until it again permeates all of society. Only then can life be re-sanctified. Only then can we ful- fill God's mandate of kea'oshim tihyu: "You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your God am holy." --' I feel the surge of dignity, the awesome swell of Iff uch of my life's time is spent try- defiance that moved through the uprising in the ing to understand what is really Warsaw Ghetto. important. We are the bearers of a great legacy History has When the ordinary tasks, the been handed to us. It is now our turn to mold, to clutter that makes up the husk of daily life, are carve, to chisel our contribution into the song of the stripped away, what is it that is left? What is it that Jewish people. It is never enough to simply receive gives meaning to our lives? legacy,. We are responsible for adding in our own At the core of the answer to this question, I hear ingenuity. We who live during this remarkable time the song of a people. It is a song that comes to me in Jewish history when the Jewish people have never from lands that I have never seen, and yet my feet been freer. We, who are now living during the time AMARA T. RABBI. feel that they have trod over its soil. It is a song of a Jewish state and carrying its joy and its burdens. KOLT ON that comes to me in voices that I have never heard, When I think down the bones of my existence, Special to the and still they sound clear and familiar. It is a song when I try and see into the essence of who I am and Jewish News that comes to me from times well before I was what it is I am here on Earth to do, I hear the voice born, and yet I feel that I have lived each moment. of my people singing out their song. And I know It is the song of a people, rising over ancient hill- that my life must be about adding my own unique voice to this tops, moving through desert dunes. It is a song carried in the historical choir. I know that I must find the words and sing the palms of millions, written across expanse of time and sky It is out, so that when my children's children come to live upon the my historical memory, the stone from which I perceive my life Earth, they, too, will hear the song of our people. to have been carved. It is the song of the Jewish people. In this new year, let us, therefore, live our lives know- I often feel that I live my life in two dimensions, in the past ing gratitude and responsibility. And let us greet each and in the present. Oftentimes, history feels as vital and rele- other in shalom. vant to me as to what is happening today. I breathe in all the courage, the struggle and the strivings of the Jewish people over the past 4,000 years. I hear the melodic sounds of the sages Rabbi Tamara Dolton is a spiritual leader at the finding faith in a faithless universe. I smell the smoke of the Birmingham Temple. Spanish Inquisition suffocating the hearts of Spain's Jews. ❑ Rabbi Daniel Nevins is a spiritual leader at Adat Shalom Synagogue 9!14 2001