Spirituality BIRMINGHAM'S NEWEST ADDRESS TORAH PORTION Incredible Potential Shabbat Naso: Numbers 4:21-7:89; Judges 13:2-25. EUROPEAN—INSPIRED URBAN LIFESTYLE THE DISTRICT LOFTS W WWW.THEDISTRICTLOFTS.COM 248-593-6000 MOVE IN SUMMER 2008 2001 VILLA, BIRMINGHAM, MI 48009 NEXT TO BIG ROCK IN THE RAIL DISTRICT 1400980 ostu(-1036.com WATCH THE ''lfINOS. ADD OFF* *While supplies last. Valid Ihru 06/11/08 MENS AND WOMENS WATCHES Hundreds of lems are on sale! Enter the code: WATCH at check out. stucho36.com • 866.583.2422 5570 Monroe Street • Sylvania, OH • 419-824-2514 A32 June 5 • 2008 JN hen my brothers and I were children, we listened to a record of songs about stories in the Tanach. Our favorite was a song about Samson. We would sit in our living room and belt out, "His arms were big as melons. His shoulders hard as rocks. He killed a mighty army with the jawbone of an ox" (Actually, it was the jawbone of something else, but this was a children's song). As we sang these words, we would flex our muscles, and each, in his turn, would pretend to be Samson. In this week's haftarah, we read the story of Samson's birth. But Samson is a very atypical Jewish hero. When we read the story, we cannot help but be struck at Samson's inability to realize that he is being used by Delilah. He is deceived by her not once, not twice, but three times, and is still not able to realize that she should not be trusted! Many years ago, I asked a Hebrew high school class why the Bible would choose a man who is seemingly so gullible as a hero. One answer has stayed with me. A young lady named Dina responded, "Perhaps the Bible is trying to teach us that anyone can be a hero!' If there is one message within our tradition about heroism, that might just be it — the incredible poten- tial which lies within all of us to be heroes. After all, not one hero in the Tanach is portrayed as a perfect person. Even men as great as Moses or King David are shown to have flaws. Their hero- ism is not heroic because they are flawless, but because they are able to overcome their flaws and do what is right. Judaism does not ask us to be per- fect, but it does ask that each of us be a hero. There are opportunities for heroics all around us. From the simple act of giving tzeda- kah to being sensitive to those around us who are in pain. As a community, we see acts of heroism everyday. We should be proud of such communal examples as JARC, Yad Ezra, the No Family Stands Alone initiative and the many other efforts that the Detroit Jewish community has to help those who need aid. But there is much more that we can each do as individuals. Here are four suggestions — four simple heroic acts to which we can commit ourselves: • Find a charity and write a check. • Commit ourselves to at least one Sunday a month to do volunteer work. • Find someone in our community who is lonely and spend time with them. •Add some extra items to our grocery list to donate to Yad Ezra. These are not great actions. They will not put us in record books or make us go down in history. Probably no one will remember that we did any of these things. But they are small steps to show others — and ourselves — that every- one can be a hero. Shabbat shalom. Perhaps the Bible is trying to teach us that anyone can become a hero. ❑ Daniel M. Wolpe is rabbi of Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park. Conversations Who do you see as heroes in our community? What can you do that would be heroic?