Leo Baeck College |
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We are pleased to publish the latest in our series of Divrei Torah written by Rabbinic Student Sandra Kviat |
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Parashat Va-yera 6 November 2009
What would you have done? She looks me straight in the eye. How would you have reacted to being sent away, sent into the desert? I am the maid, the assistant, the one whom everybody used for their own benefit. I used to live in a community, now I am alone. Suddenly being on my own in the wilderness – wouldn’t you break down in despair? Now also imagine being responsible for someone else? The scorching sun, one water skin, and no idea how to survive by myself. Try loosing your cosy house, credit cards, family and friends, all at the same time. Nothing left to protect you.
And what about you? Your prophets are saying that disaster is coming, that the sea will rise and flood the land. That the earth will crack and nothing will grow in it. What are you going to do? It is so easy to judge me and my actions; so easy to judge us all when we were faced with disaster. Are you going to turn away because you cannot watch a child die like I did, or cannot watch a city be destroyed like Lot’s wife? What good would that do them? Abraham knew disaster would come if he did not intervene. Don’t you think he was plagued with ideas of futility? Don’t you think he just wanted to despair, give up or just not care? It was not his fault, not his doorstep; at least not yet. Can you say the same?
I sat down
and turned away from my son and wept, because I had given up all hope.
I could not face saving us by myself. I was all alone but you are not;
at least not yet. But I did not stay there. I got up and took Ishmael’s hand. I got up and survived because despair and being overwhelmed was not going to save us. I got up because I was shown that the solution was not far away, it was right in front of me I had just not been able to see it. (Because to) hope is to turn down your thermostat three degrees and trust that others will too. (Because) hope is to make sure your electricity is from a sustainable source. (Because) hope is that we can find solutions to unbearable climate change, even when others are despairing. Hope is taking someone’s hand.
I am Hagar please take my hand Sandra Kviat November 2009
Click on link to see previous Divrei Torah: http://www.lbc.ac.uk/content/blogcategory/429/142/ |

