As we sit in our Sukkos in Israel, we are, rather quickly, seeing the end of American Jewry.
I'm scared. I'm frightened. And I'm in wonderment.
News is flying across the world that Jewish neighborhoods in New York are ground zero for the second wave of Coronavirus.
The Governor and Mayor of New York have been tremendously controversial, hurtful, with wholly inappropriate comments and suggested actions against shuls and the Jewish population in general.
And what do our brethren do? They act like other individuals, setting things on fire, attacking police, and causing civil unrest.
Are we collectively out of our minds?
We need to act like the other nations of the world because we're angry? Because someone said something inappropriate and hurtful? So that the rest of the world can look at us and point, "look at those entitled Jew boys, where are their masks? Why are they more entitled than everyone else?"
Are we insane?
Is this the time to foster international attention on TV and in the world's media?
By all means. Take out a permit, protest on the BQE, on the Brooklyn Bridge, at city hall. But do it within the confines of the law. What is the excuse to chase police officers, to terrify the poor bus driver, whose eyes were wide with fear? Setting fires in middle of the road? What have we come to?
We need to refocus on our being Jews. What is expected of us. How we are meant to behave. Together, we can get through these trying times.