In 1688 a Swiss physician named James Hofer coined the term
“nostalgia” from the Greek “nostos” meaning “homecoming” and “algos” meaning
“pain”. The syndrome was characterized by sadness and a persistent longing for
a person, an object or a place. Hofer called nostalgia a “disease”. It was
thought to be particularly widespread among soldiers. Nostalgia was seen as especially
threatening to the functioning of armies, as it was thought to sap the will to
fight in those who suffered from it. We
know from historical records that the Russian army experienced an outbreak of
nostalgia on its way to Germany in 1733. In order to “flatten the curve” (as we
say) of this outbreak, the General in charge threatened to bury alive those who
came down with the disease. After following through with his threat a couple of
times, the outbreak was brought under control.
Military history throughout centuries records a range of techniques to deal
with “nostalgia” in it fighting forces.
I wonder if Abraham and Sarah ever experienced nostalgia? Did
they ever look back and long for what they left behind? G-d commanded Abraham
and Sarah to leave the land of their birth and travel to the Land of Canaan.
There, G-d promised that their descendants, the Jewish people, would inherit
the land. There, their descendants would grow into a mighty people and bring
the knowledge of the One True G-d to all of the nations of the world. In this
week’s parasha we find Rivka, too, making the decision to leave her family and
travel to the land of Canaan with the servant of Abraham to be a wife to
Abraham’s son, Isaac. Did Rivkah experience nostalgia? Abraham was already 75
years old when he left his parents; Rivka was but a young teen when she made
the decision to leave her home with Abraham’s servant for a distant new land, a
new life. Could you imagine how scary that would be, to travel to a place
unknown, with Abraham’s servant, a man you had just met, to marry a man, Isaac,
who you did not know -- especially at such a
young age?
As we observe Veterans Day, we are keenly aware of the
emotional and psychological challenges faced by the brave citizens who leave
home to heed the call for service. Rabbi Yanina Creditor, a chaplain in the
United States Navy is one such citizen. Rabbi Creditor volunteered to serve in
the military and to serve her country. In the military, she reminds us, you go
where you are sent. Setting out for an unknown outpost, with the likelihood of
facing danger in a foreign land, can be a daunting, lonely and scary process,
she says. She identifies with Abraham and Rivka, who also left their families
to serve a higher cause. Their families
back home naturally remained extremely important. When Abraham decides to find
a wife for Isaac, he reaches back to his family in Mesopotamia. When Rivka
fears for her son, Yaakov’s, life, she sends him back to her family to keep him
safe. So, too, in the military, says Rabbi Creditor, your family and community back
home remains an enormous source of psychological grounding, strength and
support from which to draw.
Rabbi Creditor says that in the military, you both take your
family with you and you build new relationships, new families so to speak,
wherever you go. Even as you build new support systems, it is important for
those serving in the armed forces to know that they remain a part of the family
back home. Like Abraham and Rivka, having that family, that connection, those
affirming bonds, reminds the soldier that they are not alone, no matter how far
away they may be.
That brings us to two projects that we at CBS are undertaking
to help our troops and veterans stay connected to home. Lisa Olhausen is
heading up a local effort to send Chanukah greetings to our Jewish troops. Last
year the national organization, The Jewish Soldiers Project, sent over 3000
cards from more than 25 states to Jewish soldiers at home and overseas. You can
either stop by the synagogue to pick up some cards that have been donated for
this purpose, send your own store-bought card or create your own card. It is a
great project for entire families -- particularly for kids and teens.
Our knitzvah team, led by CBS member Lisa Anderson, is
supporting Warm up America’s Veterans Blanket Project. Those who wish to participate can knit or
crochet a 7 inch by 9 inch rectangle in red, white, or blue yarn. Lisa will
collect all of our sections at the end of November and mail them together to
“Warm Up America” where they will be combined into blankets to be delivered to
veteran’s hospitals. The Knitzvah group meets online every other week. You can
learn more about both these projects by clicking on our weekly Connections
Update that comes on Wednesdays.
Let me close this sermon with a prayer.
God, please let every veteran of our nation’s armed forces
feel truly valued and honored by the recognition, attention and appreciation
from their fellow citizens. Let no one feel left behind, forgotten or
neglected. Let every man and woman, young or old, feel the profound,
unconditional and enduring gratitude of our nation and all its citizens.
Adonai our G-d, watch over those men and women who in their
military service have sacrificed time, safety and comfort, who have put their
lives at risk and their ambitions on hold, who have left loved ones behind, in
order to assure the peace and safety of our nation, of family and friends and
others they’ve never even known. Please reward them a hundredfold for all their
sacrifice and service. Bless them far beyond all their expectations. Reward
them richly for all they have given.”
And let us say, AMEN.
Photo by Sheri Hooley on Unsplash
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