Thanksgiving 2021/Chanukah 5782

As We Light the Candles

This year, as we conclude the Thanksgiving weekend celebration, we begin the eight days of Chanukah. The Atlanta Jewish Times invited rabbis of the community to share eight blessings for which they are especially thankful. Hopefully we have all been the recipients many blessings with some even seeming miraculous. The ceremony of lighting the candles can be enhanced when accompanied by a brief reflection of a blessing that enriched your life.

What follows is my submission to the AJT:

FOR THE BLESSING OF …

THE GIFT OF LIFE created in the Divine image, the gift I share with every human being.

THE GIFT OF FREEDOM to live in free democratic countries – in the United States and in Israel

THE GIFT OF JERUSALEM where I have spent the past 20 years of my life, and where, on Friday afternoon, as stores close and traffic thins, I sense the Shabbat Queen slowly descending from heaven.

THE GIFT OF FAMILY CONTINUITY that is evoked every Shabbat as I bless my children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

THE GIFT OF TORAH STUDY that has informed my life. The unlimited treasure trove of teachings in the Bible, the Talmud, and rabbinic sources through the ages until this very day continues to inform and shape my life.

THE GIFT OF COLLEGIALITY that enables me to relate to study with colleagues and students of all ages. There is great wisdom in the rabbinic observation that this blessing sustains us emotionally, spiritually, and physically. Were this lacking, my life could well atrophy.

THE GIFT OF ZOOMING that has been an antidote to the loneliness and separation during this pandemic. We have zoomed to create family reunions, to stay in touch with loved ones and friends, and to bring synagogue services into our homes. We have zoomed to share in a simcha, to be present at a funeral, and to comfort mourners during Shiva.

THE GIFT OF MODERN MEDICINE and the miracle of the human body. The pandemic impacted and threatened our lives, but scientific and medical advances have enabled us to be immunized. This Thanksgiving, I am especially thankful for the skill of the surgeons who attended to my fractured hip and for my body's capacity to heal.

May the blessings of good health, good tidings, and fulfillment of the wishes of our hearts for good brighten all our lives and those of our loved ones.

From the holy city of Jerusalem my best wishes for a happy Thanksgiving, a Shabbat Shalom u'Mevorach and a festive celebration of Chanukah.

Rabbi Arnold M. Goodman
Senior Rabbinic Scholar