Many of us woke up today, the day after Thanksgiving, with a full belly and an aching heart.

Yesterday was spent giving thanks for the many blessings in our lives. My Facebook feed was filled with smiling faces, pumpkin pies expertly crafted, and children with silly hats and cute handwritten notes, declaring what they were most grateful for in life.

But today, all I have seen is fire.

We have all watched in horror as our treasured homeland was set ablaze, in what appears to be the latest, creative attempt by those who wish to destroy us, to upend our lives and and hurt Jews. I heard the account of my relatives, who, as they prepared to evacuate, found their shutters melted and windows cracked, due to the intensifying heat. Their home was surrounded by fire and they were trapped. Boruch Hashem, the courageous firefighters reached them in time to aid their escape from the approaching inferno.

Sometimes, on days like this, I find it challenging to reconcile these kinds of events. We want to live happy lives, undisturbed by tragedies and emergencies such as these. We want to see more pictures of family gatherings and elegant desserts, not the haunting images of black, smoke-filled skies and our brethren running for their lives.

But, like it or not, this is our world and this is part of our mission. Showing hakaras hatov doesn’t end when we come up against something difficult. We believe this is all part of a master plan; nothing happens by chance. There is much to be grateful for in this chapter as well. Incredibly, notwithstanding the terrorists’ bloodthirst, there has not been a single fatality amidst all this destruction! Our people have banded together, as only brothers can. Righteous people are battling the fires and rescuing victims. Others have opened their homes to the evacuees, taking them in without a moment’s hesitation. And of course, we are all united in tefilla, davening for our brothers and sisters. We daven that Hakadosh Boruch Hu ease the suffering of those afflicted by these hateful acts of terror and help them to heal and rebuild.

Fire is a powerful force that can take many forms. There is the fire of anger and hatred, which spreads all too easily, and seeks only to consume and destroy everything in its path. That is the fire our enemies have set, and that is what we are toiling to extinguish. But we have a different kind of fire. We have a fire burning within us all, equally passionate in our desire to improve this world, fueled by our faith. So today, amidst unspeakable pain, there is what to be thankful for, not the least of which is being a part of Am Yisroel, and the fire that it stands for.

 

 

 

Suri Weinstock is the former editor of the Boro Park Community Advocate. She resides in Passaic, NJ with her husband and 3 children and is a proud, passionate Jew.

 

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