Parashat Vayetze
Awaken to Activism
We must stop being silent, sleepy observers of the AIDS pandemic.
By Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with American Jewish World
Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
Jacob dreamed of a ladder filled with
clambering angels. For 2,000 years, Jewish commentators have examined every
detail of this dream and found within it a series of multi-faceted metaphors
for the grand narrative of history. But it is the moment when Jacob wakes to an
ordinary day in a bleak desert that I find most significant.
"Aha,"
Jacob says in this week's Torah portion as he opens his eyes and sees a barren
patch of rocks. "The Eternal One is in this place and I did not know it
(Genesis 28:16)." What is he seeing now that he missed before?
The
wilderness where Jacob lay dreaming has always been filled with the presence of
God--the power and the potential for change that exists in every place. Yet ironically, Jacob only wakes up (in the fullest
sense of the word) in his sleep! Jacob's dream startles him into awareness and
he is able to see the potential of his surroundings.
Terror Upon Waking
Jacob responds
to this new awareness with fear. In the next verse we read, "He was afraid
and he said, How terrible is this place. This is no other than the House of God
and the Gate of Heaven (Genesis 28:17)." It might seem strange to respond
to the Divine presence with terror, but I understand what it feels like to be
scared of waking. It is always easier to stay silent and asleep. And yet
nothing could be more dangerous.
I learned this
lesson at an early age. On a cloudless day in January 1990, I was 15 years old
and standing outside Toronto City Hall in a crowd carrying giant pink triangles
and chanting, "Silence equals death. Action equals life." It was the
height of the AIDS epidemic in Toronto and the message was simple. In that very
moment we had the power to save lives--if we were willing to see what was
happening and to recognize our capacity to make change. If we had failed to wake
up, our family, our neighbors, and our friends would continue to die at
alarming rates.
We
did wake up…at least a little. AIDS deaths did not stop, but therapies and
medications were developed that vastly improved the quality and length of life
of many living with HIV and AIDS in North America. I recently saw a friend of
mine who learned in 1993 that he was HIV-positive. "I turned 52 last month
and I can't believe I'm still alive," he told me. "I never expected
to know what 50, or even 40, looks like or feels like."
It
was largely due to tireless activism in the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender community that countless people who are HIV-positive or living with
AIDS are able to know what middle age "feels like." And yet we have
gone right back to sleep.
A World-Wide Pandemic
AIDS deaths
continue to mount in the poorest parts of the U.S. and around the world. Last
year, over four million people worldwide were infected with HIV, including
530,000 children under the age of 15. In sub-Saharan Africa, less than one
quarter of the more than 4.3 million people currently in need of antiretroviral
therapies actually receive them. Over three percent of children in the region
have lost one or both parents to AIDS. Due to the spread of HIV and the
inaccessibility of effective treatments, millions of people will not have the
opportunity that my friend had to know what middle age, or even the end of
childhood, feels like.
Why are we
still not standing outside our City Halls shouting "Silence equals
death?"
Like Jacob, we
need to wake up. We need to acknowledge the current state of the global AIDS
crisis and recognize the holiness and potential for change that is "in
this place." Those of us who were involved in local organizing efforts
around HIV/AIDS issues in the 1990s opted to go back to sleep too soon.
The
awareness of the presence of God to which Jacob wakes in this week's parashah
is what spurs him to continue on his journey. His sojourn eventually leads God
to change his name from Jacob, the heel-grabber, to Israel, the God-wrestler.
As the people of Israel, may we live up to this name and transform ourselves
from silent observers of the AIDS pandemic to those who continue to wrestle
with God and humanity for action and for life.
Rabbi
Elliot Rose Kukla is an activist, writer, organizer, and educator.