Thank you Rabbi. You spoke eloquently and clearly with truth.
@MarianRich7 ай бұрын
I’m spiritual but not religious. I don’t go to synagogue. I don’t observe. I don’t believe in God. You are my rabbi. I am deeply grateful for your voice. I’m 68 and I was brought up to believe that to be a Jew is to be a good person. That is what we strive for. You are a beautiful human. I love you. I thank you. I’m grateful for your voice as are many, many others of Jewish descent. 💟☮️✡️
@nealhurwitz7 ай бұрын
Yes. Ken. Gracias!!!
@jannadav16047 ай бұрын
Amen. This is moral leadership
@rmattbill7 ай бұрын
Bless you, Rabbi. Your moral clarity in these turbulent times is more appreciated than you know.
@Egherman7 ай бұрын
Strength and clarity. Amen
@daviswiggin44257 ай бұрын
Wonderful words, rabbi
@iconoclastvii7 ай бұрын
Pretty staunch atheist here, but I was recommended this video by a friend. I'm glad I took the time. It can feel pretty hard finding common ground. You've inspired me to try harder. 👍
@sharpmind-openheart7 ай бұрын
Wonderful speech! 💗🙏
@gailcastro20487 ай бұрын
Thank you for speaking the truth of humanity!
@laurenferrari9967 ай бұрын
I'm an atheist who has been very vocal about my support for Palestine. I'm actively anti racist and don't wish any harm to the Jewish people. It's been brutal watching tens of thousands of Palestinians die these past months, and hearing some Jewish individuals caught on video saying it isn't enough has broken my heart. Thank you for standing up for their lives. ❤❤❤
@nealhurwitz7 ай бұрын
Yes--- BUT Oct 7 changed history--- and the ISR government is rightist
@cyrisesong7 ай бұрын
Goddess bless you brilliant woman
@nealhurwitz7 ай бұрын
wow
@slipman7 ай бұрын
Rabbi Brous I listened to your sermon with great interest, and I would say that you are absolutely correct that there's been a lot of dehumanizing activity going on on the UCLA campus not the least of which the violent actions on Sunday night and certainly the violent confrontations that took place Sunday afternoon. One point that I took from your sermon however were the calls from Hillel and the campus Jewish community of UCLA to the broader Jewish community to, "stay off our campus." And so I would ask you to consider what your motivation was for being on the UCLA campus in the first place on Sunday afternoon? I would submit and I don't know for sure, that you were there for many of the same reasons that a lot of the peaceful demonstrators showed up on the UCLA campus in front of Royce Hall, partly out of frustration and partly out of a desire to support the just causes to which you are calling us to support. And so the thesis statement of your sermon began to rang a little bit hollow to me.
@slipman7 ай бұрын
About 5 years ago, I was in Dayton Ohio as a speaker at Temple Israel's Jewish cultural festival. The festivals organized by Rabbi Karen Bodny Halasz And it is a lovely loving commercial for the Jewish community in Dayton. They draw people from all over the community to come for various cultural and educational events at the synagogue. Coincidentally about a week or so before that festival the local Klan had petitioned City authorities to demonstrate publicly in front of City Hall. The Jewish community wrestled for weeks with what to do with that request. Eventually what they decided to do was to give an outlet to the Jewish community to meet at a location approximately 5 mi away from City Hall to express their outrage. They did not give the Klan What they most desired which was publicity. The clan demonstration passed with almost No publicity despite the fact that police and security services in the city spent over $200,000 in overtime to provide a cage to surround the approximately 10 klan members that showed up at their demonstration. That was a smart use of Jewish communal resources to give the community an outlet to express their displeasure but to not give the klan what they desired And I would pretend that tactically the Jewish community probably made a mistake in showing up in large numbers at the Royce quad to get in the faces of the demonstrators that were in the encampment at UCLA. Well live and learn. And I think the LA Jewish community could have learned something from the Dayton Jewish community in terms of how they responded to similar actions on the part of our enemies.
@ohallright20217 ай бұрын
The rabbi surely visited UCLA and Columbia to learn and understand the nature, similarities and differences between the events, to witness execution and results of the respective calls to action. We might call it field work or research. A related motive might be simply to be on hand as an experienced adult "in the room" in case of need - similar to what the 25 Standing Together members went to do. As an FYI, a group of neo-Nazis led by Glendale's well-known agitator Jordan Henry reportedly visited UCLA specifically to stoke violence, as that's what they do. While the report lacked detail as to whether they were the sole instigators, we can hope arrest records help distinguish well-intended students misled by nationally-based organizing groups from outsiders with deliberate intent to disrupt and debase while masquerading as allies. Similar circumstances were experienced during Trump's Oval Office occupation at peaceful marches organized by local and national groups. Fortunately, LAPD was pre-advised and experienced with such deceptive practices, which helped march organizers keep the calm. While the 300-chapter "Students for Justice in Palestine" is believed to be tied too closely with known pro-Hamas operatives, focusing on what groups like Standing Together say and do to outline common ground is where leadership on the road to peace lives.
@jessegoodsell99937 ай бұрын
My understanding is UCLA Hillel's request to stay off campus came after the rabbi's visit.
@trisbon17 ай бұрын
Kol Hakavod, Rabbi. You have given me a lot to think about. I just wonder if the Pro-Palestine movement is fighting for the same things we are, as Jews. I’m finding it hard to draw a moral equivalency there.
@mariamd22437 ай бұрын
I thought the Israelites were slaves. How could they accumulate wealth