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    A CONVERSATION WITH THE LORD INTERVIEW WITH RABBI LORD JONATHAN SACKS Z”L

    Several years ago, our

    community was privi-
    leged to host Rabbi Lord

    Jonathan Sacks, zt”l.
    Before he addressed the

    over 1,000 people in at-
    tendance at BRS, I spon-
    taneously asked him if I

    could record a short interview. He gracious-
    ly agreed, despite the last-minute request

    and the fact that he was about to give a ma-
    jor public talk. That recording sat dormant

    in my phone until I was moved to share it
    after we tragically lost Rabbi Sacks four

    years ago. This week, to commemorate Rab-
    bi Lord Sacks’s fourth yahrtzeit, here is a

    condensed and edited transcript of that con-
    versation.

    You are a beacon of faith – you promote
    faith, you teach faith, and you inspire

    faith, not only among the Jewish commu-
    nity and Jewish people but around the

    world. Do you ever struggle with faith?
    Do you ever feel that you confront doubt?
    And in those moments of uncertainty,
    what do you do to overcome it?
    Let me be very blunt with you. I have had
    many crises of faith. But I have never had a
    crisis of faith in Hakadosh Baruch Hu. I
    have had many crises of faith in man. One
    crisis began as soon as I began to understand
    the Holocaust and to understand that this
    took place in the heart of civilized Europe,

    not some third world country in some medi-
    eval century.

    The biggest question of faith I had was:
    knowing all this was going to happen, how
    come Hakadosh Baruch Hu had faith in us?
    But I never lacked faith in G-d because I
    never expected the impossible from Him. I
    know perfectly well that He placed each of
    us here for a purpose and we are supposed to
    discern that and to walk ahead.
    For me, the critical moment that defined my
    faith was achieved when I learned Parshas
    Chayei Sarah. It begins with the death of
    Sarah. There is Avraham, having lost his life
    companion at the age of 137. At that point,

    he has received from Hashem three promis-
    es: Number one – I will give you the land.

    He promised that to him seven times. Num-
    ber two – I will give you children – He

    promised that to Avraham four times. I will
    make you a great nation, they will be as
    many as the stars in the sky, as the sand on
    the seashore. And finally, I will make you
    not one nation but many nations.
    But he has only one son.
    Where was the father of many nations?

    Where was the infinite number of descen-
    dants? What did Avraham do at that mo-
    ment when he should have had a crisis of

    faith?

    He understood that G-d said “Walk on ahead
    he ,So .התהלך לפני- והיה תמים – “me of
    bought the first plot of land. He then made
    sure his son got married so he would have
    Jewish grandchildren. Later, in a strange
    episode, he takes an additional wife named

    Keturah and has six more children, who be-
    come the fathers of many nations.

    In other words, instead of expecting G-d to
    do it for him, Avrohom realized that G-d
    was expecting him to do the hard work for
    Him. Once I understood that I never ever
    had a crisis of faith.
    What do you do when you run into a
    rough patch when you’re having trouble
    connecting with davening, when you feel
    distant, when it’s not flowing, and you

    don’t feel as much the presence of the Al-
    mighty?

    There are several things one can do: Number
    one I try to listen as I’m davening and be
    surprised by one phrase or one sentence, and
    that will be my meditation for the day. I’ll
    daven on that. It may stay with me for a
    week.
    For example, we say every day in Pesukei
    מונה מספר- לכוכבים לכולם שמות :zimrah’D
    יקרא, G-d creates the cosmos and knows the
    name of every star. That’s G-d the Creator.
    בונה ירושלים ה׳- נדחי ישראל יכנס says it Then

    – G-d builds Jerusalem and ingathers the ex-
    iles. That’s G-d as the shaper of history. But

    in between those two verses is a middle
    – הרופא לשבורי לב- ומחבש לעצבותם :verse
    Who heals the broken heart, administers to

    their wounds. There is Dovid Hamelech tell-
    ing us that sometimes healing one person’s

    broken heart is as important as creating a
    universe or shaping history. You can live off
    that one sentence for a year.
    Never try to find kavana for the whole of
    prayer. It doesn’t work, for heaven’s sake.
    One little thing at a time. The second point is
    that prayer has to be sung. I’ve said many
    times that when language seeks to break free

    of the gravitational pull of earth, it modu-
    lates from speech to song. I’ve spent a lot of

    time in my chief rabbinate encouraging
    chazzanim to write new liturgical music, to

    use songs to make the service more partici-
    pative, and to encourage shul choirs. I’m not

    an expert in music but I made that a key ele-
    ment. We used a lot of musical creativity I

    think that music frees the spirit and if you
    are ever short of kavanah, you need to have
    the nigun, the song, to daven with.
    Thirdly, something might just catch you if
    you create the silence in your soul to listen.
    When I’m at a critical point in my life, which

    is pretty much every day, I just listen: Hash-
    em, what are You telling me? Somehow

    prayer orients you. I call prayer “Jewish cog-
    nitive behavioral therapy.” It changes the

    way you look at the world; it changes the

    way you feel about the
    world.

    We are always pro-
    moting more Talmud

    Torah and chessed
    opportunities. We are
    involved in activism
    on behalf of Israel

    and Israel relation-
    ships. Some are in-
    volved in social action

    and social justice.
    What do you think
    that the Orthodox
    community can be

    spending more pro-
    ductive time promot-
    ing that is being over-
    looked? Are there

    initiatives and em-
    phases that the Orthodox community

    should be focusing on that we are neglect-
    ing?

    I think there are two that are being neglect-
    ed. The first is, all that goes with the affec-
    tive dimension of Judaism, the emotional

    life. There’s some nice Jewish music here,

    but some of the most popular music is actu-
    ally non-Jewish pop music set to Jewish

    words or acapella, which is great. I love it.
    The Maccabeats – I’m their biggest fan. But
    I like to see music coming from the Jewish
    soul. I think we haven’t done enough with

    the affective dimension, and music is prob-
    ably the most important.

    We write everyone else’s music. Irving Ber-
    lin wrote “I’m Dreaming of a White Christ-
    mas,”, Mahler’s eighth symphony, Catholic

    mass. Where do we write our music? I think
    we are missing the aesthetics of it and music
    is the most obvious example. Cinema, too,
    isn’t used enough in this regard. There’s just
    been a film called Menashe, a very moving
    film about Charedim in New York. I think
    we haven’t done enough with that to tell
    people what the life of faith does for you. I
    have so many stories that I think ought to be
    made into film. Stories of ordinary people I
    know who have done extraordinary things.

    Second, I absolutely think the Modern Or-
    thodox community is missing out badly on

    kiruv. The difference between material pos-
    sessions and spiritual possessions is that the

    more you share material possessions the less
    you have. But when it comes to a spiritual
    possession, the more you share the more you

    have. That is why Chabad can send out peo-
    ple all over the world where there is no Yid-
    dishkeit whatsoever, and you or I would lose

    our Yiddishkeit overnight because there’s
    no support system. Yet, they are able to keep
    it, because they share it.
    The Modern Orthodox community should
    be going out on campuses. Do you know

    how many Jews

    we lose on cam-
    pus? 90% mini-
    mum! Yet we’re

    not going out
    there. Every
    campus should

    host a nice mod-
    ern Orthodox

    minyan, daven-
    ing three times a

    day, Daf Yomi,
    and everything
    lemehadrin. But
    they aren’t taking
    it out to people
    who don’t have
    it. When you

    don’t give, some-
    thing in your

    spirit dies.
    A personal question: When we look at
    your life and productivity, whether the

    trajectory of ascending to the chief rab-
    binate, publishing 30 books, 17 honorary

    degrees, being named a Lord, etc., it just

    seems that you have had success after suc-
    cess, triumph after triumph. Have you

    ever experienced failure? Have you ever
    had any challenges that you couldn’t
    overcome and what gave you the tenacity
    to persevere?
    Ha! Have I ever experienced failure?! My
    goodness me! Oooh! [Laughter.]
    I nearly failed my first year in university. I
    nearly failed my second year in university. I
    was turned down for virtually every job that
    I applied for. Since I was a kid, I wanted to
    write a book. I started when I was 20 and I
    gave it every minute of spare time that I had.
    Even when Elaine and I went to a concert I
    would be writing notes during intervals or
    between movements during a symphony.
    Yet, I failed for 20 years! From 20 to 40 I
    had a whole huge file cabinet of books I
    started and never finished.
    What changed is I happened to be reading
    the preface to “Plays Unpleasant” by George
    Bernard Shaw. It opens by saying that if
    you’re going to write a book, write it by the
    time you’re 40 or forget it. I thought it was
    Min Hashamayim. Someone is telling me

    something because I had no idea why I hap-
    pened to read that passage by that writer at

    that time. I thought to myself that it was my
    last chance. So, I wrote my first book at 40
    and then I wrote a book a year ever since.

    Winston Churchill put it beautifully – suc-
    cess is going from failure to failure without

    loss of enthusiasm. The secret was marrying
    someone who believes in you and then to
    just keep going. Never stop! All of the things

    that came much later, most of them unex-
    pected – very moving but not the עיקר – it’s

    just “keeping on go-
    ing” day after day.

    That wonderful Me-
    drash in hakdamah

    of Ein Yaakov asks

    what is the main pa-
    suk in the Torah?

    One [Tanna] said that
    it’s loving your fellow man, לרעך ואהבת
    כמוך. A second said ישראל שמע, it’s about
    accepting the yoke of Heaven. Then, Ben
    …את- הכבש אחד תעשה בבקר says Pazzi
    bringing the daily sacrifice in the morning

    and in the evening. It’s about Shacharis, Min-
    cha, Ma’ariv. That’s life! You keep hammer-
    ing away and eventually you’ll get there.

    The only thing that is absolutely necessary is
    that you have to key into your mental satellite
    navigation system, your destination. Because
    if you don’t know where you’re trying to get
    to, you’ll never get there. I knew I wanted to
    write a book. It took 20 years of failure until
    I finally succeeded in the twenty-first year.
    Are there specific moments that you felt
    Hashem’s guiding Hand in your life, that

    things could have gone in different direc-
    tions, and those moments specifically stand

    out that it guided you to where you are
    now?
    I feel that way most of the time! I nearly
    drowned on my honeymoon. I couldn’t swim
    and I had just gone under for the fifth time.
    We were in Italy and there was no one near
    me. I remember thinking just before I was

    about to die – what a way to begin a honey-
    moon. And, what’s the Italian word for help?

    ve’I .מודה אני – שהחזרת בי נשמתי day Every

    twice suffered life threatening medical condi-
    tions, two forms of cancer. Both times I met

    the people that I needed to meet at the right

    time. My father a”h, who never had an educa-
    tion, left school when he was 15. But he had

    an emunah peshutah – a simple faith. He just
    believed that Hashem would take him where
    he needed to be. I think I learned that from
    him. You put your trust in Hakadosh Baruch

    Hu; He knows better than you. I feel that ev-
    ery single day – without exaggeration. It’s a

    mental exercise. I will constantly say to my-
    self or to Elaine – why did that happen??

    I’ll give you the weirdest example: In 2010
    I received from Princeton Theological
    Seminary an award called the Abraham

    Kuyper Prize,

    awarded to some-
    body who has made

    a significant contri-
    bution to Dutch

    Neo-Calvinist theol-
    ogy. I don’t know

    how many Rabbeim
    have such aa thing. I
    was thinking then –
    what does Hashem
    want me to have this
    for? Two years later the Dutch parliament
    banned shechita. The Dutch community is
    quite small, and they asked me to address
    the Twin Houses of Dutch Parliament.
    Abraham Kuyper, whose award I won, was
    Prime Minister of Holland a century ago.

    He was also Minister of Religion. So, I be-
    gan my speech by saying that you might be

    asking what a member of the British Parlia-
    ment is doing addressing the Dutch Parlia-
    ment? But I may be the only rabbi that has

    the prize for his contribution to Dutch Neo-
    Calvinist theology. It gave me a kind of

    visiting card and I said, ‘Thank you, Hash-
    em – now I understand why that hap-
    pened’.

    But it’s a constant discipline.
    It takes the simple question –
    what can I do, or what am I being
    called on to do, given that this
    has happened? We are sitting
    here now in your wonderful
    community of Boca Raton. And
    I’m asking myself – why did I

    davka have to come to Boca Ra-
    ton?

    I found out the answer only
    about twenty minutes ago, shortly before
    we began this conversation when I was
    given a lift in a car by someone who was
    telling me all the wonderful ways in which
    you’re bringing the community together. I
    suddenly realized that I had to be in Boca
    Raton because Boca Raton is showing the
    rest of the Jewish world how it’s done. This
    is not mindfulness. This is l’havdil Yosef
    Hatzaddik saying – why have I been sold

    as a slave? Why am I here in prison? Even-
    tually he is able to say to his brothers לא

    worked I – אתם שלחתם- אותי כי אם אלקים
    it out. It wasn’t you who was doing this to
    me. It was part of Hashem’s plan. That’s a
    mental discipline.