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    INDESTRUCTIBLE

    Mexico City 2025. The Museo de Cera,
    the city’s wax museum. Like so many wax
    museums, it houses life-like wax statues of
    personalities from the sports, entertainment
    and political arenas.
    Standing in a room with other world leaders,
    was a wax statue of Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu, wearing a dark suit and a pristine
    white shirt. But it didn’t stay that way.
    A masked man enters the room, and places
    a Palestinian flag at the foot of Netanyahu’s
    figure. He proceeds to pour blood-red paint
    on Netanyahu’s head and shirt. He then pulls
    out a sledge hammer and with visible force
    and raging anger, begins pounding, again and
    again, on Netanyahu’s head and face.
    Relentless, loud bangs. For his finale, he
    topples the broken figure face down onto the
    floor, and pours some more paint around it.
    Posing for the camera, the unidentified
    individual shouts out, “Viva Palestina… Viva
    Sudan…. Viva Yemen… Viva Puerto Rico.”
    The Israeli embassy in Mexico City, released
    a statement, calling this repugnant destruction
    “An odious act, which sends a dangerous
    message of violence, intolerance and hate that

    goes beyond legitimate criticism.”
    To me, watching a clip of this vile act was
    most chilling and frightening. The loud
    hammering and pounding. The anger in the
    perpetrator’s eyes. And no one did anything
    to stop it.
    No matter what one thinks of Netanyahu’s
    politics, it was a despicable and deplorable

    act. Yet another inexcusable incident of anti-
    Semitism and hate. The sound of the hammer

    on the wax figure was deafening, yet security
    was nowhere to be found.
    The figure fell in front of a statue of a serenely
    sitting Queen Elizabeth, in a room full of
    figures of world political leaders. Yes, they
    were wax figures, but I couldn’t help but think
    of the irony. Sadly, our living leaders have
    become like the wax figures of the museum,
    just standing idly by, doing nothing. Allowing
    hateful people to run amuck, vandalizing and
    destroying.
    I am reminded of a lecture by my mother,
    Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis a”h, to members
    of the American military and their families.
    She was invited to speak about the Holocaust.
    As part of the lecture, she described the hatred
    and brutality, the horrors and atrocities our
    people endured during that terrible time.

    As was her practice, my mother concluded
    the lecture with a Q & A. A young girl in the
    audience raised her hand with a seemingly
    innocent question. “Rebbetzin, ma’am” she
    said, “Why didn’t you call the police?”
    As my mother pondered the young girl’s
    question, she could only think, what an
    American question that is. How does one
    explain that the police were the culprits
    themselves. They were in on it. They allowed
    it all to happen.
    What an upside down world we live in.
    A world where a man who committed a
    criminal act, vandalizing and defacing the
    figure of a world leader in a wax museum, is
    called an “activist” in several news reports.
    This week we begin Sefer Shemos. The
    second book of the Chumash. Shemos is
    also known as Sefer HaGeulah, the Book of
    Redemption. Shemos takes us on our nation’s
    journey. We experience the highs and lows,
    from the forced labor in the work fields of
    Egypt, to their miraculous freedom. From
    their trek through the desert, to the greatest
    moment in time, receiving the Torah on Sinai.
    “Zechor yemos olam, Remember the days
    of old”, binu sh’nos dor vodor, understand
    the years of generation after generation.
    (Devarim 32:7) History repeats itself. From
    Egypt to Europe, to Mexico City. It’s our task
    to remember the past and learn its lessons.
    “Vayokom melech chodosh, And a new king
    arose in Egypt, “Asher lo yodah es Yosef,
    who didn’t know Yosef.” (Shemos 1:8)
    Didn’t know Yosef? Yosef was second to
    the Pharaoh. How could the new king not
    know of him?
    Rashi explains “He made himself as if he
    didn’t know”. He didn’t want to know. How
    convenient it is to forget. To have selective
    memory.
    Somehow, the world has forgotten that
    October 7 was a war started by Hamas
    terrorists. They came by the thousands. They
    were determined to kill, to torture, to brutalize
    in unimaginable ways. It is over a year, and
    as of this writing, we are still waiting for
    hostages to be released.
    We live in a world of revisionism. A world that
    turns the tables and makes the victims into
    the aggressors. That calls acts of destruction
    “activism”. A world that wants to forget.
    There are those amongst us who want to
    forget – even deny – the Holocaust. Recently,
    there was an attempt to obliterate the past.
    The Brussels community has a custom of
    laying Stolpersteine, brass cobblestones,
    upon which are inscribed the names of Jewish
    people from a particular area murdered by
    the Nazis. The cobblestones are embedded
    into the pavement as an everlasting memory
    of the lives lost. The dedication ceremonies
    are usually attended by local school children.
    This year, the leaders of two schools refused
    to allow their students to participate. They

    also reject including Holocaust studies in their
    curriculum. They don’t want to remember.
    Can we understand this? They don’t want
    their future generations to remember. A
    recent news story reported that Rabbi
    Menachem Margolin, of the European Jewish

    Association, said, “At a time of record anti-
    Semitism, it is precisely to the next generation

    that we should be transmitting the warning
    from history of the greatest crime committed
    against humanity.” Margolin closed by
    saying, “We cannot eradicate the truth to
    please a minority who may think otherwise.”
    While Shemos tells of the oppression in
    Egypt, it also gives us hope. In this week’s
    parsha, Moshe stands before the sneh, the
    burning bush. A bush that was not consumed
    by its fire. A message to Moshe. A message
    to the generation in Egypt. A message for
    all time. We have endured many pains and
    difficulties. Many have tried to destroy us
    – even by fire – but we are not consumed.
    HaShem is with us.
    We have all been shaken by the terrible fires
    that have – and still are – destroying tens of
    thousands of acres and thousands of homes
    in Southern California. Our hearts go out to
    all those affected. For the Kotler family of
    Altadena, though they lost their entire home
    and all their possessions, they experienced
    a personal miracle. An heirloom menorah,
    passed down from their Holocaust surviving
    grandmother, was the lone item that withstood
    the flames. Joshua Kotler remarked, “It was
    insanely powerful”. His wife, Leah, added,
    “This menorah story is bringing hope to me
    that we are going to survive. We are going to
    survive as a family. We’re going to survive as
    a people. We’re going to move on, and we’re
    going to rebuild, and we’re going to be okay.”
    A powerful message. Our nation is indeed
    indestructible.