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    THE MEANING OF AM YISRAEL CHAI

    We always knew
    how to die together.
    The time has come
    for us to know also
    how to live together.
    When the Jews of
    Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
    were liberated on April
    20th 1945, they sang
    Hatikvah. At the end of
    the anthem, British Army
    Chaplain Rabbi Leslie
    Hardman, cried out, “Am
    Yisrael Chai – the People
    of Israel live!”
    When Golda Meir
    visited the Great
    Synagogue in Moscow as
    the Israeli Ambassador in
    1948, the crowd of
    50,000 ecstatically
    welcomed her with
    shouts of “Am Yisrael Chai!”
    In 1965, in order to energize the

    Soviet Jewry movement, Shlomo
    Carlebach was asked to compose a
    song. He wrote the famous version of
    Am Yisrael Chai.
    In 2009, Prime Minister Netanyahu
    visited Wannsee Villa in Berlin, where
    the Final Solution for the destruction
    of Europe’s Jews was planned in 1942
    by Hitler and leaders
    of the Third Reich.
    In the visitors’ book
    he wrote just three
    words in Hebrew
    and then translated
    them into English:
    “Am Yisrael Chai –
    The people of Israel
    live.”
    As a slogan, Am
    Yisrael Chai affirms
    that despite the
    systematic attempts
    to exterminate and annihilate the
    Jewish people, thanks to God’s guiding
    hand and the tenacity and resilience of

    the Jewish People, we
    stubbornly persevere. God has
    made an eternal covenant with
    the Jewish People; He has
    their back.
    Am Yisrael Chai is also a
    prayer, a longing for a united
    Jewish people living together
    in safety, security and with
    unity and harmony.
    Explaining the words “I will take you
    to Me as a people [in Hebrew ‘l’am’]
    (Exodus 6:7), Rabbi Soloveitchik
    writes:
    The political-historical unity as a

    nation is based on the conclusion
    of the covenant in Egypt, which
    occurred even prior to the giving
    of the Torah at Sinai. This
    covenant forced upon us all one
    uniform historical fate. The
    Hebrew word עם Am, nation, is
    identical to the Hebrew word עם
    Im, with. Our fate of unity
    manifests itself through a
    historical indispensable union…
    No Jew can renounce his part of
    the unity…Religious Jews or
    irreligious Jews, all are included
    in one nation, which stands
    lonesome and in misery in a
    large and often antagonistic
    world…
    In the ashes of the crematoria,
    the ashes of the Hasidim and
    pious Jews were put together
    with the ashes of the radicals and
    the atheists. And we all must
    fight the enemy, who does not

    differentiate between those who
    believe in God and those who reject
    Him.
    The secret to a strong Am Yisrael is a
    sense of Im Yisrael, being in it together,
    united, loyal, giving one another
    the benefit of the doubt and
    judging each other favorably.
    Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau,
    standing in Auschwitz-Birkenau
    at the March of the Living
    several years ago said, “We
    always knew how to die
    together. The time has come for
    us to know also how to live
    together.”
    During this most difficult time,
    may the people of Israel learn to
    live with one another in harmony
    and unity. Am Yisrael Chai!