Tag Archives: Torah

40 Years of Manhood – A Dvar Torah

IDROS was called to the bima as a bar mitzvah 40 years ago today. A soon to be comedian was his rabbinic mentor (honestly…IDROS couldn’t make this up). IDROS had watched his peers called to read and chant Torah in the preceding weeks and months, regaling as best an adolescent going through the strange time of puberty could, in their ritualistic ascension to adulthood in the Judaic faith; learning the cadence and order of the service he was to soon lead; whispering and sharing laughs in the pews with his classmates; and watching with envy and curiosity as, toward the end of each service, our rabbi placed his hands on the shoulders of each week’s bar/bat mitzvah honoree and whispered something seemingly profound to the “newly anointed adult.”

IDROS finally had his answer 40 years ago. And the message, he learned, was for his ears only. But let’s just say IDROS could see and hear the raw tools of a budding stand-up comedian as those words echoed in the eerie silence beneath the ner tamid and ushered your humble author into manhood.

On May 2, 1986, IDROS had a twin…not a doppelganger, but a spiritual twin, a Refusenik in the then Soviet Union, who was unable to truly celebrate his own bar mitzvah in the Cold War era USSR due to religious persecution. IDROS had a chair with David’s name on the bima and acknowledged and shared the rituals with David and his family throughout the service. (Think twinning, but with no tiger blood).

Parashat Achrei Mot, which IDROS read on his big day,  opens in the shadow of loss, after the deaths of Nadav and Avihu (Moses’ nephews, and Aaron’s sons) reminding us that closeness—whether to God or to purpose—requires boundaries, humility, and awareness.

The Torah then moves into Yom Kippur, a moment not just of ritual, but of deep reflection: looking inward at who we are, and outward at how we impact others.

That dual focus feels especially relevant today. Real growth doesn’t come from introspection alone—it comes when personal honesty translates into how we treat people, how we show up in community, and how we take responsibility beyond ourselves.

In many ways, this mirrors the ongoing story of the State of Israel. It’s a society constantly balancing internal identity with external challenges—asking not just “Who are we?” but “How do we act in the world?” Ironically, in this parsha, the term “scapegoat” was coined. Ironic because the Jewish people invented the term and its meaning and have been scapegoated themselves throughout history for the ills of society.

The parsha reminds us that holiness isn’t isolation. It’s the ability to hold both: self-examination and ethical action.

So the takeaway is simple but demanding: look inward with honesty, act outward with integrity, and understand that real meaning lives in the tension between the two.

And as for the deeper meaning behind the number 40, there are many appropriate gematria (IDROS loves numbers and their significance). The Hebrew letter Mem has a numerical value of 40, which also represents the word Mayim (water)…which played a significant role in the Jews’ exodus from bondage in Egypt. In fact, the number 40 is associated with transformation and renewal, much like a bar/bat mitzvah. The number also corresponds twice to the events closely associated with the parsha IDROS read, including Moses’ 40 days on Mount Sinai and the Jews 40 years wandering the desert.

Hope you found this meaningful.

Wishing you all a Shabbat Shalom and may true peace and fulfillment fill your lives.

Thanks as always for reading!

IDROS

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NUMBERS

Happy New Year all! It’s been a minute since IDROS felt inspired enough to put fingers to keyboard. In many ways, IDROS, like many of you, has been mired for the past year and a quarter in a crippling state of shock. But we must persist. And so IDROS moves forward, much like the nomadic tribe of his ancestors, through the desert fleeing bondage.

Numbers is the fourth book of the Torah.

Numbers continues the story of the Jews’ escape from bondage, and delivers us to the land of Israel, the Promised Land. The Book’s importance to our story cannot be overstated, just as numbers are intertwined with humanity.

First there was creation. Second came freedom. Third, the rule of law. But without numbers, how would we understand the order of things?

Numbers don’t lie. Numbers are ubiquitous in life, death and throughout the universe.

Numbers help us to measure, compare, catalog, calibrate, categorize, name, differentiate, urinate, defecate, navigate, investigate, rate, rank, code and even paint (for those of us not blessed with artistic talent).

Numbers also mark human wrists like cattle.

It’s no accident I am writing this on 1/7, exactly 10 years after the terrorist attack in Paris on Charlie Hebdo.

10 and 7 are numbers.

5785 is a number.

1.6 billion is a number.

15,000,000 is a number.

55 is a number.

1 is a number.

6,000,000 is a number.

1,200 is a number.

240 is a number.

101 is a number.

2025 is a number…

The year reads as if out of a science fiction novel or movie. And the past five years, ten if I’m being honest, have fit the bill.

Reeling from the crushing blow that was October 7, 2023, I trudge through the sand dunes and scorched earth of modern Jewish life, bearing witness to another agonizing hate crime, campus encampment, terrorist ramming or award show double standard.

I truly felt that morning of 10/7 as though I literally had the wind knocked out of me, and have been trying to catch my breath ever since. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. My grandparents had suffered so much, sacrificed so much to ensure that.

We had just survived a pandemic!

And just as the world began to revel in that triumph, as ebullience gripped the economy and ushered in a new Roaring 20’s exactly one century later, IDROS’ people, the world’s rounding error, were doomed to continue our quarantine in a new ghetto fortified by a new spin on humanity’s oldest prejudice. This has been a nightmare far worse than Covid…and now, we weren’t the ones wearing masks.

It has been a trying five years and an unthinkable 460 odd days. Bearing witness to the pervasive and incessant hatred has been harrowing. But the silence and ambivalence has been far worse. Raising children amid this cruelty is a Herculean test.

Still, the more and more IDROS reflects, the more he believes this time is pivotal, even monumental for Jews and our brave allies everywhere. Sure, there have been times of relative peace and prosperity for us as a people…most of us grew up and lived the majority of our lives during such a time, and we were blessed! Blessed for the sacrifices of the millions who paid the ultimate price, the millions more, who like IDROS’ grandparents (and those of Mrs. IDROS), somehow clung to life among the ruins, and last, but certainly not least, blessed for the brave actions of our allies, soldiers and citizens who risked everything at a time when humanity had dipped further into the bowels of hell than ever before, and through their courage, saved humanity from eternal damnation.

It is imperative we honor the memory of the 6 million, and of the 1,200, and of the countless others who we lost along the way. We cannot allow their deaths to be in vain. It’s our time to grab the reins from our grandparents and help ensure that our story continues.

Having Israel is a huge bonus, one our grandparents suffered without. But there is still work to be done across the diaspora. Don’t sit on the sidelines. We have an opportunity to build a better future for not just the Jewish people, but all of the civilized world. It seems daunting. We are outnumbered. But we always have been.

IDROS loves numerology and Gematria. Numbers don’t lie. People lie, but numbers are beacons of truth.

In Numbers god takes a census, the first census, of the Jewish people. Then, 40 years later, a second census is taken, and each counts almost the same exact number of people. There are now approximately the same number of Jews worldwide as there were prior to the Holocaust. We know this because we continue god’s work. This must have significance.

October 7, 2023. This date was significant. Its aftermath is significant.

In the Jewish calendar, the date was the 22/23 Tishrei, 5784.

Tishrei is the seventh month in the Jewish calendar, and means beginning.

By the time the atrocities of 10/7 were known across the diaspora, and we had time to digest the horror, it was 23 Tishrei. 23-7-5784.

2+3+7 = 12

5+7+8+4 = 24

12+24 = 36

18 represents Chai, meaning life, in Hebrew.

The Gematria of 10/7 is double Chai.

IDROS interprets this as a new beginning for life, for both Israel, and for the Jews of the diaspora.

L’chaim.

Thanks as always for reading,

IDROS #BringThemHomeNow

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