Speaker at MLK service at Great Neck’s Temple Beth-El recalls icon’s call to service, saying ‘Justice demands participation’

Date:

Unity and defiance imbued Friday evening’s Shabbat service at Temple Beth-El of Great Neck, where parishioners who gathered to mark the Sabbath were joined by other community members in celebrating the man who embodied America’s civil rights movement.

Each January, the nearly century-old synagogue opens its doors to elected officials, distinguished guests and all comers from the community to recall the teachings of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The civil rights leader visited the temple in 1967, the year before he was assassinated at age 39, to decry the Vietnam War, as well as the violence he was witnessing in America.

In his opening sermon, Rabbi Brian Stoller charted a similar course shortly after reminding those gathered that King’s “voice and his teachings reverberate through these walls as they do through the hearts of so many Americans.”

“Tonight at this grim moment in our country, the words of Dr. King cry out to us like an ancient prophet demanding a moral reckoning,” Stoller told the crowd of more than 100 seated in pews.

“Dr. King’s legacy needs to be more than honored, it needs to be lived out in our own time, for it stands as a moral repudiation of violence, of terror and the abuse of power being perpetrated at this very moment by the United States government against citizens and noncitizens alike on the streets in Minneapolis and elsewhere,” a reference to the fatal shooting of a woman last week by federal agents during a protest of their tactics in arresting immigrants.

The connection of Black and Jewish attendees began Friday evening with back-to-back choir performances of two songs, “Behold How Good,” which included some lyrics in Hebrew, and “Siyahamba,” a South African Christian song.

Bill Tinglin, an author who advocates for the importance of education about the Holocaust and slavery, addressed the parallel histories that binds the two peoples through the “sacred urgency of memory” in his keynote address near the end of Friday’s service. While Rabbi Stoller addressed violence on the domestic front, Tinglin said King’s teachings are essential to combat the rise of antisemitism across the globe.

“We are here because memory matters,” Tinglin said at the start of his speech. “We are here because truth requires witnesses, and we are here because justice demands participation.

Keynote speaker Dr. Bill Tinglin in prayer at Temple Beth-El...

Keynote speaker Dr. Bill Tinglin in prayer at Temple Beth-El of Great Neck at its annual MLK Shabbat service Friday. Credit: Howard Simmons

“Dr. King warned us about what he called the fierce urgency of God … that justice doesn’t arrive at its own timetable,” Tinglin said. “[King] understood something essential: hatred does not survive because it is strong; hatred survives, because good people hesitate.”

The list of prior keynote speakers at past MLK Shabbat services includes House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, civil rights icon John Lewis, Gov. Kathy Hochul, and New York State Attorney General Letitia James, who attended a dinner at the synagogue Friday evening, but had to leave ahead of the service.

“It’s really critically important that we understand the importance of love and compassion,” James told Newsday.

 

#Speaker #MLK #service #Great #Necks #Temple #BethEl #recalls #icons #call #service #Justice #demands #participation

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Horror classic remake with Zac Efron ‘so bad it should never have been made’ on Film4

The 2022 Stephen King remake starring Zac Efron has...

California man accused of threatening to place pipe bombs in Disneyland for JD Vance visit

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive...

Ducks’ Leo Carlsson out 3-5 weeks with thigh injury, threatening his OIympic availability for Sweden

LOS ANGELES — Anaheim Ducks center Leo Carlsson will...

Helen Flanagan sparks worries amid ‘conflict’ with ex as ‘concern’ for her grows

Helen Flanagan, best know for playing Rosie Webster in...