We Will Not Hide Our Light
Rabbi Adrian M. Schell addresses the Wimbledon Synagogue community following the horrific knife attack on the streets of Golders Green. The fading surprise at such violence is perhaps the most terrifying reality of all. Our response cannot simply be to retreat behind higher fences.
Exploring Parashat Emor and its demand for "one standard for stranger and citizen alike" (Leviticus 24:22), Rabbi Schell confronts the normalisation of antisemitism in the UK. He unpacks the "canary in the coal mine" metaphor, reflects on the Home Secretary's recent statements, and highlights the vital need for a society that tackles hatred through education and the full force of the law. A Progressive Jewish response is not to shrink, but to act with spiritual defiance. We are still here, and we will not hide our light.
What Makes Us Whole?
In Parashat Emor, we find one of the Torah’s more difficult passages — a section that limits which kohanim, which priests, can serve at the altar. A priest with a visible difference — blind, lame, injured, or with a disfigurement — is instructed not to offer the sacred sacrifices.To modern ears, this can feel jarring. It brushes up against our values of equality, inclusion, and dignity. But maybe we can approach this not as a closed door but as a doorway into deeper conversation.