NewsOn Yom Kippur, New York Jews plan to publicly mourn Palestinian deaths

On Yom Kippur, New York Jews plan to publicly mourn Palestinian deaths

(RNS) — On Yom Kippur (Oct. 12), the holiest day of the Jewish year, hundreds of Jews will gather at Brooklyn’s Grand Army Plaza for a religious service to publicly mourn the lives of Palestinians killed by Israelis over the past year.

The service, part of the afternoon Yom Kippur liturgy called Yizkor, will feature traditional Jewish prayers, a coordinated ripping of a garment — a sign of mourning called “kriah” — and a short eulogy by a New York-based Palestinian-American for her slain Gaza family.

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The event is a further sign of the stark divide that has emerged among American Jews in the wake of the Oct. 7 massacre in Israel and the country’s devastating yearlong retaliatory war in Gaza and now Lebanon. Most American Jewish institutions are emphasizing a fealty to Israel and the Zionist project. Younger American Jews, in particular, are rebelling and calling Israel’s military offensive, which has killed 42,000 Palestinians, a genocide. They want the U.S. to stop arming Israel with weapons.

“One of the things that was so painful to think about is how many Jewish communities are not going to be mourning Palestinian lives alongside Israeli lives,” said Rabbi Alissa Wise, founder of Rabbis for Ceasefire, which is sponsoring the service. “There won’t be repentance and atonement for all the violence and horror over the past year that Israel has caused. We’re trying to embody and practice a more liberatory way of practicing Jewish life.”

The Yizkor service comes as Jewish Federations of North America and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations have just announced a Nov. 10 “Stand Together” rally for Israel on the mall in Washington, D.C. The rally comes one year after a similar “March for Israel” last November and is intended to show unity with Israel and a resolve to fight antisemitism.

” … at Stand Together, we will reaffirm our strength as a community standing together against hate and antisemitism, and standing with the State of Israel,” said William Daroff, CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, in a statement.

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The Yizkor service planned for Yom Kippur, by contrast, is not a rally or a protest. It’s a religious memorial service featuring traditional Jewish prayers: El Maleh Rahamim (God full of compassion) as well the Mourner’s Kaddish, a prayer for the dead, recited at every Jewish prayer service.

Traditionally, Yizkor pays tribute to people who have died over the past year, and in many synagogues it also honors Jews who died in the Holocaust. It originated in medieval times as a way to honor the Jewish martyrs of the Crusades. The Grand Army Plaza service is intended to boldly widen those boundaries to include Jewish lives lost but also non-Jewish lives.

“We wanted to create some kind of big public ritual,

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