For some unaccountable reason, my thoughts have been turning recently to the question of continued Jewish existence. I know: bizarre, isn’t it? Don’t ask me what triggered it, but there you are.
What struck me very forcibly is that the Jewish view of time is that the path of Jewish history unfolds along a spiral staircase. The path that we take, viewed from above, is circular, and that circle is the Jewish year. Historically, we step onto the staircase at Pesach, with the Exodus from Egypt, when Jacob’s children became the Children of Israel, and move through Shavuot and the covenant at Sinai when the Torah was given and received. At Sukkot we celebrate the protection God afforded the desert generation on their long journey to the Land of Israel, while at Chanukah and Purim we recall the miracles of the Maccabees’ defeat of the Greeks, and Esther and Mordechai’s earlier thwarting of Haman’s plans to exterminate the Jews.
Parallel to these historical memories is our annual exploration of our personal and national relationship with God. As a celebration of the agricultural year, the three pilgrim festivals are also a celebration of God’s relationship with the people of the Land, as expressed in the bounty of the Land. They are also, of course, reminders of the mass ascent of the people from their homes throughout the Land, an ascent to the Temple at those three festivals. At Yom Kippur, also, we remind ourselves of the role of the High Priest in the Temple, asking God to forgive the sins of the people. Further along the staircase, we commemorate the Maccabees’ rededication of the Second Temple, and, a little later in the year, the courage, faith and resourcefulness required when God hides his face and the Jews live in exile, with no Temple.
As I said earlier, viewed from above our path is a circle through the cycle of the year. However, viewed from the side, we are made aware of the vertical dimension of the staircase. The fact is that if, at every Pesach, we find ourselves exactly where we were spiritually last Pesach, then we have expended energy on the staircase, but we haven’t used it for the purpose it was designed to serve, spiritual ascent. Indeed, for some of us the staircase sometimes seems to be designed by M C Escher: as we walk along it, we are sure we are ascending, and yet, a year later, we find ourselves in exactly the same place as we were the previous year.

Within that annual cycle, there are smaller, self-contained, flights of stairs, that represent a historical ascent that we are invited to take inspiration from. The 10 Days of Awe, from the start of Rosh Hashana until the end of Yom Kippur, is one such brief and intense period of personal and communal repentance.
A longer period, the counting of the Omer, marks the seven weeks from the second day of Pesach until Shavuot, the period from the Exodus to the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. We learn how the Children of Israel, through their initial experiences before, during and immediately after the Exodus, were able to rise from slavery in Egypt to entering the covenant with God, and we strive to emulate that ascent.
There is another, flight of stairs, packed into the first part of the seven weeks of the Omer. I was going to call this Israeli, but the fact is that I don’t really see a distinction between Israeli and Jewish here, and the Jewish nature of this particular flight of stairs is completely undeniable.
We start with the first night of Pesach, the moment at which the Jewish people was formed. On the last day of Pesach, we remember the splitting of the Reed Sea and the drowning of the Egyptian army. A week later, we mark Yom Hashoah, the day of remembrance of the Holocaust and the Heroism. The survivors giving testimony are every year increasingly drawn from the millions of Jewish children swept up in the Holocaust (those survivors who were even as young as 16 in 1942 are now celebrating their 100th birthday.) Naturally, most survivors were not old enough to be active in resisting the Nazis. And so, equally naturally, the stories that dominate the media in Israel throughout Yom Hashoah are stories of suffering, of hiding, of fleeing, of surviving, rather than of resisting. In the early years of the State, this view of the Shoah was at odds with the message of the Zionist endeavour. Modern Jewish military heroes wanted, and ‘needed’, to be provided with suitable models for imitation.
Thankfully, Israel matured, and became sufficiently confident in its military strength, to be able to relax the official line, and to give proportionate voice to the suffering and helplessness of the vast majority of victims of the Holocaust. The pejorative depiction of Jews going ‘like lambs to the slaughter’ was recognised as the factual distortion that it clearly is. On Yom Hashoah, and this has been true for many years, the nation mourns and honours all of those who were murdered in the Shoah, without distinguishing the helpless victims from the defiant resisters or the resourceful or fortunate survivors.
A week after Yom Hashoah, the nation again pauses, on Yom Hazikaron, to remember all those who fell in the years leading to the Declaration of Independence, and in all of the wars from the War of Independence until today, as well as all victims of terrorist attacks. As a friend observed on their Whats App status today: In Israel, we have two memorial days every year: the first to remind us of the cost of not having a state, and the second one to remind us of the cost of having a state. The timing of these two days, a week apart, has always hammered home that message very powerfully. However, since October 7, 2023, I have found it more and more difficult to contemplate that message without wondering, in a corner of my mind, whether there is not a dangerous smugness in the neatness of the message. ‘Never again’ sounds a little glib in the wake of the massacre at the Nova festival, and, after two and a half years of fighting, and despite some stirring tactical victories, to still have northern communities suffering daily bombardment from Lebanon, and troops still needing constant vigilance on the Gazan border, and heroes being killed and injured in Lebanon, and Iran with its nuclear threat still intact, is sometimes, in the cooler hours of a dark night, to wonder whether Israel does really offer every Jew in the world the promise of security.
Is the Jewish world in a better place now than during the Shoah? Without a shadow of a doubt! Is that difference qualitative or only quantitative? On October 6, 2023, I would have answered, without a moment’s hesitation: ‘Qualitative!’ And now, in the world after October 7? And in the world after October 8, by the end of which day it was clear that antisemitism had come out of the closet worldwide? I would still answer: ‘Qualitative,’ but only after thinking about it for a little while.
From Yom Hazikaron, we move instantly into Yom Ha’atzma’ut, and celebrate Israel’s independence. Some find that transition jarring. However, I think it makes perfect sense. You cannot in any way live with the terrible price the Jews and other citizens of Israel have paid to ensure the establishment and the continued existence of the Jewish state unless you celebrate the miracle that is that state. And, of course, Israel is not a perfect state. What country is? For some reason, many other nations demand that Israel, uniquely among the family of nations, be a perfect state, or forfeit its right to exist. They can demand, but we are not obliged to accede to their demand.
Nevertheless, there is so much to celebrate in Israel’s continued existence. Its unequalled absorption of refugees; its thriving economy; its incredible advances in agriculture, water purification, technology, medical science; its recreation of Hebrew as a vibrant living language; its thriving religious and cultural life. I could go on and on.
And so, at the end of a period of three weeks that began with the Exodus, we reach our modern world. Almost 3000 years brought us to the depths of the Shoah. Three more years brought us to the Declaration of the State of Israel. A further 78 years have brought us to where we are now: achieving miracles on a regular basis, partnering with a world superpower in a struggle to save Western civilisation from an existential threat, Is everything rosy? Far from it. Is the future secure? No. Would the State’s achievements to date have been imaginable in 1948? I think not.
Driving home from Zichron last night, still basking in the sunlight of Raphael’s energy and Adam’s chattering away in fluent rubbish, Bernice and I listened to a couple of instalments of Daniel Gordis’s essential listening: Israel from the Inside. After we listened to the second, I turned to Bernice and said: ‘There’s one word that leapt out at me from that discussion.’ ‘What word?’, she asked me. ‘Yet,’ I replied, and, from my mention of that one word, Bernice knew exactly the sentence of the 63-minute podcast I was referring to. Discussing how the current resurgence of antisemitism makes the Zionist idea as relevant now as it was to Herzl and Jabotinsky, Gordis said: ‘I don’t think Jews are going to get rounded up by train in America. I just don’t think that America has the capacity to do that…yet, but I don’t know what’s down the road.’
I simply cannot imagine anyone with Gordis’s intellectual stature and intimate understanding of Jewish American life making a statement like that at any time before 2023. I was even shocked to hear it now in 2026, after all that has happened in the last three years. However, if that’s what Gordis feels, then I’m certainly not in a position to question his judgement.
There may be moments when I have my doubts about the future of Israel as a Jewish, democratic state. However, when weighed against the prospects of future viable Jewish communities in the Diaspora, Israel still looks like the only genuine game in town. So, I shall be raising my glass next Wednesday, and drinking a toast to her second 78 years.



