Home News Ukraine’s fate has sparked an international wave of efforts to help

Ukraine’s fate has sparked an international wave of efforts to help

0


There is a Yiddish phrase, pintele yid, expressing the belief that however far a Jew has strayed from his faith, there is a tiny flicker of Jewishness inside, waiting to burst into flame. It’s a bit like a pilot light in a gas heater.

Now, the violence in Ukraine seems to have revealed a pilot light in millions of people of all faiths worldwide. A pintele of simple human connection, compassion, and caring has sparked a widespread desire to relieve Ukrainians’ suffering.

Why We Wrote This

Widespread international sympathy for Ukrainians has sparked a sudden and heartfelt campaign to help them, bucking a trend toward nationalism and culture wars.

We’ve seen such outpourings of concern before, in response to other natural and man-made tragedies. But this seems different.

Partly that’s because it bucks a global trend toward narrow nationalism and culture wars. And also because the international breadth of the popular concern, and of efforts to help Ukrainian refugees, have been remarkable.

Social media, meanwhile, are – for once – bringing people together rather than pulling them apart into opposing political silos.

Smartphones and social media technology have spread real-life images of Russia’s attacks on civilian areas almost instantly, giving the victims’ plight a worldwide 24/7 immediacy seen in no previous war.

The only way to ignore it is to shut one’s eyes. And few people seem ready or willing to look away and do nothing.

London

It is a phrase I heard many years ago – from an Orthodox rabbi with a long, graying beard and a twinkle of optimism in his eyes – and it’s been increasingly on my mind amid the Russian army’s murderous assault on besieged civilians in Ukraine.

Pintele yid. The words are Yiddish. And, as the rabbi explained, they encapsulate the traditional belief that inside any Jewish person, however distant or alienated from his faith, there’s always a tiny flicker of Jewishness waiting to be rekindled at the most unexpected moment.

It’s a bit like a pilot light in a gas heater that ignites a flame.

Why We Wrote This

Widespread international sympathy for Ukrainians has sparked a sudden and heartfelt campaign to help them, bucking a trend toward nationalism and culture wars.

Now, the violence in Ukraine seems to have revealed a pilot light in millions of people of all faiths worldwide. A pintele of simple human connection, compassion, and caring has sparked a widespread desire to relieve Ukrainians’ suffering.

The outpouring of concern is not, in itself, new. We’ve seen it in response to a range of natural and man-made tragedies in the past – tsunamis, earthquakes, famines and, yes, wars as well.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here