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The Secret of Jewish Resilience



15 Sivan May 30, 2026


For millennia, the Jewish people have been buffeted by global forces. This pressure has not only manifested as oppression, expulsion, and extermination, but also as a powerful cultural pull. Although Judaism introduced revolutionary ideas that reshaped ancient civilization—including human dignity, universal education, and the sanctity of life—we have often felt drawn to the beliefs, lifestyles, and value systems of other nations.


Ironically, these nations were often hostile to us. Yet, whenever the door to assimilation opened even slightly, we ran toward it. In Moab, we worshipped Kemosh; in Samaria, we followed Baal; in Babylon, we were drawn to the cults of the Chaldeans; and in Europe, we were attracted to the “enlightenment”.


Historically, it seems that the more accessible the sanctity of Judaism became, the more we were tempted by outside influences. During the First Temple era, when Jews experienced Divine revelation upon entering the Sanctuary, they still worshipped every idol known to man. During the Second Temple era, when the Divine presence was less manifest, idolatry ceased, but internal strife took its place. Jews believed false rumors about their brethren and turned against one another.

(This struggle is a deliberate part of the Divine design. To preserve free choice, G-d ensures we always face balanced options. When holiness is manifest, and everything else pales in comparison, the alternatives are no longer truly competitive. To level the scales, G-d makes other paths appear far more attractive than they naturally are, elevating them until they seem like viable rivals to sanctity. When we choose holiness despite these enticing temptations, it becomes a meaningful choice for which we can take credit.)


The question remains: How have we survived these constant trials? If G-d consistently places temptation in our path, why are we still here? While many individuals have wandered from the fold, the nation as a whole remains. Why does our light still burn? To what can we attribute this Jewish intransigence?


The Secret of Mikshah

The answer lies in the Menorah, the candelabra built by our ancestors in the desert, whose light continues to shine even through spiritual darkness. The Torah specifies that the many parts of the Menorah must be mikshah, hammered from a single block of gold. Mikshah is a multifaceted word that reveals the essence of the Jewish soul:

Kasheh: Tough and unyielding[1]

Kushya: A question or a lack of understanding

Kash: Chaff, a cover that conceals what is within

Hekesh: Aligned and synchronized[2]

Keshet: A rainbow

Kosheshu: To gather or assemble[3]


When we were in Egypt, G-d called us keshe oref, a stiff-necked people. We are a stubborn lot, clinging tenaciously to our identity long after others would have surrendered. We do not take our cues from statistics or historical probability. We are kasheh, tough and resilient, refusing to disappear from the pages of history.

Even we cannot always explain the source of this tenacity. We face the same kushya, or lack of understanding, as the rest of the world. However, our lack of understanding stems from a place that transcends logic. When the pressure becomes unbearable, and we are on the verge of sinking, we unplug from reason and connect to faith. We defy the odds because we exist in a realm beyond them. While the G-d of Creation follows the patterns of nature, the G-d of the Torah transcends every premise. Though it may make no sense to hold on in the face of certain defeat, we do so anyway, succeeding in ways no one can explain.

Our sages taught that Moses found the design of the Menorah kashe, or difficult to understand. The secret of our longevity, a light that burns through every darkness, was concealed until G-d revealed it. It was covered by kash, the chaff of reason that hides the kernels of truth within.[4]


The core truth is that in our most difficult moments, we find our hekesh, our alignment and oneness with G-d. Rather than operating on the reasoned plane of the physical world, we connect to the G-d of eternity and become impervious to the pressures of culture and time. We tap into the Divine soul, a spark of the Infinite. When we find this hekesh, a resilience arises that allows us to rise like a phoenix from the ashes of expectation.[5]


G-d partners with us by granting us the strength to survive. After the Great Flood, G-d promised never to destroy the world again. He chose the keshet, the rainbow, as the symbol of this oath. The rainbow represents survival against all odds. Even when we should have been submerged, we rise to the surface. G-d infuses us with the toughness required to endure.[6]


Assembly Required

This transition into strength does not happen automatically. The prophet (Zephaniah 2:1) wrote, “Hitkosheshu ukeshu,” meaning “Assemble and align yourselves.” We must first gather our scattered parts before we can find our oneness with G-d.

To assemble means to gather our disparate thoughts, desires, and interests. We are eclectic people with many passions, some of which align with our values and some of which do not. To find our alignment with the Divine, we must examine our lives and determine which of our pursuits truly serve our higher purpose. If they do not, we must let them go.


When we follow every whim, we rely solely on our own limited power, and external pressures can easily topple us. However, when we align our minds and hearts with G-d, we find true equanimity. By removing the ego, being honest with ourselves, and remaining willing to share our vulnerabilities, we find our strength. We become fully assembled.


Just as a new toy comes in many pieces and only becomes functional once it is put together, we are “assembly required.” We possess a beautiful, resilient soul, but we must integrate our scattered parts to find our wholeness.

This is the secret of Jewish intransigence. The light of our Menorah shines despite the darkness because we are Mikshah, hammered out of one piece, forever inseparable from G-d.[7]

[1] See Genesis 35:16; I Samuel 19:44.

[2] See Rashi to Zephaniah 2:1.

[3] Exodus 5:7.

[4] Similarly, kaskasim are the coat of scales worn by kosher fish and siryon kaskasim (I Samuel 17:5) is a coat of armor.

[5] See Rashi on II Samuel 19:44, who synchronizes the two meanings of vatekash, alignment and strength.

[6] See Genesis 49:24, where Keshet is associated with strength.

[7] This essay is based on Or Hatorah, Bamidbar, pp. 354–355, and Likutei Torah, Devarim, pp. 4a–4b.

 
 
 

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Shabbat Shalom

Shabbat Times

EREV SHABBAT 

 

 Yahrzeits

  

Ted Medzon for his father, Sam Medzon, 21 Sivan (June 5-6, 2026 Fri/Sat)

 

Jane Sverzhinsky for her mother, Shulamit bat Noach, 25 Sivan (June 9-10, 

2026 Tues/Wed))

 

Nella Sverzhinsky for her mother, Shulamit bat Noach, 25 Sivan (June 9-10, 

2026  Tues/Wed)

 

Lisa Klinger for her mother, Henny Theeboom, 26 Sivan (June 10-11, 2026

Sat- Sun)

 

Kiddush

The kiddush this week is open for sponsorship 

Daily Minyan    

 

We are trying to organize evening minyanim on Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, approximately 20 minutes before sunset. Minyans this week (on Sunday and Thursday) will be held at 8:45 PM.

 

Minyans are announced and recruited via the Minyan Maker Whattsapp group. If you would like to be involved, you can join with this link:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/Dwf879wwHaZBLGbDCH7GR

 

Weekly Classes

Rabbi Lazer teaches regular weekly classes via Zoom.  

Join us in person on Sunday morning for services at 8:30 AM, followed by a short, fascinating Talmud class at 9:15 am. The Talmud class is hybrid, in person and on Zoom. 

Thursday evenings at 7:00 PM for insights and discussions on the weekly Parshah.

Tanya Class for Women  

Rebbetzin Basie leads a 30-minute in-depth class on Tanya, the classic Chassidic work that teaches the inner workings of our mind, heart, and soul. The class will be text-based as we slowly make our way through this incredible study.  

To be held via Zoom each Tuesday at 7:30 pm. To register, please provide Basie bgurkow@gmail.com with your phone number so she can provide updates about the class. 

 

Pirkei Avos Class for Women 

Rebbetzin Basie teaches a class for women on the Ethics of our Fathers, Pirkei Avos, on Shabbat at 5:30 pm. The class is held at the Gurkow family home.

 

Rabbi Gurkow Away

Rabbi Gurkow will be away on a lecture tour from Thursday, June 11 till Monday, June 21. He will be available via phone, email, text, and WhatsApp should you need to reach him. Weekly Classes will be suspended during these dates. Arrangements to substitute Rabbi Gurkow on Shabbat will be in place.

 

 

 From Jewish London

 

London’s Jewish community institutions are coming together through the Federation Security Fundraiser, a community wide campaign to raise $400,000 for the critical security needs of Jewish organizations across our community. This campaign will help protect the places where our community gathers, learns, celebrates, prays, connects, and supports one another.

Thanks to early leadership, we have already secured $100,000, including a $60,000 matching commitment. We are now inviting the full community to take part.  As part of the London Jewish security campaign, we invite you to participate in a special speaker series focused on security, advocacy, public life, media literacy, and the future of Jewish communal safety.

A household contribution includes you and one guest. Contributions are cumulative within the security campaign, so you do not need to make a separate contribution for each event. As your total household contribution reaches the levels below, the corresponding campaign events become available, subject to RSVP and capacity.

 

 

Rosh Chodesh Society for Women  

Save the date for our Rosh Chodesh Annual Garden Party 

Sunday June 28 at 6:30  pm

Please register by sending an e transfer of $18 per person to  cbtsister@gmail.com

RSVP bgurkow@gmail.com by June 21

 Dairy/Pareve Dinner will be served

Location details will be shared upon registration.  

 

Chumash with Rashi Class for Men and Women 

A class led by Julie Rubenstein. Explore Judaism’s most fundamental text with the vital commentary of Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki (Rashi) in the original Hebrew. Engage with your heritage on the 2nd Wednesday of every month. Classes are currently on hiatus and will resume in the summer, G-d willing.

 

Donations and Sponsorships

Boris Sverzhinsky to commemorate the yahrzeit of Jane’s late mother, Shulamit bat Noach Rubinchik

E-Transfer Your Donation

Beth Tefilah is set up to receive email money transfers to our email address, office@bethtefilah.ca. This method can be used to pay for dues, donations and 

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