If as you say, antisemitism does not define us as Jews, why are you going around talking about it?
Rabbi Takes the World's Temp, Describes Illness
Sir Jonathan Sacks, the Chief Rabbi of England, told a local audience last week that, over the course of the past 2,000 years, there have been four major mutations in the virus known as anti-Semitism...
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
"Anti-Semitism is serious," and it does happen, attested the rabbi. "But it does not define us as Jews."
1 comment:
"If as you say, antisemitism does not define us as Jews, why (is Rabbi Sacks) going around talking about it?"
If I were to suggest an answer, such as, "because the topic is very important," would that sound reasonable to you?
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