2003                    2002                    2001
 
 
 
Printer-friendly format                   
 
 

by Phil Jacobs, Editor, July 6, 2001

You have to make a telephone call to Israel on a hot, humid day in Baltimore. Your kids want you to hurry up so that you can take them to the pool. It's a call you've been dreading through Shabbat and into Sunday.

The "you" is me. The person I interviewed Sunday was Rabbi Seth Mandell, the former University of Maryland Hillel director. I wish that I had to call him about student activities at College Park. Instead, we were talking about what his eight weeks have been like since the brutal stoning murder of his 13-year-old son Koby, and his friend Yossi Ishran near their home in Tekoa.

Rabbi Mandell, a friend of Rabbi Menachem Goldberger, will be speaking at Congregation Tiferes Yisroel on Wednesday, July 11 at 8:15 p.m. His speech is open to the community and is co-sponsored by Tiferes Yisroel, Beth Tfiloh, the Baltimore Jewish Council, Shomrei Emunah and B'nai Jacob Shaarei Zion.

Go ahead, be a journalist. What on earth can one ask Rabbi Mandell without coming across as insensitive? How are you doing? How have you been feeling? What answer can we possibly expect from a man who has experienced the unthinkable?
I remember going through something similar when getting ready to interview a Holocaust survivor. I heard myself ask the survivor what he had "learned" from his experience. I couldn't believe I asked such a question. But the survivor came right back with an answer, one I've never forgotten: "I've learned to keep a packed suitcase in the front closet and a passport ready at all times."

I asked Rabbi Mandell two basic questions. How does he get out of bed in the morning? And how does he not hate? That's as good as I could get. I felt like an intruder into his private pain. I just wanted to tell him somehow that I cared for him, and then leave him be.

"The central message I'll be giving next week is that what we've learned and come to realize is that this was not a matter of land, it was hatred," he said. "This was essentially a hate crime. It was perpetrated and inculcated within the Palestinian population. We believe it was part of a deliberate attempt made by the Palestinian Authority to incite Palestinians to kill Jews wherever they can find them. My son and his friend Yossi happened to be in an isolated area and were come upon by Palestinians simply because the Palestinians knew they could kill them. They were killed because they were Jews."

Rabbi Mandell answered my questions, as simple as they were. He gets out of bed each day for several reasons. One motivation is his three other children. "To compound the tragedy by ruining their lives is unthinkable. We have to go on because of the other children."

Another motivation is his obligation to say Kaddish for his Koby. He calls this part of the "practical" framework he and his wife have to move forward.

Another reason is philosophical. He places his son's murder in the context of Jewish history, and he tries to turn it into a Kiddish HaShem or a way to honor God's name. He said that people all over the world were for a moment unified by the horror of Koby's murder. It changed the attitudes of many people toward the conflict. He talks about the phone calls he's received, even from Christians and their clergy, who want to offer comfort.

"It reinforced," he said, "what we've learned from the Torah, that we are part of something that came before and will continue on in the lives of the Jewish people as a nation."

Rabbi Mandell and his family also have started the Koby Foundation. This is a non-profit formed to help Israeli siblings of children who somehow have been hurt by traumatic loss, be it through terrorism, or even an auto accident or illness. The Koby Foundation will start a camp for these children. Rabbi Mandell has asked that contributions to the Koby Foundation be directed to Rabbi Goldberger at 6201 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. 21215. Checks should be made out to Congregation Tiferes Yisroel. But Koby Foundation should be written on the "memo" line of the check.

"We believe that Koby would have done a lot of good in his life," said Rabbi Mandell. "He would have given tzedakah, and he would have worked for many. We feel that a foundation in his name can substitute for the good that was stolen from the world. Whatever a child goes through with traumatic loss, we feel we want to make a camp structured to bring them together."

This is how Rabbi Mandell gets out of bed.

But what of the hate? Can he hate? Does he hate the Palestinians? "I look at the people who committed this horrendous crime, the same way I look at the boulders they used to smash the boys' heads in," he said. "They were not people, they were things. They were brainwashed by the Palestinian Authority to hate Jews. The hatred was so intense; they killed 13-year-old boys enjoying nature. Their hatred was like the boulders. They were implements of hatred.

"But since [Ehud] Barak's offer, it tells us that this is no longer an issue of land," he continued. "As long as hatred is instilled by the Palestinian leadership to children as young as 2 and 3, I don't see any peace in the offing. I believe Jews want to make peace. I believe there are Palestinians who want peace. But the Palestinian citizenry is being incited to hate Jews on a daily basis. Israel can't make peace with people who hate."

This is the Mandells' first trip to the States since the tragedy. He will be speaking in places such as Philadelphia and perhaps Washington, D.C. It will give the family a breather, Rabbi Mandell said.

One last question.
Did you consider just leaving Israel after this? "To leave now would compound the tragedy, especially for my children. They love Israel."

I remembered the interview with the Holocaust survivor. I remembered the question again, "What did you learn..."

I didn't ask it. I knew the answer already.
The Mandells don't have the figurative passport and the suitcase packed.
But maybe we should.