Colors: Cyan Color

In my last column before Sukkos, I addressed the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the Yom Kippur War. I did not expect that fifty years later I would be writing about another war against Israel. It appears I was not the only one who was surprised. Just like 50 years ago, it appears that Israel was unprepared for this attack. An Israeli spokesman compared it to 9/11 and Pearl Harbor. There were also other parallels. The attack was started on a special day in the Jewish calendar. In 1973 it was Yom Kippur and this time it was Shemini Atzeres. The Yom Kippur War started on October 6 and this war started on October 7.

It has been 22 years since the attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon and the courage of those on Flight 93. It is hard to believe that it is now one generation later; those who were toddlers and those born post-9/11 have no recollection of the tragedy. This year, just like in 2001, it was during the time that we were saying Selichos. If there is any incident which encapsulates the idea that there are no guarantees we will last through the next year, it is 9/11. If you had told someone on September 10 what was going to happen the next day, they would have thought you were crazy. Imagine a small group of individuals hijacking four planes and then bringing down the Twin Towers and the Pentagon.

This year, Yom Kippur was from Sunday night through Monday night. That had an impact on what I am writing about, due to the deadline to submit an article for my column. Therefore, most of the column was written before the holiday when I was in Yom Kippur mode.

As everyone is probably aware, there is a special election in the 27th Assembly District to complete the term of Daniel Rosenthal, who resigned to take a position with the UJA. I will not address the quality of the candidates or who to vote for. There are plenty of people already doing that. Instead, I will focus on why for this race it is even more important than usual to have a strong showing by the Orthodox Jewish community.

With every contest there has to be a winner and a loser. Sam Berger may have won the election, but both candidates were winners. It was a big kidush Hashem that both Sam Berger and David Hirsch did not engage in personal attacks and stuck to the issues. I would be surprised if they were not under pressure to engage in demonizing the opponent with baseless attacks. Unfortunately, that is what politics has become in this country. It is a sad state of affairs that we have to acknowledge candidates who treat each other with respect and accept results of an election. It used to be a given. I would have liked to see a higher turnout from the frum community for the special election. The small turnout may make Berger vulnerable to a primary challenge by candidates in other communities in the Assembly district when he runs for a full term.