Today is the anniversary of the liberation of the Old City of Jerusalem during the Six Day War. Before this Jews were forbidden from praying at Jewish holy sites there. We celebrate the reunification of Jerusalem and the ability of people of all faiths to pray at their holy sites.
Yom Yerushalayim: Seeing God’s Hand in History
Today is Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Day — more fully, the day we mark the liberation and reunification of Jerusalem.
Some people say, “Why celebrate it? It’s a new holiday.” But that misses something very important. Chanukah was also once a new holiday. It is not biblical. It was added because the Jewish people recognized God’s hand in history.
We do not believe that God created the world, gave us the Torah, and then disappeared from human events. We believe God is present in the world every day. The question is whether we have the eyes to see it.
Those who remember 1967 remember the fear before the Six-Day War. Israel expected terrible casualties. In Tel Aviv, they were preparing mass graves. The situation looked desperate.
And then came events that can only be described as miraculous. Jerusalem was liberated. The Old City returned to Jewish hands. The Kotel, from which Jews had been barred under Jordanian rule, was open again.
Rabbi Shlomo Goren, then Chief Rabbi of the IDF, understood the meaning of the moment. At the Kotel, he blew the shofar. He also brought a chair and sat there, because for centuries Jews had been forbidden to sit at the Western Wall — sitting symbolized ownership. By sitting there, he was declaring: we have returned.
And then there is the story of Chevron. Rabbi Goren and his driver entered before the army had arrived. The mayor came to surrender. Rabbi Goren told him: “In this place, you do not surrender to me. You surrender to God.”
That is the message of Yom Yerushalayim.
We celebrate not only a military victory, but the ability to recognize God’s hand in history. If we cannot see the miracles of those days, then we are missing something profound.
Yom Yerushalayim reminds us that Jewish history did not end with the Bible. God’s presence is still in the world. Our responsibility is to notice it, give thanks for it, and live up to it.
Something to think about.
