July 29, 2025 



Dear Temple Sinai Members and Friends, 


We write to you with heavy hearts and great concern. We continue to mourn the death and violence against Jews and residents of Israel on October 7th, the continued captivity of fifty hostages, and Hamas’ recent refusal of truce terms. We also continue to believe in the dream of a Jewish homeland and support the right of the Jewish people to self-determination, especially as we witness more and worsening antisemitism. 


We are also outraged by and no long willing to countenance the horrific toll of death, destruction, starvation and disease in Gaza because of the current war and Israeli policies. We condemn the ongoing violence against and lack of justice for Palestinians in the West Bank and the repeated public statements of incitement against Arabs, non-Jews, and those who speak out for peace and co-existence.  


On Sunday, the Reform Movement issued a statement about the starvation in Gaza that urges, “Let us not allow our grief [over October 7th] to harden into indifference, nor our love for Israel to blind us to the cries of the vulnerable.” On Monday, news outlets reported that two respected and long-standing Israeli human rights organizations, B’Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel, have released reports officially identifying Israel as carrying out genocide and documenting their conclusions. We know that their charge of genocide is unacceptable to some people, and we have no way to independently assess it ourselves. But we also understand that such unprecedented statements by Jewish and Israeli organizations must be taken seriously and warrant a response from our clergy. 


Some members have contacted us to ask what we believe, seeking guidance as they discern their own positions in this fraught and complicated situation. Others, whose opinions are already set, are evaluating the extent to which we align or diverge from their stance and how much difference they can tolerate. None of us became clergy to foster discord or division. We love nothing more than a giant, celebratory Shabbat oneg. But all of us sought ordination for our belief that Reform Judaism is a significant, lasting source for ethical and moral living in the modern world and for our commitment to fostering communities and institutions through which any individual so inclined could be encouraged in their efforts to walk the path of a meaningful life. 


We, Rabbi Roos, Cantor Rhodes, Rabbi Goldstein, Cantor Robins, Rabbi Reiner, and Cantor Croen have each signed an open letter along with over one thousand of our colleagues that conveys our position and beliefs. The letter reads: 

The Jewish People face a grave moral crisis, threatening the very basis of Judaism as the ethical voice that it has been since the age of Israel’s prophets. We cannot remain silent in confronting it. 


As rabbis and Jewish leaders from across the world, including the State of Israel, we are deeply committed to the wellbeing of Israel and the Jewish People. 


We admire Israel’s many and remarkable achievements. We recognize, and many of us endure, the huge challenges the State of Israel relentlessly confronts, surrounded for so long by enemies and facing existential threats from many quarters. We abhor the violence of such nihilistic terrorist organizations as Hezbollah and Hamas. We call on them immediately to release all the hostages, held for so long captive in tunnels in horrendous conditions with no access to medical aid. We unequivocally support the legitimacy of Israel’s battle against these evil forces of destruction. We understand the Israeli army’s prioritization of protecting the lives of its soldiers in this ongoing battle, and we mourn the loss of every soldier’s life. 


But we cannot condone the mass killings of civilians, including a great many women, children and elderly, or the use of starvation as a weapon of war. Repeated statements of intention and actions by ministers in the Israeli government, by some officers in the Israeli army, and the behaviour of criminally violent settler groups in the West Bank, often with police and military support, have been major factors in bringing us to this crisis. The killing of huge numbers of Palestinians in Gaza, including those desperately seeking food, has been widely reported across respectable media and cannot reasonably be denied. The severe limitation placed on humanitarian relief in Gaza, and the policy of withholding of food, water, and medical supplies from a needy civilian population contradict essential values of Judaism as we understand it. Ongoing unprovoked attacks, including murder and theft, against Arab populations in the West Bank, have been documented over and over again. 


We cannot keep silent. 


In the name of the sanctity of life, of the core Torah values that every person is created in God’s image, that we are commanded to treat every human being justly, and that, wherever possible, we are required to exercise mercy and compassion; 


In the name of what the Jewish People has learnt bitterly from history as the victim, time and again, of marginalization, persecution and attempted annihilation; 


In the name of the moral reputation not just of Israel, but of Judaism itself, the Judaism to which our lives are devoted, 


We call upon the Prime Minister and the Government of Israel 


To respect all innocent life; 


To stop at once the use and threat of starvation as a weapon of war; 


To allow extensive humanitarian aid, under international supervision, while guarding against control or theft by Hamas; 


To work urgently by all routes possible to bring home all the hostages and end the fighting; To use the forces of law and order to end settler violence on the West Bank and vigorously investigate and prosecute settlers who harass and assault Palestinians; 


To open channels of dialogue together with international partners to lead toward a just settlement, ensuring security for Israel, dignity and hope for Palestinians, and a viable peaceful future for all the region. 


‘I am a Jew because our ancestors were the first to see that the world is driven by a moral purpose, that reality is not a ceaseless war of the elements, to be worshipped as gods, nor history in a battle in which might is right and power is to be appeased. The Judaic tradition shaped the moral civilisation of the West, teaching for the first time that human life is sacred, that the individual may not be sacrificed for the mass, and that rich and poor, great and small, are all equal before God.’ Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Radical Then, Radical Now (London 2000). 

With continued hope for peace on behalf of our entire clergy team, 

Rabbi Jon Roos

Rabbi Hannah Goldstein

Cantor Rachel Rhodes

Cantor Rebecca Robins

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