Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Follow the Thread - Kol Nidre Sermon 5782

 


Beginning in the spring of 1884, the artist Georges Seurat traveled to a bucolic retreat at the very gates of Paris to draw and paint.  Over the course of more than two years, he created his masterpiece, “Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte.”[i]  Perhaps, you’ve been lucky enough, as I have, to have seen this work in person at the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

Seurat was avant-garde on the canvas, in contrast to the painters who came before him as well as the Impressionists of his day.  They were about the fleeting moment, while Seurat focused on permanence. 

 

His used a technique called pointillism.  At a distance the painting is beautiful; shimmering and luminous in the light.  But as you come closer and closer to the canvas, the images disappear and all you see are dabs of color.

 

What you might not know is that pointillism came about because of the scientific work of French chemist Michel Eugene Chevreul.[ii]  In the late 19th century, Parisian tapestry makers wanted to improve the vibrancy of their colors.  Chevreul realized that the problem wasn’t the dyes being used to make the tapestry, but the ways that the hues were combined.  Most important to provide a vibrant tapestry was a thread of color.  The thread was central to make the tapestry come together.  This is what Seurat did in his painting, finding a juxtaposition of colors, blues and oranges, just as the chemist had found with the thread. 

 

Every year, it seems that we need this moment of Kol Nidre to reflect, to reframe, and to step back from our canvas of life.  But, even more so this year.  So many of us worried, fearful, and plum exhausted.  We’re standing way to close to the painting.  Our focus is on the dabs of color.  We’re worried about tomorrow, the to-do list, and keeping ourselves and our families safe,

 

Tonight, we search for that thread of color, that is found across our canvas of life.  The thread that is central to who we are, and to who we wish to become.

 

Author, educator, and activist, Parker Palmer shares this metaphor so beautifully in is poem “Everything Falls Away.”[iii]

Sooner or later, everything falls away.

You, the work you've done, your successes, large and small,

your failures, too.

Those moments when you were light,

alongside the times you became one with the night.

The friends, the people you loved who loved you,

those who might have wished you ill,

none of this is forever.

All of it is soon to go, or going, or long gone.

Everything falls away,

except the thread you've followed, unknowing, all along.

The thread that strings together all you've been and done,

the thread you didn't know you were tracking

until, toward the end, you see that the thread is what stays

as everything else falls away.


Parker Palmer describes a thread that continues from birth until death.  A thread that connects all the different pieces of our life.  The thread encompasses our failures and successes, the known and unknown.  This Yom Kippur, I urge you to take some time and reflect.  What matters most to you?  What drives you?  What connects you to those who came before and those who will follow?  What is the thread that weaves continually through your life?

 

The memoirist, Pauline Wengeroff, wrote a two-volume book about Jewish life in Russia at the turn of the twentieth century.  She shares there a beautiful story[iv] about how the Jewish women in her village would prepare for Kol Nidre to arrive.  Sara, the entrusted matriarch, gathers everyone together to recite T’chines, the Yiddish prayers and supplications that were recited by Jewish women in the old country.  Sara also brings forth an enormous ball of wick thread and a large piece of wax.


The women begin their work of candle making for Kol Nidre.  Sara places the ball of wick thread in her pocket.  She and Pauline’s mom stand three feet apart and pass the thread back and forth.  As they do this task, they speak about family members who died long ago, recalling their acts of goodness and kindness.  A thread is added for each person that they remember, until the wick is good and thick.  And then, living members of the family are remembered for life.  The threads of the dead and the threads of the living joined together to form the wicks of the Yom Kippur candles.

 

Our thread is multi-layered and is interwoven with the threads of our family and friends.  We know that those who came before us, our loved ones who are longer with us, and our family who continue to strengthen us, shaped us into the people that we are today.  It is the values, the history, the cultural framework, and even their mannerisms that give us our persona, our thread. 


When a family member dies, we take a black kriya ribbon and we cut it until the threads are shown.  The ripped ribbon serves as an outward expression of the torn grief and the broken heart that we feel on the inside.  Yet, even with the torn ribbon, our thread is not fully separated from the rest, reminding us that we are always connected to our past. On this Yom Kippur, we have the gift of time, to remember where we came from and of those extraordinary individuals who provided us with the thread that we carry forward.

 

Now, not to get too morbid, but tonight we do focus our thoughts on death.  Yom Kippur is considered a rehearsal for our passing.  Many of us don’t eat or drink, focusing on spiritual matters.  The Aron, the Ark, is also the Hebrew name for a casket.  Earlier this evening, after we removed the Torah scrolls, we looked inside the empty casket.  And tonight, many will wear a tallit, a prayer shawl, which traditionally is the garment worn when buried.


The tallit consists of four tzitzit, four fringes, four threads on each of its corners.  The tzitzit are to serve as a reminder of the 613 mitzvot, the commandments of living a full and meaningful Jewish life.  These tzitzit help us to recall our sacred obligations: to our Jewish practice, our moral commitments, and our observance of holidays and acts of loving kindness.  Those threads, the tzitzit, that we hold in our hands during the shema, should awaken us to follow a path of sacredness: our life mission.

 

One person who found his thread, who lived out his life mission, was Cleve Jones,[v] a gay activist.  Cleve lived during the early days of the AIDS epidemic.  In 1985, 1,000 San Franciscans had been lost to AIDS.  Our leaders and governments officials ignored the crisis or at worse, didn’t care.  Our country wasn’t responding.  And so, a march was planned.  Cleve asked all those who attended to create placards for friends and loved ones who had died of AIDS.  They taped those placards on the wall of the San Francisco Federal Building.  Cleve realized that placed together, the placards looked like a patchwork quilt.

 

And so, with fabric and thread, Cleve and others set out to create a memorial for those who had died of AIDS, and to show the devastating impact of the disease.  Two years later, in 1987, a beautiful and haunting quilt of 1,920 panels, larger than a football field, appeared on the National Mall in Washington.



Mike Smith[vi] was one of the co-founders with Cleve Jones of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt.  Mike believed that the quilt was a cry for help to reach Middle America.  Not something threatening, but warm and comforting, like your grandmother’s quilt.

 

Mike thought that they’d work on the quilt for a little while, a few months, and then be done.  They weren’t prepared for the beauty.  They weren’t prepared for the mothers all over the country who sent panels for their dead sons to preserve them in perpetuity.


The quilt has become Mike’s life work.  It began as a protest banner and became a National Treasure.  From that first fabric and thread, it has become the largest communal art project in the world.  54 Tons in weight, 50,000 panels.  Hundreds of thousands who’ve worked on the quilt.  But, it wasn’t just fabric and thread.  The making of the quilt inspired people to do something, to express themselves, to tell their stories, and to turn their grief into action.

 

Over the course of their lives, Cleve, Mike, and so many others, found their thread, physically and metaphorically, to express their life work, to turn their grief into action.  We are living through another pandemic.  A time of mourning and sadness and grief.  It’s so easy to be bogged down, to be exhausted, to be transfixed by the blur of colors, unable to see the thread that connects us to  what matters most and to each other.

 

This Yom Kippur, step back from your canvas, take stock in yourself: who you are, what you stand for, what you care about.  Step back from the dabs of color and find your thread.

 

As Parker Palmer concludes in “Everything Falls Away” -

Follow that thread as far as you can

and you'll find that it does not end,

but weaves into the unimaginable vastness of life.

Your life never was the solo turn it seemed to be.

It was always part of the great weave of nature and humanity,

an immensity we come to know

only   as we follow our own small threads to the place

where they merge with the boundless whole. 

Each of our threads runs its course,

Then joins in life together. This magnificent tapestry—

this masterpiece in which we live forever.  Amen.



[i] https://mymodernmet.com/georges-seurat-a-sunday-afternoon-on-the-island-of-la-grande-jatte/

[ii] https://www.britannica.com/biography/Michel-Eugene-Chevreul

[iii] I’m in gratitude to Rabbi Jordi Schuster Battis for sharing this poem at our CCAR High Holiday Sermon Seminar.  As well as a thank you to other colleagues for their thoughts and inspiration on the topic of thread.  Special thank you to my husband Brian ten Siethoff, who constantly reads and lovingly critiques every High Holy Day sermon and is my best editor.

[iv] Mishkan HaNefesh, Yom Kippur, p.8

[v] https://www.aidsmemorial.org/quilt-history


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