A conversation today reminded me of how excited I was, back in second grade, to get my Girl Scout pin. I pinned it on my green sash, just so, and kept it upside down as was the tradition: you had to do a good deed before turning it right side up. A week passed and at our next session, all my troop-mates wore pins that showed me they had clearly accomplished their good deed. I, for my part, had not. Instead, I had spent evenings wondering what my good deed would be. Would it be worthy? Would it be enough? I wouldn't have known enough to look at it this way back then, but I viewed my Girl Scout pin dilemma with a very Jewish mindset. Now, as the world is brimming over with antisemitism and brash generalizations about Jewish people are stemming from extreme violence on the other side of the globe, I want to share with you a side of Judaism that is so removed from bombings of hospitals and from hostages wrested from music concerts. I want to share with you my Jewish mindset-- differe...
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