Three steps faith leaders must take on the first anniversary of Oct. 7
Opinion
Three steps faith leaders must take on the first anniversary of Oct. 7
(RNS) — We need faith leaders to find their moral voice and the courage of ancient prophets.
Photographs of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas militants are projected on the walls of Jerusalem's Old City, Nov. 6, 2023. The Islamic militant group killed 1,400 people and kidnapped 240 others in an unprecedented cross-border attack on Oct. 7, triggering a war that has raged for the past month. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

(RNS) — Americans still feel the reverberations of Sept. 11, 2001, 23 years later. As we approach the first anniversary of Oct. 7, the Jewish people are still reeling from Hamas’ mass murders, mutilations, rapes, kidnapping and hostage-taking and the world’s overwhelming silence, indifference and even legitimizing of the terrorists’ unspeakable crimes.

And then there was the shocking surge of coordinated pro-Hamas campaigns and growing Jew-hatred that began on Oct. 8. There were elite university presidents who refused to condemn Hamas’ crimes against humanity — even when testifying under oath in the U.S. Congress; the legacy media who largely swallowed whole Hamas’ terrorist narrative and statistics while automatically discounting Israeli accounts; the social media platforms that blindly served as portals for 24/7 demonization, along with detailed tutorials to murder and maim Jewish people; police in London who did nothing to protect targeted religious Jews; campus police who failed to clear campus takeovers; and prosecutors in the U.S. who failed to prosecute rioters.

And what about faith leaders?


The two of us have devoted decades to promoting multi-faith alliances. Our painful stock-taking about the reaction of faith leaders to the worst single-day mass murder of Jews since the Nazi Holocaust reveals the almost-universal moral confusion that gave a free pass to the terrorist barbarians and failed to place the blame for the tragic consequences for Palestinian civilians on the group that deserves it — Hamas.

To be sure, some leaders got it right. It took the Global Imams Council (based in Iraq!) just one day to publish an unequivocal condemnation of Hamas and voice support for Jews. The signatures of 209 imams were appended. Here in the United States, Dr. Richard Land, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, rhetorically asked in the Christian Post, “Who are the war criminals? Is it the Israelis or the Hamas terrorists warping the minds of children and using children to shield the evil doings from attack?” Gordon Robertson and CBN began unequivocally supportive programming, which has not let up through the entire difficult year. The Rev. Dr. Franklin Graham let his actions speak for him. His Samaritan’s Purse organization donated 28 armored ambulances to Israel — some in memory of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, the American Israeli hostage recently executed by Hamas terrorists.

Writ large however, faith leaders acted and sounded eerily like lawyers. At best, they were silent. At worst, they led the chorus excusing Hamas barbarism by examining “context.” What, they posited, should we expect from a people frustrated so long in its quest for independence?



They disregarded the most sacred mission of religion — to teach people that the ends most certainly do not always justify the means; that absolute evil exists. As the war in Gaza dragged on, with an assist from legacy media, they looked upon the devastation wrought by war on the civilians of Gaza and blamed the victims of Oct. 7 for defending themselves, not the perpetrators. Hamas’ cynical game plan included building zero shelters for civilians, even as they built an underground, 300-mile beehive of military infrastructure and deliberately embedded themselves in the civilian fabric of Gaza.

An installation featuring a Shabbat table, with empty chairs representing hostages taken by Hamas, at the Lincoln Memorial, Oct. 27, 2023, in Washington. (RNS photo/Jack Jenkins)

Going forward, what should people of faith focus on to try to make a difference on behalf of the living and the dead?

First and foremost, stop acting like lawyers and pundits. Religious leaders, members of the Abrahamic faith and others must unequivocally denounce and demand accountability of any group that mass murders whole families and that uses women and children as human shields. The religious community must unequivocally call out as evil that which we have been watching for a year: storing weapons in civilian homes and deliberately operating adjacent to or completely within schools, religious institutions and hospitals, ensuring casualties among their own people — the more the better for their cause.


Second, every pulpit should be denouncing the horrors perpetrated upon women. (The mutilations, the torture and rapes of Israeli women are so beyond the pale, they cannot be detailed in this essay.) There must be theologically driven, wall-to-wall rejection of pro-Hamas apologists declaring: “Rape is resistance!” No. Rape is never legitimate, and weaponizing it does not make it resistance. It is a primary task of religious leaders to declare — “If there are no limits on what may be done by a human, there is no future for human civilization.”

Third, the taking of hostages is a grievous sin, and holding hostage the remains of a human being, any human being, is sacrilegious. If nothing else, let the faith leaders of the Sons of Abraham declare in one voice that such acts are a desecration of G-d’s name and of the vessel that held and nurtured the souls of humankind.

After 9/11 and the suicide bombings in Bali, the late Indonesian President Wahid and leader of 60 million Muslims said these words to a multifaith conference in Indonesia cosponsored by the Simon Wiesenthal Center: “Religion was meant to be a blessing for mankind. But let’s be honest. Today it is more a curse than a blessing.” 

Two decades later, we need faith leaders to find their moral voice and the courage of ancient prophets to pierce the cynicism, hypocrisy and corruption that have turned too many hearts to stone and turned unthinkable barbarity into routine headlines. And we must act to fight these evils before it consumes us all.

(Rabbi Abraham Cooper is the associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center and its director of global social action. Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein is the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s director of interfaith affairs.)



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