Starfish on the beach. Deposit photo courtesy of karenr.
By MARILYN SHAPIRO
The High Holy Days is a time for us to turn inward, to reflect on our lives, not only where we have been, but also where we hope to go in the coming year. So much of the world needs our help. What can one person do? How can one person make a difference?
In the Pirkei Avot, Rabbi Tarfon writes,“It is not incumbent upon you to complete the work but neither are you at liberty to desist from it.” That quote has been in my e-mail signature for several years and serves as a reminder to me and those that read my e-mails that we can all make a difference. No, maybe we cannot save the world. But our inability to do everything does not give us a pass on doing nothing.
Starfish Moments
This truth is found in the often-told starfish parable An old man is walking along the beach in which hundreds of starfish have been washed along the shore during high tide. As he walked, he came across a little girl who is throwing the starfish back into the ocean. “You realize that you will not be able to make much of a difference?” the old man asks the little girl. She picked up another starfish and threw it as far into the water as she could. She said, “I made a difference to that one.”
It reminds me of my recent “starfish” moment. On a trip to the beach, Larry, my husband, and I were walking along the edge of the water. As Larry was enjoying the waves and the birds, I was picking up garbage and sticking it in a plastic bag I had brought with me for that purpose. A broken styrofoam cup. A short length of cord. A lone flipflop. And a dozen or so plastic caps from water bottles.
“You can’t pick up every bit of litter on the beach,” Larry said.
“Yes. But I can do something!”
Yes, Larry was right. I am not going to pick up every piece of litter on a beach. But I can at least fill up a bag with some of it.
My Efforts
Giving away my freshly baked challahs also gives me a chance to do something Early into the pandemic, I started baking three or four challahs a week. At least one of the challahs went to someone in our community who needed cheering. he first one went to a friend whose wife was in a memory unit at the hospital. Week after week, we delivered challahs to people who had lost their spouse, who faced illness; who got bad news from their families. My small challahs were small tokens of love and caring. My challah baking has slowed down in recent months, but I usually make extras to tuck in the freezer to pull out as needed. It just filled my need to do something!
For the past 10 years, my writing has also been a way for me to feel as if I am making a difference. Initially my writing focused on my family stories. In the past eight years, I have become captivated to tell other people’s stories, particularly the lives of Holocaust survivors. So much has been written already: fictional accounts, memoirs, graphic novels, poetry, plays. Many of have become classics: Elie Wiesel’s Night; Prima Levi’s Man’s Search for Meaning; William Styron’s Sophie’s Choice, and Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl.
Why do I continue to interview Holocaust survivors and their families?
Writing these stories allows me to do my part to make the world never forget. Each story is a statement against Holocaust denial. Each story published has brought me feelings of pride, comfort, and maybe some peace to the subjects of the story and their families.
Following Rabbi Tarfon’s advice, my inability to write everything doesn’t mean I cannot continue to do something.
Pitching In To Help
Fortunately, I am surrounded by people in my Forida 55+ community who are also doing their part to help people in the greater Poinciana area. Solivita has over 200 clubs, and many of them support the local community. The Do Unto Others Initiative (DUO) has raised over $260,000 in 11 years to support the work of the St. Rose of Lima Food Pantry. Another club, Solivita Friends Helping Those In Need, provides similar support for St. Vincent de Paul St. Ann’s Food Pantry in Haines City. Solivita Friends of Elementary Education Schools (SoFEEs) provides nourishment, school supplies and seasonally appropriate clothing to local elementary schools. The Solivita Performing Arts Council (SPAC, Inc.) has raised over $139,000 since its inception, providing grants to help local schools purchase and maintain instruments, fund band and choir concerts, produce school theatrical productions, fund thespian workshops and support art projects. SOLABILITY, a club consisting of individuals of varying abilities, provides activities accessible to all. Members of the Butterfly Club provide financial support for a beautiful butterfly garden; volunteers keep it weeded and in control. The Book Circle, which has over 30 book clubs under its umbrella, donates books and financial help to Polk County Schools. The Shalom Club makes an annual contribution to the Perlman Food Pantry or toJewish organizations supporting local families.
The organizations mentioned represent only a small sample of ways individuals have joined together to help those in need. There are many ways of giving back in your area too.
So, yes, one person can make a difference.
Wishes for a sweet, healthy 5785. May it be a year in which each of us makes a difference for good.
Marilyn Shapiro, formerly of Clifton Park, is now a resident of Kissimmee, Fla. Keep Calm and Bake Challah: How I Survived the Pandemic, Politics, Pratfalls, and Other of Life’s Problems is the newest addition to her line-up of books. It joins Tikkun Olam, There Goes My Heart and Fradel’s Story, a compilation of stories by her mother that she edited. Shapiro’s blog is theregoesmyheart.me.