Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The Ordinary Nature of Hate

Is it the most wonderful time of the year?

This holiday season is not the usual type.  While many celebrate with wonderful traditions, fear has come to certain populations of the United States.

It's become a holiday tradition on my blog, when the Jewish holiday of Hanukah draws close, to blog about an annual museum in Binghamton, New York.

Hanukah House is located in a historic mansion now owned, and part of, Temple Concord.

Here is an outside picture.

During late November and into late December (days vary each year), Hanukah House operates as a museum dedicated to the Jewish holiday of Hanukah.  It's the Festival of Lights, a celebration of rebellion and religious freedom (and a miracle).  Each year its exhibits change.

Here are some of my previous posts.

From 2012

From 2015 

Would You Help a Neighbor? (from 2016)

And then there's this:  The Ordinary Nature of Evil (from 2016)

That was only the beginning, that ordinary nature of evil post.  Times have changed, my reader friends.

At one time you could just walk up to the door and open it, and walk into the museum/synagogue.

No more.

Now, the door to Hanukkah House is locked.  You have to ring a bell, and there is a security camera where the volunteers inside can view you, and decide if they will let you into the building.

Hatred has become so ordinary.  Someone with a gun, a car, a knife, could decide to put their hate into action at the mall, at your church, at your synagogue, at your mosque, at your local big box store, at your local TV station, at a concert, a movie, a grocery store, or even at an office Christmas party.

Just because.

It's so ironic that a woman whose dollhouses and dolls are part of Hanukkah House's exhibits was herself murdered in a mass shooting on April 3, 2009, in an adult classroom in Binghamton, New York.

We all pay the price of the haters among us.

Each and every day.

Even in a museum celebrating a fight for religious freedom.

11 comments:

  1. This makes me so sad and angry (the level of hate). Evil/hate is among us and I have to no idea how to stop it. I better stop while I am ahead... just know, I agree.

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  2. Hanukkah House is no different than any other synagogue in America ...we live in a changed world, and it makes me so sad.

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  3. That same type of security exists at our local Jewish Community Center. My massage therapist works there and if no one is coming out so I can walk in I often forget to push the buzzer and stand there like an idiot. Yes, it is scary.

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  4. Oh, my word, this is the best (worst) example of the tragedy that is happening all around us. Why do the haters have to hate? I simply don't understand.

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  5. This hatred that we see is so heartbreaking, but just know that there are also others like me who would do anything I could to help and protect. I just try to smother the hatred with kindness whenever possible.

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  6. I'd love to visit this museum one day. We keep both Christmas and Hanukkah at our house.

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  7. It gets harder, every day, to hold onto hope for the kind of country we're leaving to our children.

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  8. So sad. How the world has changed. Is it ever going back? I fear not.

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  9. Whoever interferes with Hanukah is no Christian, & if this Christian sees'm try it they will find out how hard it can be to get through a VERY INDIGNANT little old lady. Happy Hanukah to you & yours.

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  10. I hope that we're going through growing pains, and that soon we'll expell the haters and anger and get back to a world where kindness and trust are paramount.

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  11. The Jews are good people. I don't understand hating people for no reason.

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