Apr 15, 2021 By: yunews


Reflecting on the historic visit to Dubai, Rabbi Berman described the feeling during the Holocaust Remembrance Commemoration as one that was not “simply of coexistence and tolerance but of reuniting members of a family. The economic and technological benefits of the Abraham Accords are no doubt important to current strategic alliances. But the opportunity of the coming together of two faiths, in friendship, holds possibilities unseen for millennia. This opportunity calls for attention and investments in areas like education that humanizes and enriches people’s understanding of one another.”
In a letter to the Yeshiva University community following his return from Dubai, Rabbi Berman shared the following thought: “As the Yom HaShoah program drew to a close, a memorial prayer for victims of the Holocaust was being recited by a rabbi in Arabic, when suddenly a muezzin’s call to prayer could be heard from a nearby tower. Both hymns remained distinct, but there was a certain touch of harmony and history to them being sung simultaneously. Perhaps a fitting metaphor for the possibilities that rest ahead.”