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All around the world, in preparation for the High Holy Days, Jews are doing the inner spiritual work right now of cheshbon hanefesh, or accounting of the soul. This typically entails examining ourselves for all our moral failures and ethical shortcomings and planning how we might do better in the new Jewish year to come.
This kind of practice isn't unique to the Jewish community. We all in one way or another look to improve ourselves and our actions, and sometimes we even succeed at it. As difficult as self-improvement is, even greater is the task of collective teshuva, or repentance. (The English word "repentance" often carries a heavy connotation. Teshuva in Hebrew describes more of a return. When we change our behavior for the better, we return toward our best, truest selves.)
On Yom Kippur, which this year begins on the evening of Sept. 24, the congregation all stands together and recites a confession that goes, "We have trespassed. We have betrayed. We have stolen; we have slandered." That list goes on and on and on, announcing that "we" have committed just about every offense imaginable. That leaves many of us asking: Why is everyone in the synagogue collectively admitting to sins that they for the most part did not commit?
Jewish or not, we all find ourselves asking the question: How do we make restitution for our complicity in injustices that were beyond our control? We all participate in a globally interconnected marketplace that relies on labor abuses. We're all, to one extent or another, complicit in historical injustices that we've indirectly benefited from. Even if an injustice was not our idea or initiated by our direct action, we are obligated to do what we can to fix it.
As Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel said, "In a free society, some are guilty, but all are responsible."
Many Americans experience the privilege that comes from both Christian nationalism and white supremacy. Directly or indirectly, we often benefit from ideologies and movements that press people down.