Episode details

Radio 4,2 mins
In memory of Rabbi Lord Sacks. Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis - 09/11/2020
Thought for the DayAvailable for over a year
Very sadly, yesterday afternoon, we laid to his eternal rest my illustrious predecessor, Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, whom I had the privilege of working with for the past thirty years. He had a distinctive, familiar voice. It was a voice of clarity and erudition; a voice of hope and promise; a voice of tolerance and love; a voice of warmth and wisdom, interlaced with sensitivity and humour; a voice that will be profoundly missed by Thought for the Day listeners, by Jewish communities around the world and by all those right across the globe who found in him an invaluable guide who inspired faithfulness, moderation and compassion. The pain of his loss has been felt far and wide 鈥 the world will not be the same without the voice of Rabbi Sacks. Every year, coinciding with the anniversary of the death of Moses, we read the portion of the Bible which describes how he oversaw the building of the sanctuary, a home for God. Yet, astonishingly, his name is entirely absent from the text. God goes out of His way not to address Moses by name, even whilst he embarked on a most sacred task. There is a powerful message here about what constitutes a lasting legacy as opposed to fleeting fame. Legacy has nothing to do with one鈥檚 name and everything to do with one鈥檚 impact. Rabbi Sacks was widely acclaimed, but the measure of his greatness is in the countless lives he enriched as well as the timelessness of his wisdom. One of Rabbi Lord Sacks鈥 brilliant original thoughts relates to history, for which there is no word in the Hebrew Bible. Rather, the word 鈥榋achor鈥 is used, which means memory. He explained that history is 鈥榟is story鈥 鈥 an account by another person about events which happened to others. We recall it and study it, but we feel disconnected. Memory is quite different 鈥 we internalise it, carry it with us and make it a part of our future. Rabbi Sacks is now not only a part of our shared history. He will also live on in our collective memory. As ever, he himself put it perfectly: 鈥淢ortality,鈥 he said, 鈥渋s written into the human condition, but so too is the possibility of immortality, in the good we do that continues long after we are here, to beget further good. There are lives that defeat death and redeem existence from tragedy.鈥 It is from Rabbi Sacks鈥 own words that we can be certain that his remarkable voice will continue to be with us always.
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