His message of love — hopeful, expansive, humane — inspired genuine moral progress. It fostered hope that humanity might ultimately converge toward those ideals. In too many parts of the world, that expectation collided with societies that did not share those assumptions.
A Tisha B’Av Message: Will We Again Fail To Heed the Warnings?
Richard H. Schwartz
Tisha B’Av (the ninth day of the month of Av), which we commemorate this year beginning on the evening of July 17, reminds us that over 2,600 years ago Jews failed to heed the warnings of the prophet Jeremiah about the importance of changing their ways. That failure resulted in the destruction of the first Temple in Jerusalem, one of the many tragedies experienced by Jews on that day, including the later destruction of the second Temple.
Today there are no prophets like Jeremiah to issue warnings, but we are receiving increasingly dire warnings from climate scientists that now it is not just Jerusalem, but also the entire world that is threatened by climate change and its effects. We may be met with disastrous consequences unless we immediately reduce our enormous emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
While climate change is an existential threat, it has not received sufficient attention from most people, who are, in effect, “rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic, as we head toward a giant iceberg.”
When I hear of children or grandchildren getting married or of a baby being born, I wonder what kind of world we are passing on to the new couples and children who will have to cope with our rapidly warming world, with its rising oceans and increasingly severe climate events. This is especially relevant to me as I write this, since my wife and I moved to Israel almost five years ago and have since happily experienced the marriages of four grandchildren and the births of two great-grandchildren.
Here are nine important reasons why we should all be very concerned about climate change:
Given the above considerations, it is essential that we don’t repeat the mistake made by our ancestors who failed to heed Jeremiah’s warnings, but that we make averting a potential climate catastrophe a central focus of today’s efforts in order to leave an inhabitable world for future generations. Every aspect of life should be considered. We must shift to renewable forms of energy, improve our transportation systems, produce more efficient cars and other means of transportation, eliminate or at least significantly reduce our consumption of meat, and do everything else possible to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The future of humanity depends on whether we will heed the current widespread warnings and make positive changes now.
Richard H. Schwartz is a professor emeritus at College of Staten Island and author.
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