05/20/2026
As we approach Shavuos, we enter a time of recommitment. We recommit ourselves to Torah, to mitzvos, and to our role as members of Klal Yisrael. But being part of a community is not only about what we receive. It is also about how we show up for one another.
Too often, we as a community operate in crisis-management mode. We wait until something becomes urgent, public, or impossible to ignore. Then we scramble to respond. But by then, real harm has already happened.
Prevention asks something different of us. It asks us to care before the crisis. To learn before the emergency. To create spaces where hard conversations are not seen as threats to the community, but as acts of protection for the community.
What does it mean to be part of a community?
It means we do not wait until someone’s pain becomes public before we take it seriously.
It means we make sure we have the knowledge and skills to help our neighbors and loved ones in some of the darkest moments of their lives.
It means we understand that silence does not make a community safer. Preparedness does.
We have to build communities where people are heard earlier. Where issues are addressed sooner. Where support is easier to find. Where education is not reactive, but routine.
When we do that, the issues people are advocating for will no longer need viral campaigns to get our attention. They will already be part of how we operate as a community.
And that is the kind of community we should all be working to build.