Each summer as students engage their assigned summer reading, my school's professional community (educators and staff) also have assigned reading.
This summer it's Beverly Daniel Tatum’s “Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria: And Other Conversations About Race.” I selected this book to read as a professional community in order to advance our crucial Inclusion & Anti-Bias initiative. It is essential that Jewish Community High School of the Bay fulfill its pluralistic mission by actively pursuing inclusion and teaching that bias is corrosive to our community. Respect for difference and pursuit of inclusion also are at the heart of this week’s Torah portion and echo through rabbinic literature.
In the Torah portion this week there is a serious leadership rebellion when Korach challenges Moses and Aaron. Korach claims to be speaking on behalf of the inherent equality among the three of them. But he fails to acknowledge the unique differences in their skills, abilities, relationships, and attitudes. As expressed by Rabbi Bradley Artson Shavit, “Korach’s flaw was to confuse equal worth with equal skills. Korach was threatened by diversity.”