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November 27, 2024
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Keshet Casarotti, left, and the invitation to the hachnasat sefer Torah.

A Special Brit Milah

On Simchat Torah, a brave officer who dashed off to rescue his Jewish brothers and sisters in Kibbutz Nir Oz, arrived too late to save the Kedem family.

This week, the officer (whose name I can’t share due to his position in the IDF), celebrated the brit milah of his son. He named the baby Kedem Tzuri, in memory of the family that perished at the hands of the Hamas terrorists.

Here is what the father wrote: “On Oct. 7 we broke into the houses in Kibbutz Nir Oz, but sadly, there were many we could not rescue.

“The first house we entered was that of the Kedem-Siman Tov family. Five pure souls were blotted out — an entire family was lost to our people.

“Now with the birth and naming of my son, I feel that I personally have come full circle. Kedem [east, in Hebrew] Tzuri [my rock or my God, in Hebrew] will forever fix his gaze towards the light that illuminates the skies each morning from the east, perpetuating the Kedem family name.”

The Kedem family, left, and newborn baby Kedem Tzuri.

A Sefer Torah Restored in Memory of Keshet Casarotti

Keshet Casarotti became one of the symbols of the Nova Festival. This is what his mother, Natalia, wrote to me:

“What does a left-wing kibbutznik like me have to do with a Torah dedication ceremony? It’s because of my son, Keshet. Keshet drew closer to Judaism during the last two years of his life. He put on tefillin, memorized the ten psalms of the Tikkun Klali, and tried to observe Shabbat.

“On the evening of Simchat Torah, October 6, 2023, Keshet danced in the streets of Tel Aviv, holding the Torah scroll from the Bnei David shul. Everyone who saw him that evening spoke of the light radiating from his face, the immense joy he exuded. Later on, Keshet went to the Nova Festival with Shani Louk, Orion Hernandez and other friends. They never returned.

“Over the past year, I’ve done various things in Keshet’s memory. Although I am staunchly secular, over the past year, I found myself lighting Shabbat candles, fasting on Yom Kippur for the first time in my life, and, most significantly, taking part in a project that takes damaged or invalid Torah scrolls, repairs and restores them, giving them new life.

“I connected with this project primarily from an ecological and ideological perspective—nothing is discarded; everything is repurposed. A Torah scroll that has lived a full life and served a community faithfully for decades is renewed and brought to a new home. This project is open to other bereaved families interested in this kind of commemoration.

“The cover for the Torah scroll is made of embroidered squares that I, along with an incredible group of women, sewed together in memory of Keshet. The wood for the atzei chayim (Torah rollers) comes from trees burned on the morning of October 7 in the Gaza-border communities.

So much symbolism, so much continuity, so much life within — and despite — the death.

“This week, the Torah scroll will be brought to the same synagogue in Tel Aviv where Keshet danced on Simchat Torah. I’ve never been to a Torah dedication ceremony before. From all the preparations, I understand it’s a big event.

“The journey I’ve gone through from the moment I chose to take part in this project until its completion has brought me closer to Keshet, and, in some way, also closer to my roots and to Judaism.

“Dear God, if I’m already drawing closer, please, send our people home! Release the hostages now, protect the soldiers, return everyone to their families — and make peace among us!”

* Translated by Yehoshua Siskin


Sivan Rahav Meir is a primetime news anchor with weekly broadcasts on television and radio. She lives in Jerusalem with her husband Yedidya and their five children.

Want to read more by Sivan Rahav Meir? Google The Daily Thought or visit sivanrahavmeir.com

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