Archbishop: hopes and prayers at the start of the Jewish New
Year
News from the
Archbishop of Canterbury - 11 September 2007
The Archbishop
of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has sent a greeting to
Jewish Communities at the start of the festival of Rosh
Hashanah, marking the start of the Jewish New Year.
His greeting
touches on the themes of covenant and renewal, expresses the
hope that the pressures on Jewish communities including
anti-semitism and pressure arising from international
tensions may alleviate. He also hopes and prays for the
return of three Israeli soldiers abducted last year.
The full text
of the greeting is below:
I am writing at
this beginning of a new year for Jewish communities in this
country and around the world, to offer you my warmest wishes
for a good year ahead and for one in which our personal and
community relationships will be further strengthened and
deepened. The festival of Rosh Hashanah and the solemnities
of the High Holy Days through to the Day of Atonement which
follow, have a strong resonance for Christian communities
who share the same scriptural heritage.
During these
days Jewish families and communities will come together, as
they have done for millennia, to pray and to renew a
profound commitment to the foundational values of the life
of faith in God. The renewal, year by year, of this grateful
commitment to God’s calling and covenant is the wellspring
of that intense vision of justice, mercy and mutual respect
that is so central a dimension of the many gifts Judaism has
given to the world.
I sincerely
hope that all that may have marred the year past – a rising
level of anti-semitic incidents and the anxieties and
insecurities arising from conflict in the Middle East – will
be alleviated in the coming year. I particularly hope and
pray for the return of Gilad Shalit, Ehud Goldwasser and
Eldad Regev to their families.
May the year
ahead indeed be one which includes sweetness in our
relations and for our country.
Rowan CANTUAR;
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