By Betzy Lynch in La Jolla, California

Dear Muslim Neighbor,
Thousands of years ago, in a story held as history, sacred memory, and inherited narrative, our traditions begin in the same household.
Abraham. Sarah. Hagar. Isaac. Ishmael.
For Jews and Muslims alike, this is more than biblical story. It is part of how we understand ancestry, inheritance, fracture, and belonging.
Sarah, unable to bear the child she longed for, turned to Hagar. Hagar carried life where Sarah could not. Then when Isaac was born, joy and jealousy, love and fear, promise and pain became tangled inside one family.
And so, Abraham, with no simple path forward, sent Hagar and Ishmael into the wilderness.
Whether read as history, sacred story, or inherited memory, what remains is ache.
Two mothers. A father. Two sons. One family. A separation.
Perhaps that is where our story began.
Cousins.
Born from one household, then carried onto very different roads, sometimes parallel, sometimes adjacent, sometimes intersecting, and often worlds apart.
This week in San Diego, we were met with another adjacent moment.
A mosque. A sacred place. Prayer interrupted by violence.
And for many Jews, grief has memory.
It took us back to Michigan. To Washington. To Pittsburgh. To Poway, right here at home.
Different buildings. Different prayers. The same desecration.
I wanted to show up for you.
Not as a political voice. Not as an argument. Only as a neighbor.
I wanted to hold your grief and say: we know something of what it means when sacred spaces become targets.
But I knew I was not welcome.
And that carried its own grief.
On some level, I understand why.
The Middle East does not remain in the Middle East. Our histories, our fears, our families, and our pain travel with us. War and memory cross oceans. There is no full separation between there and here.
And yet there is no honest way to pretend we are the same.
We are not.
Jew and Muslim. Israeli and Palestinian. American and Middle Eastern.
Cousins, perhaps. But not interchangeable.
Our histories are different. Our grief is different. Our truths are often painfully different.
Still, what pains me most is not only that we are strangers.
It is that we are so often cast as enemies.
By history. By politics. By war. By inherited fear.
Perhaps peace does not begin by asking us to become family again.
Perhaps it begins more humbly.
Can we move from enemies to strangers? And from strangers to neighbors?
A Jewish teaching says: “In a place where there are no human beings, strive to be human.”
Perhaps this is such a place.
A place where grief often arrives carrying politics. Where fear becomes distance. Where history hardens into suspicion.
And still, we are asked to remain human.
Because if harm is to change, our thinking must change.
Not softer thinking. Braver thinking.
Thinking that grief is not a competition. Thinking that truth matters more than conspiracy. Thinking that difference does not require distance.
And that kind of courage requires strength.
My tradition teaches: “Who is strong?” “One who conquers their inclination.”
Perhaps strength now is resisting the instinct to dehumanize. To refuse collective blame.
To name Islamophobia for the fear and dehumanization that turns neighbors into threats.
To name antisemitism for the ancient and evolving hatred that continues to cast Jews as outsiders, conspirators, and enemies.
To remain honest without becoming hardened.
We may never be the same.
But perhaps we do not have to remain enemies, making both of our communities less safe.
So, I ask for something small, but sacred:
Can we begin there?
From enemy. To stranger. To neighbor.
From my JCC to your mosque.
With ache. With honesty. With difference.
And still, with hope.
*
Betzy Lynch is the CEO of the Lawrence Family JCC.
Hi Betzy,
I’ve liked your suggestion and I know from experience that it’s practical. I was born and raised in Uganda and we have quite a big Muslim community living amicably alongside us Christians. Some families like my aunt’s, have Christian and Muslim step siblings living together. Growing up, we had neighbors that were Muslims but were closer to us than our Christian neighbors. The parents immigrated from Tanzania. Our mother and the Muslim mother were like sisters. We celebrated birthdays together, we shared meals on Christian and Muslim holidays, they attended all our weddings but also shared our grief by attending our relatives’ funerals and we did too. One time my mother travelled to Tanzania for a funeral.
This I believe happened with many Christians and Muslim neighbors. One time I deposited money on an item that I was supposed to pick up after a few days and when I went to pick it up, the seller didn’t have the item but then refused to refund the deposit. The nearby central police station failed to help but one of the officers referred me to the chairman of that business community. I went to him and I could tell that he was a Muslim because of the mark on his forehead and his clothing. I showed him the receipt and he immediately got up and walked to the man and demanded that he refunds my money. After the man refunded, the Muslim chairman checked the note to make sure that it was genuine and then he let me leave.
Unfortunately, that peaceful coexistence is slowly changing. About a decade ago, we had a terrible terrorist attack in which my cousin died and recently I read a sad report of a man in Eastern Uganda, who had been proselytized to Christianity had his hands chopped off by his own brothers with their father’s approval! There’s also a bill that is intended to establish khadi courts as part of the justice system.
So, my take is that I believe that there’s those Muslims whose hearts have been hardened like pharoah in the book so Exodus so that they can get the wrath of our GOD (Romans 9:17-22)
Such Muslim are increasing in number and unfortunately many hapless Americans and Europeans are sympathizing with them. But Romans 12:19 assures us that vengeance belongs to the Lord and He will repay.
My encouragement to you Jews and us Christians is that we should continue to pursue peace, serve our communities regardless and also pray to the Almighty, Who is just. He is not aloof to all that is happening but is merciful and is giving an opportunity for everyone to repent and believe His Messiah whom He sent before He comes with vengeance. And who can withstand it?