Rabbi Steven Abraham

Rabbi Steven Abraham at Beth El Synagogue in Omaha, NE

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The PTSD of the Jewish Soul

March 22, 2025

532 Days Since October 7

We live in a world where, for some Jews, time has stood still.

There are October 8th Jews—those who have been frozen in grief, in rage, in fear, since that dark morning 532 days ago. And there are Jews for whom October 7 never became a defining rupture. They mourned, maybe even protested, and then got back to life. They moved on—not out of malice, but out of habit. Maybe out of comfort. Maybe out of necessity.

I love them both—or at least I’m trying to.

This split we’re experiencing—it’s not religious. It’s not about denominations or prayer styles. And it’s not exactly political—though that line is already blurring and may become more visible in the years ahead.

No, this fracture is deeper. It’s spiritual. It’s emotional. It’s existential.

It’s about how one carries the burden of Jewish history in real time.

There’s something that now separates these two groups of Jews—and if we don’t face it, name it, and make space for its complexity, it may destroy us.

Because some of us woke up on October 8 and realized the world had changed—and so had we. We are not the same people. We no longer have the same patience. The same emotional bandwidth. The same ability to keep balancing everyone’s narratives.

The past 532 days have changed many of us in ways we may not even want to admit. Some of us have developed a kind of emotional triage. A spiritual PTSD. A narrowing of the heart—not from hatred or fear—but from sheer overload. We have only so many “cares” to go around.

And I find myself asking:

Has my character lessened because I can’t hold everything anymore?

Because I can’t carry both the hostages—dead or alive in Gaza’s tunnels—and still feel the same level of urgency about U.S. immigration policy, or about law firms being targeted for defending clients?

These are causes I still believe in. Things I still care about. Just not in the same way. Not with the same fire. Not right now.

Is something wrong with me? Or is this what spiritual exhaustion looks like?

I don’t think it’s apathy. It feels more like a forced recalibration. A narrowing of priorities to survive. And I need to own that—for myself. Because pretending otherwise doesn’t serve anyone.

My brain—and more importantly, my heart—no longer contains the same number of compartments.

There used to be more room in there. For nuance. For global empathy. For patient dialogue. I still believe in those things. I do. But something has shifted. October 7 didn’t just break something in Israel—it broke something in the Jewish soul. And we haven’t yet figured out how to name that pain, let alone how to heal it.

So we keep going. We scroll. We show up to synagogue—or we avoid it entirely. We argue about Zionism, or Hamas, or hashtags. We try to find someone to blame. But beneath it all, many of us are grieving something that has no clear funeral. We are mourning something sacred that we can’t yet articulate. And that grief comes out sideways—in judgment, in silence, in withdrawal, in rage.

And in the middle of all this, I have to say: my patience for screwing around with Jewish continuity is gone.

We know what works and we know what doesn’t. We know that strong Jewish identity doesn’t come from watered-down programming or generic messaging. We know that connection to Israel and Jewish peoplehood isn’t only built in college—it’s inherited and nurtured long before. We know that Jewish education is the key to our survival. And we know it will never be secured through branding campaigns or hashtags. It’s earned through depth, commitment, ritual, and love.

So if we’re going to play games—let’s just be honest about it. Let’s admit when we’re more interested in making ourselves feel better than actually changing anything. Let’s stop pretending that all paths lead to Jewish thriving when we know, deep down, that they don’t.

This moment is asking something different of us. Something harder. Something real.

The Jewish people are strong. Resilient. We’ve carried pain before. We’ve been fractured before. But right now, we need to carry each other—across this divide of grief and perspective.

Because what happens next in Jewish history isn’t only about what happens in Israel, or on college campuses, or in courtrooms.

It’s about what happens between us.

Whether we have the courage to stay in relationship with fellow Jews who see the world through different eyes.

Whether we can rebuild trust after feeling abandoned—or unseen.

Whether we can name our trauma without being trapped by it.

This is our task now.

To mourn. To witness. To rebuild.

To refuse to look away from each other.

Even when it’s hard. Especially when it’s hard.

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Steven Abraham currently serves as the Rabbi at Beth El Synagogue in Omaha, NE.

Copyright © 2025 · Rabbi Steven Abraham