Murray Katz
The Montreal Gazette
22 September 2007
Forty years ago in Montreal in a synagogue on Saint-Urbain Street, I last heard my father, a part-time cantor, sing the Yom Kippur service. Today, my youngest son, Peter, will sing on Yom Kippur before our synagogue a song he wrote titled Forgiveness.
The song was inspired by Michael Berg, the father of Nicholas Berg, who was beheaded in Iraq by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. When told of the subsequent death of Al-Zarqawi, Michael Berg expressed his regrets, saying that now there was another family who mourned the death of their son. Revenge, Michael Berg said, was not the way to “love in a wounded world.”
At first, Peter did not understand how this father could forgive his son’s killer. Then he became inspired to write a song in tribute to this father’s courage.
It is significant that Yom Kippur, the most sacred holiday in the Jewish religion, celebrates personal atonement for the harm we do to others.
How are we to respond in the face of the hatred that motivated Hitler and the Nazis, the 9/11 fundamentalists, and even Kimveer Gill, who one year ago shot and killed Anastasia DeSouza at Dawson College? How do we respond in our hearts?
Few might condemn us for demanding an eye for an eye: we do not have to forgive these people, ever; we decide whom and what to forgive. Michael Berg’s stance, and my son’s song, are saying that forgiveness is not about those who commit barbaric acts of hatred. It is about us and how we want to live our lives and who we want to be. It is about taking back control of the situation, control over how we respond to what others have done to us. Unlike the people who horribly wronged us out of their own blind, misguided hatred, we do not want to be filled with hate.
Forgiveness, perhaps, allows us not to be slaves to revenge and bitterness.
To view the complete article please go to
[http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/editorial/
story.html?id=5051f574-0d82-4251-af2f-7f1abd535903].
The song Forgiveness is part of the Daniel Pearl Music Days festival. The words and music were written and composed by Peter Katz. To hear the song and read the words, please go to [www.peterkatz.com].