By Rabbi David Cohen Special to OnMilwaukee Published Jan 18, 2018 at 5:02 PM

The opinions expressed in this piece do not necessarily reflect the opinions of OnMilwaukee.com, its advertisers or editorial staff.

On Jan. 17, Latino and Jewish leaders from Milwaukee joined with representatives of their national organizations in a news conference at the capitol in Washington, D.C. In addition to myself, the rabbi at Congregation Sinai in Fox Point, speakers included Elana Kahn, Director the Milwaukee Jewish Federation’s Jewish Community Relations Council and Darryl Morin, the President of LULAC (League of United Latin American Citizens), Wisconsin.

Here were my remarks:

The Biblical book of Joel describes a utopian, messianic future, a time when: "the old shall dream dreams and the youth shall see visions." (Joel, 2:28) Throughout human history, Dreamers have always pointed the way. As the Book of Proverbs puts it: "Without dreamers there is no vision; without vision the people perish." (Proverbs, 29:18)

The Dreamers here with us today are the promise of America’s future. Our moral obligations to them flow from the Torah’s value of human dignity. Created in God’s image, each and every human is of infinite value, each is utterly unique and each is co-equal to the other. We are commanded to love and care for those who lack power, the poor, the widow, the orphan and the stranger, to treat them with dignity and respect. "There shall be one law for both the native and stranger," says Leviticus (24:22). One standard for justice and compassion.

Yet, had the prophets never spoken, Jewish history would compel us to action. From the time of slavery in ancient Egypt through the DP camps of Europe to the gates of Ellis Island, we have been immigrants. At times a despised minority, we know all too well the fear and ill will that surround those who are different.

  • When we hear immigrants collectively described as rapists and murderers, we remember how our ancestors were accused of blood libels and poisoning wells. We know these accusers; we have faced them before.
  • When our elected leaders fan flames of fear into a firestorm of prejudice and hostility, we remember other demagogues who made the powerless scapegoats for all of society’s ills. We know these demagogues; we have heard their dog whistles before.
  • When bureaucrats separate family members, deporting some to countries where they know no one and don’t speak the language, we recall the Kindertransport and the selections at Auschwitz. We’ve stood before such soulless bureaucracies before.
  • When private prisons under contract to U.S. Immigration customs and enforcement violate federal anti-slavery law by forcing tens of thousands of immigrants to work for a dollar a day or, sometimes, nothing at all, we remember how wartime industrialists at IG Farben and Volkswagen once took advantage of such forced labor. We have seen such craven, immoral opportunists before.
  • When innocent children are held liable and punished for their parents’ choices, we see a violation of basic fairness. We have experienced such injustice before.

In the face of current attacks on human dignity, we can’t help but recall our own immigrant forebears, and reflect: "There but for an accident of history, Go I." In other words, A generation or two or three ago, it would have been me standing where you, today’s Dreamers, are standing.

If religious tradition demands our care and concern for the stranger, how much the more so should we care for those who have grown up in America practically their entire lives, especially, when we already have signaled their acceptance by establishing DACA and encouraging them to sign up.

Now is the time to make good on that promise and to vote for human dignity. In so doing, we will fulfill God’s expectations expressed in the book of Micah (6:8): that we will do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with God."

Rabbi David Cohen Special to OnMilwaukee

David B. Cohen is rabbi of Congregation Sinai in Milwaukee. A past president of the Wisconsin Council of Rabbis, Rabbi Cohen has served on numerous CCAR-URJ committees including a stint as co-chair of the reform movement’s Joint Commission on Life Long Jewish Learning. He is proud that Congregation Sinai was honored in years past with both a RAC Irving J. Fain Social Justice Award and a Belin Outreach award.  In his local work with immigration, he has partnered with Milwaukee’s JCRC, Voces de la Frontera, LULAC and “Never Again is Now.”

Rabbi Cohen was ordained at the Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion in New York. An honors graduate of Brandeis University, he also holds a masters degree in Education from Stanford University.  Rabbi Cohen has taught at Marquette University and is a Senior Rabbinic Fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem.

He is married and the father of two sets of adult twins.