(JNS.org) The holiest day on the Jewish calendar isn’t among the 10 holiest days on the United Nations calendar. But Israel and many other countries hope that changes by the time next year’s Day of Atonement arrives.
In July, amid Israel’s summer war with Hamas and global anti-Israel protests, UN ambassadors from 32 countries wrote a letter to a UN General Assembly committee that urged the recognition of Yom Kippur (Oct. 3/4 this year) as an official UN holiday.
The UN currently marks ten holidays, including the Christian holidays Christmas and Good Friday as well as the Muslim holidays Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, but there is no Jewish holiday on that list.
The messages of Yom Kippur — that “every person’s deeds are weighed on the heavenly scales of justice and the blessings of the coming year are determined by the good deeds performed in the service of others” — are “universal” and as such deserve to be marked by the UN, the letter said.
The letter came in support of an Israeli initiative on the issue that was launched in May. Israeli ambassador to the UN Ron Prosor had sent his own a letter asking the 192 other U.N. envoys to join Israel’s campaign for the holiday’s recognition.
“It is about time Jewish employees at the U.N. won’t be obligated to work on Yom Kippur,” Prosor wrote. “Such discrimination at the U.N. must end,” he added.
Currently, the Israeli Permanent Mission to the UN is working within the UN’s vast bureaucracy to get Yom Kippur recognized.
“The issue of Yom Kippur is of a cultural/religious nature,” Yotam Goran, a diplomat who works for Israel’s UN mission, told JNS.org. “It can be an issue that bridges divisions and speaks to the universal values we all hold closely, including reconciliation, forgiveness, and tolerance. The hope is that these values will prevail and be heralded by all member states in the upcoming negotiations.”
Goran represents Israel on the UN Fifth Committee, which is the world body’s administrative and budgetary committee that decides on issues such as holidays. The committee begins deliberating on the Yom Kippur issue this month, with a possible decision coming by December. The matter will be voted on by all 193 UN member states.
Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, also believes that by recognizing Yom Kippur, the international community could take a step in the right direction. “Given the traditional hostility of the United Nations to Israel” as well as “the rise of anti-Semitism and [Israel] delegitimization efforts,” recognizing Yom Kippur at the UN would be a message “that the modern religion is recognized, and the role of Judaism among the world’s great religions would be enshrined by the United Nations by at least having one [official Jewish] holiday,” Hoenlein told JNS.org.
In a statement provided to JNS.org, the World Jewish Congress (WJC) also linked the Yom Kippur issue to UN bias, noting that Israel and Jews have been “subjected to many unjustified tirades and condemnations of dictators in the U.N. General Assembly Hall” and that Israel “is routinely singled out for blame in the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, which has repeatedly showed itself to be biased against the Jewish state.” Most recently, the UN Human Rights Council launched a probe into Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in Gaza, but no investigation of Hamas’s actions during the summer war.
“Adding Yom Kippur to the UN calendar of holidays would not only be an important demonstration of inclusiveness, but would send the message of hope for reconciliation among peoples and the betterment of mankind,” the WJC statement said.