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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

The ordinary heroes we’ll remember this year

'Long after the pain of 2020 has faded into the background, the individual stories of human triumph over adversity, of personal selflessness and self-sacrifice that have emerged this year will remain strong.'

December 31, 2020 09:45
Sometimes the biggest heroes are ordinary people
3 min read

As we enter 2021 under the shadow of Tier 4, most of us find ourselves wanting to forget 2020 as quickly as possible. But this has also been a year when the strength of the human spirit has shone through. This has been a year of ordinary heroes.

Long after the pain of 2020 has faded into the background, the individual stories of human triumph over adversity, of personal selflessness and self-sacrifice that have emerged this year will remain strong. They will become stories that we will relate to our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Here are my personal heroes of 2020.

My first hero is my 88-year-old grandmother. Someone who always smiles and is always positive, but who also loves being with others. She became my hero when she had to spend both seder nights (and an entire three-day Yomtov) alone. We spoke to her endlessly before Yomtov, and those who lived nearby waved through the windows at her Jewish Care assisted living facility. What more could we do? But when we were finally able to phone her after Yom Tov, the pride we felt at still hearing the smile in her voice, at her own pride in saying that she kept Yomtov properly by herself, made the entire family feel that she was a true superstar. A real triumph over adversity, she is my hero of 2020.

My next hero is a barmitzvah boy who did not know whether he would be able to have a barmitzvah at all. Then, almost miraculously, on the very first day we were able to re-open the shul on July 4, he stood at the bimah completely by himself because of social-distancing requirements and read the entire sedra. Hearing him and his family say that all that mattered to them was for him to be called to the Torah in shul was extraordinarily moving. It made me realise that the party, the kiddush, the extensive guest lists have all receded into the background this year — and we have been left with what really counts. Watching the dignity, commitment and maturity of that young man made him another hero of my 2020.