The Merits ofInsightfulSpeechwriting
This term, I had the privilege of hearing our Year 6 public speaking finalists and theܱܲԳagony of having to choose justthreeto represent Carmel at the interschool speaking challenge at Scotch College.
The calibre of speeches, both in their content and delivery,was simply mind-blowing. The students researched their topics,learnt their speeches by heart sothat eventheir small cue cards were redundant, practised their expressions and honed their poise. Their speeches were entertaining, interesting andheart-warming.Teachingourstudents to be confident andablepublic speakers is yet another area weshine inat Carmel; perhaps itstems fromour emphasis on questioningandon making our students feel heard and valued that gives added oomph to the explicit teaching and preparation done by our wonderful teachers.What was extra special was seeing the classmates cheer each other on, truly happy for their friends’ successes.
Away to hone speechwriting skills is to read and study the great speeches of history.IHave aDreamby Martin Luther King,WeShallFight on the Beachesby Churchill,orOnceMore unto the Breachin Shakespeare’s HenryV,stir up emotion and passion, no matter how many times I read them.
I feel that the speeches given at the inauguration of the new, most diverse, IsraeliGovernment by both Naftali Bennettand Yair Lapid are also speeches of great importance. If you haven’t read them, I encourage you to print them out to read over Shabbat. The shameful heckling in the Knesset meant that Lapid did not havea chance to givehis speech, but the words are just as beautiful in written form. They are poignant, eloquent and contain so many important and wise sentiments for our people and our country:
One of the Haredi Knesset Members sent me a message just before Shabbat which said,“TheKotzkerRebbe defined the saying,‘Just as their faces are not the same, so their opinions are not the same’as meaning,‘Just as no person is angry that his friend has a different face, so no person should be angry at his friend’s different opinions.’And then he added:“Let us hope for days of common good.”
If theKotzkerRebbe had known his words would become a WhatsApp message full of good intentions between two Knesset Members, one Haredi and one secular, in a free and democratic Israel, then I think he would have been pleased. I believe he would have said to us,“Itcannot be that you do not see how close you are.”We have an argument between us over politics and values, but we are not enemies. We live here together. Our fate is intertwined.
Our fate too is intertwined with all Jewish people, with Israel and with each other here in Perth.
Back in 1986,wrote an insightful book entitled,about major tenets that the vast majority considered sacred and inviolable.
Among these major tenets common to religious and nonreligious Jews alike,he listed “unity of the Jewish people,” “mutual responsibility,” “the centrality of the state of Israel” and “Jewish survival.” These core beliefs, he argued, bound Jews together.
Our calling is to embrace that interconnectedness, revel in our joint responsibility and stride forward on the common ground we so deeply cherish.
May the new government lead our country and our people with integrity and wisdom.
Am Yisrael Chai.
Shabbat Shalom,
Shula
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