In 1902, Herzl wrote 'im tirtzu, ein zo agada; if you will it, it is no dream' (ok, so he
wrote it in German and Nachum Sokolov translated it into Hebrew). When he wrote these words, the idea
that he was contemplating, a national home for the Jewish people, was considered by most to be fantastical,
impossible, or downright ridiculous. And yet, even in the face of being told repeatedly that what he was working
toward was unachievable, Herzl did not give up. The power of this quote is not in saying that you should dream big.
It is in the fact that it requires you to will your dreams into existence. The second part is quoted far less
often, but its lesson is no less important: ve'im lo tirtzu, agada hi ve'agada
tisha'er'; and if you do not will it, a dream it is and a dream it shall remain.
Herzl’s dream of a Jewish homeland was realized with the creation of the modern state of Israel in 1948. And
today we dream of a homeland for the Jewish people and a homeland for the Palestinian people. We dream of peace. We
dream of a better future where Israeli children and Palestinian children do not grow up in conflict and are not
taught hatred, but rather live and flourish together.