Jewish Wisdom for the Next Time You’re Delayed in Secaucus
This week brought major news about the Gateway Project, the massive undertaking to modernize and expand the rail infrastructure between New Jersey and Manhattan. For those of us who live in this part of the world, this is hardly an abstract policy discussion. It is deeply personal. It is about children and grandchildren commuting to work, family members sitting on delayed NJ Transit trains, and the familiar frustration of hearing about signal problems, tunnel congestion, or yet another inexplicable delay somewhere between Secaucus and Penn Station. When completed, the Gateway Project promises something genuinely transformative: increased rail capacity, far greater reliability, and modernization of one of the most fragile transportation chokepoints in the United States. And yet there is one sobering reality: the full project will take another 20 years to complete. Some reading this Shabbat message may never see its final completion. That naturally raises a question. Why undertake ...