My perspective on Jewish life, chinuch/parenting, psychology, social issues, health ...
Apr 25, 2012
Emotional Ties
R' Grylak of Mishpacha magazine tells the story about how, after the Holocaust, a community of survivors including his father-in-law formed in Milan. There was a Polish survivor from a chassidishe family who had given up religion after being in Auschwitz. One day, he announced that he was going to marry an Italian non-Jewish woman. The religious members of the community were appalled but none of their arguments were effective to dissuade him.
Then someone said, "How can you do such a thing?! Have you forgotten that you are the only living descendent of a beautiful family of Gerer Chassidim from Lodz?"
Now, what kind of reasoning was that when the man had dropped Yiddishkeit? And yet, this is what convinced him and he cancelled his marriage plans. It's like all those Jews who are not religious who are proud to let you know about their rabbinic ancestors. Why are they proud when they themselves aren't religious? Apparently there is something in their neshama that lets them know that this is worthy of admiration.
The lesson R' Grylak learns from this is that a person is kept from sin (and I would add - is inspired) only by what is relevant to him personally, what he is tied to emotionally. It's hard to capitalize on this insight because what is meaningful to one person is not to another. There are many ways people have been convinced not to marry out, and what worked for one is not a guaranteed approach for someone else. Likewise, for religious people, some love the structure of halacha, others love the mystical approach. There is a way to speak to every child and adult. One needs wisdom and siyata dishmaya to find it.
During the Spanish Inquisition, nearly 300,000 Jews were burnt at the stake by the auto de fe. The Spanish kept careful records. One of the items recorded was whether or not the person agreed to accept the Xtian deity in order to be killed by strangling rather than being burnt at the stake. The vast majority, at least 70%, did not agree to the last minute sham conversion and preferred the painful death rather than the sham conversion.
ReplyDeleteDaniel Pearl had married a non-Jewish woman but his last words were "I am a Jew."