A woman described her grandmother, a Holocaust survivor who was the only survivor of a very large family. She had one child who died at age 40:
"My grandmother is very bitter about losing her entire family in the Holocaust and then her only child dying. She often talks about her father who was a great talmid chacham. She is very angry at Hashem. She keeps Shabbos and a strictly kosher home. She goes to shul every Shabbos but does not daven. She says, 'I can't get myself to praise Hashem after what happened to me, so I say nothing.' She says, 'I don't bentch. If I were to thank Hashem for the food, I also must scold Him for what He did.'"
What an amazing approach to life! It's like what they teach kallos, that even when upset with your husband, the routine of life must go on. There is supper and mikva. This woman has a genuine relationship with Hashem and she is mad at Him. She stills keeps Shabbos and kosher and even goes to shul, but to praise Him? That's going too far.
I'd love for her to speak to disenfranchised teens and adults and tell them about her life and her attitude toward serving Hashem. Perhaps all those who walk away from Shabbos and kashrus will be touched by her story and ashamed when they compare their grievances to the life this woman has led, and hear how she still maintains the routine of Jewish life, because - just because you're upset, doesn't mean you walk away from it all.
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