Vol. 10, Issue 1                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Click for Print Version    Blessing                            and Atonement:  Blessings,                            Honoring Parents, Atonement and Closeness   Dr. Einat                            Ramon       If we stop a moment to think back and                            ask ourselves how our Jewish identity has been formed                            by our individual experience, what has influenced us                            to keep the tradition of our ancestors, and in rare                            cases to join the Jewish people in order to become                            part of its national and religious life - in most                            cases, we probably will recall childhood memories of                            our parents, who guided us to continue in their way of                            life. Perhaps it was family Shabbat excursions, prayer                            services, or the Shabbat meals; perhaps it was                            discussions on Jewish identity or the Seder table. We                            each have our own childhood memory, distant or                            recent.     Jewish                            children in 19th or 20th century                            Europe (many of whom were not in synagogue on the High                            Holidays) must have been spiritually nourished by the                            emotionally charged blessing they received on Yom                            Kippur Eve from parents or grandparents, who placed                            their trembling hands on the child's head and blessed                            him or her through tears. The memory of this moving                            moment, which does not contain the content of the                            personal blessing, has been aptly described by                            Yehezkel Kotik (of Kamentz-Litovsk, in the Province of                            Grodno, 1847-1921), a Jewish intellectual with Hasidic                            roots:   Grandfather                            began to bless the children on one side of the room,                            Grandmother on the other. He would call each child by                            name, in order: first the older sons, daughters and                            daughters-in-law, followed by his daughters'                            daughters... Even newborn infants were brought to be                            blessed. Grandfather started by blessing the males,                            from the eldest to the two-week old babe resting on a                            cushion carried by his mother. He would place his                            hands on the child's head and bless him. Then he                            blessed the women, also according to order of                            age. As he gave                            his blessing, Grandfather would weep bitterly, a                            sobbing that could melt stone. Everyone, of every age,                            of course cried with him. The air carried a mix of                            crying sounds, low and shrill.  An                            outside observer could well think that the city had                            been destroyed. As soon as                            he finished, all moved to Grandmother to receive her                            blessing. She also cried, but quietly. She would lay                            her gaunt hand on the child's head and the tears would                            silently flow.... The blessing ceremony would take                            more than two hours. i   Bella                            Chagall, the wife of painter Marc Chagall, describes                            the scene from her family, members of the Habad                            Hasidim:   The                            parents placed their hands on each child's head and                            blessed them.  Even the older                            children seemed small under the spread palms of the                            parents' hands on their heads. I, the youngest, was                            last. Father, his eyes downcast, placed his hand on my                            head, and the tears immediately came to my eyes. I                            could hardly hear his words - his voice was by then                            hoarse. I felt as                            if I were set on fire by the wax candle made by my                            mother, and purified. I left the circle of fire formed                            by his burning hands, giving light as he blessed me,                            and I moved under my mother's                             anxious hand. Here I                            relaxed somewhat. I felt closer to her tears. I heard                            her simple and heartfelt prayers, and I did not wish                            to remove myself from under her hands.                             When she finished her murmured blessings, I                            immediately felt a chill.ii   What has                            happened to this beautiful and moving tradition? Why                            do the guides to holiday observance written for                            non-Orthodox Jews omit this custom? How is it                            described in Orthodox guides? Former Ashkenazic Chief                            Rabbi Yisrael M. Lau (1978, 1988) writes in his book                            Practical Judaism:   It is                            customary before leaving for synagogue for the head of                            the family to bless his children, each separately,                            according to the birkat                            habanim.iii   It seems,                            then, that this rare and instructive custom of parents                            blessing their children has waned over the years.                            Orthodox rabbis have turned it into a purely technical                            matter, and secular researchers of Jewish tradition                            have dismissed it altogether. Both have removed any                            educational and philosophical significance from this                            custom, and the opportunity for a gentle, loving                            message to the child about the values and life we wish                            for him or her has been lost. How has this                            occurred?   It may be                            that the reason for the disappearance of this magical                            moment of a personal blessing to the children is to be                            found not in theological leanings, for even an atheist                            can freely take part in it, but rather in the loss of                            parental authority in a culture that celebrates                            revolution. This hundred-year old trend crosses                            cultures and borders, but commonly involves a lack of                            belief on the part of parents that they have anything                            of value to transmit to their children, and the                            children seek neither guidance nor a blessing from                            their parents.  This rebellion                            perhaps began in the 1960's, or could be rooted in the                            socialist-nationalist revolutions that took place in                            the late 19th century. At the start,                            children rebelled against parents; but parents                            subsequently stopped believing in the need to guide                            their children.  A riveting                            depiction of this rift is to be found in the memoirs                            of the Israeli secular journalist Neri Livneh, writing                            about her memory of Rosh Hashanah Eve in the year                            5768:   My father,                            donned in a blue satin kippa with pronounced                            creases indicating its fresh exit from the package,                            and a creaseless white shirt, sat alone at the teak                            dining room table situated in the 'lithall,'...looking                            sad despite his festive clothes and kippa that                            so rarely adorned his head. In the                            next room, called the 'salon,' sitting on the sofa                            bed, were his two children - my elder brother and me.                            My mother, with an accusing look, bounced back and                            forth between the table in the hall and the armchair                            in the salon that faced the Grundig television. My                            14-year old brother, at the height of his rebellion                            against our parents, resisted what he termed their                            religious coercion and hypocrisy. He had already, a                            week earlier, announced his unwillingnes to sit at a                            holiday table at which any words of Jewish text were                            to be recited. I, ten years old, blindly followed him                            like a fool. That is                            why, that year, my parents were forced to refuse the                            customary invitation from our relatives on the kibbutz                            to join them for the holiday meal, depriving my                            grandparents of the chance they so eagerly anticipated                            to spend the holiday with their daughter. We stayed                            home in our municpal workers' apartment, because of                            the principles of a fanatic anti-religious charismatic                            14 -year old, who turned the holiday into a complete                            disaster for our father, descendent of a haredi                            family... Evading                            family holiday celebrations became a sport for me and                            for my friends. Once I even hosted a holiday meal for                            all my friends who, like me, employed manipulations or                            outright lies in order to escape from celebrating the                            hoidays with their own families, calling themselves                            "orphans by choice." We thought we were so original,                            witty and true to ourselves. I didn't realize that one                            day it would be too late. Everyone                            is mortal, but no one truly believes that one's                            parents, and the foundations that were in place when                            one came into the world, are transient. Neither can                            one imagine how it feels to be orphaned, whatever                            one's age, until it happens.iv   This                            phenomenon is summarized by the writer and                            psychologist Wendy Mogel of Los Angeles in her book,                            The Blessing of a Skinned Knee                            (2001). The book describes a girl                            who shows disdain towards her elder relatives. Her                            parents regret this but are unwilling to restrain her.                            Mogel writes: "I recalled the protest buttons and                            T-shirts from the 1960's and early 1970's that sported                            the maxims 'Question authority' and 'Don't trust                            anyone over 30.'"  Here were two                            parents well past 30, but whose political philosophy                            was destroying their family                            life.v   The                            American sociologist Christopher Lasch, in his book                            Haven in a Heartless World (1977), explains                            that the disconnect between authority and love in the                            parent-older child relationship has caused parents to                            accept their own irrelevance, as if parenting is an                            obsolete institution.vi   Is the                            trivialization, even the negation, of the parental                            blessing on Yom Kippur Eve derived from the rebellion                            against authority that has turned us all into                            perpetual youths because we fear to be adults? What is                            required in order for parents and grandparents to                            spread their canopy of hopes and dreams over the                            younger generation and inspire them with their                            blessings? The tradition teaches that it is the young                            who must seek their elder's blessing.                                In Jewish                            tradition, it is our cousin Esau whom the                            midrash praises for honoring his parents in an                            exemplary fashion. Although portrayed in other                            midrashim as the archetype hater of Israel, the                            Book of Genesis teaches us only that even without the                            loss of his birthright, Esau could not have merited to                            lead the monotheistic religion in the face of social                            pressure that supported idol worship.                             Instead, Jacob was endowed with the strength of                            character to fulfill that mission, entitling him to                            the birthright. Yet, the Rabbis taught that in the                            area of respect for parents, Esau was unparalleled. It                            is he who teaches us  excellence in                            the fulfillment of this mitzva. The following midrash                            in Tanhuma describes him thus:   Come and                            see, how delightful the mitzva of honoring parents is                            to the Holy One Blessed be He, who rewards both the                            righteous and the wicked for fulfillment of this                            mitzva. Esau the wicked was thus rewarded; after Isaac                            blessed Jacob, and 'Esau lifted up his voice and wept'                            (Gen. 27:38).... God rewarded him for honoring his                            father. How much greater is the reward for one who                            honors his parents and fulfills other mitzvot as well.                            (Tanhuma Kedoshim 15).                                The writer                            S.Y. Agnon sums it up as follows: "A person should                            always seek a blessing from his/her father and mother                            and especially on Yom Kippur Eve. Come and learn of                            Esau's reward for crying out (Genesis 27), 'Bless me,                            too, my father,' and God granted him peace of mind."                            vii   As the New                            Year approaches we are left asking ourselves whether                            we will learn to inspire our children with our                            blessing, and, if our parents are still alive, to ask                            them for their blessing before they are taken from us;                            a blessing that is as a thread that links the                            generations and binds us together in one Jewish human                            fabric.   Shana                            tova and                            g'mar hatima tova, may we merit a good year and be                            inscribed in the Book of Life.   Dr. Einat                            Ramon teaches                            modern Jewish thought and literature and Jewish                            feminism at the Schechter Institute of Jewish                            Studies.     i David Asaf, ed., What                            I Saw: Memoirs of Yehezkel Kotik (1847-1921),                            2009, Ben Yehuda Project,  http://www.benyehuda.org/kotik/ch14.html    ii Bella Chagall, Lit                            Candles, Tel Aviv: Dvir Publishers, 1970, p.                            67   iii Rabbi Y.M. Lau,                            Practical Judaism, Shaul Meislich, ed., Tel                            Aviv: Masada, p. 208   iv "The Season of                            Orphanhood," Neri Livneh, Ha'aretz, Rosh                            Hashanah Eve 5768   v Wendy Mogel, PhD., The                            Blessings of a Skinned Knee, New York, Penguin                            Compass, 2001, p.68   vi                            Christopher Lasch, Haven in a Heartless World: The                            Family Besieged, New York: W.W.Norton                            & Company, 1977, pp. 174-175 vii                            S.Y. Agnon, Yamim Noraim (Hebrew), Jerusalem                            and Tel Aviv, 1979, p. 245.       
   From: schechternews@schechter.ac.il
To: alanjayg46@aol.com
Sent:    9/18/2011 1:52:04 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Blessings, Honoring    Parents, Atonement and Closeness          
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 Schechter                            Institute of Jewish Studies: A Graduate                            School for Israeli Educators, where 600 students learn                            Jewish studies within a pluralistic                            environment 
 Schechter                            Rabbinical Seminary which trains                            Conservative/Masorti rabbis in Israel 
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