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March 1996Israel's Family of MosesJudaic Togetherness and Caring Are Blessings In any CommunityBy Rabbi Forman Recently I asked parents of 12-year-old students, "What Jewish values were passed on to you from your family which you wish to pass on to your children?" The students, seated in a circle behind their parents, listened quietly as their parents responded. The students then moved into the inner circle to respond to this question as their parents took their place as listeners. The most striking aspect of this exchange, during which emotions were touched and tears evoked, was the tender and powerful memories of family life which parents shared. One father recalled the weekly Shabbat meal at his grandparents' home and the smell of fresh-baked hallah. One mother spoke about how her mother and aunts shared holiday celebrations, with each family being 'assigned' a particular holiday. Prior to the holiday, all four sisters would gather to prepare the traditional family foods and to ready the house for the gathering of family members from near and far. A few parents, children of Holocaust survivors, movingly spoke of how they did not have extended family because so many family members had been killed during the Holocaust. For them, the knowledge that their parents survived imbedded within them a special sensitivity to the preciousness of family and survival. Many of today's Jewish parents struggle to replicate the interwoven fabric of family and tradition of their childhood. No longer living in homogeneous neighborhoods with grandparents and other family members nearby, contemporary Jewish parents are themselves often times not well-educated Jewishly, nor are they completely comfortable with ritual and religious practice. Thus, they search for ways to recreate for themselves and their children a binding sense of family and Jewish identity. Certainly, Judaism has always been family centered, whether through childhood experiences or through images of Jewish families which have permeated American culture through literature, film and television. Judaism is often equated with family. While at times these images can become stereotypical, there is little doubt that the family, as Jewish family, is the central transmitter of values and identity to generations of Jews. How is this accomplished? Without entering into a long sociological discussion, I will attempt to present a few ways in which the family plays a unique role as the foundation of Jewish life.
The Shabbat In a traditional home where Shabbat is observed, the mood and rhythm of the family changes. There are no pressing matters to distract family members from attending to one another and to their sense of being together as a family on Erev Shabbat (Shabbat Eve). In some Jewish families, televisions are turned off, phones are not answered. The evening begins and ends with song. It is a festive, relaxed meal during which the concerns of the week slowly dissipate. Shabbat is a hallowed time. It is one way families can incorporate "family" time into their lives on a weekly basis.
Religious Family Festivals
Judaism's Family Charity Every family decides on where to contribute their tzedakah in different ways. Some families may count up their pennies, dimes and quarters every six months; others may attach their decisions to a particular anniversary or holiday celebration. What is educationally important about the presence of a tzedakah box in a family's home is two-fold: 1) children are taught from early on that giving is a central Jewish family value; that we think of others in our moments of joy and in our moments of sorrow, and 2) that children and parents have a chance to discuss together their family values and priorities and decide where to contribute their tzedakah monies.
Scriptural Guidance for Families Conversely, the Torah explicitly teaches in two places that a child is commanded to treat his or her parents with "honor and reverence" (Exodus 20:12 and Leviticus 19:3). Honor, in Hebrew called kavod, refers to the positive acts of care, such as providing food, clothing and shelter for elderly parents. These actions require emotional closeness and action. On the other hand, reverence, connoted by the Hebrew word yirah, refers to acts of self-restraint on behalf of the child, such as not embarrassing a parent, not arguing with a parent in public or speaking out of turn. Many commentators have considered the various questions and situations which arise from these obligations. The most common questions touch on the matter of what, if any, are the limits to these obligations. What is essential to note is that in Judaism, parents and children have a priori obligations to one another which, in good or bad times, hold the family together as a unit.
The Need for Family Education Margaret Mead, the famous social anthropologist, describes our contemporary society as a prefigurative culture in which adults learn from their children. In contradistinction, Mead describes the traditional society as a post-figurative religious community in which children learn primarily from adults, and where traditions are passed on from the elders. Today, in our attempt to strengthen families through family and parent education, we must attempt to return to a community in which adults and parents educate children, where tradition is truly passed down from one generation to the next and not visa versa.
The Challenges of Today Rabbi Lori Forman, ordained in 1988 at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, is a former principal of the West Side Jewish Community School of New York and is now inter-religious program specialist at the American Jewish Committee. Selected Bibliography: Bloom, Brad. Honor Thy Father and Thy Mother: The Scope of Filial Responsibility in Talmudic Literature. CCAR Journal, Winter, 1993; Bulka, Dr. Reuven. Jewish Divorce Ethics. London: Ivy League Press, 1992; Cohen, Steven M. and Paula E. Hyman. The Jewish Family: Myths and Reality. New York: Homes and Meier, 1989; Council of Jewish Federations. 1990 National Jewish Population Survey; Kraemer, David:, editor. The Jewish Family: Metaphor and Memory. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989; Linzer, Norman: The Jewish Family: Authority and Tradition. New York: Human Sciences Press, 1984; Strassfeld, Michael and Sharo, editors. The Second Jewish Catalog. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1976; Response: A Contemporary Jewish Review: The Family. Spring 1985 Vol. XIV, No. 4 (all articles in this issue are on family).
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