Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Alan Mairson's avatar

My failure to (really) learn Hebrew takes a backseat to the failure of never being told the following -- something I stumbled upon in a book when I was 30+ years old:

In the land of Israel, “the Jews begin to live morally — as the Japanese have done literally — in a house of paper: the Bible....

Here, probably long before the Greeks, they achieved the intellectual feat of composing a connected narrative of history — their own and that of the world — enmeshed in the five books of Moses. Here, a national identity was defined, perhaps for the first time, by articulating a philosophy of history.

And here, the idea of progress was first broached. In its time it was an absolutely sensational idea. Thucydides still thought it was worth writing the history of the Peloponnesian war because its events inevitably would be repeated. The scribes and prophets of Jerusalem challenged the prevailing notion that history necessarily moved in circles, repeating itself again and again. They invented utopia, the possibility of a better world. They enunciated hope on a grand scale. They postulated the possibility of a linear progression toward a better, more worthwhile life.” (from Jerusalem: City of Mirrors, by Amos Elon)

If someone had explained this to me clearly when I was a teenager, I would have been far more enthusiastic about my Jewish education, faith, and practice.

Expand full comment
Brad Goverman's avatar

Bingo. You captured precisely both my experience and my feelings on what i considered "after school torture". I did learn to read Hebrew, and I do recall some pretty funny stories and early crushes from the small group of my fellow prisoners, so there were other redeeming benefits.

Expand full comment
9 more comments...

No posts