In the beginning of September, thousands of children marched off to their first day of school. We are blessed to call this our “popcorn” year, with four grandchildren starting first grade.
But I didn’t post their photos on Facebook or Instagram. I didn’t WhatsApp them to any groups, beyond our family.
Because I know that, the world over, there are thousands of people, women and men, who watch these children marching off to school and a knife pierces their heart. Do we also have to shove it in their faces on social media?
This is a shout-out to my friends who are not blessed with biological or adopted children; some may yet know that bleSsing.
This is a shout-out to my friends who are not blessed with biological or adopted children; some may yet know that blessing. Others may not. Yet all of them have spiritual children, who have learned from them or been influenced by them in some way. Perhaps in a classroom, perhaps in another framework, or perhaps they have read a book or seen a film, a play, or heard a song, or witnessed acts of great kindness, by someone, that changed their life forever.
In honor of those friends, I share here an excerpt from the conclusion to my M.A. thesis that I wrote for Bar Ilan University in 2011, “Performing Ruth: Dramatic Exegesis in Religious Women’s Theater Groups, With an emphasis on the character of Naomi,” under the superb mentorship of Professor Susan Handelman.
I also had the privilege of studying under the late biblical scholar, Professor Nehama Leibowitz, in the late 1960’s. “Nehama,” as she was called, had thousands of students — hundreds of thousands probably, including those who read her books — yet she had no biological children. I include her ideas in this excerpt:
I believe that part of the message in Megillat Ruth lies in the fact that Oved is not really of the flesh and blood of Naomi and Elimelech.
What this indicates is that what we leave behind in this world, what we give to this world, is not just a matter of biology. Naomi is a facilitator; no magic in the world will turn her into the mother or grandmother of Oved, who engenders the Davidic line leading to the Messiah.
Like Job, Naomi – by extension – achieves a new family of sorts, but they can never replace the loved ones she has lost, just as the Jewish people, after pogroms, the Shoah, or terror, move on with spirit and create new families, but those who they have lost are not forgotten. They will always be backstage. The underpinning of sorrow remains.
What is the role of the mother-facilitator?
Nehama Leibowitz cites the Akedat Yitzhak, a commentator who explains the reasons for Eve having two names –“Isha” (woman) and “Hava” (Eve), the “Isha” referring to her ability “to understand and become wise with words of intelligence and kindness” and the “Hava” referring to her biologically giving “life” (being the “eim kol hai” – mother of all living) to children, which the Akadat Yitzhak calls “the lesser of the two roles.” Or, as it says in Sifrei Ve’Ethanan, “You are children to the Lord your God” (Devarim 14:1), means that “[Your] students are called [your] children.”
The idea of “children” is an egocentric one according to the Lebanese Christian author Khalil Gibran, who wrote in “The Prophet,” “They come through you but not from you.”
We are all merely facilitators, whether biological, spiritual, intellectual or national…
The message of Naomi is that, whether her goal is to facilitate the achieving of personal resolution, tribal resolution, religious resolution or family coexistence, life is extremely imperfect and challenging, and the goal of the individual must be to overcome adversity and sorrow to achieve meaning for himself and for others, whoever those others are.
A different mother figure was that of Deborah, who also had no children, but who was called “Eim b’Yisrael” (“Mother in Israel”). Her persona was one of … national action, leadership and victory.
Are the mothers of Israel today Naomi’s or are they Deborah’s? Perhaps both.
May this be a sweet, healthy and joyful year for us all. G’mar tov and hag sameah.
Toby Klein Greenwald is an award-winning journalist, director of the biblical Raise Your Spirits Theatre, and editor-in-chief of WholeFamily.com
The First Day of School
Toby Klein Greenwald
In the beginning of September, thousands of children marched off to their first day of school. We are blessed to call this our “popcorn” year, with four grandchildren starting first grade.
But I didn’t post their photos on Facebook or Instagram. I didn’t WhatsApp them to any groups, beyond our family.
Because I know that, the world over, there are thousands of people, women and men, who watch these children marching off to school and a knife pierces their heart. Do we also have to shove it in their faces on social media?
This is a shout-out to my friends who are not blessed with biological or adopted children; some may yet know that blessing. Others may not. Yet all of them have spiritual children, who have learned from them or been influenced by them in some way. Perhaps in a classroom, perhaps in another framework, or perhaps they have read a book or seen a film, a play, or heard a song, or witnessed acts of great kindness, by someone, that changed their life forever.
In honor of those friends, I share here an excerpt from the conclusion to my M.A. thesis that I wrote for Bar Ilan University in 2011, “Performing Ruth: Dramatic Exegesis in Religious Women’s Theater Groups, With an emphasis on the character of Naomi,” under the superb mentorship of Professor Susan Handelman.
I also had the privilege of studying under the late biblical scholar, Professor Nehama Leibowitz, in the late 1960’s. “Nehama,” as she was called, had thousands of students — hundreds of thousands probably, including those who read her books — yet she had no biological children. I include her ideas in this excerpt:
I believe that part of the message in Megillat Ruth lies in the fact that Oved is not really of the flesh and blood of Naomi and Elimelech.
What this indicates is that what we leave behind in this world, what we give to this world, is not just a matter of biology. Naomi is a facilitator; no magic in the world will turn her into the mother or grandmother of Oved, who engenders the Davidic line leading to the Messiah.
Like Job, Naomi – by extension – achieves a new family of sorts, but they can never replace the loved ones she has lost, just as the Jewish people, after pogroms, the Shoah, or terror, move on with spirit and create new families, but those who they have lost are not forgotten. They will always be backstage. The underpinning of sorrow remains.
What is the role of the mother-facilitator?
Nehama Leibowitz cites the Akedat Yitzhak, a commentator who explains the reasons for Eve having two names –“Isha” (woman) and “Hava” (Eve), the “Isha” referring to her ability “to understand and become wise with words of intelligence and kindness” and the “Hava” referring to her biologically giving “life” (being the “eim kol hai” – mother of all living) to children, which the Akadat Yitzhak calls “the lesser of the two roles.” Or, as it says in Sifrei Ve’Ethanan, “You are children to the Lord your God” (Devarim 14:1), means that “[Your] students are called [your] children.”
The idea of “children” is an egocentric one according to the Lebanese Christian author Khalil Gibran, who wrote in “The Prophet,” “They come through you but not from you.”
We are all merely facilitators, whether biological, spiritual, intellectual or national…
The message of Naomi is that, whether her goal is to facilitate the achieving of personal resolution, tribal resolution, religious resolution or family coexistence, life is extremely imperfect and challenging, and the goal of the individual must be to overcome adversity and sorrow to achieve meaning for himself and for others, whoever those others are.
A different mother figure was that of Deborah, who also had no children, but who was called “Eim b’Yisrael” (“Mother in Israel”). Her persona was one of … national action, leadership and victory.
Are the mothers of Israel today Naomi’s or are they Deborah’s? Perhaps both.
May this be a sweet, healthy and joyful year for us all. G’mar tov and hag sameah.
Toby Klein Greenwald is an award-winning journalist, director of the biblical Raise Your Spirits Theatre, and editor-in-chief of WholeFamily.com
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
Calling All People of Principle
An Israeli Soldier’s Suicide Reminds Us of the Survivor’s Guilt So Many Carry
We’re Allowing Jew-Haters to Define American Jewry and Distance Us From America
There’s Always a Jewish Party Around the Corner – A poem for Parsha Re’eh
If I Had Lived: Anne Frank on Why Israel Must Always Defend the Jewish People
A Bisl Torah — A Dusty Soul
Family of Israeli Hostage Pleads with Red Cross for Urgent Aid
According to Health Team of the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the hostages have lost “a dangerous amount of weight.”
Undivine Unconsciousness
A Moment in Time: “The Sun Rises, and the Sun Sets”
My First-Ever First Place: Honored at the 67th Southern California Journalism Awards
Can “Dude Be Nice” Become the World’s Hottest Slogan?
“Just do it” certainly permeated the culture and became one of the most famous slogans in history. But Nike never told us what “it” was.
Jeremy Kneller Hernandez: Deli Nostalgia, Culture and Knish
Taste Buds with Deb – Episode 121
France, Antisemitism and Dr. Seuss
The best way to honor Ilan’s memory is both to condemn those who desecrated his memorial, and to stand up against all those who commit anti-Jewish atrocities.
Fighting Antisemitism by Reclaiming the American Jewish Story
The Jewish story is so consequential precisely because it is inseparable from the American story. If Jews need America, America also needs the Jews.
Los Angeles Couple Launches Nationwide Fellowship for Jewish Journalism
Ten journalists will receive cash stipends and guidance from prolific figures in the media world.
The Denial Disease
Antisemitism in this new digital age where information is readily available, but all too often falsified, is a disease largely about denial.
My Biggest Life Lesson About Money
There’s a phenomenon in psychology called the “endowment effect”—people will value things more when they have paid for them.
‘Are Cabinet Ministers Not Playing Into Hamas’s Hands?’ Hostage Father Asks
Demonstrators filled Hostages Square and major intersections, channeling grief and anger into a strike that drew support from political leaders and celebrities
All Eyes on Alaska: Why Trump is Hardly a Shrewd Negotiator
Although Trump holds a significantly stronger hand as leader of the free world, he squandered much of that leverage by showing how eager he is to make a deal and win the Nobel Peace prize.
Esti Kohen, Local Child Who Suffered Severe Burns, Honored by Chai Lifeline
Even though Esti still has more surgeries and treatments to undergo, the Kohens expect positive news ahead.
What Will Happen After October 8th?
As the Jews and Israel have been the subject of hatred and vitriol, many Jews have leaned into their Jewish identity.
A Pair of Ballet Flats Raises $13,150 for Israel: Inside Tieks’ Philanthropic Mission
This pair became the centerpiece of a campaign that raised more than $180,000 for Israeli hospitals treating the victims of the October 7 terror attacks.
Manipeace Destiny – A poem for Parsha Eikev
All rivers lead to home.
A Bisl Torah — 44
We casually say each day is a gift. But perhaps it’s only on birthdays where this phrase sinks in.
On Rising Lions and Waiting Tigers: Contemplations on the Israeli-Iranian War
We need to change how we talk about Israel and Palestine—not as a symbol, but as a nation of people with distinct, intersecting identities.
Table for Five: Eikev
Fear And Love
More news and opinions than at a
Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.