This is precisely the question I posed to the Edot students yesterday. How can you tell if someone is Jewish? If we can figure out the answer to that question, we can have a good chance of figuring out what it means to be Jewish. We had quite an animated and fruitful discussion each session, during which students shared what they have learned to date at home and at school about Jewish symbols, rites, holidays, food, clothing, music, etc.
We concluded that to be Jewish means to be a member - a citizen, if you will - of the oldest surviving nation on our planet. We conform to the four necessary attributes of a nation - we have a language, a land, laws, and history in common. Because of our very long and unique history, we were forced to live outside of our land - Israel - for almost two millenia (some of us, we will learn, even longer than that!), but we always kept its memory alive in our hearts and minds. We kept our Hebrew language in our prayers, and also integrated it into new languages spoken in Europe, Spain and Portugal, the Middle East and North Africa - Yiddish, Judeo-Spanish (Ladino), and Judeo-Arabic, respectively. And we studied and taught the Torah, which we had written down during the Babylonian Exile, some 2,500 years ago. The Torah is both our national history book (along with succeeding Biblical books in the "Prophets" and "Writings" section of our Hebrew Bible) and our constitution. What we refer to as commandments, are the laws of our nation.
We looked at our holidays and religious rites, and saw that each was developed very carefully by the Talmudic era Rabbis, to keep our national memory and pride alive. We concluded our discussion by having the students share what they thought we should study in JQuest in order to ensure that a new generation will learn enough about our nation to transmit the memory and pride of our roots to a new generation after them. We should, the students said, study Hebrew, Jewish history, the geography of Israel, and learn the important laws.
This is precisely what I intend to share with them, as my teachers and parents shared with me. Am Yisrael Chai - the Nation of Israel lives!
There were lots of ideas to share about how you can tell if someone is Jewish... |
...which a TA each session wrote on the board as they were shared. |
What should we learn in JQuest this year to help us be good citizens of the Jewish nation? Hebrew was the first subject that came up. And so we began our Hebrew studies for this school year with a review of the Hebrew Through Movement program vocabulary. Almost all the students were familiar with the program from last year, and what a wonderful surprise for me to realize that they had all remembered so much of the foundational vocabulary.