The Art of Subtlety
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dedicated to the loving memory of
MRS. CHARLOTTE (SARAH) ROHR
of blessed memory
* * *
A selfless wife and mother, whose family's selfless deeds
continue the legacy of her extraordinary life on this earth.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stereotypes abound about
the classic “Jewish Mother:” A nag, a yenta, overprotective and overbearing,
one who is often getting involved in her children's lives long after they have
grown up, intensely loving but controlling to the point of smothering, and
engendering enormous guilt in her children through the endless suffering she
professes to undertake for their sakes. The cause for all our problems.
Remember the one about the three Jewish mothers in Miami
Beach comparing notes how their sons celebrated their respective
80th birthdays. First Jewish mothers says: “My
Barry’le. He flew down the entire family for a week
to Miami just to spend time with his dear mother for her
birthday. Tell me is that not a boy for you?” Mother
# 2: “Ahh, that’s nuting. My Wolfie, you know
what he did? He took us all for a safari in Africa. That’s
what he did for my 80th birthday.” Finally mother
#3 looks at the other two, and waves dismissingly with her
hand: “You both have nice boys. But you want to hear
what s son is, look at my Sydney. My little boy is a high-powered
lawyer in New York, who makes who knows how much money.
My Sydney goes to therapy three times a week, pays ich veis
vifel – top dollar they say – and he talks about
nothing else but me! Now, that’s a ziskeit [sweetheart]
for you,” she kvels.
And then of course there
is the Jewish mother-in-law…
Where all these images
came from I don’t know. Some attribute the demonizing of the Jewish mother
to feminist anthropologist Margaret Mead, who persuaded the American Jewish
Committee to fund research at Columbia University on the European shtetl.
Interviews with 128 European-born Jews who had immigrated to the United States
demonstrated a range of different family experiences. But the anthropologists
who wrote up the study and published it in the 1950s, in frequently cited
books and articles, placed a “nagging, whining and malingering” mother at
the center of the shtetl family. They reported that these mothers gave
their children unshakable love but anchored it in "boundless suffering."
They retold this folktale: “A young man begs his mother for her heart, which
his betrothed has demanded as a gift; having torn it out of his mother's proffered
breast, he races away with it; and as he stumbles, the heart falls to the
ground, and he hears it question protectively, 'Did you hurt yourself, my
son?’”
Regardless of its root,
this stereotype like all stereotypes is based on myth and is as far as it
gets from the true nature of the quintessential Jewish mother.
If you want an accurate
description of a true Jewish mother – the first matriarch in history – read
the story of our mother Sarah.
A “mother” is not a trivial title. The Talmud (Berachot
16b) makes it clear that only four women can be called matriarchs,
and Sarah is the first of them.
Many virtuous attributes are identified with the immortal
Jewish mother Sarah:
Purity
Piety
Beauty
Modesty
Wisdom
Courage
Inspiring
Role model
Spiritual
Visionary
Princess
Above all, she was seamless.
The opening verse of this week’s Torah portion captures the consistency of
Sarah’s life: “And the life of Sarah was one hundred years and twenty years
and seven years.” Why is the word “years” repeated three times? To
teach us “that every digit is to be expounded upon individually: when she
was one hundred years old, she was like a twenty-year-old in piety. And when
she was twenty, she was like a seven-year-old in beauty” (Rashi from Midrash
Bereishit Rabba 58:1).
What made this first Jewish
matriarch tick? How did she maintain her integrity through all the ups and
downs of her and Abraham’s life – and there were many: from the brink of death
in Ur Kasdim through Lech Lecho, from the battles to the abduction by Pharaoh
and Avimelech, from the challenges at home with Ishmael to the anguish of
childlessness most of her life – Sarah never wavered from her innocence, piety
and commitment.
The secret of the Jewish
mother can be found in the Aishet Chayil – in the final chapter of
book of Proverbs (Mishlei), which we lovingly recite and sing every
Friday night. This hymn, which corresponds
to the twenty-two letters of the alef beit (the Hebrew alphabet) was
said about the Matriarch Sarah, from aleph to tav (Midrash Tehillim 112:1).
Without entering into
an analysis of each verse, their underlying theme is one of transcendence.
True virtue and dedication is invisible at the moment, but its impact becomes
obvious with time.
A mother is – and therefore
builds – life’s foundation. A foundation holds up the entire structure, but
is undetectable to the eye. At the time a true mother’s counsel may not always
be appreciated. When trouble brewed at home threatening her son Isaac, Sarah,
not Abraham, insisted on a course of action that distressed her devout husband
and he is reluctant to comply with, until G-d intervenes and tells Abraham
“Whatever Sarah your wife says you shall listen” (Genesis 21:12).
And why? Because “Isaac
shall be called your seed.” Sarah understood, with the intuitive knowledge
that comes from the innermost depths of the soul that only a mother can understand,
what is right for the future. Sarah was able to transcend the momentary discomfort
of the present and build an everlasting future, which can be appreciated only
over the years.
What is most remarkable
is the fact that the more times passes the greater we can appreciate Sarah’s
contributions.
The Jewish people today
exist due to Sarah’s selfless dedication and wisdom in ensuring Isaac’s physical
and spiritual welfare. Had she not insisted or had Abraham prevailed, all
of history would have changed!
How many people can claim
the same?
Her candle does not go out at night. Even when the
sun sets and hope may seem lost, even when no one can see
through the darkness, the mother’s flame is never
extinguished. She watches over her child and her family.
Who can ever measure the countless hours a mother spends
silently caring and praying for her family; the innumerable
little messages she gives her child through life? She
watches over the ways of her household, and does not eat
the bread of idleness.
Strength and honor are her clothing, she smiles at the
future. Things are not always, or perhaps never, clear
in the present. But the mother’s strength and honor
look ahead and beyond, and then return to infuse the life
today with the wisdom and smile of tomorrow. She opens
her mouth in wisdom, and the lesson of kindness is on her
tongue.
Charm is deceptive and beauty is vain, but a woman who
fears G-d shall be praised. We identify beauty today
with externals. The cosmetic and garment industry. Inner
beauty is not quite as appreciated. The true mother is beautiful
within and without. She is beautiful and she transcends
beauty. She is a princess (as the name Sarah implies, “sar”)
– first a princess to Abraham and her nation (“sarai” with
a yud, my princess), then a princess to the world (“Sarah”
with a heh - Berachot 13a).
No wonder that Isaac recognized
his wife’s beauty when he compared her to his mother. And Isaac brought
her to the tent of Sarah his mother. He brought her to the tent, and
behold, she was Sarah his mother; i.e., she became the likeness of Sarah his
mother, for as long as Sarah was alive, a candle burned from one Sabbath eve
to the next, a blessing was found in the dough, and a cloud was bound to the
tent. When Sarah died, these things ceased, and when Rebecca arrived, they
resumed (Rashi from Midrash Bereishit
Rabba 60:16).
Many people today may
look for a spouse that is everything but their mother (I suspect because of
the stereotypes above). Isaac, however, was blessed with a true Yiddishe Mamme
– someone who you want to emulate in every way.
Is their a greater tribute
than that?
Indeed, being associated with Sarah was such a blessing that
even “the letter yud of Sarai, which was removed from her name, stood and
cried for many years until Yehoshua (Joshua) ben Nun came and G-d added it
to his name” (Sanhedrin 107a). The letter yud flew before the throne of the
Holy One, and said, "Master of the Universe, ‘have You taken me out of
the name of the righteous Sarah because I am the smallest of the letters?’
The Holy One replied, ‘in the past you were at the end of a woman's name,
now I shall place you at the beginning of a man's name: Yehoshua" (Bereishit
Rabbah 47:1).
Sarah’s impact was so far reaching that even one letter
from her name gave Joshua the power to lead the Jewish people
into the Promised Land.
These are the attributes
of the first Jewish Matriarch, Sarah, and those of every true Jewish mother.
A true Yiddishe mamme
is one of the most powerful and complex figures in life. She serves as a pillar
of unwavering strength, while remaining mostly invisible. Think of the love
and confidence that a mother instills in her newborn child as she cradles
him. As a mother’s loving eyes meets the eyes of her child, what message is
being conveyed? Is there a more powerful image of nurturing, yet one that
is so understated?
Many indispensable lessons
can be gleaned from Sarah the mother. Especially today – coined by some as
the dysfunctional age, with families in crisis, marriage in disarray, and
so many of us in search of a mother (and father) – it would be wise to study
Sarah’s life and dedication. She was, after all, a success story…
Practically speaking,
one of the legacies Sarah left us, actually three legacies, are the three
virtues manifest in her tent: A candle burned from one Sabbath eve to the
next, a blessing was found in the dough, and a cloud was bound to the tent.
They represent the three pillars upon which every healthy home should
be built:
1) Lighting Shabbat and
Yom Tov candles, every Friday before sunset – ushering in the sanctity of
Shabbat into the home and world, illuminating the environment with holy and
spiritual light.
2) Kosher – eating refined
food. We assume what we consume.
3) Family Purity – ensuring
the sanctity of intimacy (see Zohar 1:102b).
Sarah teaches us how every
good wife and mother can transform her home and family with these three bedrocks,
and thereby infuse all our lives with deeper meaning.
Never underestimate the
power of the Jewish mother – the Yiddishe mamme – as she subtly builds an
eternal edifice. She brings, in her own silent way, gentle warmth into the
home, whispering prayers and blessings as she waves her hands and covers her
eyes during candle lighting; she quietly instills tender love in her “dough;”
she elevates the inner spirit of her home through a heightened state of sublime
sensuality and intimacy, driven by subtlety, modesty and sanctity.
Another Sarah, the mother
of a dear friend and selfless builder of Jewish life, passed away last week.
From the ashes of the Holocaust she and her husband built an extraordinary
family, dedicated to the eternity of the Jewish people. No stretch is needed
to see parallels between the two Sarah’s.
The Jewish mother: She
smiles at the future.
Sarah (1802-1675 bce)
passed away 3683 years ago, but we talk about her till this very day. Not
only about her per se – but about what she built.
No doubt the same can be said about Sarah daughter of Yekusiel Yehuda.