Parashat B’midbar
What Is
Parenting?
Transmitting
Jewish culture by embodying Jewish practice is part of the responsibilities of
Jewish parenting.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article is reprinted with permission from University of Judaism.
One of the greatest mitzvot (commandments) in the
Torah, the very first command given to humanity, is that of bearing children.
"Be fruitful and multiply" is the necessary underpinning of any
Jewish community, since without renewed Jewish people, there can be no Torah,
nor any Judaism either.
But parenting is more than simple biology. Any animal can
spawn, and most animals have the necessary instincts to guide their young
through a relatively brief infancy before the new generation takes off on its
own, guided by its own internal barometer. Humans are distinctive in the
extraordinary length of our infancy and youth, the extreme degree of dependence
of our young, and by a lack of instincts on which to fall back to guide us in
raising our children.
Instead of biological drives, we rely on social norms and
religious values to guide our parenting and to mold our children. Our friends,
our parents, books, Rabbis, magazines and popular psychologists all instruct us
about how to raise our children and what standards and expectations we can
rightly apply to them. Human parenting, then, is executed within a network of
other adults, and is guided by the cumulative experience of our own
communities.
In this sense, anthropologists also speak of the
transmission of a traditional culture in similar terms. A culture is normally
passed from one generation to another, from knowledgeable adult to learning
child. Since the adult has imbibed the norms and practices of the culture from
older acculturated adults, this transmission is often simply through exposure
and through example--the stuff that memories are made of, i.e., watching Bubbe
lighting Shabbos candles, sitting next to Zeyde at a Seder.
The Torah records that point clearly in this week’s reading.
The parashah opens by noting, "This is the line of Aaron and Moses at the
time when the Lord spoke with Moses on Mount Sinai. These were the names of
Aaron's sons . . . " What follows is a list of Aaron's children and
grandchildren.
This strange juxtaposition of Moses' name with Aaron's
children raises an obvious question. In the words of the Midrash Bamidbar
Rabbah, "Surely, 'the line of Moses' is not required here! Why, then, is
it stated?"
The answer provided by the Midrash is that Moses' name is
listed alongside that of the natural father, Aaron, "out of respect for
Moses, in order not to diminish any of his dignity." Yet, we still must
ask, what did Moses do to deserve being listed as a "parent" to
Aaron's children?
The answer is found in the commentary of Rashi (France, 11th
century). Rashi tells us that Aaron's children "are called the line of
Moses because he taught them the Torah. This teaches that whoever teaches Torah
to the child of a friend, it is accounted as the bearer of the child."
Moses makes himself the equivalent of a parent by providing the Jewish identity
of Jewish children. By teaching them who they are and where they belong, he
really does perform the deeds of parenting.
As the children watched Moses fast on Yom Kippur, study
Torah, build a Sukkah, care for widows and orphans, eat matzah on Pesach, keep
kosher, dispense justice and observe the Sabbath, they absorbed his Jewishness
without even knowing it. By teaching them the Hebrew alphabet, how to pray,
study and live as Jews, Moses assured the continuity of Judaism and the Jewish
People. Isn't that precisely the role of the Jewish parent throughout time?
Today, far too many of us live without the ability to be
Jewish parents to our children. Instead of teaching Judaism to them, we learn
from them what they have gleaned from Religious School. In many homes, parents
are unable to parent their children in this most important area of the child's
identity. How can we rectify that imbalance?
Every synagogue in existence is really an empowerment
center, dedicated to providing Jews with the ability and knowledge to create
Jewish homes and to teach their children Jewish ways and Jewish values.
Ignorance is no sin, unless it is the result of deliberate
choice. Putting parenting back in the hands of Jewish mothers and fathers is
precisely what Rabbis, educators and adult education programs are eager to do.
So, reach out to these potential parents of you and your children. Go and
learn!
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler
School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the author of The Bedside Torah:
Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill).
For a free subscription to his weekly email Torah commentary, please
send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.