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HILLEL
GROSS' RESPONSE TO THE BEGINNERS
AT THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION OF THE LSS BEGINNERS SERVICE
February 23,
1986
To see this video performed live, click here!!
I am here
tonight on what I fear is a totally vain effort to restore some
perspective to this orgy of self-congratulations that you have staged
for yourselves this evening. Because I think that somehow it's important
that you beginners, B.T.s, leave tonight with at least a sense of
how we, the F.F.B.s, as you call us, the frum-from-births, the "lifers,"day-by-day
Lincoln Square everyday congregants, feel about you--we don't like
you!! And if you'll just indulge me for two to three minutes, I
will tell you why it is that we don't like you--aside from the fact
that you won't talk to us during davening!
For ten years
now, you have been coming to my house on Shabbasim and Yomim Tovim;
just this once try to see it from my perspective. I am what the
sociologists and the demographics experts would call the "tired
Jewish businessman." My fantasy of the ideal Friday night is
to daven as fast as I can, eat as fast as I can, jump under the
covers, assume a pre-fetal position, and conk out until Shacharis.
So, I come
to shul Friday night and invariably Rabbi Buchwald approaches and
says: would I mind taking three or four of his beginners home for
Shabbat dinner? Since Rabbi Buchwald insists on posing this question
in front of the people involved, it makes it very difficult to say
no! Fine, I'll take them.
Introductions
are made and we begin to make our way home. Invariably, one of you
will screech, "Wait!! Don't go on Broadway--that's the goyish
way, go through Lincoln Towers, that's the Shabbos way." Fine,
Lincoln Towers.
We get home,
and again one of you is screeching, "Stop!! Don't go in the
elevator. Take the stairs, like Effie does." Effie lives on
the third floor! . . . Ten flights later, we arrive home... breathlessly,
introductions are made and we take our places around the Shabbat
table. You want to sing Shalom Aleichem--each verse three times,
because it says so in the siddur. Fine, Shalom Aleichem three times.
Then, you want Ayshes Chayil read in English--because it's more
meaningful. Fine. Then one of you has a question -- "We just
made kiddush in shul, why are we making kiddush a second time?"
Well, to paraphrase Renee Leicht, "How the hell do I know why
we're making kiddush a second time?" After kiddush, one of
you decides you'd like to make your own kiddush, because you forgot
to ask me before My kiddush if I had you in mind. Fine, make your
own kiddush--at the rate of three Hebrew words a minute!
Then, after
washing, we sit down, and during the course of conversation, usually
mine, one of you will interrupt with undeniable sincerity and politeness
and say: "Excuse me, but isn't what you're saying Loshon Hara?"
Yeah, I suppose you could say it's Loshon Hara. Fine, no more Loshon
Hara! Then you want to sing Zmiros, the ones with eight verses--all
of them! Fine. Then you want to do D'var Torahs; every D'var Torah
you ever heard up there you want to do. Fine. Then you want to bentch,
singing each verse, "cause that's the way Effie does it.
Fine. At
this point, I bleary-eyed excuse myself and again, with unfailing
politeness you say, "Thank you for having us, we'd love to
come back next Shabbos!!" You'll be back next Shabbos all right,
over . . . .
But you
see, it's not that we dislike you, Chas V'shalom (G-d forbid), it's
that you make us uncomfortable. We're uncomfortable because after
20-30-40 years of saying Shemoneh Esrei three times a day, when
we're with you we sense that perhaps our Shemoneh Esrei has become
flat, routine, mechanical, while yours is vital and exuberant. We're
uncomfortable because in the solitude of our souls we ask ourselves
(and don't believe for a second that we don't ask ourselves), we
ask ourselves if we could do in our 20's and 30's and 40's what
you've done. Could we uproot the habits of a lifetime, the occupations,
change our jobs if necessary, confuse our friends, antagonize our
families, just to commit ourselves to our Judaism? And if we articulate
this question, few of us dare to answer it.
So, I suppose in the last analysis, we're uncomfortable because
you practice what we preach. By your enthusiasm, by your embrace
of everything that's Jewish, you challenge us. By your insatiable
thirst for knowledge, you provoke us. And by your open-hearted love
affair with Judaism and everything about it, you ultimately shame
us.
We pray that
under the inspired leadership of Rabbi Buchwald you will continue
to shame us, to provoke us, to challenge us, to lead us, until the
coming of the Redeemer, Moshiach, speedily in our days,
Amen.
Copyright
2006 National Jewish Outreach Program
www.njop.org
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