The Importance of Jewish Education
By Deborah Biskin Levine
With all the discussion about vouchers to help defray the cost of
parochial education, there are still many who are opposed to the Jewish
day-school concept on a philosophical or a practical level. Even if they
were
to receive substantial help from the government or the organized Jewish
community, they still would not take advantage of an intensive Jewish
education for their children. Like most of us who are committed to the
ideal
of day-school education, I have received my share of flack for choosing
to
send my children to the Hebrew Academy.
In some circles, it's not
fashionable to require your child to spend half their school day learning
about Judaism. Some think it's provincial and almost un-American. Others
have
confided in me that they would be embarrassed by their son getting on the
school bus wearing a kippah or by their daughter carrying a book with
Hebrew
writing on the cover.
My kids always joke that the yearbooks of the local suburban schools
look
like GAP advertisements–filled with blonde haired middle-class kids
wearing
chinos. Interspersed among the pictures of the white, gentile children are
the Jewish students, one or two African Americans and three or four
Asians.
Many of the parents of the Jewish children swear that they send their
progeny
to public schools and not to the Hebrew day-schools so they can encounter
a
diverse peer group. A noble and democratic ideal. Why then do these
families
flock to schools where almost everyone is white and living in three or
four
bedroom colonials with two and a half bathrooms and two car garages?
Over
the
years, my children had experiences meeting poor, immigrant students from
the
former Soviet Union, Israeli children whose parents were born in places
like
Yemen and Morocco and even black Jews from the southern United States.
Admittedly, these kids were all Jews, but their backgrounds were colorful
and
varied. This particular argument against day- schools would be more
believable if parents actually sent their kids to schools in places where
they might experience people from different cultures and lower
socioeconomic
levels.
Others say that day-schools are not reflective of their religious
values
because they don't observe kashruth and/or Shabbat in their own homes. I
wonder if those people who are concerned that their children are exposed
to
Jewish teachings that they don't feel are applicable to them also worry
about
their kids being exposed to Christmas trees and Easter bunnies. Why is it
acceptable to learn about those Christian rituals when they are not
practiced
in your home? I can't help but conclude that there is a certain amount of
guilt attached. If the children don't learn about critical aspects of
Jewish
life–then they can't question their parents about why they don't observe
them.
On the other hand, if the kids ask why they don't put up a Christmas
tree–the parents can proudly and self-righteously say–"because we're
Jewish."
Thus, the parents feel they are fulfilling their role in educating their
kids
without having to look at how they are living their own lives. On the
other
hand, I have met several nonreligious and non-Catholic Christians who
send
their kids to Catholic school and don't worry about the religious aspect,
they actually seem to welcome it. They want their kids to learn
discipline
and Christian values. Why shouldn't Jews feel the same way? Maybe there
is
something about Jewish self-hatred here.
Parents often worry that their children will know more about Judaism
than
they do. How will they be able to help them with their Hebrew or Bible
homework? The truth is–hopefully–they won't be able to. Their kids will
know
a great deal more than they do. Most likely, these same parents won't be
able
to assist their kids with the new math or their computer assignments
either.
It may be frustrating for the moment–but in the long run it usually fills
mothers and fathers with pride when junior surpasses them. They know that
their children will have to live in another world and they will need to
know
more and different things than their parents in order to be successful.
Somehow, the same doesn't carry through for Judaic studies. Parents appear
threatened when kids know more than they. As this generation of kids
grows
up, they will be increasingly assimilated into the culture and in order to
be
successful as Jews, they will need to know more.
"Our children need to learn to live in the real world," is a popular
lament among day-school detractors. On a practical level, the proof is in
the
pudding. Day-school education is no longer a new concept, and untold
numbers
of graduates make the transition easily into "a real world." What may be different
about many of these alumni is that they look at Judaism as a pro-active
experience. Being Jewish doesn't mean that "we don't celebrate
Christmas,"
being Jewish means we have a Seder and we build a sukkah. Most don't view
themselves as Jews in terms of what they are not relative to the
Christian
majority–but they see themselves based upon what they are relative to
three
thousand years of Jewish history and culture. Indeed they live in the
real
world, but they see it through a Jewish lens.
Other parents are concerned that their children won't have the time
they
feel is necessary to devote to their other interests and passions. It's
usual
for Jewish parents to devote countless numbers of hours (not to mention
huge
sums of money) to enable their child to master the tuba or complete an
axle
on ice skates. Realistically, most of these parents don't believe their
child
will be a virtuoso or an Olympic athlete. In fact, in many cases, these
avocations will probably not last into adulthood. However, they are
willing
to help their child pursue something that will enrich their lives–at least
for the moment.
It is also true that most Jewish parents would like their
children to (at the very least) find Jewish spouses, circumcise their male
children, belong to a synagogue and have Bar or Bat Mitzvahs for their
kids.
Most Jews would like to have Jewish grandchildren. In the end, parents
will
not be brokenhearted if their child can't play the tuba, but they will
shed
many tears if their child is married in a church. So then, why are they
more
willing to invest most of their time and energies into their children's
development as a tuba player or an ice skater than as a Jew?
Deborah Biskin Levine is a writer living in Albany, New York.
from the February 2000 Edition of the Jewish Magazine
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