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Learning is for everyone

Moshe Unger - Columnist
Posted 5/21/20

My favorite Jewish holiday falls on next Friday and Saturday, the 29th and 30th of May. The holiday is called Shavuos and it celebrates the receiving of the Torah on Mt. Sinai. The Torah consists of …

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Learning is for everyone

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My favorite Jewish holiday falls on next Friday and Saturday, the 29th and 30th of May. The holiday is called Shavuos and it celebrates the receiving of the Torah on Mt. Sinai. The Torah consists of the Bible and its interpretation. The interpretation was first transmitted orally and many years later the oral tradition was also written down.

The Bible has had an immense impact on world history. Today almost all religions are Monotheistic (even many Eastern religions reformed throughout the ages to believe in one G-d), and the values that the Bible taught the world are the underpinnings of almost all moral and ethical ideas that people have today. Even someone who is not religious can appreciate the value that there is in the Bible and what it brought to the world.

In Judaism, knowledge and toil in learning are sacred acts and are also a religious service. In prayer, a person speaks to G-d, in learning, G-d speaks to the person.

Everything in the world needs a “user's manual”. Way before companies started to print and attach them to appliances, the Creator instilled in every animal and in every living thing instructions of how to live. There is a vast body of information in every living cell, that relegates and instructs the cell in all its functions. The same is true for humans. The Creator put in the soul common sense to be the user's manual for the human.

However, common sense is not enough. “For God made man straight, but they sought many intrigues.” (ecclesiastes 7,29) Humans are smart enough to obscure their common sense. To think straight, we need to continuously study and learn.

There is something enlightening in studying even non-sacred works. Many times, I wonder at people who express views that they never read up about. People express views on many things including politics that they've read very little about. Ignorance is fertile ground for other people and entities to plant all sorts of ideas in minds that are not theirs.

On the other hand, keeping a habit of daily study, makes a person find constant renewal and enlightenment. A new insight brings a burst of life in the mind and is felt in the entire body.

If this is so with general knowledge, how much more so with texts of the Torah and the Bible. Every story and every piece have significance and depth that is unfolding more and more with every time it is read.

On Shavuot the custom is to eat dairy delicacies and sweets. A reason to it might be as follows. Gourmet foods and wines can have different appeals to different people. Children generally don't like them; it takes time and maturity to appreciate rich and good food. That's not the case with sweets. A good cookie or other sweets need no level of sophistication to like. The same is with study and learning. It's available to everyone and everyone can begin learning, even if they haven't done studying for a long time. Of course, the more one studies the richer it becomes, but there is something for everyone in the Torah.

I want to recommend two resources. As we are locked at home, they both may be even more useful. One, is an amazing website called AlephBeta.org for fascinating insights in biblical verses. It takes the viewer on a road of discovery as it unfolds the texts.

The second is called Torah Mates which matches up people to study and chat on the phone half an hour a week. A friend of mine is involved in this latter organization and I'll be happy to answer questions about it or to find a right partner for you. My email is below.

Comments? Email me: moshe@jaketv.tv

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