28/01/2019
A spiritual comment and prayer to begin the day, with Rabbi Alex Chapper, community rabbi at Borehamwood & Elstree Synagogue.
A spiritual comment and prayer to begin the day with Rabbi Alex Chapper, Community Rabbi
Borehamwood & Elstree Synagogue
Good Morning
Itβs been long known that most peopleβs earliest memories only go back to about age 3 and it was Freud who coined the term βchildhood amnesiaβ to describe this loss of memory from the infant years.
And yet, Jewish tradition calls on us to remember the Revelation at Sinai - an event that took place over 3000 years ago.
This imperative is recorded in Deuteronomy: βBe careful and guard yourself so that you do not forget the things that your eyes have seen, so that they will not leave your hearts all the days of your life.β
But how can anyone be expected to remember something that took place so long ago and at which they werenβt even present?
The key to this is to be found in the very next verse that says: βTeach them to your children and your childrenβs children.β
The best way to ensure something isnβt forgotten is to impart our knowledge of it to young, fresh minds.
This isnβt about information, today, for facts everyone relies on their favourite search engine, but this is about something much more important, itβs about identity - who we are, our heritage - the ideals and values that we live our life by.
If theyβre truly important to us then we must teach them to our children so the next generation has a clear understanding of their origins.
Societies change, fashions change but values are eternal.
So letβs pray that we remember what our parents taught us.
Letβs remember to hold on to those memories.
And letβs teach those ideals and values to our children.