by Sara Yoheved Rigler
Pulling our misdeeds out by their roots.
It's not that I mind giving charity to all and sundry, but I do mind
being rooked. That's why my "don't think you can fool me" persona went
on high alert when the girl approached our table at an outdoor cafe one
evening this summer.
My husband and I were having supper with another couple, distant
relatives from America. The girl wore blue jeans, a halter-top,
dangling pink earrings that must have been six inches long, and gobs of
makeup. Her hair was streaked with purple. I guessed that she was
probably 16 years old. She mumbled that she belonged to a religious
youth group called B'nei Akiva and that she was collecting for
disadvantaged children, and she limply displayed her receipt book.
As an American living in Israel, I often miss the cultural clues that
would save me from being conned. This time, however, I was savvy. I
knew plenty of B'nei Akiva girls, and they didn't dress like that. In
fact, at their meetings and when on "official business," they wear a
uniform of a white top, blue skirt, and blue neckerchief. Because we
were speaking English, this girl must have thought that we were
tourists and thus easy marks. "Where's your uniform?" I quizzed her in
Hebrew.
The girl shrugged.
"What chapter of B'nei Akiva are you in?" I prodded.
"Shechuna," she answered, surly.
Shechuna? This is a low-income neighborhood in Jerusalem, a
neighborhood, I had heard, rife with drug addicts.
I took the receipt book and examined it. "B'nei Akiva" and something
about disadvantaged children were printed in Hebrew beside the figure
"5 shekels" (about $1.25). I turned to my husband and dinner
companions. "Should we believe that she's really from B'nei Akiva?" I
asked in English.
I was the best Hebrew speaker in the group. "It's your call," they told
me.
Torah admonishes us not to close our hand or our hearts to our needy
fellow, and requires that we give a minimum amount (enough to buy some
item of food) to every individual who asks us. However, if someone is
collecting for an organization, we're permitted to refuse.
I surveyed the girl uncertainly, debating within myself. "So what if
she pockets the money for herself? If she lives in Shechuna, she
herself is a disadvantaged child. But what if she uses the money for
drugs or alcohol? Then I'll be guilty of contributing to her
delinquency. Or what if she passes on the money to her drug-addict
boyfriend?" The thoughts raced through my mind as the girl, her
expression blasé, stood beside our table.
Finally my distrust prevailed. I handed the receipt book back to her
and said, "I'm sorry. I don't believe that you're from B'nei Akiva."
She shrugged and turned away. For the rest of the dinner, I was plagued
by second thoughts. What if her family needed the money for food or
rent?
After parting from our relatives, my husband and I decided to walk
home. On the way, we encountered two girls dressed in B'nei Akiva
uniforms. One of them approached us and announced that she was
collecting for disadvantaged children. She showed us her receipt book
-- the same book the other girl had sported.
I paled. So, B'nei Akiva girls really were out collecting tonight.
"What chapter are you from?" I asked.
"Shechuna," they replied.
"A girl claiming to be from your chapter approached us downtown," I
told them urgently, "but she wasn't wearing a uniform."
The two girls nodded their heads knowingly. "We're supposed to wear our
uniforms to meetings and whenever we're doing B'nei Akiva stuff. But
most of the kids don't bother to. In fact, most of the kids in our
chapter don't even come from religious families. B'nei Akiva started in
our neighborhood as a kind of... I guess you'd call it...
rehabilitation."
My heart sank. "Oh, no!" I thought. "I really blew it. Not only was she
telling the truth, but she was trying to do a good deed, and I
distrusted her." I felt like I had knocked a fragile crystal vase off a
table, and now I stood there, disconcerted, staring at the broken
pieces.
My husband reached into his pocket and gave the girls five shekels. As
soon as they moved on, I asked him plaintively, "What do I do now?"
"Teshuva," he replied.
Teshuva or "turning around" is God's great, supernatural gift to
humanity. Through it God gives us, who are the proud masters of our
present and future, the keys to our past. By properly enacting the
steps of teshuva, human beings can actually undo the damage they have
done. They can repair the crystal vase to be as good -- or better --
than its original state.
For sins between us and God, teshuva entails three steps: Admitting we
did wrong, feeling regret, and resolving not to repeat the sin. For
sins between us and another person, there are two additional steps:
Asking forgiveness and making restitution.
Standing there on that Jerusalem street, I realized instantly that
these last two steps would pose formidable difficulties. To ask the
girl's forgiveness, I would have to find her -- and I didn't even know
her name. And to make restitution, to correct the wrong, I would have
to personally hand her the five shekels donation, which meant
descending into the depths of Shechuna.
All the way home, I mulled over the mechanics of asking forgiveness and
making restitution. As it turned out, the mechanics, though
problematical, were the easiest part of my teshuva process.
ELUSIVE TESHUVA
As soon as I got home, I went to my neighbor's daughter Netta, a
counselor in B'nai Akiva. She knew the counselor of the Shechuna
chapter and was willing to call her and explain my predicament.
As soon as Netta described the dangling pink earrings, Miri, the
Shechuna counselor, identified the girl. Her name was Daphne, and I
could find her at next Tuesday night's B'nei Akiva meeting. Miri gave
Netta the address where the youth group met, a bomb shelter on a street
I had never heard of.
I spent all that week dreading having to roam around Shechuna in the
dark searching for the bomb shelter. When I finally got there, my
efforts were for naught. Daphne didn't show up for the meeting.
The next Tuesday evening, I had a wedding to attend. The following
Tuesday, Miri's cell phone was disconnected.
I was getting desperate. "Restitution" required making a donation to
the cause Daphne was collecting for, but the fundraising campaign would
not extend indefinitely. I had to get to Daphne before it was too late.
DELVING DEEPER
Since teshuva was eluding me, I sat down and considered what I was
doing wrong. Perhaps I was being too facile in my approach. What
precisely did I have to do teshuva on? Stinginess? Distrust? Skepticism?
I called my teacher, Rebbetzin Tziporah Heller, to discuss the matter.
She explained that my sin was not my refusal to make a donation, but
rather my telling the girl that I didn't believe her. In so doing, I
had insulted her. Restitution would require building up her self-esteem
to the extent I had damaged it. We decided that I should go to her home
to ask forgiveness. Such a gesture on the part of an adult would be an
ego boost to a teenager.
Everyday I tried calling Miri to get Daphne's address, but Miri's cell
phone was out of commission. Finally, the following Tuesday, I got
through.
Miri informed me that that very day was the final day of the
fundraising campaign. The kids who had collected 200 shekels would get
to go to Superland, Israel's biggest amusement park. No, Daphne had not
collected enough. She was 70 shekels short and she had lost her receipt
book, so there was no way for her to collect more money. Strangers
would not give her donations without receipts, and apparently her own
family did not have 70 shekels ($16) to contribute.
I was amazed. What Providence! I could give her the 70 shekels'
donation! Perhaps this whole, long, drawn-out drama was just so Daphne
would not be left out of the trip to Superland. What better way to
bolster her self-esteem than to give her the satisfaction of having
raised her quota and of being included in the prize?
Miri gave me Daphne's cell phone number. I called Daphne right away.
Yes, she remembered me, the American woman at the cafe who didn't
believe she was from B'nei Akiva. I told her I wanted to come to
Shechuna that very afternoon to ask her forgiveness and to make a
donation of 70 shekels. There was silence on the other end of the line.
Finally, she said that that would be fine.
I told her that I didn't think I could find her house. We agreed to
meet instead on the main thoroughfare that borders Shechuna. I breathed
a sigh of relief. My teshuva was almost complete. And Daphne had fared
better than if I had given her the five shekels at the cafe. The fixed
vase was better than the original. Real teshuva!
Or so I thought.
EVEN DEEPER
As I drove to our rendezvous, my cell phone rang. It was Daphne. She
had told her mother the story, and her mother wanted to see me. Her
mother wanted me to come to their home. Her mother had a thing or two
to tell me. Doing teshuva on this one, I realized like a school kid
about to be thrashed, would be much harder than I thought.
I picked Daphne up on the main thoroughfare, and she guided me through
the narrow back streets of Shechuna to her home. Her mother was sitting
on the couch watching TV when we arrived. She did not get up to greet
me.
She told me that she cleans houses for a living and her husband is a
porter in a produce store and that they make an honest living and that
I am not one wit better than they are.
Then she gestured toward Daphne, who was sitting on the second couch.
Wearing neither make-up nor jewelry, she looked her real age, which, it
turns out, was 14. "My kids aren't angels," her mother lectured me,
"but they don't lie."
Instead of getting defensive at Daphne's mother's rebuke, I listened,
truly listened. Then I realized that my teshuva had to go much deeper
than I had imagined. Behind every failure of action is a failure of
character. Daphne's mother was accusing me of feeling superior. The
truth, I realized, mortified, was that I did.
It was my vaunted pride that had made me judge Daphne negatively. I
thought back to my own youth in the sixties in New Jersey. I was the
top student in my class, and I looked down on the girls with teased,
bleached blonde hair who barely got passing grades, girls who thought
-- when they thought at all -- that the purpose of life was to be
pretty. As I had dismissed those girls as intellectually and morally
inferior, so I had dismissed Daphne.
Daphne's mother had seen right through me. When she finished
admonishing me (it took 15 minutes), I admitted she was right, and
apologized for my affront to her family. In the process of fixing the
vase, I was being compelled to fix myself.
DOING A LIFE REVIEW
The period leading up to Yom Kippur is the time for doing teshuva.
Every Jew is supposed to reflect on the past year, identify wrongs
committed against God or one's fellow, and go through the steps of
teshuva.
Too often, however, a sincere personal accounting reveals that, despite
the most ardent resolutions to change, this year's sins doggedly
resemble last year's. The Slonimer Rebbe wrote that if one's teshuva
process addresses only deeds but not motivations, it's like cutting
grass rather than uprooting it.
While engaged in fixing the vase, I must ask myself: What character
trait caused me to knock it over? Clumsiness? Boisterousness?
Heedlessness of others' property? If I don't identify and fix the
character trait, sooner or later other shards will be littering the
floor of my life.
A LIFE REVIEW
Rebbetzin Heller, based on classical Jewish sources, recommends a
method that delves to the deepest levels of character and traces wrong
actions to their source. This method, which she calls "A Life Review,"
is the first step toward permanent change.
Divide your life into its major periods, such as "childhood," "high
school," "college," etc. For each period, write answers to the
following questions:
Which events were central to this time period in my life?
How did I respond to those events?
From my current perspective, which choices brought me closer to where I
want to be today?
What character traits motivated me to make the good choices?
What character traits motivated me to make the bad choices?
As you review the various periods of your life, a pattern of positive
and negative traits will emerge. Because you want to work on what needs
improving, when you are done, review all your answers to the final
question. There will be many duplications and different aspects of the
same trait. For example, you may have listed:
Pride
A sense that I was always right and anyone not on my side was wrong
Intellectual superiority
Not legitimizing others' needs or point of view
Arrogance
Condense all such duplications into one character trait, such as
"arrogance." When you are done, you will have no more than five core
traits that are the culprits behind all your wrong, hurtful, and
self-destructive actions. Pick one of these traits to do teshuva on
before Yom Kippur.
For any method of working on yourself to be successful keep in mind:
Make a concrete plan of action based on taking very small steps.
Chart your progress.
Reward yourself for progress.
Commit yourself to working on the trait for at least a year.
According to the Vilna Goan, we have come into this world for no other
purpose than to fix our character traits.
We don't do real teshuva with superglue, but with a very deep spade.
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