Home › Forums › Bais Medrash › Coca-Cola Classic and Yiddishkeit
- This topic has 106 replies, 26 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 8 months ago by oomis.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 23, 2009 5:35 pm at 5:35 pm #589456Feif UnParticipant
Rabbi Yakov Horowitz wrote a great article here on the modern view of the chinuch system. Basically, he feels it is broken, and needs to be fixed. He writes that the previous generation had a much better idea of how to raise their children, and we need to revert back to their system. Less learning Gemara b’iyun, and more time learning other things – even secular studies. Less pressure on the children, and more time instilling a genuine love for Yiddishkeit.
I highly recommend reading this article from a renowned expert in chinuch.
February 23, 2009 8:03 pm at 8:03 pm #640765JustAGirlMemberYes, the chinuch system must be revamped.
When I was in HS, we were forced to memorize details of Gedolim’s lives that were utterly pointless.
Instead they should have taught derech eretz. My teachers constantly complained that these girls lacked respect. I would often look on painfully as I couldn’t control my classmates, but wishing they’d listen to me when I told them to just be quiet and let our teachers teach!!
B”H, I was an extremely respectful student…but I flunked that Gedolim test, BIG TIME. You tell me what’s more important?
February 23, 2009 8:35 pm at 8:35 pm #640766areivimzehlazehParticipantdon’t have time to read the article but I think it’s the one we were discussing at our shabbos table. Powerful comparison to the coke ad. my own vort: ‘new’ is not always improved
February 23, 2009 8:46 pm at 8:46 pm #640767JotharMemberThere is a famous story that someone once asked the Satmar Rav ZT”L why many Yerushalmi kids learn so well when they’re younger but nothing became of them later in life. He said, “If the kids don’t play when they’re younger, they play when they’re older”.
Rav Matisyahu Solomon once did a study of the leaders of the “masmid” programs as elementary school kids, and checking what became of them. He found NO correlation between kids who did well in those programs and later Yeshiva success. Let kids be kids. He is absolutely correct- go back to raising talmidim, not gedolim.
February 23, 2009 8:48 pm at 8:48 pm #640768SJSinNYCMemberThats very interesting but…
to play devil’s advocate slightly, if you remove some of the pressure/obligations (obviously non-halachic), then you also risk the “idle hands” problem.
February 23, 2009 9:25 pm at 9:25 pm #640769moish01Memberyeah but chs vesolom a single second of learning the heiligeh torah should be wasted! so let’s pump the guys up with as much as possible till they explode. when they go home and won’t open a sefer for the rest of their lives, THAT’S not bittul torah, is it??
they don’t realize that an extra few minutes a day could make a guy so sick that he’ll never want to learn a gain. and they think they gained another hour.
and they’re never gonna learn. they always think they’re better and know better. even if you create new schools, they’re always gonna be second rate.
February 23, 2009 9:31 pm at 9:31 pm #640770JotharMemberIf kids are allowed kosher outlets, they won’t need unkosher outlets.
February 23, 2009 11:56 pm at 11:56 pm #640771tzippiMemberThe problem is when “they” decide that truly kosher outlets aren’t. There aren’t too many left. An example: back in the day, the really, really good boys were the ones going to nursing homes erev Shabbos and giving concerts. Now, if a boy plays an instrument you have to kler, did he have any kind of learning issues so the music was a tool for focusing, or this, or that…
February 24, 2009 12:23 am at 12:23 am #640772JosephParticipantThis is why we have, and need, Gedolei Yisroel Shlita to make these important decisions for Klal Yisroel.
February 24, 2009 1:55 am at 1:55 am #640773moish01Memberjoseph, i hate to be so blunt, but what do they know? as great and brilliant and wonderful as they might be, they can’t understand for even a second. they’re the ones running the schools now, right?
February 24, 2009 2:14 am at 2:14 am #640774qwertyuiopMembermoish: i agree, i know peoplelike that.$
February 24, 2009 2:15 am at 2:15 am #640775JotharMemberJoseph, I agree 100%. the problem is that in many cases, the gedolim aren’t consulted. The gedolim were quite clear that kicking a child out of yeshiva is a drastic step that must be deliberated on for quite a while. Rav Shach ZT”L once called some mechanchim “rotzchim” for not doing that. There are kids kicked out of yeshivas every day. How many of them are done with the haskama of gedolim? We also find that in yeshivas run by actual gedolim (Reb Yaakov ZT”L, Reb Moshe ZT”L, et al), the curriculum was a lot more tolerant of kids being kids.
February 24, 2009 2:30 am at 2:30 am #640776anonymisssParticipantJothar, good line “If the kids don’t play when they’re younger…”
Suppose the kids would have more free time, society being what it is today, what do you think they would be doing? Honest answers, please!
~a~
February 24, 2009 2:57 am at 2:57 am #640777mw13ParticipantFor some reason my web browser shuts down every time I click on Feif Un’s link. Could somebody please copy and paste the article?
February 24, 2009 3:33 am at 3:33 am #640778JotharMemberanonymiss, it’s not my line, it’s the Satmar Rav’s. Most elementary school kids could do with less homework. As for high school kids, I honestly couldn’t tell you. Homework is a poor substitute for honest-to-goodness parenting.
February 24, 2009 4:58 am at 4:58 am #640779anonymisssParticipantyes, ames, I completely agree that all people; children, teens, and adults, all need time to unwind. I’m just not sure that what kids/teens would be doing in this time will be good, either.
~a~
February 24, 2009 12:34 pm at 12:34 pm #640780ujmParticipantLike a few people mentioned, we need to follow the directives of the Gedolim on these (and other) issues.
February 24, 2009 12:36 pm at 12:36 pm #640781JosephParticipantames, its funny that you should mention stamp collecting as an activity. What made you think of it? (Yes, I have had that hobby since young childhood.)
February 24, 2009 2:01 pm at 2:01 pm #640782anonymisssParticipantWhat about our teenagers? Any ideas?
~a~
February 24, 2009 4:40 pm at 4:40 pm #640783bored@work2Participantmoish01: “i hate to be so blunt, but what do they know? as great and brilliant and wonderful as they might be, they can’t understand for even a second. they’re the ones running the schools now, right?”
no offense to u moish, but u can not make a statement like that cuz they do understand eventhough it may seem to u like they dont. u might not agree with what they say and u might think u know how schools and yeshivos should be run- but u dont. ur a lil kid, and not a rabbi. if you have questions, get answers. dont just bash rabbis like that.
and im not arguing the fact that things need to be changed with the yeshiva system, obviously there are many changes that need to be made but they can only be made with the help of ppl who are truly experts in these type of things…..
February 24, 2009 6:05 pm at 6:05 pm #640784Feif UnParticipantThe problem is that the people running the schools won’t change things. If someone attempts to start a new school based on the system of old, they’d be blacklisted and called apikorsim.
R’ Horowitz was in my community recently, and someone asked him how we should start this. R’ Horowitz replied that as parents, we need to decide for our children. If you feel your child needs to leave school at 5:00 every day, and anything later is too much for him, then go and take him out at 5:00! Explain to the principal what your reasoning is, and take him home.
The problem with that is the schools won’t stand for it. If a parent removes their child early, the school would very nicely explain to the parent that their child isn’t welcome in their school anymore.
Just to note, when I was in Yeshiva (post-high school) my Rosh Yeshiva told me one day that he felt I was burning out in middle of the zman, and that he felt I needed a break. He advised me to go home for a few days, relax, and re-energize myself. With that, I’d be able to finish the zman on a much higher level.
That is how a Rosh Yeshiva should be, knowing his students and what’s best for each one.
February 24, 2009 6:54 pm at 6:54 pm #640785yossieaParticipantFeif Un,
I know what you mean. There was a kid in my grade who was always in the Beis Medrash learning. I saw him once leaning against the wall just standing there and I asked him why, he replied that his rebbe kicked him out of the beis medrash.
February 24, 2009 8:27 pm at 8:27 pm #640786moish01Memberi never said i knew how to run a school. that’s why i would never attempt to run one. but NO ONE should if they don’t know how to do it right.
i think the problem is that originally everyone went to public school or day school. when a yeshiva opened up only the guys who REALLY wanted to attend begged their parents to let them go. eventually more yeshivas opened and they wanna now produce major masmidim like tuna fish cans. the ones running the show don’t realize that just because they were dying to go and were willing to give up playing ball for learning, no one wants it that badly anymore. and if you wanna play ball you’re not the top guy anymore. doesn’t matter if the “top guy” has his head in a box. as long as there’s a flashlight and gemara in the box with him.
do you know when i wanted to play an extra hour of basketball (on free time) after school, one of the rabbis came over and told me not to because it’s such a waste and that it’ll be bad for shidduchim?! i was in NINTH grade! (not that same stupid rabbi – a different one)
February 24, 2009 8:44 pm at 8:44 pm #640787areivimzehlazehParticipant>> moish01
Member
joseph, i hate to be so blunt, but what do they know? as great and brilliant and wonderful as they might be, they can’t understand for even a second. they’re the ones running the schools now, right? <<
I don’t mean to pick on you, but this statement is really bothering me. The Gedolei Yisroel have a much broader picture and deeper understanding than us on ALL matters; no matter what we think they do or don’t know/understand. They have a tremendous amount of siyatta dishmaya that we can not comprehend. They can perceive consequences and what is really for the ultimate good of klal yisroel. Us? We just have our little 2×2 vision and think we can change the world.
If we don’t have emunas chachamim, what are we left with? Who will be Hashem’s shaliach to take care of us and defend us?
February 24, 2009 8:48 pm at 8:48 pm #640788areivimzehlazehParticipantmoish- your statement: “the ones running the show don’t realize that just because they were dying to go and were willing to give up playing ball for learning, no one wants it that badly anymore.”
whom do you mean by ‘no one’?
February 24, 2009 9:07 pm at 9:07 pm #640789moish01Memberyeah but can 20/20 vision see in the dark?
and who do i mean by “no one?” every single kid out there. maybe everyone has a different tolerance level. and some guys are by nature more passive so that take orders laying down. but there’s a limit to how much anyone can be choked.
the only guys who make it at the top are the guys who like it and want it. in that case, they are not forced to do anything. according to their logic, they are handed whatever they want on a silver platter.
February 24, 2009 9:10 pm at 9:10 pm #640790gavra_at_workParticipantareivimzehlazeh:
Part of this discussion is how the gedolim are no longer running the schools, and the directors have used them as their personal feifdom. This is what Joseph & Jothar pointed out earlier. Its not the Gedolim, its “others” who don’t listen to the Gedolim.
February 24, 2009 10:31 pm at 10:31 pm #640791moish01Memberhey areivim, no answer here? i guess you can’t say i’m right. for once.
February 24, 2009 11:19 pm at 11:19 pm #640792areivimzehlazehParticipantsorry- just read this, i ALWAYS have a comeback 😉
…. that was my comeback 😉
ok, seriously-
GAW- I think you misunderstood me. You are 100% correct. However, I was not taking moish’s comment with all the context around it aka this entire thread; just the bashing of the Gedolei Yisroel was really bothering me, so I aired my thoughts on the matter is all
and- when I asked about ‘no one’, I was just trying to make him realize that what he feels doesn’t necessarily apply to the entire klal
February 24, 2009 11:50 pm at 11:50 pm #640793moish01Memberareivim. big deal. so many of the guys who come out on top didn’t have anything pulling away. i’ll be really impressed with a guy like me who learns.
February 25, 2009 3:03 am at 3:03 am #640794SJSinNYCMemberAreivim, sometimes gedolim might lose sight (or not have the exact insight) into certain problems. They arent perfect and can make mistakes.
Also, if people stop following gedolim, are they really still gedolim? Or just unbelievable men? (if you understand my distinction)
February 25, 2009 3:18 am at 3:18 am #640795asdfghjklParticipantjoseph: i think u saying you collect stamps is actually the only thing u revealed abt the real joe!!!!!
February 25, 2009 3:47 am at 3:47 am #640796JotharMemberHere is a story proving my point from the excellent book “In Their Shadow”, Yonasan Rosenblum’s English translation of “???????” by Rabbi Shlomo Lorincz, which is chock full of selected stories about The Chazon Ish, the Brisker Rav, and Rav Shach. I highly recommend it for anyone who’s looking for an honest look at what made these 3 Gedolim. On page 16, the author is discussing the fact that many yeshivas of his time refused to take Sephardi kids. One such Rosh Yeshiva told the Chazon Ish that he didn’t take Sephardi kids because he felt they would not be successful in their learning. The Chazon Ish said back, “If that’s the case, how is it that you study the Rif and the Rambam?” In another story, a Rosh Yeshivas rejected Sephardi kids because they don’t speak yiddish, the teaching langage of the school. The Chazon Ish advised the man to switch to ivrit so he could accept Sephardi kids. Keeping the language as Yiddish would force kids who don’t know Yiddish to worse schools, and the loss would outweigh the gain of not speaking ivrit.
Today in Israel, the shanda of segregating Sephardi and American kids is a reality, despite our Gedolim.
February 25, 2009 4:02 am at 4:02 am #640797JosephParticipantasdf, I’ve collected postage stamps (Philately) since 9 years old (and still do)!!
February 25, 2009 4:03 am at 4:03 am #640798JosephParticipantSJS, The Gedolim don’t need us as much as we need them. They are Gedolim whether everyone or no one follows them. They are G-d’s messenger’s on Earth.
February 25, 2009 4:29 am at 4:29 am #640799asdfghjklParticipantJoseph: cool!!! i collect rare u.s. coins!!!!
February 25, 2009 5:16 am at 5:16 am #640800JosephParticipantasdfghjkl, I collect U.S. coins too!
February 25, 2009 5:53 am at 5:53 am #640801asdfghjklParticipantJoseph: maybe we go to the same dealer!!!
February 25, 2009 6:14 am at 6:14 am #640802JosephParticipantasdf, subscribe to any numismatics periodical?
February 25, 2009 8:10 am at 8:10 am #640803asdfghjklParticipantjoseph: nope, but i really should!!!!
February 25, 2009 11:27 am at 11:27 am #640804SJSinNYCMemberSJS, The Gedolim don’t need us as much as we need them. They are Gedolim whether everyone or no one follows them. They are G-d’s messenger’s on Earth.
I agree that we need them more than they need us. But, if everyone ignores them, are they one of our leaders (what we call gedolim), or just an adam gadol?
February 25, 2009 8:06 pm at 8:06 pm #640806Feif UnParticipantWe really need to move back to the system of only the best and brightest sitting an learning full-time for most of their lives. Everyone else should be supporting their families, and learning whenever they have time.
February 25, 2009 8:44 pm at 8:44 pm #640807JayMatt19Participant>>We really need to move back to the system of only the best and brightest sitting an learning full-time for most of their lives. Everyone else should be supporting their families, and learning whenever they have time. <<
Every word of Torah learned benefits this world in more ways than we all can imagine. Why should people stop learning?
And your idea of “best and brightest” is foolish at best. Look at the order of the meraglim and see where Yehoshua was placed. Yet HE was appointed as the new leader.
How to you plan on checking “best and brightest”? Is the current high-school system not cutthroat enough for you? What would this do for the shidduch crisis?
February 25, 2009 8:54 pm at 8:54 pm #640808moish01Memberif you’re gonna use an IQ test you’re gonna get surprising results. the smartest are not necessarily the ones learning. (…ahem…)
and the best are overrated. (…double ahem…)
😉
February 25, 2009 9:29 pm at 9:29 pm #640809SJSinNYCMemberEvery word of Torah learned benefits this world in more ways than we all can imagine
I think Feif’s point was that sometimes its detrimental to the communities also. If Kollel is ideal, and 100% of people are in Kollel, AND women staying home is ideal so they stay home, how will anyone feed their children? Forget yeshiva tuition!
Every man is obligated to learn. Working doesnt mean you don’t learn. It just means you fulfill the requirements of your ketubah in addition to learning.
February 25, 2009 9:36 pm at 9:36 pm #640810YW Moderator-39MemberThis post is from JayMatt19
If a person (or family) want to make the sacrifice for Torah, because they know that to be the Ikar, who has the right to tell them not to, because he isn’t “the best or brightest”. We all have different levels and different nissyonos. I don’t need some guy in a hat and beard deciding whose Torah is more valuable.
JayMatt19 – I cut and pasted your post and put it here. I wouldv’e just edited it but I guess I still new at this and deleted it completely. – Sorry!
I’m still new!
February 25, 2009 9:38 pm at 9:38 pm #640811SJSinNYCMemberIf a person (or family) want to make the sacrifice for Torah, because they know that to be the Ikar, who has the right to tell them not to, because he isn’t “the best or brightest”. We all have different levels and different nissyonos. I don’t need some guy in a hat and beard deciding whose Torah is more valuable.
If he is relying on my money to sit and learn, don’t I get some sort of say? Won’t my tuition go up to cover the costs that he cannot? Won’t my taxes go up if he is on government subsidies?
February 25, 2009 9:43 pm at 9:43 pm #640812moish01MemberJayMatt19, then i think you’re safe asking charlie brown. he doesn’t strike me as the hat + beard kinda guy. (maybe a hat, but no beard!)
and don’t ask joseph. he’s definitely got a hat and beard 😉
… you can always ask me…
February 25, 2009 9:53 pm at 9:53 pm #640813Feif UnParticipantJayMatt19: Yes, I agree, learning Torah definitely helps the world. However, for thousands of years, there was no such thing as the kollel system we have today, and the world survived. Judaism survived, even thrived.
Here are two cases, tell me which you think is better:
1. A kollel guy who wakes up at 7:30, goes to yeshiva, learns a few hours, takes a lunch break for a few hours, learns a few more hours, takes a supper break, learns another hour and goes home to sleep at 10:30 or 11:00. His wife works two jobs, neither of them spends much time with their kids, and they live off of the government and their parents.
2. A man who wakes up at 5:30 every morning, goes to a daf yomi shiur and shacharis, then to work. While riding the train, he brings along a chumash and goes through the parshah with Rashi so he can discuss the Parshah with his children on Shabbos. After work, he comes home, helps with his kids’ homework, and puts them to bed. He sits down to supper with his wife, and afterward goes to either a gemara or halachah shiur. The family is self-sufficient, they don’t need to accept any charity from either the government or family.
Which one is better?
February 25, 2009 9:55 pm at 9:55 pm #640814JayMatt19Participant39, I guess this makes up for my gaffe in the d’var torah forum.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.