Lessons From My Jewtor
We're about the same age and from a distance, it almost looks like we could be
sisters. But that's where the similarities end between Melissa and I.
Melissa is what I call "My Jewtor," a woman assigned to me by a local rabbi to
tutor me about Judaism. For months now, I've been showing up at her apartment
to sit at her kitchen table, and in the parlance of the Orthodox, "learn
together," although I sometimes wonder if she has much to learn from me.
"What would you like to talk about?" she asked me in our first phone
conversation, her small voice barely audible over the phone. Some devious part
of me wanted to play stump the Jewtor. "Life. What it's all about."
"Sure," she replied. "No problem."
No problem? I had a good feeling about her right from the start. This is the
kind of stuff religious people traffic in every day, I thought. They can
discuss the meaning of life the way we secular types can talk about the
weather. No problem.
During our first meeting, we dove right into the big questions, why we're here,
how to know if God exists, how to live, why bad things happen to good people,
the purpose of pain. My head felt like it was going to explode.
Being Jewish is an important part of my identity but observing Jewish laws is
peripheral to my life. For Melissa, it is her core.
She wears a wig, covers every part of her body, prays over everything from
waking up to eating and spends most of her free time either teaching or
learning all things Jewish. She wouldn't dream of going out dancing, doesn't
see the point of most movies and doesn't even own a television set.
My Jewtor is consumed with how to be a better person and how to improve her
relationship with God. I'm not sure I believe in God at all, a fact which made
the blood drain from her face and tears well up in her eyes when I told her.
The only time Melissa looked more upset was when I told her I was dating a
non-Jew.
"How do you feel about that?" she asked, as though I had just told her my dog
died.
"Fine," I replied.
"We'll talk about that next time," she said. We never did.
There are certainly times when I've felt judged by my Jewtor. Though she has
never said as much, I know she disapproves of many of the things I do in life.
Still, I go back. Busy, tired, over-scheduled, I drag myself to her apartment
and struggle over everything from the difference between the Mishnah and the
Talmud to the philosophy behind family purity laws and the concept of Shabbat.
On Purim, I was dashing out the door late for work when she called and asked if
she could stop by. She couldn't have been more out of place in my ramshackle
neighborhood, gingerly approaching my door in her perfectly tailored suit,
black flats and simple gold earrings. She handed me a basket of food, as is the
Purim custom, she explained, and drove off.
My co-workers were confounded by the little straw basket on my desk that day,
filled with home-baked zucchini bread, rice and vegetables, fruit and even
bottled water wrapped in foil.
"It's from my Jewtor," I explained. "It's a Purim thing. You're supposed to
give a basket containing at least two different kinds of foods to someone."
"I wish I had a Jewtor," they sighed.
The idea that someone would be so generous and want nothing in return touched
me and haunted me and confused me. I keep that straw basket on my desk to this
day. When I asked why there were more than two types of food in my gift,
Melissa replied that there's a law in Judaism not only to follow the rules, but
to do more whenever possible.
After Purim, a guy asked if I could give him a jump, standing frustrated by his
broken down car. I had just enough time to grab my coffee and get to work so I
declined. The guilt got to me while I waited in line and I turned around and
went back to help the man. The incredibly minor good deed stayed with me longer
than a latte buzz. It's a facile point, but it feels good to do good. Melissa
reminds me of that.
She also reminds me that there's more than one way to succeed in life, which is
nice when you feel like a big failure. Career success is so secondary in
Melissa's world, and some days that's a nice paradigm to brush up against. All
that matters to her is how closely we can follow divine teachings.
I spend a lot of time wondering who's happier, Melissa with her long-sleeve
sweaters on hot days and her intricate, time-consuming laws to follow, or me
with my freedom and accompanying ever-present questions about what this is all
for.
I don't know. I just know that there's more than one way to be a good person,
more than one way to be a good Jew, and only one thing to do when a guy needs a
jump.
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