Until a few years ago, I didn't take anything very seriously. I had graduated from a Yeshiva high school, and, unlike most of my class, I didn't feel I had what it took to be a learner. I didn't want to go to college right away, and I thought I would get a job and have a good time before I settled down. My parents were not very pleased with these decisions, but at that point in my life, what my parents wanted was not terribly important to me.
Regrettably, during this time I fell in with a group of friends who were not orthodox. At first, I told myself that they would not influence me; but this turned out to be very far from the truth. In a very short period of time, I became exactly like them, and maybe worse, as I should have known better. Shabbos meant nothing, Kashrus meant nothing, and my life was spent in a haze which even today I have trouble remembering. My parents were devastated. Maybe they didn't expect me to be the best of the best, but they certainly didn't expect this.
As well as having destroyed my own life, I was on my way to destroying my family as well. Because of the bad influence I was having on my younger brothers, my father asked me to leave the house. When I moved out, I said some really cruel and spiteful things to him. I can remember him standing silently at the door, with my mother crying at his side. I realize now that what I had seen in them as a weakness was actually enormous strength. I had no contact with anyone in my family for almost a year. Deep inside I missed them very much, but I foolishly thought that I could be seen as weak, if I contacted them.
One morning, I was shocked to find my father waiting for me outside of the apartment
I made the necessary apologies to my friends, and, later that day, I met my father. We didn't talk much during the trip up. I remember getting out of the car with him, and walking over to one of the graves. He put some rocks on top of the grave and gave me a Tehillim. We must have looked quite strange. My father in his long black coat, a black hat perched on his head, and me, with my leather bomber jacket and jeans. We didn't stay long. Ten minutes after we had arrived; we were on our way back. The return trip was as quiet as the trip there. My father let me off in front of my apartment building. I still recall the words he said to me
The next morning, I woke up to some shocking news. On the way back from
We had never talked to each other about that trip to Monsey, nor had I ever told him about the death of my friends. I just walked back
jeudi 12 juillet 2007
une tres belle histoir, desole mais cest en englais
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4 commentaires:
wow c hyper long! je lirai plus tard!!!
wow, i just had shivers going up and down my spine. what a powerful story. Thank You
magnifique histoire!
trés sympa! pas grave si c'est en anglais! tellement emouvant!
comme quoi:"dvarim ayotsim min alev nih'nassim el alev"!!!
too long to read. sorry, but I'm sure it was nice
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