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I Am A Non-Observant Yeshivishe Guy

For the past 4 years people have been asking Heshy: “Who’s this Shragi guy and why do you have an OTD writer on Frum Satire? Or is it just your angry side coming out, now that you’re married and realize that you’re stuck in the frum world forever?”

Well in real life people ask me the same question.  “Why do you hate Nazis and Eli Dessler?” “Why do you quote Mark Twain, Eminem and Pirkei Avos in the same sentence?”

I’ve struggled with this for years. Living in a world where labels are of utmost importance one cannot live in this bifurcated world without a label; everyone must know if I’m in or out, with or against them. So the search for a label continues relentlessly.

I’m the guy who finds himself quoting gemarah in a business meeting and a Feldheim Holocaust Diaries book in a board meeting. I’m the guy who learns Nach with a chavrusah because I’m not satisfied with the treadmill of gemarah I was kept on in yeshiva, but I do it while sitting bareheaded and reading out the shem hameforash aloud (freaking out my wife in the process).

I bust my ass to send my kids to Hebrew school, going out for risotto with shellfish for business lunch meetings then coming home to do chumash homework with the kids, practice benching with them, do research on projects such as shechita with them, putting them to bed with shema while not wearing a yarmulke and not doing any of those things myself.

I go to Mr. and Mrs. Heshy for a Shabbos, sit politely through the rabbi’s anti-gay drasha in shul, say over a dvar torah at his meal then get into an argument with him about the existence of God with arguments such as “If Avraham Avinu could discover God at the age of three then I can reject Him at the age of 30, don’t give me this naarishkeit.” Real strong argument, also real yeshivish.

I go to Venice for work and immediately seek out the ghetto. The Israeli guard at the shul asks me if I’m shomer Shabbos, I almost feel guilty when I respond to this secular Israeli “At home? No.” And when I start davening, for the first time in a few years, in this beautiful 450 year-old synagogue I burst out crying in middle of shemoneh esrei, something I never did while frum. Then when the poor, bored, American kids behind me turn to each other to ask why the chazzan doesn’t drink the wine after the kiddush he made, instead giving it to a kid to drink, I turn around and explain the halacha to them while their counselors, as ignorant as they, look on half bemusedly and half gratefully. I then join a visiting professor of Judaic studies for his meal where we talk Judaism for 2 hours and afterwards I join my colleagues for a birthday party at a bar.

I feel that “OTD” hardly does justice. Off what derech? The one that prioritizes boys over girls, gemarah over halacha, ignorance over knowledge, institutions over people, form over substance? While I have left that derech, it doesn’t deserve mention in the definition of who I am.

Some have suggested we use the term “maskil”; after all, it’s romantic, it implies intellectual interest! It focuses on the brain rather than…well all the earthly things we think about when we think about the degenerate OTD. The problem is, though, that I’m no Mendel Lefin (although I have read Ben Franklin’s autobiography).

When I consider all the Jewish labels that I could self-apply I find myself dissatisfied with all of them:

  1. Secular: I guess I am in thought and practice, but not in mindset; I spent way too much time in yeshiva to ever make a good secular Jew. Plus I don’t care enough about Israel.
  2. Reform: Hardly. I couldn’t care enough to memorize the Pittsburgh Platform like I did the Ten Commandments, let alone the torturous road the religion has taken since that time and place.
  3. Conservative: No. I just don’t get giving yourself a heter to drive to shul but only if it’s too far to walk. I guess I’m still too much of a black and white thinker for that, but I just don’t see the point in that kind of gymnastics. Plus I can’t afford the membership.
  4. Reconstructionist: I don’t know, other than constructing a bunch of JCCs, I don’t know what kind of civilizations Judaism is. Also Israel, I’m just not that into it.
  5. Humanist: I figure the Orthodox should just come clean and admit that they’re the original humanist Judaism; chazal’s fingerprints are too obvious all over Judaism.
  6. Chabad: How can I if I don’t like Shmearnoff or keeping my shirt untucked?

So I find myself right back where I started. I’m still a yeshiva bochur and probably will be for life but I don’t believe in God or practice anything. I guess I’ll have to content myself with introducing myself as a non-practicing Yeshivishe Guy.

The post I Am A Non-Observant Yeshivishe Guy appeared first on Frum Satire.



This post first appeared on Frum Satire, please read the originial post: here

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