But, I was sidetracked by a documentary and it got me
thinking a different way. So, Mr.
Armstrong will have to wait; but the idea, at least from my way of thinking,
that “the truth will set you free”, applies here as well.
The story takes place in Bergen-Belsen, a notorious Nazi
death camp. The chief Rabbi of Amsterdam
was there along with thousands of other Jews.
He maintained his faith and organized the prisoners as best as he
could. One day, he approached a young
Jewish boy in the camp. “I understand
you will soon turn thirteen. Would you
like to study for your Bar Mitzvah?” The
boy, at first stunned by the offer, agreed.
Each morning the Rabbi would wake the boy at 4:00 and they
would sit outside and read from a small Torah.
The boy learned his lessons in Hebrew.
Soon it was time for the ceremony.
But, the Nazi’s frowned on acts of faith. In a bunkhouse, with the windows covered, the
boy was led up to a makeshift altar.
Before he began there was a knock on the door and a lone
woman entered. It was his mother. They had been separated on arrival at the
camp. The Rabbi, however, had found her
and had her smuggled across the camp.
In those filthy, dismal conditions, with hundreds of Jewish
people he did not know, the boy recited the text that had carried his father’s
people forward from generation to generation.
Through slavery, freedom, captivity in Babylon, pogroms throughout the
centuries, he repeated the same prayers every Jewish boy says at his Bar
Mitzvah. At the conclusion, with the
ceremony over, the boy was handed a small piece of chocolate as a gift.
Weeks later, the Rabbi again pulled the boy aside and gave
him the Torah. “Keep this and tell the
world what took place here”, the Rabbi told the boy. The Rabbi would not see the end of the
war. But the boy - he survived and made
it to Israel. He would become a
scientist and design an experiment that was carried into space on the Space
Shuttle Columbia by an Israeli astronaut.
And the Torah, that small Holy collection of the word of
God, was also carried into space. It was
Columbia’s last flight, the fateful re-entry when the space shuttle broke apart
over Texas. The old man who’d been that
boy once movingly said the Torah had been “From the depths of hell to the edge
of space”.
I love that imagery.
Life is a very difficult proposition.
No one’s life is free of trials or difficulties. Some, like the boy’s, are thrust on us by the
evil that seems to permeate human kind.
He experienced more trial, more difficulty, more inhumanity, than most
can comprehend.
Others, like me, find ourselves in great difficulty and
trying circumstances because of our own sin.
We struggle to come to grips with our behavior, our wrongs, and the
consequences of our actions even as our lives go further astray. And the consequences, we realize much too
late, are usually beyond what we anticipated or deserved.
Life can break you; it can stretch you and wear you down. Unless you learn a few simple truths. First, you always have to have hope. Without it, there can be no faith. And faith can move mountains. It can lead a boy from the concentration
camps of Nazi Germany to a life of family, friends and science.
You also have to be kind, in spite of the anger launched
against you. The Rabbi understood
that. It is a lesson I teach myself over
and over in here as I deal with a wide array of broken, angry, dysfunctional men
and the program system that perpetuates the disgust of prison.
Finally, you have to forgive and let go of the hurt and pain. How do you forgive when you’ve been hurt so
deeply? I have spent literally every day
of my confinement asking that question.
There isn’t any easy answer. It’s
like the Nike slogan – you “just do it”.
The other day I learned a new reader – “Tonya” – popped up
and was clearly not happy with me. I
wrote a number of witty replies down to “zing” her. See, I know “Tonya” isn’t “Tonya”. I know everything that occurred at the office
for months after my arrest and my arrest leading to someone being fired did not
occur. But, I also know it’s easier to
blame others when we find ourselves in situations we don’t like or
understand. As I’ve said many times on
the pages of this blog, what I did was wrong.
But, what I’ve been through and what I lost does not balance with my
sins. And that, I’ve learned is
alright. So I keep hoping. And I keep believing because my faith tells
me that hope does not disappoint.
I had intended to write about falling and your chance at
redemption. Come to think of it, that’s
what I wrote about.