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    KI TEITZEI: CAN YOU FORGIVE YOUR CHILD? HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH CHILDREN WHO PUT YOU THROUGH THE WRINGER?

    Why Death?
    The law in this
    week’s parsha
    concerning a
    wayward son seems
    absurd and horrific.
    “If a man has a stubborn and rebellious son
    who does not obey the voice of his father
    and the voice of his mother, and does not
    listen to them when they discipline him;
    then his father and mother shall take hold of
    him and bring him to the elders at the gate
    of his town. They shall say to the elders,
    ‘This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious.
    He does not obey our voice. He is a
    profligate and a drunkard.’
    “Then all the men of his town shall stone
    him to death. You must purge the evil from
    among you. All Israel will hear of it and be
    afraid.”
    How are we to understand this Torah
    passage? First, are we to believe that parents
    would actually take up the Torah’s advice
    and have their son killed if he acts like a
    monster in his teens!

    Can you imagine a Jewish mother sending
    her son to the High Court to be punished:
    “Here, Ben, I want you should take along
    these cookies I baked for you; and don’t
    forget to wear your cardigan; it gets cold in
    the death chamber.”
    Besides, a death sentence for what? For
    eating meat and drinking wine? For stealing
    food? Isn’t this punishment excessive? He
    is only a 13-year-old kid? And did his
    offenses really merit capital punishment?
    The Mishnah and Talmud, quoted in Rashi
    on our parsha, gives this answer:
    He is not being punished for
    his current sins. Rather, given his
    outrageous current behavior, the Torah
    testifies that it is inevitable that he will grow
    up to be a robber and murderer. So better to
    kill him now, before he murders other
    people and before he destroys his own soul.
    The patterns of his behavior demonstrate
    that he is doomed to a life of inevitable evil.
    Let him die an innocent man.
    Yet this seems absurd. All of Judaism is
    based on the idea that even a sinner can

    repent. Certainly, a 13-year-old boy who is
    at this point not killing yet, certainly he may
    change his ways. How can we be certain
    that he will become a murderer?
    An axiom in Judaism is, “Nothing stands
    in the way of Teshuvah.” The most evil
    Jewish king, Menashe, was accepted as a
    baal-teshuva. And here we say that a
    13-year-old troubled boy is destined to
    grow into a monster? Why?
    True, as the Talmud says,[3] this story
    never happened nor will it happen. This
    Torah law is theory, not practical. But how
    are we to understand the law in theory?
    What is a lesson the Torah is trying to
    impart in this law?
    Forgiveness
    There is a beautiful answer given by the
    Shem Mishmuel, authored by Rabbi Shmuel
    Bornstein (1856-1926), the Rebbe of
    Sochotshov, Poland. (He was the son of the
    Avnei Nezer, Rabbi Avraham Borenstein,
    and grandson of the Kotzker Rebbe).
    He raises one more question. The Talmud
    says, that at any point, a wayward son
    whose parents forgive him is forgiven
    and not punished.
    But wait. We don’t kill the boy because
    of what he did to his parents. We kill
    him, as the Talmud explains because the
    Torah testifies that he is destined to
    become a killer. So what does it help
    that his parents forgive him?
    The Holy Chain
    The answer contains one of the most
    critical lessons for our day and age in
    terms of how parents and educators deal
    with children who are difficult,
    challenging, and often take us through
    the wringer.
    Every child, even the greatest menace,
    is inherently holy and good, Divine and
    sacred. For each of them carries the
    genes of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob—
    each of them has a Jewish soul, which is
    eternally connected to the Divine.
    To reveal that connection, a father and
    a mother must keep the bond with their
    children strong. When we sever our
    relationship with our children, even if
    we have good reason to do so, we
    deprive them of the ability to experience
    themselves as part of the golden,
    unbreakable chain from Avraham to this
    very day.
    Says the Shem Mishmuel: When the

    son feels the love inherent in his parents’
    willingness to forgive him, despite all of his
    misdeeds, this keeps him connected to his
    roots. And since his roots are so deep and
    sacred, there is now strong hope that he will
    find the ability to transform himself.
    If the parents do not forgive their child,
    they do not allow him to forgive himself
    and start his life anew. They ensure that he
    continues in his destructive path.
    Conversely, the moment they forgive him
    internally, the moment they can accept their
    child and love him despite his terrible and
    heartbreaking failures, they now allow him
    to discover his own spiritual power, which
    is deeper than all of his failings and trauma.
    Never Disconnect
    This is the great message the Torah is
    teaching us. Never ever disconnect from
    your child, even if it is not easy. Sometimes
    we are compelled to break the connection,
    to sever the bond, to alienate him or her. It is
    simply too painful to be in a relationship.
    But the Torah is telling us, this is the
    primary reason he will never be able to
    come back. You need to learn to forgive
    your children, to see the infinite light hidden
    in them, that light you saw in the child when
    he emerged from your womb as innocent
    and angelic as ever. Yes, there have been
    disappointments, perhaps betrayal, shame,
    and serious misdeeds. Your child is broken.
    So what does he (or she) need to find the
    stamina to repair himself? He needs to be
    able to believe in his soul, in his future, in
    his goodness.
    How can we help him achieve that? If we
    can love him, if we can forgive him, if we
    can show him that he is not a worthless,
    helpless case, but a particle of the Divine, a
    ray of infinity, a fragment of G-d in this
    world.
    Keeping him connected to the chain, will
    allow him to see himself, ultimately, in the
    context of a 4,000-year chain, of which he is
    the next rung.