Connecting Generations to the Bible

This week is one of the most enjoyable weeks of the year for me.  Each year, thousands gather in Gush Etzion, at the Herzog College in Alon Shvut, for a 5 day Bible Seminar. Herzog is a religious college which began as a Bible School and then expanded to include a full range of academic subjects.  It follows academic standards while remaining loyal to fundamental religious principles — the Bible is a G-d—given Book and the commandments of the Bible are binding upon the Jewish people.

The Bible Seminar is intense — there are five class periods a day and each class period offers 10 different course selections.  The range is amazing, covering nearly every book in the Bible.  The lecturers include the staff of Herzog College, the country’s finest Bible College, as well as lecturers and professors from schools and universities all over Israel.  And the participants come from all over Israel as well as from abroad, range in age from 18 to 90, men and women — but they all love the Bible.

I travel each day to the Seminar, about a 90 minute drive each way. And each day, I have passengers in my car — friends and neighbors who hitch a ride with me to the seminars.   At the end of each day, we share experiences from the day’s classes and debate the various perspectives we heard that day regarding familiar Biblical passages.

Friends of mine from all over Israel participate in the seminars for at least some of the days.  Most people cannot devote an entire week to the study but come for a few days.  But for years now, my dear friend Linda and I are both there every day.  We often have registered for the same classes and save each other seats in the front rows.  In fact, Linda and I have been studying Bible together for many years.

We first became friendly when we were both at the same Bible College in Jerusalem when we were 18 years old.  Linda grew up in New Jersey while I came from Ohio but we had both been members of the same Religious Zionist youth movement, Bnei Akiva.  Towards the end of that year in Israel together, we discovered that we were going to be studying at the same university in New York City and decided to share a room in the dormitory.  We were college roommates for the next 3 years, graduating together in 1979.

I got married right after graduation and Linda married two years later.  We lived in two different parts of New York but we both moved to Israel.  We settled in Karnei Shomron and a number of years later, Linda and family settled in Efrat.  Linda and Jay have raised six children in Efrat, some of whom have married and have given them grandchildren.

Another friend that I see each year at the Bible Seminars is my friend Debra.  We grew up together in Cleveland and her father was my rabbi.  Her brother lives a few blocks away from me and his children grew up with mine.  Debra and I studied Bible together from kindergarten through 12th grade and then she too, was with me and Linda in the same Bible College in Jerusalem after high school.  Today, Debra gives Bible classes of her own in Jerusalem, similar to what I do in Karnei Shomron.

Debra’s mother and my mother were and still are good friends — starting in Cleveland and now continuing in Jerusalem.  Debra and I and Wendy, another friend whom I will see at the Bible Seminars tomorrow, were in the same class from pre-school through high school.  Wendy’s mother passed away years ago but our mothers were all dear friends.

I began my life in Cleveland, Ohio, a member of the Orthodox Jewish community.  Being part of the community meant going to synagogue together, going to school together, going to Bnei Akiva together and studying the Bible together.  We formed friendships that have spanned 6 decades and have crossed oceans.  We began in the US and we are all here together, in Israel, still studying Bible.  When we were children, we loved the stories of the Bible.  As we grew, we struggled to understand Biblical Hebrew.  In high school we mastered modern Hebrew and discussed the Bible in Hebrew.  We danced and sang songs whose words were from Scripture.

My Bible Study has also been multi-generational.  Two of my sons are Bible teachers and they, too, participate in the Bible Seminars.  My parents have participated as well in the past, joining their friends from Cleveland who are now living in Jerusalem.

This morning, I heard a wonderful presentation on Genesis given by a mother and her son.  The mother, Dr. Tova Lichtenstein, is the daughter of the leading American rabbi of the last generation, Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveichik and is the widow of one of the leading rabbinic giants in Israel in recent years, Rabbi Aaron Lichtenstein, one of the founders and heads of the Gush Etzion Yeshiva and Herzog College.  The son, Rabbi Moshe Lichtenstein, is now one of the heads of the Gush Etzion Yeshiva and a brilliant Bible scholar in his own right.  They spoke about family relationships in Genesis and how these relationships  are foundational to the Jewish nation even as they point to the vital role family plays in transmitting values and beliefs from one generation to the next.

Mother and son studying and teaching Bible together.  Mother and son representing for us the spiritual and physical continuity that Judaism is all about.  It is all about relationships, family, friends, community. It is about Jewish tradition and Jewish destiny, in Israel.  It is all about the Bible.

Related News

An Eye on Zion: Kochav Yaakov

Just over a century later, a group of devout pioneers sharing the same love and passion for the Land of Israel, founded a new community just north of Jerusalem. Drawing their inspiration from Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeira, they named it “Abir Yaakov,” the same venerated title that was used to address the late Rabbi during his life. Subsequently renamed “Kochav Yaakov,” (“Star of Jacob”), the community has absorbed many Jews who, like Rabbi Abuhatzeira, left their respective countries of birth to live in the Land of Israel.

Mar 3, 2025

The Evil That Surrounds Us

As we watched the return of what we thought were the bodies of four beautiful Israelis, we wept with the families and with all of Israel. Shiri Bibas and her two gorgeous red-headed children, Kfir and Ariel — their story and their pictures traveled the world and became the symbol of the evil and cruelty of the Hamas terrorists.

Feb 25, 2025

An Eye on Zion: Kiryat Arba

On April 4, 1968, Rabbi Moshe and Miriam Levinger, a visionary couple, registered themselves and dozens of others to stay at Hebron’s Park Hotel. Just ten months after the People of Israel liberated Hebron and the rest of the Biblical Heartland during the Six Day War in 1967, this dedicated group excitedly planned to hold the city’s first Passover Seder in several decades.

Feb 17, 2025

The Price We Pay for Caring

What an emotional roller-coaster! Last Sunday and again this past Saturday, we waited with baited breath to see which hostages would be released and what they would look like. It had been more than a year since the last hostage release, and no one knew what their condition would be.

Jan 28, 2025

A Week in Washington D.C.

The experience of participating in what could be one of the most pivotal moments for Judea and Samaria left an indelible mark on me. I want to share with you, my friends, the highlights of this extraordinary journey.

Jan 23, 2025

An Eye on Zion: Yakir

The pioneers named the nascent community “Yakir,” meaning “precious,” the precise Hebrew word used by God to describe His “son,” Ephraim (Jeremiah 31:19).

Jan 13, 2025

Life in a Villa in a Jungle

It is hard to believe that another year has gone by—another year of seemingly unending war, tragedy, loss. There are still 100 hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza. While at least 36 have been murdered, it is not clear how many of the remaining 64 are still alive.

Dec 31, 2024

An Eye on Zion: Avigayil

Drawing their inspiration from the Biblical figure Avigayil (Abigail), Elisha and his friends decided to establish a new community in the southern Hebron Hills. They parked an old bus on a plot of land facing Maon, the ancient Biblical site where Avigayil lived.

Dec 9, 2024

Israel Welcomes Trump

What an astounding result in the US elections! While this regime change will have significant effect on many issues in the US, as an Israeli, I want to share with you my thoughts, which reflect the thoughts of so many in Israel, on how this change will affect Israel.

Nov 19, 2024

An Eye on Zion: Bet Hagai

On Friday evening of May 2, 1980, a group of students from Nir Yeshiva, located on the outskirts of the Biblical city of Hebron, excitedly headed to the Cave of Machpelah. There, they joyfully welcomed in the Sabbath with uplifting prayers.
That evening, however, terrorists threw grenades and fired bullets in the direction of the students, murdering three of them.

Nov 11, 2024