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Should I forgive my deceased, formerly abusive parents?



Question:

I am about to be married to my wonderful fiancé, but my heart is troubled. Must I go to the cemetery to invite the souls of my deceased parents to the wedding, though they both abused me as a child—both physically and emotionally? Maybe I can forgive them for the beatings, but I cannot find forgiveness in my heart for the emotional abuse which continued well into my adulthood years. My childhood haunts me and has continued to give me great pain in spite of professional help and much prayer.

Answer:

Firstly, I'd like to wish you a warm mazal tov! May you and your fiancée share many years of happiness and meaning, enjoying a Jewish home based on Torah values.

As a child, you experienced neglect and abuse at the hands of the ones who should have shown you the most caring, attention and love. It is no wonder that you continue to be haunted by those horrific memories.

I am not sure how many years have gone by since your parents passed away. But their blemished souls, by now, have surely undergone the painful purifications of the Hereafter, which comes with the soul's keen realization of the gravity of its misdeeds (for more on this topic, see I'm scared of going to hell...). Surely their souls were filled with bitter remorse for their deplorable behavior. And surely by now their hot tears of contrition have scoured away their dark stains. If they were able to communicate with you today, they would certainly express their remorse and beg for forgiveness.

Just one thing now stands in the way of complete Divine forgiveness—that is the forgiveness that only you, their child and victim, can give.

I encourage you to focus your thoughts on the gift of life your parents gave you, and whatever other goodness they showed you.

A wedding is such a very special time. With the union of two souls, G‑d forgives the bride and groom for all their past misdeeds. I hope that by the time your wedding arrives, you will find it in your heart to forgive your parents, and to welcome their presence at your wedding.

It may help, too, to take up the regular study of Chassidism. The divine light that shines through its teachings is very therapeutic, and would greatly complement the professional counseling you receive.

To understand the benefits of forgiving those who have wronged us, I would encourage you to read Do we need to forgive those who wrong us?

You also might want to check out our Jewish Marriage section. This section will give you the Jewish perspective on everything from finding a soulmate (which apparently you've successfully managed already), to the wedding ceremony, to marital harmony.

Rabbi Eliezer Danzinger for Chabad.org


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By Eliezer Danzinger   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Eliezer Danzinger, first content editor for KabbalaOnline.org, is the translator and editor of several important Chasidic texts. He also serves as the Jewish chaplain for York Central Hospital, and for numerous Federal prisons. Rabbi Danzinger currently resides in Toronto, Canada, with his wife, Yehudis, and their children.
All names of persons and locations or other identifying features referenced in these questions have been omitted or changed to preserve the anonymity of the questioners.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 3, 2008
forgiving parents
I very much identify with the question as well as the answer. I wish and pray extremely hard that I should be able to practice it.I still find it very hard to look forward to the marraige of my own children or praying for them to have children. I really sincerely think that sometimes it would have been better not to have children if parents are going to behave in this manner. As hard as I try, I feel that I am emotionally stifled and incapacitated to act as a healthy loving mother. My children definitely do not understand or accept this and I really don't feel it is right to speak to them about the horrors my mother did to me. If you have any suggestions for reading material or whatever else I can do to alleviate this blog, I would bless you in my prayers and be very grateful to G-d to send me such valuable information.
Posted By Anonymous, zfas, israel

Posted: Nov 3, 2007
forgivenss isn't the same as agreeing
I forgive my parents their lack of caring and thier shouting etc since I believe that they didn't do it from lack of love but from their own emotional lacks from their childhoods. I pity them; that sin't the same as feeling that they acted in an acceptable manner.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Oct 30, 2007
re: Question and Should
I discovered when I was 17, after not being able to cry following a beating that the most severe crime was not in the beating as it was in the sudden self awareness that if I turn to stone, I would become that which I most despised. At that moment my tears flowed like a river. I have been free ever since. By accepting that my mother must have had issues which she did not release, it was she that I should love more. I did not say, "agree", but "forgive". In the forgiving is the releasing and you will no longer be captive. Before my mother passed, she had Alzheimers and she remembered her horrible actions BUT AS SOMEONE ELSE, not as herself. She cried because she couldn't believe that a mother could be so harsh and inflict such beatings for next to no reason upon her own wonderful child. I now have 17 grandchildren. When my children were young, I remembered that I had the chance to teach love, kindness and above all, forgiveness. G_d knows you and them. I hope this helped.
Posted By Faith Savitt, New Hope, MN, US



 


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