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Chabad.org » Magazine » 5763 - (2002-2003) » Bo » Learning the Child


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Inner Dimensions
Learning the Child



There are no one-way streets in our world. There is no way to give without getting, there is no one who gets but does not give.

So it is with the child. Just as the adult gives the child the knowledge and wisdom of life, so the child can give the adult the keys of how to live it.


What is it that the child has to teach?

The child naively believes that everything should be fair and everyone should be honest, that only good should prevail, that everybody should have what they want and there should be no pain or sadness. The child believes the world should be perfect and is outraged to discover it is not.

And the child is right.


Watch the child involved in an activity. Whatever the child is doing, there the child is, all the child.


A child's enthusiasm comes in a storm, taking over the child's entire world. That is why, when a child embraces a new, good trait, it enters forever.


The child delights in the simple things of life. Sometimes that delight could lead in the wrong direction. But the delight in itself is good.

We need to embrace and nurture the delight while weaning it from those things unwholesome.


A child cannot learn something without running out and screaming it to others. And so it should be with all those who have knowledge.


When a child feels something is missing the child wants it, demands it with all the heart and soul -- and demands it now.

We are all lacking, because the world is not the way it should be and none of us are in our proper place. We need to demand from the Owner Above that all this be repaired and be repaired now.


A child gives love for the sake of love. But even an adult can learn to do the same.


How will we preserve the innocence, the genius and the beauty of the child into adulthood?

First, we will nurture that beauty from its very beginning. We will surround the child with Torah and sing to it songs of wisdom even before it leaves the womb. We will make the child's room into a sanctuary with holy books, posters with thoughtful messages hanging on the walls and a charity box to be used daily.

And then, as the child emerges to discover that the world outside is not quite the same as that sanctuary, we will explain, "Yes, this is not the way it is supposed to be. But it is only temporary. You and I and all of us, we are going to change it. We are partners in the act of creating this world, because it is our mission to perfect it. And we are doing this now, with acts of beauty and kindness, one good deed at a time."



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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
From the wisdom of the Lubavitcher Rebbe; words and condensation by Tzvi Freeman. To order Tzvi's book, "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth, click here. Rabbi Freeman is available for public speaking and workshops. Read more on his bio page.

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Inner Dimensions:
Learning the Child

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Bo - Exodus 10:1-13:16

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