A picture tells a story. The story tells what is missing from this image
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✨ Discover A picture tells a story. The story tells what is missing from this image
— everything you need to know
This guide:
Look carefully in this picture. It was taken this morning. It is a scene that repeated itself among the Jewish people for thousands of years. On the left side of the picture, there are two Juda’s son, who was to have a Metzvva bar in one month. This morning, placed on TEFILIN and Tallit for the first time. This story is listed in the picture.
He stands on his left, broken, is his great grandfather Abram Corcvield. He was summoned to the Torah first today in honor of his grandson, who was putting Tefillin for the first time. When Abram was 12 and 13 years old, he was not wearing Tefillin. Instead, he was wandering between the detention camps. On Saturday, just 3 days ago, we celebrated the seventieth anniversary of its liberation from the Buchenwald Competion camp.
Today, Zayed recited the Abram prayer of the traditional mourners for his father Mir, who was killed at the end of World War II in Bushnwald. The seventieth anniversary of his father’s death begins tonight according to the Hebrew calendar. Zayde Meir’s father almost ended the war and kept the eye contact with his son by wearing a red hat that Zayde ABRAM obtained. In this way they can see each other through the camp and maintain each other’s morale. The great grandfather may not be in this picture, but he lives through Zayde Abram, who has dozens of grandchildren and many great descendants of the grandchildren who put Tefillin. He is not photographed here but here.
Standing next to me and I read the Torah is my father and to his right is my father in the law. Tonight is also the sixteenth anniversary of the death of the mother of Abi, Bobby, known to all her friends and family as Tootsie (Sarah) Eisenberg. Bubby is responsible for a major family that we repeat to all our children. “It takes a long time to say something good as is the case in saying something not good.” Hence she was loved by all friends. She had more friends than anyone could count. My son Yehuda seems to have a characteristic of the character as well. She is also in the picture but she did not see.
At the back behind the pole, my daughter Tamar, whose birthday is on the same day. She was born on the thirtieth day after the death of Sony Eisenberg. Hence we named Tamar Nikama. Nechama in Hebrew means comfort. At the back, above the head of Judea is my son Sony Eisenberg. The same name was a US Navy officer in World War II and Zionist sensitivity. I encouraged my father to go to study in Israel, which I would like to say is a great driving force for my decision to move to Israel and my father as well. He is also in the picture, Tiflene wears though his great grandson.
The peak above my head is my wife Jaffa. If you notice that the loving ornamental decorations for every divorce (called Atara In the Hebrew language) Ali Juda, I and Sony, because Jaffa made these. She was inspired by my mother hidden by my father. The family badge, if it is permissible to express, is about the decoration of the loving cost is now a tradition in these images and for life. My mother started in the Mitzva Port 30 years ago next month. Then I made the person over the head of my father, who you see in the picture (and my brother on the right side of the image). I made my original mother Atara And now I made Jaffa for me and my children.
My mother is in law and her mother in the back to the left of the picture, hidden by the curtain. Boba (my wife’s grandmother) will say, “With me, none of you will be here.” You may be right. The same should be said about my mother -in -law, which insisted that her parents and family continue in all traditions. This was not easy for a poor migratory family coming out on the other side of the Holocaust. This focus on tradition is what brought us to this picture today.
It is important to tell the hidden story of this image. We do not always take enough time to think about the history of our families and people. We do not tell our children where they came to understand where they need to go to it. When we look at a picture of four generations and understand that there are 4 generations that are really present in the image and the other ancestors who are represented but not in the picture, we must stop.
I stop, praise be to God for our luck to live, and to live in our country after 2000 years of wandering. Stop thinking about those who have never made from gas rooms to Israel or America and those who survived the horrors of giving us life. I stop thanks to the United States for taking Jewish refugees and Jewish officers in the navy and being a great place to grow. I stop thinking about the importance of family and family traditions that move from generation to generation. I stop temporarily to take all the lessons that are taught to us and our children by those who are photographed here and those that exist but are not photographed in the picture. I stop drinking and embrace the wonderful responsibility that we should hold as a generation that must continue to build the moral fibers and the economic opportunity for the small state of Israel to inspire the world and absorb the Jewish people.
I pray and hope. I pray to God that we all can celebrate many traditions with more generations. And I hope that the photographers and those present with us will continue with us.
Learn more at: http://sixkidsandafulltimejob.blogspot.com/2015/04/a-picture-tells-story-story-tells-what.html
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– Published on: 2015-04-13 18:25:00
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