An Israeli woman mocked a Chabad rabbi at Ben Gurion Airport as he helped another man don tefillin.The lady has been throughly criticized for her behavior on Israeli social media. I would like to offer my insight into her unseemly behavior.The woman, whose actions were captured on a cellphone video posted on Facebook, mocked the men, laughing and screeching on Monday morning as they practiced the religious rite. She yelled at them in Hebrew to “move because you are bothering me” and asked rhetorically, “Why are you doing this here? There are people here.”
Several people in the terminal ask her to tone down, but instead she became louder.
The video, which has had more than 300,000 views since Monday, was posted by Gad Kaufman, the businessman who put on the tefillin with the help of the Chabad rabbi manning a booth at the airport.
Kaufman, who was leaving Israel for a business trip, wrote a post in the Hebrew with the video.
“An amazing incident took place this morning at the airport, when I was politely asked by a Chabad man if I wanted to put on tefillin,” he wrote. “I said yes, and then a woman with a crazy look jumped up and started cursing, harassing and disturbing! It is really shameful that being a Jew in this country means being persecuted by leftist Bohemians. If I were a Muslim or a Christian, would it be more legitimate for her …?”
The woman was identified by the Israel National News website as Pnina Peri, the head of the Joseph and Alma Gildenhorn Institute for Israel Studies at the University of Maryland. Peri, who formerly taught at Israel’s Sapir Academic College, is an expert in multicultural theories. Her husband, Yoram Peri, served as president of the New Israel Fund, which supports left-wing causes, from 1999 to 2001.
Many of the responses to the video criticized the woman for her actions. Several also praised the Chabad rabbi, identified by Channel 20, a religious news station, as Rabbi Meir Herzl, the director of the Chabad House in the Jerusalem suburb of Pisgat Zeev, for his restraint in not responding to her.
This lady has a pure and holy Jewish soul. When she saw a Jew happily accept the opportunity of performing the mitzvah of tefilin, that Jewish soul was aroused. That made Ms. Peri feel very uncomfortable. It is something that she has probably been educated to suppress. This outburst was just her way of stamping out this arousement of her holy Jewish soul.
One can certainly learn a lesson from this embarrasing clip. As the Mishnah states,
"Contemplate three things, and you will not come to the hands of transgression: Know what is above from you: a seeing eye, a listening ear, and all your deeds being inscribed in a book."What will be with me when my time comes, and the heavenly tribunal will show me all of the "clips" where I am the star?
2 comments:
Thank you for this comment
The whole episode has bothered me. A woman acted inappropriately at an airport and was mocked at the time.
I don't know why she acted this way (I like your theory), but she may have been nervous about flying, or stressed with something at home or at work, or just having a bad day, or maybe she's a jerk - I have no idea.
What I do know is that we have all acted in an embarrassing or inappropriate manor on occasion, and normally feel bad about it afterwards. However in this day and age of cell phones, instead of embarrassing yourself in front of a handful of people in an airport, you can be embarrassed in front of 300,000 viewers, who know nothing about you other than a 20 second clip.
That short clip can effect your entire life (imagine going for a job interview in the month after an embarrassing 10 second clip when viral)
Your reminder that even before cell phones our actions were being recorded and may come back to haunt us was a great way to put this in perceptive and take a positive message away from the entire episode.
Thank YOU for YOUR comment, Michael!
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