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May 20, 2026
Seeing Shavuot Through the Eyes of a Child
Please see my new article in The Times of Israel called "Seeing Shavuot Through the Eyes of a Child."When my five-year-old grandson asked for pictures of the Torah and Ten Commandments for Shavuot, his sincere remark that “Hashem is so happy that you made these for me” stopped me in my tracks. His excitement revealed the Torah not as an ancient relic but as something alive, personal, and meaningful, embodying the innocence and clarity that adults often lose. This moment reflected Shavuot’s deeper message: though the Torah was given at Mount Sinai over 3,000 years ago, it is spiritually renewed each year as we return to it as changed people with new experiences and questions. Judaism endures not through nostalgia alone but through active engagement—learning, teaching, struggling, and returning—so that every generation, like my grandson, rediscover the Torah as something new and bring the covenant at Sinai to life once again.
Labels:
Andy Blumenthal,
Change,
Children,
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Community,
Continuity,
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Faith,
Family,
Growth,
Innocence,
Judaism,
Learning,
Mount Sinai,
Renewal,
Shavuot,
Spirituality,
Survival,
Times of Israel,
Torah
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