Speaking in shul yesterday between minchah and maariv, Rabbi Wein spoke positively about something we usually associate with the negative: pride. When it’s attached to an individual, pride can be a big problem: people who are proud are, by definition, not humble. They may crave honour and status and their pride can be at the expense of other people on whom they look with disdain. But this wasn’t the sort of pride that Rabbi Wein was talking about.
Next Shabbat’s leining begins with the mitzvah of counting
the Children of Israel—but the Torah doesn’t give the usual word for counting.
Instead, it says “Ki Tiso”, when you lift up the heads of those whom you
are counting. Holding up one’s head is a sign of pride.
Secular Jews, Rabbi Wein continued, are rarely proud of being Jewish and, as Jews, have little sense of self-respect. This is why the Purim story offers an explanation for the gezerah, the decree of destruction that was made against the Jewish people: they joined in the six-month-long party celebrations of Acheshverosh while that king was seeking to embarrass and humiliate them. Dressed in the garb of the Kohen Gadol and serving food and drink from vessels pillaged from the Temple, he was blatantly mocking his Jewish guests—yet they came, they ate and they drank. It was not avodah zarah (idolatry) that sealed their fate. Rather, it was their abandonment of any pretence of self-respect. They had no pride.
Rabbi Wein added that it is not a mitzvah to be proud of
being Jewish. No-one commands us to do it. But it is a value, and an important
one at that. Without proudly recognizing our status as Jews, we have missed the
whole point of our Judaism. In short, without being proud of who and what we
are, we are doomed.
Concluding with a litmus test that we can all apply in our
lives, Rabbi Wein quoted an aphorism from his cheder rebbe: “If your grandparents
can look at you and take pride in who you are, and if your grandchildren can
look at you and take pride in you, then you know you are doing something right”.
Purim same’ach—and have a proud Purim!