I'm not a kid

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  • #613885

    So therefore I wont do gelila. I have nothing against kids, or gelila for that matter, but I wont do it. Even if you ask nicely. Even if you throw the card at me and run away. I’ll walk out at Shvii.

    So now, someone here has got to be that guy. the guy who says <high pitched voice> “Gelila is sooo chashuv! its better than shlish!”

    Thats fine. Give it to the rabbi.

    #1036396
    oyyoyyoy
    Participant

    nu, someone shtell tzu popas thread

    #1036397
    TheGoq
    Participant
    #1036398
    Curiosity
    Participant

    My great grandfather was the rav and the “candy man” of the shul that he built. Even when he was in his last months of life, in pain and dying of leukemia; sitting in shul on Shabbat a little child came to my great grandfather for candy. His grandsons, my father and my uncle, would tell him to sit down – that they would go get it for the child instead. Yet, he insisted. He lifted himself up out of his seat and slowly limped to the cabinet in the back of the shul, where he had left the bag of lollipops to bring one back for this young child. He was a gadol nistar who respected even the smallest of mitzvahs, putting a smile on a young child’s face. But for a saint such as you, being mechabed a sefer torah – such an insignificant mitzvah – I think everyone can agree you’re too high and lofty for that… I don’t understand what the gabbay’s hava aminah was! It’s a bizayon to you to have to waste your precious time with such shtus. It’s poshut bitul Torah.

    #1036399

    I am the candy man of this shul, indeed quite respected as I am the only one who can get the gabai’s kids to be quiet for more than two minutes. But I am not a kid, so I wont do gelila. Bitul torah, zilzul torah, call it what you want. I still wont do it.

    #1036400
    ivory
    Member

    I’m missing something here… Glila is a bizayon for a grown man? I thought its a kibud?

    #1036401
    showjoe
    Participant

    gilila is a kibud. as a matter of fact so is handing the golel the gartel and cover.

    however since gilila is many times given to kids, for some reason PurimMashgiach seems to think this ruins its “kibud status”

    i dont know why one would think such, but thats his logic.

    #1036402
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant
    #1036403
    showjoe
    Participant

    ok, i understand zaidy point, thx 4 clarifying dy

    #1036404
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Yes, I would be happy for zeidy78 to be my zeidy. I would even buy him gelila.

    At my aufrauf they gave me gelila because they thought it was funny. It was.

    #1036405
    Joseph
    Participant

    Does zaidy78 propose that single men should also be offered to be shliach tzibbur on the yomim noraim (or yom tov), despite the minhag otherwise, in order to prove our equal treatment of older single guys? How about wearing a talis?

    #1036406
    showjoe
    Participant

    lior: no that goes against halacha/tradition.

    but not giving them gilila dosent

    #1036407
    sirvoddmort
    Member

    I’m not a kid

    May I respectfully disagree?

    And if davening for the omud was considered a azzus would you turn it down?

    #1036408
    TheGoq
    Participant

    Thats just the point sirvodd married people dont have to ask for respect they just get it.

    #1036409
    #1036410
    sm29
    Participant

    I think the idea is since it’s a job that’s given to kids, we don’t want to do what is like their job, even though it’s very important. It’s like when I was in high school(went to a small school near an elementary school) and the teacher suggested joining the younger students for an activity that i felt was too young, like making our own shofar. I refused because it was their project.

    I think it’s sad though that Gelila is viewed negatively, when it’s an important job. I understand though about not wanting to viewed as a kid

    #1036411
    Joseph
    Participant

    Who does gelila in a minyan where there are no children?

    If everyone takes this attitude apparently everyone will be refusing to do gelila and the Sefer Torah will be stuck open.

    #1036412
    oomis
    Participant

    As most of you know, who know me for many years in the CR, the one main thing that ALWAYS grinds my gears, is disrespect. It is one of the very few things about which I might give mussar to another poster, and out of deference to the obvious lack of thought that the OP put into his comment before actually hitting “send post,” I will assume he was just trying to elicit lots of controversial commentary.

    I don’t know if g’lilah is more choshuv than shlishi or any other kibud, for that matter. What I do know is that when one is offered the opportunity to be mechabeid the Torah, and treats that kovod with zilzul the way it seems to have been treated here, there is something fundamental that is apparently lacking in that person’s thinking.

    I hope the OP will reconsider his ill-advised comment, and be appreciative of ANY kovod that is offered to him. My husband is a real baal anivus, and feels as though he should refuse certain kibbudim because he believes himself to be unworthy of them, having come from an irreligious background. I told him the same thing I am saying here. It is not just a kovod to the person, it is kovod to the Torah, and it would be disrespectful to refuse. Only exception in my mind, is when someone is being given that kovod too frequently, when others have not had a chance. And there is still a respectful way to express the thought that perhaps it is someone else’s turn.

    #1036413
    ivory
    Member

    Beautiful oomis! Thank you so much for kindly and RESPECTFULLY explaining the truth!

    #1036414
    oomis
    Participant

    Ivory, I appreciate your comment.

    #1036415

    @Lior

    If there are no children, then it’s not a bizayon, because when they give it to you it’s not because you are the oldest child

    @oomis

    Yes, you are correct in theory, unfortunately you are incorrect in actuality. It would be so nice if everyone felt the way you did and it was not always given to the oldest single present and then it would be a kibud that everyone would appreciate. but that is not what goes on.

    #1036416
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    @oomis

    Yes, but in your standing up for respect, you have ignored the very basic level of respect that op is looking for.

    #1036417
    oomis
    Participant

    Seriously, Popa???? I will assume, knowing your usual posting style, that this was a joke coming from you. The poster was either yanking our chains (and I think he was just trolling), or is genuinely in need of a better understanding of what kovod haTorah means. And by the way, to get respect, one must show respect.

    #1036418
    golfer
    Participant

    Oomis, the OP presented his point in a joking manner, but I don’t think he’s playing with us.

    The fact is, this is a Kibbud that is usually given to a younger bachur. The problem is that a man of 30 or 40 or 50 who isn’t married, is still considered a bachur. And may actually feel uncomfortable to be called up to the Torah, bifnei am v’eidah, at a point where it’s common to see a young man proudly sporting his first Borsalino.

    The embarrassment is similar (forgive me if I’m wrong, Miss Haifa) to haifagirl’s discomfort (mentioned in a different thread) when her friend’s children call her by her first name, and call their mother’s married friends who are 20 years younger than haifag, “Mrs X”.

    People who have not yet been zoche to stand under the Chuppa with their bashert want to be respected as normal, adult members of our society, not as overgrown (possibly graying) childen. That’s the respect the OP is requesting, oomis.

    I think that what threw you off course is the fact that there is a Sefer Torah involved in the discussion. And Kavod Torah does have precedence. But I didn’t notice any intended bizayon (Ch”v’Sh) here. Just a request for consideration, and recognition of the fact that the OP is a mature adult.

    With all the hype about the catastrophe (not my word, coined by someone far more chashuv than me) facing our older single ladies, it’s understandable that the men who find themselves in the same predicament feel somewhat invisible. They have all these askanim pointing out to them, in large colorful ads, that they don’t actually exist. Or, if they do in fact find they have a pulse, and see a reflection in the mirror, it must mean there’s something seriously wrong with them.

    So Popa may or may not have been joking (I don’t think so), but I have to agree with him.

    #1036419
    Little Froggie
    Participant

    Oomis, (again!) Very beautifully written and expressed. Yes, folks here are putting their own kavod before HaShem and His Torah. They would do well to take a lesson from David hamelech and what he answered Michal when she berated that it was below his dignity by dancing so vigorously in front of the Aron.

    I don’t have Hebrew here so I can’t quote his timeless words and most important lesson, it’s worth looking up.

    No, regarding HaShems honour I’ll do ANYTHING, so should anyone else genuinely Jewish.

    There is a lesser known Kibud extending the Torah belt and mantle to the one doing Gelilah. I always try to grab it. No, not at all a “lessening of my honor”.

    I think there’s a Rambam about this, something about dancing before HaShem and his Torah, and about someone who doesn’t because it’s below his dignity.

    #1036420

    In fact, the gabai offered me glila today, and I happily took the kibud because there were no kids there, and the gabbai was just giving it to whoever was closest.

    @oomis @little froggie

    #1036421
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Yes quite serious oomis.

    Take a step back and reconsider.

    Connsider if you really do believe in respect. Or if you just couch your opinions in terms of respect.

    #1036422

    Without expressing an opinion one way or the other regarding Gelilah, I will just mention that I don’t think “You gotta relax” is an appropriate response to offer someone who has taken offense.

    #1036423
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    JF: I don’t think that’s a very fair remark to make without taking sides.

    It kinda feels like you’re taking sideways shots to try to undermine one’s position.

    A bit like the guy who trips one of two people in a fight, and then says he has nothing to do witht he fight.

    #1036424

    I disagree. Substantively, I can see both sides here. But one of my pet peeves is when someone responds to an objection (legitimate or not) by saying “Chill” or something in that genre. It’s condescending, offensive, and shuts down dialogue.

    #1036425

    @jewishfeminist02

    No offense was taken by oomis because she still has no idea what my point of view is. I already agreed to her in theory, and pointed out that in practicality however, it is far from what goes on.

    I usually get offensive when people pretend to be offended. It usually comes out when they repeat themselves without responding to the ideas expressed by the person with whom they are conversing.

    #1036426
    ivory
    Member

    May I suggest a practical impractical idea… Maybe if mature men (married and single) would start accepting glila it wouldn’t be a kids aliya and no one would be offended!

    #1036427

    The gabbaim have to stop giving it to children first

    #1036428
    ivory
    Member

    In other words we’re going around in circles. The adults don’t want to accept it cause it belongs to the kids. The gabbaim can’t stop giving it to kids cause adults don’t want to accept!

    #1036429
    Joseph
    Participant

    Maybe it should be given to the women?

    #1036430
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Not really Ivory. They could just keep giving it to kids, and also not give it to single men over 18.

    #1036431
    catch yourself
    Participant

    Having learned in a Yeshiva in Givat Shaul, I used to daven at Zupnik’s Shteiblach quite often. I remember the last surviving “Diskin Yasom,” then a man of over eighty years old, being honored (and accepting…) with gelilah on a regular basis.

    For what it’s worth, as a former gabbai, I must say there is no malice intended, and I certainly hope that I never offended anyone in any way, either by not extending a kibud, or by extending “the wrong” kibud. I think (and hope) I speak for all gabbaim when I say that a gabbai views his position as an opportunity to be m’chabeid other Jews, not chas v’shalom the opposite!

    For the record, I believe that most (all?) gabbaim make every effort to deal with “older singles” as well as all people in a sensitive way (i.e., I would never call an older single, “habachur…” – he would be the same “Reb…” as his friends from high school). Keep in mind that by no fault of their own, older singles (and younger ones for that matter) have fewer occasions which entail receiving kibbudim than married men do. This may in fact be the origin of the minhag to offer gelilah to singles; there was a motivation to make sure that they would not be overlooked.

    I agree that in general people “gotta relax.” Just knowing that everyone around you is (usually) trying to do the right thing in the best way they know how should help you realize that no slight was intended.

    #1036432
    ivory
    Member

    I was responding to Purim mashgiachs response

    #1036433
    Joseph
    Participant

    Why would you not call a bachur “habachur”?

    #1036434

    @ivory

    Give it to marrieds

    @catch yourself

    Indeed, I am sure that it isn’t, wasn’t, and hopefully never will be malicious, that doesn’t change the feelings that are affected by this insensitivity

    @Lior

    It’s insensitive

    #1036435
    Joseph
    Participant

    It’s insensitive to call a bachur a bachur? That’s the proper way to call a bachur up to the Torah.

    Is being a bachur a handicap?

    #1036436
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Yes Lior, because the torah says lo tonu.

    So are you oveid Hashem or rabbi miller?

    #1036437

    PurimMashgiach:

    I don’t really understand what “pretend to be offended” means.

    Regardless of whether oomis did or did not understand what you meant, “you gotta relax” is still not an appropriate response. Maybe you should clarify what you meant if you really think she didn’t get it.

    catch yourself:

    I agree with this: “Just knowing that everyone around you is (usually) trying to do the right thing in the best way they know how should help you realize that no slight was intended.”

    But it doesn’t mean that people who do take offense should be responded to by having their feelings disregarded. It’s unrealistic to expect everyone to have the above attitude, and it’s not proper to push people away or imply that they have no right to feel the way they do.

    #1036438

    Guess what?

    I got offered glila for chosson Torah!

    And guess what?

    I took it!

    You know why?

    It’s was not because I was an alter bochur.

    I like that minyan

    (Even though everything else about that minyan was a complete and total bizayon hatorah)

    #1036439
    catch yourself
    Participant

    PM and JF: My point was simply that often our feelings about (and response to) the actions of others are colored by our own perception of reality, which in turn is largely controlled by our personal attitudes.

    I was not “demanding” that people have a certain attitude; I was suggesting that people work to develop that attitude for their own benefit.

    Nothing “wrong” with calling up an older single as “habachur…”; My feeling was that he would feel uncomfortable, as if his single status were being highlighted.

    There is no question that we should always strive to be more considerate of the sensitivities of everyone around us. At the same time, people with sensitivities would benefit themselves by remembering that the people around them are not angels.

    #1036440
    oomis
    Participant

    The fact is, this is a Kibbud that is usually given to a younger bachur. “

    Not in my shul.This is more often given to the elderly who can no longer do Hagbaha and cannot stand for an aliyah. I think that shows GREAT respect for them.

    I believe that the very fact that the OP chose the kovod of G’lilah as his example (if it is correct that he merely wants to be treated as an adult and not as a kid), leads me to feel he has another agenda, and that is to stir up the controversy that he did, or else, he has no inner concept of kovod for Torah.

    And Popa, yes, I believe in respect all around. But I also believe first and foremost in respect for the Torah, and that is NOT was I was feeling from that OP’s words. I think that after all these years, you should recognize that I try to be very reflective and think before I speak. And I try to always be sincere in what I express. Perhaps this time around, I did not express myself sufficiently well. If so, I regret that lapse.

    However, WHATEVER the OP meant to convey, it came off (to me, at least and possibly to some others) as a bit chutzpahdig when speaking of something related to kovod haTorah. I will l’chaf zechus at this point, assume that was unintentional on his part, but please be assured, I am not overly-sensitive, I am quite “chillaxed” (especially now that everyone has gone home after yom tov), and if I give mussar in this forum, I must be feeling VERY strongly about the subject at hand. Regarding and worse, describing, ANY kovod relating to the Torah in a dismissive way, upsets me very much. It reminds me of someone who was insulted at my oldest son’s wedding because her husband was “only” asked to be an Eid Kiddushin at the Chuppah, instead of being asked to make a bracha under it.

    #1036441
    ivory
    Member

    Thanks for clarifying. Just to be dan lkaf zechus,as you pointed out, if only kids are getting glila in his shul he is totally justified in feeling slighted if he’s being singled out as an older single to get that kibud.

    #1036442
    TheGoq
    Participant

    Oomis with all due respect (and i have much respect for you) you have never been an older single bochur you dont know the pain of such an individual and how they are slighted by society as a whole this is just one way which is done publicly and therefore can hurt even more, I don’t think the gabbaim are doing this maliciously but just the same it is a slight it is saying you are not quite a man thats how the man perecieves as well as the rest of the shul.

    #1036443
    popa_bar_abba
    Participant

    Well, I suppose if you interpreted it as a troll thread to stir up controversy, then your reaction makes sense.

    I happen to think you completely misread it and that op is completely earnest. Having myself been in his situation many times.

    One time I went over to the gabbai afterward and listed off my resume, and then topped it with “but when I come for yontiff they give me gellilah because I’m single”.

    I can assure you 100 percent this op is earnest. Maybe you should at least be mesupek.

    #1036444
    oomis
    Participant

    I will be mekabeil the explanations being given. I personally have never observed in ANY shul that I have attended, that young bochurim or older single males were being singled out for g’lilah. So the concept of this being done “routinely” is quite foreign to me. Anything that is done in such a way as to make someone feel embarrassed (like putting me at the kids’ table at a slightly distant relative’s wedding (when I was specifically included in the wedding as a way of introducing me ot friends of the chosson), is improper. But IMO one should never feel that any action relating to the taking out or putting back the Torah, is a “slight” or a lesser kovod. It is unfortunate that ANY shul would relegate a kovod of this type only to bochurim or older singles, resulting in their finding it ultimately offensive and embarrassing, when it should never be considered as such. Would you feel the same way if Shishi were only given out to the same demographic?

    I do, however, understand your point, though I am not a male.

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