Gleanings
Jewish Wisdom on
Friendship
Jewish literature offers many insights into the
nature of friendship, the rewards it offers, and the efforts one should make to
sustain a friendship.
The following selections represent contributions to the
understanding and appreciation of friendship. They are taken from a medieval
midrash, a Hasidic tale, and the writing of a contemporary rabbi.
True
Friendship
There were two close friends who had been parted by war so
that they lived in different kingdoms. Once one of them came to visit his
friend, and because he came from the city of the king's enemy, he was
imprisoned and sentenced to be executed as a spy.
No amount of pleas would save him, so he begged the king for
one kindness.
"Your Majesty," he said, "let me have just
one month to return to my land and put my affairs in order so my family will be
cared for after my death. At the end of the month I will return to pay the
penalty."
"How can I believe you will return?" answered the
king. "What security can you offer?"
"My friend will be my security," said the man.
"He will pay for my life with his if I do not return."
The king called in the man's friend, and to his amazement,
the friend agreed to the conditions.
On the last day of the month, the sun was setting, and the
man had not yet returned. The king ordered his friend killed in his stead. As
the sword was about to descend, the man returned and quickly placed the sword
on his own neck. But his friend stopped him.
"Let me die for you," he pleaded.
The king was deeply moved. He ordered the sword taken away
and pardoned them both.
"Since there is such great love and friendship between
the two of you," he said, "I entreat you to let me join you as a
third." And from that day on they became the king's companions.
And it was in this spirit that our sages of blessed memory
said, "Get yourself a companion" [Mishnah Avot 1:6].
-- This translation of
a legend, from the collection of minor midrashic works, Bet ha-midrash,
assembled by the Viennese scholar Adolf Jellinek (1820-1893), appears in
Francine Klagsbrun, Voices
of Wisdom (Pantheon Books).
Learning
to Love a Fellow Human Being
Rabbi Moshe Leib [of Sassov, a late 18th-century Ukrainian
Hasidic master] told this story:
"How to love men [i.e., other persons] is something I
learned from a peasant. He was sitting in an inn with other peasants, drinking.
For a long time he was as silent as all the rest, but when he was moved by
wine, he asked one of the men seated beside him, 'Tell me, do you love me or
don't you love me?'
"The other peasant replied, 'I love you very much’.
"But the first peasant replied, 'You say that you love
me, but you do not know what I need. If you really loved me, you would know.'
"The other had not a word to say to this, and the
peasant who had put the question fell silent again.
"But I understood. To know the needs of men and to bear
the burden of their sorrow--that is the true love of men."
-- Martin Buber
(1878-1965), a prolific author and influential Jewish thinker, was Professor of
Social Philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Reprinted from Tales of the Hasidim, vol. 2: The Later Masters
(Schocken Books).
Only
Our Relationships Endure
I was sitting on a beach one summer day, watching two
children, a boy and a girl, playing in the sand. They were hard at work
building an elaborate sandcastle by the water's edge, with gates and towers and
moats and internal passages. Just when they had nearly finished their project,
a big wave came along and knocked it down, reducing it to a heap of wet sand.
I expected the children to burst into tears, devastated by
what had happened to all their hard work. But they surprised me. Instead, they
ran up the shore away from the water, laughing and holding hands, and sat down
to build another castle.
I realized that they had taught me an important lesson. All
the things in our lives, all the complicated structures we spend so much time
and energy creating, are built on sand. Only our relationships to other people
endure. Sooner or later, the wave will come along and knock down what we have
worked so hard to build up. When that happens, only the person who has
somebody's hand to hold will be able to laugh.
-- Rabbi Harold
Kushner is Rabbi Laureate of Temple Israel in Natick, Massachusetts, and author
of To
Life!: A Celebration of Jewish Being and Thinking (Little, Brown & Co.) and
Living
a Life that Matters (Anchor Books).
Reprinted from When
All You've Ever Wanted Isn't Enough (Summit
Books).