The English update issue 164 165 | Page 15

by Dr. Miriam Adahan OVERCOMING A TERROR MENTALITY The horror was unimaginable. Long lines of Holocaust victims stood awaiting the dreaded selection by the arch villain of Auschwitz, Dr. Joseph Mengele, ym”sh. He stood arrogantly with his polished boots and white gloves, taking only seconds to determine each victim’s fate. With a callous flick of his thumb he sent those he deemed useful to the right, which meant life, while children, the weak, old, pregnant, handicapped or “useless” were sent to the left, to the gas chambers. away from a “bad person/friend/ neighbor.” But very early in life, we take this far beyond the safe/unsafe level and begin to think, “Different is defective.” By the age of three, children size each other up, seeking to befriend those who are powerful and popular. They feel unbearable shame if they are “Mengalized” by someone who says, “Eewee” about an item of clothing they are wearing or “Yich” about a food no one else is eating. By age six, they know that the brilliant kids get all the glory, while the losers are sent to the left and ignored or punished. They know that the class king/queen dictates the dress code and decides who is “in” and who is “out.” They instinctively conform to those dictates to avoid the “Mengeleyes” that turn them into objects of derision and exclusion. Children also learn self-loathing from the media and advertisers, who imply that they’ll The Inner Judge I do not mean to trivialize this monster’s horrific actions. Yet our Sages say that we possess a “dust” of the traits we see in others. In truth, we all possess an inner judge which turns others into dust and ashes, if only mentally. In our homes, schools, stores, social events and shuls, we judge people. It’s as natural as breathing. Within seconds, we perform a mental selection, flicking them to the right (“S/he is successful, good looking, smart, rich, accomplished, at my religious level, a member of my social group,” etc.) or left (“S/he is ugly, weird, stupid, fat, not at my religious level, not in my social group, a loser, wears the wrong shoes or the wrong hat, etc.). Judgments have a purpose. We do need to evaluate others as safe - physically, emotionally, and spiritually. After all, in our morning prayers, we ask Hashem to keep us March 7, 2014 15