tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post293346086737063899..comments2024-03-29T11:40:46.477+03:00Comments on Life in Israel: The "Chalake-less Chalaka"Rafi G.http://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comBlogger33125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-57059616376647814482010-12-29T20:53:33.706+02:002010-12-29T20:53:33.706+02:00Good grief I had no idea of the intricacies, and n...Good grief I had no idea of the intricacies, and none of them related in any way to Torah. I think I'll go not boil my kid in its mother's milk...Yam Erezhttp://StandByYourName.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-88163114352749199652010-12-29T20:52:09.302+02:002010-12-29T20:52:09.302+02:00Good God, I had no idea of the intricacies...and n...Good God, I had no idea of the intricacies...and none of it based in Torah. I think I'll go not boil my kid in its mother's milk...Yam Erezhttp://StandByYourName.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-59840494057929468042009-12-26T17:57:43.179+02:002009-12-26T17:57:43.179+02:00in what places? I have found differences among yek...in what places? I have found differences among yekkishe minhagim, and the differences are usually based on location - which part of Germany they were from...Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-34875239934424394812009-12-25T18:48:42.910+02:002009-12-25T18:48:42.910+02:00In some areas, the Yekkes have the custom of the u...In some areas, the Yekkes have the custom of the upsherin (plus the vimpel).yekkenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-51031891872362398302009-03-30T22:19:00.000+03:002009-03-30T22:19:00.000+03:00Mark - no I don't. So they'll marry people who don...Mark - no I don't. So they'll marry people who don't care about that.Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-34218176659869086052009-03-30T22:04:00.000+03:002009-03-30T22:04:00.000+03:00Rafi - Anyways, I am really yekkishe. Real yekkes ...<I>Rafi - Anyways, I am really yekkishe. Real yekkes always wore hats and jackets.</I><BR/><BR/>Well, certainly the jacket* :-)<BR/><BR/>Mazal Tov - Good looking boy! We have twin three year old boys.<BR/><BR/><I>I think most would say I am driving without a license...</I><BR/><BR/>Are you at all worried that future shidduchim for your kids might be affected due to your level of non-conformance?<BR/><BR/>Mark<BR/><BR/><BR/><BR/>* Anyone who knows the etymology of the word Yekke will have to chuckle.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-51788287067845699572009-03-30T09:57:00.000+03:002009-03-30T09:57:00.000+03:00Rafi,Mazal Tov and shkoyach to you. It's nice that...Rafi,<BR/><BR/>Mazal Tov and shkoyach to you. It's nice that the important parts of the ceremony (i.e., the Torah) have been preserved, even in the absesence of the sartorial pretext.yoni r.noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-49875337697249187032009-03-30T04:22:00.000+03:002009-03-30T04:22:00.000+03:00actually anon, if you'd see his face, you'd know w...actually anon, if you'd see his face, you'd know why it's hidden.......shaya gnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-86917654207628872862009-03-30T00:15:00.000+03:002009-03-30T00:15:00.000+03:00anon - you must be one of the few people who still...anon - you must be one of the few people who still don't know me or what I look like. It does keep a certain sense of intrigue though...Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-4167657508067213452009-03-30T00:12:00.000+03:002009-03-30T00:12:00.000+03:002 things. first of all, what's a nurdery? is that ...2 things. first of all, what's a nurdery? is that for kids who can't make it to the cool gannim?<BR/>2nd, I like it how we can't see your face. it keeps that mystery thing goingAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-69095615355295354712009-03-29T23:16:00.000+03:002009-03-29T23:16:00.000+03:00i hate the look of little boys with long hair. (fo...i hate the look of little boys with long hair. (fortunately) my husband didnt grow up frum so since "it wasnt his minhag" we didnt do that with our boys. however quite a few ppl told me that its "minhag yerushalayim" to grow boys hair until 3. um - since when? why do ppl feel the need to fit everyone into one mold? <BR/>we did do a version of your chalake-less chalakeh and it was really nice for our boys.tzipnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-74023217203515541912009-03-29T22:18:00.000+03:002009-03-29T22:18:00.000+03:00Abbi: I agree with you. I think Rafi's "chiluk bet...Abbi: I agree with you. I think Rafi's "chiluk between yes payos and no upsherin is that he doesn't mind first and he doesn't care for the second." But Rafi wouldn't agree. He says that bottom line its a minhag thing.<BR/>Anyway, don't read into what I am saying more than just the pashut pshat.<BR/><BR/>Rafi: Why do you say that it was social environment that determined your lack of payos growing up in Chicago, but it wasn't social environment (rather, a specific minhag to the contrary) that determined your lack of chalaka? <BR/><BR/>You are probably correct that the payos minhag of the modern-day litvishe was gleaned from the chassidim. And if that's true, then all the more so that as a descendant of german jews, your minhag is actually *not* to have payos, just like it is *not* to have a chalaka. <BR/><BR/>Unless your father (or grandfather) actually told you that you have no minhag either way for payos but you davka do not to chalakas, I still don't see why you think that there is a distinction.BlackBeltStephttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10449874015115985110noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-69702543977746206862009-03-29T20:28:00.000+03:002009-03-29T20:28:00.000+03:00anyways, I am not aware of any actual minhag of ha...anyways, I am not aware of any actual minhag of having long peyos among litvishe jews. Look back at pictures of old litvishe jews and of old litvishe yeshivas from the early 1900s and you will see none of the bochurim sporting long peyos. <BR/><BR/>Perhaps Brisk had such a minhag, but most of Lita did not. The fact that Litvishe have become so associated with such peyos is more of adoption a social style, perhaps stolen from a hassidic minhag, that happened very late in the 20th century (perhaps the mid 1980s, maybe even a bit later). Long peyos is far from being a litvishe minhag.Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-43049283405660476752009-03-29T19:56:00.000+03:002009-03-29T19:56:00.000+03:00BBS, I'm not sure why it's necessary to get all ac...BBS, I'm not sure why it's necessary to get all accusatory on Rafi. There's nothing really holy about charedi minhagim today ie: it's not like charedim today are upholding age-old mesora that they lovingly learned at their zayde's knee (my own zayde from Munkatzch can't figure out why so many frum boys don't work). It's a hodge-podge of minagim that essentially define a "social style" of a particular community, as Rafi said. So i'm not sure what you're trying to insinuate with your "picking and choosing" taunts.<BR/><BR/>It almost sounds like you're accusing rafi of ch'vsh "picking and choosing" mitzvot too, that he's not really committed to being frum if he picks and chooses his random charedi minhagim.<BR/><BR/>He wants his kids to fit in, so he's willing to forgo those minhagim that don't wouldn't brand his family too much of an outsider. So what? The chiluk between yes payos and no upsherin is that he doesn't mind first and he doesn't care for the second. It's really as simple as that.Commenter Abbihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07753256568022159103noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-31526573797746472482009-03-29T19:25:00.000+03:002009-03-29T19:25:00.000+03:00"with peyos, we did not have peyos because we had ..."with peyos, we did not have peyos because we had a minhag of no peyos." should really say "with peyos, we did not have peyos because we had "a specific minhag of no peyos".Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-20194751229862617842009-03-29T19:23:00.000+03:002009-03-29T19:23:00.000+03:00with peyos the kid goes to school for 8 years, hig...with peyos the kid goes to school for 8 years, high school for another 3-4, then yeshiva gedola for however long. a kid will want to fit in for that period of time. and there is no minhag against it.<BR/><BR/>with a chalake - the kid maximum has long hair for three years, usually for considerably less, and in our family it would be "long" for maybe a year. and it is up to age 3. who does he need to fit in with before age 3 that he will have social problems without the chalake? it is short term, and it has no ramifications. So why do something that is not our minhag.<BR/><BR/>with peyos, we did not have peyos because we had a minhag of no peyos. We did not have long peyos because it was not the style where we grew up and in the environment we grew up in. my brothers in law all have long peyos. By the time I was in yeshiva gedola many of my friends had long peyos. I even tried it for a short while. We had no specific minhag on the matter - it was just a matter of social environment.Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-58046780910399712152009-03-29T19:11:00.000+03:002009-03-29T19:11:00.000+03:00so what's the chiluk between "yes" payos and "no" ...so what's the chiluk between "yes" payos and "no" chalaka?<BR/><BR/>it would fit just the same if you would replace the word "payos" with "chalaka" in the below paragraph:<BR/>"the kids have peyos because they go to a litvishe school and that is the style nowadays - kids usually like to fit in with their friends. It would not bother me if they did not want the peyos, but they have them because that is the community they are growing up in. I would not call the peyos as a minhag per se, but a social style. I see no importance in it at all."<BR/><BR/>so, again - why the payos and not the chalaka? is it any more than - because you (your wife) likes the payos idea and not the chalaka idea???<BR/><BR/>if not, well that's what i call picking and choosing. you call it what you want.BlackBeltStephttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10449874015115985110noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-81148561493862395142009-03-29T18:52:00.000+03:002009-03-29T18:52:00.000+03:00the only thing I object to is the suggestion that ...the only thing I object to is the suggestion that I take minhagim by "pick and choose". I have my minhagim I grew up with, but the overwhelming majority are minhagim that were naturally adopted as being in yeshiva, growing up in a melting pot (and thereby not knowing a specific minhag and just doing what everyone else was doing - the majority of american minhagim are like that I think), etc.<BR/><BR/>So we dont do "chalake" because we never did, but kids go to a litvishe school because where else should they go? There is no yekkishe school here or in most of the world and I never went to one. Should they go sfardic? DL? why is a different choice better than litvishe vis a vie the minhag aspect of it? the kids have peyos because they go to a litvishe school and that is the style nowadays - kids usually like to fit in with their friends. It would not bother me if they did not want the peyos, but they have them because that is the community they are growing up in. I would not call the peyos as a minhag per se, but a social style. I see no importance in it at all.Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-53527280218484099892009-03-29T18:42:00.000+03:002009-03-29T18:42:00.000+03:00why the payos? because my wife likes them. and bec...why the payos? because my wife likes them. and because it is the standard here and the kids like to fit in with their friends. My wife has not yet gotten me to grow them out though...Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-45966477622751908712009-03-29T18:26:00.000+03:002009-03-29T18:26:00.000+03:00Kin-ayn-a-hora!My grandson's hair was grown for 3 ...Kin-ayn-a-hora!<BR/>My grandson's hair was grown for 3 years and the other is also growing hair. It did not come from any of the grandparents but perhaps some of the great grandparents. We are such a hodge-podge of ashkenazi (our 3 daughters-in-law as well) that we don't know what customs might have been followed in Europe. My sons are doing it because they like the idea (neither of them are in what I would call a Litvish yeshiva and I don't really know where they got it. They both said that if the kid gets lice or grows so much hair that it's uncomfortable, they'll cut it before 3. Meantime that hasn't happened. <BR/>Lots of naches from all your kids!Risa Tzoharhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05012097234847651866noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-43657440228994638852009-03-29T18:00:00.000+03:002009-03-29T18:00:00.000+03:00well, i wasn't going to sound as aggressive as bla...well, i wasn't going to sound as aggressive as blackkbelt, but i have to agree with his thoughts - you traitor you........<BR/><BR/>the point of living in a non shtetl setting is that everyone can look and behave in their own family customs - even in school. you are supposed to teach your kids that if this is our minhag, it's beautiful and we don't need to look like that or like him. your version of community is the same problem you complained about yeshivos - they destroy family minhagim. you are teaching your kids that our family minhagim are subservient to the communities or to the communal "look".<BR/><BR/>tsk tskshaya gnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-29580060824348050712009-03-29T16:46:00.000+03:002009-03-29T16:46:00.000+03:00So I don't understand why you disagree - your root...So I don't understand why you disagree - your roots are german, you keep various german minhagim, but you also keep various litvishe customs. <BR/><BR/>Payos - definitely not a yekke custom, yet your kids grow them. tell me - why that and not the chalaka/upsherin?BlackBeltStephttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10449874015115985110noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-85677840472282520122009-03-29T16:37:00.000+03:002009-03-29T16:37:00.000+03:00I disagree. I am yekkish with a number of yekkish ...I disagree. I am yekkish with a number of yekkish minhagim. I did not grow up in a yekkishe community, so I did not grow up with yekkish customs of davening and othe rcommunal influenced minhagim. We do keep most personal minhagim of yekkim.<BR/><BR/>Hat styles are a matter of style and times. I do not wear the hat because I am a yekke. Rather because I learned in Litvishe yeshivas. When I said yekkes always wore hats it was to say that the hat is not exclusive to the litvishe.<BR/><BR/>Yes, some of what I do, much of what I do, is mostly influenced by Litvishe standards, as that is the community I live in and the communities I have grown up in. <BR/><BR/>About the term chalake, I used the Hebrew term for it. That is what it is called here for the most part.<BR/><BR/>And while I did pass down bad hair genes, if we wanted to do a chalake, it would not be a big deal. We don't do it, because it is not our custom. Do I do other things that are not purely yekkishe and more litvishe. Yes - as I said I grew up only in Litvishe communities. That is the problem of the melting pot of America, and the melting pot of the yeshiva system.Rafi G.https://www.blogger.com/profile/00699851287106903971noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-72030184642100443262009-03-29T16:31:00.000+03:002009-03-29T16:31:00.000+03:00fairly standard style of dress... for a modern-day...fairly standard style of dress... for a modern-day litvishe. Sefardim (morrocans, yeminites, etc.) dress that way because of the litvishe influence.<BR/><BR/>your kids' schools - chareidi - read: modern-day litvishe (chassidish?)<BR/><BR/>you may dress "normal" (you forgot to limit that to, "during the week" - because on shabbos, at bar mitzvah's etc. you do wear the litvishe garb - not only at the school), but your kids' payos - that's not yekkish, it's... you guessed it - modern day litvishe.<BR/><BR/>and by the way, real yekkes' hats don't look like that - much smaller rim, and more often than not, a different color, and often a different style as well.<BR/><BR/>oh, and a real yekke would have used the etymologically german word, "upsherin", not chalaka.<BR/><BR/>you may not want to admit it, but you're picking and choosing your modern day litvishe minhagim, so don't say that you've got a problem with the chalaka minhag because it's not your minhag. just call a spade a spade - you passed down some bad hair-growth genes to your kids, and that's all.BlackBeltStephttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10449874015115985110noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20257999.post-65268631859003943192009-03-29T16:20:00.000+03:002009-03-29T16:20:00.000+03:00!מזל טובMay you have a lot of נחת from him and fro...!מזל טוב<BR/>May you have a lot of נחת from him and from all your children!Mrs. S.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14649082640953110457noreply@blogger.com