Lessons from the Paint Can

White Dripping Paint On White Surface Free Stock Photo and Image

We watched Survivor last weekend on HBO MAX. We chose it as one of the ways we would observe Yom HaShoah. I was surprised how graphic some of the concentration camp scenes were and how bloody the boxing matches. It is the story of Harry Haft who survived Auschwitz by boxing for his captors and after the war lives in New York searching for his pre-war girlfriend. Near the end of the movie, one of the characters sings “God Bless America” in Yiddish. I found that moment especially touching. Maybe it was its inherent softness winding down this tough and sometimes brutal film. Maybe I was just manipulated by the story line and the film editor or director.

Or maybe it made me think how lucky we are to have been born in this land filled with so many blessings and so many challenges. My grandparents who left their home and left their past must have been desperate to risk so much to find a better life. I think there could be a film made of all our ancestors who began the long walk from dusty villages and oppressive cities to these shores that promised freedom. I think we underestimate their courage.

I only remember my father’s parents. My mother was an orphan by the age of 12. She was raised by her older sister, Aunt Molly whose husband was a house painter. He sat on my shoulder this afternoon as I painted squares of different colors of white on the walls in our apartment so we could decide which shade of white to paint. Here’s an easy confession and an obvious statement. I am a messy painter – I know there’s a way to keep the paint on the walls and off my hands, floor, and clothes, but Uncle Harry isn’t here to teach me. Thank God for water soluble paint.,

And what is it that we are being taught these days? That you can paint over truth? That you can whitewash the sometimes harsh and sometimes unsettling realities of the past? That you don’t have to pay attention to the way things were and if you have the power, you can paint the present with the colors of your choosing? My grandparents didn’t come to a land where the streets were paved with gold. They come to a tough country where you had to claw your way to survival. All of ours did. They fought with all their beings to realize their dreams. So what if the paint drips. Clean it up and try again.

Things are getting dark and dirty here. I guess my lesson to myself is – can’t step back and disengage. I hear Rabbi Tarfon: It is not your obligation to finish the work, but neither are you at liberty to neglect it. The fight for freedoms just got harder: time to get back into the ring. I am starting here:  https://www.plannedparenthood.org/

7 thoughts on “Lessons from the Paint Can

  1. Rabbi Shapiro,  A few years ago, I attended several of your comparative religion classes at the FAU Jupiter, Lifelong Learning Center.   I found them very insightful and informative.  It’s been a blessing to read your blog as a way of staying in contact.  This is the first entry I have received in a while and when I saw it in my inbox, I was so pleased.  Your writing is eloquent and so true.  Joy Shearer

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  2. I’ve got the same problem you are having. I get paint on everything. Clothes. Shoes. Glasses. Books. My hair (What there is of it.) The floor. Carpet. Furniture. Literally everything. And I was taught by experts. And you have it exactly right. We can paint the present with the colors of our choosing. Or we can do what so many great Jewish artists have done like Philip Guston, Larry Rivers, Mark Rothko, Leon Golub, Nancy Spero, Julian Schnabel, Barnett Newman, Christian Boltanski. Just paint the truth.

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