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My Orthodox Friend Cut Me Off!


Question:

I'm not Jewish, but my best friend while growing up was. Our bond was unusual for teenagers and young adults. We had a real love and respect for each other.

In his mid 20's, he was drawn to Israel and eventually moved there. He became orthodox and is now actually a rabbi.

Not long after he began his spiritual journey, he shut me out of his life completely, but without a word or explanation. He did this quite abruptly and very insensitively. I decided to give him some space and wait for some correspondence.

I didn't hear a word from him for nine years, although he occasionally visited home not far from here.

Now he's been emailing me, he's married with kids, and wants to reconnect. It hurts, but I just don't want to deal with him.

My question is this: Because the collapse of our friendship coincided with his awakening religiosity, it has crossed my mind that maybe he was instructed either directly or indirectly to sever ties with old friends, particularly non-Jews.

Could this be possible? And if so, why would he now be trying to contact me?

Response:

Many of us have been through this. You fall in love with a different way of living, rituals, study -- a whole new wave of life washes over you -- and your only way to deal with it is by blocking out the rest of the world. I've seen it happen not only to people getting into their Judaism, but with musicians, artists, career people, politicians. Although, yes, religion may be the most encompassing of all.

It's a sign of an earnest personality, someone who puts his all into anything he does. You can't achieve a total immersion into anything without first letting go of everything else. Perhaps it was that same earnestness that allowed such a strong bond between the two of you in younger years. This is a person who, wherever he is, all of him is there.

So what has happened now? Simple: It's taken your friend nine years to get his feet back down on the ground. He's finally comfortable with where he is. And now he feels a need to get back to who he is and where he comes from.

I believe your friend's reaching back out to you is sincere. You can give him the benefit of the doubt. The world, the Jewish sages say, can be sustained only through forgiveness.

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By Tzvi Freeman   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Tzvi Freeman heads Chabad.org's Ask The Rabbi team, and is a senior member of the Chabad.org editorial team. He is the author of Bringing Heaven Down to Earth. To subscribe to regular updates of Rabbi Freeman's writing, visit Freeman Files subscription.
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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Sep 2, 2010
insight
Great answer from the Rabbi. One personal addendum: as I was becomming observant many years ago, I was discussing the "perils" with one of my non- Jewish (non-white) friends. She said, "Just as my people have had to explore their roots to discover who we are, you have to, also. Just know that this may separate us in the interim."
Posted By Anonymous, Philadelphia, pa

Posted: July 29, 2010
This happens all of the time, people drift into different directions when they are adults. When we are children, teenagers and young adults our lives pretty much coincide with our peers but when we are adults we start to move in different directions, this really has nothing to do with religion. It is about the lives we choose to lead and most of the time it is not how others want to live their lives so we move in different directions. I am moving back home to NYC this month so that I can live my life Jewish with my son, my dad is Jewish but my mom was not so it is going to take a great deal of time, spiritual growth and learning to become the person I need to be. I have lost contact with friends from college but in the past few months, thanks to FB have found some of them and have a new found relationships as people in our forties, not the same relationships we had as single young women, jobs, careers, spouses, divorce, grandparent hood is the main topic of conversation.
Posted By Anonymous, NY, n

Posted: July 19, 2010
reflects the state of mind of the Orthodox friend
If you have a non-Jewish friend (not of the opposite sex), & become religious, if the friendship is solid, it's unlikely you'd drop the friend just because of you aren't Jewish. My best friend today (other than my husband and my sister) is my non-Jewish college roommate. We are very different, but she's alway supported me, and I've tried to support her even though our lives are very different. However, when I became religious, I dropped many other friends, both Jewish and non-Jewish. Sometimes I just got too busy w/family & kids, or them with work. W/some, we just drifted apart b/c our lives diverged so much. & there are a few I dropped because they reallly were bad influences on my spiritual growth (gossiped incessantly, were exceptionally shallow, were promiscuous, stole money, etc.). You don't have to pick up the pieces with the friend, but if you choose to do so, try to be understanding if he gives you an explanation that moved him to drop contact with you in the 1st place.
Posted By Rivka C., L.A.



 


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