Saturday, October 26, 2019
Conformity and Rebellion in Conversion of the Jews Essay -- essays pap
Conformity and Rebellion in Conversion of the Jews  	       Though it seems like a stereotype, all teenagers, at some point,   choose to rebel against authority figures or conform with their   friends. Part of growing up means becoming the person God   intends you to be and finding out how to survive, or be   independent, on your own. Conformity and rebellion, two issues   that each human being has experienced, have great effects not   only on the conformist and rebel, but on the people around them   as well. In ââ¬Å"Conversion of the Jews,â⬠ Ozzie rebels against the   religious complacency that he sees in his Hebrew school, and his   friend, Itzie, projects an example of religious complacency and   conformity.         Ozzie, a thirteen-year-old boy born into the Jewish faith,   has spent his short life conforming to what his single mother,   his religion, and Rabbi Binder wanted him to be and believe.    Judaism means everything to Ozzieââ¬â¢s mother, Mrs. Freedman. The   importance of her religion, expressed through her actions as   Ozzie states that ââ¬Å"she didnââ¬â¢t look like a chosen person. But   when she lit candles she looked like something better; like a   woman who knew momentarily that God could do anythingâ⬠ (1103).    Judaism defines who she is as an individual and who she is as a   member of society as well.  Ozzie has many questions about   Judaism and Mrs. Freedman and Rabbi Binder feel he does not need   to ask them, but just have faith.  It becomes clear throughout   the story that Rabbi Binder wants Ozzie to behave. By behave,   Rabbi Binder means conform to his way of thinking. The rabbi   dodges his questions and Ozzie says that ââ¬Å"he kept explaining   about Jesus being historical, and so I kept asking!   him.  No kidding, Itz,...              ...onforming.  Conforming means not   standing out, not thinking, and involves little work.  In a   religious setting, conforming gives a person a place to be   important and accepted.  Being truly ââ¬Å"religiousâ⬠ requires some   work; however, mindless conforming and religious complacency   seems much easier.  Rebelling, on the other hand, seems like   something people like to do just as much.  In the case of   religion, a line rests between rebellion and spiritual   questioning.  In Ozzieââ¬â¢s circumstance, his questions went beyond   spiritual questioning, crossing into the realm of rebellion.  In   any case, conforming and rebellion both have consequential   effects.  Conforming can lead to a life of unanswered questions   and being the person that you are not.  Rebellion can lead to   alienating yourself from something good that might only need a   few simple explanations.                      
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