Children at Seeach Sod
Children at Seeach SodNir Schneider

Last week, Jews around the world celebrated Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year), and on Saturday, we will mark Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement). Traditionally, the High Holidays are a time to take stock of the previous year and prepare yourself spiritually for the year ahead. But for those of us with busy families, it can be hard to squeeze time for reflection into the round of holiday preparations.

It seems that once you have children the holiday focus goes from attending shul to tending to your children, and as rewarding as parenting can be, it leaves little time for focusing on spiritual growth.

Yet, one of our most important jobs as parents is to teach our children the concepts of teshuva (repentance), tefilla (prayers), and tzedaka (charity). How are you supposed to teach these values to your children when you may not have time to connect to them yourself?

Child education expert, Moshe Beller, has found that the answer lies within the very task at hand – by watching your children.

As Director of the Beit Metzudot School at Seeach Sod - an Israeli organization for kids and adults with special needs, Beller is often faced with answering tough questions about how to teach children these important values. His answer – emunah (faith) - in them, yourself and ultimately in Hashem (G-d).

“Here at Seeach Sod we work with children of all ages and abilities, when we approach educating a child we look at every detail, from the diagnosis, available therapies and interventions, family circumstances and more. Then we calculate it all to find a solution that best serves the individual child. Though I cannot tell you ONE therapy that works for every situation, I can say that at the core of every treatment is believing that your child can succeed, there is no greater intervention than that!”

Sounds good, but how can we tap into that ever elusive ideal? If you haven’t guessed it already, it’s our children who can teach us that as well.

Children have a profound ability to trust their parents to lead them. Even if they don’t always follow what you say, they trust you with their life essentials. They trust you will keep them safe, fed, clothed, etc. This level of emunah is one we should allow ourselves to tap into when it comes to our ultimate Father. Mirror what your child displays regularly – let go of the worries that hold you back and know that everything is being taken care of for your benefit.

Along with lessons in emunah, children have much to teach us about teshuva, tefilla and tzedaka as well. By nurturing what comes to them naturally we can gain perspective.

Teshuva: An essential element of teshuva is believing you can start anew, that you can learn from your mistakes without your ego holding you back. Children display this to us with their ability to live in the moment. They don’t condemn their past actions or the past actions of others like adults do. They‘re excited to learn and grow without fear of admitting they don’t know it all.

Tefilla: A key to heartful prayer is awe, a sense of G-d’s greatness and the miracles that surround us each day opens the possibilities to so much more. Children have the ability to be wowed by the things we take for granted. As adults we become jaded and forget that the simple pleasures surrounding us are in fact miraculous. Learn from your children and find wonder in the simple creations.

Tzedaka: Have you ever seen how a child lights up when you tell them you need their help? At the core of generosity, is the understanding that no matter what your financial situation is, we all have something we can offer to another. Children take much pride in being able to help, whether or not being of genuine assistance is within their capabilities. We too can take the same joy in giving tzedaka, doing chesed, and "helping" our Father in Heaven.

This year, instead of seeing your children as a distraction from the path to spiritual preparation for the holidays look to them to guide you towards a year of growth.