Become a Member
Jonathan Freedland

ByJonathan Freedland, Jonathan Freedland

Opinion

A barmitzvah is a life lesson — at whatever age

I’ve had barmitzvahs on my mind in 2017, whether hosting our own or acting as an unpaid Uber driver, ferrying Sam and his friends to or from someone else’s, writes Jonathan Freedland

December 27, 2017 16:57
514479093
3 min read

All the focus this weekend is on the barmitzvah boy. He’s been practising his portion, rehearsing the brachot and running through his speech. We’re all so proud of him. Because the big day is finally here. Tomorrow, my father will have his barmitzvah.

I should explain: it’s not his first. That happened in 1947. The event we’re celebrating tomorrow is my father’s second barmitzvah, to mark that moment when a Jew reaches a double milestone: the biblical three score years and ten since reaching the age of Jewish maturity. (For those now doing the maths, it means my Dad is 83.)

As it happens, this is the second barmitzvah we’ve had in the family this year. Our younger son, Sam, had his turn in April. Which means I’ve had barmitzvahs on my mind in 2017, whether hosting our own or acting as an unpaid Uber driver, ferrying Sam and his friends to or from someone else’s. And the fact is, I’ve been won over.

It’s not that I was a hard-core sceptic before. I either didn’t give it much thought or I had an instinctive discomfort with the level of extravagance some families have notoriously reached in honouring their 13-year-old pride and joy. I cringed with everyone else when I read of the £4m bash Philip Green laid on for his son, in which the musical entertainment was provided not by a couple of guys with a tape of Hava Nagila but Beyoncé.