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Daniel Finkelstein

ByDaniel Finkelstein, Daniel Finkelstein

Opinion

My son Isaac's Zoomitzvah was loving and moving

'It seemed unlikely to be a very satisfying arrangement. Our family wouldn’t be in synagogue. Our friends wouldn’t be in synagogue. We wouldn’t be in synagogue. How emotionally impactful could be it be?'

April 30, 2020 07:55
Isaac on his big day
3 min read

Only Isaac. For thousands of years, young Jewish boys have been ascending the bimah to read from the Torah, sick with nerves, synagogue packed. And then on to the kiddush and in recent decades a party to look forward to. But not my youngest child. It would have to be something different for Isaac. Of course it would.

As March progressed and talk of social distancing increased, we began to appreciate that all the plans we had made to celebrate our third and final barmitzvah were under threat.

By the time it became clear that it would be impossible to go ahead, it was actually something of a relief. The uncertainty had been worse.

But we still had a decision to make. Should we put the whole thing off until November and then do it as planned? The case for that was obvious. Yet it would mean starting again with the barmitzvah classes after all Isaac’s hard work. And what if we got to November and had to postpone again?