By Rabbi Joshua Levine Grater,
Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center
January 5, 2007
On the 25th anniversary yartzheit of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, in 1997, I had a life-changing experience. I had just met and befriended Heschel’s daughter and only child, Susannah, and she took me with her to all of the various memorial services that were happening around New York City in her father’s memory.
I was in the Heschel home, meeting his relatives, great rebbes and leaders of various Orthodox sects, who, regardless of the fact that their famous family member left Orthodoxy, came to pay their respects and honor his memory. I remember an intense ma’ariv service, at the Heschel School, one in which Susannah taught a Mishnah, a selection of law, in honor of her father, using the chanting and pronunciation of another world, another time. Read more »