Nov 162012
 

 

Chief Rabbi in BBC Studios

Chief Rabbi in BBC Studios

Throughout this week BBC radio has been running an appeal for Children in Need, the BBC’s own charity that seeks to ensure the right of every child to be safe, secure and reach their own potential. And tonight the television appeal will be inaugurated by no less a duo than Ann Widdecombe and Russell Grant dressed as angels on Strictly Come Dancing. Once you’ve recovered from that I hope you’ll support this great and sadly necessary cause.

There are still far too many children in need today and I find it moving that Judaism and Christianity focus on their holiest days on the birth of a child. On the first day of the Jewish year we tell the story of the birth of the first Jewish child, to the elderly Abraham and Sarah who had almost given up hope. And Christmas tells the Christian story in a very similar way through the birth of a child – because nothing more powerfully symbolises the miracle of every new human life, and at the same time its intense vulnerability. Children more than anything else evoke our sense of compassion, but their very powerlessness places them at the great risk of our neglect.

Some years ago in the course of making a documentary about the state of the family in Britain I spent a day with young offenders in a probation centre in south London. They were in their late teens and most of them had been involved in minor crime for the better part of ten years. Yet they were quite clearly decent people who had never really had a chance.

They all came from broken families and most of them from abusive ones, so I tried to get them to talk about their childhood, and it was extraordinary how loyal they were to their families. They wouldn’t say a single negative thing about them to a stranger, yet each of them was obviously carrying a great burden of pain. So I said to them: “You are probably all one day going to have children of your own. What kind of father would you like to be?” That was when they started crying. They said things like: I’ll be tough but I’ll always be there for them. That’s when I knew what they’d missed and how deeply it still haunted and lacerated them.

What Judaism and Christianity are saying in their respective stories is that children are holy. Each one is a kind of miracle and needs our special care. Never let us be deaf to the cry of a child.

  One Response to “THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Never let us be deaf to the cry of a child”

  1. Dear Lord Sacks, I am always interested in hearing your “thought for the day”, but wonder how you feel about the children that have been killed in Gaza?, The next email after yours was from Rabbi Alissa Wise, of Jewish Voice for Peace. She writes- “The news coming out of Gaza and Israel has been truly horrifying. Drones,and F-16s from infrastructure to border have been bombing. Now there is indiscriminate shelling from the sea, and dropping bombs over densely populated Gaze, which continues to be under Israel’s control. Many (80) Palestinians, some of them children have been killed. Rockets being launched out of Gaza have killed 3 Israeli civilians.”
    I thought is was ” An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth” but this is not the case? I have always had very much sympathy and support for the Jewish people. My daughter has worked in a kibbutz. My mother had Jewish children to stay with us in the 2nd world war, were other people in the village would not, and I have visited Mauthausen Concentration camp, and the Holocaust museum in Berlin. But I cannot understand how Jews, who have had so many terrible thinks done to them in the passed, can treat the Palestinian People so badly.This war only creates more and more hatred. Both sides must stop killing each other and taking land. Thank you for your time.Paul Fox

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