Geyn in kheder bay reads an old Yiddish axiom. “I learned everything I know there”. Where?…at one’s school of course. The kheder or “school room” is where it all started, all the learning about life, death, even the alphabet and maybe a little algebra thrown in for good measure. Of course hipsters might claim that they went to the Marlon Brando kheyder of acting, but that just gives the word more authority as a way of learning instead of just a place where one learns. But new? I think not.
The idea that school (orschola in Latin) can be a way of life or a style of something is an ancient idea. The ninth definition offered in Webster’s refers directly to school as “a way of life, a style of manners, customs…” In fact, the ancient Greeks insisted that school could be an informal setting where “leisure time” was spent in philosophical discussion. It seems that school does not necessarily have to be a deadly serious place set apart from the life and interactions of the community. It can be a lively, friendly setting and even more.
In Jewish tradition, theshul (from the German word schule) means the “courthouse square” or the forum of the community. It is where true learning takes place, but not in isolation. An old adage states “learning is really achieved only in groups” (Berakhot). The house of worship becomes the school, becomes the center of the community, becomes the world. Voila! A community of learners is born. And these shuls were open 24 hours a day; there was no artificial separation between life and education. School was everywhere: in the home, in the temple, on the streets. The shul was just the hub, the place to come back to. Learning was constant and active, not segmented and passive.
Indeed, the idea that learning should be a joyful, pleasurable thing is also part of Jewish tradition. Jews were said to be heard ” singing their studies” so fervently in their shuls that they hoped to be transported to a “higher world” (Finkelstein). This is learning you can believe in! Read the rest of this entry »

