Yonason Goldson
I'm a Talmudic scholar and professional speaker, as well as a former hitchhiker and circumnavigator, applying ancient wisdom to the challenges of the modern world. I've published seven books, including, Proverbial Beauty: Secrets for success and happiness from the wisdom of the ages.
Homepage: http://yonasongoldson.com
A Guest of a Son of Haman
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on May 5, 2011
From this week’s Mishpacha Magazine:
It was the summer of 1984, and I was still immersed in my secular, prodigal youth, living out of a backpack as I wandered across Europe and occasionally reminding myself that following the tourist guides rarely yields the most valuable experiences.
Boarding a train from Luxembourg City to Cologne, Germany, I found myself sharing a car with a German journalist on the return leg of a business trip. We talked about politics, culture, history, and education, meandering from one topic to the next effortlessly, so that the ride passed quickly and the train pulled into its station impossibly soon after our departure.
“I have to wait for my wife to come pick me up,” said Dieter as we walked together out of the station. “Why don’t you join me for a drink until she arrives?”
I certainly had no other plans, so I followed Dieter to a nearby bierhaus. Before we had finished our second beer, Dieter had extended his invitation to dinner and offered me a bed in his guest room. After months of boarding in youth hostels and cheap pensions for five dollars a night, I had no mind to refuse.
Dieter and his wife lived in a small but beautifully appointed house. Dieter roasted a leg of venison he had been saving for a special occasion and set the table formally with excellent wine that complemented the main course.
After dinner, Dieter led me into his den, where we sipped real Cognac from crystal snifters and smoked Cuban cigars as we schmoozed late into the night. He let me sleep late the next morning, then drove me to the local youth hostel so I could check my backpack.
Among his fellow sages, Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel earned a reputation for the conscientiousness and zeal with which he honored his father. Yet Rabban Shimon himself testified that his observance paled in comparison with that of Eisav who, despite his wickedness, had no equal in the mitzvah of kibud av – honoring his father (Devarim Rabbah 1:15). When I think back to Dieter, an irreligious gentile who offered his home, his table, and his company to a ragged stranger on a train, I wonder if I have ever fulfilled the mitzvah of hachnosas orchim (hospitality) half as well as he did.
But there was one other noteworthy aspect to my encounter with Dieter. Toward the end of our train ride, I plucked up my courage and posed a question that had been long on my mind, even as a secular Jew. “How do Germans today feel about the Nazis and the Holocaust?” I asked.
Dieter showed no sign of offense, and answered as if he had given the subject considerable thought. “There are three different attitudes,” he began.
“Those who were adults when Hitler came to power refuse to accept any responsibility,” he explained. “They insist that you have to understand the context of the times and have felt the hope of National Socialism’s promise to renew Germany’s honor. They argue that no one knew what Hitler was doing… which is true and also not true; no one knew because no one wanted to know.
“Then there are the people who were children at the time,” he continued, “or who were born right after the war, as I was. To us, Nazism is a stain upon our national history, and has left us with the obligation to guarantee that it never happens again.
“Finally,” he said, “there is the younger generation – the teenagers who have embraced Cold War nihilism. They concede that the Holocaust was a tragedy, but they will tell you that the same kind of thing might happen again no matter how hard anyone tries to prevent it.”
Then, after the barest pause, he added with a smile, “But these are not the types of things a young man on holiday should be thinking about.” For all his generosity and candor, Dieter failed to understand that I was not merely a young man on holiday. I was a wandering Jew, whose neshomah prodded me on in search of my own spiritual identity.
After arriving in yeshiva, I revisited the memory of Dieter when I learned of the repentant sons of Haman whose descendants studied Torah in B’nei Brak (Sanhedrin 96a). Indeed, the kindness that he showed me proves that any human being, no matter what his background or identity, can overcome the cultural inertia of apathy and self-absorption by kindling the spark of tzelem Elokim – the image of G-d – that resides within him, and by reaching out to help carry the yoke of his fellow man.
And perhaps, in some small way, he even played a part in helping me find my own way home.
Inside/ Outside
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on May 5, 2011
Boarding the plane for my 6:00 AM flight from LaGuardia, bleary-eyed from too little sleep, I forced myself to offer a moderately enthusiastic good morning to the smiling steward as I crossed over the jet way and through the hatch. The steward echoed my greeting, then added, “You look very sharp today.”
Shylock in Jerusalem
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on May 5, 2011
I’m pleased to announce the publication of my essay “Shylock in Jerusalem” in UMSL’s recently published Jewish literary anthology.
There are no accidents in Shakespeare.
Hardly a week passed without Professor Levin impressing upon us yet again this paramount lesson, and no one passed Professor Levin’s class without learning it well. So learn it I did, but with no inkling of how its echo would reverberate beyond Shakespeare’s era by thousands of years, and beyond Shakespeare’s England by thousands of miles.
How to get rich
Posted in Ethics of Fathers on February 20, 2011
A wealthy matron asked Rabbi Yossi bar Chalafta: “What is the meaning of the verse, [God] grants wisdom to the wise (Daniel 2:21)? Isn’t this superfluous? Should it not rather state that God grants wisdom to the unwise and knowledge to those who lack understanding?”
Discover the wisdom of Pirkei Avos and the sages’ formula for wealth and prosperity.
Nothing but the Truth
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on February 18, 2011
Reflections about the boy who didn’t cry wolf.

Live From New York
Posted in Culture, History, Philosophy, Politics on February 1, 2011
I am pleased to announce that I will be a featured speaker at the Yeshiva University book sale on the topic:
Why Jews are Liberals
Jewish history and the origins of political ideology
7:30 PM
Wednesday 23 February
2495 Amsterdam Ave
Manhattan (Washington Heights), NY
A book signing will follow for my overview of Jewish history and philosophy, Dawn to Destiny.
For directions and location information, click here.
Noah Redux
Posted in Culture, Philosophy, Science and Nature on January 21, 2011
With global warming threatening to submerge the world beneath melting polar ice, could it be time for another ark?

Email of the week
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on January 21, 2011
Ever wonder what would happen if we treated Torah as we treat our cell phone?
What if we carried it around in our purses or pockets?
What if we flipped through it several time a day?
What if we turned back to go get it if we forgot it?
What if we used it to receive messages from the text?
What if we treated it as if we couldn’t live without it?
What if we gave it to Kids as gifts?
What if we used it when we traveled?
What if we used it in case of emergency?
This is something to make you go….hmm…just where is my Torah today?
Oh, and ooooooone more thing.
Unlike our cell phone, we don’t have to worry about Torah being disconnected because its calls never fail.
Makes you stop and think ‘where are my priorities’?
No dropped calls!
No worries about running out of power-recharging it
It constantly Recharges you !!
No misdialed or wrong connection etc !!
Can be totally concealed in you.
Can be used without Hardware.
No activation or usage fees.
Free Nights and Days 365
Free Text
Unlimited amount of users.
Always connects to the President/CEO/CFO 24/7
(Hat tip: Devorah Goldson)
A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Universe
Posted in Culture, Philosophy on January 11, 2011
Walking in Circles
Posted in Culture on December 22, 2010
New psychological research provides still further confirmation of Torah wisdom.

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