!!!! |
I totally disagree. If someone named their child God I would have trouble with that. Can you call her Addie? |
The word "adon" by itself is not considered sacrosanct in Judaism, unlike the name mentioned by OP. G-d is called Adon Hashalom (lord of peace) for example, and you can say that outside prayer. And the hellenization that transformed it to Adonis hides even that. |
Does the teacher call your daughter by her actual name? If not, you now have proof that the teacher sought religious counsel and was told it was fine to call your child by their name. |
| Just call her Adonai, for crying out loud. It is just a word, and you will cause major tsoris for yourself if you make an issue out of this. I suppose you can quit your job out of protest, but otherwise you need to respect this child and call her by her given name. Or, ask your Rabbi if this is ok, if you are that religious. |
First, you are not saying the lord's name in vain, you are saying a little girl's name. Context matters. Second, are you suggesting that the teacher erase this little girl's name when she writes it down? Third, it may very well be that part of the curriculum is making sure students can write their names. Just going to skip that for her? |
I am not Orthodox, but the PP is simply saying they would have to raise those issues with her rabbi and let HIM weigh them. That is the way matters of Jewish law are dealt with in Orthodox Judaism (and at least theoretically in Conservative Judaism) You go to your local legal decisor - for most orthodox Jews your local Orthodox rabbi (who may consult with other scholars if he is unsure). They may tell you what to do, or they may indicate that Jewish law gives you a choice, in which case then you do have a choice to make. Reform Jews will make this purely about their personal conscience. Many Conservative and Reconstructionist Jews (and a few Reform Jews) would consult Jewish law, but make the final intrepreation of its demands on their own. |
OP should have the child reassigned because she admitted she was "pissed" and found it "disrespectful." I don't think she will be fair to the child with those feelings. Being "pissed" that someone doesn't know the name is significant to Jews is not very kind for someone who claims to be religious. Also assuming disrespect when it is entirely more likely that the parents didn't know of its significance in Judaism shows a lack of willingness to consider other points of view. I'm not sure OP is open minded enough to teach a group of kindergarteners from a diverse background. I would have had no issue if OP had said she doesn't feel comfortable calling the student by her name, didn't want to single her out by calling her by her last name, and asked if it is ok to have her reassigned. |
This is such a great, practical, concrete post. |
Miss Teacher....busted!! |
Why on earth did you name your child GOD?? |
| When my child was 7 he had a horrible teacher. He has an ordinary name that pretty much everyone is familiar with. It also has a common nickname that he doesn’t use. The teacher refused to call him by his name and would only use the nickname that was not his name. We asked her about it and she wouldn’t budge. |
Don't be ridiculous it's not a curse word, personally you can try not to say it that much but this is so stupid what kind of religion dictates you should discriminate. If they are Jewish that is a diff story! |