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Respected by the President | Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel
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Featuring:
Chaim Dovid Saracik
Categories:
Torah
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
[Music]
The New York Times has a column in its
Sunday magazine called the ethicist in
which a person who was supposedly expert
in the area of ethics opines on some
issue of the day. This goes back to a
column that appeared in the ethicist
going back to 2002. At that time the
ethsist was a gentleman by the name of
Randy Cohen. And a question was posed to
the ethsist. It was written in by a
woman who had just concluded a real
estate transaction. She was helped on
her side by a real estate broker who was
an Orthodox Jew and very competent and
very polite and very kind. Uh and she
was really very grateful to him for the
wonderful work she did. So she extended
her hand to him. But he refused to shake
her hand and he said please forgive me
uh because of my religious beliefs I
will not shake the hand of any woman or
touch any woman other than my wife. I
was very insulted, says the letter
writer to the ethicist, and I was
wondering, I believe in
non-discrimination that he wouldn't
shake my hand. I was so insulted by
that. I'm thinking of tearing up the
contract. What do you think? And the
ethicist responded, you're absolutely
right. You should tear up the
contract. 3 weeks later, I was invited
to the White House for the Kaneka, the
annual Kaneka party hosted by President
George W. Bush. And President Bush would
pose for pictures together with the
first lady with the various guests who
came to the White House for the Kaneka
party. And as we were standing online,
along came somebody from the White House
staff and came over to those of us who
were wearing yamakas or who looked like
we were Orthodox. And he said, "The
president and first lady are very
receptive and very sensitive to your
religious concerns. And therefore, if
you are a man and you do not extend your
hand to the first lady, she won't extend
her hand to you. If you are a woman and
you don't extend your hand to the
president, he won't extend his hand to
you because we respect your religious
beliefs. And I was thinking to myself,
the ethicist Randy Cohen says, "Tear up
the contract." The president of the
United States says, "I respect what
you're doing. I respect what you stand
for." And so we speak about va we have
the opportunity to tell the world, "Yes,
we stand for something different. And if
you can't handle that, then tear up your
contract." That's your choice. But
recognize that that the highest offices
of this land, the presidency of the
United States, he does recognize the
importance of maintaining that level of
separation between man and woman. And
that's something that commands respect
in the eyes of the world. So, let's not
give in to what the rest of the society
tells us. Whether it's in the pages of
the New York Times or anywhere else, we
have our own code of conduct, and we're
going to remain true to it. And the
really great people of the world will
look at us and say,