Trunk Showing of 10 children, a Roman Catholic with a girlfriend, who flirted with the idea of becoming a celibate priest. There was Robert, a middle- aged banker who decided to devote his life to God after he saw his bank go under and his wife become an alcoholic. There was Julia, a clean-cut suburban type from Cleveland who was a leader in the school's Lesbian and Gay Caucus. And there was Soho, a Buddhist monk from Japan who brought his search for Nirvana to Harvard. They were a diverse group. But, in keeping with my pro- fessor's admonition, if I knew them all, I could begin to understand myself. The professor who spun this wisdom, Diana Eck, was a Christian from Montana and a Hindu scholar who held a joint appointment at Har- vard College and the Div School. Her class in world religions, held in Emerson Hall on the main campus, was popular in both schools. She worked hard at her lec- tures; she once admitted to staying up until the wee hours of the morning rewriting them. And she ex- pected her students to work hard as well. The syllabus warned of a mid-term, final, term paper and reading list of 10 weighty books. The books included 'What the Buddha Taught," by Walpola Rahula; "Ideals and Realities of Islam," by Seyyed Hossein Nasr; "Between Time and Eternity," by Jacob Neusner, and "Honest to God," by John A.T. Robinson. But maybe the book on the list that summed up the course the best was by Mohandas K. Gandhi. It was called "All Religions Are True." While the class was crowd- ed for the first few lectures — during a time known as the "shopping period," when Har- vard students may decide what courses they finally take — it thinned out somewhat when the requirements were spelled out. In the end, 151 students, two-thirds from the college and the rest from the Div School, stuck with Pro- fessor Eck. Her first task was to banish some misconceptions. On the blackboard, she chalked the names of the five faiths we were to study and asked us to estimate the percentage of world population each religion represented. "Hindus, what do I hear for Hindus?" she cried out like a carnival barker. "Five per- cent," said one voice. "No no," said another. "Think of all those people in India. Thirty percent." "Jews, what do I hear for Jews?" she called out. "Ten percent," called out one stu- dent. "No, too high," respond- ed another. "It's more like 3 percent." It went on like this for a while, with Professor Eck at the blackboard recording the guesses. Then she wrote the real numbers, which sur- prised more than a few peo- ple, including myself: Chris- tian, 32.4 percent; Moslem, 17.1; Hindu, 13.5; Buddhist, 6.2; Jewish, 0.4. Diana Eck was an enchant- ing teacher. In her early 40's, unmarried and pretty, she had the habit of pulling her hair behind her ears so her simple gold earrings would show. In the winter, she favored turtleneck sweaters and oversized sport jackets. She was also enigmatic. Though she came across very warmly, almost seductively, from the lectern, many students reported that she was standoffish when they approached her after class. Early in the semester, Shira good-naturedly teased me about having a crush on this professor of world religions. There was another teacher I met in the first few days of the fall semester whom I un- doubtedly had a crush on. His name was Louis Jacobs, a scholar from England who was at Harvard Divinity for the year as the visiting List Professor in Jewish Studies. He was short, a bit over- weight with a white goatee and large bags under his eyes. Rabbi Jacobs, the descend- ant of an illustrious family of European rabbis, fast became one of the most popular pro- fessors at this elitist Protes- tant divinity school. Quickly he became known as "the rab- bi," as in "Have you heard the rabbi?" "You must sit in on the rabbi's class." The rabbi is a storyteller." All this was overheard in the cafeteria and the hallways. The administration, be- mused by the rabbi's popular- ity, had inadvertently assigned small seminar rooms for his classes. All the chairs around the table were quickly filled; latecomers would steal chairs from less popular neighboring classes, or merely sit on the floor. For everyone else, Louis Jacobs was a window into Judaism; for me, an insider, he parted the curtains and let the sun shine in. The Orthodox Judaism I grew up with was warm, em- bracing and, at the same time, curiously intellectual, with much emphasis on the complicated legal arguments of the Talmud. 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