HELEN MINTZ BELITSKY Special to the Jewish News A s a 6-year-old in Budapest after World War II, Magda Rosenbaum addressed her artwork to God. Hidden by a Christian family during the war, she had been reclaimed by her father at the age of 2. Her mother, however, was killed during the liberation. "I knew she was with God," says Rosenbaum, and I needed to communicate with her. But I did- n't know the right words. So I would draw pictures about every- day life and hide them. They were my private world. I would look in the mirror and draw myself. When my father was angry, I drew an angry man. The drawings were expressive. I addressed them to God. "'If you see my mother,' I would write to God, 'tell her that things are not going well in Budapest. Today a girl refused to sit next to me in school. She said she couldn't sit next to a J ew.''' Rosenbaum, now an artist in Silver Spring, Md., understands how, as a child suffering under a post-war Communist regime, art brought her closer to God and to her mother. "Art unlocks our feelings," she says. "Art .unlocks our innate nature to be happy. Art enables a child to accept herself fully." The world of color is the world of the emotions, art teacher Rena Fruchter of Silver Spring, Md., tells us. Art deals with profound emotions, she says, such as deep religious feel- ings. God is the central fact of Judaism; it is what our tradition tells us. Judaism is coherent only if you experi- ence God as central to that tradition. But can children experience God that , way? Rabbi Reuben Levine of Montgomery Village, Md., a Jewish art historian and a specialist in syna- gogue and ritual art, suggests that when parents begin to teach children about God, "they describe God as the power behind the creation of the world." Children look around them and see what God created — a blue sky, trees, flowers, the people they love. They Helen Mintz Belitsky, a freelance writer based in the Washington, D.C., area, wrote this article for Jewish Family & Life wwwjewishfamily.com . 9/10 1999 R16 Detroit Jewish News begin to perceive God through the music they love. If the composition is religious, and they like it, they begin to like God. "Everything belongs somewhere. When children sing a prayer, they may not understand the words," adds Tasat. "But they know it belongs in the synagogue. And then it becomes more than a melody. It becomes some- thing sanctified." Children find pleasure in creating — whether it is a painting, a piece of music, pottery or a new dance step. The sense of happiness and personal fulfillment that comes from creation brings children closer to their spiritual selves than any attempt they may make to concretize God. Seven-year-old Rebecca Suldan of Baltimore, Md., expresses it well. "I once tried to draw God, but God doesn't look like anything, so I ended up with a lot of lines. But sometimes certain feelings bring me closer to God. When I'm happy I feel closer to God. When I'm sad, I feel distant." The ability to reach into our souls and communicate our deepest feelings to others brings us closer to our spiri- tual nature. The arts are a fundamen- tal —often the sole — way of com- municating for many people. Michael Tilson Thomas, music director of the San Francisco Symphony and co-founder and music director the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, Fla., writes in his book Viva Voce: "Music to me is a universal expression of mankind. We continual- ly explore the spirit of man through many different kinds of music." For Tilson Thomas, the message conveyed in music is similar to Walt Whitman's perception of what Children look around them and see what God created — a blue sky, trees, flowers, nature offers mankind. In the people they love. They learn to duplicate these things that God created through Song of Myself; says Whitman's colors and shapes. Tilson Thomas, "Whitman talks about walking through the street, In this way, says Rena Fruchter, art learn to duplicate these things that which is littered with leaves, falling can make a child feel creative and God created through colors and leaves, and every single leaf is a mes- important, closer to God, who created ), shapes. sage from God. the world. Art can also be the perfect "Children may not be able to relate Mayrav Mintz of Silver Spring, way to introduce children to the con- to an intangible concept of God," said Md., who began ballet at the age of 4, cept of enhancing the performance of Pnina Salu, a religious school principal learned the art of friendship through a mitzva by beautifying the ritual in Maryland, "but they can appreciate her dance steps, and experienced God object, adds Levine. "When a child the nature all around them. They on her shoulder as she struggled with creates a beautiful kiddush cup or a think of that as what God created." shyness. challa cover, he or she is coming "They learn that God took pleasure "I felt I had friends in the dance before God with the best he/she has to in the creation" says Rabbi Levine. ” class, but I didn't need to talk because offer. "And it was good,' God said each we had steps. Dance broke down the "Everyone has a different door that day." Similarly, Levine says, "children barriers. ... I always believed in God as opens the way to God for them," says can find pleasure in the creation of a friend who sat perched on my shoul- Cantor Ramon Tasat of Agudas Achim colors and shapes. That sense of fulfill- der. God was something my size. I was Congregation in Alexandria, Va. He ment is the product of a creativity nervous and shy, but things would be spends a great deal of time teaching which is human, but which is also a OK because God was around." Fl children music. "I know children who gift from God." The sense of happiness and personal fulfillment that comes from creation brings children closer to their spiritual selves than any attempt they may make to concretize God. A Pathway To God