Rockefellers And Shabbat Prominent couple talk about the Jewish, aith and philanthropic giving. mutual interest in environmental con- servation, and they have drawn on RACHEL POMERANCE respect for the environment in raising Jewish Telegraphic Agency their two boys — one a high school junior and another a freshman at New York Princeton University in New Jersey. earing a plain navy suit and In their Vermont home, where they loafers, radiating a ruddy, grow their own vegetables, they once unmade-up glow and enun- spent two weeks living as if it were the ciating each word with'formality, she 1840s. After one son carved out the seems every bit a Rockefeller — with yoke of a log to carry butter, he found a twist. softer wood in the log's center. "We do do Shabbat on Fridays," "I realize the deeper you go, the Eileen Rockefeller Growald says. more heart you will find," the son told "We do do shehechianus after the his mother, who realized that the les- first tomatoes of the season," she adds, son in hard work had paid off. referring to the Jewish blessing over In raising her children, Rockefeller something new. Growald tried to soften her family's The daughter of David Rockefeller saying, engraved in New York City's long has rejected the strictures of reli- Rockefeller Center: "Every opportuni- gion. But in her marriage 0 to Paul b ty an obligation, every right a respon- Growald, who has Michigan roots, she sibility, every passion a duty." has "expanded to Judaism," as she Yet she passed on her family's phi- likes to say. losophy of dividing income in equal "I feel very blessed to have married thirds, saving one, spending one and Paul and in a sense to have married giving one away. The effort to fend off into the richness of this culture," she a sense of entitlement seems to have told several members of Jewish family worked. Their college son once told foundations that gathered recently in them that he was the only one of his Baltimore for the annual conference of college friends who paid his own the Jewish Funders Network. phone bill, his parents said. In one of their first public talks The extended Rockefeller family, about their marriage, the couple which numbers about 125 people, imparted some of the intergenerational meets twice a year, and they have customs of America's most philanthrop- strategies for connecting the genera- ic families. They also discussed how tions. they teach the values of philanthropy One such approach is intergenera- and responsibility to their children. tional dialogue, when a family mem- In an interview with JTA, the couple ber may express him or herself with- also shared their thoughts on a marriage out fear of judgment. Another ritual, that blends two distinct bac rounds. called passages, allows one family member to introduce another who has The Beginning experienced a significant event, like a Growald, 57, and Rockefeller birthday. Growald, 53, met in 1980 through a In their immediate family, the Growalds have drawn on Jewish rituals. Above: Paul Growald and Eileen "I've really. loved the ritual of Friday Rockefeller Growald in Moose, Wyo., night Shabbat with our boys," in the spring of 2003 W Growald Rockefeller says. "We haven't done Havdalah as con- sistently," she adds, but when they do, they borrow a tradition of Growald's brother, dousing the candle in a dish of vodka and setting the liquor on fire. The family turns off the lights to watch the flame "dance in the dark," Rockefeller Growald says. The family members then race to "I feel very blessed to have married Paul, and in a sense to have married into the richness of this culture." — Eileen Rockefeller Growald say "Bye bye Shabbat" first. "It's play- ful, and I like closure," Rockefeller Growald says. "It puts a very nice sense of closure to the Sabbath." On Faith The couple believes faith has been critical for sustaining their marriage. "Religion as a spiritual value in raising our children was a bindinc, force in our marriage, and it continues to be," Rockefeller Growald says. The family belongs to Ohavi Zedek Synagogue, the oldest and largest shul in Vermont. Its rabbi, Joshua Chasan, who was ordained by the Jewish Theological Seminary in_Nei.v York, says the family has belonged to the shul for about 10 years. Growald is on the synagogue's board. "They've had two children in our religious school and two wonderful bar mitzvahs," Chasan says. "Both kids are real mensches." Growald's background wasn't like his wife's: His parents escaped Germany in 1934 and eventually set- tled in Kalamazoo. "I grew up in a place where there were very few Jews," Growald says. One of the first questions he was commonly asked as a boy was which church he attended. "I at times referred to the Jewish church," he adds. One parr Rockefeller and one part Jew, the couple understands the feel- ing of being prejudged. "We shared that value, that experience of being different," Rockefeller Growald says. Each family seemed to accept the couple. Rockefeller Growald says she was raised believing that spirituality was found in nature. Her father cared only that her husband believed in God. "My mother said, 'You'll never be a Jew,"' Rockefeller Growald says, which she took to mean that she would resist organized religion as her mother did. The only concern for Growald's par- ents was the idea that the Rockefeller influence would lead to spoiled grand- children. "That fear was allayed when they saw how we were bringing them up," Growald says. The couple continues the Rockefeller tradition of charity. "Making a contribution to the world is ultimately the most satisfying way to live one's life. It's not making or spending money or gaining power, Growald says. Growald is on the board of the Rockefeller Family Fund, which does- n't donate to religious causes. Rockefeller Growald is the founding chair of the Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisers, which advises philanthropies throughout the world. Asked if her Jewish experience plays a role in her work, she says that she draws on the value of service, which "is common to both Judaism and Rockefellerism." " 4/28 2005 29