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Jerusalem Post Interview with Charles Krauthammer
by Hilary Leilea Krieger, JPost Correspondent, Washington
Krauthammer, a columnist for The Washington Post, is a winner of the Irving Kristol award.
Jerusalem Post, June 10, 2009:
Can you talk a little bit about your own Jewish upbringing and sense of Jewishness, and how that influences you? I assume it's a factor in this particular project.
I grew up in a Modern Orthodox home [in Montreal]. I went to Jewish day school right through high school, so half of my day was spent speaking Hebrew from age six to 16. I studied thousands of hours of Talmud. My father thought I didn't get enough Talmud at school, so I took the extra Talmud class at school and he had a rabbi come to the house three nights a week. One of those nights was Saturday night, so in synagogue Saturday morning my brother and I would pray very hard for snow so he wouldn't be able to come on Saturday night and we could watch hockey night in Canada. That's where I learned about prayer.
That didn't seem to you to be a prayer that was likely to go unanswered?
Yeah, I was giving it a shot to see what side God was on.
And what did you determine?
It rarely snowed.
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More on Krauthammer's Canadian childhood:
"His parents were Orthodox and sent him to Hebrew day school. He also took private Gomorrah lessons twice a week."
-- "Charles Krauthammer: Prize Writer," by Mitchell Bard
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Also in the Jerusalem Post interview:
.... What, then, did you mean by a Jewish sensibility?
".... In literature it's an interesting question, what's a Jewish novel?"
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