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Promoting Empowerment: "Give Me Your Hand" - Whose Hand/What Goal?

David J Zucker1

  • 1Independent Scholar, Aurora, CO, USA.

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|June 17, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study reinterprets a Babylonian Talmud passage about suffering. It suggests the sufferer, not a rabbi, says "Give me your hand," empowering themselves through this act.

Keywords:
Ambiguous pronounsBabylonian TalmudEmpowermentwho’s hand/what goal?“Give me your hand,” suffering

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Area of Science:

  • Religious Studies
  • Talmudic Studies
  • Philosophy of Suffering

Background:

  • The Babylonian Talmud contains discussions on confronting painful suffering.
  • A specific passage involves an interchange between rabbis where the phrase "Give me your hand" is spoken.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the speaker and intent behind the phrase "Give me your hand" in a Talmudic passage.
  • To offer an alternative interpretation to the conventional understanding of the interaction.
  • To explore the practical lessons for contemporary self-empowerment.

Main Methods:

  • Textual analysis of the Babylonian Talmudic passage.
  • Comparative interpretation of scholarly explanations.
  • Philosophical inquiry into self-empowerment.

Main Results:

  • Proposes that the sufferer, rather than a rabbi, utters the phrase "Give me your hand."
  • This reinterpretation shifts the focus to the sufferer's agency.
  • The act is framed as a move towards self-empowerment.

Conclusions:

  • The passage offers a model for self-empowerment in the face of suffering.
  • Understanding the sufferer as the initiator provides a new perspective on agency.
  • This interpretation has practical implications for modern approaches to dealing with pain and hardship.