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December 19, 2004
American Jews are celebrating their three-hundred and fiftieth anniversary here. The first Jewish community in North America was established in New Amsterdam (New York) in 1654. In 1658 fifteen Jewish families arrived in Newport, Rhode Island. By 1759 their numbers and resources had increased sufficiently that they undertook the construction of what has become America's oldest synagogue, the Touro Synagogue of Newport. In 1790 Rhode Island became the thirteenth state to ratify the Constitution and complete the Union. To mark the occasion, President Washington made a ceremonial visit to Newport when Congress recessed in August. Newport welcomed Washington with open arms. In Newport on August 18, according to James Thomas Flexner, Washington "completely fatigued the company" by walking, fortified by the wine and punch served in four different houses along his route, briskly from nine in the morning until one in the afternoon. In anticipation of Washington's visit to Newport, the congregation prepared a letter welcoming Washington for presentation to him at a public event on the morning of August 18. The letter was authorized by the congregation's board and signed by its president, Moses Seixas. It is Washington's magnificent letter responding to Seixas's that is known as a testament to religious freedom and that has become famous as one of the classic statements of religious toleration in America. The congregation's letter to Washington is not so well known. Ironically, however, the most famous line in Washington's letter is an echo of the congregation's letter to Washington. By far the most striking feature of the congregation's letter is its expression of sheer gratitude to Washington for the religious freedom afforded by the United States (pre-First Amendment). Here is the congregation's letter: Permit the children of the stock of Abraham to approach you with the most cordial affection and esteem for your person and merits ~~ and to join with our fellow citizens in welcoming you to NewPort.The letter remains a timely reminder of the rarity of religious freedom and equal rights, of the gratitude their protection should occasion, and of the measures necessary to safeguard them from the contemporary adherents of "the Babylonish empire." The congregation's beatiful letter is called to mind by Dennis Prager's Los Angeles Times column noting his celebration of Hannukah at a White House party attended by President and Mrs. Bush this past week: "Born-again president, White House Hannukah." Like a true descendant of Seixas, Prager invokes twin patriarchs in his column -- Abraham and George Washington. In his "Elegy in Memory of W.B. Yeats," Auden concludes: "In the prison of his days/Teach the free man how to praise." In this column Dennis Prager not only teaches the free man how to praise, he also renews the vows that bind us to our beloved country. Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Teaching the free man:
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