The Chosen Reminder Books always manage to take a person out of reality for a while. Good books may provide comfort, adventure, or knowledge for the reader. Both To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee and The Chosen by Chaim Potok are both inspiring books to read. However, Potok’s The Chosen manages to stand out due to the fact that it allows the reader to learn more about a different religion and its culture, how to accept different opinions about certain issues, and the true meaning of friendship. The Chosen allows people to gain deeper knowledge about the Jewish culture due to the fact that its main characters are Jewish. Potok, through Danny and Reuven, allows the reader to know the two sects of the Jewish religion. He compared the Hasidic and Orthodox Jews through Danny and Reuven’s looks and actions. In the beginning of the book, Reuven Maltor, an Orthodox Jew, describes the Russian Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn. “Danny’s block was heavily populated by the followers of his father, Russian Hasidic Jews in somber garb, whose habits and frames of reference were born on the …show more content…
He showed that although people may be from different sects or religion, they could still be friends. Not only that, through Danny and Reuven, Potok shows that friendship could blossom from anything, even from dislike. From absolutely hating each other, especially due to their different religion, to practically depending on each other like brothers, Danny and Reuven demonstrates how tight their friendship is by being bluntly honest with each other. In chapter 4 of The Chosen, Reuven plainly says to Danny, “..You look like a Hasid, but you don’t sound like one. You don’t sound like my father says Hasidim are supposed to sound like. You sound almost as if you don’t believe in God.” Being completely honest with a person is not always easy. However, Potok shows the essence of friendship is through honesty as
Danny and Reuven’s relationship was a link between father and son, but this grew into something more, something life-long and unchanging. This friendship was true, it meant a lot to both of them, and their parents. However, after large disagreements in both Danny and Reuven’s religious lives and families, Reb Saunders excommunicates Reuven from the Hasidic community and Danny’s life.
“Things are always how they seem, Reuven? Since when?” This quote represents the constant reoccurring concept that appears in The Chosen. It’s brought up in many ways where the reader or Reuven’s perception is altered because they don’t know the entire story. Reuven works well as a narrator because we share his position as an outsider looking in on the unfamiliar Hasidim ways. Reuven’s view of Danny Saunders, and his perceptions about Freudian psychology are examples of views that were changed throughout the story.
In the novel The Chosen by Chaim Potok, there are similarities like how Reuven and Danny act towards each other between the baseball field, and conflicts between both characters during that time period. Like in baseball, you do not know how the next hitter is; in The Chosen Danny says, “I told my team we’re going to kill you apikorsim this afternoon” (180) When Danny says that the reader realizes that Danny is saying that baseball is war. In life you encounter situations that you would have never imagined: “There was no tension here at all but a battle between equals …” Reuven explains to Reb Saunders and Danny that he has turned their homeland into a battlefield where a war of silence is being fought. Both of these examples should give you
Danny Saunders and Reuven Malters could not be more different in appearance. Following Hasidic traditions, Danny had long earlocks, wore a tzitzit, and wore shoes with a metal bottom. Also, by he is in college his beard is full-grown. The only aspect, appearance wise, that the boys had in common in the beginning of the story were their black skullcaps. Reuven had always worn glasses, but after spending countless years reading every chance he got, Danny needed them too. The stress caused by the reading and from the pressures of his family became too much on his eyes and they started to turn red and develop bags underneath them. As the firstborn son, Danny had known, for as long as he could remember, that he was to take his father’s place as tzaddik and lead his own congregation. But Danny knew that he did not belong up on a podium preaching, just like Reuven knew that he was not meant to be a math professor. Reuven’s father, David, was one of his best friends. He talked to him
Chaim Potok’s The Chosen set in Brooklyn, New York, tells the story of two Jewish teenagers, Danny Saunders and Reuven Malter, as they experience the effects the Second World War has on their religious traditions. Their friendship faces trials but is eventually re-strengthened. The boys’ relationship fluctuates as it moves from trust to compassion and then to restoration.
Chaim Potok’s The Chosen is the story of a lasting friendship that blossoms between two Jewish boys, Danny Saunders and Reuven Malter, during and after World War II. On a deeper level, much of the plot focuses on the character of their fathers–Reb Saunders and David Malter–whose beliefs and ideals are rooted in two separate worlds. Reb Saunders is a zealous Hasidic rabbi who wants to impart his knowledge of his religion upon Danny and expects his son to follow in his footsteps. David is a professor and single father who comes from a liberal Jewish background. As the friendship between Reuven and Danny grows, both fathers try to reconcile their views with their sons and with their own
In the novel The chosen the main characters Danny and Reuven have very different relationships with their fathers. At the beginning Reuven has a very close relationship with Mr.Malter but later on as his father becomes ill and goes in and out of the hospital their relationship is distanced. On the other hand, all of his life Danny and his father had been distanced. When Danny`s father understands that the way he grew up is not incontrovertibly the best way for danny to grow up he decides to change his ways and grow closer to his son.
The main characters, Reuven Malther and Danny Saunders, in the novel The Chosen by Chaim Potok have many epiphanies. Reuven had an epiphany and realized that Danny did not hate him and was a normal person, despite his religion. Danny also has an epiphany and understands why his father raised him in silence. These two epiphanies drive the novel by both starting Danny and Reuven’s friendship and giving Danny closure.
In The Chosen, Potok describes the Jewish culture during the period of World War I. Beginning with the affluence of Polish Jews before the war, Potok established a circle of relationships. In the book, there are three main relationships. The first one is father-son, between Danny and his father, Reb Saunders and between Reuven and his father, David Malter. The relationship between Reuven and Danny is the second main relationship in The Chosen. The third main relationship is Hasidism verses Zionism.
In the novel, The Chosen, by Chaim Potok, two boys from two different upbringings are brought together causing everyone around them to make a choice. Reuven Malter, the son of David Malter, a major zionist, is an Orthodox Jew who is oblivious to the Hasidic world. Danny Saunders, the son of famous Hasidic Rabbi, Reb Saunders, is a Hasidic Jew who never had anything to do with the Orthodox Jews. They do not know of each others existence until one game brings their worlds together and they form an unlikely friendship. As the title suggests, each character is chosen for a purpose and has a choice to make which can potentially change their future.
In the novel, The Chosen, by Chaim Potok, two jewish families from different sects are brought together through the blossoming of a deep friendship between their two sons during the 1940s. It focuses on the emotional bonds forged between traditional Orthodox Jew Reuven Malter and Hasidim Danny Saunders, that last well through their childhood adventures of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, New York, and well into adult hood. It also follows their story of self discovery, parental acceptance, and how the boys attempt to fit into their modern ,popular American society as jews , all as World War 2 comes to a close. In their pursue of happiness, many problems are presented to them, which they eventually solve ,together, despite their differences. Reuven and Danny ,in Chaim Potok's ,The Chosen, manage to successfully create a beautiful friendship , aside from their different philosophical views, through perseverance, forgiveness, trustful communication, intimate listening and understanding, being supportive and present in times of need, and just setting aside their differences and accepting each other wholeheartedly.
Throughout the book, The Chosen, there are four major qualifying characters for the role of “The Chosen One”. David Malter is the father of Reuven Malter, and is an active Zionist. Reb Saunders is the father of Danny Saunders, and doesn’t talk to his son with the hopes of teaching him compassion. Reuven is Danny’s friend, and is a bridge among all the characters. Danny becomes friends with Reuven after hitting him in the eye with a softball, and also works with David in the library in secrecy. While all these characters have major roles, only one can be crowned with the winning title. Reuven Malter is “the chosen one”. Through the development of the character, Reuven, we see a sheltered young boy learn to find compassion in his heart all
Another type of silence in The Chosen is the silence that exists between Danny and Reuven and is no product of their own; it is the silence that Reb Saunders enforced upon them when he forbade them to speak or spend time together. It was a silence that came into being because of the different beliefs of their fathers, though only Danny’s father acted upon it. “There had been an explosion yesterday at breakfast, last night at supper, and this morning again at breakfast. Danny was not to see me, talk to me, listen to me, be found within four feet of me. My father and I had been excommunicated from the Saunders family.” (pg.230). The silence not only deeply hurt the boys, who were true friends, but also infuriated Reuven. Reuven had never approved of or understood the silence that Reb Saunders had created between himself and his son, and Reuven thought it to be cruel—after all, he had seen Danny’s pain and confusion over the matter and knew how hard it was for him. He was furious at Reb Saunders for not only tearing apart their friendship, but especially for tearing it apart with that hated silence. “I hated the silence between us and thought it unimaginable that Danny and his father never talked. Silence was ugly, it was black,
In Chaim Potok’s The Chosen, two contrasting characters are introduced—Reuven Malter and Danny Saunders. They are opposites. While Reuven is forward—speaking his mind, Danny Saunders shows a stark contrast—an inflective soul, listening to silence, and growing from it. These characters set the stage for a lasting relationship to form, to be strengthened, and to be stressed.
The book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is often associated with a various number of themes such as racism, social inequality, the importance of family values, and much more. But one of the more hidden messages of the book centers around the idea that there is a coexistence of good and evil. This theme is really brought to life the more the reader is able to understand the book. Through sub themes such as coming of age, perspective, and intense characterization of many important characters the idea of good and evil is really brought to light.