How do Jews educate their children?
It is said that in every Jewish family, when the child is just sensible, the mother will open it and sprinkle a drop of honey on it, and then let the child kiss the honey on the table. Then, the mother will tell her children that books are sweet. When children of Jewish families were young, almost all of them answered like this: "If one day your house burned down and your property was robbed, what would you take to escape?" If the child's answer is money and jewelry, the mother will patiently improve the child: Son, what you want to take away is not money and jewelry, but wisdom, because no one can take away wisdom. As long as you live, wisdom will always be with you. Due to historical reasons, Jews are often persecuted, often displaced and even bankrupt. Therefore, the pursuit of wisdom and knowledge has become their foundation. Parents let their children know from an early age that the bookcase at home must be placed at the bedside, which is a tradition passed down from generation to generation by their nation, so as to attach importance to books and knowledge. If anyone puts a bookcase at the end of the bed, it will be regarded as disrespect for books and knowledge and will be despised by everyone. Jews never burn books, even books that attack Jews. In the number of books and publishing houses in the world, and in the proportion of reading every year, Jews surpass anyone else in the world. While educating children to respect knowledge from an early age, Jews pay more attention to educating children to pay attention to talent. For those who have only knowledge but no talent, they call it: Jews educate their children from an early age. General learning is just imitation. Without any innovation, learning should be based on thinking, which is composed of doubts and answers. Thinking is the foundation of learning. They teach children that learning is the key to wisdom. The more they know, the more doubts they have and the more questions they have. Therefore, asking questions makes people progress, as important as getting answers. Out of this educational concept, Jewish families attach great importance to the exchange of thoughts and feelings between parents and children. Parents often talk and discuss with their children and often guide them to think through them. As a result, Jewish children were fluent in oral language and scored well in intelligence tests. According to relevant data, a large part of the rich people who are closely related to the American rich are Jews or Jewish descendants. Among the world-famous great men, there are many Jews. Like Marx Einstein, he is a Jew. Giving children a good ideological and emotional enlightenment from an early age is the best way to shape their hearts. It's like planting trees and flowers. If they want to plant beautiful scenery, they must have excellent gardeners. If the child is a seedling, then the family is the original nursery and the parents are the original gardeners.