TWO BOYS, ONE AMERICAN DREAM Baseball is a rugged sport, uniquely American. Two Jewish boys meet during one of the most hotly contested baseball games of the high school season, in New York City during World War II. The teams’ rivalry-one team are Hassidim, the other orthodox-fuels intense acrimony between them until a freak accident during the game sends one to the hospital with an injury that nearly costs him an eye. The near loss of the boy’s eye creates a bond between the boys which develops into a deep and lasting friendship.
Both boys, Reuven and Danny, are the sons of European immigrants. In The Chosen, by Chaim Poto k, the boys feel the pull of the “American Dream” with its promise of boundless opportunity and freedom of choice-something quite alien to their European forebears. The boys instinctively sense this opportunity, and as they grow up, each develops his own set of ambitions. They are hardly unrealistic: each wants to go to college to pursue his own interests. The obstacle is their fathers who, as traditional old world family patriarchs, exert their authority to dictate what their sons can and cannot do. Thus the stage is set for the conflict between fathers and sons which symbolizes the conflict between the authoritarian old world and the freedom of the new world-the “American Dream.” The friendship between the two boys grows especially tight in the times when they are both trying to escape the careers their fathers want them to pursue.
The Term Paper on The American Dream 11
Some people might agree that the American dream still exists, while others don’t or they have different beliefs. The American dream is one of the most controversial themes in the United States. I totally agree that the American Dream is still on, though we need to work a little more to make it happen. I recently read a quote by Senator John Kerry that relates two articles that I have read in the ...
Reuven wants to become a rabbi. But his father, who is a greatly respected teacher, hopes that he will become a college professor or some type of teacher. Danny’s father is known virtually everywhere because he is the most respected rabbi of the Hasidic community. Tradition, sternly upheld by his father, dictates that Danny be the heir to his father’s rabbinate, a hereditary position. But Danny loves the study of the human mind and wants to become a psychologist. For both boys getting away from their father’s wishes for their futures is a tremendous challenge.
The boys graduate from high school and enter a Jewish college in New York. They continue to live at home. College allows them to stretch their wings, and their American Dream continues to glimmer, however faintly. Although Reuven’s father has hopes his son will be a teacher, he does not demand that his son becomes one.
On the other hand, Danny’s father doesn’t even question his son about what he wants to do because he has already decided that his son will be a rabbi. He has also arranged a marriage for him. Danny knows this and in the story he says with despair, “I have to take my father’s place. I have no choice” (86).
But the sad part especially for Danny is that they are in America, and as Reuven’s father puts it, “Reb Saunders’s on does not live in Poland. America is free.
There are no walls here to hold back the Jews” (113).
It is hard for Danny because most people migrate to America to be free. But Danny is in America and still he is trapped. His father does not even let him read books other then the Talmud, the Hebrew Bible.
Danny’s father even admits that, “this is America. This is not Europe. It is an open world here. Here there are libraries and books and schools” (279).
My question is, how does Danny’s father expect him to become someone who he does not want to be? Does his father not understand that not everyone is meant for everything? At least Danny has Reuven, whom he can console with. And at least Reuven understands Danny.
In school we have talked about what shapes one’s American Dream, class, gender, or race. For these boys the pursuit of their American Dream is heavily influenced by their European Jewish cultural heritage. For Danny, as the oldest son, it is expected that he will succeed to his father’s role as the religious leader of his community. He is also expected to agree to a marriage arranged by his father.
The Essay on Danny Reuven Story One
'Do you see what I see?' When the novel "The Chosen" is read, the reader sees the story from out of Reuven's eyes (or in one case 'eye'); but if that same book was read from Danny's perspective then it would become a whole new story; for that is what life is. One person lives the story of their own life while their best friend, though he lives through the same events, lives his own defined story. ...
Danny feels utterly trapped. Now culture and religion have shaped Reuven’s dream in a different way. Reuven is intensely aware of the suffering of European Jews at the hands of the Germans during the war. His feeling of compassion is consuming. His father has been fighting for the Zionist cause-the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine, something which Danny’s father bitterly opposes.
For a time Danny is forbidden to have any contact with Reuven, even though they attend classes together. The rift is painful, but it strengthens Reuven’s determination to pursue his religious calling. Reuven’s father eventually understands this and he gives his son his blessing. What are the things that shape a person’s own version of the American Dream? My answer to that question is this: everyone is different; people belong to different classes, different races, cultures and religions, and different genders. Everyone has his own unique dreams and aspirations. In The Chosen we see two boys who both have American Dreams shaped by their religious and cultural heritage.
Outwardly it would seem their ambitions have little in common: Reuven wants to be a rabbi, Danny a psychologist. But there is an essential underlying similarity. Before they can embrace the freedom to choose their own life-path, they must first realize they have the freedom to dream the American Dream in the first place.