Abraham J. Twerski Explained

Abraham J. Twerski
Birth Name:Abraham Joshua Heshel Twerski
Birth Date:6 October 1930
Birth Place:Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.
Death Date:January 31, 2021 (aged 90)
Death Place:Hadassah Ein Karem Medical Center
Jerusalem, Israel
Occupation:Psychiatrist
Children:4
Relatives:Aaron Twerski (brother)
Michel Twerski (brother)

Abraham Joshua Heshel Twerski (אברהם יהושע העשיל טווערסקי, Hebrew & Yiddish; 6 October 1930) was an Israeli-American Hasidic rabbi, a scion of the Chernobyl Hasidic dynasty, and a psychiatrist specializing in substance abuse.

Early life and education

Abraham Joshua Twerski was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[1] His parents were Devorah Leah (née Halberstam; 1900–1995),[2] daughter of the second Rebbe of Bobov, and Rabbi Jacob Israel Twerski (1898–1973), who was the rabbi of Beth Jehudah synagogue in Milwaukee. The elder Rabbi Twerski immigrated to America in 1927, and was a descendant of Rabbi Menachem Nachum Twerski, the founder of the Chernobyl Hasidic dynasty,[3] and a student of the Baal Shem Tov.[4] Twerski was the third of five brothers. His two older brothers were Shloime and Motel, and his two younger brothers were twins, Aaron and Michel.[5]

He attended public high school in Milwaukee, and graduated at age 16. He enrolled in the Hebrew Theological College of Chicago (now located in Skokie, Illinois) and was ordained a rabbi in 1951. He worked with his father as assistant rabbi. In 1952 he married Goldie Flusberg. In 1953 Twerski enrolled at Milwaukee's Marquette University, and subsequently graduated from its medical school in 1959. He received his psychiatric training at the University of Pittsburgh, and spent an additional two years on the staff of a state hospital in Pennsylvania. He was then asked to become the department head of psychiatry at Pittsburgh's St. Francis Hospital.

Career

Medicine

Rabbi Twerski's medical career includes Gateway Rehabilitation Center, Pittsburgh, which he founded and served as medical director emeritus,[6] clinical director of the Department of Psychiatry at St. Francis Hospital in Pittsburgh, associate professor of psychiatryat the University of Pittsburgh's School of Medicine,[6] [7] and founder of the Shaar Hatikvah rehabilitation center for prisoners in Israel.[8]

Rabbinic career

In his rabbinic career Rabbi Twerski was a prolific writer of Jewish books and of shiurim (Torah-themed lectures).[9] [10] He was co-spiritual leader of Congregation Beth Jehudah with his father from ordination until 1959.[6] During this time he composed a melody for the Hebrew verse Psalms 28:9 "Hoshea es Amecha,"[11] which became popular in Jewish circles.[12] The song became especially popular in the Lubavitch community, after the Lubavitcher Rebbe sang it at a farbrengen.

Rabbi Twerski on Twelve Steps and Jewish ethics

Rabbi Twerski's clinical career specialized in alcoholism and addiction. Much of his popular writing concerned self-improvement and ethical behavior. He merged mussar (Jewish ethics and morality movement) with the Twelve-Step Program and ideas from clinical psychology.[13]

Andrew Heinze explains Rabbi Twerski's attraction to the Twelve Steps this way:[14]

The significance of the religious dynamic in Alcoholics Anonymous was captured in Abraham Twerski's comment that he discovered in AA meetings the kind of sincere and even selfless fellow-feeling that was often absent from synagogues. He was moved by the example of men and women who would willingly be awakened in the middle of the night to go out and help a fellow alcoholic. Recovering alcoholics, Twerski observed, "will often exhibit a sense of responsibility far superior to that of the non-alcoholic in relationship to their families, friends, and God."[15]
He was attracted as well by the pragmatism of the Twelve Steps.... [T]he AA system offered a practical non-analytic therapy that resonated with traditional Judaism much more than conventional psychoanalysis did. In treating addicts, Twerski discovered limitations of the psychoanalytic emphasis on understanding the origins of one's behavior. Patients would continue to drink while they inquired with their therapists into the possible reasons for their drinking. The Twelve Step program took the opposite approach, demanding that the person start his or her transformation by stopping the bad behavior. "There is an important similarity between the Torah approach to behavior and the Twelve Step program approach," Twerski realized.
One does not enter into a discussion or argument with the yetzer hara. Whatever reasons you can propose for one position, the yetzer hara will give several logical reasons to the contrary....[16]
Heinze gives the following example of how Rabbi Twerski introduced Twelve Steps, a movement with Christian origins, to the Jewish audience, which, according to Heinze, perceived alcohol addiction as a non-Jewish problem:[17]
....Twerski cleverly presents the theme of alcoholism, not as a modern American phenomenon, but rather as part-and-parcel of rabbinic discourse. He refers to Rabbi Chaim Shmulevitz, who cites Midrash Tanhuma on the drunken man whose family escorts him to witness an obviously drunk and degraded man. To his family's dismay, he bends over the fallen man and whispers in his ear, "My good man, where did you get such fine wine?"[18] To those who would claim that the problem of addictive behavior is secondary or even peripheral to the observant Jew, Twerski answers, "one cannot consider oneself to be truly observant if one neglects mussar." And for Twerski mussar entails dealing with "the psychological mechanism of denial [which] can blind a person to even the most obvious self-destructive behavior."[19]

Rabbi Twerski's reinterpretation of mussar "depends fundamentally on psychological categories in spite of his rejection of psychoanalysis as a therapeutic tool."[20] Heinze writes:

Much as it is impossible for a psychologist to ignore or overlook obvious psychological problems, so Twerski's training in the biochemistry of the brain inevitably led him to abandon the strict and often austere moral economy of traditional mussar. He cannot simply exhort, in the ancestral way, about human laziness. If a person seems incapacitated by depression, Twerski must investigate the possibility of a biochemical problem before resorting to the conventional prescription of mussar---the performance of mitzvot.
And further:[20]
"In my earlier days of doing psychotherapy, treating persons with a negative self-image was most distressing," [Twerski] recalled, "I would become angry because it seemed to me that the patient preferred to wallow in the mire of his fantasied worthlessness." "The trick in therapy," he concluded, using the English equivalent of the word mussar employed (tachbulah) to describe both the evil urge and methods to defeat it, "is to remove the distortion" of view that hindered psychological and moral growth.[21] Starting out with an old-fashioned moralism that emphasized the stubborn will as chief stumbling block to self-improvement, Twerski ended up with the premise that psychological blocks were essentially involuntary and therefore tantamount to physical disabilities, albeit ones subject to remedy.

Personal life

Rabbi A.J. Twerski retired from full-time work in 1995, and moved to Monsey, New York, where his second wife, Gail was from. After about ten years in Monsey, they moved to Teaneck, New Jersey. Rabbi Twerski finally moved to Israel with his wife, and called for his fellow Jews to do the same.[22]

His brothers are Aaron Twerski, the Irwin and Jill Cohen Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School, as well as a former Dean and Professor of tort Law at Hofstra University Law School;[23] Rabbi Michel Twerski,[24] the Hornosteipler Rebbe of Milwaukee; the late Shloime Twerski, the previous Hornosteipler Rebbe of Denver; and the late Mordechai Dov Ber Twerski of New York. Rabbi Abraham Joshua Twerski died in Jerusalem on January 31, 2021, of COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel.[25] He was survived by his wife Dr. Gail Twerski, three sons and one daughter, and grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren.[26]

In his will he specified that he did not want there to be eulogies at his funeral, but rather instead for his children to sing the song he composed, "Hoshia es Amecha", as they led his body to his grave.

Works

He wrote over 90 books on Judaism and self-help topics, including several books with Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts comic strips used to illustrate human interaction and behavior.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Abraham J. Twerski, Psychiatrist and Rabbi. 2021-01-31. Pittsburgh Quarterly. en-US.
  2. News: Berger . Joseph . 2021-02-06 . Abraham Twerski, Who Merged 12 Steps and the Torah, Dies at 90 . 2024-07-07 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  3. Web site: Abraham Twerski, Hasidic rabbi and psychiatrist has died at 90. 2021-01-31. jewishchronicle.timesofisrael.com. en-US.
  4. Web site: Yudelson. Larry. Rabbi, doctor, author, shrink. 2021-01-31. jewishstandard.timesofisrael.com. en-US.
  5. News: Times. Israel Shenker Special to The New York. 1978-07-23. The Twerski Tradition: 10 Generations of Rabbis in the Family (Published 1978). en-US. The New York Times. 2021-01-31. 0362-4331.
  6. Web site: Dr. Abraham Twerski . Gateway Rehabilitation Center. https://web.archive.org/web/20120615010612/http://www.gatewayrehab.org/dr-twerski . 15 June 2012 . October 15, 2009.
  7. Web site: Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twerski . Torah in Motion. Oct 15, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20091021004338/http://www.torahinmotion.org/spkrs_crnr/faculty/bioAbrahamTwerski.htm. 21 October 2009 . live.
  8. News: Rabbi works with Israel's prisons to aid drug addicts . Debbie . Offenberg . J. the Jewish news weekly of Northern California . November 1, 1996 . Oct 15, 2009.
  9. Web site: Shiurim from Rabbi Dr Avraham Twerski . TorahLectures.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091003020623/http://torahlectures.com/s-Rabbi-Dr-Avraham-Twerski.aspx . 2009-10-03 .
  10. Web site: Articles, audio and Video Shiurim by Dr. Twerski . Torahweb.org].
  11. Web site: Hoshia Es Amecha. YouTube.
  12. Web site: The Origin of the Famous Niggun. 4 February 2015.
  13. Heinze . Andrew R. . The Americanization of Mussar: Abraham Twerski's Twelve Steps . Judaism . 48 . 172 . 450–469 . Fall 1999 . The American Jewish Congress.
  14. Heinze, pp. 455-456
  15. Book: Twerski, Abraham . Self-Discovery in Recovery . Hazelden Foundation . 1984 . 118.
  16. Twerski, Self-Discovery, p. 94
  17. Heinze, pp. 456-457
  18. Book: Twerski, Abraham . Self-Improvement? I'm Jewish! . Shaar Press . 1995 . 27.
  19. Twerski, Self Improvement?, p. 26
  20. Heinze, p. 459
  21. Book: Twerski, Abraham . Like Yourself* (* And Others Will, Too) . 1978 . Prentice-Hall . 25–26.
  22. Web site: Rutman. David. 2019-11-09. Watch: Bring Them Home – A Call to Diaspora Jewry from Rabbi Abraham Twerski. 2021-01-31. Jewish Review. en-US.
  23. Dean Aaron Twerski Named Special Master: Federal Judge Alvin Hellerstein Appoints Dean Twerski as One of Two Special Masters to Oversee Thousands of Claims Filed by World Trade Center Workers . 2011-01-06 . Dec 18, 2006 . Hofstra Law School.
  24. Web site: Rabbi Michel Twerski . Congregation Beth Jehudah. Dec 24, 2019 .
  25. https://www.jewishpress.com/news/obituaries/bde-rabbi-dr-abraham-j-twerski-global-addiction-expert-passes-away/2021/01/31/ BDE: Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twerski, Global Addiction Expert, Passes Away
  26. Web site: Julian. Hana Levi. 31 January 2021. Update: Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twerski, Global Addiction Expert, Passes Away. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20210131183528/https://www.jewishpress.com/news/obituaries/bde-rabbi-dr-abraham-j-twerski-global-addiction-expert-passes-away/2021/01/31/ . 2021-01-31 . 31 January 2021. The Jewish Press.
  27. Web site: The Rabbi and the Nuns.
  28. Web site: Seek Sobriety Find Serenity - Jewish Books - Feldheim Publishers. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160629133916/http://www.feldheim.com/seek-sobriety-find-serenity.html?acc=c7e1249ffc03eb9ded908c236bd1996d . 2016-06-29 .