Integrating a non Jewish caregiver in an orthodox family is nothing new. I am 73, raised in NYC and I we had a nanny. This lady was with us for my whole childhood. and I had a relationship with her until she passed. During that time she learned all the things about how to keep a kosher home ect. and also learned Yiddish. Blessings for this lovely young woman. Great interviews.
I truly like this young lady. I myself am not Jewish but find the traditions very interesting. I think it’s wonderful that see learned Yiddish. She dresses appropriately and respectfully. She loves children which I also always have done. I am an older women but would never listen to someone like Kanye West. I think he really needs therapy and has mental issues. There is always someone that is going to be hateful. I call this ignorance. If Kanye was someone who had a career, or money not one would care what he thought or said. I do not like to hear prejudices against any group of people. I think what it comes down to is respect. ❤
What a sweet person. An old friend of mine - not Jewish - came to NYC from Montana in the late 1980s, and worked for the family of the rabbi who started Aish Ha Torah as a nanny to their kids. She had only good things to say about the family and how she was treated. She spoke of them with great affection, and also picked up a number of Jewish and Yiddish terms. Since she moved back to Montana, to her very Christian family (she herself is not a believer), I know she’s been a great ambassador for us. Just want to say that many sages over the centuries have advised that in times of increased antisemitism, we are not obligated to wear our Jewishness, so to speak. While current thinking is all, “I refuse to hide who I am,” there comes a point when safety comes first. I don’t believe that anyone should consider their way of dressing the line in the sand, if there’s a danger. Just as we are obligated to build railings or other safety measures on rooftops if people are going to hang out on them (as per Maimonides), then we are also obliged - this is also pikuah nefesh - to protect ourselves, and especially our children, from harm.
22:45 On not wanting to give traffic to a page that fosters bias, it's true. Even negative exposure is still exposure, essentially free advertising. Good point Adriana.
Thank u for sharing your story. I'm a jewish mom glad to see positive energy. Nannies are definitely a come back now that plenty of parents need to return back to work. Go nannies. Great 👍 😊
She has such a great perspective and positive energy!
Integrating a non Jewish caregiver in an orthodox family is nothing new. I am 73, raised in NYC and I we had a nanny. This lady was with us for my whole childhood. and I had a relationship with her until she passed. During that time she learned all the things about how to keep a kosher home ect. and also learned Yiddish. Blessings for this lovely young woman. Great interviews.
A non-Jewish caregiver is nothing new. One using her social platform to explain the beauty of Orthodox Jewish life is n
@@jewinthecity Hope you din't take what I said in a negative way,
I did not. Just clarifying what is special here.
"I have the best babysitter." A great compliment.
Thanks for this we love watching her she is such a great nanny and sweet girl my family enjoys her videos my kids wish she was Thier nanny:)
I love that she said that she would read the Jewish kids books to her own children to give them exposure. That's so smart!
👍👍👍
I truly like this young lady. I myself am not Jewish but find the traditions very interesting. I think it’s wonderful that see learned Yiddish. She dresses appropriately and respectfully. She loves children which I also always have done. I am an older women but would never listen to someone like Kanye West. I think he really needs therapy and has mental issues. There is always someone that is going to be hateful. I call this ignorance. If Kanye was someone who had a career, or money not one would care what he thought or said. I do not like to hear prejudices against any group of people. I think what it comes down to is respect. ❤
I adore Adriana
What a sweet person. An old friend of mine - not Jewish - came to NYC from Montana in the late 1980s, and worked for the family of the rabbi who started Aish Ha Torah as a nanny to their kids. She had only good things to say about the family and how she was treated. She spoke of them with great affection, and also picked up a number of Jewish and Yiddish terms. Since she moved back to Montana, to her very Christian family (she herself is not a believer), I know she’s been a great ambassador for us.
Just want to say that many sages over the centuries have advised that in times of increased antisemitism, we are not obligated to wear our Jewishness, so to speak. While current thinking is all, “I refuse to hide who I am,” there comes a point when safety comes first. I don’t believe that anyone should consider their way of dressing the line in the sand, if there’s a danger. Just as we are obligated to build railings or other safety measures on rooftops if people are going to hang out on them (as per Maimonides), then we are also obliged - this is also pikuah nefesh - to protect ourselves, and especially our children, from harm.
22:45 On not wanting to give traffic to a page that fosters bias, it's true. Even negative exposure is still exposure, essentially free advertising. Good point Adriana.
I bet Adrianna has some Jewish ancestry. She is super intelligent and a great speaker.
wow she's amazing😊
Adriana, Thanksgiving was actually inspired by Sukkos. The pilgrims wanted to celebrate the biblical holiday in their own way.
Thank u for sharing your story. I'm a jewish mom glad to see positive energy. Nannies are definitely a come back now that plenty of parents need to return back to work. Go nannies. Great 👍 😊