Saturday, April 13, 2019


A Story of Redemption

By Douglas J. Workman

I would like to have the opportunity to have a conversation with the University of Virginia’s basketball coach, Tony Bennett.  But I don’t think the conversation would be about basketball.  That would be like someone at the level of finger-painting attempting to talk art with Picasso.  I know, however, that Coach Bennett is a deeply religious Christian and in my own confused Jewish way, I share some of his religious devotion as well.  And I would truly like to discuss with him my personal insight into the religious implications to journey taken by the University of Virginia’s basketball program over the course of the last two seasons.
I would begin with something that I learned in one of the first classes I ever attended at the University of Virginia, which was a history seminar about World War I.  The Professor spoke about the reason for studying history; with the past being the only thing that we have to hold onto.  The future is unknown and the present is ephemeral; as soon as it is here, it’s gone.  Perhaps the professor’s statement can better be explained by something I later learned from the Danish philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard.  “Life is lived looking forwards, but only understood looking backwards.”
What my professor and Kierkegaard have taught me is that the stories we tell about events ultimately surpass the events themselves in their impact on our lives.  Our stories shape who we are and how we view things.  This analysis begins with an understanding of the role of myth in society.  Myth is something more than an invented epic tale; it can be a symbolic narrative, perhaps of unknown origin, which ostensibly relates to actual events and in so doing transmits a defining story. 
As an example, on the fourth Thursday in November, we all gather around our festive tables and recite some variation of the following:  Our Puritan ancestors left religious persecution to seek a New Zion and freedom in this great land.  When they arrived to Plymouth Colony, they encountered hardships and suffered greatly.  But thanks to the assistance of the native population, they managed to survive and held a festival with the native population expressing gratitude for the bounty of the land.  We all celebrate the holiday of Thanksgiving as part of our story as Americans.  If you wanted to dissect the Thanksgiving story for historical accuracy, the myth is only remotely related to the reality.  Nevertheless, part of what it means to be an American is to adopt the Thanksgiving myth as part of your story.  And just like the vast majority of the population of this great country, my family sits at our dinner table on that day and celebrates the holiday as part of what it means to be an American. 
As a Jew, my root story is the Exodus from Egypt, popularized in film by The Ten Commandments and The Prince of Egypt.  Every year at Passover, we sit down at a Seder table and recount the story of Exodus as our defining myth; i.e., what it means to be a member of the Jewish people.  We retell the story laid out so beautifully in the movies.  We use flowing metaphors to describe what God has done, freeing the Children of Israel from bondage with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm, with great awe, and with signs and wonders.[1]
The most important line that we read in the Passover Seder is not the actual telling of the story, but our personalization of it.  “In every generation a person is obligated to regard himself as if he had come out of Egypt.”  What is it that is so important about this story of redemption that makes us want to view it not as a historical memory but as a uniquely personal one?  Acknowledging our origins as slaves, we are in a position not to feel just sympathy, but actual empathy for the widow, the orphan, the stranger and the alien in our midst.  As we read 36 times in the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, we were strangers in the Land of Egypt, which is the most repeated phrase in the sacred text.  Personalizing that myth works as a matter of laying the foundation for our ethics and morals in a way that we would not be able to understand without having experienced the event.  The lesson is so powerful that it does not matter whether I believe in its historical accuracy; it is my defining myth as a Jew.
In my somewhat feeble attempts to modernize the Passover Seder, I have introduced into our family’s liturgy songs of freedom and redemption that teach the same lesson.  One of my favorites was written by Bob Marley in 1979 at the same time I was a UVA student, called, “Redemption Song.”  The lyric from that song that I always found applicable to the Passover story, “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds.”
Or to put it another way, “If you learn to use it right, the adversity, it will buy you a ticket to a place you couldn't have gone any other way.”  Coach Bennett, picking up on a phrase he heard in a TED talk pointed out to him by his wife, has managed to encapsulate the meaning of Passover, which is the root experience of being Jewish, in a single sentence.  So when he used that quote as the mantra for the Virginia basketball team’s last 14 months, he was speaking right to my soul.
The story of Virginia basketball is one of redemption.  Only by learning through adversity were the Cavaliers able to go to a place deep inside their selves.  And when you are able to make that discovery, in Bob Marley’s words, your hand has been made strong by the hand of the Almighty.  Kudos to Kyle, Ty et al. for allowing the public to be a part of their journey.  We as fans and supporters of the program were also taken to places to which we never could have been without the adversity.  I kept alternating between tears of joy and deep feelings of contentment.  Thank you to Coach Bennett for teaching me a better understanding of my own religion.
Doug Workman, a 1980 Virginia alumnus, is a lawyer in Los Angeles.


[1] Deuteronomy 26:8