Rep. Eric Swalwell questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein during a hearing of the Judiciary Committee, Dec. 13, 2017 (Screenshot/YouTube)
Rep. Eric Swalwell questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein during a hearing of the Judiciary Committee, Dec. 13, 2017 (Screenshot/YouTube)

Former Camp Tawonga director Ken Kramarz was watching a Judiciary Committee hearing on CNN yesterday when he heard California Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-East Bay) quote, nearly word-for-word, the famous saying of 19th-century Hasidic master Rebbe Nachman of Breslov: “The whole world is a very narrow bridge, and the most important part is not to be afraid.”

Kramarz called Tawonga assistant director Aaron Mandel “screaming with excitement,” Mandel told J. Every Jewish summer camp staffer and kid in America recognizes the rebbe’s quote as the lyrics to a hugely popular song session tune, “Gesher Tzar Me’od.”

Here’s the video of Swalwell’s remarks during the hearing (the relevant part starts around 4:20):

In it, one sees the Judiciary Committee questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein (who is Jewish). Swalwell (who is not Jewish) asks Rosenstein whether he is attempting to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Swalwell then closely paraphrases Rebbe Nachman: “Deputy Attorney General, your investigation is a very narrow bridge. The important part, I believe for our country, is for you to not be afraid. During these trying times, we need you to be fearless.”

So how did this quote make its way into Swalwell’s comments? Suggested by a Jewish staffer, perhaps? J. called to find out.

Unfortunately, there’s nothing special to see here, according to a spokesperson for the congressman. “It’s a quote from Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav,” Swalwell said. “Occasionally, it comes to mind.”

Anyway, a fun moment for current and former Jewish summer camp kids (and fans of Rebbe Nachman).

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David A.M. Wilensky is associate editor at J. He previously served as digital editor. For more David, find him on Instagram, Letterboxd and League of Comic Geeks. And you can email David about anything you want at [email protected].

3 replies on “How Rebbe Nachman ended up in yesterday’s Judiciary Committee hearing”

  1. I think it kind of disgusting. A congressman basically asked a Jew whether or not he thought he was a good jew. As if it’s the obligation of this Jew to reconcile his political and religious beliefs for this congressman in a public setting.

    People been singling out Jews and beating us over the head with our own religious though for millinea. What would the lefty world say if a Christian congressman singled out a Muslim nominee and pulled out of context phrases from the Koran or Hadith to confront him for political advantage? They’d call it racist. They’d scream for his resignation.

    But not if it’s a Jew.

    It’s just more subtle anti-Semitism from the left.

    And the lefties from the j weekly cheer.

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