Why does asher stop drawing




















When Lev's mother returns home, his father ceases his travel. Lev's mother is home, sick and mentally unwell for quite some time. Lev is concerned for her and often attempts to comfort her with drawings.

To help the family through this time, Mrs. Rackover begins to work in the Lev household. To keep Asher out of the way, his father often brought him to his office.

There, Asher heard his father speaking in many languages with people from around the world and began to get a better sense of the work his father did, trying to help Ladover families come to America. Many of Asher's conversations with his mother during this period of time center around his drawings.

He would often draw the world as he saw it. Question 7. What does Rivkeh Lev ask the Rebbe's permission to do? Question 8. Why does Asher stop drawing? Question 9. Where does the Rebbe ask the Levs to move? Question What prompts Yudel Krinsky to call Asher "a scandal"? It is ironic that Asher's mother What does Asher's mother do to indicate that she supports Asher's art?

What does Asher draw that confuses museum patrons and horrifies his parents? Asher's mother wonders why he's stopped drawing, and he doesn't really have an answer for her other than that he believes it comes from the sitra achra.

Meanwhile, she's entered college, determined to resume Yaakov's work where he left off. She becomes increasingly freaked out at the prospect of anyone she loves meeting with harm, which leads to her being kind of a high-strung helicopter parent and yelling at Asher whenever he comes home late from school.

Aryeh gets ahold of the news that Stalin—or "The Russian Bear," as his friends call him—has murdered six Jewish writers. The news is devastating for the Crown Heights Hasidic community, and it makes Asher think about Siberia and murder more than is probably healthy for a kid in elementary school. Six Jewish doctors are arrested in Russia, charged with plotting to kill Russian military leaders. Aryeh Lev is distraught at the news. Later in school, Asher attends a special assembly where the children are told of the event, the evils of the Russians and their hatred for Torah and Jews.

On the way home from school, Asher stops in Yudel Krinsky's stationary store. While buying a notebook and pencil, he asks Krinsky about Russia and discusses the Jewish doctors with him. When Asher returns home late, Mrs.

Rackover asks where she should tell his mother he had been. Asher responds that he does not care.



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