Theme Of Silence In Chaim Potok's The Chosen

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"A word is worth one coin, silence is worth two" (205). This passage from the Talmud is very confusing and strange. How is a word worth one coin? People use words to communicate and speak with others. Without words how could people say that they are suffering or are in need of comfort? Silence is worth two coins though. Silence can say things that words cannot. It can reach to the soul and say things that people are to afraid or unable to put into words. In The Chosen by Chaim Potok, the main character Reuven Malter experiences silence in all forms. This phrase applies to him by the time that he never appreciated how much he and Danny Saunders has been talking and then suddenly Reb Saunders, Danny's father, separated them. This is appointed to in this passage, "I hated the silence between us and thought it unimaginable that Danny and his father never really talked. Silence was ugly, it was black, it leered, it was cancerous, it was death. I hated it, and I hated Reb Saunders for forcing it upon me and his son (Potok 235, Ch 14). Though in this passage Reuven said he hates the silence, it makes him more aware of what is happening and learns to enjoy it and make use of it. "In subsequent weeks, I was grateful for that silence" (Potok 242, Ch 14). This silence has opened his mind and has allowed him to think of more …show more content…

In this book it is stated that though he does not understand it, he does not hate it either. He learned compassion in this silence and said very loud things through this though he said nothing at all. Such as the instance that he brushed Reuven's hand in the hallway when his father had his second heart attack. This quote toward Danny is more based on his childhood. To Danny, the quote means to listen to what is not being said then to what is. Danny often must read what his father is saying rather than his father says it to him. It also alludes to being trapped by the silence and how he must escape the

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