Jewish parents selflessly passed on knowledge, interests and hobbies to their children at different times, making them wise people.
Jews' pursuit of knowledge is endless, because they believe that only by constantly reading can people broaden their horizons and increase their knowledge. As parents, like Jews, let children make friends with books from an early age and form the habit of loving reading, so that children can benefit for life.
When children have a certain reading ability, Jewish parents will become their children's "bandu", reading literary classics, scientific papers, essays and so on. With children, in the process of reading, parents will often encourage their children and give careful guidance.
When children are fully capable of reading, Jewish parents often go to bookstores to buy books or often take their children in and out of different libraries in order to satisfy their children's desire and curiosity for reading.
The Jewish people are called "the nation of books", and they cultivate the habit of children loving books and reading from an early age. For Jews, books represent wisdom. Everything can be lost, but wisdom can last forever.
Jews have a good tradition that bookcases must be placed at the head of the bed, not at the end of the bed. This is done for the convenience of reading and the awe of books. The Jewish nation is still a nation that does not ban books. Even books that attack and insult Jews can circulate freely. Such an erudite attitude makes the Jewish nation truly a "nation of books".
Jewish parents not only instill the concept of loving books in their children, but also embody it in practical actions. Jewish parents will play the role of "scholars" when their children are very young. They will read fairy tales, biographies of celebrities, scientific knowledge and so on to their children every night.