will be happy and respect whatever you take. that sense of openness reinforced my attachment to judaism even when i gave up the practice of the religion. i had this revelation about the broad-mindedness and universitiality of jewish culture and it brought me back at a different place. not the kind of practicing jew that my father was but as somebody who deeply respects and wants to perpetuate to his culture. so that s where i ended up as a result of the broad-minded upbringing and rather than abandon it as many orthodox jews do when they are raised orthodox and then rebel against it, that never happened to me. well, i knew he wasn t a believer. i am a believer. the god i worship he would want charles in his presence. who wouldn t? when i became sort of
krauthammer. .rauthammer. through sweat. coppertone. proven to protect. and now for the rings. ( ) i m a four-year-old ring bearer with a bad habit of swallowing stuff. still won t eat my broccoli, though. and if you don t have the right overage, you could be paying for that pricey love band yourself. so get an allstate agent, and be better protected from mayhem. like me. can a ring bearer get a snack around here?
we always laughed that i don t think he paid attention to that. if he had something to say he was going to say it no time constraints were going to control him on that. born in 1950s new york to jewish parents that left world war ii era europe, charles father raised his son to value the pursuit of knowledge. his motto for us is i want you to know everything. i want you to learn everything. you don t have to do everything, but you have got to know everything. he thought that was part of life. the family lived in montreal and summered at their cottage in long beach, new york. it was a paratypical childhood. my brother and i were inseparable. he always insisted i be included and i got used to be around the big boys and taking the slings and arrows. that s how you get toughened up. as a senior in canada he became captivated by journalism. he applied to medical school to appease his family and was accepted to harvard. but krauthammer put off attending and enrolled at oxford instea
attention to that one if he had something to say, he was going to say it no time constraints were going to control him on that. born to jewish parents who left world war ii era europe, charles raised his son to pursu purr pursue knowledge. his motto i want you to learn everything. you don t have to do everything but you have got to know everything. he thought that was part of life. family lived in montreal and summered at their college in long beach, new york. it was a paratypical childhood. my brother and i were inseparable. he always insist that i be included, so i got used to be around the big boys and taking the slings and arrows. that s how you get toughened up. as a senior in miguel university in canada he became captivate by journalism. he applied to medical school to appease his family and was accepted to harvard. but krauthammer put off attending and encontrolled enrot oxford instead. it was there that he met
talking to anyone. they were always in our of charles and very apprehensive about approaching him and i would always say please say something to him. he was so friendly to everyone. in 2013 krauthammer released a book, things that matter, summing up the survivor spirit that guided much of his life writing, quote, the catastrophe that awaits everyone from of single false move, wrong turn, fatal encounter, every life has such a moment, what distinguishes us is whether and how we ever come back. there low point. do you want it enough and are you lucky enough? reporter: in the june krauthammer announced he had been diagnosed with cancer and doctors a given him just weeks to live, writing i leave this life with no regrets. it was a wonderful life, full and complete with the great loves and great endeavors that make it worth living.