Page 1,427«..1020..1,4261,4271,4281,429..1,4401,450..»

"Shared struggles" forum to tackle faiths’ differences, similarities – Charleston Post Courier

Posted By on July 30, 2017

The Summerville and North Area Jewish Community doesn't have a temple or a synagogue, but it still has a meaningful place to meet.

The community has partnered with Summerville's Community Resource Center and the Charleston Jewish Community Center Without Walls to offer a series of ecumenical programs exploring faith, history and community.

The next will take place Sunday, July 30 from 5-7 p.m. and will focus on the shared struggles of Christians, Jews and Muslims, said Robin Wittenberg Dudley, a volunteer with the community group.

Panel participants will include Abraham Belanger, pastor of the First Fruits Community Church in Summerville, Rabbi Greg Kanter of Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim in Charleston, and Aisha Miller of the .Central Mosque of Charleston

Patrick Labbe, who founded the Summerville and North Area Jewish Community group eight years ago, came up with the idea and will moderate.

"We do have shared struggles," Labbe said. "I liken what is happening to Muslims in our country as similar to what happened to Jews in Germany before the Holocaust: the demonization of people."

Dudley agreed. "We felt like the Muslim community is growing enough in the Charleston area that they need some understanding about the struggles we all face, not just because of religion but because of our heritage and culture."

Muslims remain only a tiny slice of South Carolina's population. The Pew Research Center's recent Religious Landscape Study put the number of Muslims at less than 1 percent. Jews make up about 1 percent of the state's population, while 78 percent identify as Christian.

Labbe said the Summerville and North Area Jewish Communitygroup originally started as a sort of social club to connect Jews in the Summerville area, but it has grown and begun to work with other social justice and community organizations. For instance, next month it will participate in a back-to-school event from 2-5 p.m. Aug. 20 at Doty Park with three local African-American community groups.

"Our purpose is to bring the community together, to make a difference in the community," he said. "I believe the old saying if we don't stand together, we fall separately."

The programs are part of the Summerville CommUNITY Artists Heritage Series.

Sunday's session will take place at the Saul Alexander Masonic Hall, 111 North Main St. in Summerville. The event is free, and food and beverages will be sold there.

Reach Robert Behreat 843-937-5771. Follow him on Twitter @RobertFBehre.

Read more:

"Shared struggles" forum to tackle faiths' differences, similarities - Charleston Post Courier

WATCH: Hasidic Jews jam with Pope Francis at Vatican …

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Pope Francis.. (photo credit:REUTERS)

ROME Pope Francis danced with a delegation of Hasidic Jews and discussed with them issues including the protection of Jewish cemeteries in Europe and combating child sex abuse.

The pontiff held a 45-minute audience at the Vatican on Monday with the group, which was led by Rabbi Edgar Gluck.

A video on the Yeshiva World News website and also posted to YouTube shows the pope swaying to the music as members of the delegation dance and serenade him with the song Long years shall satiate him.

Yeshiva World News quoted Glucks son Zvi, who was part of the delegation, as saying the pontiff pledged to work toward enacting stronger rules against destroying Jewish cemeteries to build roads or homes.

Zvi Gluck, the founder and director of Amudim, an organization dedicated to helping Jewish victims of abuse and addiction, also tweeted that the pontiff had pledged zero tolerance for the sexual abuse of children and said We need to keep kids safe.

Born in Germany, Edgar Gluck, 80, divides his time between Brooklyn and Poland, where he holds the title of chief rabbi of Galicia. In the United States, where he has long been politically active, he was a co-founder of Hatzolah, one of the largest volunteer ambulance corps.

He has been involved in the preservation of Jewish cemeteries in Eastern Europe for decades and long served as a member of the U.S. Commission for the Preservation of Americas Heritage Abroad.

Gluck and Pope Francis met and discussed the plight of Jewish cemeteries last year when the pontiff visited Krakow for Catholic World Youth Day and, according to Yeshiva World News, the pope invited Gluck to continue the discussion at the Vatican.

sign up to our newsletter

Share on facebook

Original post:

WATCH: Hasidic Jews jam with Pope Francis at Vatican ...

‘Menashe’: The Powerful New Indie That Goes Inside New York’s Hasidic Community – Daily Beast

Posted By on July 30, 2017

Making an independent film on-location in Brooklyns Hasidic community, and almost completely in Yiddish, is not the most obvious way to lure people into a theater. When director Joshua Z. Weinstein embarked on his quest to produce Menashe in this very way, his plan was greeted with considerable skepticism, including from his closest ally. Even my mom told me it was a bad idea to make this movie, he laughs. Folks didnt really believe that an all-Yiddish film with non-actors was going to be a good way to spend a Saturday night. They just couldnt comprehend it.

On the eve of its July 28 release (following an enthusiastically received premiere at Januarys Sundance Film Festival), its clear that Weinsteins gamble has paid off. Menashe is one of the years most uniquely engaging films, an ethnographic deep-dive into a closed-off community thats also a nuanced character study. That person is Menashe, a Borough Park widower who finds himself fighting to regain custody of his adolescent son, Rieven (Ruben Niborski), whos now living with his uncle Eizik (Yoel Weisshaus) because Hasidic norms stipulate that a single man is unfit to raise a child by himself. Its a heartfelt tale about a fathers love for his child (and vice versa), the sacrifices required by parenthood, and the difficulty of forging an individualistic path in a conformist environmentand one thats based, in part, on the life of its star, Menashe Lustig.

As Weinstein says, Aside from those two details [that Lustig is a widower, and was trying to regain guardianship of his kid] everything else is fictionalized. Because it wouldnt be interesting, honestly, otherwise. Peoples lives dont make simple narratives. They dont fit well in that box. Nonetheless, he knew from the outset that Lustigs plight was both specific enough to Hasidic life, and yet universal enough to resonate outside those confines, to serve as the basis for a drama. Moreover, he realized that Lustig himself was perfect for the lead roleespecially since finding him was something of a coup. Its hard to cast in that world. Literally out of hundreds of thousands of Hasidic Jews in the Brooklyn-New York area (and maybe closer to a million), we only had about 60 people show up for auditions. So I did auditions early on, and basically, I just wanted to find a great actor. I knew if I had a great actor, I could make this movie.

He did, via his producer, Daniel Finkelman. He introduced me to Menashe, and I did casting tapes, filming him doing simple improv games, and I was just immediately drawn to him, because he had this clown persona, but at the same point, a deep hurt inside him. For me, Im most excited by people who are damaged. As soon as I met him, I knew he could hold a film together.

Despite the fact that hed be plumbing his own experiences, Lustig was eager to take on the challenge of shouldering a secular-world feature. Menashe was excited because I really pushed him as an artist, says Weinstein. Hes always just done these YouTube clipstheyre kind of Charlie Chaplin-esqueand he also does two plays a year that are held for thousands of people in his town where he does, again, huge broad comedies. I think it really excited him that he had a director that could mold him and guide him and give him creative advice. Still, it was a daunting challenge for the amateur actor, given that (like his co-stars, all of whom were non-professionals) he had a decidedly limited base of knowledge about the moviesto put it mildly.

We didnt realize this, but Menashe had never been to a movie theater before he went to Sundance. Sundance was the first time hed stepped into a movie theater, recalls Weinstein. And people in the film really didnt know much about movies. Some actors would tell me the lighting was bad, or theyd ask me when they were going to get a close-up. They didnt understand the process. Their idea for acting was big Borscht Belt-style humor. It took a long time for most actors to understand the minimalism that I was after. But at the same time, I think the acting is brilliant in the movie because theyre just themselves. Everyone I found, I would just change the role to fit their body type and natural faces.

By fictionalizing Lustigs ordeal, Weinstein contends that he was able to get at a greater truth than he might have with a documentary: Menashe is more authentic in capturing a better idea of what it means to be a Hasidic Jew in Brooklyn than any National Geographic film. And one of the keys to its authenticity was making it in Yiddish, regardless of the fact that most of the crew didnt speak the language. Weinstein admits he knew very basic Hebrew. I started taking Yiddish, and it was so hard. I knew enough that I could get by. But we had translators on set at all times.

Beginning with improvisation and then scripting things more overtly as he went along, Weinstein shot as much as possible in Borough Park, utilizing a peeping-tom style (indebted to his own prior documentary output) that makes one feel as if theyre clandestinely spying on a forbidden world. Full of compositions in which his camera watches Menashe and Rieven through busy sidewalk crowds or from the back seat of carsa detachment thats matched by intimate up-close-and-personal moments at private events and celebrationsMenashes non-fiction-esque aesthetics are vital to its observational power, even though the production itself was carried out in plain sight.

It feels voyeuristic, and it takes a lot of work to make it seem so off-the-cuff. Every day I was working on it, I was like, we cant have a Hollywood-style shot in this movie, because it will break the faade, he states. That said, We actually never hid; we were always in plain sight. Im obsessed with the 70s, and I feel bad that this is an era that Im so constantly reaching for, but it was really a brilliant era of cinema where people could make art films, and it was before CGI was a thing. So you look at A Woman Under the Influence or The French Connection or Scarecrow, and they used a lot of the exact same techniques that Im using. Its just like classic cinema. Theres something about using a 400mm lens and being across the street from somebody in New York Cityweve all seen it in other films, but weve never seen it in this community. So I think its also something about this community that makes us assume that it was more on the sly than it wasWe had big billboards up, and we told people that, by crossing in the frame, youll be in the shot.

As one might imagine, most residents werent keen to participate in this outsiders project, considering the limited advantages it would afford. Most people did not want to be in the movie, and most people did not want us to film in their location. Theres just no benefit; its not like it affects their world. Its not, Oh please film in my caf because I want people to see my caf in the film. Theres no upside for it. That doesnt mean, however, that locals werent curious about all the cinematic commotion. Ive filmed a lot in Asia, and it reminded me of being in a small Indian village, where everyone would come out and watch because they were so shocked and interested to know what was going on. They didnt want to be on-camera, but they wanted to watcha situation that culminated with with a man approaching Lustig on the street to ask a favor, all while they were in the middle of shooting a scene.

As Menashe wrestles with his desire to simultaneously be himself, and to adhere to the customs and expectations that will help him permanently reunite with his son, Menashe becomes both a compelling portrait of grief and struggle, and a novel coming-of-age tale. Its also a cultural snapshot embellished with numerous sociological touchesget-togethers in claustrophobic religious spaces; meetings with the local Rabbi; the use of a washbowl for cleaning hands and face upon waking each morningthat ground its relatable story in a distinctive place and time. Many of those details are presented without explanation, so that they remain a tad mysteriousa tack that was deliberate. We didnt want to actively confuse audiences, Weinstein remarks. But we didnt want to explain something at the expense of making it feel expository. Theres definitely a clear line there, about knowing when not to explain, and knowing when to further explain. It was definitely a point we debated and talked about a lot.

Empathetic, complex and wholly engrossing, the resultant work is like no other thatll arrive in 2017, and one that adheres to Weinsteins guiding belief in cinemas role as something that brings people together, andin the best-case scenarioenlightens them as well. Film is an art form that you have to share with other people. We were constantly editing it and showing it to people and seeing what felt right, what felt wrong. And just being smart enough to listen, and to change appropriately.

Get The Beast In Your Inbox!

Start and finish your day with the top stories from The Daily Beast.

A speedy, smart summary of all the news you need to know (and nothing you don't).

Subscribe

Thank You!

You are now subscribed to the Daily Digest and Cheat Sheet. We will not share your email with anyone for any reason.

I think people want to watch cinema to learn. And for me, film is always about learning and education. I felt I was constantly learning about society and about humanity through making this film.

Read more:

'Menashe': The Powerful New Indie That Goes Inside New York's Hasidic Community - Daily Beast

Interview: Joshua Z. Weinstein on Making the Hasidic Drama Menashe – slantmagazine

Posted By on July 30, 2017

The Hasidim, extremely religious Jews known for their reclusiveness and distinctive clothing, are rarely represented on screen. Their beliefs and values put them at odds with secular culture, meaning they're usually seen from an outsider's perspectiveand when they are seen with an insider's eye, it's almost always that of someone running away from the community.

Menashe, written, shot, and directed by Joshua Z. Weinstein, a documentary cinematographer by trade, takes place entirely within a Hasidic community and focuses on the titular character, a hapless 30-something widower, as he desperately tries to recover custody of his son, forced from him by Jewish law. Filmed in Yiddish, it's a sober drama (and sometimes comedy) about balancing the demands of community, desire, and God, one that embeds us in the life of a religious man trying to do his best to become a mensch.

Fleeing the heat of Manhattan summer in a caf in Soho, I spoke with Weinstein, a self-described punk rocker with a massive smile and a mop of dark brown hair, about realism, authenticity, and the difficulties of filming one of the most cloistered communities in New York.

Have you ever done any documentaries in the Hasidic community before?

No. Because it's not possible actually. To do something as authentic as this movieyou can't shoot it because if you start filming on the street and walk into buildings, people will start yelling at you. They'll kick you out. That's why National Geographic hasn't even made a film like this. You have to recreate these moments to make them feel real.

So what possessed you to make a movie about this community?

It was impossibly difficult in so many ways. But, you know, I love New York City and I love its confluence of different peoples and ideas and faces. And me and Yoni Brook, who I shot the film with, we'd go all over the city together. I remember one summer I went to every beach in New York City. Like, The Bronx, Staten Island. It's just different and there's something special about that. So, it took me to Purim, which is like Jewish Halloween. And we got to go into ultra-Orthodox people's houses and they gave us drinks and they laughed with us and they connected with us in a way that I found really special because, as you know, even as a Jewish person myself, the ultra-Orthodox are purposefully isolated from us. They purposely don't wanna engage. If they were engaging, they'd already be talking. I found it just endlessly interesting. And for me, cinema is about learning, so I got to understanding a whole new society through making this movie.

Was there a specific push that made you decide that you wanted to do a fiction film about the Hasidim?

There was one really difficult summer, 2014, where I'd done two medical-related showsone where I was in end-of-life care in an ER for Frontline and I watched a lot of people pass away, and then I went to India and South Africa to do a piece about tuberculosis and I saw a lot of people suffering and pass away. It's heavy man. These are real people's lives, and I'm not really experiencing their lives, but I'm witnessing tremendous hardships and difficulties and there's only so much of that one person can bear [laughs]. I remember coming home and just feeling like I wanted to expand creatively. Also, in documentaries you can only film what's in front of you. And it's just inherently limiting. And I just knew that I was ready to tell a bigger story than you could tell with a documentary.

Did you write the script and think, I'll just find some Hasidic actors? Were you interacting with the community?

I wanted to create a film that was a storyline I couldn't make up. You know, the community's different, their rules are different. I love to understand a society by their laws, and so I just knew that I didn't know what was right about this world. Early on, I would walk around for months taking notes just witnessing people singing. That was enlightening, and I just knew I wanted to put that in the movie. Especially working with non-actors, you want to write parts that they can embrace and also be easy for them. So I was looking for an actor who could star in the movie who could also loosely be based on himself. And when I met Menashe [Lustig, the lead actor in Menashe], I just knew right away that this Charlie Chaplinesque sad kind of a man was a brilliant actor. There were other actors who I met who I also liked, but Menashe was my favorite. And he told me just two facts about himself: one, that he was a widower and, two, that his son doesn't live with him. He lives a few blocks away. Then I knew that this was a unique enough story that it could hold a whole film together.

So, Menashe has a lot of biographical elements, but there are some fictionalizations. How did you decide which fictional elements to include?

Well, it's mostly, again, emotionally true, but then everything is fictionalized. You know, there never was a one-week moment [granted to Menashe before his son would be taken], and there never was this dinner where he tried to impress people. It's how Menashe actually feels. The funny thing is, once I heard those details, then I didn't really consult him. I just started writing this script with Mussa Syeed, who's Muslim actually, and Alex Lipschultz, who's one of the producers as well on the film. And a lot of the things we just made up. Menashe would see them and then say, This is just like my life, this is just like my life. But it was almost unintentional, if you're in your 30s and a widower. I mean, I guess there are certain things that happen in life and in the Hasidic world where there are less options. There's more chance that everyone would do the same thing.

From my understanding, you're not fluent in Yiddish. How did you write the script? Did you write it in English and translate it on set?

Originally we thought we were gonna improvise the whole movie have the actors be themselves, but not every actor was capable. Being a great improv actor is very hard and not all actors have that ability, so we ended up writing dialogue for a lot of the actors. And by the end up of it, probably 75% of it was scripted, but we would let the actors obviously change words, because as long as it fit into the essence of what I wanted, it didn't matter what words they used. It was about the essence and about the emotion.

To me, Yiddish is a very expressive language. It's full of wonderful characters. Every single time you read about this film, Menashe gets referred to as a schlimazel [a consistently unlucky or accident-prone person]. Did the linguistic influence seep into the movie in any way?

Well, I actively tried not to use the Yiddish words that we use in contemporary society because

...they're a little too divorced?

It just felt too shticky, you know? But I just wanted to make it way more nuanced than our expectations were. So we did include a bunch of phrases like if a bear could dance. I don't know if you ever heard that before.

I haven't heard it.

It's because the film can be very hammy. And it was always, like, how hammy can it be or should be?

View post:

Interview: Joshua Z. Weinstein on Making the Hasidic Drama Menashe - slantmagazine

Corn Stock honors longtime program artist and set designer Bill … – Peoria Journal Star

Posted By on July 29, 2017

Leslie Renken Journal Star arts reporter @leslierenken

PEORIA Bill Nolden got the theater bug in 1957, and it never went away.

Nolden was nearing 30 when an acquaintance asked him to help fill out the chorus in Corn Stock Theatres 1957 production of Carousel.

I had one small speaking role, but I got the acting bug and decided I would come back the following year, said Nolden. I was in 'Plain and Fancy,' and I had a pretty good speaking role in that one.

Back then, Nolden worked as an artist at Block and Kuhl department store. He soon was asked to create the artwork on a few of Corn Stocks program covers. By 1968, he was doing them all.

Over the course of nearly 50 years Nolden has produced about 300 pieces of artwork for Corn Stock, including program covers, set designs, posters, and original paintings of the tent.

Though he turned 90 earlier this year, Nolden doesnt have plans to quit anytime soon.

Im done with all of the program covers for this year, and I hope to be doing them for next year, too, said Nolden, who works at a drafting table beside a window in the living room of his small apartment. He has lived at B'Nai B'Rith for 28 years.

Noldens program covers are a graphic distillation of the shows plot. Some are splashy and fun, and others are somber.

To do a single cover probably takes me five to seven hours to do the actual drawing. I dont rush, said Nolden. But if Im not familiar with the show, I have to do a lot of research thank goodness for Google.

Shows like Hello, Dolly! are easy ideas come fast and furious, said Nolden. Last years Spitfire Grill and this years Parade provided more challenge. He did a lot of research before deciding on a design.

Parade I really had to think about because its a serious show, said Nolden.

Program covers are not the only way Nolden has used his artistic talents at Corn Stock and other area theaters. For many years, he was involved in the design and building of sets, which is not unlike designing program art, said Nolden. The design of the set is also dictated by the shows theme and tone. Its a skill Nolden enjoyed perfecting over the years.

I did the set design for 'The Ladys Not for Burning' twice, once when set building was new to me, and once after Id learned how to do it," said Nolden. "They were vastly different. The set called for a large arched window. I did it realistically the first time. The second time the window was almost a suggestion more artistic rather than realistic.

Noldens apartment is filled with his artwork and mementos from the shows hes participated in. Photo albums reveal images of Nolden acting, directing and designing sets he was even on the CST board of directors for a while. On the livingroom walls are Noldens fine art paintings, including a gouache of the Peoria County Federal Building. The painting won best of show in the 48th Annual Rennick Art Show in 2012. Another award-winning piece of artwork, a 1973 full-page newspaper ad of mens fashions for Carson Pirie Scott & Co. department store, hangs in the bedroom.

Back then, we did art instead of photography, said Nolden. I did fashion illustration and furniture illustration for advertisements. Nolden worked forBlock and Kuhl, which becameCarson Pirie Scott & Co., for 33 years.

Corn Stock Theatre also haslauded Noldens work. He was the very first recipient of the Gretchen Iben Founders Award in 1978, and this year he is again being honored. A reception for Nolden is being held from 1 to 4 p.m. Aug. 6 in the Corn Stock Theatre Center, just south of the tent in Upper Bradley Park.

The event is open to the public, and Nolden is looking forward to seeing the many friends hes made over the years. His involvement in Corn Stock has been a big part of his life.

I love doing it, and I love the people I work with out there."

Leslie Renken can be reached at 686-3250 or lrenken@pjstar.com. Follow her on Twitter.com/LeslieRenken, and subscribe to her on Facebook.com/leslie.renken.

See original here:
Corn Stock honors longtime program artist and set designer Bill ... - Peoria Journal Star

Sex After 50? The Talmud Is Way Ahead Of Courts. – Forward

Posted By on July 29, 2017

When a 50-year old womans botched operation in 1995 rendered her unable to have sex, a Portuguese court ruled that the injury took place at an age when sex is not as important as in younger years, and duly reduced the damages owed to her by the hospital.

The New York Times reported this week that Maria Ivone Carvalho Pinto de Sousa Morais, now 72, has disputed this, and the European Court of Human Rights ruled that this was, in fact, an unjust ruling.

The question at issue here is not considerations of age or sex as such, but rather the assumption that sexuality is not as important for a 50-year-old woman and mother of two children as for someone of a younger age, the ruling stated. That assumption reflects a traditional idea of female sexuality as being essentially linked to childbearing purposes and thus ignores its physical and psychological relevance for the self-fulfillment of women as people.

But the Talmud actually weighed in on this two thousand years ago.

According to Jewish law, sexual pleasure is actually a wifes right and a husbands lifetime obligation, no matter what the age, regardless of whether a woman is in a childbearing age or not. The Ketubah, the marriage contract that a husband signs, states that the three things a husband is compelled to give his wife are sheer, clothing, kesut, clothing, vonah, literally time, which is understood as a rabbinic euphemism for marital relations.

Female sexuality is a basic human need, the text implies just like food and clothing and doesnt have to be tied to procreation, either.

Actually, the Talmud writes that a womans sexual needs are more important than money. In a discussion in Ketubot 62b, the rabbis debate if a married donkey driver (one who travels locally and spends the nights at home, at a lower pay grade) can choose to become a camel driver (one who travels longer distances and is thus more rarely at home, but is paid more). The Talmud concludes that a woman would prefer her husband remain a donkey driver, over a camel driver even though the latter job earns more money, it is more important for a woman that she has a regular relationship with her husband than the extra dollars (or shekels, in this case).

Another discussion, in Yevamot 62b, says quite clearly that a righteous woman ought to be rewarded by her husband in the bedroom. Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: Whoever knows that his wife fears Heaven and she desires him, and he does not visit her [i.e., have intercourse with her], is called a sinner, as it is stated: And you shall know that your tent is in peace.

Some ancient wisdoms just never go out of style.

Follow this link:

Sex After 50? The Talmud Is Way Ahead Of Courts. - Forward

In our personal house of prayer, think big – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on July 29, 2017

Parshat Devarim

Deuteronomy 1:13:22

Shabbat Chazon

One of the proudest moments of my life occurred at a yeshiva summer camp, where I spent five days a week learning Torah and two days a week touring Europe. At 14, I found myself in the ruins of ancient Rome, just across the main road from the Colosseum, a site drenched in Jewish blood.

For me as a homesick American, any sound of a Yankee accent was music to my ears, and so there we were at the foot of the infamous Arch of Titus, when I hear that American droll of a senior couple taking pictures right next to us.

After sparking conversation with my fellow compatriots I soon discovered that these Virginians were also fellow Yids, and so, like a good Chasid, I went running back to the bus to grab my tefillin. There we were, two proud and free Jewish people, wrapping tefillin with pride, under the arch that was built to celebrate our destruction almost 2,000 years earlier.

And thats what Jewish people have been doing for the last 2,000 years. Wherever we find ourselves, and under whatever circumstances, we build. We build Jewish and sacred relationships, moments, experiences and buildings we build a home for Hashem.

The prophet Ezekiel gave us the message from G-d that although I have scattered them among the countries, yet I will be to them as a small sanctuary in the countries where they shall come. And the Talmud in Tractate Megillah (29a) explains this to mean the houses of study and the houses of prayer.

But why then does the verse say to us that I will be to them (a small sanctuary)? Is it G-d or is the houses of study and prayer?

Perhaps the message here is that each and every one of us, not just the buildings within which we gather, are the presence of G-d in our exiles around the world.

These small sanctuaries that the Jewish people have built have been as small as two Jews wrapping tefillin together in Rome or as large as the Great Synagogue in Jerusalem.

The Talmud there in Tractate Megillah then brings another commentary that this verse is referring to the house of our Rebbe. So not only is it broadly the houses of prayer and study across the diaspora, but specifically the collective house of the leader of the Jewish people in exile.

Ive always understood this to somehow give insight to the Talmuds statement that the Moshiach was born on the ninth of Av, the day the Temple was destroyed. This not only tells us that from the moment of its destruction the potential of its rebuilding and the person who would lead that enterprise was born, but that a part of that soul is inside you and me, hoping to break out and bring the redemption. Every one of our own houses of study and prayer is a reflection of the collective house of our Rebbe, which each one of us can be.

When I would spend a Shabbat at the house of the Rebbe in Brooklyn, N.Y., hearing his passionate cry to change the world, I often felt like the immediacy of the Talmuds words were real and possible. With the passage of time, the truth of those words doesnt always ring as clearly through my consciousness.

But on Tisha BAv, when we focus on the destruction of the big sanctuary in Jerusalem, I have the small sanctuary in Brooklyn, in Rome and in Pittsburgh, the house of our Rebbe that awakens inside my own personal house of prayer and study. I need to think big. I need to think fast. And more than thinking, I need to start doing so

Please G-d, see you soon in Jerusalem with the rebuilding of the Beit Hamikdash.

Wishing you a Shabbat of RebuildingPJC

Rabbi Ely Rosenfeld serves as the director of Chabad Fox Chapel and the Jewish Relief Agency of Pittsburgh. This column is a service of Vaad Harabanim of Greater Pittsburgh.

Here is the original post:

In our personal house of prayer, think big - thejewishchronicle.net

Bridging the political divide – Rutland Herald

Posted By on July 29, 2017

This past week in Manchester Center an event was held, Can We Talk, Bridging the Political Divide, at the Manchester Community Library. The event came out of a conversation between Cindy Waters, Ruth Hoffman and Ed Morrow. I, along with Judy Livingston, our former Republican representative in the Vermont House of Representatives, was asked to co-facilitate.

Judy shared important models of working across the aisle in Montpelier. I began by saying we were not gathered to speak about specific political issues, but to remind ourselves how to have political discussions when we disagree. I hoped to share the knowledge gleaned from teaching conflict resolution classes at Bennington College and Burr & Burton Academy, as well as my work with the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies on Kibbutz Ketura in Israel, where we train and teach young Israeli, Palestinian, Jordanian and international college-age students to become environmental leaders.

Some would argue the Arab-Israeli conflict is the hardest conflict to solve. David Lehrer, director of the Arava Institute says, For over a century due to the conflict between Arabs and Jews in the region, there remains one critical resource that is scarcer than any other. That scarce resource is trust. Since 1996, the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies has brought Jews and Arabs together, Israelis, Palestinians, Jordanians and international students, in order to build a network of trust.

As we have learned, if one trusts someone, you can disagree and move forward. In many ways, we have lost that trust here in the United States when it comes to those we disagree with politically. The evening was an attempt to learn something about each other and work to rebuild that trust.

The Bible opens with God creating the world through speech. It is a profound reminder that we create worlds and realities when we speak. We grow up hearing, Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me. How wrong and false. For the most part a bone can mend, but words said can stay with us a lifetime. We need to remember the power of words and how we use them, particularly in political discourse.

When I studied at a yeshiva in Jerusalem, we could study whatever we wanted Torah, Talmud, philosophy but every day before mincha, the afternoon prayer service, we were all required to study Smirat HaLashon, literally Guarding the Tongue, the laws of speech. That is to say, the most important topic to learn was to be reminded daily of the power of speech and, by extension, listening.

One of the most intriguing aspects of Talmud is pairing rabbis together who disagree with each other. That is to say, a different opinion is not an enemy to be crushed, but a valuable perspective to be listened to. Why? For one, we could be wrong. Two, the other could be wrong. Three, that encounter helps us sharpen and strengthen our position. Four, a synthesis (read compromise) might emerge. Five, a different perspective is another color in the tapestry of discourse. Too many of us live in our siloed news and information chambers the NPR vs. the Fox News crowds. In this day and age living in Marshall McLuhans global village, the world is literally at our fingertips. We would all be wiser to make some favorites on our computer news sources with a perspective we may disagree with.

There is a story from the Talmud (Eruvin 13b) that says the different opinions of two schools of thought, Hillel and Shammai, are both, the words of the living God, but the opinions of Hillel are followed. Why? It is because the students of Hillel were kind and gracious. They taught their own ideas as well as the ideas from the students of Shammai. Not only for this reason, but they went so far as to teach Shammais opinions first. That members of Congress would act in such a way and model for us how we approach someone across our political aisle.

Much of the evening was taken up with participants forming small circles and answering between themselves these questions I posed to them: Who is your political hero/role model? What was your first political activity you ever participated in? What is your favorite political novel/movie/play? Do you vote in elections/if yes, why? If no, why? Share an incident or two that influenced your political viewpoint/ ideology. What is your favorite song with a political message?

The goal of the questions was for people to learn something about the other, to better know them a trust builder. The most important question was the fifth question, the political autobiography question, so people could see political orientations are in part formed by each of our life experiences. We may not all share the same political orientation, but we all share the experience of life.

Rabbi Michael Cohen is the rabbi emeritus of the Israel Congregation in Manchester Center and teaches at Bennington College, Burr & Burton Academy and the Arava Institute.

More:

Bridging the political divide - Rutland Herald

Green Bay synagogue sees transition – The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on July 29, 2017

GREEN BAY Its going to feel different for Rabbi Shaina Bacharach.

We never get to sit together in temple, Bacharach said, referring to her husband, Bob Dick.

At least thats been the case for the past 13 of their 20 years of marriage, during which she has been full-time rabbi at Congregation Cnesses Israel in Green Bay while he has taught in the Religious School and handled music during services.

On Aug. 1, they move from the bimah to seats in the congregation.

Rabbi Moishe Steigmann

Thats because what has befallen many small synagogues around the country finally hit Cnesses Israel with dwindling membership (80, as of 2016-17), it can no longer afford a full-time rabbi.

So Bacharach, 66, has retired and Rabbi Moishe Steigmann, 40, takes over as half-time spiritual leader at the Conservative synagogue that was founded in the late 1800s.

Bacharach and synagogue leadership discussed last fall how she might remain working, but she concluded, I cant do part-time.

The couple will remain in Green Bay, for which Steigmann is thankful. I look forward to any counsel she can give me, and hope she can help me shepherd Cnesses Israel into a new era, he said.

They have a core group that really wants to study and pray, Bacharach said. But they need to find a way to build, to survive.

Bacharach and Dick are enjoying an uncharacteristically relaxed summer. Our summers used to be built around prep time for the holidays, Bacharach said. Now we dont have that.

She will have more time to read, write, study and tend to her garden. Maybe shell write a book about growing up as a Jewish girl in Mississippi. And the couple will travel, mostly to visit family four children and a grandson are spread around the country. Among her proudest moments came when former Hebrew students became Hebrew teachers.

She added, I love the relationships that were built here.

Steigmann, a Milwaukee native, attended Nicolet High School and the University of Wisconsin-Madison and thought of becoming a patent attorney. His mother, Stisha, was Milwaukees Jewish Educator of the Year in 1988.

Rabbi Shaina Bacharach

He worked awhile in Boston before returning to Milwaukee in 2012 to become director of Jewish studies at the Milwaukee Jewish Day School.

After leaving that position, he learned about the Green Bay opening. During the interview process, he said, Two things jumped out at me. One, the genuine warmth, kindness and joy that everyone seemed to have.The other was their deep desire to create vibrant Judaism that works for their community without the mindset of, This is what we have always done and we want to keep doing it that way.

The divorced father of two will remain living in Milwaukee, commuting two weekends a month and holidays to Green Bay.

Hes not concerned about small turnouts for services fewer than 15 on Friday night and sometimes fewer than 10 on Saturday morning. Most critical is that people are engaged in the synagogue and passionate about their experiences, Steigmann said. Hopefully their passion and spirit inspires others to join.

Ironically, Bacharachs joyful experience as rabbi at Cnesses Israel will end with her reading from the bleak Book of Lamentations. Then after Tisha Bav, Steigmann says, We will begin working to create a new sense of energy in Green Bay.

Original post:

Green Bay synagogue sees transition - The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Where Zionism and the ‘alt-right’ meet – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 28, 2017

Participants hold signs at Turning Point USA's 2016 activist winter retreat in West Palm Beach, FL. Turning Point launched a blacklist of professors called Professor Watchlist. (Photo: Turning Point USA/Facebook)

In August of 2014, Palestinian-American scholar Steven Salaita was fired from a tenured position at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign after pro-Israel groups contacted the university administration to complain about Salaitas twitter posts. The posts sharply criticized Israels bombing campaign against Gaza, which resulted in more than 2,000 Palestinian deaths, including more than 500 children.

At the time, we wrote of two consequences of the Salaita firing for higher education: the first described the possible Gazafication of dissent against Israels occupation as documented by numerous students and faculty facing harassment or intimidation for their criticism of Israel. The second asked more pointedly whether the Salaita firing created the conditions for a new blacklist of scholars who dared to criticize the state, racism, and U.S. imperialism.

Three years later, it is clear that the answer to the second question is yes: the Salaita firing was a watershed that has created both a set of tactics, and as importantly a confidence, among reactionary forces in the U.S., that U.S. university faculty, including tenured faculty, can be harassed, trolled, smeared and bulliedeven out of a job for daring to act as public advocates for social justice.

We may call this trend the Salaitification of higher education. It takes the special form of a new, emboldened alt-right who have taken to emulating tactics first deployed by Zionists and defenders of Israel to stalk and attempt to destroy the careers of American academic dissidents. To wit:

As with the Salaita case, these episodes reveal a clear pattern: University administrations falling silent, or actively participating in, persecution of faculty in a concession to the hard right, often openly racist, sexist political attacks.

Zionists and Israel supporters who attacked Salaita called him a racist, bigot and anti-Semite, while themselves falling silent about the deaths of Palestinian children.

We also see universities invoking free speech and academic freedom primarily to restrict them when they involve critiques of racism, sexism and U.S. imperialism. In an insidious, but typically neoliberal move, the language of social justice is used to attack the principles of social justice.

Here, we see the corporate,neoliberal university at its nefarious worst: aligning itself with the de facto politics of reactionary states (in the Salaita case Israel and the U.S., in the latter specifically the Trump administration).

The Salaitification of American higher education means the willing participation by university administrations in suppression of oppressed racial, gendered, and sexed faculty voices in the name of what theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign called in its firing of Salaita civility, and what dissidents knew at the time to be code words for censorship and the tacit defense of reactionary ideas.

It is the task of activists, radicals, students, teachers, faculty, workers and citizens everywhere to resist the Salaita effect. Egregious political horrors like Israels 2014 bombing of Gaza, and Trumps bigoted targeting of Muslims, Latinos, LGBTQ people, immigrants may otherwise be carried out still by alt-right forces in the name of civility.Only when University faculty and students everywhere demonstrate solidarity with their dissident peers everywhere can we have a true challenge to Salaitification and the alt.right, and an end to formal and informal blacklisting and termination of lives and careers. Indeed, Steven Salaita recently announced that he is leaving academe forever, having been unable to find a permanent job since his firing by UIUC.

Students and faculty seeking to show their own solidarity in fighting back against the alt right should join up now with campus groups like Students for Justice in Palestine, join the American Association of University Professors, or take up with the new national campus anti-fascism network.

To vary slightly the words ofMartin Niemller, we cant wait for them to come for us.

View post:
Where Zionism and the 'alt-right' meet - Mondoweiss


Page 1,427«..1020..1,4261,4271,4281,429..1,4401,450..»

matomo tracker