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Rabbi Steinsaltz Back in Tekoa Yeshiva following Stroke – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on July 9, 2017

Photo Credit: Courtesy

Eight months after he suffered a stroke, scholar, teacher, philosopher, social critic, and spiritual mentor Rabbi Adin Even-Yisrael Steinsaltz arrived in Tekoa last Thursday to celebrate the sium (completion of learning) of Maimonidesmonumental halachic work Mishneh Torah. Rabbi Steinsaltz had a big smile on his face, and walked without assistance, Srugim reported.

The event opened with a festive meal accompanied by music played by the yeshiva students. When Rabbi Steinsaltz arrived, he was received with great fanfare and dancing.

The yeshiva dean, Rabbi Michal Falk, congratulated Rabbi Steinsaltz on the fact that he was privileged to see the fruits of his students.

Rabbi David Fialkoff, editor of Steinsaltzs edition of Maimonides work, told the guests that the projects first edition has been printed in tens of thousands of copies, helping to make it accessible to broad audiences, from high school students to Torah scholars.

The team of the projects writers led study groups on various subjects related to their work in the Mishneh Torah, such as the Halachic Status of corporations; and the influence of Arabic on the Mishneh Torah. The event ended with a farbrengen (joyous gathering) of the Yeshiva rabbis, the writers team, students, graduates and guests.

Steinsaltzs popular editions of the Talmud in Hebrew and English have opened up Talmud study to thousands of people outside the walls of the traditional yeshiva, including women and gentiles. When he was criticized about the boundless access his work provides, Rabbi Steinsaltz said: I never thought that spreading ignorance has any advantage, except for those who are in a position of power and want to deprive others of their rights and spread ignorance in order to keep them under foot.

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Rabbi Steinsaltz Back in Tekoa Yeshiva following Stroke - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Prominent Orthodox Rabbis From US Among Those on Israeli Chief Rabbinate’s Blacklist – Haaretz

Posted By on July 9, 2017

The rabbis, whose rulings on 'who is a Jew' the Rabbinate doesn't recognize, include Nefesh b'Nefesh's director Israel's Ashkenazi chief rabbi shocked that list was published without his approval

Israels Chief Rabbinate has published a blacklist of 160 rabbis from around the world, including many Orthodox rabbis, whose rulings on the question of "who is a Jew?" it does not recognize.

Among the prominent names in the new blacklist are Rabbi Avi Weiss, an Open Orthodox rabbi and the founder of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah in New York, and Rabbi Yehoshua Fass, the co-founder and executive director of Nefesh bNefesh, the organization that handles all immigration to Israel from North America.

Hours after it was published, Israel's Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau expressed shock and outrage that such a list had been published without his knowledge or authorization. This was done without the consent or approval of the rabbi, Laus chief assistant wrote on Sunday in a letter addressed to the director-general of the Chief Rabbinates office. How can it be that such a list is published without updating the rabbi that it exists and that it is to be made public?

The list was prepared by the official in the Chief Rabbinates office responsible for determining whether individuals born abroad, registering to marry in the country, qualify as Jewish according to religious law. Firstly, it is inconceivable that an official in the Chief Rabbinates office will decide on his own initiative which rabbis are approved and which arent, the letter said. Secondly, it goes with saying that this has terrible implications and causes grave damage to certain rabbis, and especially to the Chief Rabbinate of Israel."

In order to marry in Israel, individuals born outside the country must provide the Chief Rabbinate, which is controlled by the ultra-Orthodox establishment, with letters from their hometown rabbis certifying that they are Jewish. The blacklist, obtained by ITIM, an organization that assists immigrants challenged by Israels religious bureaucracy, includes all those rabbis whose letters of certification have been rejected over the past year.

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The Chief Rabbinate has sole jurisdiction over marriage between Jews in Israel and will only marry individuals whom it has determined are Jewish according to religious law, or halakha. To qualify as Jewish according to halakha, these individuals must either have been born to a Jewish mother or have been converted by an Orthodox rabbi recognized by the Chief Rabbinate. The Chief Rabbinate does not recognize the conversions of all Orthodox rabbis, but those rabbis whose conversions are not recognized appear on a separate blacklist.

The list also includes the following names:

Rabbi Josef Potasnik, executive vice president of the New York Board of Rabbis;

Rabbi Adam Scheier of Congregation Shaar Hashomayim in Montreal, one of the largest congregations in North America. He is known for his close ties to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau;

Rabbi Joseph Radinsky (since deceased), of Houstons United Orthodox Synagogues;

Rabbi Barry Dollinger of Congregation Beth Sholom in Providence, Rhode Island;

Rabbi Baruch Goodman, director of the Chabad house at Rutgers University;

Rabbi Daniel Kraus, the director of community education at Kehilath Jeshurun in Manhattan. The rabbi of this congregation, Haskel Lookstein, converted Ivanka Trump, the presidents daughter, before she married Jared Kushner;

Rabbi Eli Kogan, director of the Jewish-Russian Learning Center in Staten Island;

Rabbi Joshua Blass of Kehillas Beis Yehudah in Rockland County, New York;

The list also includes the names of 28 rabbis from Argentina, five from the U.K., three from Australia and one from South Africa.

Members of Reform and Conservative congregations in the Diaspora applying to marry in Israel must find an Orthodox rabbi to vouch for them, since the Chief Rabbinate does not accept letters of certification from non-Orthodox rabbis. Still, the blacklist includes many names of Conservative and Reform rabbis.

Rabbi Seth Farber, the founder and executive director of ITIM, said he had already approached several of the rabbis on the list and offered to represent them in a petition to the Chief Rabbinate demanding that it make public its list of criteria for recognizing rabbis from abroad.

And if it doesnt we will go to court, he warned.

The fact that such a blacklist exists, he said, creates a stain on Zionism, on Judaism and on the future of the Jewish people.

A spokesman for the Chief Rabbinate said in response that the names on the list were those of rabbis who letters had been rejected for marriage registration purposes. It doesnt necessarily mean that the Chief Rabbinate will reach a different conclusion when it comes to other documents issued by these rabbis, the spokesman, Kobi Alter, said.

Alter added that the list was provided to ITIM after the organization submitted a Freedom of Information Act and that it does not constitute a working document whatsoever.

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Prominent Orthodox Rabbis From US Among Those on Israeli Chief Rabbinate's Blacklist - Haaretz

The post-Haredism era is underway – Ynetnews

Posted By on July 9, 2017

The revolution is already taking place. Heads are rolling, identities are being replaced, clothes are changing. The post-Haredism era is underway. You cant feel the change because the revolution isnt reflected in the media and in politics, but the ultra-Orthodox society is falling apart. Its going out to work, its shedding the Ashkenazi clothing it adopted from the gentiles and moving to jeans, and it can no longer let everyone sit down and study. There is nothing like it in the Jewish people, there has never been anything like it among Jews or gentiles.

Haredi Jews pray at the Western Wall. The Ultra-Orthodox parties expressed an official protest against the plan, but were okay with it (Photo: AFP)

The plan for an egalitarian prayer space at the Western Wall was finalized a year and a half ago. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was married to a convert through the Conservative movement, was familiar with the US Jewrys distress. Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett, who comes from a family which is partly Conservative, is even more familiar with their distress. Liberal Orthodoxy in Israel is identical to the Conservatives. The branding is different. Bennett is a younger and friendlier version of Netanyahu. They both have enough donors and supporters in the Diaspora.

The Conversion Bill is a different and more absurd story. The Chief Rabbinate (which has a monopoly over conversions, according to the new law), refused to recognize conversions performed by Ivanka Trumps rabbiuntil her father became president of the United States.

Bennett (L) and Netanyahu. Confusion of roles (Photo: Moti Milrod)

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The post-Haredism era is underway - Ynetnews

FBI: Stolen Kosher bakery van used in Miami bank heist – The Jerusalem Post mobile website

Posted By on July 9, 2017

Police tape.. (photo credit:REUTERS)

Zak Stern was just trying to distribute his regular deliveries of bread this past Thursday in Miami.

But a bank robber stole one of the kosher restaurateurs Zak the Baker vans while the bread was still inside and used it in a holdup at a local bank that day.

According to the FBI, the robber entered the bank, fired a weapon (at least twice), and demanded money from employees. There were customers in the bank, there were no injuries. The FBI said it would not disclose the amount of money taken during the robbery, but agents told local media it was substantial.

The robber left the area in a stolen bakery van, the FBI added in the release. The van was recovered in the area of 6300 Manor Drive, South Miami, Florida.

And after the van was recovered, the FBI had to hold on to it for a while, leaving the already-delayed deliveries of Zak the Baker even further behind schedule.

Who steals a giant white bakery delivery truck to go rob a bank? Stern, incredulous, posted on Facebook that day. According to Miami.com, the truck was parked outside a restaurant during a bread delivery on Thursday morning. When the driver emerged from the restaurant, the truck was gone.

Stern called his clients to tell them the bread would be delayed, and then called police. Not only was Stern now down a truck, but he told The Forward that police kept stopping the drivers of his five other identical vans, looking for the criminal, delaying things even further.

As of press time, the FBI had not announced any arrests in the case and the suspect is believed to still be at large. Sterns Zak the Baker bakery and newly added deli are among Miamis most buzzed-about eateries, drawing praise from kosher-keepers and treyf-eaters alike. He opened his bakery in 2014 and the deli this January.

Both locations are known for their long lines snaking around the building, their critical acclaim and their dedication to Ashkenazi delicacies. From danishes to rugelach, babka and of course halla on Fridays at the bakery to kugel, corned beef, lox and herring at the deli Stern offer goods to a decidedly Eastern European palate with a modern twist.

The baker has said that while he is not observant, he keeps the eateries strictly kosher to honor his roots and his wife, Batsheva, an Orthodox native of the Bat Ayin settlement.

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FBI: Stolen Kosher bakery van used in Miami bank heist - The Jerusalem Post mobile website

Last active synagogue in Alexandria to be restored to former glory … – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 8, 2017

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Last active synagogue in Alexandria to be restored to former glory ... - The Jerusalem Post

Egypt Spends $22M To Restore Historic Alexandria Synagogue … – Forward

Posted By on July 8, 2017

(JTA) The Egyptian government reportedly has approved a $22 million plan to restore a 160-year-old synagogue in Alexandria.

The Ministry of Antiquities Project Sector on Wednesdsay approvedthe fundsfor restoring and developing the Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue, according to the head of the Islamic and Coptic Monuments Department, al-Saeed Helmy Ezzat, The Egypt Independent reported from a translation of the Arabic-language daily Al-Masry Al-Youm.

The synagogue was forced to close several months ago after part of its ceiling fell down, The Independent reported.

Ezzat said the government will pay for the restoration even though Egyptian law requires the community to cover such work.

The Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue can seat over 700 people and is considered to be one of the largest synagogues in the Middle East. It is the last active synagogue in Alexandria, which once was home to 50,000 Jews. Estimates today put the number of Jews living inall of Egypt at fewer than 50.

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Egypt Spends $22M To Restore Historic Alexandria Synagogue ... - Forward

These American Jews are looking beyond the Western Wall to the Temple Mount – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 8, 2017

JTA Liberal American Jews are feeling thwarted in their years-long campaign for the right to pray as they wish at the Western Wall. Long frustrated that the plaza in front of the wall is run as an Orthodox synagogue, they were doubly incensed when Israels political establishment scrapped an agreement that would have boosted access to their own space nearby.

Meanwhile, another group of Jewish worshippers has gained public approval and political traction by setting their sights a bit higher on the plaza just above the Western Wall, where the ancient Jewish Temple once stood.

Often led by Orthodox American immigrants to Israel, the movement to gain greater access for Jews to the Temple Mount site of the Dome of the Rock Muslim shrine and the Al-Aqsa Mosque has moved from the margins nearly to the mainstream.

Our movement is growing for sure, said Yehuda Glick, a Brooklyn-born Israeli lawmaker and longtime Temple Mount activist. The number of people ascending to the mount has doubled, and you see theres a lot more activity, a lot more public support.

Yaacov Hayman, a white-bearded Orthodox native of Southern California, has worked for decades alongside other American-Israeli leaders of the Temple Mount movement. He recently took the helm of a new government body called The Temple Mount Heritage Foundation, which is charged with preserving the holy site and educating about its Jewish history.

Hayman cited the American civil rights movement as an inspiration for his activism, which ultimately aims to rebuild the temple and usher in the messianic era. He said the status quo on the Temple Mount, where Jews access has been limited and Jewish prayer banned, reminded him of the 1960 Louisiana school desegregation crisis.

When I first went to the mount, I was shocked. This is a Jewish and democratic state, and I cant pray here? Whats going on? Hayman said. I thought back to being a kid, 6 years old, watching on TV when that little black girl walked into an all-white school. It made me proud of my country.

A group of Jewish worshippers seen at the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City of Jerusalem, on November 07, 2016. (Sebi Berens/Flash90)

Glick, whose beard is fiery red, has avoided calls for any kind of violence and framed his advocacy for Jewish prayer rights on the Temple Mount in terms of liberal values, which he said overlapped with Jewish values. Although Glick acknowledged that he also would eventually like to see the temple restored, he was quick to add that it would be a world center of peace and a house of prayer for all nations.

In a society that believes in human rights and liberal rights, the fact that youre not allowing a person to pray just because he doesnt belong to your religions, thats something thats unacceptable, he said. If you support freedom of speech, how can you support prayer for just one people?

Likud Knesset member Yehuda Glick, September 27, 2016. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

The Temple Mount has long-held religious significance for both Jews and Muslims. Although the Romans destroyed the temple in 70 C.E., Jews have continued to pray facing in the direction of the site, and mourned its destruction on fast days and even weddings with the grooms breaking of a glass. The Western Wall is a retaining wall of the mount, built by the Jewish ruler Herod at a time when Jewish pilgrims would ascend the plateau to offer sacrifices and witness rites led by the kohanim, or Jewish priests.

The Dome of the Rock and the Al-Aqsa mosque were built on what the Muslims call Haram al-Sharif beginning in the seventh century C.E. under the Muslim Ummayad dynasty.

Aerial view of the Temple Mount (Nati Shohat/Flash90)

Since Israel captured the Temple Mount from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War, the site has become a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Some Jews, mostly from the Orthodox national religious community, never accepted Israels decision to keep the mount an exclusively Muslim prayer site after the war. Although Israel insists it has no plans to change the status quo, Palestinian suspicions to the contrary helped fuel the first and second intifadas, or uprisings, and the wave of stabbings and car-ramming attacks that started in October 2015.

In 2014, a Palestinian terrorist shot and seriously wounded Glick for his Temple Mount activism.

For decades, support for Jewish claims to the Temple Mount came mostly from the fringe of Israels national religious community. In the most famous example, the Jewish Underground terrorist group plotted to blow up the Dome of the Rock in 1984 to pave the way for the rebuilding of the temple. Orthodox American Jews like Era Rapaport, a Brooklyn-born civil rights activist turned convicted Jewish Underground terrorist, brought liberal ideas even then to Temple Mount activism.

In recent years, however, the Temple Mount movement has surged. According to Yedidia Stern, who researches religion, state and Orthodoxy at the Israel Democracy Institute, Israels national religious community experienced a series of setbacks in the movement to settle the territories that Israel won in 1967 including the intifadas, the Israeli-Palestinian Oslo peace accords and Israels evacuation of settlements in the Sinai Peninsula in 1982 and the Gaza Strip in 2005. As a result, many shifted their biblically inspired fervor toward the Temple Mount.

The settlers messianic interpretation of reality suffered a real blow to the face with these events. I think most Israeli Jews realized the day will come when well either willingly or by force sign a peace accord with our enemies, and well have to retreat from Judea and Samaria, the heart of the ancient Jewish homeland, he said, referring to the West Bank by the biblical names widely used in Israel.

Many Jews have looked to revive the messianic dream on the Temple Mount. Its a replacement, one thats even more important in their minds. Right-wing rabbis, and even some Haredim Orthodox ones, have also issued rulings that permit Jews to visit and pray on the Temple Mount, despite a tradition that says Jews should not walk on the mount out of fears that they might step on the site of the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctum of the Temple.

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men look out over the southern end of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem on December 17, 2015. (Esther Rubyan/FLASH90)

According to Temple Mount activists, just a few years ago, only a few thousand Jews visited the Temple Mount every year. By contrast, more than 14,000 Jews and their supporters have come since October, by the count of the activist group Yeraeh-Connecting to the Temple Mount. That was already more than Yeraeh recorded in the previous 12 months.

Israeli Jewish organizations that champion the cause have proliferated, too, from just a couple five years ago to more than half a dozen major active groups today. In addition to leading the Temple Mount Heritage Foundation, Hayman started the Yishai Organization for Building Synagogues on the Holy Mountain in 2013 and Friends of the Temple Mount this year. Yeraeh, Students for the Temple Mount, Women for the Temple and Returning to the Temple Mount were all started in the past few years.

At the same time, older groups have flourished. The Temple Institute, co-founded in 1987 by Chaim Richman, an Orthodox rabbi born in Massachusetts, in 2013 moved from a small side street in Jerusalems Old City to an expansive space just outside the Western Wall plaza, where it has hosted thousands of visits by tourists every year with government support. A man-sized gold-plated menorah the group commissioned for use in the temple was installed overlooking the Temple Mount in 2007 in a ceremony attended by the Ashkenazi chief rabbi at the time.

The Israel Museums Second Temple Model. The soreg, a fence partitioning the complex, can be seen to the right of the sanctum, beside the steps. (Ilan Ben Zion/Times of Israel staff)

Temple Mount activists have not just grown in number, but also moved closer to power in Jerusalem. Glick in May 2016 entered the Knesset as a member of the ruling right-wing Likud party. He claimed credit for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus decision on Tuesday lifting the ban on Israeli lawmakers visiting the mount, albeit on a trial basis. Glick had petitioned the High Court of Justice against the ban, which Netanyahu implemented in 2015 amid Palestinian violence.

In November Dorshei Zion, an annual event that brings together Temple Mount activist groups, was held for the first time at the Knesset and attracted hundreds of attendees, more than ever before. Several leading right-wing politicians, including secular ones, attended.

Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein and Glick used the forum to announce a new Temple Mount Knesset lobby. Months later, in March, Culture Minister Miri Regev and Jerusalem Minister Zeev Elkin spearheaded the creation of the Temple Mount Heritage Foundation. Modeled on the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, which oversees that site, the Temple Mount foundation was allocated an annual budget of more than $500,000.

The new body was explicitly inspired by a controversial UNESCO resolution last October that ignored the Jewish connection to the Temple Mount. The Israeli government called the resolution part of a delegitimization campaign based on a distortion of facts regarding the history, tradition and culture of the Jewish people. United Nations bodies have issued similar Arab-backed resolutions before and since, including as recently as Tuesday.

Temple Mount activists said Arab and international questioning of Jewish roots in their biblical homeland has helped their movement gain traction with the Israeli public. The perceived attacks have appealed to nationalist sentiment even among the nonreligious.

Some 10,000 Palestinian Muslims pray at the Dome of the Rock shrine on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem during the second Friday of the holy month of Ramadan in Jerusalems Old City, June 17, 2016. (Suliman Khader/Flash90)

Tom Nisani, a secular student at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the chair of Students for the Temple Mount, and his fiancee, Sara Lu, made headlines on June 29 by covertly marrying on the mount in violation of the ban on Jewish rituals. His group of Jewish students from across the religious spectrum has promoted awareness of Jewish claims to the mount, and ultimately the rebuilding of the temple.

Students for the Temple Mount chairman Tom Nisani places a ring on the finger of his fiance Sarah Lurcat at the Temple Mount on June 29, 2017. (Screen capture: YouTube)

We certainly do not need to receive permits from the world regarding our right to the Temple Mount, he said. Every Israeli and Jew has a place on the Temple Mount, and accordingly, the support we receive is extensive and varied.

In contrast with the Temple Mount, Stern noted, the Western Wall has been securely in Jewish hands since 1967. While most Israelis may have opposed the governments decision to withdraw its support for the Western Wall agreement under pressure from the haredi Orthodox political parties, the issue does not resonate on a religious or nationalist level in Israel, where liberal Judaism has not taken root.

But Stern also doubted the Israeli mainstream would embrace the Temple Mount movements radical long-term aims and the likely costs of pursuing them.

From a symbolic point of view, everyone says the Temple Mount is ours. It should be ours. You can hear that from almost everyone here, he said. But does it really mean we have to do anything about it? Im not sure the majority wants to push forward this agenda.

Hayman acknowledged that force would likely be required to establish Jewish prayer on the Temple Mount, just as the US National Guard had to be sent in to enforce school desegregation.

Israeli police officers guard at an entrance to the Al Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount in Jerusalems Old City, during the Jewish holiday of Passover, on April 24, 2016. (Corinna Kern/Flash90 )

They sent National Guardsmen to line the streets. Thats what it took to end segregation, Hayman said. The same thing needs to happen here. Let the Arabs riot over the Temple Mount, and let them get shot. If you ignore the monster, it just gets bigger.

However, he predicted, when it came time to build the temple, even the Arab world would welcome it.

We have to realize were not alone in this whole thing. God is our senior partner, Hayman said. When God wants the temple to be rebuilt, hell get involved. Well get to a point in time when the entire world will come say to us, build your temple.

On a tour of the Temple Mount, Yehuda Glick shows religious Jews a diagram of the Jewish temple, which once stood where the golden Dome of the Rock stands today on Sepetember 17, 2013 in Jerusalem Israel. (Photo by Christa Case Bryant/The Christian Science Monitor via Getty Images via JTA)

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These American Jews are looking beyond the Western Wall to the Temple Mount - The Times of Israel

Jesus in the Talmud: Peter Schfer: 9780691143187: Amazon.com …

Posted By on July 7, 2017

Peter Schfer, Winner of the 2007 Distinguished Achievement Award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

"Schfer's fine new book should be of interest to a wide audience, and not only to specialists in the field of the historical interaction of Judaism and Christianity in late antiquity (who will be right to devour it). . . . Schfer's book tells a fascinating story. . . . His great scholarship now provides Jews and Christians interested in developing a new and better relationship with a way to work through many of the hateful things that we have said about each other in the past, but without pretending that this bad past was not as bad as it really was or that it can simply be forgotten. . . . The sources that Schfer adduces are virulent and dangerous, but his analysis of them leaves one unexpectedly full of hope."--David Novak, New Republic

"In the talmudic references to Jesus . . . Schfer persuasively finds sophisticated 'counternarratives that parody the New Testament stories,' composed by Jews who evinced a precise knowledge of the New Testament. The true accomplishment of Jesus in the Talmud is to show how certain talmudic passages are actually subtle rereadings of the New Testament, 'a literary answer to a literary text.' With considerable skill, Schfer weaves these together until they can be seen to form an intricate theological discourse that prefigures the disputations between Jews and Christians in the Middle Ages."--Benjamin Balint, First Things

"Meticulously researched and argued as well as clearly and accessibly written, this most intriguing--albeit radical--book is sure to spark interest, debate, and controversy. An essential purchase for academic religion collections and theological libraries."--Library Journal

"In [this] book Schfer has proven himself not only a formidable scholar of ancient and medieval Jewish texts . . . but also a talented author from whose hands the text flows like the water to which the rabbis likened the Torah."--Galit Hasan-Rokem, Jewish Quarterly Review

"Peter Schafer's Jesus in the Talmud reviews well-trodden territory but derives new and important readings from this familiar evidence. Applying contemporary historiographical methods, Schafer offers a convincing explanation of the talmudic texts about Jesus."--Ruth Langer, Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations

"Peter Schafer deserves great merit for having taken up a subject whose reexamination has been overdue for a long time already and that is of major interest to New Testament scholars, Talmudists, and historians of ancient Judaism alike...The great achievement of this book is that it reopens the discussion of texts that are of greatest significance for the study of the relationship of Judaism and Christianity in antiquity and the early Middle Ages. It presents the Jewish intellectual elite in a new light, as active respondents to Christian claims and allegations and forceful combatants in the Christian-Jewish dispute."--Catherine Hezser, Review of Biblical Literature

"Schafer's excellent study shows that, by ridiculing fundamental Christian claims, Babylonian Jewry rejected any notion that the old covenant had been superseded by the new, Judaism had nothing for which to reproach itself: its superiority over Christianity was incontestable."--Anthony Phillips, Church Times

"Peter Schfer...provides a sophisticated treatment of the subject of Jesus and other figures in the New Testament in Talmudic literature. This subject has a long history, but have never been undertaken with the kind of rigor and sensitivity to contextual factors, including the differences between the evidence available in the Babylonian versus Jerusalem versions...Clear and accessible reading for the non-specialist, this is a careful, scholarly treatment that sets the agenda for future studies"--Jewish Book World

"One of the greatest Hebrew scholars, Peter Schfer, published a book on a very controversial and difficult subject--Jesus in the Talmud. Jesus in the Talmud is a work of great value. Although the author declares that the book is not a scholarly treatise, but only a kind of extensive essay, the investigation is thorough and all its theses are excellently and fully argued."--Maciej Tomal, Palamedes

"Peter Schfer's Jesus in the Talmud is already being picked up by anti-Semitic Web sites as proof that Judaism harbors blasphemous beliefs about Jesus. Yet, it is an important book by a meticulous scholar, the head of Princeton's Judaic studies program. It is also a truthful book and should be received in a spirit of truthfulness."--David Klinghoffer, Hadassah Magazine

"Schfer bases his clearly written and exquisitely informed work on a collection of the fragmented texts about Jesus from the heart of the rabbinic period, a cluster of passages he assembles from material scattered throughout the Jerusalem and Babylonian Talmuds and contemporaneous rabbinic literature. The simple gathering of these newly translated texts in one place makes the book an excellent English-language resource for researchers and laypersons alike."--Stephen Hazan Arnoff, Haaretz

"This remarkable monograph is required reading for anyone interested in the reception of the NT in rabbinic literature."--M. J. Geller, Journal for the Study of the Old Testament

"[C]ertainly the best modern study of this topic."--Simon Gathercole, Journal for the Study of the New Testament

"This is a very interesting book, and the author's arguments are both logical and unique."--W. Pretorius, Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae

"Schafer's erudite sailing through the 'sea of Talmud' is evident on every page; and, to the extent his thesis is correct, he relocates Talmudic Jesus tradition from Jesus research in the first century to Jewish-Christian relations in late antiquity."--Michael A. Daise, Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus

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Jesus in the Talmud: Peter Schfer: 9780691143187: Amazon.com ...

How to become a Sodomite in five easy steps! – Jweekly.com

Posted By on July 7, 2017

I cant tell you how many times Ive been approached by people, Jewish and non-Jewish alike, all asking me the same thing: Rabbi, Id like to be a Sodomite, but I just dont know how to start.

Believe me, I understand. Its easy to get confused about Sodomy. The way some people describe it, youd think that Sodomy involved exhausting physical contortions and esoteric sexual disciplines.

Not so! In fact, the biblical story of Sodom actually has almost nothing to do with body parts!

In the book of Genesis, the motivating factor for the residents of Sodom is not lust, but rage. What are the Sodomites so mad about? Well it turns out that a guy named Lot nephew of Abraham, the first Hebrew man has immigrated to the town of Sodom. The Sodomites dont take kindly to immigrants to begin with, but Lot goes even farther: He offers hospitality to other immigrants.

It is this act helping others in need thats the final straw for the Sodomites, the thing that brings the entire town of Sodom to Lots door, a murderous mob of venom and fury.

When you hear that somebody is helping the poor and vulnerable, somewhere in your town, do you too begin to feel the acrid and angry bile of resentment rising in your gut?

If you answered yes, then I have good news: Youre well on your way to being a Sodomite!

But anger is just a starting place. Here are five simple steps to becoming the best Sodomite you can be:

1. Be blessed with a lot of money. The Talmud, the Jewish peoples encyclopedic storehouse of lore and law, explains where Sodoms corruption came from. In a section of the Talmud called Sanhedrin, the rabbinic sages explain that Sodom was so blessed by God that bread literally came out of the earth, the stones of Sodom were made of sapphire and its dust was made of gold. If you really want to be a good Sodomite, it helps to be in the top 1 percent.

2. Develop a paranoiac fear of parting with that money. Despite having tons of money, the Sodomites irrationally obsessed over losing it. The sage Rabbi Nathaniel explained that, in order to prevent immigrants and the poor from taking any of their wealth, they even fenced in all the trees above their fruit so that it could not be taken not even by a bird of heaven. No doubt the people of Sodom would today live in guarded and gated communities, raging against any tax money that might somehow, tragically, end up in the hands of the poor.

3. Despite having plenty, refuse to help the needy in any way. Having lots of money is a good start, but to achieve Sodomite status youll have to go farther. This was the sin of your sister Sodom, explains the Biblical prophet Ezekiel. She and her daughters had pride, excess of food and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy. So sure, of course youll want to refuse to help the poor in your town. But dont stop there! Make sure you refuse to provide the poor with any of the basic elements of subsistence, like proper wages, healthy food, safe housing and health care. Thats the genius of Sodom at work.

4. Prohibit immigration, and torture any immigrants who make it to your town. Sure, youve made the poor of your own city really miserable. But dont let down your guard there are people from other places to brutalize. The Talmud explains that any immigrant who somehow made it to the gates of Sodom was mercilessly tormented. The Sodomites had beds upon which immigrants slept if the visitor was too long for the bed, they shortened him by lopping off his feet; if too short for the bed, they stretched him out on a rack. A really good Sodomite would hound and harass immigrants and refugees, condemning them to torturous detention camps. Do you think you have what it takes?

5. Brutalize everyone else, just for good measure. As fun as it is, abusing immigrants and the poor sometimes just leaves you hungering for more. To remedy this problem, the Talmud explains that Sodom set up a high court populated by corrupt and perverse judges. Their rulings encouraged everyone to be awful to everyone. If a man assaulted another mans wife, the court would say to the husband, Give [your wife] to him, so she may become pregnant! If a person stabbed his neighbor, they would say to the victim, Pay him a fee for bloodletting! For Sodomy to fully take root, youll want to reinforce the message that violence, especially against women and the poor, is expected and praised. To ensure that violence fills the land, consider flooding your land with deadly weapons, like firearms.

Sounds daunting, right? So many boxes to check. And yet I think youll find that, with a little hard work, Sodomy isnt nearly as difficult to achieve as you might have first thought.

In truth, plenty of people, just like you and me, are right now doing their part to create a Sodomite society of cruelty to immigrants, indifference to suffering and a borderline orgiastic celebration of greed.

In fact, you might even say it almost feels like were living in Sodom right now.

See the original post here:

How to become a Sodomite in five easy steps! - Jweekly.com

Fine wine – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on July 7, 2017

Some Jews like to whine and others like to wine, that is, to

responsibly consume appropriate amounts of alcohol in the form of grape-derived goodness. On Shabbat, Jews drink wine to make kiddush and Havdalah.

On Passover, Jews drink at least four cups of wine and even dip their fingers in one of them. At weddings, Jews drink wine under the chuppah for ritualistic reasons (and perhaps if someone is getting cold feet).

So, we know that drinking wine is a part of certain Jewish rituals and customs, but the question is: what are the factors that should be considered to help Jews appropriately and responsibly consume wine?

Wine drinking is particularly prevalent on Purim, a holiday on which Jews actually are supposed to drink until they can no longer tell the difference between the hero and the villain. See, Talmud, Megillah (7b) (A person is obligated to drink on Purim until he does not know the difference between cursed be Hamanand blessed be Mordechai.)

Of course, this is not the only litmus test for sobriety versus inebriation. For the record, you have overloaded on libations if you can no longer tell the difference between: a matzah ball and a soccer ball, a hotdog and a hot dog, Levis Jeans and a Levis genes or Colombia the country, Columbia the university and Columbia the outdoor apparel company. In other words, you are overly tipsy if you think Kathmandu is a place where adult males dress and act like felines or if you think that Bangkok is a place where drummers play percussion using fowl.

It is important to recognize that Judaism and alcohol consumption are not synonymous, and one certainly does not automatically lead to the other. This also is true of other aspects of Jewish life. For instance, if you swing a live chicken over your head before Yom Kippur (as some Jews do), it does not automatically mean that you dislike animals. It does mean, however, that the dizzy chicken will not be terribly fond of you. If you sleep in your sukkah on Sukkot even when directly in the path of a Category 5 hurricane, it does not automatically mean that you are crazy. Then again, such behavior could be used as exhibit A if you ever need to plead the insanity defense.

Lets make another thing perfectly clear:in Judaism, as in secular life, drinking and driving do not mix. Drinking also does not mix well with all sorts of other activities, like drinking and hair cutting, drinking and tightrope walking or drinking and open heart surgery. Of course, there are many other things in life that should not be mixed. You should not mix wiretapping and tap dancing because those you are spying on will hear you coming from a mile away. You should not mix firecrackers with animal crackers, not even if your child is born on the Fourth of July. You should not mix cookies stored on computers with cookies stored in your pantry (and you absolutely should not puree your iPhone or iPad in an attempt to make Apple sauce).

The Talmud, in Pesachim 109a, states that wine should be consumed (responsibly) to help increase holiday happiness: With whatshouldone make them rejoice? With wine.While wine may help some people rejoice, there are other things that do not put people in the mood to rejoice, including colicky infants, visiting day traffic, anti-climactic stories with no real payoff, unflattering parent-teacher conferences,cholent shortages, higher taxes, lice and The Godfather Part III.

Bottom line: LChaim!

Jon Kranz is an attorney living in Englewood, N.J., and a weekly humor columnist for the Jewish Link of New Jersey. Send your comments, questions or insults to jkranz285@gmail.com.

Disclaimer

Letters, commentaries and opinions appearing in the Cleveland Jewish News do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cleveland Jewish Publication Company, its board, officers or staff.

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Fine wine - Cleveland Jewish News


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