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Judaism’s greatest mystery: Where are the ten lost tribes of Israel? – Ynetnews

Posted By on September 27, 2022

The protagonist in Mendele Mocher Sefarims book "The Travels of Benjamin III," dreamed of making his fortune by locating the lost tribes of Israel. The satirical novel imagines the young Benjamin unsuccessfully searching for the Sambatyon River and the Land of the Red Jews (Rote Juden).

With his sidekick, Sendrel, Benjamin wanders from village to village, eventually setting sail in a fishing boat on a river named Sirakhon, believing it to be the mythical Sambatyon River, mentioned in rabbinical sources.

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A map of the tribes of Israel

In his 1878 book, Mendele Mocher Sefarim not only sought to regale the myths relating to the ten lost tribes, he also wanted to draw attention to the idle and degenerate culture prevailing in the Jewish villages of Eastern Europe. Mendeles Benjamin goes out on a quest to find the ten lost tribes that were torn away from the Jewish people 2700 years ago.

The mystery surrounding the dream of finding, and thus determining, the fate of these lost tribes has charged the imagination of generations of writers, researchers and adventurers. From time to time the desire to find the tribes peeked as stories and fragmentary pieces of information surfaced, compounded by reports that these tribes were living happily, adhering to ancient Hebrew customs.

The story begins with the destruction of the Biblical Kingdom of Israel (independent of the Kingdom of Judah) in 722 BCE. The Second Book of Kings recounts how Shalmenezer, king of Assyria, exiled some of the residents of the Kingdom of Israel.

In the ninth year of Hoshea, the king of Assyria captured Samaria and deported the Israelites to Assyria. He settled them in Halah, in Gozan on the Habor River and in the towns of the Medes (2 Kings 17:6. Repeated in 1 Chronicles 5:26). This exile is further attested in Assyrian records as well as in the prophesies of the Biblical prophet Isaiah writing following the fall of the Kingdom of Israel that Jews would return to the Land of Israel from the north, some from the west, some from the region of Aswan (Isaiah 49:12).

As time passed, tales multiplied as did reports from daring individuals who went looking for the tribes. It seems like anyone engaged in the search was disappointed. They invariably found themselves obsessively delving into a sea of sources, unable to give up their dream. Some tried to redeem the tribes by bringing them back into the fold of the Jewish people. Others sought their own redemption through the tribes.

One redemption involves the story of 11th century Rabbi Meir bar Yitzchak Shatz Nehorai. Rabbi Meir was a cantor in Worms (Vermayza), Germany and is best known for penning the Akdamut liturgical poem which is recited in synagogues to this day. His life story is shrouded in mystery and some sources claim that he conducted a rescue mission beyond the Sambatyon River.

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A stamp with the tribes of Israel

At the time of Rabbi Meir, the splendid Jewish community of Worms found itself in grave danger due to a certain monk who hated Jews who had persuaded the king to kill them all unless they convert to Christianity. Facing tragic consequences, the community obtained an extension to allow them to bring a learned Jew capable of holding a disputation with the monk so as to revoke the ruling. At the time, it was known that there was only one man who could debate the monk: a man who was a member of the ten lost tribes residing beyond the Sambatyon River. No one knew where the river was or how to cross it.

Stories about the mysterious river appear in rabbinical sources dating to the Second Temple period as well as in the writings of Josephus and further sources. The river, the stories say, rages with rapids and throws up stones six days a week, so that it cannot be crossed. On Shabbat the torrents stop, granting the river its name. However, the river cannot be traversed on Shabbat either, due to the halakhic prohibition of crossing a river on Shabbat. Week after week the river rages, beyond it trapping the ten tribes who are unable to reunite with the rest of the Jewish people.

To save his community from destruction, Rabbi Meir took on the challenge of finding the lost tribes. He made his way from the lands of Ashkenaz to Jerusalem to find the wise elders who would direct him to the river. With these instructions, he set out on his way, managed to get as far as the river, but found the river raging. He waited for Shabbat when the river instantly calmed transforming into a calm lake. Although it is forbidden to cross a river on Shabbat, this rescue mission had earned a dispensation on grounds of pikuah nefesh (saving a life).

When Rabbi Meir crossed the river however, he ended up sacrificing himself: He reached his brethren, members of the ten tribes, who immediately agreed to send the required man to save the Ashkenazi community. The Red Jew was allowed to cross the river on Shabbat, but Rabbi Meir, who had completed his mission, was not.

So, Rabbi Meir was compelled to stay with the ten tribes. After giving the man directions, he was filled with divine inspiration and compiled the Akdamut. He gave the poem to the Red Jew who left for Ashkenaz where he reached the king and presented himself before the evil monk, won his disputation, saving the Jews of Ashkenaz. All this occurred close to the Shavuot holiday when the poem is still recited in synagogues.

Even a tomb attributed to the rabbi-poet in the Galil doesnt seem to detract from the charm of this tale of self-sacrifice. One could argue that the Galilean tomb isnt truly that of Rabbi Meir, especially as some claim hes buried in Poland anyway. The impression left by his works and activities seems to warrant more than one burial place.

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The tomb of Rabbi Meir

(Photo: Dudi Melitz)

The story of Rabbi Meir is just one link in a long chain of tales of travelers finding their way to or from the ten tribes. A further prominent story is that of ha-Dani. Although Eldad is supported by historical sources, like Rabbi Meir, he leaves behind a life story shrouded in mystery. His writings were widely circulated and were even ardently read by Mendele Mocher Sfarims Binyamin III before commencing his voyage.

Eldad lived in the 9th century and claimed to hail from the Tribe of Dan. He describes the lives of the four exiled tribes of Asher, Gad, Naftali and Dan beyond the Mountains of Kush. He claims that the four tribes were living happy and prosperous lives, that they had precious stones, silver and gold, camels and cattle. They grew olives, pomegranates, pulses and watermelons. They had six springs that they used to water their crops. They had no impure animals, fleas or flies. They all lived in grand homes and sewed no end of lovely clothes.

They had neither slaves nor concubines as they were all equal. They didnt lock their houses at night as there are no thieves among them. They all lived to that age of 100 or 120 and no son predeceases his father. They had a white flag with Shema Israel written on it in black and had never set eyes on a pagan and the member of no other nation had ever seen them as they were surrounded by the Sambatyon River which cannot be crossed.

The obvious question is if Eldad hailed from the tribes beyond the river, how did he cross it to tell the tale to the Jews of Spain and North Africa? Eldad responds with the following story:

He boarded a small boat on a trade journey with Jews from the tribe of Asher. In the middle of the night, a storm raged rocking the boat until it broke. Eldad and his friends managed to hold on to a wooden plank and floated to dry land. They found themselves in a land of man-eating giants who were as black as crows. At this stage, the luck of his large, healthy, well-built friend ran out as the cannibals started eating him alive. They attached a collar to the thin and weak Eldad and, to fatten him up, they placed large quantities of food in front him but. Knowing his fate if he were to gain weight, he ate almost nothing.

After extended agony, God sent an army of the cannibals' enemies who defeated them in battle. The new troops also took him captive but didnt harm him, but rather dragged him from one country to the next until a certain Jew paid 32 pieces of gold to redeem him.

At the end of the 19th century researcher, Abraham Epstein, edited the works of Eldad ha-Dani and critically investigated the geographic locations mentioned. He concluded that Eldad came from Eastern Africa, near the Gulf of Aden. If this conclusion is correct, his story of cannibalistic tribes is perhaps less fantastic.

The famed traveler, Benjamin of Tudela (Binyamin Metudela) also tells courageous success stories relating to the ten tribes. In the mid-12th century, he set out on a decade-long journey. In his book The Travels of Benjamin he writes that the tribes had states and vineyards, gardens and orchards. They were not oppressed by gentiles. They had one leader named Yosef Halevi. They would go to war through the desert and had an alliance with one nation whose men had no noses, but rather two small holes from which the wind would come out. He also describes as invasion by the King of Persia followed by drawing up a treaty with him.

If Mendele Mocher Sfarims hero in Benjamin III follows in the footsteps of Binyamin Metudela, who would be the first Benjamin, then who is the second Benjamin? This is 19th century adventurer Israel Yosef Binyamin (JJ Benjamin) from Moldova who went on a quest to find the lost tribes. He was an unsuccessful lumber merchant, who left his pregnant wife to travel the Levant. In his book Eight Years In Asia And Africa From 1846 to 1855, he writes about the tribes he visits and describes the conditions of the Kurdish and Moroccan Jews. Upon his return and the publication of his book, he contacted British and French rulers seeking help for Jews of the Levant.

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Bnei Menashe make Aliyah to Israel from India

(Photo: Nadav Abas)

A further dramatic account of meeting members of the lost tribes is provided by 19th century traveler, Dr. Joseph Wolff, a highly educated Jew who had converted to Christianity, became missionary, and was devoted to finding the lost tribes.

In his book, Narrative of a Mission to Bokhara, he writes that on is travels, he was attacked by thieves who stole his possessions and planned to kill him, and took him to a city named Torbad. Upon entering the city, he noticed a large crowd and he cried out Shema Israel. He found himself immediately surrounded by the crowd, excited by his ancient exclamation. They freed him from the thieves and invited him to their homes where they told him that they were descendants of the ten tribes. As a missionary, Wolff tried to persuade them that Jesus is the son of God and was surprised to learn that they had never heard of him. This, along with further customs, convinced him that they were indeed members of the lost tribes.

Binyamin Metudela, like other travelers, refers to a river surrounding the tribes. Throughout the generations, the legends about the tribes include the river and its miraculous qualities. Apparently, these qualities are in place not only when the water and sand are in their natural environment, but also when drawn from the river and transported in a vessel to some other place, where the sand rattles in the vessel stopping only on Shabbat.

An unverified, yet widely cited, quote attributed to Maimonides reads: With regard to the question about the tribes, you should know that this is a true issue and we wait for their arrival, for they are hidden beyond the mountains of darkness and the River Gozan and the River Sambatyon. He continues to tell of sand brought from the river that moves around for six days and rests on the seventh day.

For generations following Maimonides similar stories, both old and new, circulated. One such story is attributed to Menasseh ben Israel, 17th century writer and leader of the Jewish community in Amsterdam. Born in Lisbon to a Converso family, he is quoted as saying: In my hometown, there was a Kushite man who had a glass vessel filled with sand from the Sambatyon River. The sand would jump around in the vessel during the week and as Shabbat came in, the Kushite would go to the street where the Conversos were secretly keeping their religion and would show them that the sand had stopped. The Gentile would use this miracle to bring a sign to the Jews that the Holy Day had started, helping them keep Shabbat.

Into the 20th and 21st centuries, people have continued writing and dreaming about the tribes. The State of Israels second president, Yitzhak Ben Zvi, was keen to research the mystery of the tribes. He went on expeditions and interviewed people. His book, The Exiled and the Redeemed: The Strange Jewish Tribes of the Orient, detailing ancient Hebrew communities including the lost tribes, earned him the 1953 Bialik Prize for Jewish Thought.

Further books collating stories and accounts of the tribes have been published in more recent decades including Avigdor Shahans 2003 bestselling Across the Sambatyon A Journey in the Footsteps of the Ten Lost Tribes and Rabbi Eliyahu Avichails 1987 The Tribes of Israel: The Lost and The Dispersed. Rabbi Avichail went on to found the Amishav foundation to help bring hundreds of members of the Bnei Menasseh community from north India to Israel.

In 2018, the minister for diaspora affairs commissioned a comprehensive report investigating the non-Jewish communities who have a special affinity to the Jewish People. The report mainly dealt with descendants of Conversos (especially in South America) who are interested in connecting with Judaism. The report also addressed Bnei Menasseh and called for more research and building stronger ties with communities with partial attachment to the Jewish people.

The question as to whether the lost tribes would unite with the Jewish People and return to the Land of Israel was addressed by the sages of the Mishna and Talmud. As to be expected, there was disagreement: Rabbi Akiva said they are going and not returning to which Rabbi Eliezer responds: What today overshadows and illuminates, even the ten tribes that are dark for them He will enlighten them (Sanhedrin 10:3).

If we are to accept a widely held hallachic notion that the Ethiopian Jews are the descendants of the Tribe of Dan, and the claims of the communities in north India that they are the Tribe of Menasseh, some of the descendants of these tribes have already returned. Time will tell whether further such communities will be found and verified and if they return to the homeland from which their forefathers were exiled 2700 years ago. Either way, their story is still here and is forever sprouting fresh branches.

The writer is the author of the historical novel The Garden Within and Nobodys Place (both published by Kinneret Zmora-Bitan)

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Judaism's greatest mystery: Where are the ten lost tribes of Israel? - Ynetnews

How Rosh Hashanah compares to the coronation of a monarch | Opinion – Commercial Appeal

Posted By on September 27, 2022

On both days of Rosh Hashanah, we end our prayers with a prayer for the day when all of Gods creations realize that He equally created us all and empowers all that works in this world.

Shamai Grossman| Guest Columnist

Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah: The Jewish High Holy Days, explained

Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah are the Jewish High Holy Days. They're the two most important holidays of the year, and are very differently observed.

USA TODAY, Wochit

The United Kingdom just marked the passing of the longest-reigning monarch in British history, Queen Elizabeth II, and will be coronating its first monarch in over 70 years. Despite Queen Elizabeths remarkable reign, monarchies are a relic of the past. Of the worlds 195 countries today, fewer than 25% have monarchies. Only seven countries have absolute ruling monarchs, another eight have semi-constitutional monarchies, while about twenty-eight countries support constitutional (ceremonial) monarchies.

In the 21st century the idea of a ruling monarchy in a democratic society is anathema. Long ago the Founding Fathers of this country realized that unless leadership was subject to a system of checks and balances, including term limits, the ability to impeach with potential to remove a president from office, and executive veto of a law with legislative veto override, democratic society could not safely function and flourish.

Yet, in contrast to current practice, Jews around the world again on Rosh Hashanah celebrated the coronation of God as king. Judaism reaffirms itself year after year as a people fully subject to a king, unfettered by checks and balances, and unencumbered by term limits or veto of legislation. Each year on Rosh Hashanah Jews spend much of their days in synagogue engaged in prayers focused on inducting God once more as king.

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Rosh Hashanahs central prayers focus on kingship, not on soliciting God for each individuals needs. He is asked to abrogate foreign gods and aberrant worship and repair the world. Instead of praying for a better job or a more elaborate home, our Rosh Hashanah prayers are closer to political campaign speeches, spending much time reiterating Gods accomplishments as King.

These prayers recap the saving of Noah and his animals, Gods promises and covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and His redemption of our ancestors from Egypt. These prayers laud God as both the first and last king, the king without term limits who cannot be subjected to a veto.

In Judaism, we strongly believe that there is still a role for the majesty and grand honor bestowed on our leader. In doing so we recognize that God is the ultimate leader who only has our best interests at heart.

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Were contemporary society to have a leader who only had our best interests at heart, we would not need systems with checks and balances, veto and impeachment.

Can we even envision such a leader, one who only had out best interests at heart, whose only wishes were for our success?

Were that to be the case, wouldnt we want to elect and reelect that leader each year? Wouldnt we only want to look to him for guidance and place in him our hopes for the future? Wouldnt we only want to assist him in his efforts to better our society and the world around us?

On both days of Rosh Hashanah, we end our prayers with a prayer for the day when all of Gods creations realize that He equally created us all and empowers all that works in this world.

May all of our leaders realize that it is God who created them and He who empowers them with the one goal of making this a better world.

Rabbi Dr. Shamai Grossman grew up in Memphis and is now associate professor of medicine and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School, and Vice Chair for Health Care Quality, Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston.

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How Rosh Hashanah compares to the coronation of a monarch | Opinion - Commercial Appeal

D.C.-based org ready to ‘Gather’ young Jews in Bay Area J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on September 27, 2022

Not long ago, Caroline Kessler noticed a simple but telling post on an East Bay Jewish community listserv.

Hey, whats happening for High Holiday services in the East Bay this year? the post read.

If one person was asking this question, Kessler thought to herself, then many other people probably were, too.

Kessler, the newly appointed community director of GatherBay, a nonprofit that aims to connect post-college young adults to their Jewish roots, compiled a Google Doc with all of the East Bay High Holiday services she could find and forwarded it to the 400 people on the listserv, along with others shes connected with personally.

Since then, Kessler has gotten feedback from people thanking her for the guide, asking where shes going to services and even looking for a carpool.

Its less about creating a community and more about facilitating a community thats already here, Kessler said.

Rachel Gildiner, CEO of Gather Inc. based in Washington, D.C., said the nonprofit aims to help those who are slipping through the cracks by putting them in touch with existing Jewish organizations or helping them find alternative ways to express their Judaism.

She said the 8-year-old program GatherDC has seen great success with the idea of relational engagement, or meeting younger people where they are, listening to their needs and connecting them to the Jewish life they are looking for.

Gildiners faith in the power of relationships is how she ended up expanding her organization to the Bay Area after a conference where she clicked with a Jewish Bay Area professional. Soon Gather Inc. was being invited by the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund to lead a training in relational engagement.

It was organic. We had expertise, and they had a vision. And we saw this model work, Gildiner said. So when looking to pick our next pilot city, it felt really natural that the Bay Area and specifically the East Bay had all the pieces we were looking for.

The expansion is funded by the Rodan Family Foundation, a philanthropy focused on enriching Jewish community life in the East Bay, with additional support from the Federation. Contributions from the Jim Joseph Foundation and Schusterman Family Philanthropies through the Jewish Community Response and Impact Fund (JCRIF) will help support Gather Inc. on a national level.

Its less about creating a community and more about facilitating a community thats already here.

Kessler has embraced her new role at GatherBay and says she loves having coffee and tea with young adults to hear their experiences with Jewish life. She believes many of their stories will be unique to the geography and culture of the Bay, and that her initial work will move slowly as she takes the time to get to know people.

Ari Eisenstadt recalls getting coffee with Kessler and discussing his Jewish journey.

Its a conversation I dont get to have very often, the Berkeley resident said. That sort of conversation sort of bubbles up at the scene, and its sweet to explore those kinds of topics with Caroline in a collaborative way.

In the short few weeks that Gather has been in the Bay Area, it has already formed relationships with a number of Jewish organizations with similar missions, including OneTable, Moishe House and the East Bay JCC. But for Kessler, its not about prioritizing one organization over another.

The intention is to be in connection and in relationship with all of these folks, she said, so that we can connect the right Jewish young adults to the right offering for them.

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D.C.-based org ready to 'Gather' young Jews in Bay Area J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Does pagan mean what you think it does? – Aleteia

Posted By on September 27, 2022

The word pagan was first used (one could even say it was coined) by Christians in the 4th century to refer to people living in the Roman Empire who practiced pre-Christian religions other than Judaism. Being mainly an urban and cosmopolitan religion after Constantines promulgation of religious freedom in the Empire in the year 313, Christianity distinguished itself even geographically from religions practiced and preserved in rural areas. The Latin word pgnus (from which the English pagan derives) means rural, rustic, and thus unlearned, or unskilled. Paganism, as Owen David explains, was considered the religion of the peasantry.

During the Roman empire, being pagan meant belonging to a certain class one that was predominantly rural, peripheral, and provincial when compared to the Christian population of the empire, mainly concentrated in important urban centers (as the very early letters of Paul make it clear: Thessalonica, Corinth, Rome itself). But it also implied that one would still commonly practice ritual sacrifice, in the ancient Greco-Roman way. Naturally, people did not call themselves paganswhen describing their own religion. It was a term used most of the time derogatorily, and as part of a process of self-definition by Christians.

The wordpaguswas a Roman administrative term. It designated either the smallest administrative unit in a province, or a rural subdivision of a tribal (maybe even hostile) territory, including villages, farms, and strongholds. The word made its way into the Middle Ages as a geographical unit even in the Carolingian period.

In his Late Antiquity, historian Peter Brown notes how the adoption of the word paganus was mostly a Latin Christian custom. Elsewhere in the Christian world, the words hellene (that is, Greek, in a reference to ancient Greco-Roman practices) or gentile (in Greek, ethnikos) remained in use to refer to non-Christians, perhaps without the derogatory overtones found in pagan.

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Does pagan mean what you think it does? - Aleteia

This vintage video of a Jewish boys choir goes viral and you need to see it – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on September 27, 2022

TheMiami Boys Choirhas gone viral on TikTok. A video version of the song Yerushalayim has racked up millions of views, as the non-Jewish world discovers Orthodox pop with all its energy and oys and innocent dance moves. In other words, TikTok is falling in love withruach.

These Jewish choir boys are the only thing keeping me afloat atm, wroteone besotted user.

Hes not alone.

Thousands of TikTok users are recording their own personal responses to a catchy Hebrew song that is a verse from Tehillim, or the Psalms. Many describe themselves as obsessed with the song and the singers. Dance moves and admiring commentary abound; one young womansTikTok videocommenting on the choir has racked up 378,000 views and counting.

Meanwhile, those who grew up in the Orthodox world listening to this music havetaken to social mediato document how astonished and amused they are at this extremely unexpected trend.

On TikTok, though, no one seems too concerned about what the Hebrew words mean; its all about how into it he is and how addicted users are to the song, which admittedly gets into your brain as the app replays the 40-second clip unless you stop it. People cant seem to stop watching Yoshi Bender, C. Abromowitz, David Herskowitz and Binyomin Abramowitz.

A stan is a super-fan, and on TikTok, the four boys each have their ardent fans. One popular form of video is I rate the Miami boys choir with different boys in slots 1, 2, 3 and 4, with TikTok users explaining their rationale. The comments on these videos are wild, as hundreds of thousands of people debate the singing ability, dance moves, expressions, charisma and stage presence of four yeshiva boys singing about God and Jerusalem.

Theterm stan, which is now often used as a verb, is a reference to theEminemsong Stan, according to Urban Dictionary. Thatsongis about an overly obsessed fan (named Stan) who writes letters toEminemand ends up driving off a bridge with his pregnant wife, because Eminem didnt write him back.

Here is a lovelyvideowith the response we stan to the Miami Boys Choir.

ThisTikTok usercalled Binyomin potentially Michael Jackson in disguise.

So what is the song exactly? Its Psalms 125:2. In the 1985 Jewish Publication Society translation, it reads: Jerusalem, hills enfold it / and the LORD enfolds His people / now and forever. The opening hand motions in the song are the boys miming how hills surround the city of Jerusalem.

You can read the original Hebrew and translations onSefaria.

But if TikTok is more your thing, thisvideofrom NotaRabbi Yet explains the Hebrew.

The pronunciation is not Israeli, but is instead Yiddish-inflected Hebrew, or what you hear in Ashkenazi yeshiva circles in New York. Lehamo is pronounced leeamo, and mehata is pronounced meeata. The high point of the song is oy Yerushalayim oy Yershalayim.

The oy is of course not part of the Hebrew psalm.

As more and more people watch the 40-second clip from 2008, the Miami Boys Choir has been responding to TikTok users through comments on the app, and it has been uploading more clips. Yerachmiel Begun, the adult who has guided the boys in song for decades, and who can be seen in some videos, has been answering the queries of fans in TikTok comments.

Newly obsessed fans, who seem to be in their teens and 20s, are energetically digging through the archives, likethis young womanwho is a Binyomin superfan WE STAN BINYOMIN WHAT A LEGEND and records her cat also enjoying his 2008 singing.

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Yoshi has his fans too, likethis one.

Its pretty amazing to see the cat bopping to Ben David avdecha yavoh vyigaleynu in other words, a Moshiach song. And some academics onTwitterhave expressed concern about what people are actually singing along to, and potential theological or political implications.

But does anyone on TikTok care what it means?

Many videos feature people getting increasingly animated when David or Binyomin sing, at the part of the Yerushalayim song that goes higher.This versionof someone acting out and dancing to the song, even though he admits he has no idea what it means, is pretty charming.

Another userclaims Binyomin is underrated; he also dances as the song goes on.

For those who grew up singing in yeshiva choirs, the structure of the melody is familiar; it starts slow and contemplative, in a lower register, and then it goes high. Both David and Binyomin bring plenty ofruach,and rock out to Yerushalayim.

Naturally.

Other aspects of this blast from the past are familiar, too the benches singers stand on and the ubiquitous smoke machines. But its also clear that in 2008, no one imagined that video evidence could live forever, with an audience of millions instead of just the religious Jewish community.

These preteens live in a world before social media. They could not imagine that at some point in the future, folks who probably are not yeshiva grads would use a40-second clipto try and guess at the boys personalities.

Go down the TikTok rabbit hole, and youll find lots of fans that have no idea what the Hebrew says, and arefar off-basein their guesses.

Youll also find those who seem to know the Hebrew words, and who recognize the Miami Boys Choir from childhood, likethis guywho says he loved MBC before he loved strollers.

So what happened to these boys? Everyone wants to know. In recent hours, TikTok went crazy when one of the 2008 stars, David Herskovitz, made his own videos in response as the adult he is now. Here he is,filmed in bed,watching his preteen self go viral. At this writing, it had over 260,000 views.

He has alsocorrected the pronunciationof his last name, which was misspelled in the video.

As the trend of Miami Boys Choir obsession continues, a new trend of Jewish TikTokers explaining the effect of the video on them has taken root. A young woman says that she was staunchly atheist but is now feeling really connected to Judaism because of this video. She says that her whole life would have changed had she seen this group when she was 9.

Whoa.

I feel so proud to be Jewish right now. Should I go to shul? Its almost Rosh Hashanah, she says. Twitter user Mordechai Burgcomments: I didnt have viral Miami Boys Choir Tik Tok video stirring the Jewish soul and restoring Jewish Pride on my 2022 Bingo card.

Perhaps TikTok is just another way that the Lord is enfolding his people.

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This vintage video of a Jewish boys choir goes viral and you need to see it - St. Louis Jewish Light

Where to Worship for the High Holidays – Scarsdale10583.com

Posted By on September 27, 2022

Wednesday, 21 September 2022 13:12Last Updated: Wednesday, 21 September 2022 13:21Published: Wednesday, 21 September 2022 13:12 Joanne WallensteinHits: 435

The High Holidays are upon us with Erev Rosh Hashanah on September 25 and Kol Nidre on October 4, 2022. Those of you who belong to a synagogue have likely already received your tickets to services and made plans to worship and celebrate with family and friends.

For those who are not members of a local congregation, the High Holidays offer a good time to visit local synagogues, attend services and see if you would like to join.

Many invite the community at large to worship and here are details from local congregations with open door policies for certain services.

Heres where to go:

Bet Am Shalom is a joyful, spiritual congregation; we warmly welcome all generations and religious backgrounds, including interfaith families, empty nesters, singles, LGBTQ+, the scholarly and observant, and those new to Judaism.

They are bound together by a shared belief in a thoughtful and progressive approach to Judaism. With a deep respect for tradition, we seek to evolve as the world around us evolves. The creative spirit of our members fuels our community as together we learn, share lifecycle events, support each other and commit to Tikkun Olam (repairing the world). Join them! Open to all Registration required.

Bet Am Shalom Services in our Open TentVisit http://www.betamshalom.org to register

Rosh HashanahSunday, September 25Monday, September 26Tuesday, September 27Yom KippurTuesday, October 4Wednesday, October 5

295 Soundview Avenue, White Plains, NY 10606 w 914-946-8851 w 914-946-0925 w betamshalom@betamshalom.org

Chabad of Scarsdale's High Holiday Services 2022/5783 will take place at Lake Isle Country Club. For more information or to RSVP, contact Chabad of Scarsdale at 914.365.8785, or info@chabadofscarsdale.com. All are welcome, no membership necessary.

RSVP appreciated, walk-ins welcome. Services are free of charge.

Rosh Hashanah:

Sunday, September 25Evening Services: 7:00 pm(Light Candles at 6:29 pm)

Monday, September 26Morning Services: 9:30 amChildren's Program 10:30 amShofar sounding 11:30 am

Tuesday, September 27Morning Services: 9:30 amChildren's Program 10:30 amShofar Sounding 11:30 am

Yom Kippur:

Tuesday, October 4Kol Nidrei: 6:45 pm Light Candles/Fast Begins 6:14 pm

Wednesday, October 5Morning Services: 9:30 amChildren's Program: 10:30 amYizkor: 11:30 am

Afternoon Service: 5:45 pmFast Ends: 7:11 pm

Congregation Kol Ami at 252 Soundview Avenue in White Plains, offers the following High Holiday services to the public:

Monday, September 26 at 3:30PMRosh Hashanah Family Service (geared to young families with preschool aged kids)

Tuesday, September 27 at 10:00AMRosh Hashanah Day 2 Service

Wednesday, October 5 at 3:30PMYom Kippur Family Service (geared to young families with preschool aged kids)

Wednesday, October 5 at 5:00PMYizkor Memorial & Ne'ilah Service

Sunday, October 9 at 6:15PMSukkot Service

Sunday, October 16 at 6:15PMSimchat Torah Service

Congregation Kol Ami, 252 Soundview Avenue, White Plains, New York 10606, Tel: 914-949-4717, ext. 115, http://www.nykolami.org

Scarsdale Synagogue Temples Tremont & Emanu-El is a reform Jewish congregation located at 2 Ogden Road in Scarsdale. They welcome the community to the following services. To attend, please call Fawn Mendel, Executive Director with any questions or concerns at 914-725-5175 or email her at fawn@sstte.org.

Erev Rosh Hashanah, Sunday, September 25

8:00 p.m. - Rosh Hashanah Evening Service

Rosh Hashanah Day 1, Monday, September 26

9:00 a.m. - Young Family Service. Outdoors weather permitting. In the event of inclement weather, we will hold the program indoors

1:00 p.m. - Shofar Service - Outdoors followed by self-guided Tashlich - Butler Woods

Rosh Hashanah Day 2, Tuesday, September 27

10:30 A.M. - Morning Service

Yom Kippur Wednesday, October 5

3:00 p.m. - Afternoon Healing Service

4:45 p.m. - Yizkor followed by Neila ServiceHavdalah /Break fast will begin 15 minutes after the conclusion of Neila - Outdoors, weather permitting.

Scarsdale Synagogue Temples Tremont & Emanu-El, 2 Ogden Road, Scarsdale, NY 10583, 914.725.5175 x118, http://www.sstte.org

Westchester Reform Temple at 255 Mamaroneck Road in Scarsdale invites the public to the following indoor and outdoor services. Though non-members are welcome to these services, tickets are still required. Click here for more information.

Second day of Rosh Hashanah:Tuesday September 27th 10 am - 12 noon in the CJL tent (Outdoors)

Yom Kippur:Wednesday October 5th 2:00 pm - 2:45 pm and 4:15 pm - 6:30 pm in the WRT Sanctuary (Indoors, Mask Required)

Tot Services:Monday September 26th 4 pm - 4:35 pm CJL tent (Outdoors)Wednesday October 5th 4 pm - 4:45 pm CJL tent (Outdoors)

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Where to Worship for the High Holidays - Scarsdale10583.com

Martha’s Vineyard and the high price of liberal Jewish ‘compassion’ – JNS.org

Posted By on September 27, 2022

(September 21, 2022 / JNS) Its hard to recall any incident or issue that better demonstrates the stark partisan divide in the United States than Florida Gov. Ron De Santiss decision to fly 50 migrants to Marthas Vineyard, Massachusetts. For Republicans, it was a brilliant illustration of the hypocrisy of those who have been declaring their municipalities as sanctuary cities, while advocating for policies that set off a surge of millions of illegals across Americas virtually undefended borderspeople who were encouraged by Democratic Party promises of amnesty and non-enforcement of the law.

For Democrats, De Santiss publicity stunt was a cynical act that turned human beings into political props. Others on the left have gone as far as to claim that it was cruel, inhuman and even an example of human trafficking.

Democrats are right about the cynicism. The illegals from Venezuela who found themselves in the high-end enclave where many of the countrys liberal millionairessuch as former President Barack Obamaspend their summer vacations were being used as props by the Sunshine State governor.

But accepting the idea that it was cruel or inhumane, let alone a case of human trafficking, seems to rest on a willingness to ignore how it is that many, if not most, illegals cross the border. It also appears to involve the belief that it is the responsibility of border communities and states to deal with the flood of migrants, and yet at the same time asking people who live elsewherewho like to pose as believers in welcoming newcomersto foot the bill and cope with the problem is beyond the pale.

As for whether De Santiss stunt was illegal, as some are asserting: As infuriating as it was to his opponents, Im not under the impression that engaging in irony is against the law.

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In recent months, the governors of Texas and Arizona sent hundreds of busloads of people who entered the U.S. without permission to deep-blue enclaves like New York City, Washington, D.C. and Chicago. Liberals in such cities, which are far removed from the countrys border crisis, have been lecturing Republicans for years about the imperative for them to live up to the promise of Emma Lazaruss poem on the base of the Statue of Liberty:Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses.

And theyve accused Republicans who want strict border enforcement of being hard-hearted xenophobes. Yet, when some of those illegals land in their midst, liberals cry foul.

This could all be dismissed as mere political gamesmanship. But the decision of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism (RAC) to weigh in on it raises it to a new level of hypocrisy. For the RAC to use its authority as the voice of the nations largest Jewish denomination to double down on the notion that it was a grave moral failing to move the migrants from Florida to a wealthy resort that was a self-proclaimed sanctuary city wasnt merely absurd; it was yet another example of how the RAC is nothing more than a Democratic Party mouthpiece.

It also calls into question whether anyone at the RAC is willing to take responsibility for the fact that the groups advocacy has led directly to a humanitarian crisis, not just apolitical scandal.

In the past two years, since Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, the onslaught of illegal immigrants has overwhelmed the resources of those who live at the border. Bidens refusal to enforce the law has acted as a flashing green light to people in Central and South America who want to leave their existing homes for the hope of a better life in the U.S. without gaining legal permission to enter.

Identifying with these people is easy for most of the Jewish community, much of which is descended from the massive wave of immigration from Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Todays immigrants are, in many respects, like the millions who arrived on the shores of the U.S. in pursuit of economic opportunity and the promise of American freedom.

But many liberal Jews are also invoking the plight of Jewish refugees from Hitlers Europe in the 1930s and 40s to justify their support for what is, in effect, the Biden administrations open-borders policy.

Unlike the Jews fleeing the Nazis, however, few of todays immigrants are under a death sentence if they fail to find a place to which they can escape. Pretending that every illegal immigrant who seeks to evade the law by living in the shadows is in some way reminiscent of Anne Frank is to mischaracterize contemporary conditions and an utterly inappropriate Holocaust analogy.

Liberal Jewish groups like the RAC and their many allies who have been advocating immigration reform that amounts to amnesty; unfairly attacking the Border Police when it tries to do its job; and supporting Bidens non-enforcement of the laws while calling for even more leniency; are also blind to the consequences of their ideas.

The millions who have poured into the countrywith some being caught and released to await adjudication of bogus asylum claims, and others simply evading capture and beginning life outside the lawhave created a situation at the border that is nothing short of a catastrophe. Communities have been overwhelmed by the challenge of providing for those who come to the U.S. with nothing and need food, shelter and other assistance.

Most of those crossing the southern border are forced to pay smugglers who work under the authority of the drug cartels that operate with virtual impunity in northern Mexico. This has created an enormous windfall for these criminals and provided them with a population upon which they can prey.

That means not only more illegal drugslike fentanyl, which is helping to exacerbate the opioid addiction epidemicbeing smuggled across the border. It also means more actual human trafficking, in which women and children are abused.

The massive scale of this crisis is the direct result of liberal political advocacy. But it was a problem that has been largely invisible in the corporate media. De Santis wasnt wrong when he quipped that the arrival of a few immigrants in Marthas Vineyard generated more press coverage than what is happening at the border.

Jews are enjoined by our faith to treat the strangers among us with respect and kindness, because we were once also strangers. But this compassion has now manifested itself in ways that are undermining respect for the rule of law that is the foundation of American liberty. It has also created a humanitarian problem that Jewish liberals think red-state border communities should accept with no questions asked.

What De Santis and the other Republicans have done is to draw attention to a problem that the advocates for sanctuary were happy to ignore. It may have been a cynical move, but it was also necessary.

The rhetoric about welcoming strangers sounds very high-minded. But those who speak in this way need to acknowledge the callous immorality involved in their fomenting of this catastrophe, their contempt for the rule of law and unwillingness to actually do anything to ameliorate the problem. Liberals who treat their ideas about social justice as the sum total of Judaism are more than tone deaf to the irony of De Santiss ploy or to their own hypocrisy. They are also blind to the injustice that their advocacy has enabled.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him on Twitter at: @jonathans_tobin.

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Martha's Vineyard and the high price of liberal Jewish 'compassion' - JNS.org

War-torn Ukraine prepares for mass arrival of Hasidic Jews to Uman

Posted By on September 27, 2022

Despite the country being ravaged by war, Ukrainian officials said they are preparing for mass arrival of Hasidic Jews to the city of Uman ahead of the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah.

According to head of Cherkasy Oblast Military Administration Ihor Taburets, more than 1,000 Hasidic Jews have already arrived in Uman for the traditional pilgrimage to the gravesite of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov - the founder of the Breslov Hasidic movement.

2 View gallery

Ukrainian special forces train for rescue operations in Uman

(Photo: Security Service of Ukraine)

As a result, the Ukrainian authorities said they are is preparing security measures for the arrival of the pilgrims.

Ukrainian special forces are said to be bolstering security in areas where the Hasidic Jews are to be present, and have trained to respond quickly against potential threats.

The forces have been conducting drills, which included operating with climbing gear, detaining terrorists and releasing hostages. The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), uploaded photos of the forces during training in Cherkasy.

Despite the preparations, the SBU and Ukrainian police maintained that Hasidic Jews should refrain from making their way to Uman this year over the ongoing war with Russia. Ukrainian officials apparently fear that Russia will take advantage of their arrival to stir further provocations.

2 View gallery

Ukrainian special forces train for rescue operations in Uman

(Photo: Security Service of Ukraine)

Taburets said on Monday that Ukrainian authorities will place limitations on visits by Hasidic Jews. The Hasidic Jews were warned ahead of time that staying in Ukraine is dangerous, but they claim to be used to war, since it also occurs in Israel.

According the Tabuerts, Uman is still under threat from Russian artillery fire. Further restrictions will be put in place to maintain curfew, Ukrainian authorities said. Every person will be registered and movement around the city will be limited - both on foot and via vehicles. Road blocks will also be placed on some streets.

In the years before the war and the onset of COVID - some 30,000-40,000 Jewish pilgrims visited the gravesite in Uman annually.

Link:

War-torn Ukraine prepares for mass arrival of Hasidic Jews to Uman

Thousands of Hasidic Jews defy travel warnings by making New Year …

Posted By on September 27, 2022

An armed police officer stays in guard as Hasidic Jewish pilgrims walk after praying at the grave of Rabbi Nachman in Uman, Ukraine.SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images

Hasidic Jews make an annual pilgrimage to Uman, a central Ukrainian city, during Rosh Hashanah.

This year, thousands are traveling to Uman despite warnings not to, The New York Times reported.

They will worship at the grave-side of the revered 19th century rabbi, Nachman of Breslov.

Thousands of Hasidic Jews are defying travel warnings by heading to war-torn Ukraine for an annual pilgrimage, according to The New York Times.

The pilgrims are traveling from Israel, the US, and other countries to Uman, a central Ukrainian city that features the burial site of the founder of the Breslov Hasidic movement, the paper reported.

Since 1811, ultra-orthodox Jews have traveled to Uman around the time of Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year 5783), which starts at sundown on Sunday, to pray at the grave of the revered rabbi, Nachman of Breslov.

In usual years, tens of thousands go. This year, fewer are expected to make the trip, but some 4,000 Israeli pilgrims have already arrived, according to estimates by a spokesperson for Israeli's foreign ministry, per The Times. This number is likely to rise to 5,000 or more, the spokesperson said, according to the paper.

Earlier this month, the Embassy of Ukraine in Israel urged those intending to travel for the pilgrimage not to. "Please avoid pilgrimage," said the warning posted on Facebook on September 11. "Continuous Russian attacks cause real danger to your lives!"

In another warning, Ukraine's embassy in Israel asked prospective pilgrims to "pray that peace will return to Ukraine" instead of going to Uman for the Jewish new year.

The US also warned against traveling to Ukraine for any purpose, explicitly advising US citizens not to travel to Uman for the Jewish new year.

And Ukraine's culture minister Oleksandr Tkachenko told the Jewish Telegraph Agencythat it's "clearly not the best time" to visit. "A better time will come after our victory," he said, per the news agency.

Nevertheless, those who are already in the country told Israeli news media that they could hardly feel the effects of war.

Story continues

A Jewish tourist in Uman, identified only as Koller, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency: "Anyway, do you see any Russian missiles? Everything is fine here. In the evening, we have our curfew, from 11 to 5, and that is it."

Central Ukraine, The Times noted, is not currently as dangerous as cities in the east. However, Israeli and Ukrainian officials have warned that there have been missile strikes in the area in recent weeks, The Times said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Thousands of Hasidic Jews defy travel warnings by making New Year ...

Wanted for slapping Hasidic man in unprovoked attack – New York Daily News

Posted By on September 27, 2022

A Hasidic man was slapped by a stranger while walking in Brooklyn, the third suspected hate crime in Williamsburg in less than two days, police said Tuesday.

The 27-year-old victim, dressed in his religions traditional garb, was confronted by the stranger on Lynch St. near Marcy Ave. about 4:30 p.m. Monday, cops said. Without saying a word, the attacker slapped the victim in the face then kept walking.

The stunned victim did not need medical attention.

The NYPD on Tuesday released surveillance footage of the suspect walking near the scene and asked the publics help identifying him and tracking him down.

Police released footage of a suspect they say slapped a 27-year-old Hasidic man walking in Williamsburg. (NYPD)

On Sunday, two Jewish men were sprayed with a fire extinguisher and one was also punched in separate attacks moments apart.

The first attack happened shortly after 6 a.m. at Lee Ave. and Taylor St. just south of the Williamsburg Bridge ramp. One man can be seen on surveillance video creeping across the street toward his 74-year-old victim with a fire extinguisher in his hand.

The attacker, who was wearing a white T-shirt and black pants, sprayed the man, spreading a cloud of white powder onto the sidewalk and street, the video shows.

The victim was walking to synagogue when he was confronted by a group of men, he told the Daily News Tuesday.

Only one attacked me, said the victim, who asked that his name not be printed. He was sprayed in the face with the extinguisher.

They attacked me with a hand also, gave me a punch in the nose, he said. After that, I washed my face. In the synagogue, I go over there and I wash.

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The attacker and the young men he was with showed up at the synagogue and intimidated somebody there into giving them a cup of coffee before they left to find their next victim, he said.

First time in my life and I hope its the last time also, he said of the attack.

NYPD released surveillance footage of two Orthodox Jewish men being sprayed with a fire extinguisher in Brooklyn on Sunday. (DCPI)

The second attack came around the same time at Roebling and Third Sts. on the north side of the Williamsburg Bridge ramp. This time a 66-year-old Orthodox man was sprayed with the powder extinguisher and then punched in the face.

The attackers did not say anything to their victims but police believe there could be anti-Semitic motives for the attacks because both men were wearing traditional Orthodox garb.

Sundays assailants have not been caught or identified.

As of Sunday, NYPD cops have investigated 177 anti-Semitic hate crimes this year compared to 119 by the same point last year, a 48% jump.

Anyone with information on any of the attacks is asked to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential.

Originally posted here:

Wanted for slapping Hasidic man in unprovoked attack - New York Daily News


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