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Israel Moment #37 – What is the Talmud? – Video

Posted By on September 9, 2014


Israel Moment #37 - What is the Talmud?
http://www.framingtheworld.com/m2z.html Paul Wittenberger and Steven L Anderson have just finished filming their latest documentary MARCHING TO ZION. We are hoping to have this film out by...

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Israel Moment #37 - What is the Talmud? - Video

What is the value behind the signature?

Posted By on September 9, 2014

Take a look at your signature the next time you buy something with a credit card. Maybe you spell out every letter. Maybe you just put a squiggly line. The other day, I drew a tree.

Signing is a very old ritual, according to Rabbi Pinchas Allouche. He's a scholar of the Talmud, a collection of Jewish texts that's over 1,000 years old.

The Talmud not only mentions signatures; it has rules for them. "A scribble is prohibited," Allouche says. The name has to be legible. "Just yesterday, when signing a Toys R Us receipt, I thought of the Talmud," he says.

In ancient times, a signature was required for all kinds of economic transactions. If you wanted to buy a goat, you had to sign a document. And just like with credit cards today, sometimes you had to sign even for smaller purchases.

According to the Talmud, Allouche says, "the law that applies to one cent is the same law that applies to a thousand gold coins. In other words, we consider every purchase as a big one."

When the personal check came along, it came with a line at the bottom to sign on and banks needed to verify all those signatures. They had rooms of people devoted to looking at signatures and comparing them with the ones on file, says Ronald Mann, a law professor at Columbia University.

Mann visited one of those signature verification rooms. "It was an amazing thing to see," Mann says. "Look at the signature; look at the one on the check. People would do it very quickly, obviously, because they would look at more than a hundred signatures an hour."

Another problem: It could be hard to spot a forgery. Mann says he's seen court cases where experts looked at the impression the pen left on the page to try to tell if a signature is genuine. "But that's obviously not a useful way to run regular commercial transactions," he says.

Today, as far as we can tell, no one regularly looks at what you sign on the bottom of a check. That's true for credit cards, too. Companies electronically store their credit card signatures, but accessing them is not a regular occurrence, according to Carolyn Balfany of MasterCard.

She says signatures are retrieved mainly when a customer calls and says, "I don't remember buying that." The bank can show the person the signatures, and it can help jog the customer's memory.

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What is the value behind the signature?

Review: ‘The Chosen’ teaches valuable lessons at American Stage

Posted By on September 9, 2014

ST. PETERSBURG Sometimes people loathe each other because they're supposed to. But do they really know why?

"I don't understand why I wanted to kill you," one boy tells another after braining him with a baseball. "It's really bothering me."

Maybe it's worth it to try to understand. The Chosen, a life-affirming play opening a new season at American Stage in St. Petersburg, attempts to unearth the humanity behind the unsteady walls humans build around each other.

The play, which Aaron Posner and Chaim Potok adapted from Potok's 1967 novel, is hefty and meditative with a thread of sweetness that moves it along. The sumptuous set by Jerid Fox establishes the paradigm, twin offices on either side of the stage divided by the Brooklyn Bridge.

We're in Brooklyn in the 1940s. Two Jewish boys live five blocks apart, but their realities couldn't be more different. Reuven is Orthodox and dresses in current American styles. Danny is Hasidic and wears traditional garb of a black hat and suit with white threads at the waist.

The boys had never spoken before the baseball blunder, but discover they have things in common. They love studying the Talmud, the book of Jewish law. And Danny surprises Reuven with his interest in Freud and Hemingway, secret joys he keeps from his father.

Enter the complications. Danny's father (Joseph Parra) is an emotionally unavailable religious leader who expects the same life path for his son. Reuven's father (David Sitler) is an emotionally available scholar who wants his son to be a professor.

T. Scott Wooten, an American Stage veteran who has since moved to Washington, D.C., returned to St. Petersburg to direct The Chosen. It's a sort of companion piece to Potok and Posner's My Name is Asher Lev, which Wooten directed last year at American Stage.

The Chosen unfolds over a backdrop of World War II and the horrifying realizations of the Holocaust. It explores Zionism and fundamentalism but never feels overwhelming. And while the play's driving message of overcoming differences is almost too obvious, it stops just short of hitting us over the head.

The adults handle their roles forcefully with compassion. Dan Matisa plays an adult Reuven, tying the plot together with narration and wistfully watching his younger self grow. Parra and Sitler both feel powerful in different ways.

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Review: 'The Chosen' teaches valuable lessons at American Stage

Kahal Shalom Synagogue in Rhodes – Video

Posted By on September 9, 2014


Kahal Shalom Synagogue in Rhodes
This video is about The Kahal Shalom Synagogue in Rhodes.

By: Amuya1

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Kahal Shalom Synagogue in Rhodes - Video

House of One: a mosque, synagogue, and church under one roof

Posted By on September 9, 2014

In 2009, archaeologists working in the heart of Berlin excavated the foundations of what is thought to be one of the city's first churches, St. Peter's Church, built in the early 12th century, in what is now the Petriplatz area.

The church was destroyed during WW II and in its aftermath. The site where the once-grand Romanesque building stood is now little more than a wastelandbut that is set to change.

Due to the religious significance of the site, city planners asked local Protestants if they would like to be involved in the sites redevelopment. But representatives of the Protestant community thought that another church was not necessarily the way to go.

It became clear that we didn't want to build another church, said Anna Poeschel, member of the local Protestant community. We have two big churches in our parish already, the Jewish population has exploded in the last 20 years, and the Muslims in the city need a mosque.

What emerged instead was the the House of Onean idea for a new building hosting a church, a mosque, and a synagogueall under the same roof. If all goes according to plan construction will begin next year and the doors will open in 2018.

Pastor Gregor Hohberg first put forward the idea of multifaith building, and Rabbi Tovia Ben-Chorin and Imam Kadir Sanci have now joined him in the project.

Each religion will have its own practice space, all equally sized but with different designs. There will also be a central room connecting the prayer rooms and providing an area where Christians, Muslims, and Jews can all meet, along with those of other faiths.

We can see all over the world that faith can divide people, said Markus Drge, a Protestant bishop in Berlin. We want to show that faith doesn't divide Jews, Christians, and Muslims, but instead reconciles them.

In 2012, local architect Wilfried Kuehn won a competition to design the building. To raise money for construction a crowdfunding campaign is under way, with a target of $58.6 million. So far donations amount to just over $47,000 from more than 600 donors. But failure to reach the project's goal will not deter planners, who say a basic version of the building could be built for $13.5 million. If planners are unable to raise that, they still plan to fund smaller projects that promote understanding between religions.

The project in Berlin is exciting and beautiful, but in no way the first to go this direction, said Paul Chaffee, editor of The Interfaith Observer. There are lots of sanctuaries serving more than one tradition. You could write a whole book on the experiments to date.

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House of One: a mosque, synagogue, and church under one roof

Inside the historic Manchester synagogue to be demolished in Gary Neville's luxury hotel and shops plan

Posted By on September 9, 2014

One of Manchesters best-known synagogues is to be demolished and rebuilt as part of ex-United star Gary Nevilles latest property development.

Manchester Reform Synagogue is the second oldest of its kind in the country - but its Rabbi says it must move with the times.

The Jacksons Row building has been a place of worship for hundreds of Reform Jews since 1953, when it was built to replace a previous synagogue destroyed in the Second World War.

But as the M.E.N. revealed last month, a 140m redevelopment - bankrolled by the council and Reds defender-turned-property guru Neville - is now set to transform the landscape around it.

As part of that the synagogue is expected to be knocked down and replaced with a new one.

Rabbi Dr Reuven Silverman, who has been a minister of the synagogues congregation for more than three decades, said: I feel sad, because Ive spent half my life here - Ive been here 37 years and our congregation loved the building.

Eddie Garvey

Inside the historic Manchester Reform Synagogue which is facing the bulldozer

But we need to change and we need to move with the times. We need a new 21st Century synagogue and thats exciting.

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Inside the historic Manchester synagogue to be demolished in Gary Neville's luxury hotel and shops plan

Police search for swastika vandals in Miami-Dade County

Posted By on September 9, 2014

OFFICERS STILL TRYING FIND THAT ONE OTHER SUSPECT THEY BELIEVE WAS INVOLVED. Calvin: TONIGHT POLICE ARE INVESTIGATING AFTER NOT ONE BUT TWO PLACES WERE HIT BY VANDALS. THESE SYMBOLS OF HATE WERE FOUND IN WEST MIAMI AND IN SURFSIDE AND NOW POLICE WANT TO KNOW IF THEY'RE CONNECTED ON YOU LOCAL10 NEWS CRIME SPECIALIST JOHN TURCHIN IS LIVE IN WEST MIAMI TO SHOW US. Reporter: AT THIS POINT AT LEAST TALKING TO THE POLICE THERE IS NOTHING TO INDICATE THAT THE TWO CRIMES THAT WERE COMMITTED ARE ANYTHING ALIKE. IN FACT, THEY ARE MILES APART FROM EACH OTHER. IF YOU LOOK AT THE MATERIALS AND THE SCRIBBLES, DON'T LOOK LIKE THINKING HAVE THEY HAVE ANYTHING IN COMMON. TAKE A LOOK AT OVER MY SHOULDER. THAT IS WHAT WAS DONE OUTSIDE OF THIS PARTICULAR ENTRANCE AT THIS TEM PEM AND IT'S BECOME A BIT A CONCERN FOR MANY HOUSES OF WORSHIP IN THE AREA. IT'S UNACCEPTABLE THAT IN THE 21ST CENTURY YOU HAVE HATE CRIME LIKE THIS. Reporter: THE WORDS OF HATE ARE HARD TO READ, BUT THE MESSAGE IS STILL VERY EASY TO MAKE OUT. A SWASTIKAS AND THE WORD "IRAQ" POSSIBLY FINGER PAINTED THE ON WALL AT THE ENTRANCE TEMPLE BETH TOV-AHAVAT SHALOM. THE MESSAGE OF CONCERN TO THE CONGREGATION MADE UP OF PRIMARILY HISPANIC JEWS. THAT'S A HATE CRIME. TO DO THAT IN A SYNAGOGUE OR ANY ANY, YOU KNOW, MANY, YOU KNOW, READJUST PLACE IS A HATE CRIME. SO WE DON'T DO NOTHING TO HARM THE PEOPLE, SO WE ONLY COME HERE TO, YOU KNOW, PRAY. Reporter: ACROSS THE COUNTY IN SURFSIDE VANDALS VIEWING SPEWING MORE HATE, THIS TIME TARGETING WALL AT THE RAE OFF PUBLIX ALONG HARDING AVENUE. UNIVERSITY OF HATE MEDICAL CENTER, ANTISEMITIC SYMBOLS OF RACISM THAT ARE JUST HURTFUL AND THEY HAVE NO PLACE IN THIS COMMUNITY. Reporter: THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME RECENTLY POLICE ARE FORCED TO DEAL WITH THIS SORT OF THING. WHO COULD FORGET THE DAY MIAMI BEACH POLICE DISCOVERED FOUR PLACES DESECRATED, INCLUDING A JEWISH RITUAL BATHHOUSE AND THE BUSES NEXT DOOR AT THE STACY YOUTH CENTER, AND MOST RECENTLY RESIDENTS DISCOVERED SWASTIKAS AND THE WORD "HAMAS" SPRAY-PAINTED IN RED ON TWO COLUMNS AT THE FRONT OF A AN ORTH. OKAY IN NORTH MIAMI BEACH. PEOPLE KNOW WE'RE JEWISH AND WE LIVE HERE, BUT TO BE TARGETED LIKE THAT IN AMERICA IS VERY SCARY. Reporter: THAT CAME AFTER I FAMILY IN MIAMI BEACH HAD TWO OF THEY ARE VEHICLES VANDALIZED 2 THE WORDS "HAMAS" AND "JEW" WRITTEN ON ONE OF THEM. POLICE LABELED THAT WORK A HATE CRIME. GIVEN THE CONTINUED UNREST IN THE MIDDLE EAST, SOME PEOPLE FEEL UNEASY KNOWING THAT SOMETHING LIKE THIS CAN HAPPEN SO CLOSE TO HOME. IT'S A BIG DEAL. YOU'VE GOT TO REMEMBER 6 MILLION JEWS BEING KILLED BY, YOU KNOW, THE NAZIS. Reporter: AND THAT SENTIMENT LIKELY TO BE ECHOED THIS EVEN WHEN SERVICES BEGIN AT 7:30, AND MANY MEMBERS OF THE THIS

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Police search for swastika vandals in Miami-Dade County

First Hasidic Jewish NYPD Officer Joel Witriol Promoted To Sergeant – Video

Posted By on September 9, 2014


First Hasidic Jewish NYPD Officer Joel Witriol Promoted To Sergeant
A police officer who the NYPD says was its first Hasidic Jewish officer when he joined the department in 2006 was promoted to sergeant on Friday. NY1 #39;s Dean Meminger filed the following report....

By: JewsOnTelevision

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First Hasidic Jewish NYPD Officer Joel Witriol Promoted To Sergeant - Video

shmulik ashkenazi photographer – jo jo's yamin moshe jerusalem – Video

Posted By on September 9, 2014


shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo #39;s yamin moshe jerusalem
shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo #39;s yamin moshe jerusalem.

By: Shmulik Ashkenazi Photographer

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shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo's yamin moshe jerusalem - Video

shmulik ashkenazi photographer – jo jo's genesisi land – Video

Posted By on September 9, 2014


shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo #39;s genesisi land
shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo #39;s genesisi land.

By: Shmulik Ashkenazi Photographer

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shmulik ashkenazi photographer - jo jo's genesisi land - Video


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