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Hasidism | Define Hasidism at Dictionary.com

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Chassid, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid (hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid) n , pl Chassidim, Chasidim, Hassidim, Hasidim 1. a sect of Jewish mystics founded in Poland about 1750, characterized by religious zeal and a spirit of prayer, joy, and charity 2. a Jewish sect of the 2nd century bc, formed to combat Hellenistic influences Chasid, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid (hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsdim, -dm, xasdim) n Hassid, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid (hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsdim, -dm, xasdim, hsdim, -dm, xasdim) n Hasid, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid (hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsd, Hebrew xsid, hsdim, -dm, xasdim, hsdim, -dm, xasdim, hsdim, -dm, xasdim) n Chassidic, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid adj Chasidic, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid adj Hassidic, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid adj Hasidic, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid adj 'Chassidism, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid n 'Chasidism, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid n 'Hassidism, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid n 'Hasidism, Chasid, Hassid or Hasid n

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Deborah Feldmans Hasidic Exodus

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Im still so worried about Deborah Feldman, the young woman who fled the Satmar Hasidic community in Brooklyn with her small son in tow, and a flood of childhood memories, both horrifying and wonderful. She chronicled her turbulent early life in her first book, a surprise bestseller, called Unorthodox: The Scandalous Rejection of My Hasidic Roots, and now she continues her compelling story in Exodus: A Memoir (Blue Rider Press, $26.95).

Feldman wrote with bracing candor and rawness about her paternal grandparents, both of whom were Holocaust survivors from Hungary. They raised her after her mother abandoned her, and her father, due to mental incapacities, was unable to care for her. Feldman admits she was always well-fed and provided for, but remembers her childhood as suffused with feelings of emotional isolation and maternal deprivation. Her grandparents had already raised 11 children before taking young Deborah in, and each grandparent had suffered grievous losses under Hitler. Her grandmother lost almost a dozen siblings and her parents in Auschwitz, and survived only by being miraculously chosen for work duty instead of being instantly gassed along with the rest of her family upon arrival. Although she never spoke directly about the past, she continued to light yahrzeit candles for each one of them every single day; a subversive act since Jewish law permits the mourning period to last only one year, but she refused to stop. Young Deborah found her grandmother distant and perplexing, which left her restless and anxious for something more. There were brief moments of closeness when they cooked together, or worked outside in her grandmothers beloved garden, but most of the time she felt utterly alone and enveloped by silence. The rules of Orthodox life seemed to provide a prison of sorts that somehow was able to contain her grandmothers grief, but for Deborah it was always just a prison and one that grew more ruthless with time.

Deborah felt stigmatized at school because of her own mothers abandonment and her fathers inadequacies, which her Aunt Chaya continued to remind her brought shame upon her. It was Aunt Chaya who arranged for her to marry at 17, a man Deborah knew for less than an hour, and one who came from a family more stringent than her own. The marriage was a disaster from the beginning, and the young couple had tremendous difficulty consummating it which brought them further scorn from both families who interfered noisily in the most personal of realms. Deborah, now close to new levels of despair, began to fantasize about escaping which she did shortly after giving birth to her son Isaac. She had secretly enrolled in a creative writing course unbeknownst to her husband and it was there with new friends that she hatched a plan, almost Katie Holmes style, that had her safely situated elsewhere with legal counsel by the time her husband understood her intentions never to return. But what now? Where should she go? How could she support herself? Whom could she trust? Where would Isaac go to school? How would she navigate single motherhood and the temptations of the secular world? How could she reinvent herself as a Jew outside of the restrictions of the Satmar community? Her new book attempts to tell us.

The first months on her own are incredibly confusing. The joys of wearing form-fitting clothing and smoking and eating whatever she pleases and trying to date and make new friends are dampened by insomnia and anxiety that refuses to desist. Her emotionally packed narrative voice keenly captures the racing mindset of a young fragile person who is alone and lonely; uncomfortable with others. She begins making impulsive decisions, some that flirt with recklessness. She has a few one-night stands but finds them unfulfilling. She enters into a few longer long-distance relationships with men that soon fray, and begins obsessing about finding a perfect spot to put down roots as if some magical place might really exist that will wash away her sorrow. Manhattan disappoints her and overwhelms her. So does reconnecting with her mother with whom she feels uncomfortable. She begins to take road trips and finds herself self-conscious as a Jew amidst Gentiles in vast swatches of America that are far from New York City.

She attempts to find comfort with a healer of sorts who places rocks and precious stones upon her as she closes her eyes and listens to his requests to reach inside herself and locate her inner pain and anger. Most of the time, her head simply hurts. She poses naked for a man who wishes to paint her, and takes up with a German guy whose own mothers parents revered Hitler. She feels drained by the ongoing negotiations with her husband about their son and the custody arrangements they need to work out. In frustration, she considers the possibility that she may not have the ability to form real and lasting connections. The system that everyone else uses seems closed off to meI suspect I am not the average loner. For my entire life I have occupied an enclosed mental space that no one has managed to penetratePerhaps Ive chosen loneliness because it is my language.

But eventually and ironically it is thoughts of her grandmother whom she has not seen or spoken to since her departure that dominate her thoughts. She writes candidly If I could piece together the journey my grandmother had taken before she landed in the lap of the Satmar Hasids, somehow I could put into context my own journey out and back into the larger world she had once inhabited. In a sense, I would be able to clarify my own displacement only in the context of hers. If I came home empty-handed, I worried, Id never achieve context for my own life. We are, sometimes, simply reduced to where we come from--if not in the most immediate sense, then in an ancestral one. I was convinced that the angst that flowed in my veins was a result of more than just my childhood, that it was part of a greater composite inheritance that I was only a fragmentary part of. Armed with folders filled with information and photographs about her grandmothers life in Hungary before the war that she took with her when she fled Brooklyn, she leaves to trace her grandmothers footsteps in Europe, both before and after the apocalypse.

She writes with love and tenderness about her grandmother, a love she clearly feels for no one else: There was no elegance in Hasidic life, but there was elegance in her, in her origins, in her story, and in her inimitable cookingI cherished the photos taken of her as a young woman in gorgeous hand-sewn dresses with rows of tiny cloth buttons. I loved the way her slim ankles looked in delicate T-strap shoes. There was something about her loveliness and poise, which stood in sharp contrast to a photograph I found in her drawer, one of her being carried out from Bergen-Belsen on a stretcher from the British Red Cross. To embody beauty after you had endured the ugliest of assaults, that was magic to me. I surmised that there was something very powerful at the core of my grandmothers spirit.

As there is in Deborah Feldmans. Her choking and somewhat chaotic voice which initially is filled with longing and bitter confusion slowly gives way to the first nuggets of adult wisdom; and perhaps even the beginnings of forgiveness and acceptance. She does not present herself as a heroic figure and that is what is so threatening about her story to those she left behind as numerous blog posts reveal. She simply claims her own truth, aware that it is hers alone. She presents her open wounds and scars, and tries to understand the internal hurts other people carry. She misses her grandmoth
er; who for all intensive purposes was her mother; the only one she ever had.

Deborah Feldman reminds me of Lena Dunhams autobiographically based Hannah on the hit HBO series Girls. Both women seem hungry for an intensity of experience and a closeness with others that continually eludes them. Both seem deeply affected by maternal figures that were too distracted and ill-equipped to meet their needs. Both can act rashly and hurt others before realizing it. They are awkward and clumsy and vulnerable to obsessive thoughts that threaten to overwhelm them. Both need to remain vigilant to keep both their real and imaginary demons at bay. Both have tremendous creative abilities of self-expression that have the capacity to save them or smother them. Im still worried about Deborah Feldman.

Elaine Margolin is a frequent book reviewer for the Jewish Journal and other publications.

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Deborah Feldmans Hasidic Exodus

Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory Nearly Doubles Diseases Covered by Ashkenazi Jewish Carrier Screening Panel

Posted By on May 8, 2014

New York, NY (PRWEB) May 07, 2014

The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai today announced the launch of its Expanded Carrier Screening Panel for people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. This test increases the number of diseases covered from 20 to 38, giving Ashkenazi Jewish individuals a 1 in 2 chance of being a carrier for at least one of the diseases. The 18 new diseases were added based on population screening studies performed by scientists at the Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory.

There are several genetic diseases that occur at increased frequencies in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. Because disease inheritance can be autosomal recessive or X-linked, many people are carriers without knowing it. Mount Sinai has been setting the bar for Ashkenazi Jewish carrier screening since 1997, when the Genetic Testing Laboratory initiated the triple-screen for Tay-Sachs disease, cystic fibrosis, and Gaucher disease. Additional disorders have been added steadily over the years as new genes were discovered.

Scientists at the Genetic Testing Laboratory recently conducted targeted mutation screening for disorders that were previously not included in standard Ashkenazi Jewish panels or were newly discovered in these patients. Based on screening of more than 2,000 Ashkenazi Jewish individuals, scientists identified 18 disorders as recurrent, with frequencies ranging from 1 in 36 to 1 in 373. For three of the disorders Alport syndrome, multiple sulphatase deficiency, and dyskeratosis congenita patients were seen by members of the Division of Medical Genetics at Mount Sinai, and the causative mutations were discovered through research studies and additional clinical testing.

We have made consistent incremental progress with carrier screening for the Ashkenazi Jewish population since 1997, but this new screening panel represents the first major expansion of the test, said Lisa Edelmann, PhD, Director of the Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory. This is a giant step forward in helping people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent to comprehensively determine their risk for passing on one of these diseases.

In addition to conducting the carrier screening panel at Mount Sinai, the Genetic Testing Laboratory will partner with additional commercial entities to make the testing more widely available.

Feedback from clients, advocacy groups, and commercial testing organizations about this expanded panel has been very encouraging, said Ruth Kornreich, PhD, Director of Molecular Genetics at the Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory. The positive responses have been due in part to our reputation in delivering comprehensive carrier screening to the Ashkenazi Jewish community.

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Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory Nearly Doubles Diseases Covered by Ashkenazi Jewish Carrier Screening Panel

Abdallah A. Barahmeh – – Ramallah, West Bank Palestine – Video

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Abdallah A.

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Memorial Day, Independence Day, Zionism, and The State of Israel – Video

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Memorial Day, Independence Day, Zionism, and The State of Israel http://www.divineinformation.com/ By: LIORLIOR8

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Hamas TV song “The End of Hatikva” anticipates Jews’ expulsion from Israel – Video

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Hamas TV song "The End of Hatikva" anticipates Jews #39; expulsion from Israel Bulletin: http://palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157 doc_id=11411 Video:http://palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=450 fld_id=450 doc_id=11409 Text in Hebrew and Arabic: "The end of Hatikva" (i.e., "The Hope"... By: palwatch

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Hamas TV song "The End of Hatikva" anticipates Jews' expulsion from Israel - Video

Mrt Israel Throwing 1 – Video

Posted By on May 8, 2014

Mrt Israel Throwing 1 Training Camp in San Diego May 2014 Visit our site http://www.globalthrowing.com. By: GlobalThrowing

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Anti-Semitism | Monitoring, Exposing & Fighting Against …

Posted By on May 8, 2014

From the Johnson County SheriffMost readers undoubtedly know that 73-year-old longtime white racial activist Frazier Glenn Miller, who media outlets are also identifying as Frazier Glenn Cross, has been arrested as a person of interest in the shooting of three different people at two different Jewish centers in the Kansas City metro area on April [] Fair Usage Law May 2, 2014 Postedin:Abraham Foxman, ADL, Anti-Defamation League, Anti-Jewish, Anti-Semitism, Anti-Semitism News, Hate Crimes, Jewish, Jewish American Heritage Month, Jewish Heritage, Jewish History, Jewish Lobby, Jewish Supremacism, Jews, Judaism, Ku Klux Klan, Neo Nazi, Race Relations, Racism News, Racist News, Southern Poverty Law Center, Terrorism, White Nationalism, White Power, White Supremacism, William Luther Pierce, Zionism Comments Closed ENGLISH The relevance of Mary Phagan to white children todayby John de Nugent on April 26, 2013My sheriff race makes the legal case for the murder by Leo Max Frank of Mary Ann Phagan, though now a century old, even more important now than it already has been since 1913.The Leo Frank case is also [] Fair Usage Law April 26, 2014 Postedin:ADL, Anti-Defamation League, Anti-Jewish, Anti-Semitism, Anti-Semitism News, B'nai B'rith, Hate Speech, Jewish, Jewish American Heritage Month, Jewish Heritage, Jewish History, Jews, Judaism, Ku Klux Klan, Leo Frank, Race Relations, Racism News, Racist News, Southern Poverty Law Center, SPLC, White Nationalism, White Supremacism, Zionism Comments Closed If you asked one of your friends, acquaintances, or family members, whether or nottheyve heard of the musical called Parade, chances are most people would likelyshake their heads and say something along the lines of, No, Ive never heard of itbefore. Yet amongst theatre fans around the world, Parade is a cult classic.

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Anti-Semitism | Monitoring, Exposing & Fighting Against ...

Bad Boy Judaism… – Video

Posted By on May 7, 2014

Bad Boy Judaism... Bad Boy Judaism and gentile wasted potential....

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Bad Boy Judaism... - Video

gaza strip israel – Video

Posted By on May 7, 2014

gaza strip israel . By: oscar2020

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gaza strip israel - Video


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