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Healing bodies and souls: Parashat Metzora (Leviticus 14:1-15:33)

Posted By on April 3, 2014

On the margins is where some of the most profound holy acts are performed. Standing with those who are in the shadows, on the margins of society, those who have been abandoned, those in our communities who frighten us, who push us to see our own vulnerability, human beings we ignore in the hopes they will disappear but they dont.

Some of the greatest spiritual healers in our world dont just speak about healing those on the margins, they actually go to the margins and bring healing. In our tradition, based in part on the teachings of the parasha this week, Metzora, the Talmud recounts the following about not only spiritual healers, but about something/someone bigger: the Messiah.

Sanhedrin 98a recounts the following discussion between Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi and Elijah the prophet:

When will the Messiah come?

Go and ask him yourself.

Where can I find him?

At the gates of Rome.

By what signs will I recognize him?

He is sitting among the poor and the suffering sick.

Our vision of the Messiah is not of one who will ride in on a white horse, one who dwells among the rich and famous or in the halls of power. Our vision of the Messiah and therefore our vision of how we, the Jewish people, should seek to emulate and thereby bring about the Messiah or Messianic Age, depending on your own theology is to be one who sits with the sick, the outcasts, those on the margins, what some call the wretched of the Earth.

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Healing bodies and souls: Parashat Metzora (Leviticus 14:1-15:33)

Cantor Haim Ischakis sings Psalm 83 in the Synagogue of Ioannina, Greece – Video

Posted By on April 3, 2014


Cantor Haim Ischakis sings Psalm 83 in the Synagogue of Ioannina, Greece
Cantor Haim Ischakis sings Psalm 83 in the Kahal Kadosh Yashan Synagogue of Ioannina, Greece. Cantor Haim Ischakis performs El Maleh Rachamim at the Kahal Ka...

By: Haim Ischakis

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Cantor Haim Ischakis sings Psalm 83 in the Synagogue of Ioannina, Greece - Video

Brooklyn's Congregation Beth Elohim Lays Off 12 Amid Fiscal Crisis

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Reports: Major Budget Shortfall as Rabbi Andy Bachman Quits By Josh Nathan-Kazis

Published April 02, 2014.

Newly discovered accounting errors at Brooklyns Congregation Beth Elohim forced the synagogue to lay off 12 employees in mid-March, synagogue officials say.

The prominent Reform synagogues rabbi, Andy Bachman, also announced in March that he would not renew his contract after it expires next year.

The synagogues president said that Bachmans departure was unrelated to the layoffs.

The full extent of Congregation Beth Elohims financial problems were first reported in the New York Daily News on April 1. The Daily News reported that Beth Elohim had uncovered a major gap between revenue and expenses.

Beth Elohim board president Charles Nathan acknowledged that an internal audit had found a budgetary shortfall.

We were running at a true cash deficit that was not sustainable, Nathan said. We thought we were running at a break-even level.

Beth Elohim executive director Shelley Klein did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nathan blamed the accounting mistakes on a flawed system that was miscalculating revenue and expenditures totals. He said that the congregations accounting software was being used incorrectly and that staff had made data entry errors. It was a basic overhaul of our accounting systems thats been ongoing now for six or seven months because we realized the system was out of whack, Nathan said.

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Brooklyn's Congregation Beth Elohim Lays Off 12 Amid Fiscal Crisis

Mosque, synagogue partner for Inn From the Cold community meal

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Newmarket Era

Local Jewish and Muslim residents are breaking bread, then serving it, at Inn From the Cold Good Friday.

Newmarket Islamic Centre and Or Hadash synagogue members will serve food as part of the Inns weekly community meal program, April 18.

This will be the first time the organizations have formally worked together with the Inn.

Or Hadashs Peter Ginsberg and the Islamic Centres Wasim Jarrah met through the local Rotary Club, became friends and decided to work collaboratively to feed residents in need.

Both of us wanted to do something to bring the mosque and synagogue together, said Mr. Ginsberg, who lived in Israel. The different communities in Newmarket should be building relationships with each other. Everybody should know everybody else.

Canadians can set a great example of co-operation and understanding for the rest of the world to follow, given the political climate in the Middle East, Lebanon native Mr. Jarrah said.

When you come to Canada, you put all your problems aside and do whatever is better for the community, he said. We have to contribute positively to the community.

About 60 people are typically served during the meal, which runs 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Several groups volunteer to host meals throughout the year. They usually pay for the food, which typically consists of meat, potatoes, vegetables, salad and dessert.

Anyone in need of good food and companionship can participate all you have to do is show up, Inn meal co-ordinator Marilyn Sorochan said.

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Mosque, synagogue partner for Inn From the Cold community meal

Spain clarifies legislation offering citizenship

Posted By on April 3, 2014

MANILA Excited about the news circulating on the internet that Spain is extending citizenship to those whose last names appear on a certain list?

Well, you can rejoice only if you're a sure descendant of Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain in 1492.

"The Spanish government wants to bring them back as reparation for past mistakes that is why we are tracing them to offer them citizenship," explained Spanish Ambassador to the Philippines Jorge Domecq.

Filipinos, many of whom got excited about the prospect of acquiring Spanish citizenship, quickly caught the spreading news on social media sites.

"Nakaka-excite kasi syempre ang laking opportunity yun," said Kimmi Angela Abella whose surname is included in the list.

The embassy of Spain in Manila has been receiving emails and queries since the news broke out.

Reuters reported last month that the Spanish government approved a law which would allow descendants of Sephardic Jews expelled in 1942 to seek Spanish nationality without giving up their current citizenship.

Majority of the descendants of Sephardic Jews are living in Europe and America and the chances of Filipinos coming from this lineage is slim even though many carry the same last names.

"Ang mga Pilipino noon pare-pareho ang apelido. Nahihirapan silang kumuha ng buwis. Dahil dito, taong 1849 nang ipag-utos ni Gobernador Heneral na si Narciso Claveria ang pagkakaroon ng sistema sa pangalan ng mga Pilipino," explained historian, Dr. Vic Torres of the De la Salle University.

The Catalogo Alfabetico de Apellidos became the list for which Filipinos select the last names that would represent their families.

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Spain clarifies legislation offering citizenship

Evan Kleiman revisits her Passover traditions

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Pollo Arrosto (lemon and rosemary chicken)

In an environment thats all too familiar with short-lived businesses and perpetual change, the sound of a collective, disappointed sigh spread through Los Angeles in January 2012 when restaurateur and chef Evan Kleiman announced she was closing Angeli Caffe after more than 27 years in business. Kleiman remains prominent on the L.A. food scene with her KCRW show, Good Food, and the doyenne of the beloved Melrose Avenue Italian restaurant also gave her fans a taste of what theyd been missing a few weeks ago at the Skirball Cultural Center, where she prepared her classic Passover menu.

In this culmination event tied to Tent: Food LA, Kleiman partnered with Skirball Executive Chef Sean Sheridan to revisit classic dishes her customers came to expect every year at her Angeli Passovers, this time at a special gathering called Angeli Caffe Passover Pop-Up. Here, as at the restaurant, Kleiman served the meal kosher style and family style, never as a formal seder, however.

For my own family, in fact, Passover at Angeli came to represent what the restaurant did best. Kleiman excelled at offering comforting, unfussy, fairly priced food that tasted delicious and was prepared with the utmost care yet offered in an unpretentious ambiance, all under the guidance of her own deep culinary knowledge and generous spirit.

Angeli was never about Kleimans singular culinary ego or advancing a dogmatic agenda shes built around authentic Italian food and cooking. Instead, Kleiman a Silver Lake native and Mid-City resident who clearly remembers learning to make hamantashen at the Hollywood-Los Feliz JCC (now the Silverlake Independent JCC) on Sunset Boulevard when she was 8 years old served as an L.A.-based pioneer in recognizing how a mix of European influences and California ingredients can thrive. Perhaps most significantly, she showed us how food can foster community.

This mission of creating a genuine food community remains a core component of her continuing work as a cook, educator, writer and host of Good Food. It is no wonder she describes herself as a culinary multitasker. (Disclosure: I have appeared as a guest on her radio show.) After attempts in the late 1980s and early 90s to expand the Angeli brand at three splashier locations in West Los Angeles, none of which achieved the longevity of her first venue, she reinvented herself at her original home on Melrose near Poinsettia Avenue, where she continued to cement her role as one of L.A.s godmothers of food.

Jordan Peimer, vice president of programs at the Skirball, summarized feelings shared by nostalgic erstwhile Angeli customers, many of them in attendance at the dinner that night. There are all kinds of reasons I miss Angeli Caffe, Peimer told the crowd. I miss seeing Evan at least every month. And I really miss Passover.

Kleiman starting doing casual holiday dinners more than 25 years ago to provide a place for her family and friends to go (Kleimans mother recently turned 94). During the early years, she took what she confessed to be an overly eclectic approach to menu planning.

I flitted around. I would do all-Indian Passover, and then I would do all-Greek Sephardic Passover, she recalled. I realized what people really wanted was some Ashkenazi stuff, and some Italianized stuff. Eventually, her longtime staff knew how to make Pesce en Carpione, the fusion Tortino di Azzime (aka mazzagna), and Kleimans unique charoset recipe as easily as Angelis signature dishes, such as pizza Margherita and red-beet gnocchi.

The Skirball meal included huevos haminados, hard-boiled eggs slow-cooked in layers of onion skins in a time-honored Sephardic method. This dish holds a particular significance for Kleiman, who said her favorite [moment] was when somebody would come up to me and ask, Is it time to start saving onion skins? And I was like, Yes, we did it!

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Evan Kleiman revisits her Passover traditions

Beit Shemesh mayor condemns attack on woman for modesty

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Beit Shemesh, photo via Israel PikiWiki Project

Beit Shemesh Mayor Moshe Abutbul condemned an attack on a woman by a haredi Orthodox man who accused her of not being dressed modestly enough.

Abutbul issued astatementTuesday condemning the attack of last week.

I strongly condemn this violent incident, something that is forbidden according to the law and according to the Torah, Abutbul, of the Sephardic Orthodox Shas party, said in the statement. I have asked the chief of police in Beit Shemesh to strongly pursue this case. I also addressed the entire city police force and underlined my policy of zero tolerance to violence.

The modern Orthodox woman, who was with her 2-year-old daughter, was attacked at a bus stop in the haredi Orthodox neighborhood of Ramat Beit Shemesh Bet. The attacker shouted at her before the physical attack, shetolda reporter for Israeli televisions Channel 2. The victim said she was wearing a skirt and had her hair covered.

She said no bystanders came to her aid and that her daughter was being treated for post traumatic stress disorder.

Beit Shemesh, a city about 20 miles west of Jerusalem, has seen conflict between haredi and non-haredi and secular residents over restrictions on womens dress and gender-segregated seating on public buses. In a widely publicized incident in 2011, an 8-year-old Orthodox girl was spat on by haredim on the way to school for her perceived immodest dress.

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Beit Shemesh mayor condemns attack on woman for modesty

Is there a link between Parkinsons and Ashkenazi Jews?

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Its no secret that harmful mutations to the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, which increase a womans chances of getting breast cancer, are more common among those of Ashkenazic descent. Now researchers are investigating another gene mutation with links to Jews descending from Eastern Europe, this time related to Parkinsons disease.

A major international study currently is enrolling participants of Ashkenazic heritage and other risk factors, with local testing taking place at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Its focus: the LRRK2 gene, a certain mutation of which is much more common in Ashkenazic Jews and a target of interest in drug development.

Its all part of a landmark effort that the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinsons Research began in 2010, called the Parkinsons Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI). The $60 million international program aims to identify biomarkers in individuals with Parkinsons, which has no cure and is characterized by tremors, impaired balance and rigidity. In the United States, about 60,000 Americans are diagnosed with the disease each year, according to the Parkinsons Disease Foundation.

Efforts to identify therapies and medications have been slow to come, and complicating matters is the fact that there are no biomarkers measurable substances, processes or characteristics of the body (think of the relationship between cholesterol and heart disease) which are critical in testing new therapies and treatments. Biomarkers give researchers a quick and more effective way to evaluate if a new therapy or drug is working.

With several promising Parkinsons drugs currently in the pre-clinical phase, our concern and rationale was that if a therapeutic doesnt work, we should know that because the therapy isnt accomplishing its goals. We dont want the outcomes to be unknown because we cant measure it, said Sohini Chowdhury, senior vice president of research partnerships for the Michael J. Fox Foundation.

The current method to gauge the effectiveness of Parkinsons treatments involves a physician measuring a persons motions over a specified amount of time, which Chowdhury called highly inaccurate.

You need a measure that gives you a sense of accuracy and confidence, she said.

The first wave of PPMI studied individuals with Parkinsons against a control group. That research ended in 2013, when the study expanded to groups with non-genetic risk factors, such as REM sleep disorders, and, more recently, to individuals with genetic risk factors, including LRRK2.

Changes in LRRK2 are believed to be responsible for 15 to 20 percent of Parkinsons disease cases in Ashkenazic Jews, a much greater percentage than in the general population according to the Michael J. Fox Foundation.

Dr. Douglas Galasko of the UCSD School of Medicine said he and his team are enrolling Ashkenazic Jews who have a family member with Parkinsons and who are willing to be tested to some degree. The more intensive testing involves spinal taps, brain imaging and more, and they hope to find 50 to 60 individuals worldwide to undergo that level of testing (two or three in Southern California).

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Is there a link between Parkinsons and Ashkenazi Jews?

Mark Nanos, “Paul’s Relationship to Jews and Judaism in First-Century Context,” Mar. 24, 2014 – Video

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Mark Nanos, "Paul #39;s Relationship to Jews and Judaism in First-Century Context," Mar. 24, 2014 "Paul #39;s Relationship to Jews and Judaism in First-Century Context: Revisiting the Translation of Romans 11." Dr

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Mark Nanos, "Paul's Relationship to Jews and Judaism in First-Century Context," Mar. 24, 2014 - Video

Mystery Ancient Oracles of the Dead an Sirius Mysteries Part 1 – Video

Posted By on April 3, 2014

Mystery Ancient Oracles of the Dead an Sirius Mysteries Part 1 pet shop fun. Theologian Paul Begley wonders about the 70 ancient books in Jordan cave, also radiation in Spokane , Wa. Milk! Has the Muslim Jihadist gone aw..

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Mystery Ancient Oracles of the Dead an Sirius Mysteries Part 1 - Video


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