Page 233«..1020..232233234235..240250..»

Hackers leak information of 30,000 Israeli students and teachers – Ynetnews

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Hackers leaked on Monday the private information of 30,000 Israeli teachers and students and are putting records of an additional three million up for sale.

The group, which goes by the moniker The Generous Thief, posted to its Telegram channel files containing first and last names, ID numbers, birth dates, home addresses, phone numbers, emails, and more.

The data was most likely stolen from the Center for Educational Technology (CET), a nonprofit dedicated to integrating pedagogical innovation and advanced technologies into the Israeli education system. Its online learning platform serves tens of thousands of Israeli students every year.

On Monday, CET said that it found "indications of a cyber incident" during its preparations for the opening of the school year and that it was working with the National Cyber Directorate to amend the situation.

CET noted, however, that its online learning systems were working as usual.

"We are investing the necessary resources and carrying out all the tests and actions in coordination with the relevant parties. The web is rich with disinformation and fake news," company officials said.

The students whose information has been compromised are no longer part of the education system as all of them were born in the 1990s or early 2000s, raising questions about how up-to-date the leaked data is.

Posting in broken Hebrew, the hacker group presented itself as a collective that wishes to exact vengeance on the government for what they deem its mistreatment of teachers.

"Okay enough! Finally in this period you truly harmed the teachers," the group wrote. "What do they think if now we bother them? To start taking our rights back we broke into the biggest educational technological center (CET) in Israel. And it continues."

Cybersecurity firm Check Point told Ynet that it has seen a clear rise recently in malicious attacks against Israeli targets by pro-Iranian or pro-Palestinian hackers using Telegram.

"The fact that these attacks are reported at a high pace, in close intervals to other security events, shows that the central purpose of the attackers is to create a resonance around these attacks," the company said.

"Although the information exists there, it does not necessarily match their claims, there is no doubt that there are things here that should not happen. From embarrassing information to long records of names, birth dates, passwords, and phone numbers - these are tools that in the digital era are worth a lot to hackers."

Originally posted here:

Hackers leak information of 30,000 Israeli students and teachers - Ynetnews

Painstakingly crafted, Torah scroll arrives on Bainbridge Island to celebration – Kitsap Sun

Posted By on September 6, 2022

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND Displaying his congregations new Torah scroll, Rabbi Mendy Goldshmid takes great care to move it with reverence, to ease it open delicately, to keep it safe and secure. He points out the expert level of work that went into copying each of the 304,805 Hebrew characters that make up the text, the months it took a scribe to do the lettering by hand. Even the slightest error would void the entire work.

Spotting the tiniest bit of fuzz that has fallen onto the parchment, he pauses a conversation for a moment to clear it away.

Its a very instrumental part of a Jewish community, he says of the scroll. Welcoming it to the community is a great celebration. Its a great addition, probably the most significant addition, that you could add to a Jewish community.

Hundreds of members of the Jewish community connected to the Chabad Jewish Center of Bainbridge Island and North Kitsap gathered at Wilkes Elementary School on Sunday to celebrate the arrival of the new Torah scroll, a special occasion in the life of the Jewish center established in 2019. Those in attendance watched as a scribe inked the last letters of the scroll and then marched it around in a celebratory parade with music and dancing.

For many, Goldshmid said, this was a once-in-a-lifetime event: People were really excited to meet their own Torah, to show their love to it, to show their connection to it and to welcome it to their life, to their city, to their community, in a way that now its going to be ours forever.

A Torah scrollcontains the text of the Five Books of Moses, which have been painstakingly copied and transferred in the original Hebrew by scribes for centuries. Great care is invested in creating each copy.

Each letter is written slowly, meticulously, to the dot, Goldshmid said.

Bainbridge Islands Alice Langer Acker was happy to take in the celebration with her son, Zach Acker. The moment brought her together with family, she said, recalling those in her own lineage who had been killed in the Holocaust. Her grandfather was one of eight brothers and sisters and was the only one of that group to make it out of Germany, alongside his wife and children, she noted.

This is my family now, she said, reflecting on the congregation and those in attendance at the Torah celebration. I dont necessarily agree with everything, like we all dont agree with our family on everything, but this is my family. I saw my grandfather even though it wasnt my grandfather, I saw my father even though it wasnt my father.

She added: Unlike us that will die, the Torah lives on. If letters become faded with time, theyre lovingly corrected and restored.

Jews from across Kitsap County and Seattle made the trip to the school to join in the celebration over the weekendto welcome the scroll to the community andto its place in the life of the congregation.

During Sundays festivities, Zach Acker, a former Wilkes Elementary student, danced with the Torah scroll: It results in a spiritual elevation and a sense of euphoria that is unlike anything else, he said, recalling the moment. I studied in Jerusalem for a year, and the amount of happiness one can obtain doing these types of events with your community is far greater than really anything the material world can provide.

Nathan Pilling is a reporter coveringBainbridge Island, North Kitsap and Washington State Ferriesfor the Kitsap Sun. He can be reached at 360-792-5242, nathan.pilling@kitsapsun.com or on Twitter at @KSNatePilling.

Consider supporting local journalism in Kitsap County:Sign up fora digital subscription today.

Excerpt from:

Painstakingly crafted, Torah scroll arrives on Bainbridge Island to celebration - Kitsap Sun

Jewish Israelis are heading to Arabic class and learning a bit more about Palestinians – Forward

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Palestinian and Jewish women learn each others' native languages at Spoken Jerusalem-ese, a group that organizes conversation circles and field trips. Photo by Lior Urian

By Eetta Prince-GibsonSeptember 01, 2022

Israeli public schools require students to study Arabic, but the instruction is often either poor or doesnt stick, and most Jews retain none or very little of it.

An increasing number, though, are committing to learning the language as adults, many of them reasoning that relations with their Arab neighbors, and the future of Israeli society, requires more Jews to understand the mother tongue of a fifth of its population.

To that end, Tal Rubenstein, 24, attends a Jerusalem conversation circle that regularly draws about 50 women, half Jews, half Palestinians, where they teach their native languages to each other. At one recent gathering, a Palestinian woman brought along her infant, who contentedly bounced from lap to lap.

Like everyone else, I studied Arabic in school, said Rubinstein, an elementary school teacher. But I still couldnt speak, or talk to my neighbor or even make funny Arabic sounds to a baby, she said.

Such conversation circles, and Arabic language schools, have proliferated in Israel in recent years.

The first-ever Festival of the Arabic Language and Culture attracted hundreds of Jewish Jerusalemites. For two days they could take a sample lesson from Arabic language teachers and browse book stalls selling everything in Arabic from textbooks to copies of The Little Prince.

Its all part of growing movement to correct what many Israeli Jews sometimes for different reasons describe as a problematic gap in their education. Dozens of initiatives to teach Arabic to Jews have sprung up, from private language schools to workplace classes to immersive courses in Israeli villages.

The trend is particularly noticeable in Jerusalem, where, according to linguist Anwar Ben Badis, one of Israels best known teachers of the language, there are at least 20 such initiatives, enrolling thousands of students.

Gilad Sevitt, 30, a Jerusalem Jew who founded an online Arabic learning forum in 2014 called Madrasa, or school in Arabic, now serves 110,000 students with free videos that allow them to learn the language at their own pace.

I thought it was absurd that Jews dont know Arabic and lots of people agreed with me, he said. Hebrew -speakers are the majority in this country, but we are certainly a minority in the region. Its just logical that we learn to speak Arabic, too.

The first language of Israels Arab citizens is Arabic, but an overwhelming number 92% have some command of Hebrew.

Arabs learn Hebrew for practical reasons, because, as a minority, they need to know the language of the majority in order to get along, but Jews do not need to know Arabic, said Ben Badis, who was born in an Arab village, and counts government officials, media personalities, and academics among his students.

In Jewish schools, the study of Arabic is compulsory in grades seven through 10. But according to a 2018 report by Sikkuy, an NGO that promotes equality between Israeli Jews and Arabs, there is little enforcement and the quality of instruction is deficient. Ten percent of Israeli Jews understand some Arabic and a scant 2.6% are able to read and understand Arabic-language media.

Those who learn Arabic in high school often do so in order to be accepted into elite intelligence units during compulsory military service after they graduate. In his 2014 book The Creation of Israeli Arabic: Security and Politics in Arabic Studies in Israel, Yonatan Mendel, a senior lecturer in the Department of Middle East Studies at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, writes that this militarized pedagogy alienates Jewish-Israeli students from Arabs rather than serving as a potential bridge between them.

Im trying to help free the Israeli student to stop thinking of Arabic as the enemys language and to start thinking of it as a way to connect with their fellow-citizens, said Ben Badis.

Compounding the language gap is that most Israeli schools, if they do teach Arabic at all, teach classical Arabic, which has different grammatical rules and vocabularies than spoken Arabic. And Arabic differs from region to region. The new language initiatives all emphasize that they teach spoken Arabic in whats known as the Palestinian urban dialect that spoken in Jerusalem.

While the number of Jewish students interested in learning Arabic had been growing for at least a decade, the trend really took off, Ben Badis said, in 2018, after the Knesset passed the controversial Nation Law, which, among its other provisions, downgraded the status of Arabic from an official language of Israel to a language with a special status.

He sees the drive to learn Arabic as somewhat of a backlash.

The Nation Law is an offense against the Arab citizens of Israel and their language, Ben Badis said. There is a large population in Israel, and especially Jerusalem, who want to live together as equals and who know that studying a peoples language and culture is an important way to reach that goal.

Learning Arabic for many native Hebrew speakers is best done socially, with Palestinians who also want to brush up on their Hebrew.

At the Silo Cafe, a laid-back coffee shop in South Jerusalem, each week between 20 and 30 Jews and Palestinians meet for the Language Coffee Shop. Yonatan Lavi, a Jew from West Jerusalem, and Razan Hiyatt, a Palestinian from East Jerusalem, run the group, which is supported by the local community center.

The students also come from East and West Jerusalem, and they range in age from 20-somethings to retirees in their 70s. A core group comes every week, while others attend sporadically. Yonatan and Razan maintain a sign-up sheet to ensure that each week there are equal numbers of Palestinians and Jews.

After introductions which the Palestinians must do in Hebrew and the Jews in Arabic the leaders split the group up into Arab-Jewish pairs. For 25 minutes they speak to each other in Hebrew, and then switch to Arabic. Some speak fluently, others haltingly, the learning punctuated by frequent outbursts of laughter linguistic stumbles, everyone in the room seems to understand, can often be funny.

Shahad Kiswame, a Hebrew University student wearing a hijab topped with a baseball cap, has teamed up with Tamar Alon, a retired teacher in her 60s who took up Arabic several years ago.

Jerusalem is supposed to be a united city, but we cant even speak each others language. How are we ever going to live in peace? said Alon.

Its hard to listen to Palestinians talk about the occupation and inequality in Jerusalem, but still, theres something hopeful here, she added.

Spoken Jerusalem-ese the all-womens Jewish-Arab language group capitalizes on what founder Lior Urian calls the natural bond between women. The single-gender nature of the gathering seems to make participants more comfortable, and allows them to speak more freely, she said.

Rubenstein, the teacher who wants to build on the little Arabic she learned as a teenager, is there. But so is Hodya Cohen, who wears a dress and head-covering in the style popularly known as settler chic.

The graphic design artist, 35, said she does indeed live in a settlement in the West Bank, and that she grew up going to a religious school in Jerusalem. Unlike Rubenstein, she said, because religious schools are exempt from teaching Arabic, she didnt learn it even a little.

What motivates her now?

Learning more about my neighbors and their language is crucial, because we are going to have to live together, she said.

Urian, who is Jewish, said the group emphasizes language as culture.

She compares Arabs many blessings and greetings, and their often formal manners, to Israelis more abrupt and direct style, with its informal chutzpah.

We dont know their codes, we dont know how to address a person in a respectful way, we dont know how to interact, she said. Its important that we learn, because we want to live together in this city.

Today, Spoken Jerusalem-ese has more than 2,000 women, with 16 volunteers and two paid staff members. They meet in four Jerusalem locations and make field trips to different parts of the city. Urian said it surprised her to see that the Arab women were just as hesitant to visit West Jerusalem as Jewish women were to visit Palestinian neighborhoods.

I know there is an occupation, but somehow I never think of Jews as threatening. Well, they do see us as threatening, and that is important to know, she said.

Sevitt, who started the online community for Arabic learners, said that besides building bridges to Palestinians, there is another reason for Israeli Jews to learn Arabic.

Its their own familys language, too.

Many of our parents and grandparents came from Arabic-speaking countries, and Arabic is their mother tongue. But the State of Israel denigrated Arabic to build up the Jewish nation, he said.

This distanced many of us from our own families. Learning spoken Arabic is a way to reconnect.

Some of the most serious Jewish students of Arabic end up in the classroom of Ben Badis, who teaches in two of Jerusalems most demanding programs one at the Jerusalem Intercultural Center on Mount Zion and the other at the Museum of Islamic Art.

Both are heavily subsidized by the government and offer five levels of 32-week courses, for beginner to advanced speakers. Together the schools enroll about 8,000 students, each paying $600 for each level on average.

Ben Badis requires that his students speak Arabic, even as beginners. He aims to cultivate a respect for the language but also more than that.

I am teaching them to appreciate the language and the culture. I am teaching them about my own history, my grandparents, my family.

And that is how the occupation and the Palestinian cause enter the conversation.

Ben Badis said he knows hes not a political science professor, but we cannot ignore what has happened here, what happened to my people in Israels War of Independence, which we call the Nakba, he said, using the Arabic term for catastrophe.

My grandmother grew up in what is now West Jerusalem. Her house is still standing, and Jewish people live there, he said. I use my language to communicate, but also as a resistance, to protect my identity.

At the same time, he said, he tries to avoid overt political discussions, even if he knows that most of his students are sympathetic to his opinions. He also knows that not all are, and said that as a language teacher, he respects their right to hold views different from his own.

One student of his a 36-year-old, strictly observant Jewish woman who works in public service, declined to give her name because, she said, her family does not know and would not approve of her studies but freely acknowledged her right-wing politics. She studied in nationalistic schools, and was evacuated from a settlement during Israels disengagement from the Gaza Strip in 2005.

Im not here for the same reasons that most of the left-wing students come here, she said. I am not here to learn to communicate with Arabs. I am here to understand their language because I think it is important to understand the language of your enemy.

Sharon Mizrahi, also a student in Anwars class, shakes her head at her classmates reasoning. Im here because I hate when we are defined as enemies of each other, she said.

The more the conflict becomes desperate or violent, the more I want to understand Arabic, she said. For me, studying Arabic is a way to stay hopeful.

Eetta Prince-Gibson, who lives in Jerusalem, previously Editor-in-Chief of The Jerusalem Report, is the Israel Editor for Moment Magazine and a regular contributor to Haaretz, The Forward, PRI, and other Israeli and international publications.

See the original post:

Jewish Israelis are heading to Arabic class and learning a bit more about Palestinians - Forward

30 Boy Names That Start With A, From Aaron To Azad – Romper

Posted By on September 6, 2022

I'm always a sucker for playing the name game, but my susceptibility to it skyrockets when I'm actually pregnant. As someone who has always wanted a big family, that has turned out to be pretty often. This year when I found out I was growing our fourth child, I knew I had better start looking at boy names. Sure enough, my gut was right: Our fourth boy will join the chaos soon. And since I have spent many collective hours going through baby name lists, I humbly offer you 30 of my favorite boy names that start with A.

Why start with the letter A? Whether you have a name preference in mind (one that relates to your family perhaps) or you're unsure of where to start, beginning with the first letter in the alphabet can help. From Aaron to Azad, there's an A name for everyone, and this list could be the jumping off point you need to choose a sweet moniker for your little guy.

My personal naming preferences lean a bit to the eccentric, so you'll find a lot of unique and perhaps unfamiliar names on this list. But I also really dig the choices of my friends who have more traditional taste; especially when they have multiple children whose names are total style matches to one another, like my friend with an Emma and a Henry. Swoon! So while I may prefer more rarely heard names for my own shorties, I was intentional about including a wide variety here to be sure there's a little something for everybody. Let the boy name party commence.

1Aaron

This classic name, which means high mountain in Hebrew, elicits images of a strong and reliable man, but also doesn't feel like too much for a mischievous little 3-year-old. Aaron is a great choice for parents looking for a traditional name that is also downright cute.

2Amir

Traditionally a Middle Eastern name, Amir is coming into Western popularity as our world cultures become more intertwined. In Arabic, it means ruler. It's short, adorable, and unique a total winner.

3Archer

There are lots of ways to spin the symbolism behind this name (it literally is Latin for bowman), as associations could run from a brave warrior to a visionary with a keen eye. Archer has grown in popularity in recent years and is a charming choice for parents looking for something unique but not unheard of.

4Ari

Does it get any cuter than Ari? For parents looking to keep it short and sweet, this Hebrew name, which means lion, should be a heavy frontrunner.

5Aapo

Finnish names are underused in the United States because, although usually easy to pronounce, they feel quite foreign to our ears. But Aapo (meaning father of many) is similar in style to a lot of popular names these days, such as Finn, Pip, and Nico, and would make a darling choice for a cutting-edge family.

6Arnold

Grandpa names for babies are all the rage right now (think: George, Henry, Jasper, Rufus) and Arnold (with German roots meaning strong as an eagle) is a strong contender in that category. Plus, the opportunities for nicknames abound with this one (Arnie?!).

7Abner

Chalk another one up to the grandpa category, but Abner (of Hebrew origins, meaning father of light) is so full of character I can't help but love it. For religious families, the meaning behind the name may feel particularly significant.

8Alden

The name Alden conjures up feelings of someone kind and likable, so its no surprise that the meaning conveys exactly that: Its an English name with roots meaning wise friend. This name is the perfect balance between familiar and unique.

9Alejandro

This is a variant on Alexander, and there are as many ways to use it as there are cultures in the world. Brits have Alistair, Russians have Alexey or Alyosha, Peruvians have Alejandro; whichever way you spin it, you really can't lose. All of them mean defender of humanity.

10Abe

Abe is typically short for Abraham (of Hebrew origin), but it can certainly stand on its own as well. The name brings to mind some great men of history, including President Lincoln and the Biblical patriarch. Plus, let's face it, it's just plain cute.

11Ajax

Ajax is definitely a bit unusual, but its really not a far cry from the wildly popular Jack or Jaxson. It makes an edgy statement without compromising an element of childhood whimsy. Its a moniker of Greek origin and a name most often associated with the strong and courageous Greek hero in Homer's Iliad.

12Augustine

This is an example of a name perfectly representing its meaning, because Augustine is about as dignified a moniker as they come (it has German roots meaning majestive dignity). If you're put off by the formality, consider the immeasurable cuteness that is "Gus" as a nickname. It may just push you over the edge.

13Aidan

Aidan (Irish for fiery) has been at the top of the boy name charts for years now, and with its combination of innocence and strength, it's easy to see why.

14Aric

The unusual spelling on this Norse name that more often starts with the letter E could be the right amount of twist that you're looking for. The sound of it is still traditional, but seeing it spelled out adds just a little bit of oomph.

15Azad

The name Azad is a Persian name that means liberty and free. To be free is a beautiful ideal, and this name lives up to the beauty that it represents. Another traditionally Middle Eastern name, I think it's time we brought this strong and masculine name to Western culture, too.

16Apollo

This nod to Greek mythology feels both ancient and completely fresh. You're not likely to find another Apollo in your son's kindergarten class, but you wouldn't have to deal with mispronunciation either, since most people are at least nominally familiar with Zeus' son.

17Ace

Short and sweet, the name Ace calls to mind a spunky, fun-loving kid who just might be the star of the sports team. Single-syllable names are skyrocketing in popularity, but so far this name, Latin for unity, is an underused gem.

18Arlo

Arlo, a name of Celtic origin, is an adorable name for a baby boy, and yet is one that could realistically grow with him through childhood and into adulthood. Chalk another one up to the three- and four-letter moniker craze; these names are only getting more trendy.

19Andrew

It's appropriate that this Greek origin name means strong, because who doesn't know a consistent and reliable Andrew? Bonus points for parents: a plethora of nickname choices at your disposal, from Andy to Drew to Andre.

20Angelo

Derived from the word angel, this name is ethereal. Whether used in homage to Italian roots or simply because you like it, the name Angelo commands attention. (Just ask Adele, who chose it for her sweet son.)

21Atlas

Another nod to Greek mythology that is fitting right in to trends, Atlas is both darling and epic. This name would be a perfect complement to a family who thinks outside the box.

22Arrow

Similar in style to Archer, this name evokes feelings of childhood adventure and strength. A little boy bearing this title is sure to be a bundle of curiosity and bravery.

23Asher

Once considered fringe, the name Asher (meaning happy in Hebrew roots) has been climbing the baby name charts for the past 10 years. The fact that this name's popularity is unique to our generation of children makes it feel nontraditional yet accessible at the same time.

24Atticus

Best known from the book To Kill a Mockingbird, the name Atticus is a Latin name practically synonymous with integrity. If you're hoping your little one will fight for justice (and maybe turn out to be a literary hound to boot), this name might be for you.

25Abbott

Traditionally an English word used to connote a religious position, this classy little name is getting a modern update. And can we just take moment to appreciate the unbearable cuteness of a nickname like Abb?

26Antoine

Adapted from the Roman clan name, Antonius, meaning highly praise-worthy, Antoine is a stylish French name. If you like the name Anthony but want something slightly more unique, this name is a winner.

27Alastair

The anglicized form of the Scottish Gaelic name, Alasdair (meaning defender of men), this boy name has a quirky yet refined ring to it. Plus, there are a ton of different spellings, including the aforementioned, as well as Alister, Allister, and Alyster.

28Andre

Andre (or Andr) is a name of French and Portuguese origins. Derived from the Greek name Andreas, it means man and warrior, just like the English variant, Andrew. I guess this name is so popular that it can be found in many different forms!

29Asa

The name Asa is an interesting one, because it appears in a few different cultures all of independent origin. The most well-known stems from Hebrew origin, after the Biblical King Asa in the Old Testament. However, its also a Japanese name meaning born at dawn and an old Norse name (sa, pronounced o-sa) meaning god.

30Alexei

Derived from the Greek Alxios (and then Latin Alexander), meaning defender, Alexei is a Russian and Bulgarian name. And its another great one for spelling variations: Alexey, Alexie, Aleksei, and Aleksey are other forms of the strong name.

Theres no shortage of inspiration for boy names that start with A. Whether you want something classic or something a little bit more unique, there are endless options to choose from for your incoming little one.

What Parents Are Talking About Delivered Straight To Your Inbox

This article was originally published on Oct. 12, 2017

Read the original post:

30 Boy Names That Start With A, From Aaron To Azad - Romper

Tim Throckmorton: Back to school is time to reflect on the parent’s job – The Tribune | The Tribune – Ironton Tribune

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Published 5:34 am Sunday, September 4, 2022

Sitting on my front porch with a nice cup of coffee in hand, I watched as the first school bus of the year rolled by with students headed off to class.The back to school season has arrived!I began to think about riding a school bus years ago along the same road to the same school and before long, I was considering my grandkids who are in school now.What they can potentially face in their current setting is nothing like what their parents or grandparents would have dreamed would await them.It was Carl Henry that stated that Christians should work through civil authority for the advancement of justice and human good to provide critical illumination, personal example, and vocational leadership. Jeremiah 29:7 says: But seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the Lord on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare. Referring to Babylon, the prophet recognized that secular government served a legitimate purpose in Gods plan for Israel.This is still true.Today, good governments promote literacy, advance just laws, provide religious liberty and allow churches to preach and teach. Christian witness in the public square contributes transcendent values about moral and ethical issues. Christian withdrawal opens a moral vacuum susceptible to influences that pressure government to move outside the purview designated by God. Politics affects government, shapes society and influences culture. Because of what the Bible teaches and the inevitability of its effect on our culture, Christians must care about politics, and they must be involved in it!As students around the nation go back to school it must be remembered that the most important authority in a childs life is still a parent!The writer in Proverbs reminds us, Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.The phrase train up carries the idea of a dedicated trainer.Parents need to see themselves as dedicated and committed spiritual trainers of their kids. That means you dont coast through parenting and you dont stick your head in the sand and hope everything going to turn out alright.You get in the game and show up each and every day.Its the two words train up that cause us to give close attention.They mean in Hebrew touch the palate of.Hebrew mommies would soften food and with their finger gently touch the palate of the child creating an appetite, a taste or desire to have more of that food. Our lives and influence must create a taste for God in our children.Benjamin Rush, who signed The Declaration of Independence and ratified the Constitution gives us a glimpse into the worldview our founding fathers were guided by.The only means of establishing and perpetuating our republican forms of government is the universal education of our youth in the principles of Christianity by means of the Bible. The great enemy of the salvation of man, in my opinion, never invented a more effective means of limiting Christianity from the world than by persuading mankind that it was improper to read the Bible at schools. Boy, does that make sense!My friend Joseph Backholm, senior fellow for Biblical Worldview and Strategic Engagement at Family Research Council said recently, If someone asked you whether you should be a good spouse or a good parent, you would reject the premise of the false choice presented. The correct answer is: do both.The Christian life requires multi-tasking.So, disciple your children and coach their Little League team.Preach liberty to the captives, feed the hungry, and clothe the naked.Love sinners, bless those who curse you, and pray for those who mock you.Dont neglect the discipleship of your children or of yourself.Do all of this, simultaneously.And if God is calling you to run for school board, then run for school board. If we dont, someone else will.And as we have seen, that doesnt always go well. As President John F. Kennedy once said, If not us, who? If not now, when?

Tim Throckmorton is the national director of Family Resource Councils Community Impact Teams.

See the article here:

Tim Throckmorton: Back to school is time to reflect on the parent's job - The Tribune | The Tribune - Ironton Tribune

Israeli President Herzog’s speech at the 50th anniversary memorial of the Munich Olympics massacre – JNS.org

Posted By on September 6, 2022

(September 5, 2022 / JNS) Below is the full text of the speech delivered by Israeli President Isaac Herzog at the 50th anniversary commemoration of the massacre of 11 Israelis at the 1972 Munich Olympics:

Dear families of the murdered athletes; survivors of the Munich massacre; Your Excellency, my friend, the President of Germany, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, thank you from the bottom of my heart for your brave and historic speech, which touched everyones hearts.

Your Excellencies, the Minister-President of Bavaria and Mayor of Munich; leaders and government officials from Germany and Israel; representatives and directors of the national Olympic committees; Jewish community leaders in Germany; loved ones, friends, families, and all those who cherish the memories of the murdered athletes, ladies and gentlemen.

Why must my pain be endless, my wound incurable, resistant to healing? So asks the Prophet Jeremiah (Jeremiah 15:18), and so we ask today. Even fifty years after the horrific murder of the eleven Israeli athletes here and in the Munich Olympic village, with inconceivable cruelty and in cold bloodthe pain is eternal. That awful event remains a wound, resistant to healing.

All those of us who remember those dark and endless hours in that bitter September of 1972 carry in our hearts the same scar, the same moments in which we followed with excruciating anxiety and boundless concern the conflicting reports coming in every few hours from the Olympic village in Munich. We struggled to fathom that Jewish and Israeli athletes, judges, and coaches were being held by terrorists on German soil. We prayed so hard for a different ending. But our hearts were pained and broken; our hopes dashed.

Subscribe to The JNS Daily Syndicateby email and never missour top stories

Within a day, we received the most agonizing of news: None survived. Although I was only a young boy, I shall never forget that awful morning, driving with my father to school and in the car hearing together the horrific news, and we stopped breathing. I shall never forget the tears that welled up in our eyes, the sense of total shock, the grief, the gloom, and the angst that engulfed an entire country when the so-called Cheerful Games were instantly transformed into the darkest nadir in the history of world sports and in the annals of the Olympics.

The eleven athletes, may their memories be a blessing, the victims of the Munich massacre, arrived at the Olympics on German soil fifty years ago, in the name of the spirit of sports. They arrived in the name of the spirit of the Olympic movement: a spirit of fraternity, a spirit of friendship and fellowship. A spirit of unity, of cohesion, and of social solidarity. Between nations and between states.

They were brutally murdered in cold blood by a Palestinian terror organization just because they were Jews; just because they were Israelis. This brutal and barbaric massacre, which ended the lives of eleven Israeli athletes and one German policeman, was a momentous human tragedy in which the values of morality and justice were trampled; human dignity was erased; all semblance of humanity lost. It was the moment the Olympic torch was snuffed.

For us, as a people and as a country, this massacre has always been a national disaster. It desecrated the unifying and cohesive sanctity of the Olympics, the ultimate symbol of sports, and smeared its flag with blood. The Olympic flag, with its five rings, would never again be what it was before.

For many decades, as President Steinmeier said, Germany and the International Olympic Committee avoided commemorating the eleven athletes. For the families of the victims, their pain and sorrow for their loved ones loss, their agony and tears, and the traumatic scars that the survivors bore for years, were compounded by their anguish about this indifference and cold shoulder. These were years in which it seemed like one simple truth had been forgotten: this was not a uniquely Jewish and Israeli tragedythis was a global tragedy! A tragedy that must be recalled and commemorated at every Olympic Games; a tragedy whose lessons must be taught, from generation to generation. A tragedy that underscores for us, time and again, that sports have no more polar opposite than terror, and terror has no more polar opposite than the spirit of sportsmanship.

The world must never forget what happened at the 1972 Munich Olympics. The world must never forget: the war on terror, everywhere and always, must be fought with unity, determination, and assertiveness. The future of human society depends on us sanctifying the good, and at the same time repudiating and vanquishing evil: anti-Semitism, hatred, terror.

In this sense, but not only, Germanys decision in recent days, for which I express thank you again my friend President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, for your tremendous efforts, and of course also the Federal Government, the Bavarian State Government, and the Municipality of Munich for making this decision. The decision to take responsibility for the failures surrounding and following the massacre, to allow for an objective and rigorous inquiry, and to compensate the victims families is part of that sanctification of the good and triumph over evil. It represents, half a century later, an important step of morality and justice for the victims, for the families, and for history itself.

Ladies and gentlemen, there is a distinctive word in the Hebrew language for one who was murdered or killed in a disaster. Such a person is a halal. This word, halal, is also the Hebrew word for an empty spacea void. Each and every one of the eleven athletes was a world unto himself. To his family. To his loved ones. To his people. Each and every one left behind a void, a halal, that will never be filled.

There are no words to comfort you, dear and beloved bereaved families. Your courage, your commitment to life, and your future generations, some of whom are here with us today, committed to the imperative of memory and the imperative of life and meaningthese are all an example for all of us, and they are a proud and glorious memorial to the murdered athletes.

May the memory of the victims, the halalim, of the Munich Olympics massacre be preserved in our hearts forever.

Follow this link:

Israeli President Herzog's speech at the 50th anniversary memorial of the Munich Olympics massacre - JNS.org

Animal Welfare in the Bible – CounterPunch.org – CounterPunch

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Frequently, when I read Christian arguments for animal welfare, they quote from the Old Testament. For instance, they describe the Garden of Eden as a vegan paradise, which they view as Gods ideal. Christian anti-speciesists seem to much less often cite the New Testament, which, of course, focuses on the life and teachings of Jesus.

As an animal activist operating in a majority-Christian country, Im interested in these arguments. If Im honest, though, Im also interested because Im culturally Christian and theres a part of me that wishes there was a more species-inclusive version of Christianity to be had.

So I decided to ask some Christian activists, scholars, and theologians who are concerned with animal ethics whether they thought the Old Testament had more to say on the subject than the New Testament, and whether they viewed this as a problem. Heres what they said.

For Christopher Southgate, a professor of Christian theodicy at the University of Exeter, this was all a non-question. The NT writers presume the content of the OT (which they often quote as Scripture, and sometimes re-interpret), he said. So they would not have found it necessary to supplement OT teaching in most areas.

Michael Gilmour, who teaches biblical literature at Providence University College, agreed with Southgate. Positive statements about creation and animals we find in Genesis, the Psalms, Jonah, and elsewhere inform the apostles worldview, Gilmour said. They knew those texts, and so did most of their readers. They are presupposed, part of the bedrock on which their religious worldview rested.

Gilmour didnt, however, concede the New Testament had less to say about animals than the Old Testament. They are always there, between the lines, so to speak, he said. We need to consider whether love your neighbor as yourself and other passages like it refer only to people as is so often supposed. Im not so sure they do. If correct, the New Testament has much to contribute to a specifically Christian animal ethic.

The president of the Christian Animal Rights Association, Matthew King, argued the Old Testament talked about nonhuman welfare to a greater extent. It is important to remember that the NT only comprises about 25% of the Bible, whereas the OT comprises around 75%, he said. Therefore, the OT is much longer and has more opportunities to discuss the issue.

This didnt concern King. I believe there is much continuity between the testaments, he said. A prevalent method of bible interpretation known as premillennial dispensationalism teaches a strict discontinuity between the testaments. I think that interpretation is false.

Grace Kao, a visiting professor at Loyola Marymount University, struck a familiar note. The Hebrew Bible covers terrain the NT assumes, she said. The New Testament assumes much of this material and also contains material and imagery not found in the OT As a Christian I believe the whole Bible contains material to teach and guide us.

David Clough, a professor at the University of Aberdeen, told me the same thing, making me wonder if my questions were embarrassingly ignorant. Together, the Old Testament and New Testament comprise the Christian Bible, he said. Christians have no reason to be concerned by the fact that different books within the Bible have different emphases, in relation to animal welfare or any other topic.

Taking a different approach, the chair of the Christian Vegetarian Association, Stephen Kaufman, questioned the New Testaments accuracy. I think Keith Akers in his book Disciples makes a very compelling case that Jesus was very likely a vegetarian, Kaufman said. Had Jesus vegetarianism been part of literature canonized as the New Testament, it would likely have had profound impact on animal welfare.

But, ultimately, Kaufman agreed with the point made by everyone I interviewed. Given that Christians revere the Hebrew Scriptures, he said, it would not be problematic for me if someone insisted that the case for animal welfare is stronger in the Hebrew Scriptures than in the New Testament.

Read the original here:

Animal Welfare in the Bible - CounterPunch.org - CounterPunch

Creators Behind FX Series ‘The Patient’ Explain How the Show Explores Jewish Trauma, Themes of Intolerance – Algemeiner

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg, the two creators behind the new FX limited series The Patient, talked in a new interview about how their psychological thriller addresses a father-son conflict that stems out of their differences in Judaism and trauma as it relates to the Holocaust.

In the series The Patient, which premiered onHulu on Tuesday, actor Steve Carell plays a Jewish psychologist named Dr. Alan Strauss who is kidnapped and held as a chained prisoner by one of his patients, a serial killer named Sam, played by Domhnall Gleeson. Sam wants to stop his killing spree and needs the help of the doctor in order to overcome his homicidal urges.

While alone in captivity Alan is forced to also work through his own repressed issues, including his estrangement from his religious son whose conversation to Orthodox Judaism alienated him from his family the recent death of his wife, who was a cantor, and Alans repeated nightmares of the Holocaust.

For us, we had this idea of a serial killer kidnapping a therapist, and we thought that was good, and then we started trying to flesh out the characters, and one of the things we thought of was, lets make this guy Jewish and lets give him a wife whos a cantor lets give him a kid whos orthodox who hes having trouble with, Weisberg, who with Fields were also the executive producers of the widely popular television show The Americans, told The Daily Beast in an interview on Wednesday.

September 5, 2022 3:51 pm

And the whole thing started to just expand and have a richness and fullness and a relationship to our own personal lives too, he added. We recognized pretty quickly was going to be very, very rich to explore, and add a level of depth to it that is part of what makes good drama.

Fields added about the show, theres the big themes of intolerance and then there are the small micro ones in this family and within the different threads of Judaism. But really, thats all stuff appropriately for a show thats about therapy that bubbled up subconsciously through our process. Then wed talk about, be surprised by it, and navigate through the characters and their journey, and that increasingly became the story.

Fields and Weisberg also explained that the Holocaust references in the show came later on in the creative process as they tried to flesh out details about the storyline and Carrells character arch. Fields said, it came late because it came out of the story and character process for us, and what felt true to what we think would be triggered in this characters mind just blossomed out of what was happening to him, and what we thought he would start to consider.

Filming scenes of Nazi gas chambers and concentration camps for the show were especially surreal for the two visionaries, Weisberg noted.

For both of us, [it was] one of the weirdest days of our lives, he told The Daily Beast. Because there are all these guys in prison clothes at craft services, just walking around. It was surreal. Also being inside that set, which was realistic, was pretty moving, disturbing and odd. It was a strange day.

The two-episode premiere of The Patient created, executive produced and written by Fields and Weisberg is now streaming on Hulu. The 10-episode limited series is produced by FX Productions.

Read more:

Creators Behind FX Series 'The Patient' Explain How the Show Explores Jewish Trauma, Themes of Intolerance - Algemeiner

Kenden Alfond Finds Culinary Inspiration from the Talmud – aish.com – Aish.com

Posted By on September 6, 2022

Honoring women-focused narratives with thoughts and recipes.

Kenden Alfond is an American in Paris whos spent her adult life working for NGOs and the United Nations from India and Afghanistan to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Switzerland, and Cambodia. But a constant in these past eight years is Jewish Food Hero, a food blog created to connect with other Jewish people who care about healthy food and modern Jewish life.

At Jewish Food Hero, we create cookbooks that reflect what we are passionate about: conscientious food preparation and uplifting Torah study, says Alfond.

As of 2022, four cookbooks have been published under the banner of Jewish Food Hero and the fifth one is forthcoming in 2023. The most recent, Feeding Women in the Talmud, Feeding Ourselves, is what Alfond calls a community cookbook. Shes referring to the 129 Jewish women from around the world who contributed recipes and essays to the book. This includes 60 rabbis, rabbinical students, Jewish teachers, and emerging thought leaders who contributed to the Talmudic narratives of the cookbook as well as 60 female professional chefs and passionate homecooks.

The addition of this female-focused point of view to these womens Talmudic storieswhich were recorded and edited by menis a bright and encouraging testament to a modern generation of women engaging in Jewish learning, says Alfond.

The cookbook is the second volume of the cookbook series that Jewish Food Hero started in 2020 with Feeding Women of the Bible, Feeding Ourselves. The woman-focused narrative highlighted 20 compelling female biblical heroines from the Hebrew bible paired with two healthy plant-based kosher pareve recipes inspired by the characters experience.

The idea for these cookbooks came from my desire to create true food for thought by creating a cookbook/study book that retells the stories of women in Jewish text and honors them with our contemporary thoughts and recipes, says Alfond. These books seek to add more Jewish female stories and delicious vegan and plant-based foods to our tables, so we can connect to Judaism and healthy food at the same time.

In Feeding Women in the Talmud, Feeding Ourselves, each chapter is devoted to one female character in the Talmud. Theres a concise, true to the text story, context that seeks to enhance the stories by exploring their historical, social, literary and/or liturgical background for the story, a description of what happens before and/or after the particular story in the Talmud, and an exploration of how the context and position of the story reveals more about its meaning.

Then comes the aggadah or a modern commentary, sometimes in the shape of a fictional story that uplifts the subjects voice without attempting to neutralize her imperfections, flaws or struggles. Readers are then given meaningful questions intended as prompts to inspire further reflection on the story before finishing with the food offeringone vegan or plant-based recipe, each inspired by or honoring the female Talmudic character.

Alfond was drawn to the project given her long interest in learning more about female stories in Jewish texts. These projects, specifically of the Feeding Women series, is how she's been able to learn and study alongside women in the Jewish community. The Talmudic spin was especially helpful for Alfond, who says it was emotionally comforting and intellectually inspiring during the increased social isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic.

This Golden Tumeric Lemon Cake from Feeding Women in the Talmud, Feeding Ourselves is based on the Talmudic characters of Yirmatia and her mother.

In the cookbook, Rebecca Whitman, a doctoral student in mathematics at UC Berkeley, describes how the Talmud records her donation to the Temple in an amount of gold equivalent to her daughters weight. Alongside an overview of the Talmudic narrative, Rebecca offers a modern aggadah and prompts for reflection.

This Golden Tumeric Lemon Cake recalls the gold that Yirmatias mother donated to the temple, says Alfond, and is a variation of a sour milk sponge cake.

This cake mixes apple cider vinegar and soy milk to create sour milk and uses a reduced amount of caster sugar and applesauce to give added texture and sweetness, she explains. Applesauce is also a fantastic vegan substitute for the setting properties of eggs. Dense texture can be the curse of some plant-based cake adaptations. But the combination of baking soda and apple cider vinegar stops this turmeric cake becoming claggy. Instead, it gives a light crumb with that vibrant golden color throughout. The soy milk soured with apple cider vinegar adds the perfect tangy taste to the finished cake.

For serving, Alfond recommends combining a slice with a bright tea or cup of coffee.

Thanks to the lower sugar quantity in the recipe, you can serve it with sweet toppings, she says. It can take a dusting of powdered sugar and/or a dollop of raspberry jam without becoming overly sweet.

Original post:

Kenden Alfond Finds Culinary Inspiration from the Talmud - aish.com - Aish.com

Kirtans with the Bene Israelis – mid-day.com

Posted By on September 6, 2022

How did a Jewish sect start singing local devotional songs? Drop by for a lecture-performance to learn about the revival of the syncretic tradition

The clink of hand cymbals, beats of dholak and singers caught in a trance come to mind when we think of kirtans, be it to invoke the blessings of Sherawali Mata or Sai Baba. But in the 1880s, long after the ship-wrecked Bene Israelis had put down roots in the Konkan soil, kirtans were giving voice to the stories of creation, Noah, Abraham and Moses. Composed by a new breed of kirtankars, who were Bene Israelis, the devotional songs - primarily in Marathi then - were being sung to not just invoke the almighty, but to also preserve the history of the community. "Our ancestors had lost everything in the shipwreck. In the villages where they resided, kirtans were a major form of religious discourse among Maharashtrians. To keep the Biblical traditions of Judaism and what happened to our forefathers alive, they adopted kirtans, using drama, narration and music to impart knowledge," shares Elijah Samson Jacob, a member of the Orot Ha Tanakh kirtan group. Jacob, along with the group, will open up about the history of this syncretic tradition at a lecture-performance hosted by the Mumbai Research Centre of The Asiatic Society of Mumbai.

Benjamin Shimshon Ashtamkar, the first Bene Israeli kirtankar

Jacob, former executive director of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, India, recalls growing up listening to the catchy tunes of Bene Israeli kirtans, thanks to his grandfather. A former cantor at the Sha*ar Harahamim or The Gate of Mercy Synagogue near Masjid Bunder, his grandfather would often hum kirtans. "Kirtans started becoming popular in the community in the 1880s. He must have heard them and would often sing or hum the songs, while dropping us to school or sitting at the Victoria Gardens," Jacob reminisces.

Shimshon Akhyan (1934), a book of kirtans

Despite some early resistance, the community warmed up to the songs that became a regular feature at naming ceremonies, weddings and housewarming parties. Between 1880 and 1960, 42 kirtans became part of the repertoire. Although Bene Israeli kirtans started fading away after India and Israel*s independence, they were briefly revived by Flora Samuel in Israel and Rachel Gadkar in India. Sustained revival efforts started in 2015, when Jacob, and many others like him, started discovering that they had musical memories of these didactic songs, thanks to their grand, or great-grandparents. "I thought, why not compile these kirtans. Fortunately, Dr Nathan Aston, a community member from Pune, had a bundle of 22 kirtans that his great-grandfather, the first kirtankar, Benjamin Shimshon Ashtamkar, had left him." Their efforts were boosted by Anna Schultz, an ethnomusicologist, who sponsored the first kirtan recital in Matunga.

The early kirtans were centred on Biblical stories, Jacob notes. "It started with the concept of creation of the world, Adam and Eve, Noah, the forefathers, and continued with prophet Moses. Most kirtans in the early days were based on The Torah. Some of the later prophets were also included, along with other writings and events in Jewish history."

Elijah Samson Jacob

On Wednesday, Jacob and the kirtan group will delve into the different influences that shaped the tradition - from Bollywood songs such as Ae malik tere bande hum to the Shabbat liturgy. Viewers can expect to hear kirtans in Marathi, Hindi, English and Hebrew, accompanied by the quintessential sounds of cymbals, dholak and harmonium, rendered through a synthesiser and a mouth organ. "We*re also going to have a sale of our compiled publication, Bene Israeli Kirtans. The proceeds will go to an old age home for the community in Panvel," Jacob adds.

On: September 7; 5 pmAt: Durbar Hall, The Asiatic Society of Mumbai, Fort

Originally posted here:

Kirtans with the Bene Israelis - mid-day.com


Page 233«..1020..232233234235..240250..»

matomo tracker