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The Best Jewish Delis In The US – Tasting Table

Posted By on August 10, 2022

It's hard to succinctly encapsulate all that Zingerman's is and does within its Ann Arbor community. Frankly, it doesn't even seem possible thatAri Weinzweig and his kismet business partner, Paul Saginaw, started themulti-armedempire,Zingerman's Community of Businesses,with just two employees and four brick walls. Zingerman's Delicatessen is locatedin downtown Ann Arbor, Michigan, but the community contains multiple other locations and nearly 600 employees. The Jewish deli offers and educates about everything that's good to eat from coffee to cheese, to bread baking classes, to foundational menu items that started it all.

You'll want to browse the grocery and bakery section, namedone of the top 25 food markets in the world by Food & Wine. Order from the caf, Next Door, but don't forget to use the returnable Tupperware program for any to-go items, part of a wider community recycling program. All the Jewish deli classics are there the ones that bonded Art and Paul and kickstarted the business. Pastrami, corned beef, and Reubens all make thedeli top 10 list.

Zingerman's James Beard Award winning chef, Alex Young created other dishes such as spicy eggplant, asparagus couscous, and barbecue created. And, just in case these aren't enough reasons to support the business, Zingerman's founded Food Gatherers in 1988, Michigan's first food rescue program, actively working to feed vulnerable people within the community.

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The Best Jewish Delis In The US - Tasting Table

Coming soon! Jewish deli fare at Disney World, and how to eat kosher as well – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on August 10, 2022

Jordan Palmer, Chief Digital Content OfficerPublished August 9, 2022

I remember walking off the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror ride at Walt Disney World in Orlando and thinking to myself, I could really go for a pastrami Reuben right about now only to then realize there was no delicatessen at Disney World. But how times have changed. (Disclaimer: This paragraph is a total fabrication. No one walks off that ride wanting anything to eat.)

All kidding aside, no longer must you suffer from a lack of deli while visiting the happiest place on earth. Opening in late summer 2022, BoardWalk Deli is replacing BoardWalk Bakery and will feature a host of Jewish deli staples, from that pastrami Reuben with sauerkraut I wasnt craving in 2018, to a house-baked everything bagel. The deli will even offer classic sweets like coconut macaroons.

According to Disney, this is the first time the theme park has offered a permanent menu of Jewish deli favorites. Specific meal plans and hours of operation have yet to be released, but you can view the delis menu right now.

It appears the deli will serve breakfast, lunch and dinner and includes:

The menu also has plenty of nut allergy and gluten-wheat allergy options as well.

Connect with your community every morning.

Kosher dining at Walt Disney World

If youre also looking for kosher dining options at Disney, know that it is possible, but you may want to plan ahead.

Most Walt Disney World Resort Table Service restaurants that acceptAdvance Dining Reservationscan accommodate kosher needs if requested at least one day in advance. Call 407-824-1391 to make arrangements.

According to AllEars, a website dedicated to helping visitors navigate Disney, this list of locations should offer kosher meals on the property, but site operators suggest that things change quickly, so make sure you call ahead.

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Coming soon! Jewish deli fare at Disney World, and how to eat kosher as well - St. Louis Jewish Light

Jewish music festival asks: What exactly is Jewish music? – DW (English)

Posted By on August 10, 2022

Over a pulsating beat, Ramona Kozma (pictured above center) sings melancholically of a worthless life that is given meaning by a pair of dark eyes. The rhythm is pure tango. But the language is Yiddish.

Kozma is the accordionist and singer of Trio Picon,a German ensemble that performs Yiddish tango, and the trio is one of many musical groups performing at the inaugural Shalom Music Cologne festival (Shalom-Musik.Kln). The week-long event, an offshoot of the city's 2021 celebration of 1700 years of Jewish life in Germany, is dedicated to presenting Jewish music.

Yiddish tango was a popular genre of the 1920s-30s, with composers from Latin America, as well as the United States and Eastern Europe penning words in the language of AshkenazicJews to the emotionally intense Argentine music. Yet it's not a musical style people usually think of when they hear the words "Jewish music."

"I've noticed that there is a relatively large knowledge gap," Kozma says. "For example, a lot of times Balkan music or Romanian music isassociated with Jewish music. But that's just not right."

Yiddish tango is one of many genres included in the festival program. The others range from classical art song to contemporary jazz to club music to synagogue organ works. The musical diversity reflects the diversity of the Jewish experience, both throughout history and today, while also raising the question: What exactly falls under the umbrella term "Jewish music"?

The Shalom Music festival is organized by the Cologne Forum for Culture in Dialogue and the Cologne Synagogue Community

Jean Goldenbaum, a researcher and professor at the European Center for Jewish Music in Hanover, is very familiar with this question it's usually the first he gets on the topic.

"The first thing that I explain is that there is not a definitive answer. And there is not a concrete answer," Goldenbaum says.

There is no one overarching factor that unites Jewish music, he explains. Instead, it relates to what parameters are set and then what elements are accordingly present. Or, as Goldenbaum puts it, "Does it bring something or some things that show us or locate us in this [Jewish] cultural universe?"

A very restrictive interpretation could define Jewish music as liturgical music in Hebrew meant for the synagogue, while a broader definition could include non-religious music with lyrics in Hebrew or other Jewish languages; non-Jewish language lyrics that nevertheless draw on Jewish texts or themes; or the use of musical motifs and stylistic features commonly found in the Jewish musical tradition, such as certain musical keys or melodic patterns and embellishments.

In the case of Yiddish Tango, the elements go beyond the language.

"Yiddish tango is definitely written in the I'll call it tonality typical to synagogue music, which klezmer music also shares the vocal part is also influenced by synagogue singing and a particular way of making certain sound effects or raw crying sounds with the voice," Kozma says.

Compositions by non-Jewish composers who used Jewish elements can also fall into the category of Jewish music. The opening night of the Shalom Music festival included a well-known example: "Kol Nidrei," by Max Bruch. The Protestant composer wrote the piece based on Jewish melodies in the early 1880s for Liverpool's Jewish community. The name comes from the declaration recited during Yom Kippur services.

The reverse scenario a composition by a composer of Jewish origin that contains no apparent elements orienting it within Jewish musical tradition is perhaps the most contested when it comes to definitions of Jewish music.

"Another very, very large question is if the piece has no Jewish musical elements and has also no Jewish texts, but the composer is Jewish. What do we do about that?" Goldenbaum posits.

Categorization in this instance is tricky because it boils down to identity, a topic that is never clear-cut.

"This question and this answer will be, in the end, bigger than the conceptions of the composer himself," Goldenbaum says. There will be disagreement, he adds, which is fine: "Because it's all about perspectives. It's all about concepts. How do you choose to understand music. And it's all about identity."

Israeli jazz trumpeter Avishai Cohen, a festival headliner, presented his new album, 'Naked Truth'

A prominent example of the difficulty tied up in identity is the music of Austrian composer Gustav Mahler. Born Jewish, he converted to Catholicism to secure a prestigious post in the Hapsburg court, and his compositions do not openly draw on Jewish elements. The Shalom Music festival's opening concert featured classical songs in which Mahler used traditional German folk poetry.

Festival co-artistic director Thomas Hft underlines that there is more than one lens through which Mahler's music can be examined.

"This repertoire has many more characteristics," he says. "But is there something that is specifically Jewish about Gustav Mahler? Is there? Is this being denied? Did he himself repress this? What is there? Can we assess it? Or is this a false assumption? This is an experimental categorization. We are putting on glasses that have been impacted by different experiences and using them to look at a very broad repertoire."

"Electric Counterpoint," by the contemporary American composer Steve Reich, is another example of an ambiguous composition. While other works draw on his Jewish heritage, this looping piece for electric guitar and recorded samples, performed by Cologne-based Israeli guitarist Tal Botvinik at the festival, uses central African horn themes.

Besides Steve Reich's 'Electric Counterpoint,' Tal Botvinik also performed Hebrew and Latino songs on accoustic guitar

Then there's the self-described "sexually loaded freak party" that is The White Screen.

There is nothing particularly "Jewish" about the duo's music, Hft says, which fuses art-rock, gospel-punk and psych-pop. But as is the case with any identity, the outsider perspective plays a role.

"They come from Israel, and they are'read'bypeople who do not want them to perform. And so they perform, and we look at them through these glasses and ask ourselves, 'Is this Jewish, Israeli or even totally colorful world music? Right now, is this queer music from a dancefloor context?' It all comes down to the question."

In taking a broad, inclusive approach, the Shalom Music festival has created a line-up that spans the Middle Ages to the present day, features countless styles of music and prompts the audience to reflect on their own idea of what Jewish music can be.

So what finally unites the festival's musical panorama? For Hft, it's quite simple: "Only the title. Only the perspective."

Edited by Brenda Haas

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Jewish music festival asks: What exactly is Jewish music? - DW (English)

Mercy Health Welcomes More than 45 New Residents and Fellows to Cincinnati – Mercy Health

Posted By on August 10, 2022

Last month, Mercy Health Cincinnatiwelcomed more than 45 new residents and fellows from across the United States and abroad to its residency and fellowship programs at its two sponsoring institutions, The Jewish Hospital and Anderson Hospital.

The Jewish Hospitals oldest residency program is its surgery program, which launched in 1933. This year, the hospital welcomed 31 residents in specialties including internal medicine, general surgery and podiatric medicine. The hospital will also welcome three orthopedic and sports medicine fellows to the sports medicine orthopedic surgery fellowship program in August. Over the course of its residency and fellowship programs, The Jewish Hospital has played a role in developing the careers and expertise of hundreds of doctors.

Anderson Hospital will be home to eight new family medicine residents. The hospital received full accreditation for a new family and community medicine residency program from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) in 2021. This is the second cohort of family medicine doctors to choose Anderson Hospital for their residency.

It is an honor and a privilege to help these talented doctors grow their futures in internal medicine, general surgery, podiatric medicine, surgery, orthopedics, sports medicine and family medicine, the most recruited specialty in the United States for the past decade. The residents and fellows skills and talents benefit those in our hospital and, should they choose to practice locally, our community, too, said Mercy Health Cincinnati Chief Clinical Officer Steve Feagins, MD, who serves as designated institutional official of the residency programs at both Anderson Hospital and The Jewish Hospital. We are proud of our programs, which help address critical community needs, and we look forward to working with our new residents.

The hospitals programs and their directors are as follows:

The Jewish Hospital

Anderson Hospital

In addition, Mercy Health sponsors the following programs:

After graduation from medical school, doctors must complete a residency program in their field of practice where they undergo extra three to five years of hands-on training in environments including the hospital, outpatient settings and the community.

Mercy Healths commitment to graduate medical education (GME)is linked to its mission to improve the health and well-being of our communities and bring good help to those in need. Faculty and administration teams work to provide residents with the highest quality education, enabling them to give patient care in the safest environment. We foster the qualities of academic excellence, scholarship, research and professional leadership to help our students, residents and staff achieve and advance their clinical skills.

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Mercy Health Welcomes More than 45 New Residents and Fellows to Cincinnati - Mercy Health

The Jewish Spirit of Saving Lives | Justin Amler | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on August 10, 2022

If you want to know what evil is true, unmitigated evil, you need to look no further than Gaza, where one of the many Arab terrorist organisations launched about a thousand rockets against Israel in the last week.

Each rocket was intended to terrorize. Each rocket was intended to murder. Each rocket was intended to destroy.

And they succeeded, but not in destroying Jewish lives but in destroying the lives of their own people, for each death that occurred in the Gaza strip was their responsibility, including rocket attacks that were intended to kill Jewish children falling into their own territory killing their own children instead.

Jews do not celebrate that, but our enemies do. For their goal is a dark goal a goal of such depravity that while we celebrate saving lives, they celebrate taking them including their own.

The intentional act of murdering innocent people, especially children, is an act of such wickedness that its hard for a human mind that is capable of compassionate thought to understand, yet those are the kind of people Israel faces.

The Arab terrorists, whether they are called Islamic Jihad or Hamas or the Palestinian Authority, invest their vast resources, given to them by a world community that is blinded by their prejudice against Jews and their failure to understand the lessons of history, into weapons of death and destruction and mayhem and misery.

And these terrorists, who should be ostracised into the filthy corners of society, far from all decency and morality, are actually supported by so many in a world whose moral compass has never found true north.

Whether its the United Nations who will always find Israel the only guilty party, or the dictatorial leadership of Turkey who farcically accuse Israel of killing children, or the morally deficient Russian spokeswoman who in the irony of ironies, condemned Israeli actions that targeted Islamic Jihad terrorist.

Perhaps we should call it a special military operation instead?

Our enemies and critics arent going away. We know that.

But neither are we and we know that too.

For Israel, a country besieged by this darkness of humanity somehow, in an act that defies all logical thought and understanding, still manages to shine a light that penetrates the thickness of this evil fog.

It is a miracle.

And it must be, for thousands of rockets rained down on this tiny democratic country, and yet there were no deaths. They should have been. There were supposed to be. The sheer vastness of the odds tells us there has to be.

And yet there werent.

And it wasnt dumb luck. It was the epitome of the Sanhedrin quote in the Talmud that says, anyone who saves a life is as if he saved an entire world.

Despite all the flaws that exist in Israel, as in any other country, and despite the many flaws of people and politicians, that also exist in every other country, I could not be more proud of our Jewish homeland, a country in which, despite so many challenges, the Jewish spirit still manages to find its way.

It is that Jewish spirit that impassions Israelis to do the opposite of what our enemies do, to invest resources not in taking lives, but in saving lives. The technological marvel of the Iron Dome epitomises that, for while it may be built with steel and iron and cutting-edge technology and the greatest minds alive, it is powered by our ancient Jewish spirit and our ancient Jewish belief that every life is important.

Justin Amler is a South African born, Melbourne based writer who has lived in South Africa, New Zealand and Australia.

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The Jewish Spirit of Saving Lives | Justin Amler | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Jewish community: various religious perspectives held little bearing in abortion vote – WISH TV Indianapolis, IN

Posted By on August 10, 2022

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) The passing of SB1 sparked celebrations and disappointment. Both Jewish and Muslim community members are among those pushing back, as they say the decision didnt factor in other religious perspectives.

Jewish leaders say even the introduction of the legislation in July was a disappointment in itself, as one of the things that makes America great, they say, is the ability for people to practice their religion freely. Adding this decision plays against that, the leaders said.

Despite Indiana legislatures voting new abortion restrictions into law, the abortion rights debate isnt over just yet .

[It] Does not align with where Jewish beliefs are, said Jewish Community Relations Council Executive Director Jacob Markey. In fact, we saw this as infringement on religion and state.

Markey says theyve been disappointed since the legislation was first introduced. In a statement released on social media, the JCRC, in part, said the general assembly did not consider the religious perspectives of the Jewish community, along with the strong opinions of a majority of Hoosiers.

Thats what makes America so great. Anyone is freely able to practice our religion, Markey said.

Adding the legislation does not align with Jewish beliefs, which say a fetus is part of the mother not an independent human being. But Markey says religion aside, thats not how democracy works.

State Senator Fady Qaddoura is one of several legislators to vote against the measure.

The conversation was fueled by religious views of the minority of legislators. And my understanding of how democracy works is that we were elected not to be religious leaders, we were elected to be representatives of the people, said Qaddora.

Qaddora shared disappointment that the general assembly would move a a piece of legislation that he says was motivated and crafted with the standards of one faith, while ignoring different religions and those who dont practice religion.

In my perspective, [it] violates our United States Constitution, said Qaddoura.

Qaddora added that since we are a multifaceted community, the discussion around choice should have been limited to women, their physicians, and if they choose, their faith leaders as well.

Qaddoura and Markey say the decision is still new, but expect to see new pieces of legislation filed soon to address issues and restore choice to Hoosier women.

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Jewish community: various religious perspectives held little bearing in abortion vote - WISH TV Indianapolis, IN

‘Sandman’ is haunted by Judaism, mythology and God knows what else – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on August 10, 2022

Neil Gaiman is no stranger to television and movie adaptations of his fantasy novels. Theres Good Omens, which he co-wrote with fellow fantasy author Terry Pratchett, a surprisingly cozy book about the Antichrist that made for a pitch perfect miniseries. American Gods followed ancient deities as theyre eradicated by technology; it ran for three seasons. Stardust, a Victorian-style fairy story, became a movie starring Claire Danes, and Coraline, a delightfully creepy childrens novella, made for a delightfully creepy stop-motion film.

Yet The Sandman, arguably Gaimans best-known work, and certainly the one that jump-started his career, has never been adapted until now, with a Netflix series that premiered Friday.

The Sandman is a comic series following the Sandman, or Dream, or Morpheus, or whatever other names the world has for the shadowy figure that rules our collective unconscious. It ran from 1989-1996, distributed by DC Comics, and accrued a devoted fanbase, thanks to its complex web of characters and references that characterize Gaimans work. Its a story about stories and the power they hold over us to inspire hope and fear and meaning no small subject.

What makes Gaimans work great is also what makes it difficult to adapt. His worlds are meaty, full of overlapping symbolism that pulls in religion and mythology and history and sharp sociological observations and layers them all together to build something familiar yet new.

The world of The Sandman in particular is known for its breadth. Each issue is an entirely new story in which the King of Dreams is often a side character to a rich world populated by the likes of the three Fates, William Shakespeare, Cain and Abel, and a nightmare with teeth for eyes. Gaimansinterview with The New York Timesin advance of the series launch has footnotes to explain his rapid-fire references.

The rich source texts likely have something to do with Gaimans own spiritually eclectic upbringing, which involved a bar mitzvah facilitated by observant family members he visited in London on weekends, all while being raised by devoted Scientologists and attending schools run by the Church of England. Its a scattered background that, along with a reading diet of Christian apologist C.S. Lewis and the Catholic, myth-inclined Tolkien, allows Gaiman to create the kind of message-driven stories that need not have happened to be true, as he said ina 2012 lecture.

Unfortunately, that sense of truth doesnt quite materialize in Netflixs adaptation. The show mines every major tradition, but somehow doesnt have anything to say.

The episodic series follows Dream as he tries to keep control over his kingdom, The Dreaming, with the aid of his librarian, Lucienne, and a talking raven named Matthew. We see him, at various points, try to rein in the dreams and nightmares he has created when they go rogue, struggle against his siblings Desire, Destiny and Despair for control over humanity, and try to understand the very humans whose sleeping minds he rules over.

Im a fan of Gaimans work, but I never read The Sandman, so I came to the series blind, with none of the inherent delight someotherreviewershad seeing beloved characters and storylines reenacted, apparently quite faithfully. But the attempt to cram so many of those stories and characters into a 10-episode season makes for a fractured viewing experience, with little sense of throughline. All the pieces are there rich references, creepy villains and charming heroes, visuals full of Easter eggs yet there are no stakes, nothing the characters are fighting for or against.

The series opens with Dream captured by a rogue magician, who has stolen the tools of his trade sand, a ruby and a weird gas mask, all of which are apparently essential to his power yet none of which have clear uses. Halfway through the season, Dream has escaped and recovered his tools, and the show has entirely forgotten the havoc supposedly wreaked on humanity by his time in captivity. Later, he destroys peoples beloved dreams of lost spouses or parents because of the strict rules that govern the Dreaming, yet we never learn why these rules exist, leaving Dream feeling bureaucratic and self-serious.

Dreams, we are told over and over, are immensely powerful and essential to life itself, but we never see how or why. The series cant keep still long enough to build any depth, relying on the audience to inherently recognize the sinister weight of a character like Lucifer by name alone instead of having to develop it. Characters resort to making clumsy soliloquies on peoples ability to change or the power of hope, unable to naturally demonstrate those ideas.

There are standalone episodes that are quite charming, largely when the show leans into Gaimans talent for references and religion. (Gaiman produced the show, but only wrote the opening episode). In the sixth episode, Dream makes a man immortal and meets him every 100 years to check in on whether he hates life yet; along the way, he also helps Shakespeare get famous. In another arc, he follows his sister, Death, as she gracefully ushers people away from life, allowing an elderly Jewish man an extra moment to say the Shema before he leaves the world.

And the series excels when it abandons itself to a dark sort of whimsy instead of focusing on Dream and his pompous responsibilities. We meet Cain and Abel, for example, and learn that Cain murders Abel daily, only for him to resurrect from a shallow grave, forgiving his elder brother each time. Theres a cereal convention that is a thinly veiled conference for serial killers, where they all listen to keynotes in a boring hotel room just like any other conference.

All the pieces are there, and I found myself fighting to see something deeper, sure that there was a message to grasp. But perhaps the lesson to see is that while mythological and religious stories have truths to tell us, dreams can only show us fragments, just like the show. The Sandman might be a story about stories, but it doesnt manage to tell one of its own.

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'Sandman' is haunted by Judaism, mythology and God knows what else - The Jewish News of Northern California

What about the tenth of Av? – Religion News Service

Posted By on August 10, 2022

(RNS) OK, Rabbi. You told us what happened on Tisha BAv, on the ninth day of Av. The Temples were destroyed, as well as other terrible things that happened to the Jewish people.

Do we know what happened the day after like, say, on the 10th of Av?

Hmnn.

Lets imagine the 10th day of Av, or thereabouts, in the year 70 of the Common Era.

The Talmud (Gittin 56b) tells the following story.

Jerusalem was in flames. In utter despair, the Jews put their quite-alive leader, Yochanan ben Zakkai, into a coffin, so that they could smuggle him out of Jerusalem.

The Roman soldiers spotted the procession. They demanded that the Jews halt, and then asked: Who is in the coffin?

The Jews responded: Our teacher and leader, Yochanan ben Zakkai, has died.

The soldiers replied: Then let us pierce the coffin with our spears, to make sure that he is really dead!

How can you do that? It is bad enough that our teacher has died; would you now desecrate his body?

The soldiers allowed them to pass.

When they were outside the walls of Jerusalem, Yochanan leaped out of the coffin and saw the Roman general, Vespasian, and greeted him: Hail, Emperor of Rome!

This did not endear Yochanan to Vespasian. I am not the Emperor. I am merely a general.

Moments later, a messenger arrived on horseback. He told the general that the emperor had died, and that the general was to take his place.

Grateful to Yochanan, the general, now emperor, asked him: What can I give you as a reward?

To which Yochanan famously replied: Give me Yavneh, and its sages.

At Yavneh, south of modern-day Tel Aviv, the sages of Jerusalem knew that they faced the mother of all existential problems.

Their Judaism had centered itself on the Temple in Jerusalem the place of pilgrimage, national gathering and sacrificial offerings.

What would they do, now that the Temple was in ashes? What would they do when they could no longer offer sacrifices?

In retrospect, their solution was brilliant, revolutionary and the epitome of religious adaptation.

As Jewish Renewal Rabbi Marcia Prager put it: The rabbis at Yavneh were the midwives of a paradigm shift.

No more altar in Jerusalem? OK. They would relocate Judaism from the Temple to the home more precisely, to the table. That would become their new sacrificial altar.

Cant sacrifice lambs anymore at the Temple for Pesach? OK. We move the whole thing to the table in the home. We institute the Passover Seder. We start working on the Haggadah.

Cant offer sacrifices anymore? We cope. We create a new religious language of prayer, Torah study and mitzvot.

While they were at it, the sages in Yavneh decided what books would be included in the Tanakh (the Hebrew Bible), and which would be left on Gods cutting room floor. They reestablished the Sanhedrin, the legal system of ancient Judaism. They formulated the Amidah, the classic statement of Jewish prayer.

That whole scene where Yochanan leapt out of the coffin?

That is a fantasy of resurrection. For that is exactly what the sages did. In Yavneh, the sages resurrected we might say rebooted Judaism.

One year at Yavneh, Rosh Hashana fell on Shabbat. Yochanan ben Zakkai did the unthinkable. He blew the shofar.

Outrageous! Completely contrary to tradition! How could Yochanan have done such a thing?

We must blow the shofar, Yochanan said, because it is a wake-up call. Not just the Temple, but our entire world of meaning has disappeared. We cannot bring that world back, but perhaps the blasts of the shofar can inspire us to create anew.

Over the past 2,500 years, Jews have heard the story of Yavneh, and they have internalized that story as their own wake-up call.

In 1923 in Warsaw, Poland, the writer and poetHillel Zeitlindreamed of a new Yavneh. (Arthur Green writes beautifully of Zeitlin in A New Hasidism a must-read.)

Zeitlin dreamed of creating an intentional, elite community of young Jews who would reinvigorate Judaism with the spiritual energy and enthusiasm of Hasidism. Their new Yavneh would replenish modern Judaisms storehouses of study and activism.

Zeitlin died on the road to the Treblinka death camp on Sept. 2, 1942, wrapped in a tallit and tefillin. With his death, his dream died, as well.

In 1960, young Orthodox Jewish students dreamed of a new Yavneh. They wanted a new kind of spiritual invigoration, of not only ethnic pride and socializing, but of religious intensity. Yavneh would become the name of their college organization, which would be guided by such luminaries as Rabbi Irving (Yitz) Greenberg. Yavneh was short-lived; by 1980, it had folded.

In the 1970s, the guru of Jewish Renewal, the late Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, picked up the sparks from the ashes of Zeitlins dream and once again dreamed of a new Yavneh.

Is there a problem with the story of Yavneh? In the words of my teacher, Yehuda Kurtzer, president of the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America, the story of Yavneh is actually the story of an exclusive Judaism.

Think about it. Yochanan ben Zakkai flees from Jerusalem with several of his students. He leaves the other Jews of Jerusalem behind. He asks for Yavneh as a city of refuge. As he does this, he is bowing down to Roman authority and ingratiating himself to Roman authority. True, he saves Judaism and/or leads the process to reimagine a Judaism without the Temple. But, it comes with a price.

There is, however, a second story of renewal after the catastrophe. It is a story that I have only recently learned from Yehuda. It might be a better story.

It is the story of Usha, a city in the Western part of Galilee. It was to that city, as well as to Yavneh, that some sages also fled. They moved the Sanhedrin from Yavneh to Usha, and then from Usha back to Yavneh, and a second time from Yavneh back to Usha.

The leader in Usha was Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel. There, the sages did not exactly reinvent Judaism, but they made many reforms.

These are my favorites:

They ruled that if people knew that the president of a Jewish court had behaved badly, the first resort was not to excommunicate him. Rather, they would ask him to show self-respect by resigning his post. If he persisted in the same act, only then would the community excommunicate him.

They ruled that it would be unlawful for any person to be wasteful with his own money, goods or property. They were not allowed to give more than one-fifth of their money to tzedakah, so that they themselves would not have to become the recipients of tzedakah.

They ruled that young people could read publicly from the Megillah on Purim.

They ruled that parents could compel their children to have an education.

And then, we have this amazing teaching from the midrash (Shir Ha-Shirim Rabbah 2:5):

At the end of the persecution our rabbis entered Usha (followed by their names) They sent a message to the house of the Elders of the Galilee and said, All who have already studied, let them come and teach, and all who have not yet studied, let them come and study.

Amazing! They issued a general invitation. If you have studied, then come teach. If you have not studied yet, come learn. They basically said: The study of Torah is open to everyone. Anyone can become a student, and anyone can become a teacher.

And then, this is what follows. They entered, and learned, and met all their needs.

Not just their intellectual needs; all their needs. As a response to persecution; as a result of trauma what did these refugees from Jerusalem do?

They created a genuinely open and diverse community not only of those who learned, but of those who cared.

In a time that has seen, and continues to see, its own version of trauma this plague that has not yet abated I think that this is what people need from their religious communities.

The three Cs: community, content and caring.

Sign me up.

Who else is in?

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What about the tenth of Av? - Religion News Service

How Holocaust Tourism Changed This Jewish Dads Views on Fatherhood – Kveller.com

Posted By on August 10, 2022

Occasionally you find an author whose work is so riveting you never want to put it down. Such is the case with Jerry Stahl his disruptive fiction proves what a national treasure he is.

Known for his 1995 bestselling memoir of drug addiction, Permanent Midnight, which was adapted into a 1998 film starring Ben Stiller, Stahl has worked for years in film (Bad Boys II) and television (Hemingway & Gellhorn, CSI and Escape at Dannemora, for which he received an Emmy nomination). The author of 10 books (Perv: A Love Story, I Fatty), his journalism has appeared in Esquire, the New York Times and a variety of other publications.

In a world where antisemitism is on the rise, Stahls latest book, Nein, Nein, Nein!: One Mans Tale of Depression, Psychic Torment, and a Bus Tour of the Holocaust, becomes even more of an important read.

Exploring the bizarre world of Holocaust tourism, Stahl embarked on a guided bus tour across Poland and Germany in fall 2016, visiting Nazi concentration camps, forever changing his life.

I was in a dark place with my depression and I wanted to find a place that would match that level of despair. There was no place more appropriate to visit, Stahl told Kveller.com.

Stahl initially wrote about his trip for Vice. The experience altered his relationship with Judaism to such an extent, he was inspired to delve even deeper into the material. He told Kveller how the bus tour impacted his relationship with his parents, children and Judaism.

On Being a Parent

The trip allowed Stahl to confront his own personal and historical demons with two dozen strangers on the bus tour, examining his own failures as a father.

For me, all parenthood, on some level, is an endless contemplation of things that can go wrong. Whether catastrophizing exists as some epigenetic Jewish trait, instilled in the DNA after generations of torment, abuse, and state-sponsored terror or its sprung up in response to the Jews Will Not Replace us madness unleashed since our white nationalist president told the Proud Boys to stand by, my fear for the world my children will inherit has never been greater. That so much of America, essentially now buys into the racist, bigotry-soaked rantings of todays Joseph Goebbels may be the most terrifying truth of all. We love to say, Never Again. Maybe, after the Tree of Life slayings, its time to modify that sentiment to Until Now.

Stahl lost his father to suicide when he was just a teenager.

My theory of parenthood is pretty simple. You try to fuck your children up the opposite of how they fucked up you, and hope things land in the middle. At a minimum, one promise I made myself is that I would never, to the best of my ability, inflict my mental health issues (i.e. depression, neurosis, narcissism, etc.) onto my kids. Life is hard enough without forcing your offspring to deal with your own psycho-emotional failings.

He continued: I loved my father though in retrospect, he left this earth before I really got to know him. And I am not sure, for that matter, that he got to know me. But what memories I have are the ones I hang onto.

Given that history, there is nothing more important to Stahls world than his children.

Whether they live in the same city or a thousand miles away, that contact, and that love the non-stop demonstration of concern, and care, and genuine interest stands out as a primary focus of my own life.

Stahl remains grateful for his powerful two week experience, because it brought him a newfound appreciation for fatherhood.

It is impossible not to project your own family into the brutal history you confront at the camps, he said.

Think about what happened and try to imagine anything more horrifying than having your child deliberately ripped from your arms. To see their little tiny shoes was so heartbreaking. It made me feel even more lucky to be a father; its an absolute miracle to bring a child into this world.

On Judaism

While he is not a practicing Jew, Stahl has a strong connection to the culture; loving the distinctive voice and spirit of Jewish writers and comedians for as long as he can remember.

Its hard to imagine a world without Lenny Bruce, and Oscar Levant and Joan Rivers and [he continues]. Too many genius talkers and thinkers and straight-up tummlers to remember in one place. Without them, the world would be a far drearier place. And whether Jew or non-Jew you wouldnt want to live in it.

Stahls experience taught him that, practicing or not, Jews are Jews.

Writing this book, which took me to the historically Jew-killing countries, the feeling was inescapable. Reform or Orthodox, Conservative or bagels-and-lox, whatever kind of Jew you are, when the knock comes at three in the morning, when youre dragged out and thrown on the train, it does not matter whether youve rigorously celebrated Shabbos, or last set foot in a synagogue two decades ago at your great-uncles funeral. The monsters who hate Jews dont care what kind of Jew you are. And neither did the ovens. End of story.

Despite this confronting realization, Stahls been ongoingly comforted by Judaisms resilience.

One of the most inspiring, and undeniable truths about Judaism is that, no matter what, it somehow endures. How many cultures, through the millennia, how many people on the planet have come and gone? Call it the Jews Revenge. The thousand year Reich, to name but one, came and went in twelve years. (Discounting, of course, the random Hitler fans whose fuhrer-love has morphed into lust for Donald Trump.) Even with the ever-swelling ranks of American and global Nazis, its safe to say there are, for now, still more Jews left in the world than white nationalist fascists and fundamentalists who want them dead. Though who knows how long we have before the ax[e] falls again.

One only has to look at a newspaper to see that its not a matter of if the Holocaust could happen again, its a matter of when.

Its happening right now in the Ukraine. For the Yemenis its happening in Yemen. For the Somalis, in Somalia. Or you could talk about the slow-motion genocide of death by global warming, by environmental pollution choose your poison, he said, wearily.

All one can do, as a writer, is chronicle the internal effect of the external savagery.

More here:

How Holocaust Tourism Changed This Jewish Dads Views on Fatherhood - Kveller.com

Why Are There So Many Jewish Lawyers? – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on August 10, 2022

At the beginning of the book of Devarim, Moses reviews the history of the Israelites experience in the wilderness, starting with the appointment of leaders throughout the people, heads of thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens. He continues:

And I charged your judges at that time, Hear the disputes between your people and judge fairly, whether the case is between two Israelites or between an Israelite and a foreigner residing among you. Do not show partiality in judging; hear both small and great alike. Do not be afraid of anyone, for judgment belongs to G-d. Bring me any case too hard for you, and I will hear it. (Deut. 1:16-17)

Thus, at the outset of the book in which he summarized the entire history of Israel and its destiny as a holy people, he already gave priority to the administration of justice: something he would memorably summarize in a later chapter (Deut. 16:20) in the words, Justice, justice, shall you pursue. The words for justice, tzedek and mishpat, are repeated, recurring themes of the book. The root tz-d-k appears 18 times in Devarim; the root sh-f-t, 48 times.

Justice has seemed, throughout the generations, to lie at the beating heart of Jewish faith. Albert Einstein memorably spoke of Judaisms pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, an almost fanatical love of justice, and the desire for personal independence these are the features of the Jewish tradition which make me thank my lucky stars that I belong to it. In the course of a television program I made for the BBC, I asked Hazel Cosgrove, the first woman to be appointed as a judge in Scotland and an active member of the Edinburgh Jewish community, what had led her to choose law as a career, she replied as if it was self-evident, Because Judaism teaches: Justice, justice shall you pursue.

One of the most famous Jewish lawyers of our time, Alan Dershowitz, wrote a book about Abraham, whom he sees as the first Jewish lawyer, the patriarch of the legal profession: a defense lawyer for the damned who is willing to risk everything, even the wrath of G-d, in defense of his clients, the founder not just of monotheism but of a long line of Jewish lawyers. Dershowitz gives a vivid description of Abrahams prayer on behalf of the people of Sodom Shall the Judge of all the earth not do justice? (Gen. 18:25) as a courtroom drama, with Abraham acting as lawyer for the citizens of the town, and G-d, as it were, as the accused. This was the forerunner of a great many such episodes in Torah and Tanach, in which the prophets argued the cause of justice with G-d and with the people. (See Abraham: The Worlds First (But Certainly Not the Last) Jewish Lawyer, 2015, by Dershowitz.)

In modern times, Jews reached prominence as judges in America among them Brandeis, Cardozo and Felix Frankfurter. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the first Jewish woman to be appointed to the Supreme Court. In Britain between 1996 and 2008, two of Britains three Lord Chief Justices were Jewish: Peter Taylor and Harry Woolf. In Germany in the early 1930s, though Jews were 0.7 percent of the population, they represented 16.6 percent of lawyers and judges.

One feature of Tanach is noteworthy in this context. Throughout the Hebrew Bible some of the most intense encounters between the prophets and G-d are represented as courtroom dramas. Sometimes, as in the case of Moses, Jeremiah, and Habakkuk, the plaintiff is humanity or the Jewish people. In the case of Job it is an individual who has suffered unfairly. The accused is G-d Himself. The story is told by Elie Wiesel of how a case was brought against G-d by the Jewish prisoners in a concentration camp during the Holocaust. At other times, it is G-d who brings a case against Bnei Yisrael.

The word the Hebrew Bible uses for these unique dialogues between heaven and earth is riv, which means a lawsuit, and it derives from the idea that at the heart of the relationship between G-d and humanity both in general, and specifically in relation to the Jewish people is covenant, that is, a binding agreement, a mutual pledge, based on obedience to G-ds law on the part of humans, and on G-ds promise of loyalty and love on the part of Heaven. Thus, either side can, as it were, bring the other to court on grounds of failure to fulfill their undertakings.

Three features mark Judaism as a distinctive faith. First is the radical idea that when G-d reveals Himself to humans He does so in the form of law. In the ancient world, G-d was power. In Judaism, G-d is order, and order presupposes law. In the natural world of cause and effect, order takes the form of scientific law. But in the human world, where we have free will, order takes the form of moral law. Hence the name of the Mosaic books: Torah, which means direction, guidance, teaching, but above all law. The most basic meaning of the most fundamental principle of Judaism, Torah min haShamayim, Torah from Heaven, is that G-d, not humans, is the source of binding law.

Second, we are charged with being interpreters of the law. That is our responsibility as heirs and guardians of the Torah she-be-al peh, the Oral Tradition. The phrase in which Moses describes the voice the people heard at the revelation at Sinai, kol gadol velo yasaf, is understood by the commentators in two seemingly contradictory ways. On the one hand it means the voice that was never heard again; on the other, it means the voice that did not cease, that is, the voice that was ever heard again (Deut. 5:19). There is, though, no contradiction. The voice that was never heard again is the one that represents the Written Torah. The voice that is ever heard again is that of the Oral Torah.

The Written Torah is min ha-shamayim, from Heaven, but about the Oral Torah the Talmud insists Lo ba-shamayim hi, It is not in Heaven (Bava Metzia 59b). Hence, Judaism is a continuing conversation between the Giver of the law in Heaven and the interpreters of the law on Earth. That is part of what the Talmud means when it says that Every judge who delivers a true judgment becomes a partner with the Holy One, blessed be He, in the work of creation (Shabbat 10a).

Third, fundamental to Judaism is education, and fundamental to education is instruction in Torah, that is, the law. That is what Isaiah meant when he said, Listen to Me, you who know justice, the people in whose heart is My law; do not fear the reproach of men, nor be afraid of their insults (Is. 51:7).

This is what Jeremiah meant when he said, This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the L-rd: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their G-d, and they shall be My people (Jer.31:33).

This is what Josephus meant when he said, 1,900 years ago, Should any one of our nation be asked about our laws, he will repeat them as readily as his own name. The result of our thorough education in our laws from the very dawn of intelligence is that they are, as it were, engraved on our souls. To be a Jewish child is to be, in the British phrase, learned in the law. We are a nation of constitutional lawyers.

Why? Because Judaism is not just about spirituality. It is not simply a code for the salvation of the soul. It is a set of instructions for the creation of what the late Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein, ztl, called societal beatitude. It is about bringing G-d into the shared spaces of our collective life. That needs law: law that represents justice, honoring all humans alike regardless of color or class; law that judges impartially between rich and poor, powerful and powerless, even in extremis between humanity and G-d; law that links G-d, its Giver, to us, its interpreters, the law that alone allows freedom to coexist with order, so that my freedom is not bought at the cost of yours.

Small wonder, then, that there are so many Jewish lawyers.

See the article here:

Why Are There So Many Jewish Lawyers? - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com


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