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At least 9 cities in the Twin Cities metro targeted with antisemitic, racist flyers – Bring Me The News

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Multiple communities around the Twin Cities have seen antisemitic and white supremacist notes distributed this summer to residential areas.

Since July 1,the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas (JCRC) has found flyers distributed in the following areas in the Twin Cities metro:

The JCRC condemned the acts this week.

The Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas (JCRC) condemns the distribution of noxious propaganda fliers in neighborhoods across the Twin Cities metro area. Compounding this ugly antisemitism is the invasion of tranquil neighborhoods during the night," the civil rights group stated.

The St. Louis Park Police Department and city officials said they are investigating after flyers were distributed in the city this past weekend.

St. Louis Park Mayor Jake Spano received one of the fliers at his home overnight Sunday into Monday, July 24-25. He called the discovery "disgusting and sad." He added that the acts are having an opposite effect on people than what the person(s) responsible are intending.

This morning I, and those in my neighborhood, awoke to anti-semitic flyers left at our homes which served as a disgusting and sad reminder that religious-based hate remains a pervasive problem. Ive been in contact with residents of multiple faiths today and I can tell you that whatever the people spreading these hateful messages think they are accomplishing in dividing people, its having the exact opposite effect," Spano said in a statement on Monday.

Similar happenings have occurred over the summer, however, police have not confirmed a connection between each incident. Despite that, the JCRC has attributed these incidents to a national extremist group based in northern California.

The first known instance of antisemitic flyers in the metro this summer was in June in St. Paul, with Sgt. David McCabe telling Bring Me The News that flyers were found at the Newman School-Talmud Torah.

As was first reported by TC Jewfolk, a Reddit user posted a photo of the St. Paul flyer, which shows a revolver crushed in a first over the Israeli flag and the Star of David, opposite of a satanic pentagram. There are also 21 Jewish lobbyists, politicians and lawyers pictured on the page.

The Edina Police Department is still investigating after slurs and other derogatory statements were found written on school tennis courts over the July 16-17 weekend.

On July 10, the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MN) condemned racist flyers distributed in Lino Lakes. Sen. Roger Chamberlain (R-Lino Lakes) expressed "zero tolerance for this behavior."

A week before that, on July 3, white supremacist propaganda flyers were distributed around Cottage Grove. The flyers were found in driveways across the city.

"Hate will not be tolerated in Cottage Grove. Period. The information contained in these flyers does not represent what we stand for as a police department or a community," Cottage Grove Police Chief Pete Koerner wrote.

Police in St. Louis Park are asking if anyone has received the flyer to call the department at 952-924-2618. In addition, authorities are asking for video of the person or people responsible, if by chance home security cameras recorded them in the act.

Read more here:

At least 9 cities in the Twin Cities metro targeted with antisemitic, racist flyers - Bring Me The News

The God Squad: From the mailbag | Opinion | pressrepublican.com – Plattsburgh Press Republican

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Q: In your recent column, Are there many paths to heavenly salvation?, you discussed the differences in worshiping God. As you pointed out, non-Christians have perhaps the most difficulty with John 14:6: Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh to the father but by me. Yes, this verse serves as a divide between Christians and many other religions. Yes, Jesus said: I am the way; but let us interpret the way as love. Isnt it possible that love is the way? Isnt it more meaningful? Will it not serve as a stepping stone to harmony among all religions?

l John 4:7 reads: Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God, and he who loves is born of God and knows God. Perhaps, more Christians should become aware of the beauty of this verse. J

A: I love your compassionate solution to one of the most vexing texts in the Christian Testament. However, Jesus was a person not a synonym for love. Jesus loved but Jesus was not love. If the Beatles were right and Love is all you need, then the need for Jesus atoning death and resurrection would evaporate.

Christianity is not just love and only love. Christianity is a religion that saves believers from sin. Love may be enough dear God I wish you were right but there is much more that is needed for salvation than just love. To quote the prophet Micah chapter 6 we need to do justice. love mercy and walk humbly with our God. Whatever those commandments mean, they surely mean more than just being a loving person. I am not insulted by John 14:6 but I cannot find myself in that verse. Still, I do wish you were John and that you could go back and edit that difficult verse.

Q: In the Jewish faith is there a belief in an afterlife? G in West Haven, CT

A: Yesbutnot until the arrival of post-biblical Judaism called rabbinic Judaism, which added the Talmud to the list of Jewish sacred texts after the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans in the first century of the common era. In the Bible, there is no belief in life after death. For example, Jobs comforters never mention Heaven as an answer to him because they did not have it. Then, in the year 331, before the common era, Greek ideas of matter and form began to be accepted by teachers who would later be called rabbis. They taught that our bodies (matter) die and decompose but our souls (form) live on with God in the World To Come (Heb: olam habah).

This teaching was adopted by the early Christians and later by the Muslim faith and called Heaven. However, it all began with Judaism. Many rabbis do not speak about this luminous teaching of Judaism and this troubles me greatly.

Q: Can God forgive someone who has talked to spirits in the cause of good and to help people? If they decide to stop doing it because God doesnt like it, can they then be forgiven? Thanks. Looking for a true bible answer her. P

A: Talking to spirits or using psychics to communicate with the dead is expressly forbidden by Judaism and Christianity.

The reason for this prohibition is that their powers, even if they are real, draw us away from Gods words and seduce us into following the words of human beings. These mediums also can have a financial motivation to create their predictions. I have also seen that such psychics can block a mourners grief work by convincing them that death is not a real final barrier between the living and the dead. Father Tom Hartman, my pal, did not agree with me. He was much more open to what he believed to be the healing powers of psychics. I came to believe that such dialogues with the dead ought to be a surprise not an appointment, and that they should happen without any professional assistance. However, I am definitely going to check this out again with Tommy when we meet up in Heaven.

As to your question there is no doubt that God can and will forgive a brief and mistaken dalliance into the spirit world. The Christian Testament affirms this in a true Bible answer, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men; but the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit shall not be forgiven unto men (Matthew 12:31). Sitting in while some person you pay rings up grandma Mary may be a sin but it is not an unforgivable sin against the Holy Spirit. So dont worry, but try to keep your conversations limited to people who have an area code.

Send ALL QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS to The God Squad via email at godsquadquestion@aol.com. Rabbi Gellman is the author of several books, including Religion for Dummies, co-written with Fr. Tom Hartman. Also, the new God Squad podcast is now available.

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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The God Squad: From the mailbag | Opinion | pressrepublican.com - Plattsburgh Press Republican

Two rabbis, from two different denominations, get a second chance at love J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 28, 2022

In the beginning, the relationship was secret. Neither Rabbi Amy Wallk nor Rabbi Mark Cohn wanted to worry their respective congregations, especially when they still had so much to consider. It was like Wallk had joined the CIA, her sister joked.

But eventually they realized this relationship was the real deal, and the time had come to make some serious choices. Wallk served Temple Beth El in Springfield, Massachusetts, and Cohn was at Temple Emanuel in Winston-Salem, North Carolina (though he was raised in Moraga and attended Temple Isaiah in Lafayette).

One big decision they faced was that one of them (or both) would have to relocate if they wanted to be together. It wasnt the sort of decision either expected to be making at that stage in their lives.

After her divorce, Wallk gave little thought to new relationships. She was far more cognizant of the personal example she wanted to set for her three children. I felt it was better to be lonely and divorced than lonely and married, she said. I felt I could be a better model for my children being alone than in a bad marriage.

With this in mind, and newly single in her mid-50s, she wanted to be more intentional about putting herself first. In this case, that meant nurturing her religious and spiritual life which is why she ended up in Jerusalem at the Shalom Hartman Institutes three-week Rabbinic Leadership Initiative seminar in the summer of 2017.

Also present among the 125 or so rabbis was Cohn, though he was there for only five days. He was also newly divorced.

The two met one day over lunch after they both happened to sit at the same table.

Though Wallk is a Conservative rabbi and Cohn is Reform, they quickly realized they had much in common. Both loved prayer, and each had worked on revamping their movements new prayerbooks. They were both parents, both just out of decades-long marriages, and each had lost a parent in recent years. They spoke once more before Cohn departed, and it was clear they had a connection. But neither had been looking for a relationship, and the 700 miles between them in the U.S. made it impractical to consider pursuing one. They exchanged a few emails in the weeks that followed, but that was it.

Then, six weeks later, they met again at an AIPAC rabbinic seminar in Washington, D.C. This time they realized their desire to get to know each other better might outweigh the impracticalities of living so far apart.

They began to visit one another. Their communication increased. At one point, they shared the eulogies they had each written about the parent they had recently lost.

You could see the distance between us as an obstacle or a benefit, Wallk said. And I chose to go the benefit route. When I was at home, my children got my undivided attention.

But still, they knew they had to be cautious. Dating as a rabbi is always tricky, and that doubles when both people in the relationship have their own congregations. Some members of Wallks congregation had voiced their fears of losing her after the divorce, and neither of them wanted to raise concerns in their synagogues until they knew the relationship was serious.

We had a lot of things on the stovetop, Cohn said. Once we knew this was something, we needed to think about the kids, our careers and what we wanted.

Whatever happened, they agreed they couldnt both be congregational rabbis, or they would rarely see each other.

The full-time pulpit rabbinate is, necessarily so, demanding and needs full attention. If we are both doing that work [at] different [synagogues], we would be limited in time, Cohn said, adding this would be particularly true if one of them was starting a new position. We were concerned we wouldnt have the kind of time together we desire.

Of the two, Cohn had been at his congregation longer, 21 years to her 14. He said he felt he had accomplished much of what he set out to do at Emanuel: He had officiated more than 200 bnai mitzvahs, forged relationships with local clergy members and overseen many social-justice projects.

I was the one who was ready to move, Cohn said. Ive got a remarkable bride who I happen to really respect as a rabbi. Ive been in her synagogue, and I love being a Jew in the pew there.

Once that was settled, the pieces quickly fell into place: Wallk and Cohn were married on Jan. 2, 2022 at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco in front of 17 guests.

The location was an easy choice, as Cohns family has been in the Bay Area for generations, and its where his mother, Robbie Cohn, the only living parent of either of them, still lives. Additionally, multiple members of Cohns family have been married at the Fairmont, which used to be owned by Jewish philanthropist Ben Swig, for whom the old Jewish summer camp in Saratoga, Camp Swig, had been named (and which Cohn attended for many years).

Narrowing in on an officiant was harder. Their social circles had no shortage of rabbis, but few who knew both of them as individuals.

Ultimately, they decided on Rabbi David Ellenson, now chancellor emeritus of Hebrew Union CollegeJewish Institute of Religion. Wallk had met him at the University of Judaism (now American Jewish University) in Los Angeles, and Cohn took a class from him when he was an undergraduate at UCLA, and considered him a mentor ever since. Ellenson officiated from New York, projected on a big screen.

Hes the only rabbi in the whole country that knows us each as individuals and knows our families and our stories, Cohn said.

This month, Cohn moved to Springfield, and was replaced in Winston-Salem by Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker, the rabbi who was taken hostage during Shabbat services at his synagogue in the Dallas area earlier this year.

Cohn doesnt know what his next job will be, but hes excited to find out. With his passion for the environment and social justice, he could see working outside of the Jewish world.

What he does know is that, for the first time, he will live in a house with a strictly kosher kitchen, although, in general, the two have pretty good overlap in religious practices. Shes on the more liberal side of the Conservative movement and Im on the more traditional side of Reform, he said.

Like other mixed-movement rabbinical couples, they have learned to appreciate things about the others movements.

Were modeling a kind of Torah that isnt modeled very often, Wallk said, noting that women were traditionally expected to prioritize their husbands career over their own, and that people in general often put their careers above all else. There are times when your career comes first, but you only get one life to live, and you have to take care of yourself. This decision of Mark, moving to be with me and finding work, is saying we have to come first.

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Two rabbis, from two different denominations, get a second chance at love J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

As an Orthodox Rabbi, I Believe In Making Sacrifices When It Comes to Jewish Celebrations – Kveller.com

Posted By on July 28, 2022

I love what I do. Im an Orthodox rabbi and mohel, and have been for more than a decade now. That means Ive dedicated my lifes work to traditional values, and to bringing Jewish babies into the covenant. Ive been blessed to work with families from all walks of life. Much of my work is done here in Israel, but Ive also been called to work in far-flung places such as Bulgaria, Croatia and even St. Petersburg.

Many times, I work with parents who are much to my religious left. I try to do everything I can to not stand in the way of what they want. Although not in line with the traditional roles at a Brit Milah ceremony, women have often served as the Sandakit (the person who holds the baby during the bris) and as the person bestowing the newborn baby his name.

Prior to such events, parents have asked if its permissible to make these changes. I always respond the same way: That depends on who will be present at the event. If there are close family members who will be insulted by these changes, you may want to take that into consideration.

The result has been conversations leading to what I hope has been a comfortable atmosphere for all who attend. Its not an exact science, but Ive never heard of people protesting the occasion because of any alterations made under my auspices.

But thats not the case in all situations. According to aKveller article by Lynn Levy, entitled I Wont Bring My Kids to a Jewish Service Separated by Gender. Heres Why, some people refuse to attend events that make them feel religiously uncomfortable. Levy would not bring her children to a family brit milah at a Chabad house because of the communitys practice of separate seating. She refuses to do so because it enforces a patriarchal system, which teaches the children that women are not welcome. The practice of separate seating was likened to an Evangelical sermon discussing homosexuality as a sin; she would never bring her children to such a sermon, so why would she bring them to this bris?

I can empathize with the authors general discomfort. I was raised in the Conservative movement in Philadelphia and I sometimes question my decision to become a member of the Orthodox community. I fear that my values are tacitly teaching my daughters the same kind of lessons. I would never want them to think they were unwelcome or second-class citizens. It is a constant battle to make sure they know they are not only welcome, but valued community members. But thats not what this article is really about.

This article, as with all things in life, is about prioritizing values, and the authors priorities seem to be slightly skewed. Everyone has the ability and responsibility to choose a community that reflects their values. And this is of ultimate importance when creating a religious home. But no one was asking the author to make the Chabad her synagogue. She was asked to attend a family simcha for a few hours. The takeaway her children would have gotten from this act would not have been that anyone was unwelcome, but rather they would have learned the value of family.

Over the years, my wife and I, along with our children, have attended many smachot [celebrations] at synagogues we would never choose as our own. Our commitment to separate seated prayer would never keep us from these events. In fact, I see these as teaching opportunities. They are a chance to explain how multifaceted and wonderful the Jewish community is as a whole, and how even though people have different practices, we love them no less.

Whats disturbing is that, due to her actions, Levy is making an ultimatum everyone must practice Judaism as I do. But thats not the case at all. To truly be pluralistic, we must accept all forms of Judaism even though theyre not our own. That means attending smachot, even if they make us uncomfortable.

Its unclear to me why the Chabad required a separation of men and women at a brit milah. This is not the custom in Israel, and Ive been the mohel in some black hat communities. But the question isnt what should the Chabad do in this instance, but rather what Levy should have done.

I, for one, demand equal compromise. Just as I hope the more traditional attendees will put up with the alterations at events I oversee, I hope the more liberal attendees do the same when at Orthodox events. Clearly, these differences in practice are not easy for either side. But I deem this a reasonable request because we Jews, both liberal and traditional, are really one family. And, in the end, family comes first.

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As an Orthodox Rabbi, I Believe In Making Sacrifices When It Comes to Jewish Celebrations - Kveller.com

Synagogue service times: Week of July 29 | Synagogues – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on July 28, 2022

ConservativeAgudath B'nai Israel

Meister Road at Pole Ave., Lorain

Ritual Director Mark Jaffee

440-282-3307

abitemplelorain.com

750 White Pond Dr., Akron

Rabbi Jeremy Lipton

330-864-2105

bethelakron.com

27501 Fairmount Blvd., Pepper Pike

Senior Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria;

Stanley J. Schachter, Rabbi Emeritus;

Cantor Alyssa Rosenbaum

216-831-6555

bnaijeshurun.org

Anshe Emeth Beth Tefilo Congregation

27500 Shaker Blvd,

Pepper Pike, OH 44124

Joshua Skoff, Senior Rabbi

Sharon Y. Marcus, Associate Rabbi

Rosette Barron Haim, Guest Rabbi

Milton B. Rube, Rabbi-in-Residence

Misha Pisman, Cantor

Gadi Galili, Ritual Director

216-371-2244; TDD # 216-371-8579

parksynagogue.org

26811 Fairmount Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Scott B. Roland; Cantor Beth Schlossberg; Gary Paller, Cantor Emeritus

216-765-8300

shaareytikvah.org

an Independent Minyan

3246 Desota Ave., Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Michael Ungar

216-320-9667

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Montefiore Maltz Chapel

One David N. Myers Parkway., Beachwood

Rabbi Akiva Feinstein; Cantor Gary Paller

216-360-9080

30799 Pinetree Road, #401, Pepper Pike

Rabbi Eddie Sukol

216-509-9969

rabbieddie@theshul.us

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1700 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Boruch Hirschfeld

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25400 Fairmount Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Ari Spiegler; Rabbi Emeritus David S. Zlatin

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Beachwoodkehilla.org

23711 Chagrin Blvd., Beachwood

Rabbi Moshe Gancz

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clevelandjewishlearning.com

2437 S. Green Road, Beachwood

Rabbi Binyamin Blau; Melvin Granatstein, Rabbi Emeritus

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14270 Cedar Road, University Heights

Rabbi Raphael Davidovich

216-382-1958

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1771 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

Rabbi Yehuda Blum

216-321-1033

27100 Cedar Road, Beachwood

Rabbi Akiva Feinstein

Associate Rabbi Joseph Kirsch

216-831-6500

23749 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst

Rabbi Noah Leavitt

216-382-6566

office@oz-cedarsinai.org

oz-cedarsinai.org

2004 S. Green Road, South Euclid

Rabbi Yossi Marozov

216-235-6498

5570 Harper Road, Solon

Rabbi Zushe Greenberg

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office@solonchabad.com

solonchabad.com

1970 S. Taylor Road, Cleveland Heights

216-321-4875

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Rabbis Shalom Ber Chaikin and Shmuli Friedman

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info@ChabadofCleveland.com

wccrabbi@gmail.com

Hebrew Academy (HAC), 1860 S. Taylor Road

Beachwood (Stone), 2463 Green Road

Rabbis Naphtali Burnstein and Aharon Dovid Lebovics

216-382-5740

office@yigc.org

2203 S. Green Road, Beachwood

Rabbi Alexander Charlop

216-407-7398

Rabbi Steve Segar

216-320-1498

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Synagogue service times: Week of July 29 | Synagogues - Cleveland Jewish News

The New Proliferation of Female Pseudo-Orthodox "Rabbis" and More – Yated.com

Posted By on July 28, 2022

It has been a long time since I have written about the innovations of the Open Orthodox movement for good reason, boruch Hashem. For the most part, the movement has not done anything new and seems to have taken a downturn: the two Open Orthodox, co-ed (!) semicha programs in Eretz Yisroel (Beit Midrash Harel and Yashrut) appear to not have graduated anyone this year, and Yeshivat Chovevei Torah (YCT), the Open Orthodox seminary in Riverdale, only graduated two people at its annual ordination ceremony. Similarly, unlike in years past, when there was a steady flow of new teshuvot and innovations by Open Orthodox leaders introducing major changes to halacha and hashkafa, as of late, not much has been issued, and one gets the sense that things are dwindling down on that front.

However, there is one notable exception to this trend: the ordination of female Orthodox rabbis. In contrast with an acute decrease in the ordination of male Open Orthodox clergy, the female side of this enterprise has quietly mushroomed both in Eretz Yisroel and in the US, as two seminaries and a network of pseudo-Orthodox congregations have been involved in trying to radically change the Orthodox landscape and its future leadership profile.

Ever since the major American Orthodox organizations effectively banned the notion of female clergy (see sidebar for details), efforts have been made to surreptitiously undermine the ban and sneak things in under the radar. For example, Congregation Beth Sholom of Providence recently hired Rabba Amalia Haas as its Director of Spiritual Engagement. Haas, who completed the Executive Ordination program at Yeshivat Maharat in Riverdale (the Open Orthodox seminary that grants semicha and full rabbinic titles to women), not only teaches at Beth Sholom, but also delivers occasional sermons from the pulpit on Shabbos mornings and provides pastoral guidance, according to the congregations literature.

Rather than refer to Haas as Assistant Rabbi or Associate Rabbi, Beth Sholom has cleverly employed the title of Director of Spiritual Engagement for Haas in order to evade censure by the Orthodox establishment. So too, prior to this, Congregation Anshe Sholom Bnai Israel (ASBI) in Chicago retained Rabbanit (i.e., female rabbi her husband is not a rabbi) Leah Sarna as its Director of Spiritual Engagement. Sarna, too, was ordained at Yeshivat Maharat and was listed as clergy at ASBI, where she periodically delivered sermons on Shabbos mornings from pulpit. Again, ASBI utilized the artifice of a title that was fabricated for female clergy to slip past the system.

Similarly, Congregation Beth Abraham of St. Louis retains Maharat Rori Picker Neiss as Religious Consultant, Congregation Beth Israel of Berkely, CA retains Maharat Victoria Sutton as Director of Education and Community Engagement, and Congregation Shaar Hashomayim of Montreal retains Rabba Rachel Kohl Finegold as Director of Education and Spiritual Enrichment. So long as these contrived and distortive titles are used for their female clergy, these congregations basically get a free pass.

ASBI has hired a new Maharat intern for next year. Other congregations that have hired Maharat interns as of late are Beth Sholom of Potomac, MD, ACT Jewish Community of Canberra, Australia, and Prospect Heights Shul of Brooklyn. 19 other congregations have hired Maharat interns over the past several years, and a total of 13 congregations have hired Maharat graduates as clergy.

There are also some important changes at those congregations that hired Yeshivat Maharat graduates several years ago. Most notable is Congregation Ohev Sholom (which refers to itself as The National Synagogue) of Washington, DC, whose rabbi, Shmuel Herzfeld, retired last year to found Yeshivas Reb Elimelech a pluralistic institution described by The Washington Post as an alternative yeshiva that welcomes people of all religious backgrounds, genders and orientations it will offer them types of ordination. (This planned yeshiva was hit with a work-stop order by city regulators for noncompliance with its construction permit and has not opened.) After Herzfelds departure from Ohev Sholom, the congregation did not hire a new rabbi, but instead made its clergywoman, Maharat Ruth Friedman, into its sole spiritual leader. Yes, this Orthodox house of worship is led exclusively by female clergy. Two other pseudo-Orthodox congregations likewise are led solely by female clergy, who were ordained by Yeshivat Maharat: Walnut Street Synagogue, led by Rabbi Lila Kadegan, and South Philadelphia Shtiebel, led by Rabbanit Dasi Fruchter. And let us not forget Hebrew Institute of Riverdale (HIR), whose founding rabbi, Avi Weiss, created the Open Orthodox movement. HIR houses Yeshivat Chovevei Torah (YCT) and Yeshivat Maharat, and its clergy roster includes Bracha Jaffe Associate Rabba and Sara Hurwitz Rabba (Part Time).

It is interesting to contrast YCT and Yeshivat Maharat. YCT has a total enrollment of 18 students in its four-year program and graduated only 2 students this year; mathematically, only 4.5 students will graduate from YCT each year over the next four years. Yeshivat Maharat currently has 28 students, divided into two tracks, and it graduated 9 students this year. What this means for the future landscape of Jewry can be significant.

(Although YCTs future impact appears to be somewhat muted, due to record-low enrollment, it has not stopped YCT from forging ahead on occasion with outrageous innovations that are further poretz geder. YCT just announced that it is hiring a Director of *Toeivah* Initiatives, and the job posting does not even specify that the candidate should be Orthodox. There is no limit to the insanity and the stark rejection of halacha and mesorah Furthermore, Rabbi Dov Linzer, rosh yeshiva of YCT, along with the heads of Yeshivat Maharat/ Rabba Sara Hurwitz and other Open Orthodox institutions, such as JOFA-Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance, Torat Chayim Rabbis/Rabbi Shmuly Yanklowitz, and Yashrut/Rabbi Daniel Landes, have been fighting tooth and nail to keep abortion legal. This includes speaking at rallies, publishing open letters on the part of the Orthodox rabbinate, and flooding the media with op-eds by Orthodox rabbinical leadership.)

Let us now turn our attention to Eretz Yisroel, where the female ordination issue has unfortunately gotten even more out of hand. Ohr Torah Stone (OTS), founded by Rabbi Steven/Shlomo Riskin and now led by Rabbi Kenneth Brander, created and houses the Susi Bradfield Womens Institute of Halakhic Leadership (WIHL), which runs a full-blown semicha-type program for women, and whose website states that:

Over an intensive period of five years the following subjects are covered:

Hilkhot Niddah (rituals involved in family purity);

Shabbat and the Jewish Holidays;

Kashrut;

Aveilut (the laws of mourning);

Kiddushin and Gittin (Jewish marriage and divorce);

Graduates of the five-year WIHL program are certified as spiritual leaders and Morot Horaah [authorized to provide direction in matters of halakha-Jewish Law] In May 2019, the WIHL hired a director of career development and placement, to strengthen the practical impact of the WIHL by opening doors and making connections so that graduates can acclimate into leadership positions within the religious public realm. Ultimately, the aim of the WIHL is to empower Jewish women with the proper skills and credentials not only to achieve self-fulfillment and earn a meaningful livelihood, but to educate, guide, inspire and provide meaningful leadership to the world Jewish community.

Until now, WIHL fellows studied a wide and diverse body of halakhic literature over the course of five intensive years, at the end of which they took the same tests that men take with the rabbanut. Our fellows become certified halakhic and spiritual leaders and have the opportunity to play halakhically appropriate roles in the Torah and larger Jewish community, explains OTS President and Rosh HaYeshiva Rabbi Kenneth Brander. The training we offer is both extensive and unique, but we recognize that we must also take it to the next level in terms of professional guidance, internships and employment.

Although WIHL and OTS leadership cleverly maneuvers so as to avoid referring to WIHL graduates as rabbis, thereby evading censure by the Orthodox establishment, it is clear that WIHL is a female semicha program and that its intent is to ordain female clergy. If WIHLs conferral of Morot Horaah titles upon its graduates, and its provision to these women of a semicha curriculum and rabbanut semicha exams, is not the equivalent of creating female rabbis, I have a bridge to sell you

Moreover, Yeshivat Maharat outright grants women semicha, with a rabbinic klaf and all; it does not hide the fact that it ordains female rabbis. It is thus quite telling that among the Yeshivat Maharat Advisory Board members, we find the names Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, Rabbi Shmuel Klitsner and Rabbanit Devorah Evron. Rabbi Riskin is the founder of OTS and WIHL, Rabbi Klitsner is WIHLs chairman, and Rabbanit Evron is WIHLs director (!). So much for WIHL not endorsing semicha for women and merely masquerading as providing some type of vague halachic leadership role.

WIHLs cohort of this past year consisted of 13 students more than Yeshivat Maharat.

OTS is planning on flooding the Orthodox world (at least according to OTS definition of Orthodox) with the equivalent of female rabbis. OTS mission and trajectory exceed those of Yeshivat Maharat and display blatant disregard for traditional Yahadus. (Thus far, one OTS-WIHL graduate serves as the sole spiritual leader of a congregation. Rabbanit Shira Marili Mirvis was chosen last year to lead Kehillat Shirat Ha-Tamar in the Israeli city of Efrat, with the blessings of OTS senior leadership and the acclamation of the Israeli Masorti [Conservative] movement. In an interview with LA Jewish Journal last April, Mirvis referred to her role as one of rabbinic leader My duties in the synagogue are to serve as the sole halakhic authority for our community, teach Torah and rule in halakhic matters, which [were] always the traditional [duties] of a rabbi in halakhic Orthodox communities. I will also counsel families and individuals, deliver sermons and teach Torah classes for our community. There are no other rabbis serving in our synagogue; I will be the sole rabbinic voice and spiritual leader in all religious matters. And, quite ironically, Rabbi Brander remarked, The chance to witness Rabbanit Shira Mirvis take on this role represents an important moment as we recognize that the place of women in Jewish leadership can go fully hand in hand with halacha and our mesorah (tradition). How anyone can claim this with a straight face is beyond me.)

It is also important to note that there is a proliferation of subpar geirus occurring under the auspices of Open Orthodox/pseudo-Orthodox clergy. Young YCT graduates who espouse very problematic hashkafic positions and are certainly not poskim or talmidei chachomim go about performing Orthodox conversions for people who clearly are not committed to full halachic observance, with these YCT graduates posting on social media about being megayer loads of people, along with pictures of the immodestly-clad intermarried couples and groups of people in Latin American countries whom these rabbis converted converts who did not fully undertake mitzvah observance and who did not appreciate the gravity of halacha. Geirus on the part of a person who is not mekabel ol mitzvos is invalid, and these cases are no exception. Boruch Hashem that the Israeli Rabbanut and mainstream American botei din do not accept these conversions. (Additionally, OTS offers conversion through the Jewish Learning Center of New York (JLCNY); the director of this program is a fringe Open Orthodox clergyman who, among other things, marches in the [toeivah] Pride Parade and celebrates other such events.)

One can speculate with much confidence that the compromised geirus policies of former Religious Affairs Minister Matan Kahana and Rabbi Eliezer Melameds very public (and roundly condemned) endorsement of conversion without kabbolas ol mitzvos played no small part in inspiring the above subpar geirus endeavors.

How did this all come about?

As one who has had previous personal contact and familiarity with many of those who are behind these wayward semicha and geirus programs, I can attest to the fact that detachment from ones rabbeim is the enabling force behind this all (as well as the fact that the younger people involved with these innovations often never had real rabbeim in the first place). The more senior leaders of Open Orthodoxy/pseudo-Orthodoxy began their misguided initiatives either after moving to countries far from their rabbeim and/or after their rabbeim passed on or were not with the mental capacity to rein in delinquent talmidim. Just like we find that those who depart from communal norms in the yeshiva/chareidi world and pioneer controversial and often problematic ventures are most often those who have moved away from the influence of their rabbeim and their former tight-knit communities, where standards were expected and enforced, so too is it with those who are poretz geder in Yahadus and launch unconventional new modes of Orthodoxy. Once these people left the shadow of their rabbeim, many of whom were anoshim gedolim, they felt free to foment upheavals and to overturn Torah norms in the name of progress.

Although the average Yated reader will probably never be personally exposed to or challenged by the damaging reforms of Open Orthodoxy/pseudo-Orthodoxy, let everyone see clearly what happens when one does not have a live rebbi to whom one submits, and what transpires when one moves away from the sphere of rabbinic authority and a communal Torah structure. The hefkeirus that ensued in the situations described above did not come in a vacuum. It was the direct consequence of a state of affairs that enabled the destructive goals to be achieved. This was a preventable churban. Let us take note and take heed.

*****

Proclamations on Female Rabbis

2010 Statement of Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah Agudah

Rabbi Avi Weiss has conferred semikha upon a woman, has made her an Assistant Rabbi at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale where she carries out certain traditional rabbinical functions, and has now given her the title of Rabbah (formerly Maharat). He has stated that the change in title is designed to make it clear that Sara Hurwitz is a full member of our rabbinic staff, a rabbi with the additional quality of a distinct womans voice.

These developments represent a radical and dangerous departure from Jewish tradition and the mesoras haTorah, and must be condemned in the strongest terms. Any congregation with a woman in a rabbinical position of any sort cannot be considered Orthodox.

2015 Rabbinical Council of America (RCA) Resolution which strengthened the 2010 and 2013 RCA resolutions on the topic

Therefore, the Rabbinical Council of America resolves to educate and inform our community that RCA members with positions in Orthodox institutions may not

2017 Orthodox Union Rabbinic Panel Position Paper on Female Clergy

For the reasons stated above, we believe that a woman should not be appointed to serve in a clergy position. This restriction applies both to the designation of a title for women that connotes the status of a clergy member, as well as to the appointment of women to perform clergy functions on a regular ongoing basis even when not accompanied by a rabbinic type title. The spectrum of functions appropriately considered as the role of clergy can be identified by duties generally expected from, and often reserved for, a synagogue rabbi. These common functions include, but are not limited to: the ongoing practice of ruling on a full-range of halakhic matters, officiating at religiously significant life-cycle events, (e.g,. brit milah, baby naming, bar mitzvah, bat mitzvah, weddings and funerals), the regular practice of delivering sermons from the pulpit during services, presiding over or leading services at a minyan and formally serving as the synagogues primary religious mentor, teacher, and spiritual guide.

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The New Proliferation of Female Pseudo-Orthodox "Rabbis" and More - Yated.com

Milwaukees Highland Park rabbi reflects on tragedy – The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on July 28, 2022

The news trucks are gone, the police tape has disappeared, and the quaint shops have reopened in Highland Park, Illinois, as the community finds its new normal even as the intense agony of the Fourth of July parade mass shooting that left seven dead and dozens injured remains fresh in many hearts and minds.

For Rabbi Evan Moffic, a native Milwaukeean who is a spiritual leader for Makom Solel Lakeside synagogue in Highland Park, the tragedy has shone a spotlight on a therapeutic and restorative sense of community, one of the enduring aspects of Judaism.

People are in pain and hurting. People are emotionally fragile and feel violated, he said. But, at the same time, people are connected. People are supporting each other. Theres a real sense of community. Theres a sense of trauma, but also a feeling of resilience.

That sense of community was felt days after the shooting when the synagogue held a healing service. Some 600 people attended, many who are not members of the synagogue. Since then, Moffic and other rabbis at the synagogue have been spending much of their time counseling and connecting with members.

As Jews, we kind of know the reality of trauma. We know the reality of hate and pain and that doesnt make it easier to digest or to process, Moffic said. In some ways, its shocking. But in other ways we know that evil is real, and these types of awful things can happen.

Moffic is a renowned speaker on faith and author of several books, including What Every Christian Needs to Know About Judaism and Reading the Old Testament Through Jewish Eyes.

The Nicolet High School graduate was not at the parade this year, but he and his wife have taken their children in years past. The couple have also eaten at the Walker Bros. Original Pancake House, steps from the shooting dozens of times, leading to his own personal, deep sense of vulnerability and fear.

Whenever were out in public, whenever were driving in a car, there is a sense of vulnerability. In some ways, it reminded me of why we have our faith and community to give place of healing and to make life meaningful, said Moffic, whose parents are members of Congregation Shalom, Fox Point. Ive done enough funerals to know that life can be taken from us at any time. And the importance of taking the moments we have with loved ones, it cant be overestimated.

A few members of the synagogue were injured in the shooting, but none were killed. The synagogue has 600 members and draws from Highland Park along with several other nearby communities.

The local faith community has galvanized around Moffic and his congregation, he said, noting that several ministers attended the healing service and a couple of imams have reached out to him since the tragedy. He has also gotten text messages and calls from various people from different points of his life, such as friends from high school and college and even couples he married a decade ago. Those calls are extraordinarily meaningful, he said.

This shooting brought a kind of human solidarity. Its sad that it takes this to bring us together, but it was still wonderful to hear from people, he said.

Moffic noted that there are few communities like Highland Park, a city of 30,000 on the shore of Lake Michigan. It is a civic minded, safe and compassionate place, he said, aspects that have paid huge dividends since the tragedy.

The amount of money raised for families hurt in Highland Park has been astronomical. We didnt even need to ask people in our congregation to support families in need. People just started giving, like there was no tomorrow. That generosity is incredibly inspiring, he said. Highland Park is a very strong Jewish community with a real appreciation of tzedakah, of giving. Horror can strike anywhere. Theres no better model of how to be resilient than we have been in Highland Park.

* * *

About this story:

Seven people were killed when a gunman fired a hail of bullets from a roof at Highland Parks Independence Day parade. Highland Park has a large Jewish population. There has not been a connection established, in the national media, between the attack and antisemitism. But the accused shooter did reportedly visit a synagogue there last Passover, wearing all black clothes, catching the attention of a security director.

Here is our collection of photos shot in Highland Park in late July, 2022:

Makom Solel Lakeside synagogue in Highland Park has a Wisconsin native for its rabbi. Chronicle photo.

Mementos of Highland Park remembering the attack can be found throughout the area. Chronicle photo.

Rabbi Evan Moffic

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Milwaukees Highland Park rabbi reflects on tragedy - The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

John Hartson in Rangers transfer confession as he raves about Rabbi Matondo and admits Tom Lawrence surprise – Daily Record

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Celtic hero John Hartson expects compatriots Rabbi Matondo and Tom Lawrence to make a telling impact at Rangers after their switch to Ibrox.

The Welsh duo are part of seven new arrivals for Gio van Bronckhorst 's side this summer, amid a rebuild in the wake of big money exits for Calvin Bassey and Joe Aribo. And Hartson was especially bullish about 21-year-old Matondo's chances for Rangers success following his permanent switch from Schalke.

The former Parkhead goal machine is also a believer in Lawrence and remains surprised to see the former Derby County man on the outside looking in ahead of the national team's first trip to a World Cup since 1958. Lawrence has been absent from recent squads and that led to a personal appeal from Wayne Rooney asking for a recall.

But Hartson is convinced both will star under the Dutchman this season. Speaking to Go Radio , he said: "Good players, I have seen a bit of Rabbi Matondo with the Welsh set-up, very quick, very direct, skilful, he's one for the future but I think he can make an impact.

"Tom Lawrence, lots of experience with the national team, with Derby, Wayne Rooney made him captain, that's how much he thought of him around the place. He can play along the front, anywhere through the middle or wide. Rob Page doesn't pick him for some reason."

While Hartson expects big things from Lawrence, he reserved his loftiest praise for jet-heeled Matondo who has turned heads during his early pre-season opportunities in Light Blue. He added: "For me, two good players, two proud Welsh lads and two good signings, especially Matondo who is a threat. He likes to take players on. Only likes to go one way, one thing on his mind, he's very positive. That's a good signing, Rabbi Matondo."

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John Hartson in Rangers transfer confession as he raves about Rabbi Matondo and admits Tom Lawrence surprise - Daily Record

Nice Jewish kids struggle with addiction, too. Its past time for a Jewish solution – Forward

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Medical workers and police treat a woman who has overdosed on heroin, the second case in a matter of minutes, on July 14, 2017 in Warren, Ohio. Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The stigma of addiction in our community is deeply ingrained and ever-present. We know this because weve each experienced it firsthand.

Rabbi Michael Perice: As a young, enthusiastic rabbinical intern at a local synagogue, I once suggested in an ideas meeting that the synagogue offer a program addressing addiction and recovery from a Jewish perspective. They responded: Thats not an issue that affects our community. Unbeknownst to them, I was several years in recovery from opioid addiction.

I remember thinking, how could I ever possibly share my story if my fellow Jews dont think Jews can be addicts?

Marla Kaufman: Fresh off a summer teen trip to Israel, our older sons quick descent into addiction unfolded. We were leaders in our Jewish community, deeply invested in Jewish life. Facing this devastating crisis, we turned to our synagogue for support. We not only found a lack of resources, but also a profound lack of understanding and compassion. After sending our son (who is now in long-term recovery) away for treatment, the clear message we received is: Your familys experience is an outlier.

The judgment and shame we faced led us to be unaffiliated for four years.

Perice & Kaufman: As Jewish community recovery advocates, we hear similar stories all the time, even though our experiences happened several years ago.

The real shanda lies not with the individuals and families touched by addiction, but with the greater Jewish community when it perpetuates the myth that we are not as vulnerable as others to the ravages of addiction. A mistaken belief that says nice Jewish kids (and certainly rabbis!) dont get addicted to drugs or alcohol is extremely harmful to those in our community who deserve our help and support.

This denial is confirmed by the fact that no large-scale study of substance use disorder (SUD) in the Jewish community has been undertaken. So while we do not yet have solid Jewish-specific statistics, the larger portrait of addiction in America provides a useful lens.

SAMSHAs (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration) annual National Survey on Drug Use and Health for 2020 reported that more than 40 million Americans have an active SUD, with only 6.5% receiving treatment. In May, the CDC released the heartbreaking news that drug overdoses in the U.S. reached an all-time high, killing more than 107,000 souls in 2021. And for those not tracking year to year, that is a nearly 15% increase over 2020, not to mention the 30% jump from 2019 to 2020.

The hopeful news is that over 22 million Americans are in long-term recovery, according to the Recovery Research Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital.

We know that Jews are among these statistics. Its past time for the Jewish community to live up to these words from our Torah: If there be among you a person with needs, you shall not harden your heart, but you shall surely open your hand (Deuteronomy 15:7).

The will to truly address addiction in Jewish communities has to come from the highest levels of Jewish leadership and be part of the bigger conversation on diversity, equity and inclusion and mental health. Our national Jewish umbrella organizations and major philanthropic foundations need to embrace this issue as the pressing priority it is, and as such, invest significant time, money and resources.

Robust and ongoing education for clergy and communal professionals through rabbinical and cantorial schools, Jewish education graduate programs, national denomination movements and major organizations needs to be a priority.

Individual Jewish communities must get on board as well by fostering collaboration across the spectrum of synagogues and organizations to put addiction and recovery on the community agenda. Programs and services could include addiction-specific counseling and support groups, recovery meetings in Jewish spaces and increasing awareness through dedicated Shabbat services and holiday celebrations, offering youth prevention education, hosting workshops and speakers and having books on addiction and recovery in synagogue and community libraries.

While some of this is happening in some communities, its hit and miss, and largely without the necessary consistency to make a real difference.

In 2016, journalist and author Stephen Fried wrote, It has proved nearly impossible to get most communities or, frankly, most families to view mental illness and addiction as daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, lifelong realities and medical illnesses.

This is still true today. Its going to take a great deal of commitment from our community to address the addiction epidemic meaningfully and consistently. Jewish families impacted by this disease deserve to feel seen, welcomed and supported without reservation or judgment. We would have healed faster and had fewer scars had we been embraced with understanding and compassion.

Lets no longer ignore those touched by addiction. The time for change is now, and the Jewish community can do this.

To contact the authors, email editorial@forward.com.

Marla Kaufman is executive director of Jewish Addiction Awareness Network (JAAN). Her own familys experience navigating SUD and recovery alongside her son inspires her national work with Jewish communities, clergy, families, and individuals to raise awareness, eradicate stigma and provide resources.

Rabbi Michael Perice is the senior rabbi at Temple Sinai of Cinnaminson in New Jersey. Rabbi Perice is known for his advocacy work on addiction after publicly sharing his own story of recovery from opioid addiction in 2021. He sits on the advisory board of Safehouse Philadelphia, an organization saving lives by providing a range of overdose prevention services.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover more perspective in Opinion.

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Nice Jewish kids struggle with addiction, too. Its past time for a Jewish solution - Forward

Next Dor: Jews, Brews and BBQs Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Partners Detroit Jewish Young Professionals hosted a Jews, Brews and BBQ summer event at its Platform 18 space in Royal Oak on Sunday, June 26.

We had a great turnout of more than 20 people gathering for an evening of BBQuisine, craft brews and some big Jewish ideas, said Rabbi Noam Gross.

Gross, whos also the director of Partners Professional Division, says they were running summer series like this before the pandemic and originally planned on hosting it at Belle Isle in Detroit, in hopes of giving it a more summer feel. But had to quickly change locations due to the weather.

Those who registered for the event were notified, and we were still able to give it a chill summer vibe in our building. We have a large garage door we were able to open, and people could still enjoy the outdoor feel with good food and music.

For all Partners Detroit events, Gross says, while socializing and community is important, they always implement something with depth.

We share an idea of Judaism that people can think about and take home with them. On top of that, especially post-COVID, pushing yourself to get up and get out is crucial, he said.

Everyones gotten used to locking themselves up. I think in some ways we still are struggling a little bit. Pushing yourself to meet other people and having a sense of community with a good group of people who are happy to see you is important in hopes to expand our Jewish journey together.

To see all the events Partners Detroit Jewish Young Professionals has coming up, visit partnersdetroit.org.

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