Page 316«..1020..315316317318..330340..»

Israeli foreign minister condemns Russia’s Lavrov for ‘unforgivable …

Posted By on June 30, 2022

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid condemned his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, for comments he made standing by Russia's claim that it invaded Ukraine in part to root out Nazism, dismissing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's Judaism as irrelevant and suggesting that Adolf Hitler "had Jewish blood."

The Italian news channel Zona Bianca pressed Lavrov on the issue during an interview Sunday, asking him how Russian President Vladimir Putin can claim he is trying to "denazify" Ukraine when Zelenskyy is Jewish.

RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE: LIVE UPDATES

"So what if Zelensky is Jewish," Lavrov said, The Times of Israel reported. "The fact does not negate the Nazi elements in Ukraine. I believe that Hitler also had Jewish blood."

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pauses during a news conference in Moscow, Nov. 30, 2021. (Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service via AP)

Lavrov went on to say that "some of the worst antisemites are Jews."

Lapid full-throatedly condemned Lavrov's remarks, calling them "unforgivable" and "outrageous."

"Foreign Minister Lavrovs remarks are both an unforgivable and outrageous statement as well as a terrible historical error," the Israeli foreign minister said. "Jews did not murder themselves in the Holocaust. The lowest level of racism against Jews is to accuse Jews themselves of antisemitism."

Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that it had "summoned the Russian Ambassador to Israel for a clarification meeting with the Deputy Director-General for Eurasian Affairs."

The claim about Hitler's Jewish blood traces back to Hans Frank, who served as governor-general of Poland during the Holocaust, whose memoirs suggest that Hitler's paternal grandmother had been impregnated by a Jewish man. Historians have long countered this assertion as flimsy and based on an unreliable source.

ZELENSKYY TURNS NAZI RHETORIC ON RUSSIA, SAYS US AID PROGRAM WILL DEFEAT THEIR IDEOLOGICAL SUCCESSORS

Lavrov's remarks came in the same week that Israel commemorates the Holocaust. Speaking to The Times of Israel, the head of Israels Yad Vashem Holocaust museum, Dani Dayan, condemned Lavrovs remarks as "false, delusional and dangerous, and worthy of all condemnation."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks from Kyiv, Ukraine on Thursday. (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)

Putin's attempt to justify his invasion as a "denazification" effort plays on the Russian public's longstanding hatred for the Nazi regime, but Zelenskyy is Jewish and had family members perish in the Holocaust. Russian officials have compared him to Jews who were forced to collaborate with Nazis.

On Friday, Zelenskyy condemned Russian soldiers as "even more cynical" than Hitler's troops.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Yerevan, Armenia. (Shutterstock)

"Russian troops manage to be even more cynical than the Nazis 80 years ago," he said. "At that time, the invaders did not say that it was the Mariupol residents and the defenders of the city who shelled and killed themselves."

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Ukrainian president predicted that U.S. aid in the form of the Lend-Lease program "will help Ukraine and the whole free world beat the ideological successors of the Nazis, who started a war against us on our land."

Fox News' Caitlin McFall contributed to this report.

Tyler O'Neil is an editor at Fox News. On Twitter: @Tyler2ONeil. News tips can be sent to: tyler.oneil@fox.com.

Here is the original post:

Israeli foreign minister condemns Russia's Lavrov for 'unforgivable ...

Congregation Ahavas Israel is a Staple of West Michigan Conservative Judaism Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Grand Rapids Congregation Ahavas Israel is a welcoming community to all who seek a spiritual path using traditional Jewish practice in a modern, egalitarian Conservative Jewish setting. Ahavas Israel offers a warm Shabbat experience, as well as diverse activities for families and adults, including Torah study, Junior Congregation, art workshops and a community garden.

Ahavas, made up of about 90 household units, has a fascinating history and has changed over the years from Orthodox to an egalitarian, inclusive, Conservative congregation.

In 1892, 15 families joined together to form Temple Beth Israel, the first Orthodox congregation in Grand Rapids. It grew quickly over the next two decades, but in 1911, a dispute over the presence of girls on the bimah singing in the choir caused a small group to form the second Orthodox synagogue in Grand Rapids, Ahavas Achim. Over the next 27 years, both congregations continued to grow and were virtually the same size when they merged in 1937, forming Congregation Ahavas Israel.

Following WWII in 1947, Ahavas Israel, like many other congregations, formally joined the United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism. While then the ritual of the congregation was Orthodox, such things as mixed seating, womens voices in the choir and an emerging bat mitzvah ritual made for a natural transition to Conservative Judaism.

Ahavas Israel moved to Lafayette Street in 1953 and into its current building in 1971, which features a large and small sanctuary, religious school classrooms, a library, meeting room, two kosher kitchens and a social hall. It also houses the Jewish Federation of Grand Rapids.

Ahavas Religious Life Committee creates a wide variety of religious programming that involves the congregation in active participation. Programming includes a Schmooze n Schmear breakfast on Shabbat morning, services with a monthly speaker series and a Torah study group after Kiddush.

The activities committee plans movie nights, trips out of town and other social get-togethers for adults, families and youth.

Ahavas makes up one half of the United Jewish School (UJS), a combined religious Sunday school also serving the Reform congregation of Grand Rapids, Temple Emanuel. In general, Ahavas Israel has a close relationship with Temple Emanuel.

Its been a wonderful school and a model for partnerships between Reform and Conservative congregations and what we can do to improve our educational programming by working in partnership, said Rabbi David Krishef, Ahavas head rabbi who has been with the congregation for 28 years. Weve been able to engage in the partnerships with Temple Emanuel while still maintaining our identity as a relatively traditional but egalitarian Conservative congregation.

Ahavas Corner of the Field Garden provides three deliveries a week of various vegetables to the Temple Emanuel food pantry and/or other organizations that provide food distribution. They have distributed approximately 2,000 pounds a year for the past three years. In addition, a group from Ahavas Israel volunteers monthly preparing meals for those in need.

Ahavas, Temple Emanuel and the UJS entered a three-way partnership last summer and hired a full-time cantor, Cantor David Fair. Fair spends most of his time with Temple Emanuel and the school but helps out on many Shabbat and holiday mornings on a part-time basis at Ahavas.

Ahavas Cantor Emeritus, Stuart Rapaport, has been a lay cantor for 45 years.

Krishef takes pride in Ahavas being a Conservative congregation that serves a large part of West Michigan and beyond.

Weve had members from Lansing, Holland, Grand Haven, Muskegon, Ludington and more, Krishef said. We cover a wide area, and we also really try to create a big tent congregation. We have a very good program for Jews by choice, thats an important part of our congregation.

Watch Ask the Rabbi with Rabbi Krishef

Originally posted here:

Congregation Ahavas Israel is a Staple of West Michigan Conservative Judaism Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

Abortion access is a Jewish value: Reaction to Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade – Forward

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Abortion rights demonstrators outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Friday, June 24, 2022, after it overturned Roe v. Wade, ending constitutional protections for the right to an abortion. Photo by Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg via Getty Images

By Beth HarpazJune 24, 2022

The U.S. Supreme Courton Friday overturned Roe v. Wade. The decision ended constitutional protections for the right to an abortion that had been in place for nearly 50 years. Abortion opponents have fought for decades to outlaw the procedure. Abortion will now likely be banned in about half of the states.

Here is a sampling of reaction from the Jewish community.

The Jewish Council for Public Affairs: Prohibiting abortion access is contrary to Jewish law, traditions, and our principal value of saving a life; it enshrines specific religious imperatives in American law. Judaism compels us to stand for all life, and we prioritize the life and health of a pregnant person.

Hadassah: Hadassah, The Womens Zionist Organization of America, reaffirms its unwavering support for full and complete access to reproductive health services and the right to make decisions based on each womans religious, moral and ethical values. Hadassah will continue to fight for federal and state legislation affirming and protecting reproductive rights.

U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY): Today is a victory for life, for family, for the constitution, and for federalism. When my daughters, Mikayla and Arianna, were born 14.5 weeks early, I had the opportunity to witness life in the second trimester and it was absolutely beautiful. In a state that has legalized late term partial birth abortion and non-doctors performing abortion, in a state that refuses to advance informed consent and parental consent, and where not enough is being done to promote adoption and support mothers, today is yet another reminder that New York clearly needs to do a much better job to promote, respect and defend life.

Keshet(LGBTQ rights): This Supreme Court decision is the culmination of a decades-long campaign by an extremist, predominantly white Christian minority to impose their religious and cultural beliefs on the majority of Americans who support abortion rights. Keshet, and the Jewish and LGBTQ+ communities, will fight to reverse this court decision and ensure abortion access for all.

Rabbinical Assembly (representing Conservative rabbis): The RA is outraged by the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court to end the Constitutional right to abortion and deny access to lifesaving medical procedures for millions of individuals in the U.S., in what will be regarded as one of the most extreme instances of governmental overreach in our lifetime.

Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America: The Orthodox Union is unable to either mourn or celebrate the U.S. Supreme Courts overturning of Roe v Wade. We cannot support absolute bans on abortionat any time point in a pregnancythat would not allow access to abortion in life-saving situations. Similarly, we cannot support legislation that does not limit abortion to situations in which medical (including mental health) professionals affirm that carrying the pregnancy to term poses real risk to the life of the mother. The right to choose (as well as the right to die) are thus completely at odds with our religious and halachic values. Legislation and court rulings that enshrine such rights concern us deeply on a societal level.Yet, that same mandate to preserve life requires us to be concerned for the life of the mother.

Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance (Jofa): As a matter of faith, Jofa supports every womans legal right to make decisions about, and have control over, her own body, without the involvement of the government or any other entity.

Womens Rabbinic Network: The Torah, the Mishnah, and the Talmud Judaisms most sacred and authoritative texts do not view a fetus as a soul until it is born. Rather, a fetus is considered part of the parents body until delivery. Indeed, the word for soul neshama also means breath, because Judaism teaches that life begins not at conception or with a heartbeat but with the first breath. Therefore, forcing someone to carry a pregnancy that they do not want or that endangers their life is a violation of Jewish law because it prioritizes a fetus over the living adult who is pregnant. This must be understood as a violation of the United States Constitution which guarantees our freedom to practice our religion and also our freedom from the dictates of other religions.

Hillel International: Our tradition teaches that our most sacred obligation is the preservation of human life, and were dismayed that this ruling will make it more challenging to fulfill that promise for the students, professionals, and community members we serve.

Rabbi Jill Jacobs, CEO of Truah: Todays ruling ignores the First Amendment right for Jews to practice their religion without government interference, and will also have life threatening implications for millions of Americans, primarily low-income people of color, by giving states the power to revoke essential health care from nearly half the population.

Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington:Even under its strictest, most traditional interpretation, Jewish law mandates the termination of a pregnancy in certain circumstances involving the life or health of the mother. While we respect other religions belief that life begins at conception, Jewish law has no such dictate. Accordingly, a ruling holding that a fetus is a person effectively elevates one religious viewpoint over others and infringes upon Jewish pregnant individuals right to follow the tenets of their faith.

Read the original:

Abortion access is a Jewish value: Reaction to Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade - Forward

Community invited to Shabbat Under the Stars at Temple Beth-El – Daily Herald

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Area residents are invited to join with Temple Beth-El members and enjoy Shabbat Under the Stars from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on Friday, July 15.

The gathering will be held in the congregation's large garden area at 3610 Dundee Road, Northbrook.

Attendees are invited to bring the family, their own picnic dinner, blanket and lawn chairs. An ice cream truck will provide delicious treats after the service at about 7 p.m.

There is no fee to attend but registration is requested at http://www.templebeth-el.org/event/Shabbat-Under-The-Stars-July2022.

Should weather become an issue, the event will be moved inside Temple Beth-El. Vaccination is required to attend (for those who are eligible to be vaccinated).

"Shabbat Under the Stars is a great way for folks to meet the Temple Beth-El community and clergy," said Rabbi Sidney Helbraun of Temple Beth-El. "I encourage everyone to grab a patch of grass, enjoy a picnic dinner, feel the embrace of friends who join together with open hearts to feel the peace of Shabbat on a summer night."

"Sunshine, laughter, friends, ice cream and song -- there's no better way to enjoy a summer night," Rabbi Helbraun added.

Get to Know Temple Beth-El: Vibrant Judaism, Welcome Home

Temple Beth-El, a Reform congregation, is an engaging destination for connection, comfort, joy, and spirituality.

"We are a home where all are encouraged to explore their knowledge, faith and activism within a safe atmosphere to find their place in Judaism," said Rabbi Helbraun.

The congregation, currently observing its 150th year, celebrates diversity and is warm and welcoming to all including the LGBTQ+ community, interfaith families, blended families, single-parent families and people from all walks of life and anyone interested in learning more about Judaism.

Rabbi Helbraun added, "If you have school-age children, we invite you to get to know our revitalized Religious and Hebrew School. We offer varied options for busy families seeking high-quality Jewish and Hebrew education for their children. More than anything we'd love to meet you and introduce you to our Temple, our beautiful, inspiring spaces, our warm and welcoming community."

For additional information about membership and the Religious and Hebrew School, contact Temple Beth-El, by reaching out to Laurie Orenstein, executive director, at (847) 205-9982 ext. 211; email Lorenstein@templebeth-el.org; or visit http://www.templebeth-el.org.

Link:

Community invited to Shabbat Under the Stars at Temple Beth-El - Daily Herald

Shalom Rubanowitz: The Rabbi on the Beach – Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 30, 2022

On the Venice Beach boardwalk, just steps away from trendy restaurants, weed shops, tattoo parlors and, of course, the ocean, is an Orthodox synagogue with three bright blue Stars of David on its facade. Its called the Pacific Jewish Center, AKA the Shul on the Beach, and its there that Rabbi Shalom Rubanowitz welcomes Jews of all kinds. A typical Shabbat service might include those who are observant, those who are unaffiliated, young professionals, community residents and visitors to the popular SoCal destination.

Given his unique congregation, its no surprise Rubanowitz became the synagogues spiritual leader in a non-traditional fashion. Over the weekend of July 4, 2015, with his daughter Dena he Airbnbd a boat in Marina del Rey. He called the Shul on the Beach to see if anyone could offer Shabbat hospitality.

We hit the Shabbos invitation jackpot and were invited to the home of a lovely couple from the shul, with whom I became great friends, Rubanowitz told the Journal. When the shul needed a rabbi a few years later, Im told I was the first call.

The rabbi, who is originally from the Fairfax district and attended Yavneh Hebrew Academy, has been working at the synagogue since 2015, but hes been a lawyer and a pulpit rabbi for over 20 years. He learned at Beth Medrash Govoha in Lakewood, New Jersey, and received ordination while he was there, became certified in Jewish marriage and family law and gained admission to the Bar in 14 states.

Growing up, Rubanowitz spent three years in Israel when his parents decided to make aliyah and try living there. While in the Jewish State, he studied in Safed and Jerusalem.

That was a big part of my life, he said. I gained new knowledge of a broader Jewish world outside of just our local community. I learned Hebrew and understood Israeli life.

Rubanowitz had no intention to become a rabbi. While his parents raised him and his nine siblings to be learned, he wanted to take a different path from his five brothers; all of them became rabbis and teachers and didnt go to college. He attended Rutgers Law School, where he came across a rabbinic opportunity.

I got a place to live above a shul and in exchange, I was the rabbi, he said. I was a part-time rabbi and just never stopped. I knew I wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but I never thought Id go into the rabbinate. Once I saw I could do both, I kept it up throughout my career.

Going to college gave Rubanowitz a more open-minded perspective, one which would serve him well at the Shul on the Beach.

I recognized there is a lot of wisdom and knowledge in the secular world, he said. If youre a rabbinic student or raised very Orthodox, you may think this is the only way to go and other people are wrong. It gets very insular and can create a feeling that you know the truth and the truth is only held by those who grew up Orthodox. Going to law school, I was able to see the value of human beings in the secular world and relate to them. It made my religious and secular worlds better, giving me a broader perspective on my religious life.

Rubanowitz calls himself the out-of-the-box Orthodox rabbi. When he first came to the Shul on the Beach, it was in survival mode, because many of the congregants had moved to the La Brea and Pico-Robertson Jewish communities. Working with the remaining shul members, he came up with ways to ensure the shul not just survived, but thrived.

I focused on creating a place where people can find a home and connection, he said. Now its in a revival, where people are joining us for Shabbat meals and services. People are happy to be part of a community.

One Friday night a month, the synagogue hosts a Shabbat lounge, where sushi and sake are served. Theyve held standup comedy shows and klezmer concerts and offer a matchmaking service, too.

I got divorced and Im still single, so I can relate to a lot of singles out there, said Rubanowitz. We have a very big focus on singles who can meet each other. Weve made some matches.

In the end, what he believes attracts people to the Shul on the Beach is its dedication to traditional Judaism while welcoming in outsiders.

In the end, what he believes attracts people to the Shul on the Beach is its dedication to traditional Judaism while welcoming in outsiders.

Were very authentic and keep the sense of tradition, Rubanowitz said. But at the same time, its very open to any kind of person who comes in. People are able to feel at home because they can connect to something authentic. Its just what their Jewish soul is looking for.

Whats your favorite Jewish food?

Shalom Rubanowitz: Can I have two? Chopped liver and good schmaltz herring.

JJ: Whats your perfect Shabbat look like?

SR: Having plenty of time to eat and learn and meet everybody and sleep.

JJ: What do you do on your day off?

SR: On Sundays, Ill take time to ride my motorcycle and sail my boat and hang out with my kids.

JJ: Whats your favorite place in Venice?

SR: I love the canals. No question about it. And my shuls library. I love my library.

See the original post here:

Shalom Rubanowitz: The Rabbi on the Beach - Jewish Journal

When Truth Is Sacrificed To Power – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

What was wrong with the actions of Korach and his fellow rebels? On the face of it, what they said was both true and principled:

You have gone too far, they said to Moses and Aaron. All of the community is holy, every one of them, and the Lord is with them. Why then do you set yourselves above the Lords people? (Num. 16:34)

They had a point. G-d had summoned the people to become a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Ex. 19:6), that is, a kingdom every one of whose members was in some sense a priest, and a nation where every member was holy. Moses himself had said, Would that all the Lords people were prophets, that the L-rd would place His spirit upon them all! (Num. 11:29). These are radically egalitarian sentiments. Why then was there a hierarchy, with Moses as leader and Aaron as High Priest?

What was wrong with Korachs statement was that even at the outset it was obvious that he was duplicitous. There was a clear disconnect between what he claimed to want and what he really sought. Korach did not seek a society in which everyone was the same, everyone the Priests. He was not as he sounded, a utopian anarchist seeking to abolish hierarchy altogether. He was, instead, mounting a leadership challenge. As Moses later words to him indicate, he wanted to be High Priest himself. He was Moses and Aarons cousin, son of Yitzhar, the brother of Moses and Aarons father Amram, and he therefore felt it unfair that both leadership positions had gone to a single family within the clan. He claimed to want equality. In fact, what he wanted was power.

That was the stance of Korach the Levite. But what was happening was more complex than that. There were two other groups involved: the Reubenites Datan and Aviram, formed one group, and 250 Israelite men, leaders of the community, chosen from the assembly, men of repute, were the other. They too had their grievances. The Reubenites were aggrieved that as descendants of Jacobs firstborn they had no special leadership roles. According to Ibn Ezra, the 250 men of rank were upset that, after the sin of the Golden Calf, leadership had passed from the firstborn within each tribe to the single tribe of Levi.

They were an unholy alliance, and bound to fail, since their claims conflicted. If Korach achieved his ambition of becoming High Priest, the Reubenites and the men of rank would have been disappointed. Had the Reubenites won, Korach and the men of rank would have been disappointed. Had the men of rank achieved their ambition, Korach and the Reubenites would be left dissatisfied. The disordered, fragmented narrative sequence in this chapter is a case of style mirroring substance. This was a disordered, confused rebellion whose protagonists were united only in their desire to overthrow the existing leadership.

None of this, however, unsettled Moses. What caused him frustration was something else altogether the words of Datan and Aviram:

Is it not enough that you have brought us out of a land flowing with milk and honey to kill us in the desert, that you insist on lording it over us! What is more: you have not brought us to a land flowing with milk and honey, nor given us an inheritance of fields and vineyards. Do you think that you can pull something over our eyes? We will not come up! (Num. 16:1314)

The monumental untruth of their claim Egypt, where the Israelites were slaves and cried out to G-d to be saved, was not a land flowing with milk and honey was the crux of the issue for Moses.

What is going on here? The Sages defined it in one of their most famous statements:

Any dispute for the sake of Heaven will have enduring value, but every dispute not for the sake of Heaven will not have enduring value. What is an example of a dispute for the sake of Heaven? The dispute between Hillel and Shammai. What is an example of one not for the sake of Heaven? The dispute of Korach and all his company. (Mishnah Avot 5:21)

The Rabbis did not conclude from the Korach rebellion that argument is wrong, that leaders are entitled to unquestioning obedience, that the supreme value in Judaism should be as it is in some faiths submission. To the contrary: argument is the lifeblood of Judaism, so long as it is rightly motivated and essentially constructive in its aims.

Judaism is a unique phenomenon: a civilization all of whose canonical texts are anthologies of argument. In Tanach, the heroes of faith Abraham, Moses, Jeremiah, Job argue with G-d. Midrash is founded on the premise that there are seventy faces seventy legitimate interpretations of Torah. The Mishnah is largely constructed on the model of Rabbi X says this, Rabbi Y says that. The Talmud, far from resolving these arguments, usually deepens them considerably. Argument in Judaism is a holy activity, the ongoing internal dialogue of the Jewish people as it reflects on the terms of its destiny and the demands of its faith.

What then made the argument of Korach and his co-conspirators different from that of the schools of Hillel and Shammai? Rabbeinu Yona offered a simple explanation. An argument for the sake of Heaven is one that is about truth. An argument not for the sake of Heaven is about power. The difference is immense. In a contest for power, if I lose, I lose. But if I win, I also lose, because in diminishing my opponents I have diminished myself. If I argue for the sake of truth, then if I win, I win. But if I lose, I also win, because being defeated by the truth is the only defeat that is also a victory. I am enlarged. I learn something I did not know before.

Moses could not have had a more decisive vindication than the miracle for which he asked and was granted: that the ground open up and swallow his opponents. Yet not only did this not end the argument, it diminished the respect in which Moses was held: The next day the entire Israelite community complained to Moses and Aaron, You have killed the Lords people! (Num. 17:6)

That Moses needed to resort to force was itself a sign that he had been dragged down to the level of the rebels. That is what happens when power, not truth, is at stake.

One of the aftermaths of Marxism, persisting in such movements as postmodernism and post-colonialism, is the idea that there is no such thing as truth. There is only power. The prevailing discourse in a society represents not the way things are, but the way the ruling power (the hegemon) wants things to be. All reality is socially constructed to advance the interests of one group or another. The result is a hermeneutics of suspicion, in which we no longer listen to what anyone says; we merely ask, what interest are they trying to advance. Truth, they say, is merely the mask worn to disguise the pursuit of power. To overthrow a colonial power, you have to invent your own discourse, your own narrative, and it does not matter whether it is true or false. All that matters is that people believe it.

That is what is now happening in the campaign against Israel on campuses throughout the world, and in the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions) movement in particular. Like the Korach rebellion, it brings together people who have nothing else in common. Some belong to the far left, a few to the far right; some are anti-globalists, while some are genuinely concerned with the plight of the Palestinians. Driving it all, however, are people who on theological and political grounds are opposed to the existence of Israel within any boundaries whatsoever, and are equally opposed to democracy, free speech, freedom of information, religious liberty, human rights, and the sanctity of life. What they have in common is a refusal to give the supporters of Israel a fair hearing thus flouting the fundamental principle of justice, expressed in Roman law in the phrase Audi alteram partem, Hear the other side.

The flagrant falsehoods it sometimes utters that Israel was not the birthplace of the Jewish people, that there never was a Temple in Jerusalem, that Israel is a colonial power, a foreign transplant alien to the Middle East rival the claims of Datan and Aviram that Egypt was a land flowing with milk and honey and that Moses brought the people out solely in order to kill them in the desert. Why bother with truth when all that matters is power? Thus the spirit of Korach lives on.

All this is very sad indeed, since it is opposed to the fundamental principle of the university as a home for the collaborative search for truth. It also does little for the cause of peace in the Middle East, for the future of the Palestinians, or for freedom, democracy, religious liberty, and human rights. There are real and substantive issues at stake, which need to be faced by both sides with honesty and courage. Nothing is achieved by sacrificing truth to the pursuit of power the way of Korach through the ages.

The rest is here:

When Truth Is Sacrificed To Power - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Voices of Faith: Celebrating LGBTQ Pride, conversion and Torah – Record-Courier

Posted By on June 30, 2022

By Rabbi Michael Ross| Record-Courier

Recently, we celebrated a week of LGBTQ Pride events to kick-off Pride month at Temple Beth Shalom in Hudson. At Hudsons Memorial Day Parade, my wife, my son and I joined the new group Pride in Hudson,'' as we marched through the parade route together. It was wonderful to hear a chorus of cheers and applause as our banner was welcomed throughout the route.

A few days later, I convened a Jewish law court, or Beit Din, as we immersed two of our conversion students to Judaism at the ritual bath or mikvah. One is trans and the other is non-binary. Tears flowed easily down our cheeks as we welcomed them ritually into the Jewish community.

Voices of Faith: You are not alone in your demand for justice in wake of gun violence

Voices of Faith: Prayer without action is meaningless in wake of Texas school mass shooting

On Friday, June 3, TBS Hudson hosted its inaugural Pride Shabbat. Four of our community members spoke about their intersections of their queer identities and their Jewish identities. We read special poems and sang a few queer anthems as well.

At our Torah Service that evening, we asked our two newest members our recent conversion candidates to carry the Torah scrolls and process them through the community. Placing the two Torah scrolls in their arms was one of the great blessings of my rabbinate. We welcomed in the holiday of Shavuot, where Jews celebrate the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. We were re-enacting that moment with our newest members. Our Judaism 101 class had joined us that evening for a special dinner. In that class we have a second small group of conversion candidates who witnessed the successful completion of the conversion journey in Judaism.

The following evening, at Bnai Jeshurun in Pepper Pike, in honor of the festival of Shavuot, TBS co-sponsored an all-night community study session to prepare us for the moment of receiving the Torah. We were joined by more than a dozen other groups. I was one of the first teachers that evening, and I led a session about the Book of Ruth, which is the special study text for the holiday. Ruth is the story of a non-Jewish woman who is considered the first convert to Judaism. I spoke about how before the pandemic, I had one or two students a year interested in conversion, maybe. During the first year of the pandemic that number grew to 5. This year it grew to more than a dozen students from TBS and Kent State Hillel who are now studying for conversion. The majority of these conversion students are part of the LGBTQ community, and its up to us to welcome them with open arms.

Our Jewish community is broadening and expanding. It is such a joy and blessing to have these new faces in our community who challenge us to love them with the same unconditional love that Ruth showed Naomi in the Book of Ruth.

May we go from strength to strength.

Rabbi Michael Ross is the Rabbi at Temple Beth Shalom in Hudson and the Senior Jewish Educator at Kent State Hillel. He also teaches in the Jewish Studies department at Kent State.

Continued here:

Voices of Faith: Celebrating LGBTQ Pride, conversion and Torah - Record-Courier

Statement from the JCRC on the overturn of Roe v. Wade – Heritage Florida Jewish News

Posted By on June 30, 2022

For 50 years,Roe v. Wadehas been the settled law of the United States. Today, in its decision onDobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Center, the Supreme Court overturnedRoe v. Wade, revoking the Constitutional right of a woman to terminate a pregnancy and sending the authority to regulate reproductive rights back to the states.

Judaism cherishes human life, requiring Jews to set aside all ritual and religious obligations to preserve it. At the same time, Judaism recognizes that a fetus is not an independent individual, and the life and welfare of a pregnant woman takes precedence. Todays Supreme Court decision strips women of the Constitutional protection to a crucial aspect of self-determination for their own lives and welfare, opening the door for even further restrictions by the states.

The Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Orlando includes rabbis from different denominations and backgrounds. They may disagree on some points of halakhah (Jewish religious law), but they fully concur that access to safe and legal pregnancy termination stands fully within the boundaries of Judaisms legal framework.

Those who remember the pre-Roe v. Wadeera are painfully aware that laws curtailing reproductive rights forced women to put their health and lives at risk to terminate a pregnancy. This alone flies in the face of tenets of Judaism.

Roe v. Wadeallowed women to make their own choice a highly personal, emotional, and difficult choice regarding a pregnancy. The Supreme Courts action today takes away that choice, with the very real possibility of causing devastating physical and emotional damage. At no time and in no way didRoe v. Wadeever interfere with a womans reproductive choice. OverturningRoe v. Wademost certainly does.

While the motivation for this Supreme Court ruling is not expressly a religious one, it would be nave to think religious belief was not at all a factor. OverturningRoe v. Wadenow allows states to restrict or deny Jewish women, as well as those of other faith traditions and worldviews, access to health care that is permissible under halakhah, through the passage of laws influenced by a particular religious ideology.

There is serious concern that theDobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organizationruling may not only embolden more restrictive state laws but result in targeting other aspects of reproductive health. We stand with the majority of Americans, who support a womans right to choose.

Continued here:

Statement from the JCRC on the overturn of Roe v. Wade - Heritage Florida Jewish News

A Jewish prescription for July 4th skepticism | The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on June 30, 2022

July Fourth is a challenging holiday for me. How is it possible to reconcile the beautiful sentiments about liberty and equality in the Declaration of Independence with the fact that its primary author and many of the documents signers owned slaves?

I have experienced similarly conflicted feelings in synagogue. How is it possible to reconcile the God that commanded us to love our neighbor as we love ourselves with the Almighty who destroyed the world in a flood and killed every Egyptian first-born?

Gods inconsistent behavior as expressed in the Torah also troubled the revered theologian Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. In his seminal book God in Search of Man, he grappled with this issue in a way that is applicable to my contradictory feelings about Americas origins.

Get The Jewish Chronicle Weekly Edition by email and never miss our top storiesFree Sign Up

Heschels book addressed the serious problem of a number of [Torah] passages which seem to be incompatible with our certainty of the compassion of God. Some Jews ignore these passages, or claim that criticism of Torahs content is heretical. In my synagogue, Torahs declaration that homosexuality is an abomination is chanted in hushed tones.

I wanted to lash out against Gods inhumanity. Yet, I did not know how to do so without jettisoning Torah as a whole an option which would be tantamount to rejecting my heritage.

Heschel emphasized that Gods cruelty stands in sharp contrast with the compassion, justice and wisdom of [Torahs] laws. Rebelling against God when He violates these principles [endows] us with the sensitivity that rebels against all cruelty.

In seeking authority to dissent, Heschel looked to those prophets who dare to Challenge [Gods] judgement. They included Abraham, who argued (unsuccessfully) against Gods plan to destroy Sodom; Moses, who talked God out of destroying the Israelites for worshiping the golden calf; and Job, who called out God for treating the righteous unfairly.

By holding up these prophets as role models, Heschel relieved me from thinking that rebellion was inconsistent with embracing my heritage. Registering disappointment when God failed to live up to His noble ideals elevated, rather than degraded, Judaism.

A similar dynamic defined my relationship with Americas founders. I revered them for envisioning a nation grounded in respect for inalienable rights, led by a government that derived its authority from its citizens. How these same men could be so blind to their cruelty angered and disappointed me.

These contradictions have led some Americans to reject the founders in full, while others claim that criticizing our beginnings is unpatriotic. My reading of history has forced me to struggle with the dilemma of identifying with a national heritage grounded in both the lofty vision enshrined in our founding documents, and the shameful values exhibited on the founders plantations.

Heschels depiction of the prophets rebelliousness against God as a path to arousing empathy, enabled me to comfortably hold my disappointment with Washington, Jefferson and their contemporaries, alongside my veneration for their foresight and courage. Their vision of a nation that enabled the pursuit of happiness, contrasted against the sinfulness of slavery, clearly illuminated Americas potential.

Arguing across generations with our forbearers, in order to fulfill their most noble aspirations, is a noble American tradition. Emulating their biblical counterparts, Americas civil rights prophets from Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglas, to Martin Luther King Jr. and Lyndon Johnson implicitly rebelled against the revolutionary generations sins by emphasizing the democratic spirit enunciated in their founding documents.

Rather than blasphemous, challenging the founders is a necessary step if we are to access Lincolns better angels of our nature. Lauding their accomplishments helps us to see and avoid their shortcomings.

No matter how we view our origin story, the Declaration of Independence and the sins of the men who signed it, represent the foundation of our countrys heritage. Similarly, the Torah its good and bad is the genesis of Judaism. By mirroring Gods biblical critics by holding the darkness of Americas history against its light we can honor our collective past, and use it as a springboard to a brighter future.PJC

Ben Krull is a lawyer and freelance writer, living in Brooklyn, New York.

Read more:

A Jewish prescription for July 4th skepticism | The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle - thejewishchronicle.net

Power in the Blood: True Religion and Transformation in C.S. Lewis’ Till We Have Faces – tor.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Ive been reflecting on Till We Have Faces and all the different things we could discuss. Theres more to say about Greek philosophy and how its reflected in the book, and about the Christian symbolism and nature of myth that Lewis smuggled in, or about the constant dualities which become, over and over, unifications. But Im afraid wed end up with more words than the book has itself, so Ive decided to limit myself to two more articles. In two weeks, well explore how Lewis views of women shifted and changed over the years, and how this book is, in many ways, a rebuttal to his own previous views.

But first, this week were going to talk about an underlying theme of Till We Have Faces: Lewis thoughts about how a true religion must function.

Ill mention one obvious thing to start: Lewis believes that the truest religions must have mysticism at the core. This is true in all his books. No one changes without meeting Aslan, or recognizing Maleldil, or getting on the bus to Heaven. Lewis cared deeply about theology and wanted Christians to get it right in what they believed. But at the end of the day the most important thing (the only important thing?) was seeing God face to face. For Lewis, it was the transformational moment, the mystical experience, of meeting Christ (Aslan, etc.) that formed the core of true faith. Obviously this is true in Till We Have Faces, as Psyche and then eventually Orual become something greater than human after interacting with the gods.

Now, lets look at a speech Lewis once gave to some young clergymen. Were going to look at a decent-sized chunk of it, and apologies in advance for some of the ways Lewis talks about other religions as well as tribal peoples (the word savages is used, among other things that may reveal he knew a little less about some religions than he thought). You can read the entire speech here if you like.

Well start where Lewis is talking about how to find a religion that is true. Which is to say, not just a set of beliefs, but something that we could look at and say, This is real and honest and insightful. Something that is the product of actual mystical union with God, not simply a construct of belief.

He starts by saying this:

I have sometimes told my audience that the only two things really worth considering are Christianity and Hinduism. (Islam is only the greatest of the Christian heresies, Buddhism only the greatest of the Hindu heresies. Real paganism is dead. All that was best in Judaism and Platonism survives in Christianity.) There isnt really, for an adult mind, this infinite variety of religions to consider.

A couple of notes. Were pretty used to thinking of Islam as a completely different religion than Christianity, but it was common in Lewis day (and still in many scholarly circles) to refer to it as a heresy of Christianity. In other words, its an offshoot of Christianity where the beliefs of the Christian segment moved away from orthodox theologies to become something else. (Much in the same way that Christianity could be called a heresy of Judaism.) Lewis suggestion here is that Islam is not more true than Christianity, but less. He also sees Buddhism as a heretical offshoot of Hinduism, and is saying essentially the same thing (Any truth in Buddhism can be seen perhaps more clearly in Hinduism or something to that effect.)

Real paganism is dead is such a delightfully Lewisian thing to say that I laughed when I first read it. Lewis loved (ancient) paganism so much. Its funny because many orthodox Christians are vehemently opposed to paganism, ancient or modern, but we have to remember that Lewis saw himself as one who had come to Christ through paganism. His love of myth and Greek gods and Norse mythology was the pathway toward Christianity for him. Its one of the reasons he could write a novel about Greek myth and never once mention Christ (or even a singular supreme being) and then be surprised that the Christian community never embraced the book the same way that they did, say, The Screwtape Letters. In any case, his point here is that while there may be things like Wicca or neopaganism (he was indeed aware of these), in his opinion there was nothing like true paganism anymore. No doubt he means something much more along the lines of Merlin in That Hideous Strength.

All that was best in Judaism and Platonism survives in Christianity. While he dismisses Islam and Buddhism as mere heresies, Lewis sees the Christian departure from Judaism as a strength (as we might expect). Christianity, in his view, held on to the most valuable bits of Judaism. The Platonism bit is interesting. Weve talked before about how Lewis was enthralled by the neo-Platonism of Charles Williams, to the point that it distressed J.R.R. Tolkien. But theres a long history of Christians in the West dragging Platonic thought into their theology, from Justin Martyr to Augustine and straight through the medieval period to today. I suppose Lewis is mentioning it to point out that Platonic philosophy alone was inferior to what it could be when incorporated into Christianity.

And then, in his last sentence, he says, There isnt really, for an adult mind, this infinite variety of religions to consider. Tell us what you really think, Jack! This might seem dismissive (or rather, this seems dismissive because it is), but remember that Lewis is speaking to a friendly audience of ministers. Hes not trying to convert anyone, and expects that everyone in the audience already more-or-less agrees with him. Hes not setting up an argument here so much as laying out the common ground he has with the people listening. In any case, he then comes to the meat of what were going to examine this week:

We may salva reverentia divide religions, as we do soups, into thick and clear. By thick I mean those which have orgies and ecstasies and mysteries and local attachments: Africa is full of thick religions. By clear I mean those which are philosophical, ethical, and universalizing: Stoicism, Buddhism, and the Ethical Church are clear religions. Now if there is a true religion, it must be both thick and clear: for the true God must have made both the child and the man, both the savage and the citizen, both the head and the belly. And the only two religions that fulfil this condition are Hinduism and Christianity.

Okay, so every religion according to Lewis can be divided into one of two camps: The thick religions and the clear religions. A puree or a broth. Clear religions are religions of the mind: philosophical, ethical, and universalizing. (Note that he specifically mentions Stoicism. The Fox is a Stoic, and we see him presented consistently before his death as a philosopher first, to the point that the gods are not people but helpful constructs for philosophy). Thick religions have orgies and ecstasies and mysteries and local attachments. He says, unhelpfully, that Africa is full of thick religions. Obviously Lewis hasnt spent much time studying African religious practicehes picturing a stereotypical tribal religion full of fires and witch doctors and sacrifices. We could probably do a whole article digging into that, but lets set that aside and focus on what Lewis is trying to get athe sees some religions as primarily intellectual, and others as primarily visceral.

A religion that falls into just one of those categories, he says, cannot be true. There are good things, helpful things, about both. But each is missing the truth the other has. So a true religion must be both thick and clear. And his conclusion is that the only two religions that truly have both are Christianity and Hinduism. He goes on to explain why Hinduism doesnt do it as well as Christianity, and then says this about Christian faith: It takes a convert from Central Africa and tells him to obey an enlightened universalist ethic: it takes a twentieth-century academic prig like me and tells me to go fasting to a mystery, to drink the blood of the Lord. The savage convert has to be clear: I have to be thick. That is how one knows one has come to the real religion.

Again, laying aside Lewis less-than-educated conception of African tribal ethics and religion, his point is that a true religion must have both enlightened universalist ethics as well as something visceral: Sacrifice. Blood. It is when someone like Lewisthe civilized Oxford dontakes communion and says Im drinking a blood sacrifice that we see a true religion in action.

If youve read Till We Have Faces recently, you probably already see how this concept works as a sort of key to the novel. The first priest of Ungit, when he comes to the king and says that Psyche must be sacrificed, is opposed by the Fox and Orual. Theyre arguing against the barbarity of it. Pointing out the inconsistencies in the priests theology and stories. The priest is talking nonsense. The priest is saying that the god is a beast but a shadow, a mother and son, a woman and her lover, and the sacrifice must be the worst person but also without flaw. It makes no sense to the philosopher or ethicist: A child of six would talk more sense.

The priest of Ungit is not shaken. He points out that the subtleties of Greek philosophy bring nothing concrete (rain or crops) but that sacrifice will. Greek philosophy doesnt even create men who are full of courage (didnt the Fox do the cowardly thing in a battle and thus become a slave?). No, according to the priest, Holy places are dark places. It is life and strength, not knowledge and words, that we get in them. Holy wisdom is not clear and thin like water, but thick and dark like blood.

So there we gothe priest uses the exact words Lewis did. And we see this throughout the novel, represented most overtly in the first priest of Ungit and the Fox. The priest is all blood and ritual. Lots are cast. Human sacrifices must be made occasionally, but animal sacrifice is just a part of worship, for the gods are holy and thirsty for blood and must be obeyed. Meanwhile, the Fox doesnt think the gods exist in any meaningful sense. They are stand-ins to help the ignorant understand the philosophical underpinnings of the moral world. Intellect, theory, learning, knowledge are what matters. Everything else is superstition.

Psyche, who grew up under the care of the Fox, is taken aback when she meets and converses with the old priest. She tells Orual:

The Priest has been with me. I never knew him before. He is not what the Fox thinks. Do you know, Sister, I have come to feel more and more that the Fox hasnt the whole truth. Oh, he has much of it. Itd be dark as a dungeon within me but for his teaching. And yet I cant say it properly. He calls the whole world a city. But whats a city built on? Theres earth beneath. And outside the wall? Doesnt all the food come from there as well as all the dangers? things growing and rotting, strengthening and poisoning, things shining wet in one way (I dont know which way) more like, yes, even more like the House of [Ungit].

Psyche immediately recognizes something true in the priests religion. And shes the first in the book to know that she needs both the philosopher and the priest. She embraces them both immediately, and so she goes to meet not the Beast, but the Lover. She recognizes the gods for what they are when first she has opportunity to meet them.

Note that the second priest of Ungit, a younger man, is deeply interested in the Fox, howeverhe jettisons the old ways to adopt a new, Greek version of the worship of Ungit. He doesnt mesh the two, he turns the House of Ungit into a house of Greek philosophy with a new goddess complete with a new and more beautiful Ungit statue and a new way of doing things.

Orual sees a woman who comes into the house and still pours a bit of blood on the old stone of Ungit, she asks her if she always prays to the old Ungit, and the woman tells her, That other, the Greek Ungit, she wouldnt understand my speech. Shes only for nobles and learned men. Theres no comfort in her. The new priest has failed to incorporate the clear into the thick; he has merely exchanged one for the other.

The Fox learns his lesson about thick and clear, but not until after he dies. Once he comes face to face with the gods he realizes (as Psyche had suggested) that his worldview was perilously narrow. The Fox even becomes a sort of guide for Orual, taking her through the underworld and showing her things she wouldnt understand without him. He apologizes profusely for having led her astray with his own thoughts when he was living.

Orual realizes in her visions of the gods that she is someone different than she thought. She thought she was enlightened, but she learns instead that she is Ungit. Horrible, ugly, blood-gorged Ungit, who she hates. And Psyche, who is on the road to godhood, is working to make Ungit beautiful. Orual, confused and frustrated, is told that she will also become Psyche.

I think this is a part of the novel thats confusing for a lot of people. This just means were in the same place as Orual. Her first thought is, To say that I was Ungit meant that I was as ugly in soul as she; greedy, blood-gorged. But if I practised true philosophy, as Socrates meant it, I should change my ugly soul into a fair one. And this, the gods helping me, I would do. I would set about it at once.

She thinks if she doubles down on the clear religion, it will transform her and make her beautiful. But it wont. It doesnt.

What Orual needs, in reality, is two things: She must embrace the horrible reality that sacrifice is necessary; she has to accept what has happened to her sisterin fact, she discovers that she has begun to participate in that sacrifice, taking on her sisters suffering and thus beginning the process of becoming her. She has to become thick, in Lewis words. And she must, once she sees herself clearly, come at last into mystical communion with the gods. She must see them and herself as they truly are.

Psyche brings the magical casket from the underworld that will make Ungit beautiful, and it is Orual who is transformed. Or, not exactly. It is Oruals vision of herself that is transformed and she realizes she has always been beautiful. She has been wooed by the gods just as surely and just as long as Psyche has.

She has died before she died, so that she might live and become her true self. Psyche is a goddess now, but even more, Psyche had become her true self. As Orual/Ungit takes the casket, she came to the highest, and to the utmost fullness of being which the human soul can contain.

And now voices began to say that the god was coming to judge her.

Orual looks down into a pool of water and sees herself: Two figures, reflections, their feet to Psyches feet and mine, stood head downward in the water. But whose were they? Two Psyches, the one clothed, the other naked? Yes, both Psyches, both beautiful (if that mattered now) beyond all imagining, yet not exactly the same.

When the god comes and pronounces his judgment of Orual, it is both simple and complex. He looks on Orual and says only these four words, You also are Psyche. The god has spoken. The god has answered all her questions. She sees herself at last, she sees the god clearly at last, and she learns what she has never once dared to think her entire life: she is beautiful, and the god loves her.

We do not see everything that comes next, though its clear if we stop to think about the book or Lewis theology for a moment. Orual has died, and now must die again (she doesher old body gives out a few days after this final vision). And then, having embraced true religion, she will marry the Beast, the son of Aphrodite, Cupid, the god and be united with the Divine Nature. She is not only Orual, after allshe is also Psyche.

Matt Mikalatos is the author of the YA fantasy The Crescent Stone. You can follow him on Twitter or connect on Facebook.

More here:

Power in the Blood: True Religion and Transformation in C.S. Lewis' Till We Have Faces - tor.com


Page 316«..1020..315316317318..330340..»

matomo tracker