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Rabbi Englander honored for 23 years of service at Bnai Torah …

Posted By on June 28, 2022

On Sunday, May 15, Bnai Torah Congregation, a Conservative synagogue in Boca Raton, held a buffet brunch in the packed ballroom honoring Rabbi David Englander for his 23 years of service.

I asked Rabbi Englander what changes he has witnessed over the past 23 years at Bnai Torah?

He replied, The changes that come to mind, other than the people who have lived out their retirement years here and have passed away who I think of fondly and often, include these trends:

When asked what will he miss most about leaving Bnai Torah, Rabbi Englander said, I will miss the relationships we have built together over a generation. There is nothing more affirming as a rabbi than to officiate at multiple lifecycle events for the same family, and to experience both happy and sad moments of transition together.

I will miss seeing how Boca Ratons Jewish community manages its post-Covid influx from points north; our new arrivals bring ideas, commitments, and a willingness to be engaged that will hopefully be met with creativity and enthusiasm. And Im not going to lie, I will miss the warm winters.

When sharing special memories, Rabbi Englander said, I arrived in the previous century practically newly married and now a husband of almost 25 years, a parent of two college students and a high school junior. Looking back, the scope of my work and life here has been as interesting as it has been challenging.

Bnai Torah Congregation, is the only large, intergenerational Conservative congregation in the area, which meets the needs of the local Jewish community. Partnership among synagogues of different movements and a unified modeling of civil discourse, public respect, and even love among all spiritual leaders is a hallmark of my clergy colleagues in south Palm Beach county, for whom I have great respect and admiration. I will always carry memories of my blessed time here with me as the next chapter of my rabbinate begins.

Cantor Magda Fishman, Music teacher Laura Lenes and her students each sang during the celebration.

Other highlights from the event included speeches from Congressman Ted Deutch, Vice President Margie Browner-Marks and Elissa Schosheim, a member of the Board of Trustees.

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Congregant Howard Rabinowitz said, I will miss Rabbi Englander. He has made my experience at Bnai Torah very meaningful. I wish him the best.

Synagogue President Ed Sopher added I have taken many classes from Rabbi Englander and will miss him as a teacher. I will especially miss his Talmud class.

Rabbi David Steinhardt, the synagogues senior rabbi, expressed his heartfelt words at the end of the beautiful reception.

Personally, I benefited from Rabbi Englanders strong work ethic. He would take on any job and any responsibility. He was very serious about tradition and Jewish life and authentically went about his responsibilities towards it as both a teacher and pastor. Rabbi Englander has a real strong desire to attach children to Jewish life, the Conservative Movement and to our synagogue. He has deep roots and connection to Camp Ramah and saw that at every possible occasion he would try to influence youngsters to attend.

Rabbi Steinhardt continued, Rabbi Englander offered an alternative Shabbat service that was attractive to many of our younger families as they prepared for and celebrated their Bnai Mitzvahs. His relationship with those young students continued with his involvement in their lives as they grew up here in Boca Raton. He also was our rabbi who taught individuals interested in converting and practicing a Jewish life and synagogue life.

When someone makes a difference in the life of a community it should be noted. The great Bible commentator Rashi asked the question about the seemingly repetitious words in the Torah, when Jacob left Beer Shevah and went to Haran. And Rashi taught that when someone has an impact on a place and leaves that place it is diminished. Twenty three years of dedicated service is meaningful. And Rabbi Englanders service was done with total commitment.

Bnai Torah Congregation, the largest Conservative synagogue in Southeast Florida with over 1,300 membership families, is located at 6261 SW 18th St., Boca Raton. For more information call (561) 392-8566.

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Rabbi Englander honored for 23 years of service at Bnai Torah ...

Rachel Timoner, 51, rabbi helping to amplify the voices of liberal Jews – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 28, 2022

Rabbi Rachel Timoner of Congregation Beth Elohimwas selected as one of the New York Jewish Weeks 36 to Watch (formerly 36 Under 36). This distinction honors leaders, entrepreneurs and changemakers who are making a difference in New Yorks Jewish community. In 2020, she was acofounder of New York Jewish Agenda, anorganizationformed to amplifyprogressiveJewishvoices on issues likesocial justice, fighting antisemitism and supporting a democratic vision of Israel. Timoner lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

For the full list of this years 36ers, click here.

NewYork Jewish Week: Tell us about your work and accomplishments.

Timoner: My initiatives in recent years include co-founding New York Jewish Agenda, culminating this month in a gathering of 55 women rabbis with Mayor Eric Adams, demonstrating that the vast majority of New York Jews have women leaders and a progressive/liberal agenda. Ive led CBE into a long-term partnership with Antioch Baptist Church to engage in deep and real dialogue about racism and antisemitism that we hope will lead to a powerful Jewish-Black alliance for systemic change in Brooklyn.

Previously, I ran a study series on systemic racism in America and an antiracism process at CBE which led to a Dismantling Racism Team, which was part of the successful campaigns to raise the age of criminal responsibility and to win bail reform, speedy trial reform and discovery reform in the State of New York. I engaged an architect to design a sukkah about the refugee experience that led to the formation of a large Refugee Task Force which resettled refugees in Brooklyn and advocated for immigrant rights, until it spun off into an independent non-profit.

I also helped launch RAC-NY and Reform California, two statewide efforts to bring Reform Jewish values to bear on core issues of our times, such as immigration, affordable housing and racial profiling.

How does your Jewish identity or experience influence your work?

Everything about my work comes from identifying with a people who have known exile and oppression, who have survived against all odds, who never ever give up hope and who persist in the pursuit of freedom and justice.

Was there a formative Jewish experience that shaped your life path?

I left synagogue life after becoming bat mitzvah because my rabbi was unkind to my disabled father and because I found the synagogue to be vapid and materialistic. But then I made myself try out a new synagogue in my mid-20s, and I felt alive and home in a way I didnt expect. These experiences help me to understand those who feel alienated from organized Jewish life and those who are seeking a way home.

In one sentence, what was your best experience as a Jewish New Yorker?

Gathering 55 women rabbis to meet with the mayor.

Whats your favorite place in New York to take an out-of-town guest?

Prospect Park.

Want to keep up with stories of other innovative Jewish New Yorkers? Click here to subscribe to the Jewish Weeks free email newsletters.

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The post Rachel Timoner, 51, rabbi helping to amplify the voices of liberal Jews appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Rachel Timoner, 51, rabbi helping to amplify the voices of liberal Jews - Cleveland Jewish News

Why Rabbi Matondo was at Cardiff City’s training base today – Wales Online

Posted By on June 28, 2022

Rabbi Matondo sent Cardiff City fans into a mini meltdown on social media on Tuesday.

As ever during the transfer window, supporters are heightened to any potential social media activity, no more so than after watching their club make nine signings at the beginning of the window. They are practically expecting a new arrival every day.

And Matondo did little to quash excitement on Tuesday when he posted on his Instagram a photograph outside Cardiff's academy training base, accompanied by two blue love hearts.

READ MORE : Rabbi Matondo wanted by Scottish giants Celtic and Rangers

Bluebirds fans were quick to jump to conclusions, hoping Matondo had jumped the gun and announced his homecoming prematurely. Unfortunately, that's not why he was there.

He was actually there accompanying his younger brother, Japhet, who had gone in for his education induction for first-year scholars where they go through the requirements of the course. The academy kids are expected back in for pre-season training later this week.

The 16-year-old, who has been at the club since he was nine years old, is very highly thought of within City's academy, just like his older brother was before he moved to Manchester City. Japhet, a Wales youth international, was included in WalesOnline's five Bluebirds youngsters to watch out for, which you can read here.

Japhet, who can play on both flanks, has attracted interest from elsewhere in recent months, too, with Leeds United, Celtic and Rangers thought to have been monitoring the youngster, who scored three goals in 12 games for the under-18s despite being two years young.

As for older brother Rabbi, well there was perhaps understandable murmurings about a potential move given he has been linked with a number of clubs coming into this window following a positive loan spell to Cercle Brugge, through which he forced himself back into the Wales set-up, away from Schalke.

Coincidentally, both Celtic and Rangers were understood to be eyeing up a move for the Wales international earlier this summer, too.

The former Cardiff youngster racked up 10 goals in 27 games for Cercle Brugge which has seen his stock rise markedly. However, it seems parent club Schalke, who recently completed a return to the Bundesliga, are willing to let the Welshman move on to pastures new in this window.

Cercle were understood to be keen on keeping the winger, while city rivals Club Brugge were also believed to be admirers.

Reports on the continent have previously suggested that the 21-year-old was close to signing on for Anderlecht before Vincent Kompany's departure, while Fulham and Bournemouth have also shown an interest in taking him to the Premier League.

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Why Rabbi Matondo was at Cardiff City's training base today - Wales Online

‘Attacks the integrity of the Jewish family:’ Congregation fights against SCOTUS abortion ruling – WPBF West Palm Beach

Posted By on June 28, 2022

ACTIVISTS OF ALL FAITHS BACKGROUNDS AND AGES CONTINUE TO SPEAK UP AFTER THE CONTROVERSIAL ROE VERSUS WADE DECISION. FRIDAY OUR SUJI NAM HAS THE STORY FROM UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP IN NORTH PALM BEACH WITH MORE ON HOW THEY SAY THIS NEW LAW ATTACKS THE JEWISH FAITH. WERE GOING TO FIGHT BACK. THATS THE MESSAGE DOZENS OF PEOPLE CAME OUT TO SAY TONIGHT TO SHOW THEIR SUPPORT FOR WOMENS RIGHTS. COMMUNITY MEMBERS OF ALL AGES JOINED RABBI BARRY SILVER SUNDAY EVENING TO VOICE THEIR OPINIONS ALLOWED AGAINST THE SWEEPING US SUPREME COURT DECISION ON ROE V WADE THIS IS A BATTLE THAT HAS TO BE FOUGHT BY --. AND LIBERAL CHRISTIANS AND NON-CHRISTIANS AND ATHEISTS AND OLD AND YOUNG AND MEN AND WOMEN. EVERYBODY HAS TO COME OUT AND FIGHT BACK. FAVORITE DEMOCRACY CONGREGATION. LADOR VADOR HAD RECENTLY FILED A LAWSUIT AGAINST GOVERNOR RON DESANTIS AFTER HE SIGNED THE 15-WEEK ABORTION BAN INTO LAW RABBI SILVER TELLS US THOSE RESTRICTIONS GO AGAINST JUDAISM, BUT IF YOU WANT TO GO TRADITIONAL JUDAISM YOU WANT TO GO WITH THE BIBLE WHICH THE CHRISTIAN FUNDAMENTALISTS CLAIMED TO DO AND THEN HAVE NO CLUE WHAT IT SAYS BECAUSE THEY CANT READ HEBREW. LIFE BEGINS AT BIRTH THE LEGISLATION TO GO INTO EFFECT IF SHE NEEDS AN ABORTION FOR HER MENTAL WELL-BEING FOR HER EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING FOR HER HEALTH SHES NOT ONLY ENTITLED TO IT. SHES REQUIRED BY JEWISH LAW TO HAVE AN ABORTION. THIS LAW. THIS LAW WILL PENALIZE AND CRIMINALIZE JEWISH LAW ON FRIDAY GOVERNOR RON DESANTIS TWEETED QUOTE, FLORIDA WILL CONTINUE TO DEFEND ITS RECENTLY ENACTED PRO-LIFE REFORMS AGAINST STATE COURT CHALLENGES WILL WORK TO EXPAND PRO-LIFE PROTECTIONS AND WILL STAND FOR LIFE BY PROMOTING ADOPTION FOSTER CARE AND CHILD WELFARE. IT WOULD END THE PRACTICE OF JUDAISM AS WE KNOW IT IT ATTACKS THE INTEGRITY OF THE JEWISH FAMILY AND WE REACHED OUT TO THE GOVERN. OFFICE FOR A COMMENT AND HAVE YET TO HEAR BACK IN NORTH P

'Attacks the integrity of the Jewish family:' Congregation fights against SCOTUS abortion ruling

Updated: 10:23 AM EDT Jun 27, 2022

"We're going to fight back" - that's the message community members are sending in North Palm Beach.Dozens of people gathered at First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Palm Beaches to show support for women's rights after the sweeping U.S. Supreme court ruling on Roe v. Wade. "This is a battle that has to be fought by Jews, and liberal Christians, and atheists and old and young and men and women. Everybody has to come out and fight back to save our democracy," Rabbi Barry Silver of Congregation L'Dor Va-Dor, told WPBF 25 News. The congregation had also recently filed a lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis, after he signed the 15-week abortion ban into law. Rabbi Silver said those restrictions are against Judaism."If you want to go traditional Judaism if you want to go with the bible, which the Christian fundamentalists claim to do and that have no clue what it says because they cannot read Hebrew, life begins at birth," Rabbi Silver said.The latest: WPBF 25 News coverage on PoliticsThe 15-week abortion ban legislation is set to go into effect July 1. The current restriction on abortion is set at 24 weeks. The state, however, faces various lawsuits, in addition to that filed by the congregation."If she needs an abortion for her mental wellbeing, for her emotional wellbeing, for her health, shes not only entitled to it. Shes required by Jewish law to have an abortion. This law, penalizes, criminalizes Jewish law," Rabbi Silver said.On Friday, the governor responded to the sweeping Supreme Court decision, tweeting in part: "Florida will continue to defend its recently-enacted pro-life reforms against state court challenges, will work to expand pro-life protections, and will stand for life by promoting adoption, foster care and child welfare."WPBF 25 News reached out to the governor's office for a comment in response to Sunday's gathering. "Governor DeSantis is and always has been pro-life. Our office is confident that this law will ultimately withstand all legal challenges," a statement from the executive office of the governor said. Follow us on social: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram"It would end the practice of Judaism as we know it. It attacks the integrity of the Jewish family," Rabbi Silver said.

"We're going to fight back" - that's the message community members are sending in North Palm Beach.

Dozens of people gathered at First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Palm Beaches to show support for women's rights after the sweeping U.S. Supreme court ruling on Roe v. Wade.

"This is a battle that has to be fought by Jews, and liberal Christians, and atheists and old and young and men and women. Everybody has to come out and fight back to save our democracy," Rabbi Barry Silver of Congregation L'Dor Va-Dor, told WPBF 25 News.

The congregation had also recently filed a lawsuit against Gov. Ron DeSantis, after he signed the 15-week abortion ban into law. Rabbi Silver said those restrictions are against Judaism.

"If you want to go traditional Judaism if you want to go with the bible, which the Christian fundamentalists claim to do and that have no clue what it says because they cannot read Hebrew, life begins at birth," Rabbi Silver said.

The latest: WPBF 25 News coverage on Politics

The 15-week abortion ban legislation is set to go into effect July 1. The current restriction on abortion is set at 24 weeks. The state, however, faces various lawsuits, in addition to that filed by the congregation.

"If she needs an abortion for her mental wellbeing, for her emotional wellbeing, for her health, shes not only entitled to it. Shes required by Jewish law to have an abortion. This law, penalizes, criminalizes Jewish law," Rabbi Silver said.

On Friday, the governor responded to the sweeping Supreme Court decision, tweeting in part:

"Florida will continue to defend its recently-enacted pro-life reforms against state court challenges, will work to expand pro-life protections, and will stand for life by promoting adoption, foster care and child welfare."

WPBF 25 News reached out to the governor's office for a comment in response to Sunday's gathering.

"Governor DeSantis is and always has been pro-life. Our office is confident that this law will ultimately withstand all legal challenges," a statement from the executive office of the governor said.

Follow us on social: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

"It would end the practice of Judaism as we know it. It attacks the integrity of the Jewish family," Rabbi Silver said.

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'Attacks the integrity of the Jewish family:' Congregation fights against SCOTUS abortion ruling - WPBF West Palm Beach

20 years on, don’t forget Andreas the rabbi who just wanted to help – Camden New Journal

Posted By on June 28, 2022

Andreas Hinz

Two decades after one of Camdens most shocking murders, CNJ editor Richard Osley reflects on how the case was covered

AS time passes and stories are told and retold, and memories get foggier and more fragmented, sometimes you hear him referred to as simply that chopped up rabbi. Remember that time?

The more grisly true crime podcasts that spring up, with their haunting voices and chilling string music, the more the gruesome circumstances of any murder are ramped up.

I used to write like that. As a trainee reporter desperate to get anything into print, Id floridly set the scene with fearful adjectives.

But you only have to spend some real time with a grieving relative to realise reporting a tragedy should not be like a Sunday night cop drama.

Its true that the events in Camden Town 20 years ago might sound like a far-fetched police procedural on a streaming service desperate for viewers, but Andreas Hinz deserves better.

Killed in a flat inBaynes Street at the age of 37, his body was dismembered with a saw and left out with the rubbish. His remains were found when neighbours complained of the smell and some teenage boys went to investigate.

The 20th anniversary of Andreas death will tick by at the start of next month, but you are unlikely to hear much about him in any new media reports, nor the failures in the care system which might have saved his life.

People just vaguely remember the chopped up rabbi.

Forensic teams in 2002

While something so shocking was made even more wild in print with each story that was published, Iremember his friends asking for his family to be left in peace.

His mother and cousin had held a missing person press conference in the days before they discovered what hadhappened toAndreas, and now the constant doorknocking and calls were too much.Reporters wanted a picture and some quick words for a speedy turnaround.

A fuller picture found Andreas to have been in his second year of training to be a rabbi, and how he had spent a lifetime buried in books and studying religious tracts.

He was a high achiever at the Wuppertal University in his native Germany and was praised for deciphering hidden meanings in ancient texts that had not been considered before.

It was his tireless research which led to his discovery that he had Jewish ancestors and he decided to follow Judaism.

Later, he was simultaneously known as a quiet man among friends, modest to a fault, but one who could deliver passionate speeches at conferences after joining the European branch of the Union of Progressive Jews.

In his 20s, he had worked at a publishing house in Germany before coming to England around 2000 to train as a rabbi at the Leo Baeck College in Barnet.

Everybody Ispoke to at the time remembered an amiable, rather unassuming man who wanted to help others.

The CNJ after the court case

He was warmly known at the Belsize Square Synagogue too, where he would occasionally deliver lectures.

Open about his sexuality, he was involved in Londons Jewish gay and lesbian groups. It was in the Black Cap one of the citys best known LGBT+ venues that he met Thomas McDowell.

They went back to McDowells flat near Royal College Street where Andreas was killed.McDowell was later described as a controlled psychotic, but there was never really any inquiry into the chain of events that led to the killing.

Tormented by the abuse he had suffered as a child and homeless, McDowell had been given a flat but not an adequate care package. He is now one of only a small number of prisoners to be given a life means life prison sentence.

If any lessons were learned about how to help or handle somebody on the brink, its not really clear what they were.

More important to the press at the courtroom door seemed to be that McDowell had given himself the nicknameTommyThe Hacksaw. Isaw one report which made a silly connection that both McDowell and the serial killer Denis Nielsen had both drunk in the Black Cap.

Its the killers, or at least their bloody methods, which take centre stage when cases are reheated for clicks, likes and listens.

With the battle for attention so desperate on social media platforms, the gore will no doubt escalate more in each retelling of crimes like this. The victims if we extrapolate things further become just part of the genres commodity.

But if we cant sit still long enough to learn from the holes in the care system which Andreas death should have exposed, we should at least remember him as more than a man in the wrong place at the wrong time. More than the man in the bin bags.

RabbiDr Michael Shire, now living in the United States, had talked about his kindness at the college, and how he would have made a fine rabbi one day.

And one of his former flatmates up inWindermere Avenue explained back then:Everybody loved Andy. I think almost everyone he talked to somehow saw Andy as a best friend. What he had was very rare.

He would never complain and he would always make everyone feel as though their thing was the most important.When he got time to socialise it was very treasured because he was so busy helping everyone else.

Remember Andreas on July 3.

Continued here:

20 years on, don't forget Andreas the rabbi who just wanted to help - Camden New Journal

Shabbats on the Beach & Open Houses – framinghamsource.com

Posted By on June 28, 2022

SUDBURY Congregation Bnai Torah of Sudbury warmly invites the community to Shabbat on the Beach services and open houses at the Wayland Town Beach at 25 Parkland Drive, Wayland.

Prospective members are welcome to join us 30 minutes prior to each beach service to learn more about Congregation Bnai Torah. Sand toys, bubbles, and sidewalk chalk await families with young children who would like to meet members of our temple and learn more about our community. R.S.V.P. tomembership@bnaitorah.comif you would like to attend.

Services will take place:

Friday, July 8 at 6:30 p.m. (led by Rabbi Joshua Breindel of Congregation Beth El and Rabbi Louis Polisson of Congregation Or Atid)

Friday, July 22, at 6 pm (led by Rabbi Allison Poirier of Temple Beth Sholom)

Friday, August 5, at 6:30 p.m. (led by Congregation Bnai Torah member Jeff Levine)

Friday, August 19, at 6:30 p.m. (led by Bnai Torahs Rabbi Lisa Eiduson with Rabbi Joshua Breindel of Beth El).

Bring your beach chairs (or blanket) and a picnic dinner, and enjoy the sunset while we share the beauty of Shabbat together as a community!

Bnai Torah, a reformed synagogue, welcomes families of all backgroundsincluding interfaith families. The synagogue is located at 225 Boston Post Road, Sudbury. Seebnaitorah.comor contactmembership@bnaitorah.comor 978-443-2082 for further information on all programs and services.

Photo by Sheldon Golden

Originally posted here:

Shabbats on the Beach & Open Houses - framinghamsource.com

Double standards for rabbis and politics | Elchanan Poupko | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 28, 2022

I was recently asked why is it that I, as a rabbi, speak about politics at all? Shouldnt you only speak about Torah and Jewish topics? I strongly agree with this sentiment. Politics in nature are divisive, and the role of religion and community is to bring people together. To understand why one needs to understand the extraordinary changes American Orthodoxy has gone through and the direction in which it is heading.

As a rabbinic student, I had the honor of being part of the Strauss Center for Torah and Western Thought at Yeshiva University. One day in class, I found myself sitting through a persuasive argument on how money equals free speech, and why money in American politicssurely not a matter of consensus and without much to do with Torah or Western Thoughtsis the right thing for democracy. This was no exception. The Orthodox public sphere is so dominated by GOP politics that when we see expressions of that partisanship, we dont think twice; it is just what part of Orthodoxy has become, and when we see any expressions in the other direction, it is shocking and alien to many.

This is why the Tikva Fund, a conservative think tank made most famous recently by inviting Ron DeSantis to explain to New York Jews why they should move to Florida or how to combat wokeism, is able to openly recruit students in Jewish day schools and high schools. At the same time, its equivalent on the democratic (Western) side of the spectrum could never dream of such a thing. Organizations that are affiliated with some of the most militant elements in the GOP are considered to be just mainstream normal parts of Orthodox life. This is how I got to see in an event as apolitical as Chidon Hatanach national finals, a day school father showing up with a Lets go Brandon shirt, something that would never happen in the other direction. It is also why I get to see in Orthodox spaces The Heritage Foundation swag, an organization that advocates for committing women who have abortions to psychiatric facilities against their will and is praised by the NRA as it helps perpetuate Americas gun promiscuity, the leading cause of death among American children.

This is why when infamous Congresswoman Mary Miller gave a speech saying Hitler was right, there was a group of mainstream Orthodox rabbis who made sure to go out and defend her, while rabbis with far less extreme positions on the democratic side of things would be afraid to express those in the Orthodox community. It is why rabid antisemites like Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene are featured with adoration in one of the Orthodoxys largest magazines days after her attempt to overthrow the US government which we now learn she sought to be pardoned for, while we can never dream of that happening to any part of the other side of the political spectrum. American Orthodoxy has turned too much of who it is to be synonymous with extreme GOP politics and me not joining that ride seeming too extreme to those who have taken it will not change my mind.

The branding of extreme GOP politics as normative Orthodoxy while ostracizing everything that is taken for granted by Jews in every other Western country, such as the right to vote, the right to healthcare, and your childrens right to not get shot up in school or somewhere else in a mass shooting, hurts us all. If you thought that being a thoughtful armchair conservative who is just concerned about the judiciary from your home in New York, this weeks Supreme Court decision is delivering open carry handguns to a subway or street corner near you. If you are an Orthodox woman in Florida who was just concerned with how woke the country has become, the Supreme Courts overturning of Roe v. Wade and their promise in the decision to change much more will jeopardize the health, maternal mortality, and life expectancy of Orthodox women in red states in ways that most people in our community cannot begin to imagine. There is good reason for the double-digit gap between life expectancy and average income in New York and many other red states. Public policy, investments in health and education, and regulations that are shared with the rest of the developed world make a difference and have real outcomes.

The fact that Americans died from COVID at the rate of three times more than in other countries and that the Orthodox community has died at an even higher rate than the general American population, is another one of the prices we pay for political extremism in our community. These are not abstract discussions.

And yet, we have come to a situation where positions that are mainstream in Orthodox communities in Israel, the UK, Canada, France, Australia, and other large Jewish communities have come to be seen as anti-Orthodox, anti-Jewish, and even antisemitic in our own community.

When someone who has known me for years and knows of my commitment to Israel and the wellbeing of the Jewish community heard that I do not share their conservative political views, which by now are the views of almost 80 percent of American Orthodoxy, they looked at me in disbelief. They said: I almost feel like you support BDS.

Portraying fellow community members as hostile, unloyal, and even antisemitic for believing in ideas like universal healthcare, ending Americas child killing spree perpetrated by promiscuous gun laws, voting rights, workers rights for decent treatment and pay, which made Shabbat observance possible in this county, and other policy issues that do not divide the Jewish community in any other county will take a hefty toll from our community. Besides for the cost opposing these policies, which are a partisan discussion, it will unnecessarily divide us even more than we are divided, it will alienate many who should not be alienated, and it will undermine the ability of Jews in blue states, i.e., the vast majority of Jews, to have a say in our local and federal politics.

For these reasons and more, I speak my mind on political issues despite the cost that it might pay for doing so. The Orthodox community has reached an absurd situation where thoughtful and altruistic leaders who do not side with right-wing talk radio points are afraid to speak their mind and are even ostracized, while populist radio hosts are cheered on wherever they go.

This is how we have come to the situation where some prominent Orthodox rabbis who have not joined this ride, can be cheaply attacked by online Orthodox pundits while at the same time, Ben Shapiro receives a heros welcome in every Orthodox venue he attends. Any responsible parents can ask themselves if they see something wrong with Orthodox teens feeling such adoration for Ben Shapiro while feeling little regard for pillars of our community and thinking where this is headed ten years from now. This is why I will continue to speak out despite some finding it to be the exception rather than the norm.

We cannot allow a situation in which rabbis who are deeply engaged with far-right Christian groups and the extreme-right Steve Bannons of this world are seen as doing their sacred duty towards our community, while those who take positions shared by a majority of Americans and the vast majority of the developed world are seen as un-Orthodox pariahs. It is wrong to those rabbis, it undermines other members of our communities who also share those positions, it estranges those who might consider joining our community, and it undermines the interests of our community.

As a rabbi, my highest duty is to teach and inspire as many Jews as possible. While achieving this broadest reach is compromised by taking political sides on some issues, it cannot bend to foreign trends in our community. If all the cool kids stop talking to one kid, it is wrong for me to do the same. If the Orthodox community has decided for the past two decades to go from more of a 50-50 political split towards a 90-10, I will not shun that 10, nor will I side with the 90 because it is popular. I will continue to serve 100% of our population, even if those disagree with me. I will be there to ensure those who are not part of the vocal majority of our community know that their voice is a legitimate part of our community and that politics are never a reason for exclusion from a community of faith. Most importantly, I greatly value those whom I know disagree with my politics and still keep up a cordial, respectful, and friendly relationship and see value in preserving a Jewish community in which belonging, learning, and collaboration are not conditioned on the most recent hot topic on American cable TV. We might fiercely disagree, but we will always be brothers.

The writer is an eleventh-generation rabbi, teacher, and author. He has written Sacred Days on the Jewish Holidays, Poupko on the Parsha, and hundreds of articles published in five languages. He is the president of EITAN--The American Israeli Jewish Network

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Double standards for rabbis and politics | Elchanan Poupko | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

These Clergy Are Bridging the Gap Between Religion and Climate – InsideClimate News

Posted By on June 28, 2022

A rabbi in Jerusalem and a seminary professor in Kentucky are finding a way to help solve the global climate crisis: through the hearts and minds of the faithful, one congregation at a time.

Rabbi Yonatan Neril, founder and director of the Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development, and the Rev. Leah Schade, a professor at the Lexington Theological Seminary, are among a growing number of religious leaders who are working to bridge the gap between faith and climate. Their joint effort, launched last year, offers clergy across the United States advice and recommendations in theologically-based tip sheets written by Schade, an expert at helping clergy bridge political divides in their congregations.

Nerils and Schades vision is to unleash the power of the clergy as a change agent for climate action. They are working toward helping more of the faithful view climate change not so much as a political issue but as something rooted in religion. The goal, Neril said, is that the current and next generation inherits a sustainable, thriving and spiritually aware planet.

Voters of faith have a history of fueling social movements, on the left and the right, including the civil rights movement, the anti-abortion movement and the 2016 presidential election of Donald Trump and his pro-fossil fuel agenda.

I have always felt that the faith community is sort of the sleeping giant when it comes to climate and environmental issues, said Schade, author of the 2019 book, Preaching in the Purple Zone: Ministry in the Red-Blue Divide, which explores how clergy can use the Bible and careful dialog to address controversial social issues, including climate change. In the same way that the civil rights movement in America was powered by churches and synagogues, she said, the same thing needs to happen and is starting to happen with the climate movement.

But, she added, because there have been so many barriers put up by those who are opposed to any action on climate change, its been much harder to wake the sleeping giant.

Major Jewish organizations and most mainstream protestant denominations have made strong statements on the need to address climate change, as have Islamic leaders.

But within faith traditions, polling shows sharp divisions by ethnicity, with whites more reluctant than people of color to accept mainstream climate science. For example, when asked how much they believe human activities like burning fossil fuels contribute to global climate change, only 22 percent of white evangelical protestants told Pew Research pollsters in January that it contributed a great deal. That was compared to 40 percent of nonwhite evangelicals; 46 percent of Black protestants; and 60 percent of Hispanic Catholics. Overall, 46 percent of U.S. adults said that human activities contributed to warming the planet.

Still, some white evangelicals are working to change that, including many evangelical members of Generation Z.

But its not just white evangelicals who lack a sense of urgency about climate change, the Pew polling suggests: Less than halfor 40 percentof white non-evangelical protestants in the poll said they believed fossil fuels were a great deal responsible for climate change.

For some Christians, the word just doesnt make it down from on high, as is the case with the American Catholic Bishops, according to research conducted last year by Creighton University professors Sabrina Danielsen and Daniel DiLeo. The researchers found that bishops in the United States have been nearly silentand sometimes misleading when it comes to Laudato Si, Pope Francis 2015 climate change encyclical, which author and climate activist Bill McKibben has called perhaps the most important document yet of this millennium.

To Neril and Schade, one problem is that until recently, most seminaries did not make strong enough connections between Biblical teachings and the science of climate change and the wide consensus among scientists that greenhouse gas emissions are heightening extreme weather events like hurricanes and wildfires and leading to increased rainfall, droughts, sea-level rise and flooding.

A 2016 study by Nerils Center for Sustainable Development found that of 252 North American educational institutions that train seminarians to become religious clergy, only 23 percent taught at least one course on faith and ecology, and only 11 percent offered multiple courses.

Neril said he believes those numbers are improving, even in areas of the United States where that might not be expected, like the politically conservative Southern Bible Belt. In the South, there are seminaries, and there are clergy who are very committed to climate action and preaching on this issue, he said. Were trying to increase the number of such clergy.

Schade has surveyed nearly 3,000 pastors since 2017, and found that more are tackling environmental issues in their sermons now than in previous years, she said. Less than a third of pastors indicated they addressed green topics such as climate change in 2017. But that number increased to 50 percent of pastors last year.

Still, Schade said, too many pastors feel ill-equipped to lead conversations on what many see as a complex and politically sensitive issue.

Thats a big jump, but it still means half of preachers are not talking about what Yonatan and I believe is the issue of our time, that we need to address, she said.

In an effort to encourage clergy to preach and teach on Christian ecology at least once a month, the interfaith centers program named Ecopreacher 1-2-3 offers thoughts and ideas for sermons or prayers, raises questions that clergy can ask their congregations and suggests specific actions congregations can take. A recent post, for example, making a Biblical case for environmental justice, suggests that clergy ask when people last felt Gods presence in nature, and that they find ways to respond to the humanitarian and environmental crisis in war-torn Ukraine.

Biblical references in Schades Ecopreacher offerings are drawn in part from Eco Bible, a Jewish ecological commentary on the Hebrew Scriptures for which Neril was a co-author.

One pastor who has tapped into the work of Neril and Schade is the Rev. Chuck Waugaman, the minister at Monterey Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), in Monterey, Kentucky. Its a small church in a small town in a small, rural county of about 11,000 people, 20 miles north of the state capital in Frankfort.

Waugaman has long had an interest in science, even studying botany in college before attending the Lexington seminary in the early 1970s.

I grew up in a family where camping was very important, he recalled. We had a travel trailer and went camping every summer, to the Rocky Mountains, Maine, we were in almost all 50 states. We had an appreciation of nature.

That love of nature, however, was not reflected in his seminary experience, he said, where professors seemed at best to tolerate (Gods) creation, or he added, what people would call the natural world.

Waugaman said he took a course from Schade a few years ago and he continues to read her writings. Schades work, he said, has awakened him to a new understanding of how theology and nature are tied together. Its influenced my thinking as much as Rachel Carsons Silent Spring, he said of the iconic 1962 book that exposed hazards of pesticides and has been credited with igniting the modern environmental movement.

The creation story is central, not an afterthought, Waugaman said. Its the core of scripture. Its central to what Jesus was trying to get across when he said, for example, look at the flowers of the field and they will teach you about God.

God is actually in nature, he said, and to pollute nature is the same as polluting God.

The Rev. Clayton Summers is a trained aerospace engineer and former software developer who went back to school to earn a masters degree from the Lexington Theological Seminary, graduating last year. He works as the minister and camp host at Camp Walter Scott, a Disciples of Christ camp serving youth from Illinois and Wisconsin.

Summers said hes not preaching regularly now, but that Ecopreacher 1-2-3 guides him as he brings the concepts of creation care to life at the camp, including reducing energy consumption, starting a garden and facilitating conversations about climate change.

With youth, he said, his approach, starting out, is to listen.

Kids are used to having things shoved down their throats, he said. I give them space to express themselves, through writing, drawing or speaking.

From there, as questions about climate change arise, he said, they can spur further questions: What does our faith say about this? What are things we can do as a response?

Other faith traditions have programs that are similar to Ecopreacher 1-2-3. For example, the Catholic Climate Covenant, an independent organization that grew out of the U.S. Conference of Catholics Bishops and works to energize climate awareness and action in dioceses across the country, offers regular suggestions for priests homilies in Catholic services and guidance for hundreds of Catholic churches that practice what they call creation care.

This guidance is largely based on the Popes Laudato Si encyclical and its explanation of what the Pope called integral ecology or, as Paz Artaza-Regan, a program manager at Catholic Climate Covenant, put it, Everything is connected.

We are shifting our view of what it means to be a Christian, Artaza-Regan said. It also means to care for the poor, to care for the planet, and to see it all as part of our ministry. That includes the fact that not just the human body but the planet and all living things on it are sacred, she said.

ICN provides award-winning climate coverage free of charge and advertising. We rely on donations from readers like you to keep going.

The Presbyterian Church USA, based in Louisville, Kentucky, works with Blessed Tomorrow to provide materials and suggestions for its own Earth Care Congregation program and help Presbyterian ministers improve their knowledge of the intersection of climate change and faith. Blessed Tomorrow is a nonprofit coalition of religious partners that also includes the Episcopal Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Islamic Society of North America and the Catholic Climate Covenant, among others.

A big piece is figuring out how do we unpoliticize this so we can have the conversations we care about, said Jessica Maudlin, a program associate working on sustainable living issues with PCUSA. That does get very tricky, she said. We are working really hard to do that.

For Schades part, she recalls upsetting politically conservative members of a suburban Philadelphia Lutheran church, where she worked before she became a seminary professor, when some members wanted to show former Vice President Al Gores Academy Award-winning 2006 documentary on climate change, An Inconvenient Truth.

That experience convinced me more and more that pastors need more guidance, she said.

Schade said shes found from experience and through research that effective pastoral communication wont work if the clergy get too, well, preachy.

She described her approach as delivering a sermon, then having a dialogue before another sermon that integrates insights from the dialogue, and then further dialogue. Its the pastor raising awareness about an issue, framing it Biblically, theologically, not politically. Pastors are listening to and collaborating with their congregation so this is not just the pastors agenda, she said.

She said that climate change is getting less political within faith communities than some other social topics, such as abortion or gun control. That, she said, could be good for the planet.

Theres research that shows that when pastors preach about climate change, their congregants are more likely to believe that it exists and that its human-caused, more than those pastors who never talk about it in their sermons, Schade said. People are listening. It makes a difference.

James Bruggers covers the U.S. Southeast, part of Inside Climate News National Environment Reporting Network. He previously covered energy and the environment for Louisvilles Courier Journal, where he worked as a correspondent for USA Today and was a member of the USA Today Network environment team. Before moving to Kentucky in 1999, Bruggers worked as a journalist in Montana, Alaska, Washington and California. Bruggers work has won numerous recognitions, including best beat reporting, Society of Environmental Journalists, and the National Press Foundations Thomas Stokes Award for energy reporting. He served on the board of directors of the SEJ for 13 years, including two years as president. He lives in Louisville with his wife, Christine Bruggers.

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These Clergy Are Bridging the Gap Between Religion and Climate - InsideClimate News

Those Messiah Is Here! signs popping up in New York? Heres whos behind them. – Forward

Posted By on June 28, 2022

In certain parts of New York, the signs are inescapable. Photo by Gaby Grossman

By Louis KeeneJune 23, 2022

Almost every night for the past few months, a nondescript crew of yeshiva bochurs has fanned out across New York City, armed with nothing more than MetroCards and buckets to stand on.

The following morning, the familiar visage of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, peers out at harried commuters from bright green signs hung in a few new places, usually on the back of pedestrian walk signals. Below the picture of the man-turned-myth known to many simply as The Rebbe, the signs proclaim, in no uncertain terms and without qualification:

MESSIAH IS HERE!

The Schneerson posters have become inescapable in some New York City neighborhoods Brooklyn and Manhattan in particular but they provide no context to the image and those three words, leaving their provenance and meaning a mystery. Are they advertisements for Chabad, the Jewish movement that Schneerson led and which still views him as its lodestar? Does Chabad believe that Schneerson, who died in 1994, is the Messiah? And if the Messiah is here, shouldnt it be pretty obvious?

The answers to those questions depend on who you ask even within the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, whose membership worldwide has been estimated at around 100,000. Yes, the Messianist branch of Chabad is considered fringe, and synagogues that tout Schneerson as the Messiah in Hebrew, mashiach or moshiach comprise a small minority and are not a formal part of the international Chabad network. But mashiach is itself an elusive concept in Judaism, and Chabad members beliefs on the matter dont fit into a neat binary.

Put it this way: A spokesperson for the movement called the posters a shame but its students at Chabads flagship yeshiva in Crown Heights who are putting them up.

Mendel Shpindler, a 21-year-old self-starter originally from Montreal, is one of those students. He said they started putting up the signs about 10 weeks ago, following in the tracks of Messianist Chabad ad campaigns that date back to the early 1990s.

A few people going out each night, with little organization or planning, have already placed more than 6,000 of the bills, which fit neatly on the back of traffic signal boxes.

Its pretty much whoever has the energy to go and do it and take it on himself, he said, adding that they have another 6,000 to go.

Shpindler is one of about 600 young men in their fourth year of the Chabad yeshiva cycle: three years full-time study in Israel followed by one at 770 Eastern Parkway, the iconic former Schneerson home in Crown Heights which now houses Chabad headquarters.

About 30 of them have contributed to the signposting effort, according to Shpindler; they passed a hat around to raise the few thousand dollars it cost to make the signs.

Hes firm in his belief that the Rebbe is the Messiah, and he believes that deep down, every other Chabadnik agrees with him.

No one would say the Rebbe is not mashiach, Shpindler said. If you cornered them, they would tell you, straight up, The Rebbe is mashiach. The question is whether to publicize that or not.

By his own admission, not everyone in the crew was as fervent in their belief. An avowed meshichist, or Messianist, Chabad Jew, Shpindlers views are on the radical end of the spectrum. For example, he believes Schneerson did not die at Mount Sinai Beth Israel hospital in Manhattan, but in fact is still alive and testing his followers to see how strong we believe.

But differences within the group regarding Schneersons present condition did not weaken their shared interest in spreading the word that he was mashiach.

And though hanging posters on public property is illegal, so far, none has faced much resistance from law enforcement.

Weve had police tell us its illegal, dont do it, Shpindler said. Some police ignore. And some were more like, OK, what is this about? like they were interested in knowing. Its not really enforced as a legal thing. And no one really cares about it too much.

Support from the higher-ups was another matter entirely. Asked whether he thought the administration at 770 Eastern Parkway would approve of his mission, he said he thought a few would commend him, and others would try to cool his jets.

But he wasnt doing it for them. He was doing it for his Rebbe.

In the Chabad-Lubavitch mainstream, Schneerson, who led the movement from 1951 until his death in 1994, is larger than life, a mystical figure and a talisman of righteousness and religious devotion. His portrait hangs in every Chabad house. Legions of Chabad children are named after him or his wife, Chaya Mushka, and his compiled letters are ubiquitous in Chabad homes. In times of need, some Chabadniks will write a letter to the Rebbe and insert it randomly between the pages of one of the volumes. Whatever Schneerson is writing about on the pages where they placed the letter will provide a clue, they believe, as to how they should address their problem.

Opinion on whether Schneerson is the Messiah falls on a continuum among Chabad Hasidim. Some believe he will be, others believe he could be, and plenty say that while he had the potential to become the Messiah during his lifetime, its no longer possible. A small but vocal minority Shpindler among them claims he is now. And many are content to say they dont know.

But the movements leadership has been eager to formally distance Chabad from the perception that Messianist belief in Schneerson is commonplace in its ranks. In Judaism more broadly, many believe the Messiah will come. But the notion that the Messiah has already arrived is widely considered heresy and a lot like Christianity.

Told that students at 770 were behind the signs blanketing New York, Rabbi Motti Seligson, spokesperson for Chabad-Lubavitch headquarters, said there was no ban on such beliefs in the yeshiva. But he rejected with disappointment Shpindlers contention that everyone in Chabad shares them.

What a shame that this individual is spending his time on speculation that the Rebbe advised against, instead of internalizing the Rebbes vision and passion for a world truly transformed, Seligson said, citing Schneersons immense corpus of teachings.

Instead of flyering neighborhoods, Seligson said, a student like Shpindler should be committing his energies to the Rebbes actual directives about how to get there.

The vast majority of Chabad centers in the United States are not associated with the Messianist offshoot. Messianist Chabads are not listed on the Chabad website or discussed in its publications, and Chabad-Lubavitch headquarters wont send rabbis associated with that group on shlichut, or official outreach missions. That means the more than 700 Chabad houses on college campuses around the world should not be Messianist. (If youre wondering whether youve attended a Messianist Chabad, one meshichist giveaway is a phrase yechi adoneinu (long live our master) recited at the end of daily prayer services.)

Nevertheless, yearning and striving for mashiach is a central concern of Chabad, a way of life developed by Schneerson in countless teachings. The Jewish outreach that is Chabads signature free Shabbat meals, street-corner tefillin-wrapping stations keyed Schneersons vision of bringing redemption closer, one mitzvah at a time. (They were also informed by the imperative of ahavat yisrael, or loving fellow Jews.)

Feeling the squeeze of rising rent, and inflation, and temperature, New Yorkers might greet the signs skeptically: the Messiah is here? Now?

Shpindler said that while the identity of mashiach is clear, the Messiah that is, the revival of the dead, the great ingathering of Israel and the reconstruction of the Holy Temple is a destination were still traveling toward.

Among the prerequisites for reaching it, Shpindler says, is a cause the Rebbe sought to advance in his lifetime: the adoption of the seven Noahide commandments by non-Jews, which include prohibitions against cursing God and committing adultery. By using the word Messiah rather than moshiach on the signs, and through the mass distribution of business card-sized Noahide explainers in non-Jewish communities, Shpindler is hoping some gentiles will start observing them.

We want them to be more of a global thing, he said of the signs.

Of course, Christians picked their Messiah roughly 2,000 years ago. Shpindler says hes not interested in converting them, but he wouldnt hate to change a few minds, either.

Not that the signs provide a useful jumping-off point. Shpindler said he regretted that the posters, which one of the other students designed, lacked further instruction. Even without that, though, he felt they were accomplishing something important.

There is this concept of just letting people know, getting into their knowledge, mashiach is here period, said Shpindler. And know, this is the man.

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Those Messiah Is Here! signs popping up in New York? Heres whos behind them. - Forward

An Evening of Inspiration | JewishBoston – jewishboston.com

Posted By on June 28, 2022

All are welcome to join an event honoring the life and legacy of the Lubavitcher Rebbe.

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Rabbi Shais Taub is one of the most sought-after speakers in the Jewish world today. He has inspired audiences of all backgrounds on six continents, and The New York Times called him a phenomenon.

He serves as permanent scholar-in-residence at Chabad of the Five Towns in Cedarhurst, New York, and directs the Torah website SoulWords, where thousands of hours of his classes on a wide variety of Jewish topics may be viewed.

Pre-event cocktail reception with Rabbi Taub at 5:30 p.m. with sponsorship of $180 and more.

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