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A new book explores abusive rabbis and the Jewish institutional culture that protects them – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 23, 2022

(JTA) In the global reckoning with sexual abuse by powerful leaders, no religious movement has escaped scrutiny and censure, including the broad spectrum of Jewish denominations.

Major Reform and Conservative bodies have mounted investigations or issued detailed reports on abuse and cover-ups within their ranks. Lawsuits have been brought against longtime accused abusers such as Baruch Lanner and institutions such as the Orthodox Union for protecting them. The rabbi heading Germanys largest Liberal Jewish group recently took a leave of absence following allegations he had ignored or covered up harassment allegations leveled at his husband. Orthodox leaders in Canada and Australia who sheltered in Israel for years to avoid being tried on multiple counts of child sex abuse have been arrested, and are now awaiting trial in their home countries.

Jewish anthropologist, educator and activist Elana Sztokman has been researching the specter of rabbinical abuse for years. Her new book When Rabbis Abuse: Power, Gender, and Status in the Dynamics of Sexual Abuse in Jewish Culture is an effort to peel back the curtain on abusive power dynamics across every denomination. She is publishing it through Lioness Press, a feminist imprint she founded.

We have lots of communal studies of engagement and continuity and belonging and all kinds of stuff, but not a single one has ever examined the connection between experiences of abuse and people dropping out of Judaism, Sztokman told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. And thats a big, gaping hole.

Sztokman, who received her masters degree and PhD from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, has twice won National Jewish Book Awards for her books exploring gender dynamics in Orthodox spaces. She also recently spoke up about alleged workplace abuse she experienced, by a former board chair of the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance, where Sztokman formerly served as executive director.

While not a quantitative analysis, Sztokmans book is informed by her interviews with 84 survivors of alleged abuse, and includes around 200 additional survivor testimonies gleaned through various Jewish archives. When Rabbis Abuse attempts to understand the manipulative personality type of abusive clergy, their methods and means of exploiting victims within Jewish spaces, and the ways in which their behavior is protected or excused by Jewish power structures.

Raised in the Orthodox movement, Sztokman no longer identifies with the denomination. She briefly enrolled in rabbinical school at the Reform-affiliated Hebrew Union College, but is no longer in the program; she now runs a new organization called the Jewish Feminist Academy. A Brooklyn native, Sztokman spoke to JTA about her new book from her home in Modiin, Israel.

This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

JTA: You have been thinking and writing about abuse in Jewish spaces for a while. Tell me about your journey to decide to write a book entirely focused on abusive rabbis.

Sztokman: I didnt plan to write a book about rabbis abusing. I really just wanted to dig a little deeper into what was really going on in the community. When the Barry Freundel story happened [a Modern Orthodox rabbi in Washington, D.C., Freundel was convicted in 2014 for secretly videotaping people in his synagogues mikvah and ultimately reached a $14.24 million settlement with his victims], that really struck a nerve with me and with a lot of people, because it was so many violations of a space that was meant to be sacred.

I went to a conference for Jewish leadership about a year before the scandal broke, where he was the featured speaker. It was all about issues around conversion, and he was featured as the macher. He promoted himself as controlling the entire discourse between the American and Israeli rabbinate around who gets to be a true convert. And then a year later it comes out that he was controlling all this because he liked access to converts, in order to be able to watch them naked. He had this whole system, telling them where they should stand and how they should stand, all for his personal arousal. This person had all this access and all this authority, with this roomful of people hanging on his every word.

It really illustrates how, when a rabbi is abusive, the abuse takes place in a location where a persons religious and spiritual life is meant to be sacred. Thats really what pushed me to start talking to people. My book proposal, I wrote in 2015. Thats how long Ive been working on this.

Were you surprised by how many rabbis have been accused of abuse, across every denomination and every conceivable Jewish space?

It was quite shocking. I shouldnt say surprised, because the truth is that anyone paying attention to the news sees these stories all the time.

These are people were supposed to be able to trust, we give them our hearts, we give them our spirits, we give them our Jewish identity, and this is happening. In many cases, its very destructive to the relationship between Jews. Even though many people have rebuilt their relationships to Judaism, it doesnt mean that they can recover. It takes a process. If the person whos the gatekeeper for your Jewish spiritual practices is this narcissistic abuser, then that has impact.

You offer a character study of an abusive rabbi, or an abusive Jewish spiritual leader. How do you define this personality type, and why are they able to operate in those spaces?

The biggest takeaway was about charisma. We define leadership very closely to charisma. And we know that charisma is one of the signs of a narcissistic personality. Charisma is basically a person who can walk into a room and manipulate people. And the Jewish community tends to give a lot of awards to that person, to that personality.

Thats not to say that every rabbi is a narcissist; Im not making that claim. But I am saying that there is overlap between the qualities that tend to be culturally valued in rabbis and some of the qualities that define narcissism.

The other point that came up very strongly is about pastoral care as an opportunity for preying, for targeting victims, and also the use of Jewish lingo to have an in with their targets. A whole bunch of abuse stories had rabbis talking about teshuva [forgiveness] and about bashert [soulmates]. A lot of abusers will find the spiritual openings that theyre looking for.

We need to be aware of this, and we need to start thinking about ways to handle the qualities that we want in leadership, versus the qualities that we tend to be starstruck about.

Are these simply narcissistic personality types who are just finding the ways to exploit the system theyre in, and that system happens to be Judaism? Or is there something about our current organizational Judaism that actually encourages this kind of behavior?

Im reluctant to make that second point, even though it could be concluded from the research. My point is that a lot of people try to say, Oh, Orthodox culture encourages abuse, because there are so many messed-up things about sexuality. Or on the other hand, Oh, look at Reform, its so permissive, look at how the girls are dressed, that kind of stuff. Everybodys always looking for the cultural hook, to say, Thats what happens in that culture. But that happens everywhere, and nobodys immune. Abusers know how to manipulate whatever tools they have at their disposal, and they know how to be these chameleons that are able to use language that they know will speak to their targets.

Your book explores rabbis who commit both child sexual abuse and also adult relationship or power differential abuse, and you often talk about them interchangeably. Is it important to distinguish between these, or do you think theyre all under the same category of abuse?

I think theyre on a spectrum, for sure. I think that there are a lot of efforts to distinguish them from both sides: You see a lot of child sexual abuse advocates saying, I dont want to deal with the womens issues. I deal with children. Ive also had experiences with feminist groups who are like, Yeah, we deal with feminist stuff, we dont deal with child sexual abuse.

Both of those attitudes strike me as misdirected, because these are very, very similar dynamics. It all has to do with control and it has to do with emotional manipulation. Who the target is may change from one abuser to another, but it doesnt matter. Its still damaging, and its still dynamics that we need to be recognizing and observing. These distinctions are, I think, not helpful. Theyre not two different phenomena. It just comes down to the particular case of a particular abuser.

Just recently, Rabbi Shlomo Mund was arrested and charged with sexual abuse of minors in Montreal, dating back to 1997. The former day school principal Malka Leifers trial for child sexual abuse in Melbourne is scheduled for later this summer. Both cases involve charges more than a decade old, where the accused perpetrator was protected to some degree by their communal leadership, and evaded arrest for years by moving to Israel. What lessons can we draw here?

One is structural and one is cultural. Structurally, yes, communal structures protect abusers by placing them in another shul or another school or whatever. For all kinds of reasons. Because abusers often are people with power, so power protects power. Its really hard to push back against, because youre pushing back against networks of power.

The other level is cultural: whose lives are valued and which people do we see as worthy, which people we think of as deserving of our support. Someone who comes forward is seen as someone whos a nobody, so we can dismiss them as a disgruntled employee. If they move to a new congregation, nobodys crying. If the rabbi leaves, wow, that will be so damaging. But who cares about the victims? Its a cultural dysfunction around whose lives are considered valuable.

How can, or should, Jewish institutions change their approach to thinking about rabbis in order to counter this kind of abuse?

We need to disconnect concepts of leadership from performance, versus actual kindness and empathy. Too often as a community we overemphasize performative things like charisma. But this is not a salient definition of leadership, or of the kind of person we should want to put on a pedestal. So culturally we need to change our definitions. Rabbinical schools should rethink some of the ways rabbis are trained, and hiring committees should also be rethinking what kinds of qualities were looking for.

Policy-wise, organizations should be more self-aware about who is being supported, how abusers are being supported, and how victims are treated.

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A new book explores abusive rabbis and the Jewish institutional culture that protects them - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Vaulted from pit to prime minister, Joseph gave God the – Leawood – Church of the Resurrection

Posted By on June 23, 2022

Daily ScriptureWEDNESDAY 6.22.22 Genesis 39:21-23, 41:9-16, 37-41

Genesis 39

21 the LORD was with Joseph and remained loyal to him. He caused the jails commander to think highly of Joseph. 22 The jails commander put all of the prisoners in the jail under Josephs supervision, and he was the one who determined everything that happened there. 23 The jails commander paid no attention to anything under Josephs supervision, because the LORD was with him and made everything he did successful.

Genesis 41

9 Then the chief wine steward spoke to Pharaoh: Today Ive just remembered my mistake. 10 Pharaoh was angry with his servants and put me and the chief baker under arrest with the commander of the royal guard. 11 We both dreamed one night, he and I, and each of our dreams had its own interpretation. 12 A young Hebrew man, a servant of the commander of the royal guard, was with us. We described our dreams to him, and he interpreted our dreams for us, giving us an interpretation for each dream. 13 His interpretations came true exactly: Pharaoh restored me to my position but hanged him.14 So Pharaoh summoned Joseph, and they quickly brought him from the dungeon. He shaved, changed clothes, and appeared before Pharaoh. 15 Pharaoh said to Joseph, I had a dream, but no one could interpret it. Then I heard that when you hear a dream, you can interpret it.16 Joseph answered Pharaoh, Its not me. God will give Pharaoh a favorable response.

37 This advice seemed wise to Pharaoh and all his servants, 38 and Pharaoh said to his servants, Can we find a man with more God-given gifts [Or like this one, in whom is the spirit of God] than this one? 39 Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, Since God has made all this known to you, no one is as intelligent and wise as you are. 40 You will be in charge of my kingdom [or house], and all my people will obey your command. Only as the enthroned king will I be greater than you. 41 Pharaoh said to Joseph, Know this: Ive given you authority over the entire land of Egypt.

A Hebrew slave unfairly jailed by a rich Egyptian ownerhow could Joseph escape that fix? God helped Joseph explain dreams for two fellow prisoners. After two years, Pharaohs restored steward finally remembered Joseph (still in jail) when the king had baffling dreams. Pharaoh, impressed by Josephs discernment, made an unexpected (no doubt shocking to ambitious Egyptian officers) choice. He freed the Hebrew and made him his chief deputy, with power over all of Egypt!

Merciful God, how powerfully Joseph exemplified the spirit of your kingdom as he saved his brothers and his Egyptian captors. Keep growing in me a capacity to embody and act out your mercy. Amen.

* Adam Hamilton; Rob Simbeck, ed. Forgiveness: Finding Peace Through Letting Go. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2012, p. 95.

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20 Baby Girl Names That Start With Z – Romper

Posted By on June 23, 2022

Picking a baby name can be a tricky task for many parents. And throw in a name theme for a family like names that all start with the same letter the task of choosing a baby name is even more difficult. If youre looking for girl names that start with Z, this task can become even harder than before.

Sometimes names come to people in a dream. For other families, some research is involved whether thats browsing baby name lists online or looking through baby name books like our parents did.

If youre tasked with the challenge of coming up with unique girl names that start with Z, this list of names from all different parts of the world all have pretty powerful and beautiful meanings.

Whether youre looking for more common girl names that start with Z like Zoe, or want to go totally rogue and name your daughter Zenola, theres something for everyone on this list for your baby.

1Zella

This gorgeous, musical, and warrior sounding names meaning is just perfect for the way it sounds. Zella means happy, blessed, and a grey fighting maiden. Your child will definitely be a bada** with this name.

2Zephyr

Zephyr is rooted in mythology and has Greek origins. It means west wind, which is the seasonal breeze controlled by the ancient god Zephyrus.

3Zoya

Zoya, meaning life or alive, has Russian origins, and is the Russian, Ukrainian, and Bulgarian version of the name Zoe, which is also on this list.

4Zendaya

You may be familiar with the name Zendaya already, as Zendaya is an actress who has been in Spider-Man, Euphoria, and Dune. Whether you love the movies, or you just like the meaning of the name Zendaya to give thanks its a fun girl name that starts with Z.

5Zadie

Not only does the name Zadie mean prosperous, but its also the name of the incredible novelist, essayist, and short-story writer Zadie Smith. Perhaps On Beauty or White Teeth will be her favorite reads when shes older if you name her after this incredible writer.

6Zoella

Zoella, meaning to live, a living, life, derives from the Ancient Greek name Zoe. Its definitely a unique take and more lyrical take on the name Zoe, and your child will definitely not meet another Zoella in her lifetime unless her mother also read this list and liked the name.

7Zenola

Though there is no official definition of the name Zenola, because its so unique, your kid will definitely be the only one named Zenola in her school. There have apparently only been 101 people named Zenola in the United States according to Name List.

8Zoe

Zoe is of Greek origin and means life, while its Hebrew meaning is Eve, and giver of life. It was the 41st most popular girl name in the U.S. in 2020, so while it may not be the most unique name, its still beautiful and meaningful.

9Zamirah

Zamirah is a common name in Hebrew and Jewish cultures, and it means good voice; in its Hebrew roots, it means nightingale, which is a bird that also has a beautiful voice.

10Zara

If youre looking for a girl baby name that means radiance, Zara is the name for you. Its short, easy to pronounce, and even has another beautiful meaning blooming flower, which has Arabic roots.

11Zuri

The baby girl name Zuri has Swahili origins, and it simply means beautiful. I feel like you cant go wrong naming your daughter after a name that means beautiful, and its a pretty unique name in its own right.

12Zenith

Zenith is the highest point in the heavens, which is definitely how youll feel about your baby. Zenith has Arabic origins and is a gender neutral name if youd like to go that route for your child.

13Zinnia

Zinnia is actually a flower from the perennial family and theyre a gorgeous violet color. Butterflies love these flowers and theyre very popular in gardens. Perhaps your daughter will love butterflies and flowers and have a green thumb if you name her Zinnia. Im sure theyll be as gorgeous as the plant itself.

14Zeya

Zeya is a beautiful girl name that starts with Z, and it has Islamic origins. Zeya means light and radiance, or a source of light. Im sure your baby will be a beautiful ray of sunshine whether you name her Zeya or not, but it cant hurt, right?

15Zeynep

This girl name that starts with Z is the Turkish form of Zaynab (also a good baby name that starts with Z) and both mean precious rock, precious gem.

16Zabrina

Whether youre trying to go for another take on the name Sabrina, or just like the name Zabrina on its own, both names mean a princess, which is just perfect for your little princess.

17Zelda

Whether youre a fan of the Zelda video game franchise, or just find this Germanic name powerful and beautiful, Zelda is a great girl name that starts with Z, because it means strong woman. Empower your baby from the start with this girl name that starts with Z.

18Zia

Meaning splendor or light, Zia is a girl name that starts with Z that has Latin, Italian, Arabic, and Hebrew roots, and they all have the same beautiful definition.

19Zyrah

The name Zyrah means blossoming flower or coming of dawn, both beautiful images of growth and beauty, which will be perfect for your baby.

20Zion

Zion is a unisex name that starts with Z, and means highest point. This unique name is perfect for both girls and boys, and in fact, Lauryn Hill named her son Zion in 1997.

Hopefully there are a few girl names that start with Z on this list that you and your partner can agree on, and none of them bring up bad memories of bullies past when youre trying to pick one (does this happen to everyone when picking out a baby name?). Good luck, and congratulations.

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How the murders of Jewish farmers connected an Argentine writer with his familys past – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 23, 2022

(JTA) On June 9, 2009, Javier Sinays father sent him an email with the subject line Your Great Grandfather. The email linked to a Spanish translation of an article written in 1947 by Mijel Hacohen Sinay.

The First Fatal Victims in Moises Ville detailed a series of murders that had occurred in that village, the first rural Jewish community in Argentina, between 1889 and 1906. All the victims were recent Jewish immigrants, murdered by roving gauchos preying on their vulnerability.

Reading this article raised many questions, Sinay, an investigative journalist from Buenos Aires, explained in an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in New York during his recent book tour. Why did my great-grandfather report on murders that were committed half a century earlier? Who were the people murdered? And why?

One question led to another, and consequently Sinay started his own investigation, one that turned into something much bigger and deeper.

The result is The Murders of Moises Ville, a book that goes beyond true crime to become a history of Jewish migration to Argentina, as well as a travelogue of Sinays visits to Moises Ville, retracing his own family roots. A surprise success in Argentina, the book had three print runs and launched a national debate about collective memory in a society that often prefers to bury the past. It was published earlier this year in English by Restless Books.

The village of Moises Ville, where the murders occurred, is located around 400 miles north of the Argentine capital Buenos Aires. For Argentine Jews, it is a mythical place, to which they attach feelings of nostalgia like those American Jews feel for Manhattans Lower East Side. However, as Sinay underlines, its history is unique since Argentina has the only Jewish community that started as an agricultural community.

Fleeing poverty and pogroms, hundreds of thousands of Jews left Czarist Russia at the end of the 19th century. Munich-born philanthropist Baron Moritz von Hirsch founded the Jewish Colonization Association, which facilitated their resettlement in Latin America under the theory that Jews who lived in small shtetls would find it easier to become farmers in the New World than resettle in urban areas. However, as the books publisher puts it, like their towns prophetic namesake, these immigrants fled one form of persecution only to encounter a different set of hardships: exploitative land prices, starvation, illness [and] language barriers.

The first residents of Moises Ville were a group of families from Bessarabia and the Podolia region in todays Ukraine. The village would soon become the cultural center of Jewish life in Argentina. Among the founders were Sinays great-grandfather, Mijel Hacohen Sinay, who arrived in 1894, and Alberto Gerchunoff, who in 1910 would publish Los Gauchos Judios (The Jewish Cowboys), a collection of short stories set in a village inspired by Moises Ville. Gerchunoffs book is considered the first Latin American literary piece focusing on Jewish immigration to the New World.

However, by the time the book was published, the majority of Jews had already moved to Buenos Aires, among them Mijel Hacohen Sinay and Gerchunoff, whose father was one of the people murdered in Moises Ville.

The 42-year old Javier Sinay was born and raised in Buenos Aires. When he first learned about the murders, he did not know much about Moises Ville or his familys history.

I always knew I was a Jew, but I was not raised in Jewish environment, said Sinay, who started to work on this book when he was 28. It felt like an ancient call to learn about my ancestors. I found myself a link in a chain.

This chain did not only relate to his Jewishness, but also to his love for journalism. Before I started my research, I did not know that I come from a family of journalists, tracing back to my great-grandfather, the protagonist of my book.

In 1898, Mijel Hacohen Sinay founded Argentines first Jewish newspaper, the Yiddish language Der Viderkol (The Echo).

He was barely 20 years old. Discovering this was just incredible, Sinay said.

Sinay himself has worked for the newspapers La Nacin and Clarn and as editor at the Argentine edition ofRolling Stone. Heis currently a staff writer for REDACCION.com.ar, a solutions journalism news outlet.

Javier Sinay worked on his book about Moises Ville and his familys history for over a dozen years. (Julian Voloj)

To read his great grandfathers work, however, Sinay had to overcome a language barrier. To learn Yiddish, he went to the Fundacion IWO, the South American counterpart of YIVO, the New York-based YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. I didnt even know how to read Hebrew letters, he said.

He soon was able to read newspaper headlines and book titles in Yiddish, but despite his progress, it was not enough to translate whole articles by myself. Sinay was introduced to Ana Powazek de Breitman, known to her friends as Jana, the daughter of two Holocaust survivors from Poland, who would help him with the translations.

I would go to the warehouse of Tzedek [a Buenos Aires Jewish charity] and look for old Yiddish books. If it looked like there could be something interesting for my research, Id buy the book and give it to Jana to translate. She would read for me in Yiddish, then translate into Spanish while I typed up notes. For four years, they would meet twice a week.

Original copies of his great-grandfathers newspaper had been stored in the building of Argentinas Jewish federation, AMIA, which was destroyed in 1994 in a terrorist attack. The AMIA bombing is a very traumatic for all of Argentine Jewry, but nearly made my research impossible. It underlines that it was also the destruction of a culture, said Sinay. Some newspapers survived and were part of an exhibition at the National Library of items rescued from the terrorist attack. However, after the exhibition, even those papers disappeared. Sinay hired a private investigator to find them, but until now, nothing was unearthed. But I have not given up hope.

The highlight of his investigation was his journey to Moises Ville. I think I was the first one of the Sinays who went back after my family ended up in Buenos Aires, he said.

Today, Moises Ville has just over 2,000 residents, about 10% of them Jewish. Jewish sites there include the Kadima cultural center, which contains a theater and library; the former Hebrew School, Argentinas first Jewish cemetery and three synagogues. A particularly meaningful experience for Sinay was spending Shabbat in Moises Ville at one of the local synagogues.

The Workers Synagogue (Arbeter Shul) in Moises Ville, Argentina, photographed in 2010. (Wikimedia Commons)

I had never gone to synagogue before. I celebrated my first Kabbalat Shabbat in Moises Ville. It was a fascinating experience. I was thinking about my ancestors and about what kind of Jew I am. My upbringing has little in common with these immigrants, but I feel very connected to them, he said.

The Murders of Moises Ville sheds light on a chapter in Argentinas history that was widely forgotten.

There is a romanticized image of immigration, but the reality was brutal, Sinay explained. Although he was not able to find all the answers he was seeking, he believes that he understood why his great-grandfather wrote about the murders more than half a century after they took place.

He wrote about the murders just after the Second World War, in a time of collective mourning. It was a catharsis remembering the dead, and even if it was not related to the Holocaust, it was part of the zeitgeist. He was talking about our history and our suffering. I dont know if it is true, but its a theory I have, he said.

Connecting as a reporter with his great-grandfathers work is also a homage to the power of journalism, he said. There is a lot of chaos in todays journalism, but it is still possible to find good and meaningful stories that become our legacy.

Reflecting on his own identity, he concluded: I didnt have a bar mitzvah, but maybe writing this book and reclaiming my Jewish identity through journalism was my bar mitzvah. And its something I have chosen, not something that was forced on me.

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What is The Divine Council? Southern Equip – The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Posted By on June 23, 2022

When studying Scripture, it is always helpful to understand more about the particular historical, cultural, and linguistic setting in which the story of the Bible unfolds. Michael Heisers 2015 book The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible has introduced many ordinary readers of Scripture to a new concept with ancient roots: the divine council.

This term, although not found in the Bible, is best illustrated with reference to the famous prologue in Job 12, where the sons of God present themselves before the Lord. Heisers work has been lauded by such established evangelical scholars as Darrell L. Bock, John Goldingay, and Tremper Longman III. It has also received favorable reviews in Themelios, the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, and the Review of Biblical Literature. In his book, Heiser presents the divine council as an assembly of lesser divine figures, presided by a higher, supreme being. While in ancient Near Eastern (ANE) societies, such a concept entails a polytheistic pantheon of deities, its occurrence in Scripture is variously interpreted and debated.

How might Christians today approach the divine council theme in Scripture? We can begin by looking at the Old Testaments ANE context.

In exploring the divine council theme and potential connections to extrabiblical contexts, it is useful to understand the ancient setting of the Bible itself. For the Old Testament, the context is largely ancient Canaan, a land situated in the Levant, on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea. The books of the Hebrew Bible span approximately one thousand years, from the Late Bronze Age up to the Persian period. These centuries witnessed the rise and fall of major world empires, as well as innumerable smaller local kingdoms. Within this relatively small territory, many languages and cultures came into contact with Gods people.

The linguistic context of the Old Testament is particularly important to us because culture and language go hand in hand. Words, concepts, and ideas are conveyed through language, and these connections are often more transparent when examining genetically related languages. Linguistically speaking, biblical Hebrew is the language of the vast majority of the Old Testament (just a few chapters in Ezra and Daniel are written in Aramaic), and it was the language spoken by the ancient Israelites themselves. Its closest relatives are the other Canaanite languages: Moabite, Edomite, Ammonite, and Phoenician. These languages are unfortunately very poorly attested, being found only occasionally in a few inscriptions.

More distant languages, yet still closely related to biblical Hebrew, are Aramaic and Ugaritic. The former was the language of various kingdoms in the region of Aram, mostly located in present-day Syria. This language would later greatly spread in influence and become the lingua franca of the entire ANE for centuries. Many important religious texts, both Christian and Jewish, were written in varieties of Aramaic.

The latter, Ugaritic, is of more interest for our purposes because of its very early collection of clay cuneiform tablets, discovered by accident in 1928.

When archaeologists and other scholars began working on this significant collection of Ugaritic texts, they were amazed to discover extensive documentation of a language and a culture that flourished north of Israel, around the time of the biblical judges. Many of the cuneiform texts (an ancient writing system that made use of various combinations of wedge-impressions made in wet clay tablets) are records of mundane economic activities and other facets of daily life. A select few, however, provide invaluable information about the religious practices of the ancient city-state of Ugarit, including the deities worshiped there, and the temple rituals carried out within the kingdom.

A famous series of large tablets, called the Baal cycle, contains epic texts that depict a divine council of deities, headed by the chief god Ilu (a word that is related to the generic words for God in biblical Hebrew: l and Elhm). Featuring prominently in the epic is the deity Balu, parallel to the Hebrew word Baal. He was perceived by the ancient Canaanites as a storm deity who brought life-giving rains in the winter season.

In the epic, Balu engages in annual combat with Mtu, the god of death and drought. The Mediterranean cycle of rains and drought was thus conceived of as a struggle between rival deities for supremacy. Although Balu is defeated and descends into the underworld, he is subsequently assisted by Anatu and apu (the sun deity), who resurrect his body and transport it to Mount Sapunu (a mountain directly north of Ugarit, and whose name is related to the cardinal direction sfn, north in biblical Hebrew). It was here, in fact, that the autumn rains broke, as the sea-borne clouds were trapped by this towering landmark.

Other deities could be named as part of the divine council of gods: Airatu (related to Hebrew Ar, Asherah) was seen as the wife of Ilu and his consort. Karu-wa-assu was the craftsman of the council, who helped fashion a mace for Balu. Yammu (related to Hebrew ym, sea) was the god of the seas and another adversary of Balu. Together, they paint a portrait of an Ugaritic cosmology in which the various deities are active in their respective domains, forming alliances and also vying for power.

With this ANE background in place, one can now compare and contrast some of the various passages and concepts associated with the divine council theme in Scripture. Certain passages in the Bible seem in particular to give evidence to a spiritual realm beyond that of our physical world. Generally, students of the Bible conceive of only two broad categories angels and demons (fallen angels) but there is much more.

Although in modern parlance we equate the term angel with any non-physical heavenly being, in the biblical languages (both Greek and Hebrew), the words translated angel (Hebrew malk; Greek ngelos) are more properly descriptors of messenger activity (in particular from the heavenly realm to the earthly realm). Thus, it would not be precise, for example, to speak of the erfm in Isaiah 6 or indeed the four living creatures described in Revelation as angels.

Beyond these more familiar categories is an additional term that may not be as apparent to students of the Bible: sons of God (Hebrew bn helhm). It appears to be related to the equivalent Ugaritic expression ban ili, sons of Ilu, a descriptor for the various non-human divinities in their pantheon. We can examine its occurrence in a few biblical passages.

GENESIS 6

The phrase occurs in key passages in Scripture, most notably in Genesis 6 and Job 12, as well as in a number of psalms. According to Genesis 6, one precursor for the flood was the intermarriage of the sons of God with the daughters of men. Although the understanding of this passage is difficult, it seems likely, when taking into account the references to this passage in Jude and 2 Peter, that sons of God here refers not to men from the godly line of Seth, but rather to fallen spiritual beings. Thus, Jude 6 and 2 Peter 2:4 appear to be describing the unnatural union of fallen angels and humans.

The primary objection to this interpretation is Jesuss teaching in Matthew 22 in response to the Sadducees question about marriage in the resurrection. However, when Jesus states that in the resurrection people neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven (Matthew 22:30), he probably did not intend to claim that an (unlawful) union of this sort had never occurred in history. The offspring of this unholy union are called Nephilim (Genesis 6:4), a word in Hebrew that means fallen ones.[1]

DEUTERONOMY 32

Other intriguing references to the sons of God can be found in the Old Testament. In Deuteronomy 32:8, Moses speaks: When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when he divided mankind, he fixed the borders of the peoples according to the number of the sons of God. This is the rendering from the ESV. Most English versions have sons of Israel here instead of sons of God. Sons of Israel is the reading reflected in various ancient translations of the Bible; it is also the reading in the Masoretic Hebrew tradition, which is the basis of our English Old Testament. The Greek Septuagint, however, features the reading angln theou, angels of God, and most intriguingly, a Dead Sea Scrolls manuscript has sons of God.

The context of the verse appears to allude to the Tower of Babel and the subsequent dispersal of the nations. If so, the sons of God would seem to be heavenly beings assigned by God to the various nations of mankind. By contrast, the Lords inheritance is Israel, specifically (Deuteronomy 32:9). An alternative interpretation, which cannot be excluded, is that the (approximately) seventy nations listed in Genesis 10 correspond to the seventy members of Jacobs household (i.e., Israel), which went down to Egypt to Joseph (Genesis 46:27). On this understanding, however, it is not entirely clear what kind of connection between Israel and the nations Moses would have intended.

JOB 12

Probably the best-known reference to the sons of God is found in the prologue to the book of Job (chs. 12). Here we learn that the sons of God present themselves before the Lord, and furthermore, that Satan is among their number. The word Satan is a transliteration of the Hebrew tn, (the) accuser. Strictly speaking, it is an epithet, not a personal name, and yet we know from other passages of Scripture, especially in the New Testament, that Satan is a particular fallen angel who is the originator of sin. Revelation 12:9 describes him as the dragon . . . that ancient serpent, a clear allusion to the serpent who tempted Eve in the garden. In the Septuagint and the New Testament, the equivalent term in Greek for Satan is dibolos (also meaning accuser), transliterated in English as devil.

Yet another, less well-understood reference to this member of the divine council is Beelzebul, sometimes also spelled Beelzebub. The Pharisees and scribes describe him as the prince of demons (Matthew 12:24), and Jesus calls him the master of the house (Matthew 10:25). This title appears to be equivalent to the Old Testament Baal-zebub, who is described as the god of Ekron (a Philistine city) in 2 Kings 1. The epithet baal zbb, lord of the flies, is apparently a deliberate corruption of baal zbl, exalted lord, whose equivalent is found in Ugaritic literature (balu zablu).

Mainstream secular scholarship argues that passages hinting at the divine council theme are remnants of the original polytheistic cult of Yahwism, the religion peculiar to the ancient Israelites. In particular, it is asserted from archaeological evidence that Yahweh was worshiped alongside his consort, Asherah.[2] These scholars claim that the majority of the Hebrew Bible, considered to have been written late, witnesses a kind of anachronistic polemic of the worship of deities beside Yahweh (when in fact there was no such taboo originally). Concomitantly, over time Yahweh increasingly assumes roles that were previously assigned to other deities, or to his wife Asherah. Thus developed the classical conception of monotheism, which is the foundation of Western Judeo-Christian civilization. Despite this paradigm shift, these scholars argue, extrabiblical evidence, together with clues such as the divine council theme in Scripture, allow for the reconstruction of the Israelites original polytheistic system of worship.

By contrast, evangelicals, such as Heiser, maintain that the divine council in Scripture, while influenced by the surrounding ANE cultures, nevertheless is distinctive, and does not contravene monotheism. Another scholar who has popularized the use of ANE backgrounds in studying Scripture is John Walton, whose Lost World book series examines various Old Testament passages in light of the ANE context. A common distinction he makes is the following: Although the Bible was written for us, it was not written to us. If the Bible was not written to us, then it seems we must adjust to the worldview of the biblical authors, at least to some degree, in order to properly understand the Old Testament, including the theme of the divine council.

Given the work of these scholars (and others), however, ordinary Christians might be wondering how they could possibly access the meaning of the Old Testament (almost eighty percent of Gods word!) without an adequate understanding of its ANE background. What is more, if the Hebrew Bible is a product of its own cultural and historical setting, does it even make sense to speak of it as Christian Scripture?

As is so often the case, ones hermeneutics plays a decisive role in determining the interpretive outcome. A critical component in any hermeneutical process is the assessment and incorporation of various types of contexts. There are near and far biblical contexts (e.g., verse, chapter, book, canon). There are also extrabiblical contexts situated around the ANE milieu in which Holy Scripture arose. It is precisely here the proper adjudication of biblical and extrabiblical contexts where significant hermeneutical battles are fought. When faced with apparently conflicting contextual evidence, which type of context ought to play a more primary role? Should the ANE context of the Old Testament be dominant, with the Bibles internal textual context playing a subservient role?

Heiser argues,

The proper context for interpreting the Bible is the context of the biblical writers the context that produced the Bible. Every other context is alien to the biblical writers and, therefore, to the Bible. Yet there is a pervasive tendency in the believing Church to filter the Bible through creeds, confessions, and denominational preferences.[3]

Heiser appears to be arguing that certain key elements about the biblical text (here, especially the divine realm) were essentially obscured to Christians over two millennia because they lacked access to the extrabiblical resources that we now possess, thanks to archaeology and other historical disciplines. Thus, he goes on to state,

The biblical text was produced by men who lived in the ancient Near East and Mediterranean between the second millennium BC and the first century AD. To understand how biblical writers thought, we need to tap into the intellectual output of that world. A vast amount of that material is available to us, thanks to modern technology.[4]

Just how unique was Israel in its ancient context? On the one hand, Israel, as we have seen, was a nation and a people with a language and culture that was situated in a specific historical context, one that we dare not ignore. On the other hand, Israel was a distinct entity, constituted by God to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Exodus 19:6). Its God, Yahweh, the true God, was unlike the false gods of the nations (Jeremiah 14:22). We must be careful not to assume that the true meaning of divine Scripture (both New and Old Testaments) is somehow ultimately inaccessible to modern people apart from specialist knowledge of the ancient cultural context. While the Bible is indeed the product of multiple human authors, the ultimate author of Scripture is God himself, and it bears witness to a fundamental unity from Genesis through to Revelation.

In general, Heisers work offers interesting and sometimes illuminating exegeses of many passages. Unfortunately, it is sometimes imbalanced and suffers from a deliberate attempt to downplay the churchs historical engagement with Scripture. Some of the language in the book on Trinitarian matters, for example, is unhelpful, and potentially dangerous. Certain terms that Heiser uses to point out a distinction between the Father and the Son in the Old Testament (such as a second Yahweh and two powers in heaven) are at best careless, and at worst ignorant of historic orthodox Christian doctrines such as divine simplicity.5 More broadly, in emphasizing the reality of other spiritual beings, especially malevolent powers, Heiser tends to downplay the central problem described in Scripture (our sinful state before a holy God) and its only solution (the substitutionary death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, for us and in our stead).

Consequently, while it is helpful to consider the ancient cultural context, it is vital to always think theologically and canonically when studying Scripture, especially in the context of the historical theology of Gods church. When thinking about the divine council theme, one vital component of historic Christian theology is the Creator-creature distinction. God is not merely the greatest of all beings, as though he were somehow a species of a genus of things in common with plants, galaxies, and humans. Rather, God is utterly unique, separate from his creation. God is in a class of his own.

A major section in Scripture devoted to the uniqueness of God is the so-called trial of the false gods in Isaiah 4045. There, Yahweh sets himself in distinction to both the false gods and more broadly his entire creation. God cannot be likened to anything (Isaiah 40:18), neither to the idols of men nor to his majestic creation. Yahweh challenges his opponents to tell us the former things, what they are, that we may consider them, that we may know their outcome; or declare to us the things to come (Isaiah 41:22). The former things in history may be known, but their deep purposes in the hand of a sovereign God are beyond the grasp of his creatures. Because of this, the Lord does not give his praise or glory to anyone else in creation (Isaiah 42:8). Indeed, the Lord declares, Before me no god was formed, nor shall there be any after me (Isaiah 43:10). It is the Lord who created the heavens, and there is no other (Isaiah 45:18). Gods creatorship and sovereignty are thus vital indications of his uniqueness.

Given this, how are we to understand the divine council theme? Where do these beings fit? Clearly, they fit on the creature side of the Creator-creature division, and as such they share none of Gods incommunicable attributes (for example, his aseity, his omnipotence, his omnipresence). Consequently, it is better to speak of the members of the divine council as heavenly beings and not divine beings. For although the council is of a heavenly, spiritual nature, and although Scripture portrays God as heading this council, these beings are not in the same class as him. As A.W. Pink so eloquently states in his book The Sovereignty of God, even the loftiest creatures of all, the awe-inspiring seraphim who dwell in Gods presence (as seen in Isaiahs vision), are infinitely closer to the tiny insect with its fleeting life than they are to Yahweh. They cover their feet before their Creator because they too are made by him.[6]

It is also important to understand that God, although he maintains a divine council, is not in any way subject to it, but is in fact ultimately sovereign over both it and the rest of his creation. By employing the important theological concept of secondary causation, we can thus properly understand how 1 Chronicles 21:1 states that Satan incited David to number Israel in a census, and yet 2 Samuel 24:1 claims that it was the Lord who ultimately incited David. Although Satan and other members of the divine council are genuine agents and active in the world, nevertheless, none of their activities is ultimately independent of Gods providence and his divine decree.[7]

Given this theological foundation, what should we make of the fact that in a number of passages, Satan and other members of the divine council are described as god(s)? For example, Satan himself is described as the god of this world in 2 Corinthians 4:4, an apparent reference to his temporary domination of fallen mankind by means of blinding them to the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God. When Hebrews 2:7 quotes from Psalm 8, it appears to be interpreting the occurrence of elhm in that passage as a reference to the members of the divine council (i.e., angels). This word is ambiguous in Hebrew, since it has a plural form (the -m suffix indicates plural), yet it usually refers in context to God (singular). Thus, one could translate the verse as follows: You have made him [man] a little lower than the gods.

Likewise, Psalm 82, although exegetically challenging, appears to be describing a council of non-human beings as gods: God has taken his place in the divine council; in the midst of the gods he holds judgment. If this interpretation is correct, it seems that these beings had some kind of jurisdiction over the nations (as is also hinted in the passage discussed earlier, Deuteronomy 32:8). They are faulted for judging unjustly (Psalm 82:2) and hence condemned by God in verses 6 and 7: I said, You are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you; nevertheless, like men you shall die, and fall like any prince. Astonishingly, the psalm ends with the promise that God will one day both judge all the nations and inherit them (i.e., redeem them).

It is crucial to observe what Pauls theology both says and does not say about other gods in the context of idol worship. In his extended discussion of food offerings to idols, beginning in 1 Corinthians 8, Paul does not deny the existence of malevolent spiritual realities behind the physical idols worshiped by the pagan nations. On the one hand, he states that the physical object (the idol) has no real existence (1 Corinthians 8:4), something that even the ancients acknowledged. Nevertheless, there is an actual demonic realm behind idol worship, for Paul later warns the Corinthians not to be participants with demons like the pagans, who, when they sacrifice, offer to demons and not to God (1 Corinthians 10:20). Consequently, Paul is not being sarcastic or speaking hypothetically when he says the following:

Although there may be so-called gods in heaven or on earth as indeed there are many gods and many lords yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist. (1 Corinthians 8:56)

The gods behind idols are gods for the pagan unbelieving nations, not for Christians. One day, all such gods will be judged, and their authority over the nations will be stripped away. Indeed, this process began at the cross and the resurrection of Christ, where God disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in him (Colossians 2:15).[8]

For the believer, everything in the new covenant is new. Not only does he have a new relationship with God, but he has a new relationship with sin, the flesh, and indeed the fallen heavenly beings who presently are in this world. There has been a fundamental shift in allegiances, to the point that Paul boldly declares to the Colossians that God has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins (Colossians 1:1314).

Furthermore, the Gentile nations are now progressively turning to God and becoming part of his eschatological people. This was already promised in the Old Testament prophets and was inaugurated with the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is very significant, therefore, in Acts 2, when the disciples begin to speak in the languages of the nations and three thousand are added to their number. Later in Acts, Paul is specifically told that he is being sent to the Gentiles to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me (Acts 26:18).

As modern Western believers, we should be aware of the supernatural realm that exists around us. Yet just the same, as Christians we must always put these spiritual realities into their proper context in terms of our theology of God. Furthermore, as new-covenant believers, we joyfully recognize that we have been delivered from genuine spiritual darkness and that our gospel witness to the nations is truly a matter of life and death.

Editors note: This article originally appeared at Desiring God.

__________

1. The only other place they are mentioned is in Numbers 13:33, where the Israelite spies bring back a false report about the land. Because they are untrustworthy eyewitnesses, we should be cautious about drawing any confident conclusions about the continued existence of the Nephilim after the flood (or indeed that they were giant in stature, to the point that the Israelites felt like grasshoppers in comparison to them).

2. One is sometimes puzzled that non-confessional scholarship makes so much of the archaeological evidence for Israelite idolatry (as though that were a defeater for the reliability of the Bible), when it is even more pervasive on the pages of Scripture.

3. Michael Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015), 16. Emphasis original.

4. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 16.

5. Heiser, Unseen Realm, 252.

6. Biblically speaking, the feet, as R.C. Sproul explains in The Holiness of God, are symbols of creatureliness. This is seen, for example, in Gods command for Moses to remove his sandals from his feet at the burning bush.

7. To that end, certain theological approaches are quite unhelpful here in setting up a cosmic warfare model and delegating a measure of ultimate sovereignty away from God and to the divine council. Sometimes it is even claimed that God is constrained in some way by this council and is therefore unable to prevent evil that he otherwise would have. Although this theology is intended to provide a kind of theodicy for evil in our world, it cannot ultimately succeed in so doing, and in fact undermines any basis in our confidence that God is truly in charge of our destiny. See, for example, Gregory A. Boyd, Satan and the Problem of Evil: Constructing a Trinitarian Warfare Theodicy (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2001), or more recently, John C. Peckham, Theodicy of Love: Cosmic Conflict and the Problem of Evil (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2018).

8. That non-human authorities and rulers are implied here is clear from several other passages in the New Testament. In Ephesians 3:10, the rulers and authorities are located in the heavenly places. In Ephesians 6:12, the character of these authorities is clearly described: We do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places. Finally, 1 Peter 3:22 lists authorities and powers alongside angels and claims that these have now been subjected to Christ who is in heaven.

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What is The Divine Council? Southern Equip - The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

The wealthy grew olives and figs in Israel 7,000 years ago – ISRAEL21c

Posted By on June 23, 2022

Researchers have identified some of the worlds earliest examples of our ancestors cultivating fruit remains of a 7,000-year-old olive and fig trees.

They say they must have been deliberately planted because neither tree grows naturally in the Jordan Valley, southern Israel.

The research team, from Tel Aviv University and the Hebrew University, found remnants of charcoal in the valley at Tel Zaf, a large and wealthy village from the Chalcolithic or Copper Age. They were later analyzed in the lab.

Remains of a 7,000-year-old hearth at Tel Zaf. Photo by Prof. Yosef Garfinkel

Olives and figs were considered luxury fruits at the time, and the inhabitants went to great lengths to cultivate them.

Archeobotanist Dr. Dafna Langgut. Photo courtesy of Tel Aviv University

Olive trees grow in the wild in the land of Israel, but they do not grow in the Jordan Valley, said Dafna Langgut, head of Tel Aviv Universitys Laboratory of Archaeobotany & Ancient Environments, who led the study.

This means that someone brought them there intentionally took the knowledge and the plant itself to a place that is outside its natural habitat. In archeobotany, this is considered indisputable proof of domestication, which means that we have here the earliest evidence of the olives domestication anywhere in the world.

Scientists can identify tree and plant remains under the microscope from their anatomic structure, even if theyve burned to charcoal. Wood was the go-to material in the ancient world for construction, making tools and furniture, and as a source of energy.

So analyzing the remnants from a fireplace tells us a lot about what kinds of trees grew in the natural environment at the time, and in this case, when humans began to cultivate fruit trees.

Prof. Yosef Garfinkel. Photo courtesy of Hebrew University

The tree remnants used in the study were collected by Prof. Yosef Garfinkel, of the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University, who headed the dig at Tel Zaf. The findings were publishedin the journal Scientific Reports.

Since groves of fruit trees require a substantial initial investment, and then live on for a long time, they have great economic and social significance in terms of owning land and bequeathing it to future generations procedures suggesting the beginnings of a complex society, said Langgut.

Moreover, its quite possible that the residents of Tel Zaf traded in products derived from the fruit trees, such as olives, olive oil, and dried figs, which have a long shelf life.

Such products may have enabled long-distance trade that led to the accumulation of material wealth, and possibly even taxation initial steps in turning the locals into a society with a socio-economic hierarchy supported by an administrative system.

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The wealthy grew olives and figs in Israel 7,000 years ago - ISRAEL21c

Students heading back to classrooms nationwide as teachers strike halted – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 23, 2022

Zelensky tells Israeli students he is disappointed by governments level of support

Stressing the close historical and cultural ties between Ukraine and Israel, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says that his country is disappointed by the level of material and diplomatic support it has received from the Israeli government.

Unfortunately, for most items of assistance we would want to get from Israel, we cant say weve gotten any of that assistance, says Zelensky, speaking by video to students and faculty at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem a day before the four-month mark of the Russian invasion.

Please remember how close we are linked, how our ties are, and what should be the level of understanding between us, he continues, after referencing the Israeli pioneers who grew up in Ukraine, including prime minister Golda Meir, author Sholem Aleichem, and president Yitzhak Ben-Zvi.

When governments introduce sanctions against Russia, this is not about business, he stresses, wearing the khaki t-shirt senior Ukrainian officials have donned during the war. This is about values and general security. This is about everyone who is willing to destroy another nation has to be held accountable. Unfortunately, we have not seen yet Israel join the sanctions regime.

Why we have misunderstandings, miscommunication with representatives of the government, I dont know, he laments.

At the same time, Zelensky underscores his admiration and gratitude toward the Israeli people.

I love your country, he says. I am grateful to the people of Israel. I am grateful to you for the sincere and emotional support for Ukraine, for your support of Ukrainians, Im grateful for the Ukrainian flags on your streets. We see this and we value this very much.

He also says that he cares deeply about the future of Israel-Ukraine relations.

We do have a joint future, a great future, says Zelensky. Because we have this great history and great past We will have to look into each others eyes for many years to come.

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Students heading back to classrooms nationwide as teachers strike halted - The Times of Israel

FOJAM and MSO unite for ‘A Night of Compassion’ – Beat Magazine

Posted By on June 23, 2022

Created after the tragic death of Westlakes son, this seven-movement song cycle draws on ancient Hebrew and Arabic poems, proverbs and texts that express the wisdom of compassion. A meeting of song and symphony, Westlake and Lior explore healing in a world struggling with divisiveness. Though Compassion draws from the languages and cultural richness of two worlds, the overriding theme of the work is the wisdom and universality of compassion, says Lior on the collaboration.

Keep up with the latest music news, features, festivals, interviews and reviewshere.

A Night of Compassion is a collaboration between Festival of Jewish Arts and Music (FOJAM) and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. The evening will also bring together pianist and MSO Composer in Residence Paul Grabowsky AO and Indigenous soul vocalist Emma Donovan. Accompanying Emma Donovan singing in language, the pair will also play tracks from their recent gospel and country collaboration, The Old Rugged Cross.

The classically trained, Ukrainian-Jewish-Australian duo made up of vocalist Billie Tumarkin and multi-instrumentalist Alex Burkoy will also perform joining Lior and Westlake to perform culturally significant works that address themes of compassion and healing.

As the Festival Patron of FOJAM and Compassions co-creator and lead performer, Lior welcomed the opportunity to re-present the original work along with pieces from fellow musicians.

As a fluent Hebrew speaker, I initially thought that singing texts in Arabic would feel foreign and disingenuous, yet to my surprise, many of the words I encountered were common to both languages, Lior continues.

In learning these texts, it became clear to me that these two languages share a common origin. Just as experience often validates the existence of a well-worn cliche, it is difficult to escape the analogy of two brothers starting from a common source and branching out to become what we now know as Hebrew and Arabic.

Eight years after the critically acclaimed Melbourne debut of their award-winning song cycle Compassion, Westlake and Lior reunite once again. The catalyst for Compassion was a single watershed moment: my first Lior concert, the inaugural fundraiser for the foundation our family formed in memory of my son Eli. At dusk, Lior began to weave his magic upon the crowd. It was a poignant occasion planned to coincide with the one year anniversary of Elis death, and the music held a very special meaning for all, states Westlake. Featuring FOJAM Festival Patron and singer-songwriter Lior and acclaimed composer Nigel Westlakes ARIA award-winning song cycle Compassion as the centerpiece, FOJAM re-stages this outstanding work with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra for the first time since 2014.

Liors music had been part of our family playlist for years. Autumn Flow, the album that rocketed Lior to prominence in 2005, was among the last music I shared with my son Eli before his death. As Lior came back on stage for an encore, little did I realise that his final offering for the night would hold the germ of an idea that would become a life-changing journey.

Without accompaniment, Lior embraced the plaintive strains of the ancient Hebrew hymn of compassion Avinu Malkeinu. The power and spirituality of the song struck a deep resonance amongst us all. It was following that concert, I suggested to Lior that I work on a symphonic arrangement for Avinu Malkeinu, which subsequently had commissioning support from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

Get tickets to A Night of Compassion, or find out more information, by heading here.

Made in partnership with FOJAM and the MSO

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FOJAM and MSO unite for 'A Night of Compassion' - Beat Magazine

Hasidic boys like mine don’t receive the education they deserve – Forward

Posted By on June 21, 2022

A Hasidic man walks through a Jewish Orthodox neighborhood in Brooklyn Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Beatrice WeberJune 15, 2022

In September 2019, almost 1,000 days ago, I filed a complaint with New York City and Yeshiva Mesivta Arugath Habosem, alleging that my youngest son, who was 6 years old at the time, was not receiving a secular education as required by NYS law.

The New York Supreme Court this past week finally confirmed what Ive known all along: The Education Department is not following up on complaints that the Hasidic yeshivas are failing to provide a secular education, but instead is giving parents the runaround.

I am a mother of 10 children, six of them boys, all of whom have attended Hasidic yeshivas where they receive six hours of instruction in basic English and math a week at best, for just five of their elementary school years.

My 9-year-old son begins his school day at 8:45 a.m. with Judaic studies. His secular studies begin at 4:45 p.m. and end at 5:45 p.m. He is taught by a Yiddish-speaking young man who has not attended high school and who often relies on my son to read the harder words in the books aloud to the class.

Once my sons enter high school, they receive no secular education at all; their entire days are devoted to the study of the Talmud.

This has made finding a job very difficult for my sons. Some of my adult sons have chosen to remain in yeshiva and study the Talmud full time, and are well prepared for a life of study. However, my sons who have chosen to join the workforce have struggled terribly, as they are unable to put together a resume, fill out an application or prepare for a job interview. Sadly, the majority of jobs that are available to them are low-level, unskilled jobs.

This is the reality for the overwhelming number of men in the Hasidic community who wish to work. The idea of becoming a professional is out of reach, something they cannot even dream of, something that is seen as only for non-Jews. For all too many, going on public assistance appears to be the better option. I believe this leads to low self-esteem and frustration, but few are comfortable talking about it.

For years, despite my frustration with the lack of secular education my children were receiving, I did as women in the community are taught. I kept silent. Like in a dysfunctional family, where the focus is on hiding the dysfunction rather than addressing it, Hasidic women are taught to keep silent and not make trouble, and I obeyed.

Years before I left my marriage, I got permission from a rabbi to go to college and began to experience the benefits of an education.

The world opened up to me. I was amazed at everything that had been withheld from me. I was offered a job in the community that I could have never have gotten without the benefit of education. This reinforced to me the importance of secular studies.

When I left my marriage, I experienced incredible pushback from my family and the community. My older children were alienated from me, and my family supported my husband. This shocked me but also gave me the courage to finally speak up about my sons educational neglect.

Confronting the authoritarian nature of my community emboldened me. I wanted my son to have every opportunity; to see the future as filled with possibilities and I was no longer willing to remain silent about something so important for his future.

In my divorce agreement, I was ordered to keep my children enrolled in the Hasidic schools that they attend. Fearful of losing custody, as many of my acquaintances who have left marriages in the ultra-Orthodox community had experienced, I agreed to the demands.

But my frustration grew, especially after seeing the struggles my adult sons were experiencing when joining the workforce.

Still, I was terrified to speak up. Growing up, I was taught that being a moser, a snitch, was tantamount to committing the worst sin. In school, we were told stories of how in Eastern Europe a moser could be ostracized or killed for their actions.

However, the illiteracy that was being inflicted upon my children and tens of thousands like them was indefensible. Judaism treasures learning. For Jewish leaders to withhold education from children was wrong.

First I met with the school principal, a kind-looking Hasidic man, who explained that he came in for a few hours a week to run the English program.

Yet when I asked him about the educational goals for my son, he had no information and explained that the yeshiva does not do report cards.

Later, when I asked for the schedule and curriculum, he refused to provide them. I dont think that he was being difficult. I believe that they just dont exist.

No curriculum.

No schedule.

No reading list.

Throughout the years, I have never received a single schedule or curriculum for any of my sons.

Not one.

Parents are expected to trust the school. Questioning can lead to a parent being labeled a troublemaker, with serious consequences such as expulsion from the school, loss of jobs in the community, and general harassment and social ostracization.

When I realized that I was not making any progress in trying to solve things within the schools themselves, my attorney David Shapiro and I filed a complaint with the city and state.

Though I knew that this was a hot political topic, I was shocked by the runaround I got. Instead of taking my complaint seriously, I was stonewalled by both the city and state. Despite promises to the contrary, the Department of Educations investigation was never completed. I was back at square one, unable to ensure that my sons received an education.

A year ago, my attorney and I finally brought this issue to court. Last week, in a scathing report, the judge ordered the city and state to conclude their investigation within four months.

Though the city issued an ultimatum to 26 failing yeshivas in 2019, this ruling marks the first time that a judge in NY has ordered the city and state to determine whether a yeshiva is providing an academic education.

Despite this landmark ruling, there is a long road ahead until Hasidic children receive the education they deserve. My son and his peers are still spending hours in school today (and every other day) and not receiving an education. Every day this continues is intolerable.

However, I believe that the symbolic value of this ruling will catalyze holistic change.

I have been accused of being a disgruntled outsider, but the opposite is true. I speak for many Hasidic mothers and fathers who are despondent over the shoddy education their children receive. Indeed, I regularly receive messages from parents, often anonymous, thanking me for speaking up.

They thank me for being their voice, as the price they would pay for speaking up is too high.

I hope that this ruling empowers and motivates other Hasidic parents to speak up and demand better for their children without fear and that the leaders return to one of Judaisms central teachings, that all knowledge is holy.

Beatrice Weber is an author, speaker, former ultra-Orthodox rebbitzen and a mother of 10.

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

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Hasidic boys like mine don't receive the education they deserve - Forward

Up in the Air – Tablet Magazine

Posted By on June 21, 2022

When Dvora Lapson, the celebrated dancer, choreographer, and Jewish educator, published Dances of the Jewish People, a spiral-backed compendium of steps and directions, in the mid-20th century, little did she imagine that, in America of the 21st, the Hasidic practice of lifting the happy couple aloft in the air would become the thing to do at Jewish weddings, even among those celebrating what used to be called a mixed marriage.

Perched precariously on a set of ballroom chairs, whose wobbly legs are held by equally wobbly well-wishers, their faces flush with drink and physical exertion, the newly married bob up and down. Sometimes, they clutch at either end of a hanky or a cloth napkin, waving it merrily about or bridging the distance between the two chairs. And sometimes, they do both.

Like conquering heroes, or royalty, the newlyweds are also paraded around the dance floor, accompanied by singing, shouting, and clapping guests. Depending on the crowd, the music and the look on the couples faces, which ranges from Im lovin this, to put me down NOW, staying aloft might last a tad longer than a New York minute or go on and on until the bearers arms grow weary.

Limited at first to weddings, the chairs, as the dance is called by those in the know, has become such an entrenched part of a simcha, a Jewish celebration, that is now customary at contemporary bar and bat mitzvah parties. On these occasions, parents and grandparents, as well as the adolescent celebrant, are hoisted upward, extending the movements symbolic circumference.

Whatever the occasion, the heavy lifting doesnt follow any prescribed pattern. Sometimes, it erupts spontaneously while a hora, or circle dance, is underway. At other times, especially within more ritually observant and knowledgeable settings like those among the modern Orthodox, the moment might follow on the heels of or precede a traditional dance known as keytsad mrakdim in which the nuptial couple are seated on two chairs as guests perform all sorts of antics in front of them. Then again, it might not. The chairs move to their own beat. Meanwhile, when theres little by way of Jewish dance literacy, a professional Jewish dance leader like Steven Lee Weintraub might step in to set things in motion.

If modern secular dance is about the self and the body, flirtation, and sexualitycue the hipsthe chairs dance and the larger circle in which its quite literally embeddedcue the armscelebrate community. As Weintraub puts it, the dance is a gift that elevates the newly married couple and amplifies their status while also bringing people together. That you dont have to be mindful of its significance or even know the steps to participate is an added bonus. An example of what Weintraub calls dancing happily, its fun, fast-paced, easy, and joyful nature draws you in.

A high point of the festivities and in more secular circles, the culmination of the Jewish segment of the evening, the chairs has become a hallmark of a Jewish wedding, distinguishing it from its non-Jewish counterparts. It also calls into being and heralds a contemporary Judaism that is fleet of foot, inclusive, and gestural rather than obligatory.

How this came to beand whyis anyones guess. Like so much else associated with grassroots behavior, where several intangible factorsopportunity, motive, and tasteappear to converge all at once, giving rise to a new cultural phenomenon, pinpointing the history of the chairs dance in the United States is equally elusive.

To compound matters, documenting the history of dance is famously difficult. Photographs might freeze the moment, videos might capture its intensity, and participants able to recount with various degrees of glee and apprehension what it felt like to be elevated, but how and when this particular dance came on the scene and whom to hold responsiblethe caterer? The band? The increasingly indispensable and ubiquitous party planner? Fiddler on the Roof?is murky and hard to pin down.

Dance ethnographers such as Jill Gellerman speak of the ripple effect, of the ways by which dances in one cultural arena spill over and take root in another, a process facilitated informally by popular culture, word of mouth or cultural sightseeing. The chairs dance, for instance, moved from a Hasidic context to a yeshivish one and onto modern Orthodox circles, from whence it radiated outward.

Often, passing familiarity with a dance or a song is obtained by being on the sidelines as a wedding guest who observes, and takes a shine to, the goings-on. Slightly more formal channels of circulation such as the internet and its self-appointed apostles also beat the drum for Jewish dance, while immersive Jewish arts festivals such as KlezKamp or KlezKanada expose audiences to an expanded repertoire of possibilities.

Klezmer, in fact, has much to do with setting the stage for the current appeal of the chairs dance. A phenomenon of the 1970s, which came into its own a decade later and stayed for several more, the revival of interest in a style of Old World music-making that had long been passand declasstook youthful American Jewish audiences by storm. A literal blast from the past, with nothing mellow or subdued about it, klezmer provided a new generation of American Jews with an assertive, unrepentant Jewish identity.

At the same time that klezmer was tooting its horn (or, more to the point, its clarinet), another revival was underway: the Jewish renewal movement. Best understood as an attitude, it married several sensibilities that had hitherto lived far apart: the socially progressive values of egalitarianism, the joy of Hasidism, the informed do-it-yourself spirit of the havurah. The objective, explains Shaul Magid in American Post-Judaism, his deeply reasoned account of Jewish renewals evolution and development, was to construct a radically new Torah emerging out of but not confined by the old.

Tout ensemble, both klezmer and renewal challenged the status quo, making room for and repositioning prewar acoustic patterns and ritual behaviors in postmodern America. Floating free of the traditional anchors of Jewish communal life even while rooted in the pursuit of authenticity and the promise of continuity, these two instances of cultural efflorescence shook things up in every which waysonically, performatively, structurally, emotionally. Ultimately, they seeded the ground for one of the most striking developments of our day: post-denominationalism.

You dont have to cite chapter and verse from the Pew study on Jewish affiliation to know that aligning ones Jewish self with any of the four American Jewish denominations, as our parents and grandparents did before us, no longer fits the bill. Rejecting institutional boundaries and its associated labels, millenials and their successors prefer a much looser, more freewheeling, pick-and-choose approach to modern Jewish life. With cultural fluidity and openness as their mantra, equal access to Jewish resources of all kinds, be it studying Talmud and Kabbalah, or dancing up a storm at a simcha, is also high on their list of priorities, challenging the claim of one group over another to maintain a monopoly.

Which brings us full circle.When joined together, klezmer + renewal begot post-denominationalism and post-denominationalism, in turn, begot the chairs dance, circa 2000-22, whose origins are Hasidic, whose expression is boisterous, and whose access is unguarded and open.

Am I making more of this phenomenon than it warrants? It could be. Im under no illusion that, if asked about the rationale for or motivation behind the chairs dance, not one of its participants would prattle on about post-denominationalism or cultural fluidity. Theyre too busy enjoying themselves to be overtly staking a claim for authenticity or making a bid for inclusion.

Still, theres no getting around the fact that lifting the celebrants into the air as guests enfold them in a circle is a gesture that beckons, invitingly, even if you have two left feet.

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Up in the Air - Tablet Magazine


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