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France has 500,000 Jews but only 5 women rabbis. A growing movement is pushing to change that. – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on June 2, 2022

PARIS (JTA) In 2019, at a Jewish conference in Troyes, France, Myriam Ackermann-Sommer did something quietly historic: She read from the Torah in an Orthodox prayer group.

Ackermann-Sommer was in charge of facilitating the minyan or the 10-person Jewish prayer quorum, traditionally male-only at the cross-denominational conference, titled Do Women Have To Disobey To Be Leaders? and organized by Filles de Rachi, or Daughters of Rashi, a reference to the medieval French sage born Shlomo Yitzhaki. Troyes was his birthplace.

Theres a lot of questioning our motives in the Orthodox world, and elsewhere, like saying, Why do you do that? Is it just feminism? she told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. No, I think its Judaism and its been there all along.

In the United States especially, the roles of women in Judaism have expanded in all denominations, including strictly gender-conscious Orthodoxy. In France, however, where Orthodoxy has long been the dominant Jewish denomination, there are only five female rabbis in a country with over half a million Jews.

The 2019 Daughters of Rashi conference was a call to action: Just after the conference that year, Pauline Bebe, the countrys first-ever female rabbi, opened up the countrys first Reform rabbinical school. Six of its eight current students are women.

A second edition of the conference imagined as a biannual event, but delayed due to COVID-19 took place last month in Rouen, the city in Normandy known for its medieval, Romanesque yeshiva (Europes oldest and discovered in the 1970s). Panelists took on an array of topics, from the COVID pandemic to the war in Ukraine to the role of France in Jewish history, and vice versa. Between 70 and 80 people attended, down from 200 in 2019 because of COVID precautions.

Conference-goers discussed topics that engage all French Jews, especially their sense of security in a country struggling with diversity and integration. I often think when youre Jewish in France, they always ask where you came from, said Manon Brissaud-Frenk, a student at Bebes Rabbinical School of Paris and a Daughters of Rashi co-president. And I always find it quite difficult because if I look at it personally, its been more than a century. Im French. Full stop.

But the conference also continued the theme of greater inclusion for women in the Jewish organizational and theological worlds. One well-known attendee was Reform Rabbi Delphine Horvilleur, who has gained international acclaim for her books and media presence.

The question of the advance of women in the political world is the opposite of the pawn in the game of chess: the right of women can go backwards, warned Horvilleur in her talk with Danielle Cohen-Levinas, a French philosopher and musicologist with a specialty in Jewish philosophy.

Also in attendance were figures from the Israelite Central Consistory of France, or Consistoire, created by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1808. Many women hold leadership and teaching positions within the largely Orthodox body, which continues to play an important role in the direction of French Judaism, but it does not recognize women rabbis. Rosine Cohen, who has been teaching for years at the Consistorial Victoire synagogue in Paris, shared a workshop with Javier Leibiusky, who researches the immigration of Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish, from the East to Buenos Aires.

When I was young, we studied women in the Talmud, but it was never an issue, Cohen said during their talk.

Even if we dont have the same way of interpreting the text, even if we try to do it in a different way, with maybe different roles, there is no reason that in a society like France, women should find themselves at some point choosing between playing minor or major roles, no matter what space they are in, Brissaud-Frenk said.

The mix of topics, the array of religious denominations represented and the focus on women made for a historic combination in the eyes of Laura Hobson Faure, chair of the modern Jewish history department at the University of Paris Panthon-Sorbonne. She said that while these groups might come together at a rally for Israel, for example, gathering for an overtly religious event is rare.

Whats interesting is that usually Orthodoxy struggles with the notion of pluralism in Judaism, said Hobson Faure. The fact that women are creating this pluralistic space in France where the different tendencies of Judaism are represented is quite new.

Brissaud-Frenk was part of the board directors of the Maison Rachi, a cultural center that aims to preserve Rashis legacy. She was inspired by one of the lines in Rashis siddur, or prayer book, concerning the education of women: If she wants to, nothing can stop her.

The concept led to a discussion with Bebes husband, Rabbi Tom Cohen of the French-American liberal Kehilat Gesher synagogue in Paris. Brissaud-Frenk and Cohen decided to bring together female rabbis and Jewish scholars to exchange, study and learn and the conference was born.

Ive gone to way too many conferences where all the talking heads were male rabbis who talked about women and Judaism, said Cohen, who is a Daughters of Rashi honorary co-president. I thought that would be great because were now at this stage in the development that theres enough women who have come through the studies, universities, that we have scholars of high quality in all of the different [Jewish] movements.

The conference has inspired women outside of the more liberal movements too. Ackermann-Sommer, who also spoke at this years conference, is studying in New York City with two other French women at Yeshivat Maharat, which confers semicha ordination to Orthodox Jewish women.

Myriam Ackermann-Sommer speaks at the conference in the Synagogue of Rouen, May 23, 2022. (Filles de Rachi)

She is also pursuing a Ph.D. with a focus on Jewish-American literature, and her podcast Daf Yummy a play on Daf Yomi, the practice of studying a single page of the Babylonian Talmud per day compares Jewish teachings to classic literature and popular culture, from Platos Symposium to Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith.

With her husband mile Ackermann, she also runs a Modern Orthodox group called Ayeka, which promotes the democratization of Jewish study. One Ayeka program focuses on studying Jewish texts that are usually reserved for men. Its name, Kol-Elles, is more wordplay in this instance on the word kollel, the term for an institute of full-time, intensive Jewish study, using elle, the French female pronoun. So far, about 100 Jewish women, ages 25 to 60, have taken part in the program.

Ackermann-Sommers end goal: to become Frances first female leader of a Modern Orthodox synagogue.

I just think that male, bearded rabbis are simply not enough anymore, she said. It used to be the case that these were the types of figures that we wanted to look up to, for decades, for millennia, probably. But now we need women to represent women and to speak to women and to men as well.

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France has 500,000 Jews but only 5 women rabbis. A growing movement is pushing to change that. - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Anti-Black Racism and The Great Replacement | OP / ED | thesuburban.com – The Suburban Newspaper

Posted By on June 2, 2022

On Saturday, May 14, an 18-year-old gunman entered a supermarket in Buffalo and opened fire. In a matter of minutes, ten innocent people were dead and three more injured. Eleven of the victims were African American, deliberately targeted because of the colour of their skin. This, in itself, is horrific, but even a cursory look at this heinous hate crime reveals a deeply troubling motive that renders this impossibly immoral act even more evil and one that should concern us all.

Before perpetrating the attack and live streaming it on social media, the murderer published his manifesto, providing insight into the ideologies that animated his killing spree. He subscribed to the Great Replacement, a racist and antisemitic conspiracy theory that claims that elites and Jews are engaged in a nefarious plot to replace white Americans with people of colour. It was the same egregious theory that, in 2018, motivated a gunman to walk into the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh and murder 11 people and leave another six wounded.

While what happened in Buffalo was, clearly, a racist crime targeting African Americans, the actions of the murderer were connected to a conspiracy theory that is antisemitic to its core. The horror in Buffalo serves as devastating proof that hatred of Jews has consequences well beyond the Jewish community.

As part of my duties as a rabbi, I counsel people considering converting to Judaism. I recently sat with a young man who came to see me. After listening to him recount the fascinating journey that brought him to my office, I was compelled by Jewish law to caution him. Paraphrasing the 5th century text of the Talmud, I asked, are you aware that not everyone loves us?

The longer directive in the Talmud instructs that the potential convert must be asked, are you not aware that at this time the Jewish people are despised and oppressed? Tellingly, whenever this quote was repeated in later texts and codified into Jewish Law, the phrase at this time continued to be included.

This is a sobering reminder of the persistent nature of the worlds oldest hatred.

In addition to Pittsburgh and Buffalo, on August 3, 2019, a racist murdered 21 at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, where he targeted Latinos. His manifesto cited the same conspiracy theory. He also referenced the mosque shootings earlier that year in Christchurch, New Zealand. That killer targeted Muslims and killed 51 at two mosques. Again, his manifesto cited the evil, pernicious and debunked Great Replacement Theory.

Many were perplexed by the chant Jews will not replace us heard in Charlottesville. What was regular fare at neo-Nazi and white supremacist gatherings was, suddenly, thrust into the public consciousness. Unfortunately, it has only burgeoned since that notorious Unite the Right rally in August 2017.

In a sickening confluence of hate, the Buffalo murderer wrote Virginia Sorenson on his weapon. She was one of the victims of a car ramming attack during a 2021 Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin. White supremacists have characterized the six victims of that attack as exemplars of Black on White crime, and those victims have since become martyrs for the White supremacist cause. By inscribing her name on the gun, the Buffalo killer probably imagined himself as her avenger. The disturbing irony? The Black perpetrator of the Wisconsin assault also posted hate-filled antisemitic conspiracy theories.

More examples: On December 10, 2019, inspired by the sermons of Louis Farrakhan, two Black Nationalists opened fire on a kosher supermarket in Jersey City, New Jersey, killing five. On May 22, 2021, diners at a kosher restaurant were violently assaulted by leftist extremists in Los Angeles. On January 15 of this year a man entered a synagogue in Colleyvillle, Texas, demanding the release of an al-Qaeda operative imprisoned nearby.

We do not need to enumerate all recent examples to spot the pattern of hate and murder. The hate was fomented online, spread by veteran haters to their fellow believers and to young adults they seek to recruit to do the killing for them. These young, mostly white males are susceptible to the conspiracies peddled not just in the dark corners of the virtual world but, increasingly, in relatively mainstream media.

The events are linked both by the murderers wholehearted embracing of the spurious but dangerous conspiracies and by their proud references to the heinous killers they are emulating. Like others before him, the Buffalo terrorists manifesto comprised whole paragraphs from the New Zealand murderers manifesto. And, like the New Zealander, the Buffalo terrorist went in prepared to share his hate in real time with the world online.

Its that hate, grounded in antisemitism, that repeatedly manifests as violence in the real world and destroys any lives in its path.

Rabbi Reuben Poupko is the rabbi of the Beth Israel Beth Aaron Congregation in Montreal.

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Take The NYS Dept. Of Ed Fight To The Streets – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 2, 2022

While we strongly support and applaud the current community-wide efforts to encourage thousands of our co-religionists to sign petitions calling for a reversal of the proposed NYS Department of Education regulations prescribing yeshiva curriculums, we also cannot fail to note with sadness that we have yet to take a page from the very successful advocacy book of some of our fellow minorities. Black Americans have scored big time by coming out en masse in public places urging this or that result.

To be sure some of their demonstrations have unfortunately been marked by violence. One does not have to agree with the merits of their positions to acknowledge that they have made it perfectly clear that they understand the symbiotic dynamic between the street and politics and are not at all shy about exploiting it.

What makes this very frustrating is that what New York State is about to do to us directly impacts our fundamental duty to perpetuate our faith in the time-honored way we teach it to our children that Torah study is central. The proposed regulations would require our yeshivas to provide instruction that is substantially equivalent to what is offered in the public schools. Yet this would not only necessitate a curtailment in the time available for religious studies but would also authorize the imposition of the anti-Torah woke agenda that is causing such havoc in the public schools across America.

Moreover, there is a decided lack of appreciation of the educational value of the study of Jewish texts such as the Talmud and the commentaries in terms of reading comprehension and analytical skills and so much more.

When government tampers with our ability to transmit our faith, they challenge our essence as a people. Maybe we should consider making our views more loudly and clearly in person and at the ballot box.

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He Who Must Not Be Named: Responding to Mass Murders – aish.com – Aish

Posted By on June 2, 2022

They do not merit fame only infamy.

Grief, despair, anguish all of these words express, in the limited way words can convey heartbreaking pain, our response to the horror of this past weeks murderous rampage in the elementary school in Uvalde, Texas that took the lives of 19 children and two teachers.

In the aftermath of the Columbine massacre, a few months after teen shooters brutally murdered 12 of her classmates as well as her father who tried to intervene and save intended victims, Coni Sanders was standing in line at a supermarket with her young daughter when they came face-to-face with a shocking magazine cover. It prominently pictured the two gunmen responsible for one of the deadliest school shootings in American history. Coni realized that very few people know anything about her father who had saved countless lives, whereas virtually everyone knew the names and the tiniest of details about the murderers.

What do the killers want above all? Money is not the greatest motivator. Above all it is fame and notoriety that are the primary goals of those who commit the most horrific crimes assured of the media spotlight for weeks, if not months and years.

Adam Lankford, a criminologist at the University of Alabama, who spent years studying the effects of media coverage on future shooters, concluded that in all probability the most powerful deterrent to copycat crimes is to ensure that the murderers never achieve the personal fame that served as primary psychological motive. A lot of these shooters want to be treated like celebrities. They want to be famous. So the key is not to give them that treatment.

A mere four days after the 2017 Las Vegas concert shooting, an event which remains the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history, Lankford publicly urged journalists to refrain from using shooters name, photos, or writing in exhaustive detail about his supposed motivations - ideas which could inspire others to justify similar actions.

James Alan Fox, the Lipman Family Professor of Criminology, Law, and Public Policy and former dean at Northeastern University, singles out over-the-top coverage that includes irrelevant details about the killers, such as their writings and their backgrounds, items not only irrelevant but which unfortunately and unnecessarily humanizes them. It grants them the gift of being perceived human when our efforts ought to concentrate on their inhumanity.

Many law enforcement agencies have adopted the lead of the Aurora Illinois police chief who spoke just once the name of the gunman who killed five coworkers and wounded five officers: I said his name one time for the media, and I will never let it cross my lips again, Chief Ziman wrote in a Facebook post.

It is an approach that I believe has a precedent in the Bible.

The Torah recognized the most appropriate punishment for ultimate evil: God will blot out his name from under heaven (Deuteronomy 29:20).

King Solomon put it this way in his book of Proverbs: The memory of the righteous is a blessing, but the name of the wicked will rot (Proverbs 10:7).

Thankfully, the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Team, in collaboration with the FBI, developed the dont name them campaign to minimize and/or to totally avoid naming and describing individuals involved in mass shootings.

A name, according to the Talmud, is our most prized possession. The Hebrew word for name, shem, is represented by the two letters central to the word neshamah, soul. Those who, by their actions, destroy the sanctity of their souls no longer deserve the preservation of their names.

They do not merit fame only infamy.

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He Who Must Not Be Named: Responding to Mass Murders - aish.com - Aish

Inscription in Beit Shearim Burial Cave Reveals the Deceased: Yaakov the Convert Who Warned Grave Robbers – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 2, 2022

An inscription from about 1,800 years ago that was recently uncovered in a burial cave in Beit Shearim, northern Israel, reveals the name of the deceased and his identity: Yaakov the Convert.

The full inscription and the story of its discovery were presented at a joint conference of the University of Haifa and the Israel Antiquities Authority on Wednesday only days ahead of the holiday of Shavuot which celebrates Ruth the Moabite, the classic convert to Judaism.

The inscription is from the Late Roman or Early Byzantine period, in which Christianity was becoming powerful, and yet we find evidence that there were still gentiles who chose to join the Jewish people, said Prof. Adi Erlich of the Zinman Institute of Archeology and the School of Archeology at the University of Haifa, who leads the excavations at Beit Shearim.

Beit Shearim in the Lower Galilee was a central Jewish settlement during the Mishnah and Talmud periods (second to fifth centuries CE). The most famous part of the settlement is its cemetery, the burial place of Rabbi Yehuda Hanasi who completed the writing of the Mishnah. The place is now a national park, and the cemetery was recognized as a World Heritage Site several years ago. It was excavated some eighty years ago and features many inscriptions that speak about the Jews who were buried there in several languages, most frequently in Greek, which was then the international language of the Mediterranean basin.

About a year ago, Jonathan Orlin, head of conservation in the north at the Nature and Parks Authority, accidentally discovered a new burial cave that had not been known until then. The cave led to additional caves that were connected by gaps that had been breached in the walls in ancient times.

Two inscriptions in Greek were discovered in the innermost room which had been in complete darkness. They were deciphered by Prof. Price. In the smaller inscription, painted in red on the wall near a burial lodge, the name Judah was written, denoting the owner of the tomb.

The larger inscription, written in red on a stone slab lying in a cave and leaning against the opening of the same alcove, included 8 lines with the words: Yaakov the Convert adjures those who will open this tomb that no one must open it. 60 years old.

The final three words were written in a different script and therefore the researchers believe it may have been written by a relative, after his death.

According to the researchers, this is not only the first inscription revealed in Beit Shearim in the last 65 years, but it is also the first that explicitly mentions that the deceased is a convert. They added that inscriptions attesting to the converts are not common, and of those revealed in the past, most were from the Second Temple period or the Early Roman periodwhen Judaism was the dominant identity in Judea.

The present find is one of the few mentioning a convert from the late Roman period, the researchers said.

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Opinion: Uvalde reminds us to teach our children to make the right choices – El Paso Matters

Posted By on June 2, 2022

By Rabbi Levi Greenberg

There is no purpose for me to describe what happened in Uvalde last week, nor how I feel about it, because you know that already. We mourn the victims and feel solidarity with their loved ones. At the same time, Id like to share some ideas Ive been thinking about in the wake of this man-made tragedy that may be helpful to others.

Judaism teaches that we must personally grow from everything we see or hear. This is impossibly difficult to do when what you are seeing and hearing is 21 precious, innocent souls being gunned down in an elementary school. It may even feel callous.

But human nature is to process everything we see and hear, even, or especially, in the aftermath of such an event as horrific as Uvalde. We may be doing it subconsciously, but we attempt to make sense of what were seeing.

For me, part of my instinctive reaction upon hearing about a mass shooting is to profile the perpetrator. I tell myself this was a person with whom I have no affiliation whatsoever. I try to console my insulted and grieved humanity by declaring that someone who would do this must have been insane. Either that or the embodiment of evil, probably not even human. How can it be explained any other way?

Then I catch myself. I remind myself that insanity is a poor excuse for evil and the perpetrator was, in fact, most definitely human. So what went wrong? How is it possible for someone to do such horrible things?

Jewish tradition maintains that every person is born with two competing inner forces. One is the instinctive, survival force that motivates me to care for myself and succeed in life. The other force drives me to find meaning and purpose; to achieve goals greater than myself and make a positive impact on society and the world around me.

Although one force is selfish and the other is selfless, both occupy my psyche and are constantly clashing. Every moral dilemma I face is the manifestation of these two inner forces pulling me in two opposite directions. I alone must choose which inclination to follow. I cannot be blamed for my own inner struggles, but I am certainly responsible for my choices.

Most of the time the greatest difficulty is not discerning right from wrong, but actually making the right choices. More often than not the right choices are the harder ones and I need to choose selflessness over selfishness; divine awareness over self absorption.

In Genesis, we learn how humanity started from one single person. The Talmud explains that G-d created one human being in the beginning to illustrate the preciousness of one single life and how important every individuals choices are.

The consequences of these choices are usually not earth shattering, but the possibility for these inner struggles to morph into serious crises with far reaching consequences is very real. The more I train myself to make the right choices in the small, routine types of struggles, the more prepared I am to make the right choices when life-shattering struggles hit hard.

A young man made a horribly selfish and evil choice last week, but I am neither judge nor jury. As a fellow human being I am left with the following questions: Am I making better choices in my personal struggles? Are my personal choices inspiring others to choose right over wrong and good over evil? Am I effectively educating my children to identify these struggles and to appreciate how relevant their choices are to G-d and society?

While public officials and policy makers must continue prosecuting those who commit crimes and urgently find better ways to stop crime in the first place, we must do the very real work around us. This means making the right choices in our own lives, and teaching this, by word and example, to our children and inspiring those around us.

It may feel small, but if each individual is an entire world, it can be the very thing that will ensure that something like Uvalde never takes place again.

Levi Greenberg is associate rabbi at Chabad Lubavitch in El Paso.

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Opinion: Uvalde reminds us to teach our children to make the right choices - El Paso Matters

The Many Different Reasons We Read The Book Of Ruth On Shavuot – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 2, 2022

In most communities, the Book of Ruth is read on Shavuot during the Shacharit service, usually after Hallel.1 There are several reasons for this custom. According to one explanation, it is read for the many lessons in character refinement that can be learned from the story. Since the primary purpose of the mitzvot of the Torah is to refine our character traits and mold us into caring and compassionate human beings, it is appropriate to read the Book of Ruth on Shavuot, the day the Torah was given.2

Another reason is for us to be inspired by the suffering and hardships that Ruth was willing to endure in order to join the Jewish people and observe the Torah. As Shavuot is the holiday that celebrates the giving of the Torah, it is an especially appropriate time to read the story of Ruth so that we are inspired to strengthen our observance of the Torah as well.3

It is also taught that when the Jewish people accepted the Torah at Sinai, they were comparable to converts. Just as a convert must commit to observing the mitzvot of the Torah, immerse in a mikvah, and be circumcised (for males), the Jewish people did likewise in preparation for the receiving of the Torah.4 It is also noted that before the Jewish people received the Torah they only had the seven mitzvot bnei Noach to observe. Upon receiving the Torah, however, another 606 mitzvot were added. The word ruth in Hebrew has the numerical value of 606 alluding to these additional mitzvot.5 Others point out that the story of Ruth took place during the Shavuot season, making the holiday an appropriate time to review the story.6

Another reason the Book of Ruth is read on Shavuot is to recall King David.7 Ruth was the great-grandmother of King David and Shavuot is his yahrzeit8 and presumed birthday.9 It is also explained that one might be led to believe that King Davids lineage is illegitimate because his great-grandmother was originally a Moabite, and the Torah forbids us to accept Moabite converts.10 Reading the story of Ruth reminds us that the ban against Moabite converts was only placed on male Moabites. Moabite women were not included in the ban and are permitted to convert should they so desire.11 Many authorities allow those who follow the custom of remaining awake all night on Shavuot to read the Book of Ruth immediately after dawn, rather than at its designated place before the Torah reading, to allow the Shacharit service to conclude more quickly.12

Several halachot relating to conversion are derived from the Book of Ruth, which is yet another reason to read it on Shavuot. The Talmud teaches that before Ruths conversion, Naomi told her: We have rules as to where we can and cannot walk on Shabbat, rules regarding our dealings with the opposite sex, we have six hundred and thirteen challenging commandments to uphold, and we are strictly forbidden to worship idols.13 After hearing these rules, Ruth famously responded: Where you walk, I shall walk; where you sleep, I shall sleep; your people are my people, and your G-d is my G-d.14 From this the Talmud rules: We inform prospective converts about a few of the less serious commandments and about a few of the more serious commandments. We do not overburden the convert by explaining too many commandments, nor with their fine details.15

Another halacha derived from the story of Ruth is the practice of greeting one another with the name of G-d, as Boaz himself would do, as it is written: Boaz came from Bethlehem and he greeted the reapers with May G-d be with you, and they responded, May G-d bless you.16 We fulfill this teaching today through the greeting shalom aleichem, and its response, aleichem shalom. Shalom is one of G-ds names.

Finally, and not widely known, is that the source for bathing in preparation for Shabbat, along with the custom of wearing ones finest clothing on Shabbat, also derives from the Book of Ruth. As Naomi tells Ruth: Wash yourself, anoint yourself, and put on your fine clothes.17 The Talmud comments on this verse, explaining: These were her Shabbat clothes. Rav Chanina said: A person must have two sets of garments, one for weekdays and one for Shabbat.18 In fact, the use of fine perfumes in honor of Shabbat was a custom of even the greatest sages, and is certainly a meritorious custom that one should consider emulating.19

Outside Israel, the Book of Ruth is read on the second day of Shavuot.20 According to most customs, a blessing is not recited before reading the Book of Ruth as is done before reading the Book of Esther.21 In Italian communities the Book of Ruth was read at Mincha on Shavuot.22 Although most congregations include Ruth as a formal part of the service, there are a number of communities that dont, most notably Chassidic ones.23 Even in such communities, however, individuals are encouraged to read the Book of Ruth on their own over the course of the holiday.

____________________

2, Yalkut Shimoni, Ruth 601; Birkei Yosef, OC 494:11; Siddur Beit Yaakov.

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When Stocks And Bonds Won’t Do – Seeking Alpha

Posted By on June 2, 2022

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Dr. Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income, Calls Bonds Useless and Equities Risky. So, what should you own at this perilous time of increasing interest rates and collapsing stock prices?

I discuss two choices: (1) voiding your portfolio of stocks and bonds, and (2) hedging your stocks and bonds.

If youre not going to hold stocks and bonds , theres a long list investments you could hold. The following should protect against inflation: real estate, precious metals, commodities, natural resources, agriculture and, yes, even cryptocurrencies.

Some mix of these assets could make up your risky portfolio, instead of stocks.

To control risk, youll want to use inflation protected low risk assets like short-to-intermediate TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities).

For guidance on the blending, you could look to the Talmud that advises a third in land, a third in business and a third in reserve. In this case the third in business would be inflation protected assets. The initial portfolio would look something like the following:

Target Date Solutions

Risk can be managed by combining these two portfolios, moving more or less into the Stabilization portfolio to decrease or increase risk. You can tinker with the sample allocations based on your comfort and understanding.

A simple, but very expensive, choice would be to hire some hedge fund managers or a fund-of-fund of hedge funds. But there are plenty of tools available to do your own hedging, including:

The list goes on.

You control the amount of the hedge. In hedge fund parlance your direction can be long or short, which means you are betting for or against the market. You control the size of your bet by the mix.

If you dont hold stocks or bonds, and only hold the instruments listed above, you are short which means you are betting against the market that the market will lose value

Those who are familiar with my articles know that I see market crashes in stocks and bonds occurring in this decade, combined with serious inflation. Readers usually ask how I recommend protecting. Here it is.

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When Stocks And Bonds Won't Do - Seeking Alpha

Misfortune may not be a product of our faults – The Jewish Star

Posted By on June 2, 2022

By Rabbi Yossy Goldman

Afew years ago, I was chairing a meeting of rabbis in Johannesburg, and our distinguished guest speaker was the late Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks. He began by inquiring what was the single most frequently asked question of rabbis. Some replied, Why do bad things happen to good people? Others volunteered, Where was G-d in Auschwitz? There was a further flurry of miscellaneous suggestions.

Rabbi Sacks smiled and said, No. The single most frequently asked question of rabbis is: Rabbi, do you remember me?

That speaks volumes of the human need for recognition and acknowledgment. But also high on the list of questions posed to rabbis more a challenge than a question has got to be, Rabbi, why me?

My cholesterol is sky-high; my boss is unhappy with my performance; my wife is threatening to leave; and now the lousy car broke down. Why does everything happen to me? Am I really such a terrible person, rabbi?

Sound familiar? As a rabbi, I have heard it asked many times over the years. Implicit in this is the assumption that any suffering that befalls us must be some form of Divine retribution, a punishment from G-d. If Im such a good person, then why do I deserve to be punished? And, if on top of that, we also believe that G-d is good, then this is too mind-boggling for a mere mortal like me to work out.

What if I told you that punishment is only one of an infinite number of possible scenarios to explain these predicaments? There are many other possible explanations for human suffering. In fact, it might not be a punishment at all.

Rabbi Akiva was one of the greatest sages of the Talmud, certainly not a sinner. Do you know how he died? We read about it in the Yom Kippur service. He was one of the Ten Martyrs executed by the Romans after their destruction of the Second Temple. And it wasnt on the electric chair or by lethal injection. They tortured him to death, tearing his flesh apart with iron combs! Was Rabbi Akiva being punished for his sins? G-d forbid!

And what about the Six Million Martyrs of the Holocaust? And the million-plus innocent children among them! Sinners? G-d forbid, six million times!

Clearly then, misfortune is not necessarily a punishment for our mistakes.

Life is not that simple. Rarely is it black and white. More often than not, it is gray and not at all easy to understand why things happen. Having a deeper, metaphysical approach can help us appreciate that there is always more than meets the eye in this world. Jewish mysticism, in particular, gives us a glimpse of the inside story which can give us a better picture of life and its meaning.

In the portion ofBechukotairead last week, we came across a section known as the Rebuke. It is an ominous warning of the troubles that will befall Israel should we stray from the godly path. The mystics teach that even those frightening curses are really hidden blessings that cannot be perceived at face value.

Say youre walking down the street with your young child, and he suddenly runs into the street straight onto oncoming traffic. You barely manage to yank him back to safety seconds from disaster. You breathe a sigh of relief, but you also give him a not-so-gentle potch on his backside or, if you are more progressive, a stern warning so he never repeats that dangerous mistake.

The child may cry at the parental rebuke, but was it a punishment? Do you despise your child? Of course not. This was not an act of rejection but an act of love. That rebuke may well turn out to be a lifesaver. Naturally, the child is not mature enough to appreciate that and sees it as rejection, so he feels unloved and cries.

Sometimes, it will be necessary for the most loving parents to chastise their children. But it should never be punitive punishment. That potch may be a deeper act of love than any kiss or cuddle could ever be.

And so it is with our Father in Heaven. Sometimes, we may feel angry. Why is there so much pain and suffering? Why me? And yet, we know that he really and truly does love us. We are His children. As the child doesnt understand or appreciate his rebuke, neither do we understand G-ds.

We adults cannot fathom the Divine reprimands we receive from time to time. Nevertheless, we accept in good faith that somehow there is a good reason behind all our problems. To us, it may remain a mystery, but to G-d, there is always a cosmic, vast eternal plan, whether we understand it or not.

In our times of trouble and days of distress, let us remember that our Father in Heaven still loves us, and is surely no less caring than we are with our own children.

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Misfortune may not be a product of our faults - The Jewish Star

Questions in Judaism with Rabbi Benzion Shemtov | Article | The United States Army – United States Army

Posted By on May 31, 2022

Fort Huachucas Religious Support Office hosts the first in a series about questions in Judaism with Rabbi Benzion Shemtov (click on highlighted text for video).

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Fort Huachuca is home to the U.S. Army Intelligence Center of Excellence, the U.S. Army Network Enterprise Technology Command (NETCOM)/9th Army Signal Command and more than 48 supported tenants representing a diverse, multiservice population. Our unique environment encompasses 946 square miles of restricted airspace and 2,500 square miles of protected electronic ranges, key components to the national defense mission.

Located in Cochise County, in southeast Arizona, about 15 miles north of the border with Mexico, Fort Huachuca is an Army installation with a rich frontier history. Established in 1877, the Fort was declared a national landmark in 1976.

We are the Armys Home. Learn more at https://home.army.mil/huachuca/.

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Questions in Judaism with Rabbi Benzion Shemtov | Article | The United States Army - United States Army


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