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The UK’s immigration system is not fit to respond to the Ukrainian refugee crisis – PoliticsHome

Posted By on March 12, 2022

3 min read10 March

Whoever rescues a single soul is credited as though they had saved the whole world. This maxim, from the Jewish Talmud, is often quoted in tribute to Britains help for refugees during the Second World War.

We should keep these words close to our hearts as we respond to the Ukrainian refugee crisis today.

The governments heart is in the right place, but its policies have not kept up. A noble and genuine endeavour has had a shambolic start. Only a miniscule number of Ukrainians have been granted entry into the UK under the available visa scheme. Thousands of others have been caught in limbo, unable to reach the relevant authorities or navigate the complex bureaucracy.

While I am delighted that the Home Secretary has announced a simplified online visa scheme, the chaos facing Ukrainian asylum seekers is symptomatic of a deeper problem here at home.

Our immigration system, and specifically our asylum policies, are not equipped to respond flexibly to emergencies such as Ukraine or Afghanistan or deal with the wider net of asylum seekers from different parts of the world.

Ultimately this is about saving lives

The good news is that we have a chance to fix the system. The Nationality and Borders Bill will be returning to the House of Commons in the next couple of weeks containing important amendments for change. Two of these amendments, led by former immigration minister Lord Kirkhope, are designed to help refugees avoid more trauma and chaos.

The first amendment will put an end to the governments plans to create offshoring detention centres in a foreign country. This was always an ill-conceived proposal, and it is utterly unjustifiable in the face of the largest refugee crisis in a century.

Offshoring would cost the British taxpayer at least 2 million per person, per year. It would sanction the forced transportation of traumatised refugees to places such as Ascension Island off the coast of Africa, which has no infrastructure, no direct access and no proper links to the outside world. We may as well be sending people to Guantanamo Bay: in the middle of nowhere, without the safety net of UK laws, we risk exposing them to mistreatment.

The second amendment that MPs must consider is the creation legal and safe routes for 10,000 refugees each year. If these were lacking before they are absolutely urgent now. Many people will be surprised to learn that there are no proper resettlement schemes in place to address global refugee demands.

There is currently no way to make an asylum claim without already being present in the UK, which creates a catch-22 for asylum seekers, who want to come to the UK legally, but have no legal means of doing so.

In the absence of legal routes, safe passage goes out of the window. Many of these refugees end up making dangerous journeys, at the mercy of people smugglers, because desperate people will do desperate things.

The infrastructure is all wrong. If we had a resettlement scheme, we could have avoided the chaos Afghan refugees experienced last year, and we would not be witnessing the chaos Ukrainians are experiencing right now.

A statutory scheme, built from the bottom up, designed to help refugees from different conflict zones, will in turn build up our resilience to respond to crises. Ultimately this is about saving lives, as this country has strived to do time and again. Britains legacy should guide us forward.

Andrew Mitchellis the Conservative MP for Sutton Coldfield and former international development secretary.

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The UK's immigration system is not fit to respond to the Ukrainian refugee crisis - PoliticsHome

Students discuss themes in Judaism through fellowship – Ithaca College The Ithacan

Posted By on March 12, 2022

Beginning Feb.17, members of Ithaca Colleges Jewish community have been gathering to discuss important themes in Judaism through the Jewish Learning Fellowship (JLF).

The Jewish Learning Fellowship was founded at the Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life at New York University in 2007 as a way for students to deepen their understanding of Judaism through conversation on topics like college life, identity and romance. Since then, the program has expanded to universities across the U.S. Now in its third year at Ithaca College, the 10-week program run by Hillel at Ithaca College titled Lifes Big Questions: Or, How to Get More Out of College will allow students to define what it means to be Jewish on their own terms.

Lauren Goldberg, interim director of Religious and Spiritual Life and executive director of Hillel, said the program was for anybody at any point in their Jewish studies.

Its an engagement [between] the individual and the [Jewish] text that grows your relationship to the text in this communal way, Goldberg said. It also kind of demystifies things that can feel unrelatable. At first read, we do our best to teach students methods of entering into the text through Jewish ways of study that allows you to access some of the richness that maybe at first feels a little bit out of reach

Max Kasler, the Springboard Innovation Fellow for Hillel, said the biggest goal of the program is for people to leave with new connections to both their peers and their own Judaism.

Not everybody knows each other going into the door, Kasler said. But when they leave it seems like people walk away with really strong friendships from this as well.

Kasler also said new ideas were constantly presented during the fellowship by participants, which allowed him to see older and unchanging texts, like the Torah, in a new light.

Every time I enter a JLF space, its a different group of people. Its a different day. Its a different mood, Kasler said. Somebody is going to say something that Ive never considered when looking at a specific text.

Cantor Abbe Lyons, Jewish Chaplain of Hillel, said one conversation in the program that stood out to her was the discussion of a quote from the Talmud a text that contains the history and laws of Judaism. Chaplain said students had different interpretations of what a word in the quote was referring to. She said responses ranged from life, God and ones body.

You think about what it is to really keep turning your perspective on this one thing, which could be as finite as your own body and as enormous as the entire world Theres lots of room for that idea of continuing to seek new perspectives and keep discovering within that same paradigm.

Freshman Julia Freitor, who came into the fellowship with little knowledge of Judaism, said that learning about its history is important for her understanding of how it intersects with her identity.

Im trying to find the correlation between my ethnic identity, my social identity, my religious identity and how it all plays together, Freitor said.

In the aftermath of the discovery of two swastikas on campus, Freitor said the fellowship was needed more than ever to create a sense of togetherness.

Our history was passed down through word-of-mouth a lot of the time, Freitor said. So stories were so valuable and learning and education are the best way to combat any sort of hate and any sort of violence, because they cant take away your mind and they cant take away your stories.

Freshman Libi Warmund, who is also participating in the program this semester, said they were deeply connected to their Jewish identity, attending Jewish day school and going to their community synagogue every week. Joining JLF was an opportunity for Warmund to continue their studies and learn new ways of thinking about Judaism.

Some of the conversations Ive been coming at it from the same perspective my whole life and then somebody else is coming with a completely new and fresh perspective, Warmund said.

Warmund also said the conversations were relevant to the students interests, with one conversation focusing on the war in Ukraine and the emotions that students were feeling.

Its a great space for us to air out what were feeling, especially with the Russia-Ukraine situation, Warmund said. A lot of people have parents and grandparents that were Jewish refugees that came from there.

Graduate student Dara Spezial, said that participating in JLF was the first time she really got the chance to learn about Judaism. More than anything, she said the program reaffirmed the idea that there are many ways to be Jewish.

Whatever you take out of this fellowship, whatever you take out of Hillel is yours and very individual, but also beautiful, Spezial said. You handle how you want to express your Jewish identity in whatever way you want.

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Students discuss themes in Judaism through fellowship - Ithaca College The Ithacan

My Twins Are Adopted. Do They Really Need to Convert to Judaism? Kveller – Kveller.com

Posted By on March 12, 2022

The Children of Israel may number like the stars in the sky, but after struggling to conceive, tests at the fertility clinic showed that my egg count did not. And my husbands sperm? Lets just say it was wandering the desert.

Still, we were desperate to love a child. When we got the call that we had been chosen to adopt toddler twin boys, our years of heartache gave way to the immediate practicalities of helping children transition to our home. We had one month to outfit our house with beds and clothes and books and toys and to acquaint ourselves with the reality of becoming parents to two busy young boys who had already been through so much. I was at once euphoric and terrified, worrying constantly. Lying awake at night, my mind swirled with questions both mundane (how many pairs of pajamas are enough?) and existential (am I the mother they deserve?).

Amidst all these doubts as a new mother, what never crossed my mind was religious conversion. So I was surprised when people asked, Are you going to convert them?

I couldnt help but wonder: from what to what?

My husband and I are raising our now 6-year-olds in our secular Jewish home the same one they would have been raised in had they been born to us. The very question of conversion felt like another othering of our adoptive family, drawing a fundamental and primal distinction between the single act of giving birth to children and raising them that had blurred for me, but, apparently, not for some around us.

As a Hebrew day school graduate, I know academically of Judaisms matrilineal descent, but as an adoptive mother to two perfect little boys, this strict construction feels, well, academic.

Is Judaism in the egg? The womb? In biblical times Judaism passed through the father, a practice changed for logistical reasons when rape made it difficult to confirm the father, and hence the paternally dictated religion. If the process could be altered by men in response to the behavior of men, is it really immutable?

I consulted with the current rabbi of the synagogue where my husband and I were members as children, and where many of our family members are still congregants. While my sons may have a Jewish identity, the rabbi tells me, they do not have Jewish status. To have Jewish status, my sons must attend the mikveh (an exercise that would be difficult given their insistence on never needing a bath) and perform hatafat dam brit a procedure for turning a non-religious circumcision into a brit milah by drawing blood from where the foreskin had been.

I felt a spiritual record scratch. They need to do what now?

The rabbi assured me it doesnt really hurt, but I also assured my sons the COVID vaccine didnt hurt and I dont need to tell you how that went.

I couldnt stop thinking about it. I couldnt stop imagining telling my children that a stranger is going to hold their penis and make it bleed for symbolism, before submerging their heads in water, naked, as another stranger watched to confirm.

Why? theyd ask, as they often do. But I wouldnt know how to answer. Nothing seems satisfactory. To be Jewish? Because others see the circumstances of your birth as not enough?

Without Jewish status, my sons cannot be bar mitzvahed or married at the synagogue that bar mitzvahed and married their father and me. Nor could they be bar mitzvahed at most of the other synagogues here in Toronto, the rabbi cautioned me. Im saddened when I hear this, but I realize my sadness is not for my boys exclusion but for the institution excluding them.

When I look at my children, I am overcome with the enormity of the miracle that is our family. That in this whole wide world we found each other, and despite the enormous pain weve all suffered, our hearts are still open to love. That my children can still love so deeply, to me, has been the greatest show of faith and has forged a covenant between us so meaningful and so enduring, I cannot imagine asking them to do anything else.

Love is the foundation of my family and, Ive come to realize, my Judaism. Our family was built by love and just as we were a family long before the judge stamped our adoption order, so too will we be Jews without a paper stamped by a rabbi.

I think back to a Yom Kippur almost a decade ago when, in the depths of my sorrow, my family indulged me by attending a secular humanist service together where the prayers were bookended by Anne Frank quotes and protest songs. We sang and giggled at the campiness of it all. But when the rabbi said, We fast not just in the service of the almighty, but in recognition of all those in the world who are hungry, a sob caught in my throat. The humanity of the prayer cracked open my aching heart that yearned for the privilege of loving and nourishing another. I felt my husband, my father and brother each put a hand on my shaking shoulder as I wept like Hannah.

Should my boys have a bar mitzvah, as recognized Jews or not, they too will be surrounded by a family that loves them aunts and uncles and cousins, a bubbe and a zaide to light candles and bless the challah. They will be surrounded by their parents who have hopefully raised them with a sensitivity for the world at large, with a wholeheartedness that honors their birth parents, their history, their family and all those in the world who are hungry.

I envision my family encircling my sons, holding hands and swaying as we sing together the song I sang to myself in my deepest moments of pain, when I wondered if I would ever get to love a child. They are the words of Rabbi Menachem Creditor written for his daughter born after 9/11, trying to bring together both believers and atheists:

Olam Chesed YibanehI will build this world from loveAnd you must build this world from loveAnd if we build this world from loveThen God will build this world from love

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My Twins Are Adopted. Do They Really Need to Convert to Judaism? Kveller - Kveller.com

‘ShinShinim,’ teen emissaries, bring Israel to Bay Area students J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on March 12, 2022

At the start of the current school year, Wornick Jewish Day School in Foster City added a highly effective learning tool to its Hebrew-language classes: Israelis. In this case, two teens from Israel who are eager to illuminate the breadth and beauty of their homeland.

The young emissaries, Noa Herman and Nir Chen, are both 18 and participating in a gap-year program sponsored by the Jewish Agency for Israel called ShinShinim (short for shnat sherut, or year of service). It places recent high school graduates in a variety of settings throughout the Jewish world from JCCs to synagogues to Jewish day schools allowing them to defer their military service for one year.

Our teachers do a tremendous job of getting our students excited about Hebrew, said Adam Eilath, head of the K-8 school, but its still not enough. I am looking to have Noa and Nir be models, a plausible reason why youd want to speak Hebrew, and to provide opportunities to appreciate Judaism and Israel.

For 23 years, ShinShinim has placed hundreds of teen shlichim (emissaries) across North America, Latin America, South Africa and Europe. Its an immersive experience that opens up new worlds, both for the shlichim and for the Jewish communities they serve, including the school renamed for Ronald C. Wornick in 2004.

Were there to support and add personal knowledge, said Noa, a Ramat Gan native who speaks flawless American English. We add that to every project. On Fridays we do Kabbalat Shabbat with the kids. We add things we feel will help the kids make a more meaningful connection to Israel.

Nir and Noa have brought a youthful spirit and perspective to Wornicks Hebrew classes. For one assignment, the two talked about their favorite places in Jerusalem. Then they had the students write notes in Hebrew, which were to be taken to Israel and placed in the crannies of the Kotel.

In another class, Nir assigned students to research various Israeli sports and entertainment celebrities. This will make the connection greater, he said. They will go to Israel one day and hear the names [of the celebrities] when they walk in the street.

I feel we have learned so much. A new culture, a new country. We made connections with people that will last forever.

The two have taken on responsibilities beyond teaching Hebrew. Nir, a skilled basketball player, was named assistant coach for the Wornick Rams middle-school squad. Noa, who studied theater, dance and music at an arts school in Jaffa, has brought music to students, for example, teaching them the song Shir LaShalom, which they performed in November on the anniversary of the 1995 assassination of former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. In addition, Noa is planning a version of an Israeli program dubbed Running in Their Memory, in which each student is assigned a fallen Israeli hero and then runs a race in their honor.

The two even dreamed up a friendly competition involving Hebrew, academics and sports, with the students divided into two teams: Southern Israel and Northern Israel. The south won.

I see the impact theyre having in the classrooms, Eilath said. The teachers talk about how impactful it is to have them. A parent was just telling me how much more their kid is speaking Hebrew.

Like most exchange students, Nir and Noa have been staying with host families, an experience both have loved. Noa said the young daughters in one of her host families are like sisters to her now. Nir, a dedicated hiker, has trekked all over the local hills and visited Yosemite, and hes also watched his beloved Golden State Warriors play six home games.

Both have been impressed by U.S-style Judaism, which differs markedly from the ways back home. Noa noted that Wornick students begin their school day with tefillah (prayer), something that never happened at her elementary school.

Its been an eye-opening experience, she said. Every time I go to the synagogue, I call my parents and tell them about it. I can never forget on Simchat Torah we were dancing with the Torah. One teacher said, Do you want to hold it? I said, I can hold a Torah and have the kids dance around me? It was so fun, and such a big deal for me.

Eilath noted that the late Ronald C. Wornick himself funded the first ShinShinim cohort at the school a few years ago, but the Covid-19 pandemic prevented any follow-up until this year.

Now, he said, other local institutions including Yavneh Day School in Los Gatos, Brandeis Marin in San Rafael and Temple Isaiah in Lafayette will welcome ShinShinim emissaries next year.

Meanwhile, Nir and Noa will work at Wornick until June, and then have some summer fun being counselors at Camp Ramah in Monterey before returning to Israel.

Both affirm their California sojourn has been life-changing. I feel we have learned so much, Nir said. A new culture, a new country. We made connections with people that will last forever.

Added Noa: Now and forever we will always have a home here. I hope the kids will know they have a home with us.

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'ShinShinim,' teen emissaries, bring Israel to Bay Area students J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Purim spiels: Skits and satire have brought merriment to an ancient Jewish holiday in America – Plainview Daily Herald

Posted By on March 12, 2022

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(THE CONVERSATION) Purim, the springtime Jewish holiday packed with much merriment and humor, recalls the biblical story of Queen Esther.

In this tale, the queen stayed true to her Jewish roots and used her status to sway her husband, King Achashverosh, to defend the Jews against the sinister plans of Haman, the kings adviser, who had plotted to wipe them out.

In commemoration, Jews participate in yearly communal readings of the Scroll of Esther, which is part of the Hebrew Bible canon, engage in gift-giving and host large meals.

A lesser-known tradition is the Purim spiel, a play put on in schools and synagogues that tends to add even more color to a cheerful holiday.

As a scholar of American Judaism, I interpret the Purim spiel as a carefully curated lampoon meant to allow for a limited amount of public criticism of rabbis and the institutions that support Jewish life.

A satire on life in religious schools

The Purim spiel likely dates to medieval times, borrowed from the annual Carnival festivals of Christian Europe. In the early 1800s, it took on a new form in Volozhin, which at the time was a small Lithuanian town with a high concentration of Jews. Volozhin was home to the Etz Hayim yeshiva, a pioneering advanced academy for young men where pupils would pore over the Talmud, the classic rabbinic text of Jewish law.

The Volozhin yeshiva set the standard for subsequent Jewish academies in Eastern Europe. It was also the model for the schools that currently flourish in the United States and Israel.

The headmaster of the yeshiva called rosh yeshiva in Hebrew would shrewdly appoint a Purim rabbi each year. The ordainee would put on a one-man routine that tended to poke fun of the schools administration and satirize various aspects of yeshiva life.

One memoirist, writing in 1930, recalled that the leading scholars of his community eagerly anticipated the Passover vacation return of yeshiva students who would recount the musings and humor of the Purim performance that had taken place several weeks earlier in Volozhin.

In most instances, the sharp and witty criticisms were tolerated if not celebrated by the schools administrations as keeping within the jovial spirit of Purim. After the holiday, the Purim rabbi returned to his student status and the rosh yeshiva would once again regain control. New yeshivas in Europe adopted the Purim rabbi tradition to bring up something that might have gone unstated about, say, a poor teacher, the food, or facilities to improve their schools offerings.

Purim spiels in the US

In time, this custom migrated to the U.S. In major yeshivas in Manhattan and New Jersey, these rabbis rule with force on Purim, a popular Hebrew-language newspaper, Ha-Doar, reported in March 1959. The writer was referring to the Purim spiel tradition that had become significantly ensconced in American Judaism.

The standup routine evolved into an ensemble production in the post-World War II period, perhaps because of the rise of television sitcoms, the golden age of Broadway musicals, and, in the 1970s, the advent of Saturday Night Live.

As seen in copies of scripts held in archives, in 1963, rabbinical students at Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Illinois, which had recently moved to the northern Chicago suburb, produced parodies titled North Side Story. The following year, HTC humorists wrote Bye Bye Beardie to vent frustrations over the many draft dodgers who enrolled in the school primarily to avoid the draft rather than to study for the rabbinate.

Purim spiels paved inroads to the Conservative and Reform ranks, as well. Isaac Klein, an important Conservative rabbi, kept a notebook that he labeled Purim Thora that preserved many witty lines mostly in Yiddish and Hebrew that he employed in his years at the Jewish Theological Seminary.

The Reform students and faculty at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati routinely laughed aloud as its young men performed Purim satires that caricatured noted figures such as the American Zionist leader Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver and Hebrew Union College President Julian Morgenstern.

A reflection of Jewish self-confidence

The rise of Purim spiels in yeshivas and rabbinical seminaries put congregations on notice. , a young Conservative rabbi, hoped aloud in the pages of Bostons Jewish Advocate in 1940 that the Purim-spiel is now a thing of the past.

Waxman was part of a rising generation that had labored mightily to improve decorum in their synagogues. The slapstick and lowbrow tone of the Purim plays did not agree with Waxmans vision for the American synagogue.

Other pulpit rabbis developed a thicker skin. In 1954, the included a Purim spiel script composed by the amateur comedians of the Young Israel of Flatbush replete with generic barbs and jabs at rabbis and lay officers in its monthly program manual for synagogue activity.

With the permission of campus rabbis, Jewish undergraduates circulated routines for coeds on other college quads to merrily use on Purim.

The rise of the Purim spiel in America, then, can be understood as a measuring stick of Jewish self-confidence in the New World. The most self-assured religious leaders welcomed it as a once-a-year occasion for controlled comedic chaos and rabbinic introspection. It was meant to help glean insight from the wisdom of young people and others, predicated on the belief that things would return to normal on the other side of Purim.

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Purim spiels: Skits and satire have brought merriment to an ancient Jewish holiday in America - Plainview Daily Herald

The Inner Meaning Of The Sacrifices – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on March 12, 2022

The laws of sacrifices that dominate the early chapters of the Book of Vayikra are among the hardest in the Torah to relate to in the present. It has been almost two thousand years since the Temple was destroyed and the sacrificial system came to an end. But Jewish thinkers, especially the more mystical among them, strove to understand the inner significance of the sacrifices and the statement they made about the relationship between humanity and G-d. They were thus able to rescue the spirit of the sacrifices even if their physical enactment was no longer possible.

Among the simplest yet most profound was the comment made by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the first Rebbe of Lubavitch. He noticed a grammatical oddity about the second line of this parsha: Speak to the Children of Israel and say to them: When one of you offers a sacrifice to the Lord, the sacrifice must be taken from the cattle, sheep, or goats (Lev. 1:2).

Or so the verse would read if it were constructed according to the usual rules of grammar. However, the word order of the sentence in Hebrew is strange and unexpected. We would expect to read: adam mikem ki yakriv, when one of you offers a sacrifice. Instead, what it says is adam ki yakriv mikem, when one offers a sacrifice of you.

The essence of sacrifice, said Rabbi Schneur Zalman, is that we offer ourselves. We bring to G-d our faculties, our energies, and our thoughts and emotions. The physical form of sacrifice an animal offered on the altar is only an external manifestation of an inner act. The real sacrifice is mikem, of you. We give G-d something of ourselves (Likkutei Torah, Vayikra 2aff).

What is it that we give G-d when we offer a sacrifice? The Jewish mystics, among them Rabbi Schneur Zalman, spoke about two souls that each of us has within us the animal soul (nefesh habehamit) and the G-dly soul. On the one hand, we are physical beings. We are part of nature. We have physical needs: food, drink, shelter. We are born, we live, we die.

Yet we are not simply animals. We have within us immortal longings. We can think, speak, and communicate. We can, by acts of speaking and listening, reach out to others. We are the one life-form known to us in the universe that can ask the question why? We can formulate ideas and be moved by high ideals. We are not governed by biological drives alone. Psalm 8 (8:4-7) is a hymn of wonder on this theme:

When I consider Your heavens,the work of Your fingers,the moon and the stars,which You have set in place,what is man that You are mindful of him,the son of man that You care for him?Yet You made him a little lower than the angelsand crowned him with glory and honor.You made him ruler over the works of Your hands;You put everything under his feet.

Physically, we are almost nothing; spiritually, we are brushed by the wings of eternity. We have a G-dly soul. The nature of sacrifice, understood psychologically, is thus clear. What we offer G-d is (not just an animal but) the nefesh habehamit, the animal soul within us.

How does this work out in detail? A hint is given by the three types of animal mentioned in the verse in the second line of the Torah portion of Vayikra: beheimah (animal), bakar (cattle), and tzon (flock). Each represents a separate animal-like feature of the human personality.

Beheimah represents the animal instinct itself and refers to domesticated animals, without the savage instincts of the predator. These are animals that spend their time searching for food, bounded by the struggle to survive. To sacrifice the animal within us is to be moved by something more than mere survival.

The philosopher Wittgenstein, when asked what was the task of philosophy, answered, To show the fly the way out of the fly-bottle. The fly, trapped in the bottle, bangs its head against the glass, trying to find a way out. The one thing it fails to do is to look up. The G-dly soul within us is the force that makes us look up, beyond the physical world, beyond mere survival, in search of meaning and purpose.

The Hebrew word bakar, cattle, reminds us of the word boker, dawn, literally to break through, as the first rays of sunlight break through the darkness of night. Cattle, stampeding, break through barriers. Unless constrained by fences, cattle are no respecters of boundaries. To sacrifice the bakar is to learn to recognize and respect boundaries between holy and profane, pure and impure, permitted and forbidden. Barriers of the mind can sometimes be stronger than walls.

Finally, the word tzon, flocks, represents the herd instinct the powerful drive to move in a given direction because others are doing likewise.

The great figures of Judaism Abraham, Moses, the Prophets were distinguished by their ability to stand apart from the herd to be different, to challenge the idols of the age and refuse to capitulate to the intellectual fashions of the moment. That, ultimately, is the meaning of holiness in Judaism. Kadosh, the holy, is something set apart and distinctive. Jews were the only minority in history to consistently refuse to assimilate to the dominant culture or convert to the dominant faith.

The noun korban, sacrifice, and the verb lehakriv, to offer something as a sacrifice, actually mean that which is brought close and the act of bringing close. The key element is not so much giving something up (the usual meaning of sacrifice), but rather bringing something close to G-d. Lehakriv is to bring the animal element within us to be transformed through the Divine fire that once burned on the altar, and still burns at the heart of prayer if we truly seek closeness to G-d.

The Scientific (the idea that the material is all there is) has led to the widespread conclusion that we are all animals, nothing more, nothing less. According to this view, we are the result of a random series of genetic mutations and just happened to be more adapted to survival than other species. The nefesh habehamit, the animal soul, is all there is.

The refutation of this idea (surely among the most reductive ever to be held by intelligent minds) lies in the very act of sacrifice itself as the mystics understood it. We can redirect our animal instincts. We can rise above mere survival. We are capable of honoring boundaries. We can step outside our environment. As Harvard neuroscientist Steven Pinker put it: Nature does not dictate what we should accept or how we should live, adding, and if my genes dont like it, they can go jump in the lake. Or, as Katharine Hepburn majestically said to Humphrey Bogart in he African Queen, Nature, Mr. Allnut, is what we were put on earth to rise above.

We can transcend the beheimah, the bakar, and the tzon. No animal is capable of self-transformation, but we are. Poetry, music, love, wonder the things that have no survival value but which speak to our deepest sense of being all tell us that we are not mere animals, assemblages of selfish genes. By bringing that which is animal within us close to G-d, we allow the material to be suffused with the spiritual and we become something else: no longer slaves of nature but servants of the living G-d.

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The Inner Meaning Of The Sacrifices - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Pikuach Nefesh and the Jewish commitment to reproductive justice | TheHill – The Hill

Posted By on March 12, 2022

Dr. David Gunn, a father of two, began practicing medicine as an OB/GYN and abortion provider in Brewton, Ala., fulfilling a deeply personal imperative to offer these services to patients in hostile environments. He later decided bravely to establish the Pensacola Women's Medical Services clinic in Pensacola, Fla., despite knowing that this area was home to a hostile anti-abortion movement that intimidated abortion providers and patients.

While he was walking into his Pensacola clinic on March 10, 1993, a white supremacist, anti-abortion extremist opened fire,killing Dr. Gunn tragically. This marked the first known instance of the murder of an abortion provider in the United States, but devastatingly, not the last. Prior to this incident, Dr. Gunn faced consistent harassment, on par with the rising threats and attacks levied against abortion providers today. The National Abortion Federations 2020 statistics on violence and disruptionfound an alarming escalation in incidents of obstruction, vandalism, and trespassing at abortion clinics.

As we face concerted attacks on reproductive rightsvia restrictive laws, outright bans and demonization of providers and patientsI believe strongly that we must elevate and recognize those who provide reproductive health care. As Dr. Gunns story makes all too clear, abortion providers navigate multifaceted attacks on their work, yet demonstrate remarkable resilience and continue to serve as an essential and valued part of their communities. Their sacrifice and dedication must be honored.

This week, I am partnering with colleagues in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate to introduce a resolution honoring Abortion Provider Appreciation Day alongside Dr. Gunns surviving children, Catholics for Choice, National Council of Jewish Women and other national and local advocacy groups. This resolution affirms Congress commitment to ensuring the safety of abortion providers and their ability to continue providing the essential care their patients need. It also declares a vision for a future where access to abortion is liberated from restrictions and bans universally. We must never forget that this our foremost aspirationa country whereallindividuals who want reproductive care can receive it.

When I arrived in Congress in 2019, I was eager to engage in the critical work of advancing the cause of reproductive justice with my colleagues. My fervent dedication to reproductive justice is informed by my lifelong dedication to human rights and the Jewish tradition of respecting individual dignity and bodily autonomy.

Pikuach nefesh,a central principle of Jewish life, emphasizes that the preservation of human life always overrides Halacha, Jewish law. I, along with many across disparate denominations in the Jewish community, embrace this facet of Jewish teaching to instruct us to protect the life of the patient and prioritize their health, well-being and safety. Judaism also emphasizesKavod habriyot,the affirmation of human dignity, which guides us to uphold individual autonomy and the affirmation of each persons unique needs. Through these teachings and the Jewish spirit of community and care, my faith deepens my commitment to support abortion providers and patients alike.

We must frame the ongoing attacks against reproductive freedom and abortion providers as a movement to entrench controlcontrol over the bodies of those who seek reproductive health care, control over those who face racial and income barriers that stifle their ability to decide what is best for their own health, and control of the structures of power that are too often used to hinder progress and equality, like the Supreme Court. Further, being a part of the fight for reproductive justice also demands recognition that the movement to suppress reproductive freedom is borne from the same regressive politics of our national past. After all, it was a white supremacist who took Dr. Gunns life.

As the Court threatens to overturn or severely undermineRoev.Wade, protecting and advancing reproductive freedom will require strong, resilient communities coming together to ensure that everyone can access the care that they need. Despite the challenges ahead, I am also deeply hopeful, because I've seen how good, justice-minded people have come together to uplift and protect each other. It is in this spirit that we must all support the abortion providers within our communities and fight for their ability to continue providing the essential care their patients need.

Congressman Andy LevinAndrew (Andy) LevinPikuach Nefeshand the Jewish commitment to reproductive justice The Hill's Morning Report - World poised for war House races where redistricting is pitting Democrats against one another MORE represents Michigans 9th District in Oakland and Macomb Counties. He is a former synagogue president and member of the Pro-Choice Caucus.

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Michael Feinstein celebrates Judy Garland’s 100th birthday with a special performance – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on March 12, 2022

Michael Feinstein started playing the piano by ear when he was 5 years old. After graduating from high school, he moved from Columbus, Ohio, to Los Angeles. When he was 20 years old, the widow of concert pianist and actor Oscar Levant introduced him to Ira Gershwin in July 1977. That began Feinsteins musical career including 35 albums, five Grammy Awards nominations, concerts spanning the globe and appearances at venues including The White House, Buckingham Palace, Carnegie Hall and the Sydney Opera House.

In 2007, he founded the Great American Songbook Foundation, dedicated to preserving artifacts he collected throughout his career relating to American popular music. These artifacts contain sheet music and orchestrations donated to him from the families of songwriters including Sammy Davis Jr., Andy Williams, Bing Crosby, Henri Mancini and more.

Every year, the foundation holds the High School Songbook Academy, where 40 young people from all 50 states come for a week-long intensive to learn about interpreting music from the late 19th and early 20th century to preserve American musical heritage.

On March 20, Feinstein will be in Scottsdale performing Get Happy! Michael Feinstein celebrates the Judy Garland Centennial at Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts for two concerts at 3 and 7 p.m.

Feinstein talked to Jewish News about what it means to pay tribute to Judy Garland, what it was like working with her daughter Liza Minnelli and who had the greatest impact on his musical journey.

What does it mean for you to celebrate what would have been Judy Garlands 100th birthday with this performance?

Its amazing to me to think that Judy Garland might have lived into the next century but sadly died at the age of 47. The experience of celebrating her, in the year of her 100th birthday, has given me the opportunity to do a deep dive into her catalog and music and it feels very personal to be able to celebrate her in song. Her legacy is so multi-layered and for me the focus on her art is what is important. Much attention that has been paid to the tabloid aspects of her life and that is not the way she would want to be remembered. She set such a high bar for what she did, not only by her professionalism and talent; but also by her innate ability to galvanize an audience and create a deep connection to the heart. I hope to evoke a sense of her with this program. The show itself is very unusual in that we incorporate home movies by Judys family and a lot of photographs many of which have never been seen before to illustrate the story in multimedia. I don't attempt to copy her in any way, because that would be absurd and futile, but I do hope to evoke a sense of what made her great that will equally please those who know her work well and those who dont know anything about her.

Do you remember the first time you heard Judy Garland sing?

Like many people my generation I first heard her sing in the Wizard of Oz. I was captivated by the energy and talent of this young girl who was close to my age. Her singing thrills me in every aspect of her life. I love the young Judy Garland vocally and I equally love the mature Judy Garland.

What did it mean to you to work with her daughter, Liza Minnelli, who was the executive producer?

Working with Liza Minnelli as executive producer of the show has been wonderful. She has helped me stay on course with what I want to accomplish and encouraged me to do this concert in celebration of her mother. So to have her daughter help me to get it right, not only kept me on course but gave me tremendous joy in being able to explore the world of her mother through her daughters eyes.

What is your favorite part of this show?

Thats easy to answer because I found a private home recording of Judy Garland singing a song that she never commercially sang or recorded. Its a wartime song called Ill Be Seeing You and because she recorded it a cappella without accompaniment, I am able to accompany her on the piano. So I get to collaborate with Judy Garland singing a song that nobody has ever heard her sing.

You do so much, but is there a particular aspect of your work that you feel connects more to your Judaism?

The songs that I sing are, more often than not, ones that were written by Jewish songwriters and I talk about the songs before I sing them. I feel very connected to Judaism through the music that I perform. I find that there is a through line from historical to contemporary Jewish music. There are many examples of Jewish songwriters whose fathers were cantors or rabbis, many of the people who entered the music business in the late 19th and early 20th century were connected to the synagogue as well. Jewish music publishers would go to the synagogues and find boys who sang in the synagogue choir to be song pluggers to promote their songs. As these young boys grew up they would enter the music business and become songwriters and such.

What are some of your favorite Jewish traditions?

It links to performing. When I perform on a Friday night, I am deeply aware that it is the Sabbath. When I perform on a Friday, I think in terms of the Jewish tradition of people not working and relaxing and being able to commune with spirit through music. Whenever I am performing on a weekend, which is often, that is my way of honoring and observing the Sabbath. Even though I am not being still, hopefully, Im helping other people to connect deeper to their Judaism through my performance.

Who is the one person who has impacted you the most in your musical journey?

Ira Gershwin. It was Ira Gershwin whom I met when I was 20 years old in 1977, who made it possible for me to have my career. I was helped along the way by others including Liza Minnelli and Rosemary Clooney, but Ira was the first person who really took me under his wing. He taught me most of what I know about interpreting American popular song and was a very gentle and kind soul who taught me many life lessons. I imagine for anyone the ages of 20-26, which was the age I was when I worked for Ira, are formative years and I was lucky that my formative years were with a man who cared about me and enriched my life in ways for which I can never properly repay him. Im extraordinarily lucky to make music for my livelihood and I hope to keep doing it as long as God gives me the gift of life on this planet.

For more information on the show or to purchase tickets, visit scottsdaleperformingarts.org.

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Michael Feinstein celebrates Judy Garland's 100th birthday with a special performance - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Bill Ackmans Net Worth, Financial Situation, and Investments – The Shahab

Posted By on March 10, 2022

Bill Ackerman, Life in childhood and education Ackman was born in Chappaqua, New York, the son of Ronnie I. (ne Posner) and Lawrence David Ackman, the chairman of Ackman-Ziff Real Estate Group, a New York real estate financing firm.

He is of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. He graduated from Harvard College in 1988 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Social Studies. His thesis was titled Scaling the Ivy Wall: The Jewish and Asian American Experience in Harvard Admissions. He graduated from Harvard Business School in 1992 with an MBA in marketing.

His most successful investments have always been contentious, and his first rule of activist investing is to make a big call that nobody believes in, Ackman has stated. Investors, government officials, hedge fund managers, and the general public have both complimented and condemned Ackmans investment strategy.

Citations needed To name a few, he shorted the MBIA bonds during the credit crunch of 20072008, went toe-to-toe with Canadian Pacific Railway over a proxy war, and invested in companies including Target, Valeant, and Chipotle. The citation for this statement is not available.

He maintained a short against Herbalife, which he has said is a pyramid scheme built for multi-level marketing, from 2012 to 2018. The documentary film Betting on Zero documented his attempts.

Read More:Young Thug Net Worth: Career, Awards, Music & Personal Life

Despite a poor performance in 20152018, Ackman announced in January 2018 that he was eliminating personnel, stopping investor visits, and hunkering down in the office to pursue research. Reuters calls his Pershing Square one of the worlds best performing hedge funds for 2019, citing a 58.1% return as evidence.

Carson Block of Muddy Waters Capital and Andrew Left of Citron Research are two short sellers that Ackman has acknowledged he admires.

After marrying landscape architect Karen Ann Herskovitz in 1994 and having three daughters together, Eloise, Lucy, and Liza were born. Apparently, the pair split up on December 22, 2016. He owned a Gulf Stream G550 business jet as of 2013. Neri Oxman proposed to Ackman in 2018. After getting married in January 2019, Oxman and Ackman welcomed their first child together in the spring of 2019.

An American hedge fund manager and philanthropist, Bill Ackman is worth an estimated $2.3 billion. In addition to his other names, William Ackman was the founder and CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management LP and is widely recognized for this role (a hedge fund management company).

On May 11, 1966, William Ackman was born. Ackman-Ziff Real Estate Group chairman Lawrence David Ackman is his father. He is the son of Ackman-Ziff. In 1988, Bill graduated with honors from Harvard College with a B.A. In 1992, he graduated with honors from Harvard Business School with an MBA under his belt. Bill Ackman and a fellow Harvard graduate launched Gotham Partners in 1992.

Investments in publicly traded companies were made in tiny amounts by Gotham. Pershing Square Capital Management was founded by Ackman in 2004. Wendys was forced to sell its Tim Hortons doughnut brand when Pershing bought a large stake in the fast food chain in 2005. Wendys raised $670 million in 2006 from the initial public offering (IPO) of Tim Hortons, which was spun off from Wendys.

Read More:NLE Choppa Net Worth Information: Height, Age, Career, and Real Name

It was claimed that the sale of Wendys most rapidly expanding subsidiary left the company in a weakened market position after Ackman sold his shares at a big profit. Ackman criticized their new CEO for their dismal performance. Ackmans funds invested in Target Corporation, Borders Group, and others. Christine Richards book Confidence Game chronicles Ackmans battle with the MBIA (Municipal Bond Insurance Association), which began in 1992.

When Bill Ackman founded his first hedge fund at the age of 26, he had just graduated from Harvard. His gut told him he should go ahead and launch the hedge fund, even though he didnt have any expertise in the field. Its a good idea to start such a fund early in life so that you have room to make mistakes. There were problems with Gotham Partners for Bill a few years after he started them. In the meantime, he might start his new business.

Much is expected of those who get a large amount of money or other resources. An example of this is Bill. Pershing Square Foundation was Bills philanthropic arm as his fortune increased. Across the course of its existence, the foundation has distributed more than $100 million to charitable organizations all over the world. One Acre Fund and Bridge Academies are two of his most successful grantees.

Also read:Cathie Woods Current and Historical Net Worth

Thousands of people have benefited from the work of these organizations and the education they have provided. Bill Gates giving commitment, in which he pledged to donate half of his wealth to charity, was signed by Bill a few years ago.

For Bill Ackman, the last three years have been a trying time. From nearly $20 billion to less than $7 billion, his hedge fund has shrunk in size. Many of his investors walked away. However, he didnt give up on his dream of becoming a doctor.

Despite the difficulties, he has persevered and successfully turned around his hedge fund. Pershing Square Capital is one of the most successful hedge funds in the world right now, according to Hedge Fund Research. While the S&P 500 has risen by less than 20%, the NASDAQ has risen by over 55%.

n 2018, Ackman paid more than $22 million for an apartment on the Upper East Side in New York. He also owns the $90 million apartment at the billionaire row in New York.

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Resituating US History in a Global Context | Higher Ed Gamma – Inside Higher Ed

Posted By on March 10, 2022

I consider the U.S. history survey the most important course that a history department offers. Not only is this course sequence largely responsible for generating credit hours and recruiting majors, but for most students, the survey is the only college-level history that they will encounter.

The American history survey is a departments one chance to instill historical literacy: to ensure that all graduates are familiar with major historical themes and events; have a basic grasp of the dynamics and contours of cultural, economic, political and social change; are conversant with major historical controversies; and appreciate how history is reconstructed out of partial, ambiguous and often contested historical evidence.

But too often, I fear, college survey courses are little more than a more sophisticated and comprehensive version of the classes in U.S. history that students took in the fifth, eighth and 11th grades.

Redundancy, however, isnt the only problem. Even worse is the curse of insularity.

All too often, American history is treated in splendid isolation, even though the United States is only one of many societies to undergo a revolution, exploit slave labor, wage a civil war and experience industrialization, urbanization and mass immigration.

Given the extraordinary diversity of our student bodies, not just ethnically or racially, but in their countries of origin, I am convinced that we need to adopt a very different approach to the U.S. history survey, one that situates American history within the broader transnational forces that shaped the modern world.

To do this, wed do well to reread works of history from half a century ago.

There is a tendency to view historical scholarship through a progressivist lens: to assume that the most recent scholarship supersedes all that came before. Thats a big mistake.

Even though American historians have learned a great deal over the past four decades, in three key respects, I believe wed do well to recover the lessons taught by a generation of historians who are quickly passing from the scene.

I came of age intellectually at a moment when neo-Marxist jumbo histories by Perry Anderson, Robert Brenner, Andre Gunder Frank, Eric Hobsbawm and Immanuel Wallerstein, among others, were the rage. These works were the very antithesis of the highly specialized studies that predominate today. In their works of the 1970s, scholars including David Brion Davis, Edmund Morgan and Bernard Bailyn sought to integrate American history into that big picture.

At the same time, rigorous works of comparison, by Carl Degler, Eric Foner, George Fredrickson, Eugene Genovese and Peter Kolchin, sought to identify what was distinctive about the U.S. experience. Especially influential were their insights into how American slavery differed from its Caribbean counterparts in terms of plantation size, slave-master interactions, attitudes toward racial intermixture and the nature and significance of U.S. racism.

Yet another key current in the works of American history during the 1970s was the concept of ideology. Rather than using the term as a pejorative, as a rigid, inflexible set of political doctrines, these scholars viewed ideology as the missing link between abstract ideals and principles and social and economic realities. Works by leading historians including Davis, Foner and Gordon Wood took the ideas expressed in various manifestos and declarations seriously, treating these ideas not as free-floating entities or as crude propaganda weapons but as a conceptual lens through which individuals made sense of complex realities and advanced their interests.

These scholars were especially interested in the intricate connections between ascendant liberal ideologies and state structures and material interests, including the role of antislavery in legitimizing wage labor and justifying acts of imperial expansion.

These works offer perspectives that todays undergraduates would benefit from. What might such a narrative look like? Let me sketch, in highly general terms, a small part of the outline.

A new economic system arose in the early-modern era. Features of this new system included a money economy, expanded long-distance trade, separation of investors and producers, the growth of wage labor, and commodity production for mass markets using various forms of unfree labor.

Unlike modern capitalism, this early system, which Adam Smith called mercantilism, involved governments using various policies to promote economic growth and augment state power to better compete against other countries.

Mercantilism emphasized:

American colonial history needs to be located squarely within this mercantilist context, an era of frequent great-power conflicts, as increasingly centralized nation-states struggled over trade and colonies. Through the wealth that mercantilist policies generated and the pressures these policies imposed to bring increasing numbers of workers into a wage economy and producers into a commercial economy, mercantilism laid the foundations for more modern forms of capitalism.

But these policies also planted the seeds for their own demise as this early era of globalization provoked popular uprisings and revolutionary movements from the Urals and the Alps to the Alleghenies and the Andes, fueled by new ideas that spread across national boundaries. These powerful ideas, which included the rights of man, the nation, national independence, citizenship and constitutionalism, contributed to mass mobilization and successful revolutions not only in the new United States and France, but in Saint-Domingue (Haiti) and in many of Spains New World colonies.

I know full well the dangers of oversimplification and overgeneralization, but shouldnt we explore how the upheavals of the Age of Revolution, inspired by many of the same ideas, followed very different trajectories and resulted in very different outcomes? And shouldnt we do more to compare and contrast the consequences of the emergent liberal ideologies in various national contexts?

During and after the late-18th- and early-19th-century Age of Revolution, there was a widespread sense that the Western world had entered an Age of Emancipation, when subordinate groups would achieve liberation from archaic forms of unfreedom. The movement to abolish slavery was only one of a number of emancipation movements that included the emancipation of Eastern European serfs, British Catholics, Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews, and Spanish American Indians and Indianized mestizos alongside calls for the emancipation of women.

By treating these various struggles for emancipation as isolated, independent phenomena, we miss the opportunity to understand the diverse meanings, implications and consequences of liberal ideas in distinct national, economic and political contexts.

The emancipation of peasants, Jews and Indians was part of a broader shift from an older corporate order organized around estates or racial or ethnic castes or other corporate entities to a class society (which would have its own racial and social hierarchies).

Emancipation in Europe and Latin America was intimately tied to efforts to modernize national economies, to stimulate the productivity and efficiency of agriculture, and to rationalize production for global markets. At the same time, many governments in Eastern Europe and Latin America were seeking to integrate subordinate, semiautonomous groups into state fiscal and administration structures in order to increase tax revenue, expand the size of the military and dampen unrest.

In the United States, the revolt against earlier forms of deference, paternalism, patronage and dependency not only resulted in the abolition of slavery or adoption of gradual emancipation schemes in the Northern states, it also witnessed the demise of such paternalistic social relationships as indentured servitude and apprenticeship, the disestablishment of tax-supported churches, and the rise of a herrenvolk democracy that helped fuel the new nations expansion and the violent seizure of Indigenous, Spanish and Mexican lands.

Only by adopting a big-picture perspective can our students understand how and why Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Russia, South Africa and the United States, roughly simultaneously, displaced their Indigenous populations; how and why various welfare states began to emerge in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, even as they took sharply different forms; and how diverse nations responded to the Great Depression of the 1930s and what was distinctive about the U.S. approach.

I am, of course, not alone in calling upon history teachers to resituate the teaching of American history in comparative global contexts. That, of course, was the goal of proponents of Atlantic history. In books like America Compared, Teaching American History in a Global Context and A Nation Among Nations: Americas Place in World History, Carl J. Guarneri and Thomas Bender, in particular, have argued strongly and persuasively in favor of a history that embeds the United States in broader contexts.

Especially at the introductory level, I think a strong case can be made for replacing microscopes with telescopes. The aim not to reject the notion of American exceptionalism, nor simply to show how the United States has always been entangled with the rest of the world, but rather to help students see that the defining issues of American history have counterparts elsewhere, whether these involve the conflicts and struggles that accompanied the consolidation of the nation-state, the transition from slavery to new forms of racial inequality, or the emergence of welfare capitalism.

Much as children define their identities dialectically, so, too, do nations. The only way to truly understand this nations distinctiveness is to locate American history within a much broader comparative context and to understand how it fits into the forces and processes that have created the modern world.

Steven Mintz is professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin.

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