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Bhutan Earns First Oscar Nomination for Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom, Up for Best International Feature Film This Year – Tricycle

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Nothing is permanent, so everything is precious. Heres a selection of some happeningsfleeting or otherwisein the Buddhist world this week.

In a historic first for Bhutan, the film Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom by director Pawo Choyning Dorji has received an Oscar nomination for Best International Feature Film. Lunana is only the second Bhutanese film ever submitted to the Oscars (Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoches movie The Cup was the first in 1999) and the first to receive a nomination. Dorji, speaking with Deadline, said that the nomination lifted the spirit in the country, which is currently under a COVID lockdown. The most magical part of this is it was so unexpected, Dorji shared. This is my first filmI wasnt supposed to be here, the film wasnt supposed to be here. . . I hope it inspires Bhutanese and Himalayan filmmakers. Filmed under rough conditions in the remote highlands of Bhutan with no running water, heat, or electricity, Lunana was shot entirely on one camera with solar-powered batteries. The film focuses on the internal conflict of a young Bhutanese teacher named Ugyen, who aspires to move to Australia to pursue a big-time singing career but is instead relocated to the remote village of Lunana to serve out the remainder of his teaching contract. Read Tricycles review of the film here.

Dorji expressed his gratitude for the nomination on Facebook. We hope our film, displaying very simple and essential human values from one of the most remote places in the world, will continue to touch peoples hearts, especially during these difficult times, he wrote.

In a ceremony on February 9, Sikyong Penpa Tsering, the leader of the Central Tibetan Administration formally inaugurated the new Tibet Museum at Gangchen Kyishong in Dharamsala, India. The project was launched in 2017 under the leadership of former Sikyong Dr. Lobsang Sangay with the aim of disseminating the uncensored story of Tibet to the world and preserving the cultural heritage of Tibet. In a speech at the ceremony, Sikyong expressed his gratitude for the museums donors and for the guidance and visionary leadership of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Introducing the new Tibet Museum, Director Taishi Phuntsok said, The objective of the museum is to educate, increase awareness of Tibet, and tell our story of exile to a global audience. The museums ten permanent exhibitions will display objects, archives, photographs, and personal testimonies to highlight Tibets history as well as the crises facing Tibetans today.

Last month, a group of volunteers from New York Citys Village Zendo gathered to discuss partnering with a refugee agency to sponsor an individual or family, likely from Afghanistan. The dharma center hosted its second meeting on Tuesday, this time with members of the Buddhist Action Coalition, Brooklyn Zen Center, and Fire Lotus Temple, as well as individuals not affiliated with a sangha. Village Zendo is currently looking for more volunteers as it partners with Jewish American nonprofit HAIS. Anyone interested in participating can check out this form, reach out to doshin@villagezendo.org, and join the next meeting, which is Tuesday, February 15 at 7pm ET. Register here.

Himalayan art scholar and translator Jeff Watt proposes that there are eleven types of deities by appearance, ranging from peaceful to wrathful, warrior to winged. This week, he shared a video on his YouTube channel, Himalayan Art Resources, Inc., that explores the tenth category, Androgynous and Gender-Reversed Deities, using art selections from the Himalayan Art Resources virtual museum, of which he is the chief curator. Watch the video here.

Michelle Latvala has stepped down from her role as Executive Director of Spirit Rock, where she held the position since 2011 and has practiced since 2000. During her tenure, Latvala led Spirit Rock through the centers 2016 Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Plan and Teacher Training launch, and most recently, the pivot to online programming that the pandemic has required of dharma centers around the world. John Martin, who served as the CEO of the San Francisco Airport (SFO) for 20 years and is currently on the Spirit Rock Teachers Council and Guiding Teachers Committee, will step in as interim executive director for at least the next six months. Brian Reid, Spirit Rocks Marketing Communications Manager, told Tricycle that the center will continue offering virtual teachings moving forward, and that the robust digital presence will remain a priority on par with the in-person retreats.

At Columbia Universitys Wallach Gallery, an exhibit titled What is the Use of Buddhist Art? seeks to illuminate the social life of objects within Buddhist communities. Audiences are invited to view ritual objects outside of a European art historical context, turning an eye instead toward agency, instrumentality, materiality, and presence. On Thursday, Michelle C. Wang, associate professor in the department of Art and Art History at Georgetown University, hosted a discussion related to the exhibit on the focus of time in Buddhist thought. Barnard College professor Max Moerman curated the exhibit, which is open until March 12, 2022.

When software engineer Josh Wardle started an online word game called Wordle for his partner in October 2021, it quickly became a hit among family members. Then it exploded. As the New York Times reports, 90 people played the game on November 1, and two months later, 300,000 people were playing it. By the end of January 2022, the Times had bought Wordle, now played by millions every single day. Imitations quickly followed, and now Pali Wordle has entered the game. Its based on the Pali dictionaries on SuttaCentral. The rules are the same as the original Wordle, but theres an added bonus: after you enter a five-letter word, a definition will pop up. Share your scores with us!

Friday, February 11: Gaia House meditation teachers Martine Batchelor, Laura Bridgman, and Gavin Milne host a live virtual workshop, Compassion in the Face of Impermanence, at 1 pm. Learn more here.

Saturday, February 12: Tergar Meditation Community hosts Essence of the Bodhisattva Path webinar with Tai Situ Rinpoche. Register here.

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Bhutan Earns First Oscar Nomination for Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom, Up for Best International Feature Film This Year - Tricycle

Basketball Player Who Converted to Judaism with a Conservative Rabbi Denied Israeli Citizenship – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Jared Armstrong, center, appealed the Israeli Interior Ministrys denial of his application for Israeli citizenship but his appeal was denied Wednesday. (Courtesy Armstrong via JTA.org)

By Shira Hanau

Jared Armstrong traveled to Israel on Birthright last year. He also spent months studying with an American Conservative rabbi in order to formally convert to Judaism, a step he wanted to take so he could move to Israel to playfor the Hapoel Haifa basketball team.

That ambition suffered a serious setback Wednesday after Israeli officials for the second time rejected his application for citizenship.

According toHaaretz, which first reported on the denial of Armstrongs appeal,the Interior Ministry told Armstrong in a letter that they believed he was converting only to play on the team. It also cited the fact that his conversion classes were held via Zoom.

It makes me crazy. Hasnt Israel experienced COVID as well? I mean this decision shows so much disconnect, Rabbi Michael Beals, the Wilmington, Delaware, rabbi who supervised Armstrongs conversion, told Haaretz.

Beals,who has a longtime relationship with U.S. President Joe Biden, called the decision by Israels government racist. Armstrong is Black.

The rejection of Armstrongs conversion comes amid a string of high-profile cases in which Israeli authorities have rejected citizenship applications from Black Jews who have converted outside of Orthodox Judaism.

In December, the Interior Ministry denied an application for citizenship by a Ugandan man who converted with the Conservative Movement, despite an Israeli Supreme Court ruling last year recognizing non-Orthodox conversions performed in Israel.

And last month, a Black Jew originally from the United Stateswon a promise of citizenship after beginning a hunger striketo call attention to his experience with Israels immigration bureaucracy. First, David Ben Moshes conversion was rejected on the oft-ignored grounds that he had not spent adequate time in the community where he converted after he became Jewish, the Jerusalem Post reported. The Interior Ministry reversed that decision amid an outcry but then rejected his citizenship because he had been convicted of a crime in the United States. Now, Ben Moshe, who is married to an Israeli and has two Israeli children, will be able to become a citizen in 2023.

Armstrong, 24, is originally from Philadelphia and was previously a member of the basketball team at Slippery Rock University in Pennsylvania. His father is not Jewish, and his mother underwent a conversion through Congregation Beth El,a predominantly Black community in Philadelphia that is not affiliated with any Jewish denomination.

Israeli basketball teams often recruit players from outside of Israel who are Jewish and can therefore become citizens. But because Israel only accepts conversions performed through recognized denominations for the purposes of immigration to Israel under the Law of Return, which guarantees Israeli citizenship to all Jews who apply for it, Armstrong had to convert.

He began the process of studying for a formal conversion with Beals, a Conservative rabbi, and began applying for citizenship while in Israel where he first arrived for his Birthright trip last year and later began playing for Hapoel Haifa. After the Interior Ministry rejected his appeal for citizenship, Armstrong will no longer be able to play for Hapoel Haifa.

Not all basketball players in Israel are Jewish. Amare Stoudemire was not when he played for the Hapoel Jerusalem team. Hebegan the process of conversion after leaving the team in 2018and formallyconverted to Judaism while living in Israel in August 2020. Nowa coach for the Brooklyn Nets, and was recentlyfeatured in an HBO documentary speaking about his journey to Orthodox Judaism.

Originally posted here:

Basketball Player Who Converted to Judaism with a Conservative Rabbi Denied Israeli Citizenship - Jewish Exponent

Mushroom rabbi grows ceremonial psilocybin for Denver congregation but is that legal? – The Denver Post

Posted By on February 11, 2022

On a picturesque autumn evening in early November, the sunset belied a briskness to the Denver breeze. But inside a nondescript brick building downtown, anticipation was heating up the air.

A group of 25 people sat in a circle on the floor, each with a ramen spoon full of a brownish paste. Among them was Rabbi Ben Gorelick, a fast-talking 42-year-old with a multi-colored mohawk. On that night, Gorelicks tempo was a couple beats slower than usual as he calmly instructed those in the room to consume what was on the spoon a customized mixture of psychedelic mushroom extract and find a spot to lay on the floor as they prepared to drop in during a guided breathing exercise.

The people in the room were part of a spiritual group called The Sacred Tribe, which Gorelick founded in 2018 and which since has grown to more than 270 members. About once a month, Gorelick hosts a weekend-long retreat that creates space for people to explore the relationship to self, community and God using psilocybin mushrooms that his team grows in Denver.

This is not what a normal conservative or reform synagogue looks like, said Gorelick, adding that his approach falls in line with Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism. The goal is not to blast people to the moon. Its to give people just enough of a threshold dose that they have that openness to connecting.

Scenes like this have become more commonplace in the American underground, as shrooms and other psychedelics have experienced increased exposure and a recent renaissance in the research of their potential medical benefits. Denver, which became the first city to decriminalize personal possession and consumption of psilocybin in 2019, has been a leader in this movement and helped inspire a wave of similar initiatives from Oakland, California,to Washington, D.C.

Denvers leaders are considering further liberalization and Colorado voters could even be asked this fall to legalize mushrooms statewide. But Gorelicks Sacred Tribe, which pushes the boundaries of whats legal as it explores the intersection of Judaism and psychedelics, is spotlighting the gap between city, state and federal law on psychedelics and illustrates a key missing piece of the 2019 vote to decriminalize.

Were not trying to get the dealership pipeline going here, Denver City Councilman Chris Hinds said. But if it is decriminalized to possess it, well, how do you get it?

On Jan. 10, police raided The Sacred Tribes cultivation facility in north Denver, where the group grew more than 35 strains of mushrooms for use at its events. Police arrested one employee and seized mushrooms and documents. This week, Denver police also arrested Gorelick on suspicion of possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance, a first-degree felony, according to his arrest warrant affidavit.

Gorelick isnt worried about legal consequences, saying he never sold or distributed mushrooms beyond the scope of The Sacred Tribes retreats, and that, furthermore, he believes the group is protected by a religious exemption.

I dont sell elsewhere, I dont wholesale elsewhere. I have really, really rigid tracking systems for everything from spore to extract, he said.

Under the parameters of decriminalization, it remains a crime to buy or sell psilocybin, and to grow it beyond a personal amount.Still, mushroom-related arrests are rare these days, according to a recent city report that found just five arrests for psilocybin-only since Denver made enforcement of laws against possession polices lowest priority. (Psilocybin was listed in other arrests that included additional drugs, the report said.)

Simultaneously, activists have filed several ballot initiatives to legalize entheogenic plants such as psychedelic mushrooms for use in therapeutic settings statewide, meaning Colorado voters could also be asked to weigh in on the subject as soon as November.

As psilocybin and other psychedelics have achieved greater cultural acceptance, their use has proliferated in some medical circles to treat ailments such as depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. The movement is rippling through religious and spiritual circles, too, as individuals seek deeper connections to their communities and a higher power.

A lack of oversight, however, has led to bad actors in the space, including doctors who have been accused of sexual misconduct while treating individuals under the influence. Because much of this work is done underground, nefarious behavior often goes undocumented or unreported, said Joey Gallagher, the Denver-based executive director of the nonprofit Psychedelic Club, which aims to create community around and educate the public about psychedelics. Advocates said theyre concerned instances of emotional and sexual abuse of people existing in a vulnerable psychedelic state could overshadow the benefits of psychedelics such as psilocybin.

Its actually been a worrying thing, Gallagher said. The psychedelic community 100% needs to step up more on calling out inappropriate behavior.

Rabbi Gorelick, who was ordained by the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute in 2019, refers to The Sacred Tribe as a synagogue, but members do not need to be Jewish to join. In fact, many who attended the November event claimed no religious affiliation.

Amy Bliss was raised Catholic but rejected organized religion as a young adult. John and Lena Swedell grew up as Jehovahs Witnesses but left the church many years ago. What these folks and others who came to Denver for the weekend share in common are a curiosity about psychedelics, a desire to learn more about themselves and a willingness to connect with like-minded individuals.

The level of acceptance is radical acceptance, Bliss said. Bring who you are. And all of your faults and your, you know, impurities and ugliness and all of it. Bring it all. Its all welcome.

Since its inception, The Sacred Tribe has been growing primarily by word of mouth and through other events, such as breathing workshops, that are open to guests because they do not involve mushrooms. The group is funded through donations, Gorelick said, which go toward paying his staff and buying food for events.

To be able to join a retreat, prospective members must fill out an application, complete a medical questionnaire and some undergo an interview to ensure their goals align with the community, said Gorelick, who also co-owns a lifestyle brand called So Epic that promotes raves and electronic music concerts.

I deny roughly 15% of applications into the community typically because people are looking for access to mushrooms as opposed to an exploration of connection, he said, adding that psychedelics are just one part of The Sacred Tribe experience.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

The retreat in November started with a substance-free dinner and interactive workshop on Friday night. Those taking mushrooms on Saturday returned to find the previous nights tables replaced with brightly colored cushions covering the floor and the lighting dimmed. A sculpture covered with mosaicked pieces of colored mirror spun under a spotlight, sending fractured light dancing across the wall.

After circling up on the floor for introductions and intention-setting, Gorelick invited everyone to change into comfy clothes and approach him individually to receive sacrament. Once everyone had been served, The Sacred Tribe members synchronously consumed their spoon of extract and laid down on the floor for a guided breathing exercise. Gorelick put on a playlist curated by participants earlier in the evening and two songs in, the vibe in the room started to shift.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

People began writhing between deep breaths. Moans of agony and ecstasy filled the room. Things escalated with the intensity of the music, leading to screaming and sobbing. One person did cartwheels across the room, as others gravitated towards the edges of the group and looked on with wide eyes.

Just when the scene appeared to be bordering on madness, the tempo of the music slowed down, casting a calmness throughout the space. Movements became softer and more fluid. Breathing became more natural.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

After breathwork, as these sessions are called, the remainder of the night was free for members exploration whether it be in a quiet space downstairs, in a room with music and visuals projected on the ceiling, or outside by the fire pit. Everyone who consumed mushroomswas required to stay the night and given the option of a second dose a few hours later. Sober members were on hand to facilitate should someone experience uncomfortable or negative emotions.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

On Sunday morning, everyone was back seated on the floor for a discussion about their experiences and the takeaways they could apply to daily life.

Gallagher at the Psychedelic Club estimates the number of spiritual groups experimenting with psychedelics in this way is immense, but Gorelick is also tapping into a wider movement in the Jewish community.

Madison Margolin, co-founder and editor of psychedelics-focused publication DoubleBlind, helped create the Jewish Psychedelic Summit as a platform to talk about the intersection of religion and psychedelics. The inaugural two-day symposium, which was held virtually last May, brought together dozens of panelists from Jewish backgrounds and welcomed more than 1,100 attendees.

Discussions covered topics such as Jewish trauma and the potential of psychedelic healing, the history of psychedelics in ancient Jewish practice, and why ending the war on drugs is a Jewish imperative.

Though still niche, this approach is becoming more widespread and continually attracting folks from a variety of Jewish sects, Margolin said, in part because institutional religion as we know it, from a reform or secular perspective, is a dying creature.

For many people, their psychedelic experiences are bringing them back to a different relationship with Judaism, she said. These experiences also offer the opportunity to reflect and implement the soulful, mental and somatic effects of a trip to ones life, a practice known as integration.

I really think psychedelics are the future of Judaism in a way that theres this common ground among people from all sorts of Jewish backgrounds and psychedelic consciousness becomes a meeting place for these people, Margolin said. Judaism as a religion can be a container for psychedelic states and also offers set and setting with which to have a psychedelic experience.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

Set and setting are two words that come up frequently in discussions about spirituality and psychedelic use. According to Matt Lowe, research director at Denver nonprofit Unlimited Sciences, set refers to the mindset a person has when they ingest psychedelics and setting refers to the environment in which they do it two things that differentiate intention-driven use from recreational.

In 2020, Unlimited Sciences began collaborating with John Hopkins Universitys Center for Psychedelic & Consciousness Research to conduct an observational study of psilocybin users to learn more about the context in which people consume the substance. The study has so far enrolled 6,800 people, who either used psilocybin in the six months prior to self-reporting survey data or planned to use it in the six months following their enrollment, and more than 900 have completed an initial survey, said Albert Garcia-Romeu, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral science.

Among respondents, the largest share (40%) reportedself-exploration as the primary reason for doing so, followed by those seeking to use psilocybin for their mental health (30%) and for therapy (10%).

Were definitely tapping into a number of people who are not only using it for guiding sessions or self-exploration for topics they find difficult, or to overcome grief, or to understand unity, Lowe said. Were seeing people use it also to guide their religious experiences, or mystical experiences or spirituality.

Theres evidence of indigenous cultures in Mesoamerica using hallucinogenic cactus, plants and fungi in healing rituals and religious ceremonies. And prior to the 1970s, researchers had been adamantly studying substances such as LSD and psilocybin in mystical and medical contexts, Lowe said. After President Richard Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act in 1971, however, research and clinical trials came to a grinding halt.

Much like cannabis, its taken decades to reverse the stigma around psychedelics and investigate their benefits. Recent studies have yielded promising results in using psilocybin to treat depression, PTSD, anxiety among the terminally ill and even nicotine addiction. Modern research has also explored psychedelics as catalysts to religious experiences, Lowe said.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

In Denver, Gorelick is preparing to administer a study in partnership with Canadian company Divergence Neurothat aims to collect biometric data about how psychedelic mushrooms affect the human body and brain, leveraging fungi grown by The Sacred Tribe.

Using a proprietary method, Gorelicks team extracts and isolates psilocybin and 14 other alkaloids that can be administered to members based on their intentions for a journey whether it be to make an internal connection, open their heart space or tackle challenges head-on, he said. Some like aeruginascin are linked to states of euphoria, Gorelick said, while others like baeocystin offer feelings of connectedness.

These assessments are, so far, based on anecdotal evidence from a group of experienced psychonauts who Gorelick has been surveying. Once a month, he provides participants with 1.5 grams and asks them to rate the effects on factors such as creativity, clarity, mind, body, spirit, visuals and more.

Most of the time, I get all the results back and theres at least enough correlation between the 29 people that shows these particular strains lend themselves to more heart connection, more somatic experience, or a more visual experience, or whatever, Gorelick said.

The upcoming study aims to pair data to that anecdotal evidence by monitoring brain wave patterns, heart rate variability, respiration, gut flora response and other factors, Gorelick said. Its expected to start later this year.

What makes his study unique is that the compounds are extracted from the fungi itself. Most medical research currently relies on synthetic psilocybin for consistent dosing, he said.

We are, as far as I know, the only people in the world who have come up with a particular process that allows us to have a consistent dosing, but based on full mushroom extract. So I can say, not only is it 20 milligrams of psilocybin, its also 3 milligrams of psilocin, 12 milligrams of baeocystin, etc., Gorelick said. So I can give that consistently every time, too.

Andy Cross, The Denver Post

On the morning of Jan. 10, The Sacred Tribes warehouse underwent a routine fire inspection to secure operating permits. At 4:45 p.m. that afternoon, Denver police executed a search warrant regarding a complaint from the fire department about an active mushroom and psilocybin lab, according to the probable cause affidavit.

Officers discovered grow tents inside, scales and multiple small white freezers with suspected mushroom bags sealed and stacked filling them to the top, the affidavit stated. Police confiscated suspected mushrooms, both frozen and growing, as well as paperwork, notebooks and a digital scale, according to Gorelicks arrest affidavit.

Police arrested a chemist who was contracted to design and work in the mushroom extraction lab, according to Gorelick. The Denver District Attorneys Office charged the individual with possession with intent to manufacture or distribute a controlled substance, a first-degree felony.

On Feb. 8, police arrested Gorelick after he turned himself in at the Denver Police Department, though he had yet to be formally charged as of Thursday. According to his arrest affidavit, police linked Gorelick to the raided warehouse after finding mail and two cars registered to him at the grow facility during their investigation. Gorelicks name also was on the fire permit application, the affidavit stated.

The relationship between religion and drug use has been legally contentious for decades and became even more nuanced when Congress adopted the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, or RFRA, in 1993.

The act was passed in response to a Supreme Court ruling in Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, a case involving two Native American men who were fired from their jobs and subsequently denied unemployment benefits for using peyote, even though it was part of their religious practice. The court decided the states law prohibiting peyote use was a law of general applicability, meaning it applied to everyone equally and would not be overturned because it interfered with religious practice in just a few instances.

According to Griffen Thorne, an attorney with the Harris Bricken law firm in Los Angeles, the ruling spawned widespread backlash and even conservative religious groups were critical of implications under the First Amendment. That led Congress to pass RFRA as a test that judges use to evaluate whether a law or government action infringes on religious liberties protected by the First Amendment.

RFRA has been applied in various contexts over the years, Thorne said, including in a 2006 case involving ayahuasca that set precedent for groups to be able to import and use controlled substances in a religious context. That essentially left the door open for other groups as well, Thorne said.

Organizations can also apply for a religious exemption with the Drug Enforcement Administration, but due to stipulations in the agencys guidelines the chances of that happening are like winning the Super Bowl, Thorne said.

A lot of people probably have legitimate religious practices that would be protected by the First Amendment, but you have a federal agency thats extremely over-aggressive in how it regulates things and laws that actually prohibit things, Thorne said, so unless those people go to court and win, theyre probably still violating the law.

Despite this ambiguity, federal law is explicit in prohibiting the cultivation of illegal substances, including psychedelic mushrooms, Thorne said. The only protections an organization might have would be at the state or local level.

A panel created to evaluate the effects of psilocybin decriminalization in Denver suggested loosening local laws further after concluding it has not since presented any significant public health or safety risk in the city. The panel recommended, among other things, that the City Council make both the communal use and the gifting of psilocybin among the lowest law enforcement priority.

Additionally, activists have filed several ballot initiatives to legalize entheogenic plants and fungi, including psilocybin, mescaline and dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, statewide, and create a regulated system for their use in therapeutic settings.Should they collect enough signatures, voters could see the measures on the November ballot.

Joe Amon, Denver Post file

Until then, tension between being able to legally use psilocybin and the illegality of buying or selling it creates more grey area. Councilman Hinds found the report on decriminalizings effects promising, especially given how many law enforcement representatives, including Denver District Attorney Beth McCann, contributed to the recommendations. When Mile High City voters adopted decriminalization via Initiative 301, the measure notably did not address how locals could or should obtain psilocybin. Hinds sees gifting as a step toward resolving this Catch-22.

The committee met for more than a year and I dont know if it was fully on board with exactly how people obtain psilocybin, he said. But if the City Council agrees with the report, then at least gifting personal amounts could become decriminalized here in the near future.

But growing 35 strains appears beyond the definition of personal use, in my opinion, he added.

Still, clarity has been hard to come by even with substances that are legal, as Steve Berke, co-founder of the International Church of Cannabis in Denver, found out in 2017 when police charged him with public consumption of marijuana and a violation of the Colorado Clean Indoor Air Act.

The Church of Cannabis does not need a license for on-premise consumption because of its status as a religious nonprofit, Berke said, which enables its congregants, known as Elevationists, to smoke marijuana during private, members-only services. Despite the fact cannabis was legalized statewide several years prior to the churchs grand opening on April 20, 2017, police still came knocking. Berke went to court and was ultimately fined $50 for the two misdemeanors. (A Denver judge found another co-founder, Lee Molloy, not guilty on the same charges.)

The Church of Cannabis doesnt grow its namesake plant or sell paraphernalia, so as not to be misconstrued as a marijuana business, Berke said. (Elevationists bring their own to consume.) Still, he cautioned that any religious organization using substances needs to ensure theyre in compliance with local, state and federal law.

Religion doesnt allow you to murder people on the street or sacrifice humans, so there are still boundaries you cannot cross, Berke said. If youre doing anything with a Schedule 1 narcotic you need to be worried about the federal government. But in 2017, we knew the feds werent going after cannabis.

While The Sacred Tribes mushroom growing operation remains on hold, the group is reconvening. Gorelick postponed retreats scheduled for January following the raid but is resuming them in February sans sacrament. Still, Gorelick expects cultivation will begin again soon.

The rabbi isnt worried about legal consequences even after being detained saying the groups practices are protected by an inherent religious exemption. (The Sacred Tribe has not received a formal exemption from the DEA.) None of the mushrooms The Sacred Tribe grew were ever sold or used outside the context of its events, he said.

The Sacred Tribe stands by our religious exemption and we believe in our religious exemption, Gorelick said. I am absolutely fully confident that at the conclusion of vetting of our processes that life will go back to normal.

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Mushroom rabbi grows ceremonial psilocybin for Denver congregation but is that legal? - The Denver Post

How a rabbi suspended for sexual misconduct can stay in the pulpit – Forward

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Rabbi Jeremy Gerber earned the dubious distinction last fall of becoming the first synagogue leader to have his suspension from the Conservative movements Rabbinical Assembly announced publicly, part of the groups effort to hold members more accountable for misconduct.

Yet Gerber has remained in his pulpit in suburban Philadelphia sermonizing, spearheading the synagogues racial justice initiative and offering a benediction last May at the Pennsylvania legislature. In an ironic twist, Gerber also appeared on a national sex-advice podcast midway through his two-year sanction for initiating inappropriate sexual conversations with a congregant.

None of this violated the narrow terms of Gerbers suspension, underscoring the obstacles national Jewish institutions face as they try to crack down on misconduct across thousands of individually run synagogues, camps, day schools, JCCs and other organizations.

Spurred by the #MeToo movement and a series of revelations that respected clergy, philanthropists, academics and others had harassed or assaulted women, many leading Jewish organizations and seminaries have taken steps over the past year to review and overhaul their policies. But while the Reform movement can bar rabbis from performing any rabbinical duties, a Rabbinical Assembly suspension only prohibits participation in the groups conferences and job-placement services, having no direct effect on how the sanctioned rabbi interacts with congregants or the broader public.

We dont hire the rabbis, we dont supervise them or employ them, explained Hara Person, chief of the Reform Central Conference of American Rabbis, which like the R.A. has recently sought to sharpen its disciplinary processes. But we have this ethics system, which is the mechanism by which we try to maintain the highest standards of rabbinic behavior.

Because of the decentralized way Jewish life is organized in the United States, there is no way to know how many rabbis or congregations are grappling with how to adjudicate misconduct. But a deep look back at Gerbers case - which involved the rabbi sending Facebook messages querying a congregant who also worked for the synagogue about her sex life, and sharing intimate details of his own over several weeks in 2018 - provides a window into the growing challenge individual synagogues and national institutions face.

The Rabbinical Assemblys suspension came nearly a year after Congregation Ohev Shalom, which Gerber has led since 2009, concluded its own investigation and decided that keeping him in the pulpit and creating a new ethics code for clergy was the best option for the synagogue. We have been engaged in a process of healing and continue to commit to having our sacred community remain a safe and welcoming place for all, Ohev Shaloms leadership said in a statement.

But the episode and its contentious aftermath prompted an exodus of about a dozen members, including past presidents and sisterhood stalwarts, and caused a broader upset that is still being felt.

The rabbi, they decided, was more important than that member of the congregation and all the other members that chose to leave, said Judy Hausen, a longtime member of Ohev Shalom who is friendly with the victim and left the shul over its handling of the case.

Courtesy of Jeremy Gerber

Rabbi Jeremy Gerber was welcomed with open arms when he was hired by Congregation Ohev Shalom, south of Philadelphia, in 2009. He had an uncanny knack to be able to connect to someones soul, said Doris Elofer, a former president of the congregation who helped hire Gerber but would eventually leave the synagogue in part over how it handled a claim of sexual misconduct against the rabbi.

When Gerber was first applying to be Ohev Shaloms rabbi 12 years ago, he impressed search committee members by remembering the names of everyone he met during a weekend tryout.

I thought we hit the jackpot when we got him as a rabbi, said Doris Elofer, a former president of the shul who was on that committee. He had an uncanny knack to be able to connect to someones soul.

Gerber was raised in Sweden, where his father was cantor at the Great Synagogue of Stockholm, and was ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary in 2009. He soon joined Ohev Shalom, where he started a blog, Take On Torah, and founded a racial justice group to build bridges between the the synagogues current home in suburban Wallingford and nearby Chester, a rundown industrial town along the Delaware River where it was founded.

Now 41, Gerber sports a trim beard a touch lighter than his short brown hair, and has an open, personal style; his High Holiday sermon in 2018 was about having been diagnosed with an eating disorder and he preaches radical honesty.

Judaism is about being in relationship, he wrote in his bio on the congregations website. With each other, God, our ancient (and modern) texts, Israel (in all its complexity), and with the wider community around us.

Philadelphias wealthy Main Line suburbs are studded with synagogues, Jewish schools and a JCC. Ohev Shalom, about a 30-minute drive south, is, as one former president of the shul put it, the Jewish center in its area, and one of few synagogue options.

The congregations active brotherhood and sisterhood help weave it deeply into many congregants social lives, which made it especially painful when word of Gerbers untoward behavior with an active and longtime member started spreading.

When I heard about this I remember I cried a lot, Elofer said, because I knew that this was going to affect the community forever.

Photo by Congregation Ohev Shalom

Members dance during an an event at Congregation Ohev Shalom in Wallingford, Pa., where Rabbi Jeremy Gerber became the first Conservative movement rabbi to have his suspension for sexual misconduct publicized by the Rabbinical Assembly.

It was in August 2018 that Gerber first reached out to a congregant on Facebook for advice about sex and marriage. He was friendly with the woman, who had belonged to the congregation for more than 20 years and served as interim executive director when Gerber was hired.

The Forward agreed to the womans condition that she not be named in this story because she is a victim of sexual misconduct. She spoke several times over the past three months with a reporter, and shared the content of some of the messages. Gerber declined to be interviewed, but answered questions via email, saying the woman was an active participant in the conversations and calling her version of what happened selective and one-sided.

The woman said that in those first Facebook messages, Gerber brought up a sex-advice columnist who talked about open marriages, in which couples have sex with other people, and asked if she thought that it would be cheating to exchange text messages about sexual fantasies with someone other than ones spouse.

She replied that she did not think such texting should be considered cheating but when he asked about her fantasies, declined to share. I know this will disappoint you, but Im not going there, she texted, according to partial transcripts of the conversation reviewed by the Forward. I think my sharing personal details would do more harm than good, and really blur the line between being a supportive friend and sexting.

The woman said she told Gerber that she was uncomfortable with the tenor of the conversation, and asked him to dial things back. I liked our friendship the way it was, she said in one message. Snarky, obnoxious, and yes playful.

Gerber initially agreed to take giant steps back, but quickly began testing the limits. He said he wished both his wife and the womans husband would be OK with the two of them engaging in a sexually explicit conversation, according to the transcript. Then he proposed taking the conversation off Facebook, to a messaging platform where they could assume alter egos and talk about sex.

She declined and asked him not to contact her until the following week.

But two days later, Gerber sent her another Facebook message: Would she be interested in continuing the conversation using the secret feature on Facebook Messenger that allows users to make texts disappear after being sent?

She demurred, and told Gerber that the situation was messing with my mind.

Gerber apologized. Im sorry I started all of this, he wrote. If I could take it back I would.

In his email to the Forward, Gerber confirmed his apology, but characterized the tenor of the text exchanges differently.

I did initiate the sexual aspects of the conversation, while repeatedly maintaining it was about processing challenges in my marriage and not intended to be about her and me, Gerber wrote. In the couple of weeks that we wrote back and forth on this topic, she was an active participant and she reciprocated the communication.

Gerber declined to provide further detail about the conversations, and said he had deleted most of the messages at the womans request.

Photo by Congregation Ohev Shalom

Rabbi Jeremy Gerber blows the shofar at an event at Congregation Ohev Shalom in Wallingford, Pa., The synagogue leadership investigated a claim of sexual misconduct against Gerber and found that he had violated its employment policies.

These texts extended several weeks, into a High Holiday season in which Gerber delivered four sermons on the theme of radical honesty, telling congregants that hed been surprised no one objected to his having brought a spoken-word poet to perform during the prior years Yom Kippur service.

The majority of you seem to believe and feel that I have the best interests of the congregation at heart, and that Im doing what I do for the right reasons, Gerber said. I was a provocateur, a rabble-rouser. I was being an edgy rabbi and then you all just loved it?

After the holidays, the woman told a board member about her discomfort with Gerbers texting. But it was not until the spring that she brought a formal complaint to the synagogues president and three vice presidents. She recalled a friendly reception from the group, many of whom were close friends of hers; they hired an employment lawyer to investigate.

It was clear this was a complex situation and would need professional guidance, the current officers, led by Joel Fein, the president, said in written responses to questions from the Forward.

The lawyers report was never shared with the synagogues full board or membership. The officers said the lawyer determined that Gerber violated his contract, but that the inappropriate conversations with the woman were mutual.

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Having an outsider with relevant expertise investigate such situations is generally considered best practice. But Elofer, the former Ohev Shalom president who helped hire Gerber in 2009 and later left the synagogue in part over its handling of the situation, said she and others were frustrated that the matter was only considered through the lens of employment law, and had suggested the officers also consult rabbis for more perspective on the ethical concerns.

Chai Feldblum, a former member of the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, said preventing sexual harassment is not just about following the letter of a contract.

This is all about culture, said Feldblum, who has also investigated rabbinic misconduct. Entities, in this case a synagogue, should want their culture to be one in which harassment or improper relationships are not countenanced in any part of that organization.

The synagogue officers said that they acted to improve Ohev Shaloms culture following the incident with Gerber, drafting a comprehensive code of ethics for Ohev Shalom clergy to sign in which they commit to avoid even the appearance of wrongdoing.

I will reach out for help if I feel temptation or confusion regarding my interpersonal behaviors and choices, reads one of its bullet points.

The leaders also said that they sanctioned Gerber, but would not provide details.

Photo by Congregation Ohev Shalom

People attend an event at Congregation Ohev Shalom in Wallingford, Pa., unrelated to the events surrounding sexual misconduct claims leveled against Rabbi Jeremy Gerber, the synagogues spiritual leader.

In the summer of 2019, the officers indicated to the woman that Gerber would remain in the pulpit. She decided to quit the congregation and began sharing her story with some friends.

At Gerbers request, Ohev Shaloms leadership invited congregants to an emergency board meeting that July.

Amy Graham, who was the synagogues president at the time, said she detailed the complaint against Gerber and the investigations finding that Rabbi Gerbers written communications constituted sexual misconduct as defined in our employee handbook. Then Graham turned the floor over to Gerber and the woman he had texted.

The woman invoked the Rabbinical Assemblys code of conduct, which includes a lengthy section on boundary violations and states sexualized behavior with congregants is a violation of the rabbinic relationship.

Who are we as a Conservative shul, she posited, if we decide that the Rabbinical Assemblys expectation that our clergy not use their power for personal gain, especially with regard to sexual misconduct, is too lofty a goal?

For his part, Gerber apologized to the congregation and, according to multiple people who were there, said that he had gone to the woman seeking support during a difficult point in his marriage. Then they both left the room, and the meeting became chaotic, with some congregants hurling insults.

I literally heard a board member saying that the person who was involved she must be a slut, said Hausen, who left the congregation soon after.

But the meeting ended with a general acceptance of the attorneys report. Shortly thereafter, the board finalized the decision to retain Gerber, who led High Holiday services two months later.

The womans family and several other longtime congregants were not in the pews.

After the board of Congregation Ohev Shalom indicated that it would not fire Rabbi Jeremy Gerber for sending inappropriate messages to a congregant, the woman filed a complaint with the Rabbinical Assembly. The R.A. would ultimately suspend Gerber for two years.

Having failed to convince Ohev Shaloms leadership to dismiss Gerber, the woman turned to the Rabbinical Assemblys Vaad Hakavod, or ethics committee, filing a complaint in late July 2019. Earlier that month, Gerber himself had sent an email to a member of the committee asking to speak about an urgent matter. But the R.A. informed me that they could not respond to the situation, he said in his response to the Forwards inquiry, nor would they investigate, without a formal complaint being filed.

The woman said the R.A.s investigation did not appear to begin in earnest until March 2020, when Rabbi Daniel Pressman took over the committee. The woman turned transcripts of her conversation with Gerber over to Pressman, who also met with the leaders of Ohev Shalom.

In a follow-up email in April, David Hoffman, an Ohev board member, thanked Pressman and another ethics committee member for offering positive comments about the boards actions.

We also wanted to advise you that Rabbi Gerber has been a tremendous leader during this very difficult time, Hoffman wrote, referring to the onset of the pandemic. All in all, Rabbi Gerber has been a steady hand during very turbulent times and we are thankful to have him as our Rabbi.

In June 2020, the R.A.s executive committee approved the Vaads recommendation to suspend Gerber for two years. Both Pressman and a spokesperson for the broader group said they could not discuss the scope of the probe or its finding, citing a policy of not speaking to journalists about specific cases.

Though the umbrella groups suspension seems more severe than Ohev Shaloms undisclosed sanction, the synagogues officers said in the email interview that there was no substantive discrepancy. R.A. representatives validated our approach, the officers said, from our investigation through our remediation activities, and considered it a reasonable decision to retain the rabbi.

Gerber added that the synagogue and the R.A. came to quite similar conclusions, even though the practical implications might appear different.

Photo by Getty Images

Rabbi Jeremy Gerber appeared on a sex advice podcast hosted by Dan Savage, pictured here at a New York City event in 2013, while serving a suspension for sexual misconduct.

There were actually few practical implications of the suspension or its later disclosure to the public. Gerber continued to officiate at bnai mitzvah and other life-cycle events, to lead services, to write his blog.

And, in a move that particularly piqued some of his detractors, Gerber made a guest appearance on Savage Lovecast, a sex-advice show hosted by nationally-syndicated columnist Dan Savage the same expert he had referenced in his inappropriate conversations with the female congregant.

It was about six months into Gerbers suspension when Savage invited him onto the show to address the frustrations of a listener over the prohibitions on intercourse after monthly visits to the mikveh, or Jewish ritual bath. Gerber suggested the woman consult with her rabbi about shortening the no-intercourse window. And he proposed an idea that echoed the proposition hed made to his own congregant the very thing that had led to his suspension.

What if they wrote to each other? Gerber mused. You could write like, This is what Im going to do to you when we can finally be together again, and make it sort of much more of a play thing acknowledging that for many couples, things can become very rote.

Asked about the prudence of his appearance on a sex-advice podcast during his suspension for sexual misconduct, Gerber pointed out that the caller he gave advice to was anonymous, and there is no expectation (or intent) for experts to ever connect with the callers at any point.

I wanted his listeners to know that there are religious leaders who try very hard not to judge, who aspire to be accepting, and who focus on Gods compassion and inclusion, Gerber said in the email.

Six months after the podcast appearance, State Sen. Tim Kearney hosted Gerber as he delivered an invocation to the Pennsylvania legislature. Guide them in their work, Gerber prayed in the state Capitol, help them to discern what is right, true, and just, while also compassionate and caring for all our citizens.

A spokesperson for Kearney said the Forwards inquiry was the first time the office had heard of the allegations or suspension.

Photo by Jewish Theological Semina...

A courtyard at the Jewish Theological Seminary, the Conservative movements rabbinical college, in New York City. While major Jewish institutions have improved the way they adjudicate cases of sexual misconduct, critics say more needs to be done.

Suspension is the Rabbinical Assemblys second-most severe punishment, between probation and expulsion. It includes mandatory therapy and mentorship, both of which also apply to rabbis placed on probation, and also bars a rabbi from participating in the groups career-placement program the primary way Conservative rabbis land jobs and from the organizations conferences and committees.

My temporary suspension from the R.A. is similar to me losing my union status, Gerber said. I remain a fully ordained rabbi with the privilege to carry out all my work as a member of the clergy.

The Reform movement goes farther, with the option of barring members from providing any rabbinic services to individuals or communities. Still, the stamp of disapproval has had some local implications for Gerber: the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia has blocked him from hosting events during his suspension. When an individual has been sanctioned, and in this case by the Conservative movement, we will not provide them with communal platforms, said Michael Balaban, the federations chief.

One goal of the R.A.s new policy of publicly naming suspended or expelled rabbis, which applies to its more than 1,600 members, was that it might lead to such wider repercussions.

As a society we have learned the dangers when we fail to speak up and speak out, the R.A.s Rabbi Sheryl Katzman said in a statement announcing the new approach last fall.

But it is unclear that naming is enough.

More than 20 years ago, the Reform movement announced that Rabbi Sheldon Zimmerman would resign as president of its Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion because of a violation of an ethics policy on personal relationships.

Yet Zimmerman went on to hold various leadership positions in the community before fuller details of his misconduct including accusations that he was a sexual predator and had assaulted a 17-year-old were revealed last year.

The Reform movements Central Conference of American Rabbis subsequently launched a deep examination of its ethics policies, producing a December report that goes farther than any other major Jewish group in promising improvements in adjudicating misconduct cases.

The report identified a host of problems with the movements current process, including a policy that had allowed rabbis to escape sanction by resigning their membership in the CCAR. But it also identified a crisis of confidence among synagogue members and rabbis themselves that the umbrella body could fairly discipline clergy.

One congregational leader told investigators that his synagogue had a lot of cynicism about the rabbinical association. A rabbi said the group was a good old boys network and if you had the right creds, contacts, were thought especially well of, then your experience would be better.

Another challenge for the rabbinical associations is that local synagogue leaders tend to believe they have a better grasp on the circumstances surrounding a complicated or fraught situation like Gerbers than a council of rabbis based hundreds or thousands of miles away.

As Ohevs officers put it in their statement to the Forward: With recognition that not all matters are identical, we feel that the primary role should remain with the individual synagogue.

David Pollack, a former Ohev president who has remained a member despite discomfort with the boards decision to retain Gerber, was more blunt. At the end of the day, the ethics guidelines and investigative procedures of the nations largest Jewish institutions may count for relatively little compared to peoples feelings about a leader they know personally.

They suspended the rabbi, Pollack said, and the community still wanted to retain him for their pulpit.

The woman who Gerber texted said she has been to therapy to deal with the trauma, and said the most painful aspect of the ordeal has been feeling like she was driven out of her Jewish home.

I can forgive him for the sexual misconduct, she said, but I cant forgive the theft of the synagogue thats just, how can a rabbi do that?

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How a rabbi suspended for sexual misconduct can stay in the pulpit - Forward

A Muslim Dating App Powered Their Connection – The New York Times

Posted By on February 11, 2022

When Jafreen Momtaj Uddin and Shakil Sarfaroz Rabbi matched on Salams, a Muslim dating app, in June 2021, they immediately began a two-hour online conversation that Ms. Uddin described as extremely comfortable.

I was visiting an aunt in Philadelphia that day, said Ms. Uddin, 36. While one of her parents drove, she exchanged messages with Dr. Rabbi, also 36, for the duration of the ride.

It was a very easy and very enjoyable conversation, said Ms. Uddin, the executive director of the Asian American Writers Workshop in New York. A graduate of Columbia University, she holds a masters degree in global history from N.Y.U.

Dr. Rabbi, an assistant professor of English at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., found the exchange equally pleasant.

We just kept talking and talking, it was one subject after another, said Dr. Rabbi, who graduated from Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa., and received two masters degrees, one in English literature from the University of Dhaka in Bangladesh, and the other in English, rhetoric and composition from Penn State, where he later earned a Ph.D.

With Ms. Uddin, I could speak my mind freely, he added, which wasnt always the case for me in previous relationships.

They arranged for a first date the following month at the Longwood Gardens in Chester County, Pa., a halfway point between Ms. Uddins home in Montclair, N.J., and Mr. Rabbis in Laurel, Md.

[Click here to binge read this weeks featured couples.]

I thought he was at least worth that trip, said Ms. Uddin. Im very traditional, I always knew I wanted to end up with a man who was South Asian Muslim.

The date lasted for several hours as Ms. Uddin, who grew up in Montclair, and Dr. Rabbi, who was born and raised in Bangladesh, got to know each other better while walking amid the gardens filled with cherry blossoms and roses, tulips and azaleas, daffodils and wisteria.

Early on, they realized that the distance between them and their busy schedules would make seeing each other difficult. So we had to learn how to take advantage of quick day trips whenever possible, Ms. Uddin said.

Their second date took place just a few days later, when Ms. Uddin gave Dr. Rabbi a daytime tour of Montclair. It went smoothly until the couple realized that they were running late for Dr. Rabbis train back to Maryland.

We had 15 minutes to get to Newark Penn Station, recalled Ms. Uddin, who managed to deliver Dr. Rabbi to the station just as the Amtrak train was chugging into it. With no time to spare, he dashed aboard as the doors were closing behind him.

In hindsight, that 15 minutes of chaos has become symbolic of how we approach our relationship and partnership together, Dr. Rabbi said. No matter what the world throws at us, we will make it together.

The two, who still reside in different states (they are trying to figure it out, Ms. Uddin said), became engaged in November 2021, on the weekend after Thanksgiving. Dr. Rabbi delivered his proposal in the form of a handwritten letter that asked for Ms. Uddins hand in marriage.

One really expects no less from an English professor who is proposing to a woman who runs a literary nonprofit, said Ms. Uddin.

They wed on Jan. 30 at Crystal Plaza, an events venue in Livingston, N.J. Imam Shahid Hoque, an officiant with Muslim Wedding Service, led the ceremony in front of 200 vaccinated guests, who included the brides parents and, via video, the grooms.

I come from a huge family, explained the bride, noting that she has 20 aunts and uncles and 100 cousins who live within a 20-mile radius in New Jersey. Dr. Rabbi, she said, fits right in with every one of them.

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A Muslim Dating App Powered Their Connection - The New York Times

D’var Torah by Rabbi Josef Davidson: We are all holy in the eyes of the Divine – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on February 11, 2022

RABBI JOSEF DAVIDSONFebruary 10, 2022

In Tetzaveh, this weeks Torah portion, we learn that the High Priest was to wear a headdress to which a gold frontlet inscribed with Holy to the Eternal was attached by a blue cord. One might ask: Why was this gold frontlet attached to the headdress such that it hung on the High Priests forehead? What purpose did this serve?

Three answers come to mind. One is that it was to remind the High Priest of his holy office. A second is that it served to identify the High Priest to all who saw him. Each of these answers suggest that this was an identification badge intended to remind the High Priest and/or the people that he had been set apart from everyone else, sanctified to serve the Divine. For many, this might be reason enough for this instruction.

However, there is a third possible answer. Because the inscription was on the forehead of the High Priest, he was the one person who could not see it. How, then, might it remind him of his unique role? Visible to everyone else, it could have served as a means by which people could identify him as the High Priest. However, the rest of the High Priests clothing was so unique already and made him readily identifiable, why add this inscription? Perhaps the High Priest wore this inscription on his forehead so that when others gazed at it, they were reminded that they were Holy to the Eternal. Each and every person was holy, unique, valued and included through the ministry of the High Priest.

February is Black History Month, and Jewish Disability Awareness, Acceptance and Inclusion Month. In American society since its inception, these are groups of people who have been marginalized, ignored and excluded. Ideally, this month provides an opportunity to raise peoples awareness of the humanity of these marginalized populations.

We Jews, in particular, have long considered ourselves, in the words of the Torah, as a holy people, a kingdom of priests. We have long affixed to our foreheads inscriptions that remind us of our unique relationship with the Eternal.

Perhaps, we have thought that these were to remind ourselves of our holiness. However, I would propose that they are there to remind us and the people who come into our line of sight that they are holy.

Connect with your community every morning.

We live in a diverse country, in a diverse world. We tend to divide ourselves along lines of race, gender identification, sexual preferences, religions, politics, economics, nations of origin and, of course, abilities. These divisions lead to a mindset that assigns holiness to one over the others, rather than one that assigns holiness to every human being.

Our Torah portion teaches us and this month raises our awareness that these divisions are artificial and constructs of our own making and that we can and must do better.

As we greet each day, may we greet each person whom we meet in such a manner that they receive the message that they are Holy to the Eternal. By so acting, we, too, will be holy.

Rabbi Josef Davidson serves Congregation Bnai Amoona and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association, which coordinates the dvar Torah for the Jewish Light.

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D'var Torah by Rabbi Josef Davidson: We are all holy in the eyes of the Divine - St. Louis Jewish Light

In the Netherlands, Chief Rabbi denounces anti-Zionist group group demands that local universities identify any staff members who have ties to Israel…

Posted By on February 11, 2022

An anti-Zionist group in the Netherlands is pressuring the countrys universities to reveal whether their staff members have ties to Israel.

The move by The Rights Forum, under a Freedom of Information act, reeks of antisemitism and is reminiscent of the Mayors who surrendered information about Jews to German occupiers during WWII, denounced Chief Rabbi of the Netherlands, Rabbi Binyomin Jacobs.

Additionally, the groups request demands to know what ties and staff relations exist with Jewish communities and organisations such as the Simon Wiesenthal Centre.

In a statement, Rabbi Jacobs, who also heads up the European Jewish Associations Committee for Combatting Antisemitism, said :The Rights Forum is well known to me. The clear inference is that some shadowy Zionist/Jewish cabal is operating in the Dutch university system. This reeks of antisemitism, but it comes as no surprise to me given this groups reputation.

He added: What really concerns me is the number of universities that were so compliant with such a transparently antisemitic request.

The difference between anti-Zionism and antisemitism is now wafer thin. In all my many years in Holland I can seldom remember such a toxic environment for Jews. This is an appalling submission to the base instincts of an openly hostile group towards Israel, the worlds only Jewish State, Rabbi Jacobs stressed.

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In the Netherlands, Chief Rabbi denounces anti-Zionist group group demands that local universities identify any staff members who have ties to Israel...

Suddenly, the soldier noticed the woman’s kippah | Naamah Kelman | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Trees are essential for living. Our tradition celebrates them on Tu Bishvat. One Israeli custom associated with the holiday that began in the early 20th century was the act of tree planting. The newborn Teachers Union (Hisdatrut HaMorim), early Palestine, circa 1912, wanted to reaffirm this forgotten day of the Jewish calendar, so they joined what was one of the greatest efforts of reforestation in the land of Israel. Seemingly apolitical, even tree planting has become politicized in present-day Israel. There are Jews unsympathetic to the Bedouins who plant trees on Tu Bishvat on contested Bedouin land to reclaim it for other uses, and there are Jews who plant trees in Palestinian villages to replant the trees that have been uprooted by West Bank settlers.

This year, Rabbis for Human Rights (RHR) set out to the Palestinian village of Awarta to replenish the tree supply, given the uprooting that has gone on there. RHR has picked olives from the olive trees, and the area has become a place where the settlers have tried to stop such gatherings, sometimes using force, but always accompanied by hostile threats. Nestled under the settlement of Itamar, Hence, the IDF is routinely called in to keep an uneasy quiet between the rabbis and their allies who have come to plant trees and pick olives with their Palestinian sisters and brothers and the settlers who oppose them.

When Rabbi Nava Hefetz, director of education for RHR, Rabbi Michael Marmur, Chair of RHR and faculty member of Hebrew Union College and Rev. Gavriella Zander of Agusta arrived in Awarta by car, buses with volunteers to assist them from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv pulled up as well. Rabbi Hefetz told the group to get started along with the villagers. Within minutes, an IDF jeep pulled up with soldiers, and asked the group to leave.

Rabbi Hefetz, taking full responsibility, and calming the agitated volunteers, asked the soldiers to speak to their commanders. The soldiers responded affirmatively to this request and Rabbi Hefetz recognized, once the officers jeep pulled up, that these men were most likely seasoned officer reservists. As one officer began to question why these volunteers were there, the other officer started to film the exchange.

What are you doing? one officer asked. Rabbi Hefetz answered, We are here to replant the trees that the settlers have uprooted. We are not here to provoke, just to honor Tu Bishvat and honor the local Palestinian farmers. Who are you?, the officer wanted to know, and Rabbi Hefetz responded, We are Rabbis for Human Rights.

At that moment, the officer noticed that Nava was wearing a kippah, and said, This is quite unusual, a woman with a kippah! Are you a rabbi? Yes, she responded. I am the director of education for RHR. The officer then continued, Are you a Reform rabbi? and the questioning began to take a different turn. The tone was now almost conciliatory, and Nava answered, Yes, I am a graduate of Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem.

Pause

Wow, said the officer, now smiling, I had my bar mitzvah in a Reform synagogue in Modiin with a woman rabbi, I dont remember her name. Nava adds, You must mean Rabbi Kinneret Shiryon! Yes, thats her! he exclaimed.

Then the second officer chimed in. Hey, my son had his bar miztvah (at the Reform synagogue) in Raanana, also with a woman rabbi! Rabbi Hefetz nodded. You must mean Rabbi Tami Kolberg, and together, the two officers asked in unison, Do you know all the rabbis? To which she said, Certainly those who are affiliated with Rabbis for Human Rights.

Rabbi Hefetz then returned to the matter at hand. We are not here to provoke. We are here to plant olive trees and be on our way. The officers then instructed the soldiers to leave and, turning to Nava, added, Have a good day!

On January 14, 2022, with rain coming down, 150 saplings were planted, a Hebrew and Arabic ceremony was held, with the prayer: It is a tree of life for all who uphold it, and its ways are the paths to peace. Trees restore breath, trees give life, trees renew our hope. And sometimes, seeds planted by women rabbis in Reform synagogues, demonstrating equality, fairness, and progress, bear the fruits of justice and light.

In honor of the 50th anniversary of the ordination of women.

The above was coauthored by Rabbi Nava Hefetz.

Rabbi Naamah Kelman is Dean of the Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem. She was the first woman ordained in Israel in 1992, when no Hebrew word existed for the new role for women.

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Suddenly, the soldier noticed the woman's kippah | Naamah Kelman | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

The Happy Merchant | Anti-Defamation League

Posted By on February 11, 2022

The Happy Merchant is an anti-Semitic meme depicting a drawing of a Jewish man with heavily stereotyped facial features who is greedily rubbing his hands together. The meme is by far the most popular anti-Semitic meme among white supremacists, who have created a nearly endless series of images and variants featuring the Happy Merchant.

The meme originated with pen-and-ink artwork by a racist cartoonist who used the pseudonym A. Wyatt Mann, exposed by Buzzfeed reporter Joseph Bernstein in 2015 as actually being artist Nick Bougas (allegations of Bougas authorship had long predated Bernsteins article). Mann became known for his grotesquely racist and anti-Semitic cartoons in the 1980s and 1990s, many of which first appeared in newsletters published by longtime white supremacist Tom Metzger.

The original cartoon featured the Happy Merchant image and a similarly bigoted drawing of an African-American, as well as images of a rat and a cockroach. The cartoon contained a racist assertion that substituted the images for certain words to read: A world without [Jews] and [blacks] would be like a world without [rats] and [cockroaches]. According to the Australian non-profit Online Hate Prevention Institute, this cartoon appeared on Metzgers website at least as early as 2004 (its first appearance in print was likely earlier).

At some pointBernstein suggests as early as 2001someone cropped out all but the Jewish man from the cartoon and uploaded it to the Internet, where it became particularly popular on forums such as 4chan, whose users began modifying and spreading it. It eventually gained the name Happy Merchant. It has also been called Le Happy Merchant, Merchant Face and Jew Face.

The Happy Merchant has become nearly ubiquitous in modern online white supremacist and anti-Semitic iconography. A 2018 study by scholars examining memes displayed in various online communities determined that the Happy Merchant was among the most popular memes on both 4chan and Gab, two major online outlets for alt right expression.

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The Happy Merchant | Anti-Defamation League

Whoopi Goldberg and the Anti-Defamation League both embrace critical race theory – Towanda Daily Review

Posted By on February 11, 2022

Whoopi Goldberg has been suspended from "The View" after saying on air that the Holocaust was "not about race" because Nazis and Jews "are two White groups of people." Her comments drew immediate pushback from the Anti-Defamation League, the nation's leading organization charged with combating antisemitism. "No @WhoopiGoldberg, the #Holocaust was about the Nazi's systematic annihilation of the Jewish people -- who they deemed to be an inferior race," ADL chief executive Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted.

Funny, that's not what the ADL website said. Before July 2020, the ADL correctly defined racism as "the belief that a particular race is superior or inferior to another, that a person's social and moral traits are predetermined by his or her inborn biological characteristics." It continued that racism is "the hatred of one person by another -- or the belief that another person is less than human -- because of skin color, language, customs, place of birth or any factor that supposedly reveals the basic nature of that person." But that month, the ADL replaced that definition with a new woke version that declared racism is "the marginalization and/or oppression of (BEG ITAL)people of color(END ITAL) based on a socially constructed racial hierarchy that privileges white people" (emphasis added). In other words, the group charged with fighting antisemitism changed its definition of racism to (BEG ITAL)exclude(END ITAL) antisemitism.

That new definition of racism -- and Goldberg's embrace of it -- is straight out of critical race theory, which holds that the struggle against racism is a struggle against "Whiteness." As Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic, authors of the book "Critical Race Theory: An Introduction," explain, "Early in our history . . . Jews . . . were considered nonwhite -- that is, on a par with African Americans. Over time, they earned the prerogatives and social standing of whites by . . . acquiring wealth, sometimes by illegal or underground activity." As a result, Jews are now part of what the ADL refers to the "socially constructed racial hierarchy that privileges white people." They are no longer oppressed, but members of the oppressor class.

This is a classic antisemitic trope -- that Jews are oppressors who keep others down by virtue of their wealth and control of the world's money supply. It would also be news to many American Jews, who are victims of rising antisemitic violence in the United States. For the very organization whose mission is to defend them to embrace this radical ideology is shameful.

By the ADL's new standard, what Goldberg said was perfectly kosher. On "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert," she explained that the Nazis "had issues with ethnicity, not with race, because most of the Nazis were white people, and most of the people they were attacking were white people. So, to me, I'm thinking, 'How can you say it's about race if you are fighting each other?'" Well, if racism applies only to the "oppression of people of color," then -- according to the ADL -- Goldberg was right. Of course, she was not right. As the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum tweeted Monday, "Racism was central to Nazi ideology. Jews were not defined by religion, but by race. Nazi racist beliefs fueled genocide and mass murder."

Before her suspension, Goldberg invited Greenblatt on "The View" Tuesday to help her do damage control. "Well, Whoopi, there's no question that the Holocaust was about race," he said. "That's how the Nazis saw it as they perpetrated the systematic annihilation of the Jewish people. . . . You see, Hitler's ideology, the Third Reich, was predicated on the idea that the Aryans, the Germans, were a 'master race,' and the Jews were a subhuman race. It was racialized antisemitism."

He was correct. But his words directly contradicted his organization's own definition of racism.

So, in the wake of the Goldberg scandal, the ADL quietly changed its definition of racism again -- overnight expunging its new woke definition from its website, and replacing it with an anodyne "interim definition," which reads: "Racism occurs when individuals or institutions show more favorable evaluation or treatment of an individual or group based on race or ethnicity." They were hoping no one would notice. And so far, no one has challenged Greenblatt on it during his media tour absolving Goldberg.

Greenblatt accepted Goldberg's apology, declaring that "we're all capable of mistakes. And if you apologize sincerely, there's an opportunity for repentance." He's absolutely right. Cancel culture is toxic. But maybe it's time for Greenblatt to take his own advice and apologize for using the ADL's platform to spread woke disinformation about what constitutes racism.

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Whoopi Goldberg and the Anti-Defamation League both embrace critical race theory - Towanda Daily Review


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