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Hebrew U researchers find new way to explore white matter in brain – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 18, 2021

A Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU) neurological study has developed a new method of analyzing samples of the brains white matter something that was previously difficult to do according to a study published in the peer-reviewed journal Sciencelast Thursday.

The study was led by Prof. Aviv Mezer and Dr. Roey Schurr.

Mezer and Schurr describe that by using the nearly 140-year-old Nissl Stain Method, which is ubiquitous in the study of neurons in the human brain, they can more easily inspect cells in the white matter, which is mostly made up of nerve fibers and a group of cells known as glia.

The HU team is the first to use Nissl stained brain slices to reveal fiber pathways in white matter.

This new technique, named Nissl-ST (Nissl-based Structure Tensor) by HU researchers, can be applied to any brain slices that have undergone Nissl staining. Nissl staining is also widely available and universally used, so this breakthrough in white matter research will help research teams across the globe unearth their own discoveries.

The new method was discovered when, during Schurrs tenure in Prof. Mezer's lab as a doctoral student, he decided to look at some pictures of Nissl-stained brain tissue. To his surprise, he noticed that the glial cells formed a pattern of short rows, seemingly aligning with the local nerve fibers.

"It was just curiosity," explains Schurr. "Textbooks are full of illustrations, but I wanted to understand what the white matter of the brain actually looked like."

Schurr and Mezer then realized that by using simple image processing tools, they could utilize the patterned cell structure to uncover the white-matter architecture.

"I was amazed when we first applied this technique to a Nissl-stained slice of the brain, Prof. Mezer added. We immediately recognized it as an important piece of the puzzle that scientists have been searching for in the study of white matter.

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Hebrew U researchers find new way to explore white matter in brain - The Jerusalem Post

15 Types of Hasidic Jewish Hats | The Hasidic World

Posted By on October 18, 2021

What are the different types of Hasidic Jewish hats? There are many types of hats that Hasidic Jews wear, such as the Shtreimel, Spodik, Kolpik, Hoiche, Biber, Up-Hat, and Chabad Fedora. Here is a brief guide to the various Hasidic hats.

The Shtreimel is a fur hat worn on Shabbos (the Sabbath), Yom Tov (Jewish Holidays), and other special occasions like weddings. Most Hasidic Jews only wear a Shtreimel after marriage, so you wont see single Jewish men wearing them (except for Toldos Aharon Hasidim). The Shtreimel isnt required by Jewish law, but wearing one is an accepted custom amongst Hasidim. Plus, wearing one is considered to be a zechus (merit). The Shtreimels are a status symbol, and theyre made by Shtreimel Machers (Yiddish for Shtreimel makers). Shtreimelekh are often made from fox fur.Interestingly, some Litvish Jews also wear Shtreimels on Shabbos.The man on the left is wearing a Shtreimel, and the one on the right is wearing a Platchige Biber Hat:Here are the main times that Shtreimels are worn:

Similar to a Shtreimel, a Spodik is a tall, fur hat that Hasidic Jews wear on holidays, the Sabbath, and festive occasions. In particular, many Hasidic sects that were once centered in Poland wear them, such as Gur, Aleksander, and Amshinov. Spodiks are black, tall, and have a cylindrical shape.Heres an image of a Spodik Hasidic hat:

A Kolpik is a light brown, fur hat thats worn by Hasidic Jews on the Sabbath, Jewish holidays, and special events, such as weddings. The Kolpik hat is tall and cylindrical and looks very similar to the Spodik.In some Hasidic sects, the unmarried sons and grandsons of the Rebbe will wear a Kolpik on Shabbos and Yom Tov (I believe this is the case in Viznitz and Belz). Hasidic Rebbes will also wear Kolpiks on certain occasions, such as a yahrzeit.Heres an image of a Kolpik hat:

Hoiche hats are also known as high-crowned hats, and theyre worn by Hasidic Jews during the week. Platchige hats have a lower crown and are worn by fewer Hasidic sects.While a fedora is flexible, the Hoiche Hasidic hat is more stiff. Plus, the resting line is much further on the head. Theres a ribbon on Hoiche hats that almost looks like a belt. The side that the ribbon appears on is one way to tell which Hasidic sect a Hasid is from.Here is an image of a Hoiche Biber hat (the two men in the center are wearing Hoiche Biber hats):

Also known as a flat beaver hat, the Platchige Biber Hasidic hat is worn during the week by Hasidic Jews. It has a flat style and is worn by members of the Toldos Aharon, Shomrei Emunim, and Satmar sects.The man standing furthest to the left is wearing a Platchige Biber Hat (flat Hasidic hat):For above image, heres what theyre wearing, starting from furthest left: Platchige Biber Hat, Hoiche Biber Hat, Borsalino Fedora, Classic Kippa, and Bent-Up Hat.

An up-hat is a black hat typically worn by Rosh Yeshivas (heads of Rabbinical academies) and some Hasidim. Theyre called up-hats because the hat brim faces up rather than down. Most Litvitsh/yeshivish Jewish men, on the other hand, wear black hats called Borsalino Fedoras, which have brims that face down. Heres an image of a Rosh Yeshiva wearing an up-hat:

Most Chabad Hasidim wear a fedora because the 7th Rebbe wore one. However, some wear a simple Beret or Casquette.Heres an image of Lubavitcher Hasidim wearing Chabad Fedoras:

A Kashket hat is a felt cap thats commonly worn by Hasidic children, especially those in the Belz sect. This type of hat was commonly worn by Jews in Eastern Europe and Russia before WWII, but today its almost exclusively worn by Hasidic children. The Kashket Hat became especially popular in Russia after the Tsar prohibited Jews from wearing traditional Jewish hats; it was a practical alternative.Heres an image:

Most Satmar Hasidim wear either a Platchige Biber Hat (flat beaver hat), or a Shtoffen Hat (high felt hat, without a bent brim), which is also worn by members of Vien. Some Satmar Hasidimespecially those from Rabbinical familieswear the Hoiche Biber Hat, which is common in other Hasidic sects.Unmarried Satmar Hasidim who wear a Shtoffen Hat during the week, will wear a Platchige Biber Hat on Shabbos, unless they are Sephardim or from South America.Here is a Satmar Hasid wearing a Shtoffen Hat:

A few more types to note: a Gerrer/Breslov Up-Hat, a Hamburg, a Winter Kuchma, Toldos Aharon White Knitted Yarmulke, and a Sadigura Shtreimel.Here is a Breslov Up-Hat (Rabbi Shalom Arush):

The Rebbes of Chortkov (and sects that come from Ruzhin) wear unique pointed Shtreimels. Heres an image of a past Chortkov Rebbe:

And heres one of the Boyaner Rebbe (Boyan is related to Ruzhin):Toldos Aharon Hasidim (and other Hasidic sects mainly in Meah Shearim) wear unique White Knitted Yarmulkes:

Platchige Flat.Biber Beaver. The original version of Hasidic Biber hats were made from short-haired beavers. Now, the material on cheaper ones is a knock-off alternative.Hoiche High-Crowned.An interesting video about Hasidic hats:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEq0EpXqJaoIf I missed any hat types, please comment below.

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15 Types of Hasidic Jewish Hats | The Hasidic World

David Twersky (Skverer Rebbe) – Wikipedia

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Grand rabbi of New Square

David Twersky

Skverer Rebbe dancing with Torah (2005)

David Twersky

Rabbi David Twersky (born October 28, 1940[1]), originally spelled Twerski, is the Grand Rabbi and spiritual leader of the village of New Square, New York, and of Skverer Hasidism worldwide.

Twersky was born in Iai, Romania, in 1940. In 1945, at the end of World War II, his family moved to Bucharest. In 1947, they emigrated to the United States, where they settled in Borough Park, Brooklyn, and later in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Twersky's father, Rabbi Yakov Yosef Twersky, established the all-Hasidic village of New Square in Rockland County in 1954.

At the age of 18, Twersky married Chana Chaya Hager, the elder daughter of the Vizhnitzer Rebbe of Bnei Brak, Israel, Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Hager. The couple has four sons and three daughters:

Twersky claims to be the nearest living descendant of the Ba'al Shem Tov, and of the Ba'al Shem Tov's disciple Rabbi Menachem Nachum of Chernobyl.[citation needed]

In April 1968, following his father's death, Twersky assumed the leadership of New Square, and of Skverer Hasidim worldwide.[2] According to The Jewish Daily Forward, most New Square residents "revere their rebbe as a Saint, and look to him for guidance on all issues", showing their devotion, singing and praying at his weekly "tish".[3] The Forward also reports that Twersky lights his Hanukkah candles on a massive six-foot-tall sterling silver menorah that a wealthy follower bought him.[4] Twersky's word is considered law in New Square. He rarely speaks publicly, and exerts authority through a body of about 15 persons appointed by him, known as "the Kehilla".[3]

As in many Hasidic communities, the community in New Square tends to exercise its voting power as a bloc, under the guidance of the Grand Rabbi. He usually supports incumbents or those likely to win, putting the community in a good position to receive government support.

In 1992, New Square voted 822 for President George Bush, to 93 for Bill Clinton. In 1996, voters supported President Clinton over Bob Dole, 1,110 to 31. In 1994, voters backed Mario Cuomo against George Pataki, 907 to 63, and in 1998, voters backed Governor Pataki over Democrat Peter Vallone, 1,132 to 8. In November 2000, vice president Al Gore received more votes than George W. Bush, 1,388 to 25, after Mr. Gore visited Twersky in February of the year. During the 2000 Senate campaign, First Lady Hillary Clinton visited Rabbi Twersky and his wife in New Square, while running for the U.S. Senate, and received nearly 100 percent of the local vote. Twersky was invited to the White House in December 2000, and secured commutations for the criminal sentences of four Skver Hasidim, who had been convicted of defrauding the government of more than 30 million dollars to benefit the educational institutions of New Square.[6]

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David Twersky (Skverer Rebbe) - Wikipedia

Scandal on the Dance Floor – lareviewofbooks

Posted By on October 18, 2021

BASED ON Deborah Feldmans 2012 memoir about her choice to leave the Satmar Hasidic community of her birth, the Netflix miniseries Unorthodox draws sharp contrasts between the protagonist Esty Shapiros old life in Brooklyn and the new freedoms she experiences in Berlin. The third episode focuses on Estys sexual difficulties with her husband, Yanky, and her discovery of sexual freedom through a night of liberated dancing with her new friend, Robert. There is a world of difference between the chaste ritual dance performed by Esty and Yanky at their wedding and the earthy scene between Esty and Robert in a Berlin club. The latter encounter is presented as an important, positive step in Estys escape from Orthodoxy.

Unorthodox is not unique in suggesting that pious women need to leave a traditional Jewish world in order to find men who can give them pleasure on the dance floor and, by extension, in bed. Although traditional Jewish law forbids men and women from dancing together, transgressive dancing has long been a source of fascination in life and literature. For centuries, rabbis issued prohibitions on mixed-sex dancing, and Jewish communities found ways around these restrictions time and again. By juxtaposing the scenes of sexual dysfunction involving Yanky with the interlude in the club with Robert, Unorthodox repeats several tropes that appeared in literary texts from the 19th and early 20th centuries, in works by authors as varied in language and theme as Kadya Molodowsky, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Anzia Yezierska, and Israel Zangwill. These works deployed the motif of scandalous dancing as a way of addressing the dramatic social changes Jews experienced in the modern era especially since, for many writers, dancing was the most physically intimate act they were willing to describe in print.

After the Enlightenment, religious communities were inescapably changed by the growth of secularism. Jewish communities in particular grappled with acculturation, religious reform, and political emancipation. Even within a communal context, interpretations of Jewish law did not necessarily carry the same force as in previous generations, and it was necessary for authorities to appeal to such concerns as Jewish continuity, antisemitism, and bourgeois propriety. Writers of Jewish popular fiction, whether they were religiously inclined or staunchly secular, portrayed mixed-sex dancing as a threat to the social order.

Not all mixed-sex dancing was equally subject to criticism, however. Dances in bourgeois German-Jewish social clubs or among Yiddish-speaking immigrants on New Yorks Lower East Side may have appeared simply as a sign of the changing times, a social practice that was popular enough to overcome any potential religious censure. Although these types of dances represented a new form of courtship, one that fostered love matches rather than arranged marriages, they did not necessarily challenge the composition of the matches themselves, since participants in these social events were generally of the same class, educational background, or religious affiliation. As Mordechai Breuer notes in his 1992 book Modernity Within Tradition: The Social History of Orthodox Jewry in Imperial Germany, it was not unusual for some of the ladies and gentlemen invited to an Orthodox wedding to participate in mixed dancing, while the rabbis present, and other, more strictly traditional guests would remain seated and, as far as possible, ignore what was going on in the ballroom. The true controversy occurred, in life and certainly in literature, when individuals danced with, flirted with, and maybe even married those whom their families and communities would not have considered appropriate mates. As such, literary depictions of mixed-sex dancing typically involve multiple forms of social mixing: not only do they feature dance partners of different genders, they also involve transgressions of religious, class, or ethnic boundaries.

It is no coincidence that such anxiety about mixed-sex dancing coincided with the period of Jewish acculturation and emancipation, since social dancing was arguably the most popular (and intimate) mixed-sex leisure activity. It was, moreover, an important way for young people to display their obedience to the rules of fashion and etiquette while seeking out a marriage partner. Mixed-sex dancing was, in short, a key way for both sexes to show their commitment to modern social norms, and to display this commitment within the context of courtship. The stakes were potentially quite high, for the community, the family, and the individual.

While the dance floor was one proving ground among several available to Jewish men, it played a unique role for Jewish women in the context of courtship and marriage. Although scholars have shown that Jewish women had several options for social mobility in the 19th century, marriage remained the preferred strategy in literary representations by Jewish and Christian authors alike. To put it crudely, acculturated men could demand respect and display masculinity through professional success or physical prowess in the military, gymnasium, dueling club, or dance floor, while women used their bodies to entice a suitable man to marry them and enhance their status. It is through such a choice, to the extent a Jewish daughter had one, that female characters could change their prospects, and in the process bring the forces of modernization and secularization into the home. A womans ability to choose her own marriage partner was an important theme for writers who sought to depict, and decry, the constrained social position of Jewish women in traditional communities.

Although many of the Jewish writers who used transgressive dancing as a metaphor for modernity were acculturated and more or less secular, the dance floor could also be a place of temptation in Orthodox fiction. One of the most interesting examples of a literary text that describes the allure of dancing for a sheltered young woman is German Orthodox Rabbi Marcus Lehmanns 1868 novella Elvire, serialized in Der Israelit (The Israelite), the Orthodox journal he edited. Elvire is a didactic work that is narrated by a fictional rabbi who warns against intermarriage, romance reading, and mixed-sex dancing with just enough titillation to keep readers interested. Lehmann explicitly discusses the role of dance in Jewish debates about German culture, connecting the dance floor with contemporary political concerns, particularly those related to liberalism and emancipation. He frequently interrupts the narrative with accounts of the rise and fall of the 1848 revolutions, events that provide an important backdrop for the motivations of his characters. Lehmann sets the conflict between German culture and Jewish traditions in sharp relief when the family of a Jewish banker, Adolph Metz, receives an invitation to a noble ball. Adolph views the ball as an opportunity to integrate into German society, since for the first time members of the bourgeoisie, including Jews, are invited. Adolph allows his nave hopes for social acceptance to blind him to the threat posed by ballroom dancing.

Adolphs rabbi friend does not share his excitement about the ball, pointing out that mixed-sex dancing violates Jewish law and discouraging Adolph from attending. Even if the banker feels he must go, the rabbi warns him not to bring his impressionable young daughter, Elvire. Yet unlike historical rabbinic prohibitions going back centuries, the story does not simply warn against transgressive dancing. Instead, Lehmann stages a debate between his characters about whether Jews should be allowed to participate in mixed-sex dancing. Adolph responds to the rabbi with an argument that might have been compelling for the German-Jewish bourgeoisie, noting that both the Bible and the Talmud mention dancing on joyous occasions. The rabbi quickly refutes him by pointing out that there is no biblical precedent for men and women dancing together and asserting that mixed-sex dancing at a ball is clearly forbidden. He challenges the notions of those who, like the Jewish reformers, might choose to selectively interpret biblical texts to allow all kinds of dancing.

Lehmann frames the debate around the question of acculturation, a sign of how even warnings against mixed-sex dancing changed in the modern era. Adolph accuses the rabbi of sounding antiquated, whereas the rabbi claims that the Book of Esther provides a warning against the dangers of Jews attending non-Jewish court functions, claiming that all the misfortunes the Jews suffer in that account are a direct result of their participation in a Persian court feast. The rabbi seems most concerned with the possibility of intermarriage, and his arguments would not necessarily prevent Jews from dancing with each other at their own social clubs. Yet Adolph is not convinced by the rabbis justification that the near genocide of Jews in the Book of Esther was caused by their carousing with the Persians. He cannot bear to deprive his daughter of the pleasures of the ball.

Ultimately, events transpire as the rabbi suggests. Elvires beauty and simple yet tasteful attire attract the attention of Dr. Wetting, a Christian lawyer who claims to be a proponent of emancipation. He was once a frequent guest at the Metz home until he paid entirely too much attention to 15-year-old Elvire and was banned. In the environment of the ballroom, filled with music and the smell of expensive perfume, Wetting is able to gaze at Elvire, pay her compliments, and dance with her. Although Elvire feels flustered by Wettings seductive words and wants to go home, she is trapped at the ball (and in Wettings dangerous company) because her parents are too distracted to notice: Adolph plays cards with the local prince while Frau Metz chats with a countess. Her parents, in short, are so busy cavorting with the Christian nobility that they forget to look after their daughters welfare. Although Elvire is initially shy, Wetting slowly reveals to her, over the course of several dances, that he would like to marry her in a civil ceremony. When the ball ends, Wetting escorts Elvire to her carriage, and she suggests he discuss the marriage proposal with her father. Crucially, it is the space of the ballroom, with its social sanction and opportunity for intermingling of the sexes over a period of several hours, that enables the fateful courtship to occur. Elvire is only thrust back into Wettings vicinity because her parents did not adhere to the advice of their rabbi.

Writers often negotiated the thorny process of Jewish cultural engagement by putting Jews on the dance floor and then describing what happens when they encounter an unsuitable dance partner. Yet the tales of these Jewish dancers often end tragically, precisely because the authors could not envision a successful resolution. Jewish women were particularly vulnerable to ill-fated love affairs, since an advantageous marriage was their main form of social mobility in the literary imagination, if not necessarily in reality. The fatal mismatch between the utopian fantasy suggested by the dance floor and the reality of a society unprepared to deal with a controversial match meant that Jewish dancers could not find a proper place for themselves. As a result, the delights of the dance floor often led to tragic consequences.

While Orthodox writers such as Lehmann used transgressive dancing to warn against behavior that violated traditional Jewish law, his more secular or non-Jewish contemporaries deployed dance scenes for local color, or to attack the perceived rigidity of traditional Jewish communities, or as a way of criticizing antisemitism. Yet in the late 20th and 21st centuries, female protagonists enjoy much more space to explore their sexuality on the dance floor. As exemplified by Unorthodox, contemporary novels, television shows, and films use the motif of Jewish mixed-sex dancing to allow female characters to explore their sexuality. For instance, Rachel Benjamin, the protagonist of Pearl Abrahams 1995 novel The Romance Reader, fantasizes about dancing with a non-Jewish man as a form of escape from her strictly regulated Hasidic community. Rachels dreams of dancing foreshadow her departure from the Hasidic world, marking a sharp contrast with her stilted ritual dance with her husband on her wedding day. As in Unorthodox, Rachels future is uncertain, yet her rebellion is also depicted as necessary for her development.

In comparison with 19th- and early 20th-century fiction, contemporary works are less interested in policing the boundaries of Jewish communities or punishing characters for violating communal norms. Although Unorthodox demonstrates that restrictions on women can still be used to make a polemical point, contemporary authors are generally able to envision more opportunities for their heroines to assert their desires and sexuality, both on and off the dance floor.

Sonia Gollance is lecturer in Yiddish at University College London and author of It Could Lead to Dancing: Mixed-Sex Dancing and Jewish Modernity (2021).

Featured image: Detail of Porcelain with Dancing Figures Jewish Museum of Odessa Odessa Ukraine by Adam Jones is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0. Image has been cropped.

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Chabad is valuable, even for non-Jews – The Emory Wheel

Posted By on October 18, 2021

(Creative Commons / U.S. Embassy Jerusalem)

Are any of us actually Jewish? my friend asked, putting down her wine glass and glancing around the table. Packed like sardines into Emorys Chabad tent, all ten of us laughed, noting that only two of us had even a drop of Jewish blood.

Even then, my friend and I werent Jewish enough to justify going to Shabbat dinner at the Orthodox Chabad house. When fellow Chabad attendees ask me if Im Jewish, I respond, barely. I grew up attending Passover Seders at my aunts house and celebrating Hanukkah at home, but beyond that, I cant speak for Judaism. Before coming to Emory, I was more Jewish in tradition than in practice. Judaism represented community and family and home; not God or repentance or worship. Yet, my friends and I return every Friday to load up our plates with noodles and listen to the rabbi speak on God and repentance. We drink wine and stay respectfully quiet as the rest of the attendees sing in prayer. We chat with the rabbis children as we wait for the restroom. At Emory, Im more Jewish than Ive ever been before.

Before this year, I wouldnt have set foot in a Chabad house; I disagree with many of Chabads principles. My half-Jewish, two holidays a year upbringing is a far cry from Orthodox. But still, I find it immeasurably valuable to attend Shabbat dinner at Emory Chabad. Familiarizing yourself with and learning how to mindfully disagree with different cultures is a vital part of growing up. And while attending a Jewish event as a non-Jewish (or barely Jewish) person can be read as appropriative, approaching the experience with inquisitiveness and respect which means not treating the event as a means to get free food and drinks can prevent appropriation.

Chabad is, for context, an Orthodox Jewish movement that, unlike other Hasidic groups, embraces modern technology. It interacts with the world beyond its cloistered religious community with active chapters at many universities. Emorys Chabad house advertises itself as a place where every Jew is family, but this hasnt gone without scrutiny. For instance, Chabad follows practices like modesty and gender-separated prayer, which many argue is oppressive to women. It also preaches an extreme literal belief in the Torah, which means that whats written in the holy book is the word of God and is incontestably true. Chabad is additionally criticized for subscribing to the prejudiced view that a Jewish soul is more sacred than a non-Jewish soul. The organization also supports Israel and the Israeli Defence Forces, which have been tied to militarism, brutality, and dispossession. As a history major in the College who understands the importance of protecting human rights, I am at odds with a few of Chabads fundamental principles.

Yet despite the clash between my personal morals and the ideology of Chabad, I have never felt uncomfortable at Emory Chabad. The dinners have been nothing but inclusive, thought-provoking and fun. Exposing myself to a different culture, meeting new people and spending an evening connecting deeper with the tradition in which I was raised are all deeply worthwhile parts of Shabbat dinner. Even without internalizing the preachings of the rabbi and praying or singing along with the rest of the group, there are still lessons to be learned from such an experience.

College, and college programs like Chabad, are about surrounding yourself with people who come from unfamiliar circumstances and hold different views. I came to Emory not only to gain a degree and a wealth of knowledge about my field of interest, but also to become a more informed person about cultures unlike my own. What better way to familiarize myself with another culture than to submerge myself in weekly religious festivities? By sitting in the Shabbat sukkah and sharing a meal with Emorys most observant Jewish community members, we gain key insights that help us understand an exclusive religion. Judaism doesnt proselytize, after all. The only way to be Jewish is to be born to a Jewish mother or to convert under Jewish law. Emory Chabads inclusivity and generosity isnt meant to convert non-Jewish students, its a way to teach the greater student body about a misunderstood cultural tradition. And while it can very easily sound unethical or bordering on cultural appropriation for non-Jews to attend a religious event that offers free food and wine, I genuinely believe that most Chabad attendees are well intentioned. There are easier ways of getting food and drinks than hiking all the way to Emory Village, after all, and sitting through two hours of prayer and song is a weird way to pregame. My non-Jewish friends attend Chabad to make friends and learn something about another faith. So perhaps, through spaces like Chabad, bridges can be built between cultures. Only then will religiously-motivated conflicts be resolved.

So while I dont entirely agree with the Orthodox ground on which Chabad was built, I appreciate the public forum Emory Chabad offers for students to engage with Judaism. I like that it allows me to interact with the Emory community over a delicious, family-style meal. When Im homesick for my dads cooking and longing for the childhood excitement that accompanied the High Holidays at home, Chabad fills a void. As my time at Emory carries on, I want to continue engaging in other cultural traditions that broaden my worldview, so that I can emerge from college as a holistically educated individual. School doesnt end when you leave the classroom, after all. Anybody who considers themselves a student of the liberal arts should consider doing the same.

Sophia Peyser (25C) is from Manhattan, NY.

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Chabad is valuable, even for non-Jews - The Emory Wheel

Covid conspiracy theories are driving people to anti-Semitism online – MIT Technology Review

Posted By on October 18, 2021

A warning: Conspiracy theories about covid are helping disseminate anti-Semitic beliefs to a wider audience, warns a new report by the antiracist advocacy group Hope not Hate. The report says that not only has the pandemic revived interest in the New World Order conspiracy theory of a secret Jewish-run elite that aims to run the world, but far-right activists have also worked to convert peoples anti-lockdown and anti-vaccine beliefs into active anti-Semitism.

Worst offenders: The authors easily managed to find anti-Semitism on all nine platforms they investigated, including TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. Some of it uses coded language to avoid detection and moderation by algorithms, but much of it is overt and easily discoverable. Unsurprisingly, the authors found a close link between the amount of anti-Semitism on a platform and how lightly or loosely it is moderated: the laxer the moderation, the bigger the problem.

Some specifics: The report warns that the messaging app Telegram has rapidly become one of the worst offenders, playing host to many channels that disseminate anti-Semitic content, some of them boasting tens of thousands of members. One channel that promotes the New World Order conspiracy theory has gained 90,000 followers since its inception in February 2021. However its a problem on every platform. Jewish creators on TikTok have complained that they face a deluge of anti-Semitism on the platform, and they are often targeted by groups who mass-report their accounts in order to get them temporarily banned.

A case study: The authors point to one man who was radicalized during the pandemic as a typical example of how people can end up pushed into adopting more and more extreme views. At the start of 2020 Attila Hildmann was a successful vegan chef in Germany, but in the space of just a year he went from being ostensibly apolitical to just asking some questions as a social media influencer to spewing hate and inciting violence on his own Telegram channel.

What can be done: Many of the platforms investigated have had well over a decade to get a handle on regulating and moderating hate speech, and some progress has been made. However, while major platforms have become better at removing anti-Semitic organizations, theyre still struggling to remove anti-Semitic content produced by individuals, the report warns.

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Covid conspiracy theories are driving people to anti-Semitism online - MIT Technology Review

Holidays & Heritage Months Seramount

Posted By on October 18, 2021

March is Womens History Month. Started in 1987, Womens History Month recognizes all women for their valuable contributions to history and society.

March is National Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month, which was established to increase awareness and understanding of issues affecting people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. March is National Multiple Sclerosis Education and Awareness Month. It was established to raise public awareness of the autoimmune disease that affects the brain and spinal cord and assist those with multiple sclerosis in making informed decisions about their health care.

March is National Multiple Sclerosis Education and Awareness Month. It was established to raise public awareness of the autoimmune disease that affects the brain and spinal cord and assist those with multiple sclerosis in making informed decisions about their health care.

March 1:St. Davids Day, the feast day of St. David, the patron saint of Wales.

March 7:Meatfare Sunday (The Sunday of the Last Judgment), traditionally the last day of eating meat before Easter for Orthodox Christians.

March 8:International Womens Day. First observed in 1911 in Germany, it has now become a major global celebration honoring womens economic, political and social achievements.

March 11:Maha Shivarati, Hindu festival celebrated each year to honor Lord Shiva. It is celebrated just before the arrival of spring. It is also known as the Great Night of Shiva or Shivaratri and is one of the largest and most significant among the sacred festival nights of India.

March 11:Lailat al Miraj, a Muslim holiday that commemorates the prophet Muhammads nighttime journey from Mecca to the Farthest Mosque in Jerusalem, where he ascended to heaven, was purified, and given the instruction for Muslims to pray five times daily. Note that in the Muslim calendar, a holiday begins on the sunset of the previous day, so observing Muslims will celebrate Lailat al Miraj on the sundown of March 10.

March 13-April 15:Deaf History Month. This observance celebrates key events in deaf history, including the founding of Gallaudet University and the American School for the Deaf.

March 14:Cheesefare Sunday or Forgiveness Sunday, the last Sunday prior to the commencement of Great Lent for Orthodox Christians.

March 15-May 1:Beginning of Great Lent in the Orthodox Christian faith. March 15, the day Great Lent begins this year, is also known as Clean Monday.

March 17:St. Patricks Day, a holiday started in Ireland to recognize St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland who brought Christianity to the country in the early days of the faith.

March 19:St. Josephs Day, in Western Christianity the principal feast of St. Joseph, the husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

March 19-20:Naw-Rz, the Bah New Year is a holiday celebrated on the vernal equinox. It is one of the nine Bah holy days on which work is suspended.

March 20:Ostara, a celebration of the spring equinox commemorated by Pagans and Wiccans. It is observed as a time to mark the coming of spring and the fertility of the land.

March 21-22:Nowruz/Norooz, Persian New Year, a day of joy, celebration and renewal. It is held annually on the spring equinox.

March 21:International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, observed annually in the wake of the 1960 killing of 69 people at a demonstration against apartheid pass laws in Soth Africa. The United Nations proclaimed the day in 1966 and called on the international community to redouble its efforts to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination.

March 21:Orthodox Sunday, celebrated on the first Sunday of Great Lent. It is the celebration of the victory of the iconodules over the iconoclasts by the decision of the Seventh Ecumenical Council. Therefore, the service is to commemorate the restoration of icons for use in services and private devotional life of Christians.

March 25:International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade is a United Nations international observation that offers the opportunity to honour and remember those who suffered and died at the hands of the brutal slavery system. First observed in 2008, the international day also aims to raise awareness about the dangers of racism and prejudice today.

March 25:Annunciation of the Virgin Mary, a Christian celebration of the announcement by the angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary that she would conceive and become the mother of Jesus.

March 26:Khordad Sal (Birth of prophet Zoroaster), birth anniversary (or birthdate) of Zoroaster, a spiritual leader and ethical philosopher who taught a spiritual philosophy of self-realization and realization of the divine. Zoroastrians celebrate this day with prayer and feasting.

March 27-April 4:Passover, an eight-day Jewish holiday and festival in commemoration of the emancipation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt.

March 27:Lords Evening Meal, Jehovahs Witnesses commemorate an event believed to have occurred on the first night of Passover in approximately 33 CE, the Last Supper, known as the Lords Evening Meal.

March 28:Palm Sunday, a Christian holiday commemorating the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. It is the last Sunday of Lent and the beginning of the Holy Week.

March 28-29 (sundown to sundown):Holi, the annual Hindu and Sikh spring religious festival observed in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, along with other countries with large Hindu and Sikh populations. People celebrate Holi by throwing colored powder and water at each other. Bonfires are lit the day before in the memory of the miraculous escape that young Prahlada accomplished when demoness Holika carried him into the fire. It is often celebrated on the full moon (the Phalguna Purnima) before the beginning of the Vernal Equinox as based on the Hindu calendar.

March 28-29:Lailat al Baraa, also known as Lailat Al Baraah, Barat, or popularly as Shab-e-Bara or Night of Forgiveness. It is an Islamic holiday during which practitioners of the faith seek forgiveness for sins. Muslims spend the night in special prayers. It is regarded as one of the most sacred nights on the Islamic calendar.

March 29-31:Hola Mohalla, a Sikh festival that takes place on the second day of the lunar month of Chet, a day after the Hindu spring festival Holi.

March 31:International Transgender Day of Visibility, celebrated to bring awareness to transgender people and their identities as well as recognize those who helped fight for rights for transgender people.

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Holidays & Heritage Months Seramount

American Religion Beyond the Synagogue, Church, and Temple – Patheos

Posted By on October 18, 2021

In her fascinating book, Beyond the Synagogue, Rachel Gross describes a wide range of activities that help American Jews find meaning and connection: visiting historic synagogues, conducting Jewish genealogy research, eating Jewish foods, and sharing Jewish stories and toys with children. According to Gross, these activities are not only expressions of Jewish nostalgia, but important and often overlooked forms of American Jewish religious practice.

She details these aspects of American Jewish life not only to illuminate the significance of Jewish deli cuisine and Rebecca Rubin the American Girl, but to offer an assurance to her readers: despite claims to the contrary, American Judaism is thriving. In so doing, Gross takes issue with the scholars who point to the decline in synagogue attendance and participation in Jewish community centers as evidence that there is a continuity crisis in American Judaism. But these scholars, Gross argues, are looking for Judaism in all the wrong places. Take a look beyond the synagogue, she argues, and you can see that Jewish religiosity is actually not in decline. In fact, its flourishing.

Gross makes an important point that applies not only to the study of American Judaism, but to the study of religion more generally, and it is that people often practice religion and form religious communities outside congregations, through activities and in spaces that appear to be non-religious. Congregations and the activities that take place within them have long been the starting point for understanding American religious life. But Gross, like many other recent scholars of American religion, urges us to rethink our assumptions about where we might locate religious life and what we might count as religious practices. Religious life is vibrant outside the walls of churches, temples, and synagogues, and if were willing to shift our attention away from congregations, well be rewarded with a more nuanced, complex, and realistic view of American religion.

Why has the study of American religion focused so heavily on churches, temples, and synagogues? There are many reasons, not least of which is the fact that both scholars and religious people have largely accepted that, as R. Stephen Warner argues, the religious component of civil society in the U.S. is organized along broadly congregational lines. In the U.S., congregations are a well-established form of religious organization. Although the congregational form is rooted in American Protestantism, other groups, from Hindus to Hmong animists, have institutionalized their beliefs, practices, and communities in the form of religious congregations.

Studying churches, temples, and synagogues is also relatively straightforward. You can find them in the phone book or in an online directory. You can see them when you walk down the street. You can count them, categorize them, and map them. The conspicuous presence of congregations and the numerous ways that they facilitate relatively tidy research about the messy topic of religion make them an obvious and practical choice.

In addition, congregation-focused research often benefits from generous financial support. Institutions that are ideologically invested in the health of congregations are often financially invested in research about congregations. Take, for example, the Lilly Endowment, which has an explicit commitment to the vitality of congregations and provided 115 grants through its recent Thriving Congregations Initiative. In this funding context, religion scholars are incentivized to study congregations.

Finally, and perhaps most important, the longstanding focus on congregations is the product of Protestant assumptions that continue to shape how people think and write about religion. The beliefs, practices, and communities that are recognized and respected as religious in the U.S. tend to have characteristics that are commensurable to the features of Protestantism: a clergy, a scripture, a creed, a church. Indeed, these are the criteria used by scholars and casual observers alike when they look for religion in the real world. In the same way that beliefs and texts continue to be the focus of the analysis of American religious life, congregations continue to serve as the primary setting.

Congregations are no doubt useful and important to study, but focusing on congregations has important drawbacks. For one, it limits our ability to understand religious groups that have a history of practicing rituals and creating communities outside of formal religious institutions. Many groupsHindus, for examplehave a rich tradition of conducting rituals at home.

Even when studying religious groups that organize themselves around churches, temples, and synagogues, a narrow focus on congregationsand a narrow understanding of religion in generalmeans that we can miss opportunities to engage in important forms of belief, practice, and community that are located elsewhere. Here, Grosss work on American Judaism is instructive. As she argues, congregation-focused research does not offer an adequate representation of the vitality of American Judaism. If you consider only the number of people who regularly attend services at synagogues, she says, you might get the impression that American Judaism is stagnating. But if you look elsewhere, you can witness the dynamism of American Judaism, which is practiced in a variety of surprising and innovative ways.

If we dont focus on synagogues, churches, and temples, where else can we look to find American religious life? Here are some ideas for alternative sites of religious life beyond the synagogue, church, and temple.

People dont leave their religion at home when they go to work, and they sometimes pursue creative solutions in order to ensure that they are able to practice their rituals even when theyre on the job. Muslim taxi drivers find a way to pray in between rides, thus creating what Elta Smith and Courtney Bender describe in one article as an urban niche religion.

The ideas and examples above are only a starting point. Where else can you find religious life? And what else might we be able to see if we make the effort look beyond the synagogue, church, and temple and witness the richness and creativity of religious life that exists beyond congregational walls?

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American Religion Beyond the Synagogue, Church, and Temple - Patheos

How a Librarian and a Food Historian Rediscovered the Recipes of Moorish Spain – Atlas Obscura

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Take large fine-tasting carrots, lightly scrape their skins, cut them in half lengthwise, and then split each half into two pieces.

For centuries, thats as far as any cook could get when preparing A dish [of carrots in sauce] from Ibn Razn al-Tujbs Fidalat al-Khiwan fi Tayyibat al-Taam wa-l-Alwan (Best of Delectable Foods and Dishes from al-Andalus and al-Maghrib), a cookbook composed in Tunis around 1260. The rest of the recipe (more on that later), together with dozens of others, disappeared sometime after the late 1600s.

Most of the cookbooks 475 recipes survived in copies. Yet that maddeningly incomplete carrot recipe, along with missing chapters on vegetables, sauces, pickled foods, and more, left a gaping hole in all existing editions of the text, like an empty aisle in the grocery store.

That was until July of 2018, when the British Librarys curator of Arabic scientific manuscripts, Dr. Bink Hallum, was cataloguing a text on medieval Arab pharmacology in the librarys collections.

I was very surprised when I found that the manuscript also contained a very long fragment, a little over 200 pages, of a cookbook, says Hallum. What he had stumbled upon was a nearly complete copy of the Fidala dating to the 15th or perhaps 16th century, making it the worlds oldest extant copy.

Still, because the document lacked a title page, its identity remained a mystery. Acting upon a colleagues recommendation, Hallum eventually sent a link to the manuscript to food historian Nawal Nasrallah, who, as it happened, was busy translating one of the incomplete copies of the Fidala from Arabic into English.

It was just like a gift from God, says Nasrallah. I hated the idea that I was working with an incomplete book and was coming nearer and nearer to the missing parts.

In addition to the title page, the table of contents was also absent from the British Library copy. Yet Nasrallah immediately realized what she was looking at.

I knew right away. I was reading the manuscript on the screen, and I saw that there they were, the missing recipes, says the Iraqi-born Nasrallah, an experienced translator of historic culinary texts from the Arab world.

With this new material in hand, including 55 missing recipes, she was able to piece together the first full English translation of al-Tujbs Fidala, which was published this September by Brill. It remains one of only a handful of surviving cookbooks from Moorish Spain, an era when food was deeply intertwined with those traditionally taboo dinner-table topics: religion and politics.

From roughly 700 to 1200, most of Spain was under Muslim rule. Christians and Jews were free to worship, and observe their dietary customs, in an atmosphere of coexistence known to history as Convivencia. Whereas Jews and Muslims shared food prohibitions, such as pork, commonly eaten by Christians, cooks from all three religions enjoyed many ingredients first brought to the Iberian peninsula by the Arabs: rice, eggplants, carrots, lemons, sugar, almonds, and more.

Even couscous, widely seen as one of the most indicative items among Muslim foods, was also eaten and enjoyed by Christians in late medieval and early modern Spain, observed the late scholar Olivia Remie Constable in To Live Like a Moor.

This was the age of al-Tujb, a well-educated scholar and poet from a wealthy family of lawyers, philosophers, and writers. As a member of the upper class, he enjoyed a life of leisure and fine dining which he set out to celebrate in the Fidala. Even if many of the recipes were too daunting for most cooks, al-Tujb promised that they would rarely fail to please with their novelty and exquisiteness.

But starting around 1200, the high cuisine al-Tujb faced extinction as the tolerant spirit of Convivencia began to erode. Christian armies marching south gradually captured the city-states of al-Andalus (Andalusia), heartland of Muslim Spain, in a campaign known as the Reconquista. By 1492, many Jews had either been massacred or expelled from the peninsula, while Muslims faced the same fate a century later. Those remaining were hunted by the Inquisition and forced to either convert, which meant openly adopting a Christian diet, or face expulsion or even death.

Many reluctant Jewish converts (Conversos) and their Muslim counterparts (Moriscos) publicly worshipped as Christians while practicing their true faiths behind closed doors, including those of the kitchen.

Food became a marker of identity, says Ana Gmez-Bravo, a professor of Spanish and Portuguese Studies at the University of Washington.

We know from Christian records that there was a lot of surveillance of who cooks the food, what ingredients go into that pot, and also who is present while the food is being prepared and consumed, says Gmez-Bravo.

This level of scrutiny spawned Jewish and Islamic crypto-cuisines, foods prepared according to religious custom but intended to fool the authorities, such as faux chuletas (pork chops), which were actually thick slices of fried, egg- and milk-soaked bread.

Conversos would throw an actual pork chop on the fire, to have the scent permeating the house, but were eating these things that were really French toast, says Genie Milgrom, a descendent of conversos from Fermoselle in Spains Zamora region and author of Recipes of My 15 Grandmothers, a collection of family recipes dating back to the time of the Inquisition.

While much of this persecution occurred after al-Tujbs time, by 1247 he recognized that to remain a Muslim in Christian Spain was untenable. So at the age of 20, he and his family fled the southeastern city of Murcia with multitudes of Andalusi refugees headed for Islamic North Africa, known to Arabs as the Maghreb.

Now impoverished, he ended up in the port city of Bijya, in what is now Algeria, where he picked up what amounted to temp work as a scribe for the ruling Hafsid dynasty. By 1259, he settled in Tunis where he began writing the Fidala, at the age of 33, and lived there until his death in 1293.

While he wrote other books on history and literature, only the Fidala survives. Its composition, says Nasrallah, was an exercise in culinary nostalgia, a wistful look back across the Strait of Gibraltar to the elegant main courses, side dishes, and desserts of the authors youth, an era before Spains Muslims and Jews had to hide their cultural cuisines.

His aim was to preserve the beautiful cuisine he grew up on. He was seeing everybody fleeing Andalusia and was afraid that sooner or later people would forget this cuisine that he knew and enjoyed, she says.

When flipping through the 600 or so pages of the Fidalas recipes, their novelty and exquisiteness, as al-Tujb characterized them, quickly becomes evident.

In tma (eggplants Looking Like Ostrich Eggs), whole peeled and boiled eggplants are arranged vertically in a casserole topped with grated cheese, garlic, olive oil, and chopped walnuts.

Somewhat less elaborate, though no less self indulgent, were the breakfast treats mujabbanat, fritter-like balls of fried semolina dough stuffed with cheese. Mujabbanat spread to the rest of the Arab world where they were commonly served soaked in honey. Yet al-Tujb specified that those who want to serve mujabbanat the way Andalusis do, [i.e.,] plain, without drenching them in honey should place them on a platter, sprinkle them with Ceylon cinnamon, pounded aniseeds, and sugar, and serve with a small vessel filled with honey in the middle of the platter for dipping.

The book also includes less laborious recipes such as the long-lost carrot recipe which calls for boiling the pieces until tender, browning them in olive oil, and simply finishing them with vinegar, garlic, and a sprinkle of caraway seeds.

Throughout, al-Tujb doesnt hide the politics behind the book, nor his fondness for the cuisine of his homeland.

[I]n the field of cooking and whatever is related to it, Andalusis are indeed admirably earnest and advanced, he wrote. They create most delectable dishes, and in spite of the constricting limitations of their borders, and their proximity to the abodes of the enemies of Islam, by which he meant the steadily encroaching Reconquista.

While the enemies of Islam no longer hammer at Andalusias borders, some modern chefs are looking to its rich culinary past for inspiration, embracing and recreating dishes al-Tujb himself might recognize.

After honing his kitchen management skills in al-Tujibis hometown of Murcia, fellow Andalusian Paco Morales returned to his hometown of Cordoba to open Noor in 2016. The restaurants menu is entirely derived from the Arab cuisine of pre-Reconquista Spain, including the Fidala. (Dedicated to historical accuracy, Morales eschews using New World ingredients that were unknown in medieval Spain, such as chocolate, opting instead for carob in his Almoravid carob ice cream.) And at La Vara, in Brooklyn, chef-owner Alex Raij says menu items such as berenjena con miel (crispy fried eggplant served with labneh and honey), garbanzos fritos (fried chickpeas), and her almond torta Santiago reflect the push and pull of Andalusias Sephardic (Spanish Jewish) and Islamic culinary past, if not al-Tujbs very own story.

La Vara imagines what Spains regionally specific dishes would look like if these [exiled] communities returned from the many parts of the world they left, says Raij.

While al-Tujb never saw his beloved al-Andalus again, thanks to the discovery of a 300-year-old clerical error, all of his favorite recipes have now returned home.

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How a Librarian and a Food Historian Rediscovered the Recipes of Moorish Spain - Atlas Obscura

Creator of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Comes to Berks – bctv.org

Posted By on October 18, 2021

The Jewish Federation of Reading/Berks in partnership with Exeter Community Library announce the next author of the third season of Literatour Berks, a community-wide celebration with 14 events featuring authors, celebrities, and cultural influencers throughout Berks County. The public is invited to a Noontime Knowledge event with David Page, author of Food Americana: The Remarkable People and Incredible Stories behind Americas Favorite Dishes on Tuesday, October 19 at 12 p.m. at Jewish Federation of Reading/Berks, 1100 Berkshire Blvd. Suite 125, Wyomissing, PA.

Two-time Emmy winner David Page changed the world of food television by creating The Food Networks Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. Before that, as a network news producer, he traveled America and the world covering the biggest stories and indulging his love for terrific food. Hes passionate, engaging, humorous, and he has fascinating stories to tell.

What is American cuisine? What national menu do we share? What dishes have we chosen, how did they become American, and how are they likely to evolve from here? In Food Americana, David Page answers all these questions and more.

Food Americana is the inside story of how Americans have formed a national cuisine from a world of flavors. Sushi, pizza, tacos, bagels, barbecue, dim sumeven fried chicken, burgers, ice cream, and many morewere born elsewhere and transformed into a unique American cuisine. It is a riveting ride into every aspect of what we eat and why.

The community is invited to the Jewish Federation of Reading/Berks on Tuesday, October 19 at 12 p.m. for a Noontime Knowledge event with Page. After the discussion Page will be signing copies of his book which will be on sale courtesy of Reads & Company Bookshop of Phoenixville, the official book vendor of Literatour Berks. The event is free and open to the public however reservations are required. To reserve a spot please visit http://www.readingjewishcommunity.org/home/literatour or call 610-921-0624. Masks are required for attendees.

Literatour Berks is a community program that will bring 14 authors in exciting programs from September 2021 to May 2022 to Berks County, in-person and virtually. Now in its third season, Literatour Berks is presented by Jewish Federation of Reading/Berks in partnership with Exeter Community Library. A complete list of authors and topics can be found at http://www.readingjewishcommunity.org/home/literatour Additional support in the form of community patrons is acknowledged and appreciated.

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Creator of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Comes to Berks - bctv.org


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