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A 19-day European luxury river cruise, flights and hotel stays from $8990 per person – Cruise Passenger

Posted By on September 24, 2021

Discover Europe in a new light with an incredible holiday package hand-crafted by My Cruises River Collection, featuring flights, hotel stays, scenic rail journeys and a 15-day luxury river cruise.

This 19-day fly, stay and luxury river cruise discovery starts from $8,990 per person and sets sail on April 30, 2023.

This holiday of a lifetime begins in Paris, the ever-romantic City of Light. Youll have two days to spend soaking in the history, food, and culture of Frances most iconic city. Tick off bucket-list landmarks, such as the Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe, Notre Dame and Louvre Museum.

After your two-night Paris stay, enjoy a scenic rail journey from Paris to Amsterdam. Spend the day exploring the bike-lined canals and visiting historic gems like the Anne Frank House and Rijksmuseum, before embarking on your 15-day luxury river cruise onboard Avalon Waterways.

Make the most of your journey along the romantic Rhine and Danube Rivers soaking in the breathtaking views from your spacious suite. Along the way, youll pass storybook castles, hillside vineyards, medieval villages, and other-worldly forests.

Each day offers a chance to explore a new European town, where local guides will help you uncover historic highlights and hidden gems. Offering a distinctive range of Classic, Discovery and Active excursions, Avalon allows you to explore your own way. Not to mention feasting on local cuisine and sampling local wines!

Enjoy an overnight stay in Budapest, where youll have the chance to explore the Hungarian Parliament Building, Fishermans Bastion and Szechenyi Thermal Baths. Upon disembarking, youll be transferred to the enchanting city of Prague.

Finish your journey with a two-night stay in Czechias capital. Dont miss discovering Prague Castle, walking across the famous Charles Bridge, tracing history at the Jewish Quarter and marvelling at the beauty of Old Town Square. Youll fly home to Australia, filled with stories to share with family and friends.

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A 19-day European luxury river cruise, flights and hotel stays from $8990 per person - Cruise Passenger

Portman, Cardin Commend Biden Administration for Continuing U.S. Policy Against Participation in U.N. Conference That Promotes Anti-Israel Agendas -…

Posted By on September 24, 2021

September 22, 2021 | Press Releases

WASHINGTON, DC Today, U.S. Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Ben Cardin (D-MD) sent a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken commending the Biden Administration for continuing the United States long-standing policy to boycott the United Nations World Conference on Racism, also known as the Durban Conference IV. The Durban Conference, first held in 2001, does not advance the cause of combatting racism, but rather promotes a discriminatory and anti-Israel agenda. This year, a record number of 31 countries plan to boycott the conference.

Both Republican and Democratic U.S. administrations have consistently boycotted Durban in support of American principles and our Israeli ally, wrote the senators. We greatly appreciate comments made earlier this year by the State Department, reiterating that the United States stands with Israel and has always shared its concerns over the Durban processs anti-Israel sentiment, use as a forum for anti-Semitism, and freedom of expression issues.

Text of the letter can be found below and here.

Secretary Blinken,

As the 20th anniversary of the United Nations World Conference on Racism, otherwise known as Durban IV, approaches, we appreciate the State Departments continued stance against participation in this deeply troubling forum. For the past 20 years, these conferences have advocated agendas that have unfairly and baselessly targeted our democratic ally, Israel. The United States will lead a coalition of some twenty nations that will boycott the conference and highlight the discriminatory and anti-Israel agenda that is a core component of these conferences. This is the right thing to do and represents a welcome message of support for Israel. It is troubling that at a time when countries of the world should be banding together to nobly fight the evils of racism, discrimination and anti-Semitism, forums such as the World Conference Against Racism are hijacked by Israels detractors to propagate their own agenda.

Since its inception, the Durban Conference has provided a venue for intolerance and antisemitism, and has promoted a message of isolating Israel. Some twenty years ago in 2001, America exhibited great leadership in withdrawing from the original Durban Conference as it developed a draft conference report equating Zionism and racism a move that succeeded in ensuring that the odious language was excised from the final declaration. However, at a parallel NGO Forum which served as a meeting place for civil society groups, anti-Israel activists adopted an informal resolution characterizing Israel as a racist apartheid state and accusing it of genocide.

At Durban II in 2009, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad infamously called the Holocaust an ambiguous and dubious question and a pretext for oppressing Palestinians. Every iteration of the Durban process has promoted racism, intolerance, antisemitism, and Holocaust denial while questioning Israels fundamental right to exist.

Both Republican and Democratic U.S. administrations have consistently boycotted Durban in support of American principles and our Israeli ally. We greatly appreciate comments made earlier this year by the State Department, reiterating that the United States stands with Israel and has always shared its concerns over the Durban processs anti-Israel sentiment, use as a forum for antisemitism, and freedom of expression issues.

We also appreciate the pledge you and other senior members of the Biden Administration have made to uphold the longstanding bipartisan tradition of advocating for Israel and opposing her isolation at other international and multilateral fora. The Israeli people are vital allies and we stand ready to work with you on these and further efforts in their support.

Sincerely,

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Portman, Cardin Commend Biden Administration for Continuing U.S. Policy Against Participation in U.N. Conference That Promotes Anti-Israel Agendas -...

How Many Dead Jews Will Satisfy the Squad? – Algemeiner

Posted By on September 24, 2021

Theres an old Jewish joke that describes an antisemite as someone who hates Jews more than what is strictly necessary. And boy, did Democratic members of the progressive Squad reveal their enthusiastic Jew-hatred this week, pressuring their party to drop $1 billion in funding for Israels Iron Dome missile defense system.

The Squads Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Cori Bush (D-MO), and Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) sided with a handful of other progressive Democrats, threatening to vote against an appropriations bill that included funding for the Iron Dome. They claimed that it allowed Israel to continue its abuse and persecution of the Palestinians.

American support for Iron Dome which has zero offensive capabilities, and only protects Israeli civilians from terrorist rockets and other threats is nothing new. The missile defense system has received American funding since 2011, with the 2016 Memorandum of Understanding, negotiated under President Barack Obama, securing another decade of military funding.

This is by no means the Squads first attempt to cut US funding for Israel. The Squads members openly support the movement to boycott the Jewish state, and, in bothMay and September of this year, led pushes to suspend the transfer of $735 million worth of weaponry to Israel.

September 24, 2021 12:12 pm

But there is something particularly sickening about this latest move to prevent funding for the Iron Dome. As a solely defensive tool, Israels famed missile defense system has only ever played the role of saving Israeli lives Jewish and Arab. By pressuring their party to nix this funding, this increasingly loud and attention-grabbing group of progressive lawmakers sent a clear message to their constituency: they want Israelis dead.

Unfortunately, the ramifications of such a chillingly evil and indefensible stance are unlikely to register among many progressives, for whom Jewish lives have become increasingly inconsequential.

And in a cruel twist of irony that is evidently lost on the Squad, the Iron Dome system plays a vital, if indirect, role in protecting Palestinians. With each Israeli death, public pressure for harsher military action grows. By keeping Israeli casualties to a minimum (Iron Dome intercepted around 90 percent of rockets fired from Gaza in the latest conflict), the system relieves pressure on Israels military for a tougher response, which would inevitably lead to a drastically higher number of Palestinian civilian deaths and damage to Gazas infrastructure.

But this is irrelevant to the Squad, whose alarming desire to harm the Jewish state and Jewish people overrides any other considerations, let alone the lives of the Palestinians they ostensibly care so deeply about.

While a new standalone bill for Iron Dome funding was passed on Thursday (with AOC voting present and other far-left Democrats supporting it), the damage is done. This wont be the final progressive attempt to bully the Jewish states Democratic supporters into submission and with each attempt, these tactics will become normal and accepted.

No doubt, there is legitimate debate surrounding the benefits of Israels reliance on such heavy military support from the United States. Israel is a technological and military powerhouse with a strong economy, and there are many who argue that an end to such extensive American financial support would boost Israels economic resilience and lead to a more rational military expenditure.

But that has obviously never factored into the Squads rationale, whose members routinely lambast the United States so-called complicity in Israeli crimes against Palestinians. In voting against the bill, for example, Rep. Tlaib said, We must stop enabling Israels human rights abuses and apartheid government clearly demonstrating she either does not understand the meaning of apartheid, or is willfully lying in order to demonize Israel.

As Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY), himself a progressive Democrat, plainly noted in response to the debacle, A missile defense system (i.e. Iron Dome) defends civilians from missiles. Hence the name. Only in a morally inverted universe would this be considered a controversy.

The Squads supporters would do well to ask themselves what it is about defending Jewish lives that is, in fact, controversial. Perhaps the answer lies in the question itself.

Josh Feldman is an Australian writer who focuses primarily on Israeli and Jewish issues. Twitter: @joshrfeldman

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How Many Dead Jews Will Satisfy the Squad? - Algemeiner

More to Jewish culture in Poland than is generally realized – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on September 24, 2021

Before the Second World War, there was an abundantly rich treasure trove of Jewish culture in general and Yiddish culture in particular in every part of Poland in which there were Jewish communities, large and small. Even though Polands Jewish population was decimated during the Holocaust, the embers of Jewish culture were quickly rekindled by writers and performers.

For many years, the best known of Yiddish cultural revivals was the Polish State Yiddish Theater located near the famous Nozyk Synagogue, which was the only synagogue in Warsaw that survived the war. The Warsaw Great Synagogue on Tlomacki Street was destroyed by the Germans in 1943, and for many years after the war, the site was spooked, and any other building plans were doomed to failure. This situation prevailed until the end of Communist rule. The Polish State Yiddish Theater was actually established in Lodz in 1949.

There was also another Yiddish theater company in Wroclaw, and the two merged and performed around the country. In a relatively short time the state provided them with a permanent home in Warsaw. Until 1968, the Yiddish Theater was directed by the great Yiddish actress Ida Kaminska (the daughter of Ester Rachel Kaminska, known as the Mother of the Jewish Stage), who introduced simultaneous translation so that performances would attract not only the vestiges of the Jewish community, and Jewish tourists, but also non-Jewish Poles.

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When Kaminska emigrated to the US in the mid-1960s, Szymon Szurmiej took over, as theater director and artistic director in 1969, and remained at the helm until his death in 2014. His widow, the actress and singer Golda Tencer, now runs the theater, and has also introduced an annual Warsaw Jewish Festival known as Singers Warsaw honoring Nobel Prize-winning novelist Isaac Bashevis Singer.

Arguably, the best known of Polish Jewish festivals is the annual Krakow Jewish Culture Festival, which was founded in Communist Poland in 1988 by Janusz Makuch, a non-Jew who knows more about Jewish culture in all its diversity than most Jews. The Krakow festival attracts audiences of up to 15,000 people who flock to the city from all over Poland and from many parts of the globe, proving that you dont have to be Jewish to enjoy Jewish culture.

While the Jewish festivals in Krakow and Warsaw are the best known and have the largest turn-outs. The Taube Foundation for Jewish Life and Culture, which is one of several foundations supporting the revival of Jewish life in Poland, has published a list of more than 50 Jewish festivals and other cultural events many of them interfaith that have taken place in Krakow Kalisz, Gdansk, Bobowa, Bialystok, Kielce, Warsaw, Slupsk, Szczecin, Chrzanow, Rymanow, Tarnow, Lublin, Lelow, Wroclaw, Poznan, Lodz, Radom and many other places.

On Friday, September 24, an arts festival under the heading Time Recovered Memory and Participation is opening in the town of Orla, both inside and outside its historic 17th century synagogue. Like several other synagogues in Poland, the building is used for purposes other than prayer.

The event in itself reflects discussions on innovative uses of redundant Jewish heritage spaces with the participation of representatives of The University of the Arts Poznan, the Orla community, the Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland, and the UK-based Foundation for Jewish Heritage, which had suggested running an arts event out of the synagogue.

Dating back to the second half of the 17th century, the Orla synagogue was one of the few stone buildings in the town until the mid-20th century. The synagogues interior reflected Baroque and Renaissance influences, and the most distinctive feature was the ark. The walls were painted with colorful frescoes mainly of animal and plant motifs. The building was frequently remodeled and a striking classical faade was added.

Until the eve of World War II, the bulk of the towns population was Jewish. But in the spring of 1942, the community was forced into a ghetto and, later to the Treblinka death camp. The synagogue was used as a storehouse for Jewish property confiscated by German soldiers, and the ark was destroyed.

After the war, the building was occasionally used as a storage facility, but frequently stood empty and neglected, its condition deteriorating. In 2010, the synagogue came under the ownership of the Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland. Several local civil society organizations are involved in conserving the synagogue and are receiving full support from the local Mayor and municipality.

Devoid of Torah scrolls, a bimah and an ark, the building nonetheless reflects much of its former splendor, and as a venue for the festival interfaces the history and religious life of the past with the contemporary perspectives confronting society today.

Participating artists and academics in the festival are from the University of the Arts in Poznan and the Bialystok University of Technology (BUoT), and include professors Janusz Badyga, Rafa Grczynski, Wojciech Hora, Karolina Komasa, Wiesaw Koronowski, Maciej Kurak and Jarosaw Perszko (BUofT); and doctors Daniel Koniusz and Piotr Mastalerz.

Apropos the sukkah, anyone who wants to join a virtual global sukkah hop this Sunday, September 26, can tune into an online broadcast at http://www.TheUS.tv/succah2, available on the US West Coast at 9 a.m., Argentina 1 p.m., UK, 5 p.m. Israel 7 p.m. and India at 9.30 p.m.

EVERY NEW president of the state, brings something new to the role, but among the things that remain constant is an annual visit by representatives from Kfar Chabad on the eve of Sukkot to bring a lulav and etrog to the president for his personal use.

The custom of bringing a Chabad lulav and etrog to the president and prime minister of Israel was started by the late legendary mayor of Kfar Chabad Shlomo Maidanchik, who annually presented them to the presidents late father, president Chaim Herzog. This time, Maidanchiks son Israel and grandson Avraham, together with Avrahams son came to the Presidents Residence on the eve of Sukkot to make a presentation to the current president. There is an etrog orchard in Kfar Chabad.

President Isaac Herzog said Sukkot was one of his favorite festivals and that he was happy to continue the tradition. He only regretted that another Sukkot tradition of having an open house at the Presidents Residence could not be held this year, nor was it held last year due to the pandemic.

NEPALS AMBASSADOR Anjan Shakya, who is always clad in one of her mind-boggling collection of saris, hosted a Nepalese dinner in her residence in Herzliya Pituah in celebration of Nepals Constitution Day and National Day. Guest of honor and government representative was Minister Eli Avidar. Also among the guests was Adina Gottesman, who received special recognition for her many years of service as Nepals honorary consul-general, before Nepal established an embassy in Israel. At that time, Nepals ambassador was stationed in Cairo.

Other guests included MK Michal Shir, Chief of State Protocol Gil Haskel, former cabinet secretary Tzachi Braverman, ambassadors, representatives of various ministries, tourist enterprises and international organizations, and business executives.

Shakya, who has made a point of attending almost every event to which she is invited, and who has initiated many meetings with diverse organizations and institutions with the aim of intensifying bilateral relations, spoke of how the embassy has brought the relationship to new heights. This was confirmed by Avidar who expressed satisfaction over the friendly relations between the two countries with the emphasis on the taking of initiatives to bring new dimensions into the relationship.

In the course of the evening, guests were introduced to a newly published book, Nepal-Israel Relations, initiated by the Nepal Embassy, following last years celebration of 60 years of diplomatic ties.

Edited by Sabita Dishemaru, the book contains contributions by both Israeli and Nepalese dignitaries, and pays tribute to the presidents, prime ministers and foreign ministers of both countries.

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More to Jewish culture in Poland than is generally realized - The Jerusalem Post

Sukkot is the Jewish holiday that teaches us the joys of doing without – Religion News Service

Posted By on September 24, 2021

(RNS) In the coming days, neighborhoods that are home to Orthodox Jewish families are experiencing their annual eruption of ramshackle huts on lawns, balconies and back decks.

The temporary edifices are where observant Jews will be taking their meals and enjoying life for the seven days of the holiday of Sukkot, which begins at sundown on Monday. The holidays name is derived from the Hebrew word Sukkah, or covering, and refers to those huts, whose roofs, according to the Jewish religious tradition, must be made of any material that once grew from the ground.

But there is another Hebrew word that shares the same root: perception. The implication is that these makeshift huts provide some change in perspective which, in fact, they do.

There is something surprising, even jarring, about sitting in a small rudimentary hut, within sight of ones more comfortable, more spacious home.

For starters, sukkah-sitters quickly realize how vulnerable they, and we all, are to the elements. Orthodox Jew are reminded of the power of nature each autumn since time immemorial, but in these climate-changed times, the lesson has become especially trenchant.

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Jewish law permits indeed, requires the abandonment of the sukkah for surer shelter if it rains hard even, the law says, if it rains hard enough to spoil ones soup. But the lesson of human vulnerability remains. Even when we are safely back in our normal dining rooms, we remember that homes are themselves not impervious to disruptions of the increasingly frequent hurricanes, floods and fires that weve seen of late.

What goes along with this shift in perspective granted to sukkah-dwellers is how dependent we are on divine mercy.

More importantly, what the sukkah allows those within it to perceive, if they are honest enough to not push the thought away, is that our homes and possessions are not what matter in our lives it is not, as the old, crass bumper sticker has it, that the one who dies with the most toys wins.

When Jews sit in their primitive houses for the week of Sukkot, they come to know that accumulation of stuff is folly. What we own does not define us. We will not take it with us.

Odd as it may seem, that thought is a joyous one.

Joy is the Sukkot holidays theme, reflected in the Jewish prayers for the festival. One might assume that deprivation of the comforts of home is anything but a road to joy. But true happiness, the Sukkot message and experience reveals, begins with realizing what doesnt really make us happy.

Possessions provide a rush of sorts when first acquired, but like any addiction, that high soon enough wears off. The soul is not satiated, which is why possessions, like a drug, beget the want, even the need, for more of the same. In the Talmuds words, No one dies with half his desires in hand.

We neednt look further than entertainers, sports figures, bestselling authors, the rich with old money and lottery-winners. They may zip around in Lamborghinis, but their happiness quotient is no greater than that of those who take the bus. Their grand estates are no more of a home (and often less of one) than the simplest cozy cottage.

RELATED: Scuba diving rabbi adopts the ocean as his part of the world to repair

It is a clich, but like most clichs, is a truth: True joy comes from our relationships not with things, but with other people parents, spouses, children, friends, neighbors and our relationships with our community and with God.

That may be the perspective-offering huts message to mankind. Ultimately, what we really have is not what we own, but what weare.

And so, thoughtful sukkah-dwellers, while gazing up at bamboo slats, leaves and branches, will be seeing far beyond.

(Rabbi Avi Shafran is director of public affairs for Agudath Israel of America, a national Orthodox Jewish organization.He blogs atrabbishafran.com. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)

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Sukkot is the Jewish holiday that teaches us the joys of doing without - Religion News Service

Jewish and Latino? This educator has a new group for you. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on September 24, 2021

Ariela Ronay-Jinich was born into a Jewish family that has lived in Mexico for the past 100 years. Many of her ancestors were Russians and Hungarians who had escaped the Spanish Inquisition in the late 1400s.

Now Ronay-Jinich is a community educator in the Bay Area, where she finds that many Jews, even in such a diverse area, are generally unaware of the robust history of Jews in Mexico and how those Latin-Jewish lives have been shaped, she said.

Being both Mexican and Jewish is a highly misunderstood identity in the United States, Ronay-Jinich said in an interview. People dont understand how they go together, or include Latinx identities as part of Jewish expressions in our organizations. My experience here has always been: You can be one or the other. There just arent places that integrate both [identities].

Ronay-Jinich, 37, is out to change that with a pioneering family engagement program she created. Its called Olamim, the Hebrew word for worlds. Through activities revolving around nature, culture, service and community-building, Olamim aims to facilitate a means by which families can express, sustain and share the cultural dimensions that are often as much a part of their identities as their Jewishness.

Olamim kicked off in the spring with a farm-based, Spanish-language playgroup for littles, followed by a year-round havurah (family group) over the summer. Community programs open to the larger Latino Jewish and Jews of color communities are ongoing.

There is such a need, Ronay-Jinich said. Families like ours we all feel so alone. I have never, ever seen a single event that brings us together as Latino Jews.

Ronay-Jinich came to the United States from Mexico City when she was 12. She is married to Oakland-based Dr. David Doostan, a Spanish-speaking Persian Jew who performs with the Bay Area childrens entertainment group Octopretzel. About a year after they had a daughter, Alma, in 2019, the coronavirus pandemic began wiping out in-person socializing and Jewish celebrations. Thats just about when Ronay-Jinich decided to create Olamim and put out a call for Latino Jewish families.

A second havurah for families with children is in the process of being formed; the first was limited to six families because of Covid (but did have a waitlist). For information on that and other upcoming programs, contact Ronay-Jinich at [emailprotected].

Gabriela Kipnis, one the first parents involved, describes Olamim on the groups welcome page as a niche offering which we havent found elsewhere in the Bay Area Jewish community.

Asked about an S.F.-based nonprofit thats a leader in support and programming for Jews of color, Ronay-Jinich said Bechol Lashon is great but didnt meet her needs.

I love BeChol Lashon, and have attended their activities. But they have little that is in-person, in the East Bay, and designed for very small children, she said. Whats more, Ronay-Jinich wants to create an affinity space where the flavors of Latino culture can be nurtured in the context of Jewish life.

Wed love to partner with Bechol Lashon in the future, and are totally mission-aligned, she said appreciatively.

The families that participate in monthly Olamim meetings make the call on issues such as: Do they want to speak primarily in Spanish? And what forms of cultural expression should be explored?

This makes the vision and content of our time together a collective endeavor, said Ronay-Jinich, who expects the havurah to be celebrating holidays, engaging in community service and holding intergenerational retreats in the near future.

In Mexico, mostly all our activities were intergenerational, and I missed that so much when we moved to California, she said. I was always very close to my grandmother.

There are some 58,800 Jews in Mexico, according to the latest Mexican census, and the Jewish community is considered one of the most active in the world. That still represents a tiny minority (.045 percent) of Mexicos total population of 130 million.

In Ronay-Jinichs experience, both Mexicans in Mexico and Mexican immigrants in the United States have never been knowledgeable about the Jewish faith while Americans often are not aware of the diversity of Mexico itself.

For example, when Ronay-Jinich moved to San Diego with her mother and older sister at age 12, her schoolmates could not make sense of her ethnicity. Petite, fair-skinned, with somewhat light hair and eyes, she was often told that she could not be Mexican because she didnt look like one. Some told her that, alright, if she was Mexican, then she couldnt be Jewish.

I felt invisible and impossible, a living contradiction. I was told that I could not be what I was, she said.

Ronay-Jinich and her sister responded differently to this immigration experience. As they became adults, her sister chose to emphasize her Latin heritage.

In contrast, Ronay-Jinich said she went the Jewish route, eventually becoming a Jewish professional. As an undergraduate student at Brown University, where she earned a degree in education policy and history, she made her first Jewish friends in America.

My Hillel group was all white, Ashkenazi and East Coast, she recalled. They didnt even realize how narrow their idea of being Jewish was.

After college, she worked at Camp Tawonga, chiefly in the garden, exploring the connections between Judaism and the natural world. This focus was to become her educational specialty. When you think about it, most of the major spiritual revelations [in the Torah] came to an individual who was alone, outdoors, in nature, she said.

After a year of study in Israel, Ronay-Jinich returned to the U.S. and, since 2005, has been creating and directing nature-centric programs for kids and families at Urban Adamah (a Jewish educational farm in Berkeley), Wilderness Torah (an earth-based program in the East Bay where she developed the nature program BHootz for K-5 children) and Edah (a Jewish after-school program in Berkeley). She also developed Jewish Outside, a program that has trained more than 70 Bay Area preschool teachers in nature-based Jewish learning, and is on the board of Jewtina y Co., an organization that aims to build Latin-Jewish community and celebrate Latin-Jewish heritage.

Currently, Ronay-Jinich serves as program manager for Project Shamash, a Bay Areabased racial justice initiative of Bend the Arc focused on supporting Jews of color leadership and racial equity work among Jewish organizations.

In addition to all this plus motherhood and the as-yet unpaid work of Olamim her formal education continues: She is working on an M.A. in educational leadership from Mills College in Oakland.

Moreover, her work earned her a $10,000 Helen Diller Family Award for Excellence in Jewish Education in 2015.

For Sukkot this year, Olamim partnered with the Urban Adamah on a multicultural community experience connecting the Jewish practice of ushpizin welcoming guests or ancestors into the sukkah with the Mexican tradition of the Day of the Dead. Attendees at the event, which was titled Gathering Ancestral Sparks: A Creative Workshop for Jews of Color and Friends, could honor a deceased relative by making a nicho, a decorated box altar from the Mexican tradition.

Day of the Dead [Nov. 1-2] marks a seasonal transition, from summer to fall, and a time of community gathering around the harvest, heading into winter, and honors those who have crossed over from this world, Ronay-Jinich explained. Sukkot is also a harvest festival, in which we come to terms with the impermanence of living things and acknowledge the world of spirit, the invisible as well as the visible. To me, these two traditions have always seemed so similar.

The poster for the Urban Adamah event included a photoof two women engulfed in glowing orange marigolds, which are a big part of Day of the Dead; the flowers intense, spicy scent is imagined to attract the souls of the departed, and their brightness is said to light a path for the dead to return for a visit.

In creating the event, Ronay-Jinich said she was excited for people of all stripes to bring their family lineages, whether Jewish or not, into the sukkah.

These are holidays of inclusion, she said of Sukkot and Da de los Muertos, and acts of radical hospitality are encouraged.

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Jewish and Latino? This educator has a new group for you. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Breaking the fourth wall | Religious Life – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on September 22, 2021

The architecture of our lives begins with a basic anatomy lesson, which features the intersection of the evanescent and the eternal. Our corporal body is a complex environment, magnificently designed to be multi-functional and time limited. Our spiritual body is always present, but invisible, light-infused, designed to navigate timelessness.

Among other notable characteristics such as aesthetic, functional, relationship to nature, architectural expressions provide modes of protection. We can consider how the three-dimensional human body is an architectural structure, created by The Source of Life, that shelters the spirit like walls shelter people. However, the human body, unlike a steel building, is particularly vulnerable on all sides. One could argue that the spirit, having a timeless bandwidth, is stronger and needs the body less.

During Sukkot, we observe the ancient tradition of building huts, or booths, and their direct correlation with human fragility and Gods redemptive powers.

According to our Biblical account: You shall live in booths seven days; all citizens in Israel shall live in booths in order that future generations may know that I made the Israelite people live in booths when I brought them out of the land of Egypt. (Lev. 23:42-43)

Across the generations, these temporary structures dutifully enveloped ancient Jewish traditions, personal and familial memories. As the walls of the sukkah were secured in place, the boundaries of the festival were delineated and we began marking sacred time by our association with them. In the middle of the holy first two and final two days of Sukkot, we address the experience of being in between, the reality of impermanence and the visible presence of walls in transition. When we read Kohelet on Chol Hamoed Sukkot, we are further reminded of lifes changing seasons and their implications.

Imagine how walls have their seasons and their diversity. For example, think about their physical, psychological and metaphorical qualities. Interestingly, the Talmud highlights the potential for variety when constructing the walls of the sukkah. Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, zl referenced the Talmuds guidance in Masechet Sukkah 6. Although a minimum of three walls were needed to build a sukkah, the third wall could be a different size, even smaller than the other two: a tefach (handbreath) wide. According to Jewish law, the smaller wall is acceptable as complete. Furthermore, Rava asserted that this different wall allows for a private domain, a reshut ha yahid, for Shabbat purposes, as well as Sukkot. Today, with room for interpretation of shapes, sizes and materials, there are sukkah design contests all over the world that translate sukkah walls into architectural wonders.

Like a sukkah, within theatrical performance, there are three different directions, or walls, in which the action unfolds on a stage. Then, there is the imaginary fourth wall that separates the audience from the performance. The fourth wall is also used in literature to identify the conceptual barrier between the story and the reader. Breaking the fourth wall is a term attributed to French philosopher, art critic, author, Denis Diderot, in 1758. Removing, or breaking the barrier of the fourth wall enables more intimate encounters, bringing people closer to the performance, or story, and making them an integral part of the art form. Engagement shifts. Conditions of participation, interchange and a range of emotions are enhanced. In this case, what is broken isnt something in need of repair, or less than whole. Instead, what is broken allows for opportunities and closeness.

Because the actions of our lives unfold in the space between birth and death, because Torah is articulated in that space, we could argue that Chol Hamoed, these in between days, represent a particular holiness that isnt necessarily less important, or less spiritually charged. Shaping holy space/time of the in between are the walls we construct, revise, deconstruct, destroy. As we gather the four species in our hands and bless in all directions above, below, forward, back, side to side we can remind ourselves that the blessings we give, receive and hope for, are as multi-dimensional as the spaces we create with and without walls.

On Sukkot, we break that fourth wall in keeping with the mitzvah of Haknasat Orchim. In the opening, we manifest one act of courage, one act of welcome, one act of inclusion, one act of beauty, one act of kindness at a time. Animating the thirteen attributes of God (Ex. 34:6-7), Sukkah Shalom is made possible. With infinite possibilities, we contribute to the perfecting of our world. Then, the sounds of Tzman simchateinu reverberate across the valleys and mountains and no wall will ever be the same. JN

Rabbi Mindie Snyder serves as the rabbi and chaplain for Sun Health Communities.

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Breaking the fourth wall | Religious Life - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Torah Portion: What Needs Fixing? Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Dr. David Luchins, a professor at Philadelphias Touro College and frequent lecturer at Aish HaTorah, recalled the following story.

On the morning after Yom Kippur on September 1993, U.S. Sen. Daniel Moynihan and the professor had a private meeting with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. At the end, Moynihan thanked Peres for his strong support for the Aish HaTorah Jerusalem Fellowships.

Peres grew animated. Senator, let me tell you why I support the Jerusalem Fellowships and yeshivot. More than 60 years ago, when I was 8 years old, I was already an ardent Labor Zionist. I had a religious uncle who was upset by my lack of faith and dragged me to the village of Radin to meet the venerable Yisroel Meir Kagan, also known as the Chofetz Chaim.

The old rabbi and I had quite a talk. He quoted Maimonides and I responded with Marx; he quoted Talmud and I quoted [Zionist leader Menachem] Ushishkin.

Then he began to cry and put his hands on my head and blessed me saying, The Almighty gave me a long life, He should give you the same. You should go as you wish to Israel and become a great leader of the Jewish people; but remember, my child, that you cant have a Jewish state without the Almighty and the Almightys Torah.

At this point, Peres grew quite emotional. Senator, he declared, yesterday was Yom Kippur. I do not fast all day. I do not spend the day in synagogue. But every Yom Kippur night I think of that old rabbi and realize how true his words were. Peres knew that Israel and the Jewish people understood that Torah is relevant to all Jews and is crucial to their future.

Throughout Jewish history, ideologies have arisen to replace Torah. Today, it is tikkun olam, repairing the world,

I believe that tikkun olam has become the new ism to replace the essence of what it means to be Jewish. We are, however, ignoring its true meaning. The complete phrase in the Aleinu prayer is repair the world with the glory of God. The greatest Jewish contribution to the world is the idea of one God, the creator and sustainer of the world, who loves you.

Peres knew that nothing can replace Torah and mitzvot; they are the only guarantors of a familys Jewish continuity. Lets make tikkun olam about God.

As Lori Palatnik, founding director of Jewish Womens Renaissance Project, says, Its time for the Jewish people to once again be the God people. This is tikkun olam.

This article by Rabbi Simcha Tolwin originally appeared in the Jewish News on Oct. 13, 2016.

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Torah Portion: What Needs Fixing? Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

Coronavirus Grumbling, the Sukkah, and the Wisdom of Hindsight – Jewish Journal

Posted By on September 22, 2021

It has been a year and a half of discontent.

A friend of mine who is a doctor told me that her hospital recently held a seminar on how to deal with patients who are angry and disorderly. And it is not only this hospital. Schools, stores and airlines are similarly grappling with populations that are just angrier and more difficult.

A recent article in the Wall Street Journal noted that Customer satisfaction is at the lowest level since 2005, according to the American Customer Satisfaction Index, which tracks the behavior of 300,000 consumers across 46 industries. .The Federal Aviation Administration has initiated more than 750 investigations related to unruly passengers so far this year, compared with 146 in all of 2019. People are simply unhappy, and taking it out on others.

Grumbling is familiar to students of the Tanakh; it is the defining attribute of the generation of the desert. These recently freed slaves, who had just left Egypt, complain 10 times for every possible reason; they are afraid of the Egyptian army, but also frightened of the people of Canaan. They are worried that Moshe has left them, and angry that Moshe is leading them. They complain about a lack of food, a lack of water, and once they do receive the manna, complain about that too. They are deeply unhappy, whining about matters as trivial as a lack of garlic and watermelons.

Sukkot commemorates these 40 years in the desert; and that is extremely strange. Why celebrate a time when our ancestors were miserable and grumbling? And it should be noted, in defense of the generation in the desert, that their situation was difficult. The changes, challenges, and uncertainties experienced by the generation of the desert would worry anyone. What purpose is there in commemorating a frightening time of fear, discontent and rebellion?

The answer lies in the wisdom of hindsight. There are moments, both in history and in life, that we view very differently years later. In literature, authors use retrospective narration to show how the narrator can change perspective with time, and look back on events differently at a later date. Hindsight offers unique insights, unentangled by the emotions of the moment.

There are moments, both in history and in life, that we view very differently years later.

The grumbling of the desert came about due to a combination of circumstances and character. The challenges of the desert bring out the worst in these former slaves; Maimonides and Ibn Ezra both point to the slavish, cowardly character they had, a slave mentality they could never shake. But there is another way to explain their behavior, one that makes the former slaves far more relatable to our contemporary experience.

According to the Talmud, the Jews were freed from servitude six months before the Exodus; for half a year, these former slaves lived comfortably in a prosperous world empire. They are then promised a land of milk and honey, only to be led into a barren desert. This bitter disappointment often leads to political instability. James Chowning Davies offered a theory of revolution known as the J-Curve theory, that revolutions are almost inevitable when long periods of social and economic development are countered by sharp reversals and depreciation. The generation of the desert had already tasted freedom and comfort, and had even bigger dreams. They expected immediate gratification, an actual rose garden of milk and honey. They had expected freedom to be immediate, easy, and free of problems. Instead, the challenges of the desert made the Exodus seem like a counterfeit redemption.

The generation of the desert complained because they were captives of their own mindset. But in hindsight, those 40 years look different. The contemporary reader can recognize that the wandering in the desert is far better than slavery, that it prepared the Jews for the responsibilities of statehood, and allowed them to slowly make their way to the promised land.

The 40 years in the desert is most appreciated much later in history, during the times of Ezra. A small group of Jews had returned from Babylonia under the sponsorship of Cyrus the Great. They were threatened by the people who were occupying the land, and Ezras followers were frightened to rebuild any part of the Temple in Jerusalem.

Yet slowly but surely, this small group built a small autonomous community in the land of Israel that eventually turned into a large commonwealth. And the Book of Nehemiah tells us that this is when they rediscovered the magic of the Sukkot, and celebrated the holiday together as a community. A change in perspective had occurred. For the returning Babylonian exiles, getting halfway to Jewish sovereignty was a miracle; and they now understood how the halfway miracle of the desert was special as well.

Centuries after the grumbling in the desert, the Jews recognize how remarkable it is to take a few slow steps in the direction of the promised land. With the gift of hindsight, the years of the desert are seen differently, not as a time of frustration, but as a time of gradual redemption.

Sukkot teaches us the wisdom of hindsight, and that events look differently many years later. In the moment, we often lose sight of small victories; but years later we can see the difference they make.

Right now is a time of coronavirus grumbling and bickering. Our frustrations blur our vision, and we cannot see our own experience objectively. But perhaps years from now, with the wisdom of hindsight, things will be viewed differently. Perhaps one day, we will look back and recognize that dedicated scientists, heroic healthcare workers, and caring volunteers helped us overcome a pandemic. Perhaps one day well look back at this period of discontent, and recognize all the good that was done far outweighs the bad; and we, too, will thank God for our pandemic Sukkot, which offered us some protection while slowly getting life back to normal.

Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz is the Senior Rabbi of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun in New York.

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Coronavirus Grumbling, the Sukkah, and the Wisdom of Hindsight - Jewish Journal

30 Judaism Facts That You’ll be Interested to Know

Posted By on September 22, 2021

Judaism isnt just one of the oldest religions in the world its also one that left its mark on history. Delve into the depths of Jewish heritage by learning its principles, origins, and practices with these Judaism facts.

Maimonides was a Jewish philosopher and scholar who lived in the 12th century. Though born in Spain, he lived and died in Egypt, his people burying him in neighboring Israel afterward. He conducted many studies on astronomy and medicine, but his greatest achievement was the 13 Principles of Faith. These principles came from his study of Jewish oral traditions, going back to before Roman times. Though other scholars criticized the principles over the centuries, they remain the most popular formulation of the core teachings of the Jewish faith today.

Circumcision is a surgical procedure where a doctor removes the foreskin of a mans penis. This tradition is among the oldest of the Jewish faith, going back to ancient times. Scholars argue that at the most basic level, the reason for the tradition is to mark any Jewish man apart from other men. Other scholars argue that even at the time, the medical benefits of circumcision were already known and that the early Jews incorporated it into their tradition. Theres one of the more iconic Judaism facts.

Read also: More Amazing Religion Facts

The Torah is the foundation of all Jewish holy texts. Every other holy text builds on what the Torah teaches. However, the Torah isnt a single book. In fact, Christianity named it the Pentateuch. In Latin, it means five books, which is the first five books of the Christian and Jewish Bibles. That is Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Hows that for interesting Judaism facts?

One of the most important Judaism facts is that its not just a religion. Judaism is a culture, a political force, and even an ethnic group. The Jews are their own people, with a distinct ethnic identity like how Europeans, Asians, and Africans are distinct from each other. Unlike other religions, they use their own alphabet and language for both secular and religious purposes.

Christianity and Islam, are multi-ethnic religions but lack a language or alphabet the way Aramaic is for Jews. Christianity borrowed Latin from the Romans, and Islam borrowed Arabic from the Arabs. In terms of politics, Judaism is also tied to the Jewishs people history and continuing desire for a country of their own. This goes back to ancient times, with the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, and the modern nation of Israel.

Usually, orthodoxy and conservatism go hand-in-hand. However, thats not the case when it comes to Judaism. Orthodox Judaism firmly holds that written teachings and oral traditions come from God, and must remain unchanged by time. In contrast, Conservative Judaism holds that while both written teaching and oral traditions have a divine origin, how theyre interpreted is up to the rabbis, and may reflect modern circumstances.

Reform Judaism or Liberal Judaism originated from Central Europe before spreading to Britain and the United States. Influenced by the Enlightenment of the 18th century, Reform Judaism follows looser interpretations of Jewish law and teachings. Reform Judaism also incorporates some . Reform Judaism also puts greater emphasis on the prophets examples as role models for the Jewish community.

In Aramaic, daily Jewish prayers are called Shacharit, Mincha, and Maariv, or morning, afternoon, and evening prayers. Jewish tradition usually involves group prayers, but its allowed for individuals to pray alone if theyd prefer.

One of those is the kippah, a skullcap worn when praying, eating, or studying. Its also not unknown for some Jews to wear them at all times. Another example of religious clothing is the tallit, a prayer shawl worn during prayer services. Tallits also have distinctive designs called tzitzit, knotted fringes or tassels at each corner of the shawl.

Read also: 80 Enlightening Bible Facts To Inspire You

According to the Old Testament, God created the world in 6 days and rested on the 7th day. Therefore, Christians and Jews believe that people should follow His example, and observe the 7th days rest. However, Jews often refer to it by its Hebrew term, Shabbat.

The three major events observed in Judaism are the Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles. These religious practices all have connections to Jewish history. The Passover celebrates the Jews departure from Egypt, and freedom from slavery at Egyptian hands. Meanwhile, the Pentecost marks the celebration of Gods teachings at Mount Sinai. Finally, the Tabernacles celebrates their 40 years of wandering in the desert before finally reaching the Promised Land.

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30 Judaism Facts That You'll be Interested to Know


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