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A Jewish library’s treasure surfaced at auction. How did it get there? J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 30, 2021

When an auction house recently unveiled a newcatalogof rare Jewish books and manuscripts, Rabbi Elli Fischer was among the many who rushed to examine the goods.

An Israeli-American university researcher, Fischer was particularly intrigued by an old handwritten journal opening bid: $100,000.

The journal, known as a ledger, or pinkas, belonged to a rabbi from the holy city of Tiberias who had toured Jewish Europe some 200 years ago to raise money for his community. Fischer was fascinated to read the names of towns and rabbis visited on the tour. He even spotted the signature of one of his own ancestors, a German rabbi.

As Fischer looked through the digitized images of the ledger, he noticed a number stamped at the bottom of one page. The stamp, showing a faded 13723, told Fischer that this manuscript, now being sold by an anonymous owner on the private market, had once been part of a collection, probably at a public institution.

Theres something really curious, perhaps even suspicious, about one of the most remarkable items on auction, Fischer would later write in a series of tweets.

Fischer turned on his detectives brain, and what he would discover would soon scandalize the world of Judaica experts, help expose a controversial practice by a flagship institution of Jewish learning and raise questions about the commitment of the Jewish community to preserving its own history.

All he had now, however, was a serial number. Fischer decided to type the number into the search bar of the catalog for the National Library of Israel he got a hit. A description matching that of the auction noted that the manuscript was available in microfilm and digital formats on the library website.

But the item did not belong to the National Library, nor had it ever. Instead, the manuscript was described as part of the world-renowned collection of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York.

You read this right: A unique and valuable manuscript that was part of the [JTS librarys] magnificent collection is now on the auction block, Fischer would later tweet. How did it get there?

Fischer also noted that a search for the item in the librarys own catalog yielded no results, only another question: Had someone removed the entry from the catalog?

One possibility was that the manuscript had been stolen from the seminary at some point and was now resurfacing. The other possibility even more worrying to some was that the seminary was quietly selling the manuscript and perhaps other precious items from its celebrated collection.

The library had sold off items in the past, doing so openly. The items were either duplicates and therefore less valuable, or works printed in Latin, a language that many other institutions better specialize in.

This manuscript was a distinctly Jewish and Hebrew text, and since it was handwritten, by definition it was unique.

As word of Fischers findings spread, librarians at JTS and elsewhere grew alarmed, according to interviews with about a dozen people, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity.

With the library shut down since 2016 for a campus redevelopment project and the books sitting in a warehouse, rumors had been circulating. Many suspected the library used the cover of renovations to make the controversial move of selling collectibles.

Fischer had delivered a smoking gun, as several Jewish book experts described his discovery that an item had been removed from the library. One person called it a catastrophe. Another expert said the sale of the manuscript was as if Hadassah had removed the Chagall windows from its hospital in Jerusalem. The subsequent removal from the catalog was as if Hadassah had been asked about the windows and responded, Windows? What windows?

Located in Upper Manhattan near Columbia University, the Jewish Theological Seminary is the academic and spiritual heart of Conservative Judaism. Its library is arguably the most important repository of Jewish knowledge in the world, featuring some of the very first books printed in Hebrew, a letter written by Maimonides about 800 years ago, and thousands of other rare and unique texts.

A tension between the institutions mission of ordaining rabbis for Conservative congregations and its expensive archival responsibilities has existed for more than a hundred years, going back to the moment when rich New York Jews envisioned a Hebrew book museum at the seminary to rival the collections of imperial Britain.

We should hold in view the purpose to make our collection as nearly complete as the resources of the world may render possible, and in so doing, we should spare neither thought nor labor nor money, said Mayer Sulzberger at the dedication of a new building for the seminary in 1903.

Sulzberger and the rest of the eras mostly German Jewish donor class made good on that promise. Alexander Marx was tapped to head the library in 1903, and he embarked on a buying spree that lasted for decades.

Marx was the bibliographical equivalent of a kid in a candy shop, said David Selis, a historian studying the library. He would buy anything that has any relationship to Jews in any language.

But as it turned out, money for a museum of the Hebrew book did not remain as readily available in the 21st century.

In 2015, the seminary signed real estate deals that saw the library building demolished and replaced with a luxury residential tower. The proceeds, some $96 million, boosted the institutions endowment and paid for a campus redevelopment project featuring a new library with a much smaller footprint, as well as a new dorm and auditorium.

After having been closed for construction for years, the library is set to reopen in the coming months, Covid permitting, with only a fraction of the books available on site. The rest can be called up from a distant warehouse.

In the world of Jewish books,the real estate deal was widely understoodas a divestment by JTS from book custodianship in favor of its mandate to train rabbis. But most have refrained from saying so publicly, according to interviews, because they do not want to be seen as disparaging or undermining an institution that remains essential for serious scholarship about Judaism.

While the seminary was tapping its real estate for cash, it also decided to cultivate another revenue stream.

As many had suspected, and seminary officials confirmed to JTA, the library had quietly sold off rare items from its library.

The ledger of the rabbi from Tiberias went to a private collector in 2017 and eventually wound up on the auction block, served up by a Jerusalem-based firm called Genazym. The auction takes place on Wednesday.

The sale of this piece was deemed to be of minimum impact to the collection and financially prudent for the institution, JTS spokesperson Beth Mayerowitz said in an email to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency providing the first public confirmation of such a sale.

In an interview, the seminarys chief librarian, David Kraemer, described the instructions he had received from his superiors: The administration and the board of the seminary wanted him to sell items of his choosing in order to raise a specified amount of money. Kraemer did not disclose the dollar figure.

I asked, What in my collection would raise that amount without harming the core mission of the institution? Kraemer said, recalling a conversation with a few in-house experts whom he declined to name. It had to be an item we had digitized and that we deemed relatively low research value.

The task facing Kraemer was not as unusual as it might seem. Libraries and museums periodically sell items, a practice known as deaccessioning, often to raise money for the purchase of other items but sometimes under financial duress.

Because the library at JTS was founded on almost indiscriminate buying, it had come to possess multiple copies of many books, even remarkably rare ones published at the dawn of printing.

In fact, the library had once held an extra copy of the first printed Hebrew book to be illustrated, Meshal ha-Kadmoni, or Fable of the Ancients, by Isaac ben Solomon Abi Sahula, printed in 1491 in Italy.

In 1986, the book was sold as part of an auction through Christies, fetching the highest price ever paid for a printed book in Hebrew at the time. The library sold 95 items in that round and raised a total of $700,000.

In the decades since, the library has gained a reputation for sometimes undervaluing its possessions. In 1998, for example, a copy of the first printed edition of the Torah in Hebrew that the library deaccessioned in a $50,000 deal quickly went on to sell for $310,000 at an auction.

By 2015, when JTS wasreportedlyamid a financial crisisgoing back years, the seminary again mined its library and set up an auction, this time through Sothebys. But now the library wasnt offloading duplicates.

JTS put up a series of works in Latin that are so old that they are not called books but incunabula, a designation for items printed before 1501. The sale included a 1455 edition of the Book of Esther from a Gutenberg Bible it had been among the items showcased for donors on private tours of the library. The eight pages,handsomely rubricated in red and blue, sold for nearly $1 million, far beating expectations.

Kraemer explained that books in Latin are outside of the librarys core mission and scholars rarely come asking for them. The money collected went to a fund to buy more relevant rare books, he added.

They are selling books out the back door. The seminary is using the library as a cash cow.

An academic library like that of JTS has the legal right to sell anything it owns for any reason without publicizing it. In practice, libraries turn to deaccession only when they are facing budget shortfalls or have an opportunity to trade up, and they tend to publicly announce they are doing so. There are different views on whats appropriate, but even those who frown upon particular deaccession decisions can accept the overall practice.

It was the lack of transparency around the sale of the manuscript that especially riled Judaica librarians and consultants, many of whom wondered what other items might have slipped away unnoticed.

Indeed, other such private sales have taken place in recent years, according to seminary officials.

The sale of Pinkas Shadar of Israel Hayyim Raphael Segre (1807-1809) and several other items took place in a private sale in 2017 and was one of a few sales that occurred since 2015, Mayerowitz said.

Among the items that went, she added, were several volumes of the Bomberg Talmud printed on blue paper and a copy of the Prague Haggadah on parchment.

Those of us who are book people in our blood, we see this and we get pissed off, a former library employee said. These books dont belong in a private collection. If JTS had been transparent I could almost understand. But they are selling books out the back door. The seminary is using the library as a cash cow.

Kraemer rejects the idea that the sale and subsequent removal from the online catalog were inappropriate.

The sale wasnt announced because it was a private transaction, he said. People will interpret it how they will interpret it.

Part of the reason why its hard to evaluate whether the seminary acted properly is that it doesnt have a set policy on deaccession. The library at nearby Columbia University has a blanket policy against it, as does Yeshiva University, another Jewish institution of higher learning with a substantial albeit lesser Judaica collection.

Absent laws and mutually agreed-upon rules, each institution sets its own policy. Thats different from the related field of museums. The powerful Association of Art Museum Directorslists guidelines against deaccession, which were temporarily relaxed at the start of the coronavirus pandemicbecause of an anticipated budgetary shortfall.

Some librarians would like to see a change in their field.

There arent norms and guidelines around deaccession, and thats a problem, said Michelle Margolis, the incoming president of the Association for Jewish Libraries.

Margolis, a librarian at Columbia, said shes part of a group thats working on a solution. Common ethics would make it easier to tell apart bad actors and suss out theft.

For all their desire to obtain whats in the public domain, thieves, as much as private collectors, need institutions to exist and thrive. By warehousing precious books, libraries create scarcity on the market, allowing the few items that do circulate to fetch high prices.

Kraemer said he knows of no plans to sell more rare books, and the seminary says it is financially healthy. Like many institutions dependent on donations, the seminary was making emergency cuts at the start of the pandemic. But 2020 turned out to be one of its best years for fundraising in the past decade, according to Mayerowitz, the JTS spokesperson.

A strong fundraising year would appear to come on the heels of years of consistent growth for the seminarys endowment. Tax audits disclosed through the IRS show an increase every year for which data is available, going from $113 million in 2015 to $142 million in 2019.

Mayerowitz also said that the seminarys strong position is evident in its redeveloped campus with a performance space, residence hall and library, which she called an investment in the future of not only JTS, but the entire Jewish community.

A reminder of the cost of that investment presents itself against a slice of sky above the seminary. Where stacks of books once took up space, there are now 33 floors of luxury apartments the towering Vandewater building is one of the tallest Manhattan buildings north of Central Park.

The bulk of the librarys books will now forever be stored in a remote warehouse, with any item available for recall within one business day. Thats common practice for research libraries, Kraemer noted, adding that the most commonly requested books as well as the entire special collection rare books and manuscripts will be housed on campus.

He said the decision to downsize the real estate and sell certain items was about being prudent and not a retreat from the 120-year-old promise to make the library the best of its kind in the world.

The library will never fail, Kraemer said. Its so valuable that it will always find supporters. I am very optimistic about the future.

Against the optimism projected by seminary leaders are two long-standing countertrends in American Jewish life.

Judaisms Conservative denomination, which counts the seminary as one of its essential institutions, was the largest Jewish denomination in the 1950s and 60s. It is no longer and is shrinking still. In 1990, the percentage of American Jews affiliated with the Conservative movement was estimated at 38%. A study from earlier this year pegged the number at 17%.

Meanwhile, Jewish librarians and historians of Jewish libraries speak with reverence and affection of benefactors past. They name-drop library donors who died early in the last century, such as Judge Sulzberger, Jacob Schiff and Felix Warburg. Nostalgia abounds for an era when philanthropists rich secular and liberal Jews were committed to preserving Jewish cultural memory as a service to the Jewish people.

There just isnt money for Jewish culture like there used to be, said Selis, the historian of Jewish libraries. A generation has passed. The culture has shifted in American Judaism.

That a rabbis 200-year-old travelogue could fetch $200,000 at auction suggests demand for Jewish artifacts has not exactly dissipated as much as shifted somewhat. The marketing materials for the manuscript, published by the Jerusalem auction house Genzaym, speak to the change.

After a nod to the ledgers historical value like documentation of the eras communal fundraising system the marketing message focuses on the priceless and exceedingly rare collection of autographs of great rabbis visited on the tour of Europe. These rabbis, who signed the ledger to certify their donations, are named, described and, in some cases, illustrated in the auctions catalog.

With its signatures, the ledger belongs to a class of books that have seen demand skyrocket, according to bookseller Israel Mizrahi of Brooklyn.

The market for books with provenance of important rabbinical figures, as well as anything signed or autographed by such figures, has exploded in recent years, with prices more than doubling every decade in the last few decades, Mizrahi said.

The increased competition for such titles is being driven by the growing upper class of Orthodox Jews, who see them as an investment but also as something else.

In the Orthodox Jewish world, many of the status-symbol purchases common in the secular world would be frowned upon, but items of religious significance are viewed in a positive light, Mizrahi said. There is widespread belief that owning something that was used or written by a righteous person will bring good will to its owner.

Its perhaps too early to tell what the rising influence of Orthodox collectors will mean for the ideal of public scholarship and communal memory in the digital era. Will more items disappear into the thicket of private vaults without notice, or will the archives persevere and somehow find new patrons?

If Orthodox Jewish researchers like Fischer have their way, the spirit of collective heritage will win.

These are treasures of the Jewish people, not of individuals, Fischer said. Its important people have access to them.

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A Jewish library's treasure surfaced at auction. How did it get there? J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

The absence of the Arabic language from the public sphere in Israel Mondoweiss – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 30, 2021

Two days ago in Haifa, a city where Palestinian Arabs comprise 10% of the population, the municipality placed a sign in one of the parks in the French Carmel neighborhood to remind people who have dogs to close the gates. The sign is written in Hebrew, English and Russian, but not Arabic, thus excluding the Palestinian Arabic-speaking residents that live in the neighborhood.

Recently attempts have been made to undermine the Arabic languages status as an official language in Israel despite the fact that 1.5 million Arabic speakers 21% of the population suffer from systematic marginalization and discrimination, linguistically and otherwise. This situation is reflected in many spheres of a Palestinian Arab individuals life, be it in academia, the economy, or even in daily matters such as going to the post or the doctors office. Hebrew and English are the most dominant and Arabic is practically non-existent.

In 2004, Dr. Ahmad Tibi, a member of the Israeli Knesset, petitioned the Supreme Court to add signs in Arabic in the Ben-Gurion International Airport. However, it wasnt until a month ago in 2021 that the airport management after a long battle with Sikkuy (The Association for the Advancement of Civic Equality) installed a new welcoming sign that includes Arabic.

In 2018, the Israeli government stripped Arabic of official language status when it passed the Jewish Nation-State Law. The specific meaning of the term official (rishmi in Hebrew) is related to the definition of the term by government institutions. An official language is a language used by the government and elevated by the authority of the State. It is the language of internal communication to and from the government, as well as the language of judicial and administrative affairs, representing the government and State.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Palestinian Arabs of Israel faced various hardships, including language barriers, that complicated its ability to implement Health Ministry instructions and guidelines. A significant delay in the governments dissemination of instructions in Arabic led to severe gaps in the level and scope of the information reaching much of the Palestinian Arab public. For example, the Traffic Light website that was created by the Ministry of Health to inform the public of any updates regarding COVID only contains titles in the Arabic language, but when a person tries to enter the complete article, the website takes you to the Hebrew page. The Traffic Light issue reflects a problem documented in research conducted by the Knesset information centre in 2016, which revealed that only certain parts of the pages in governmental websites are accessible in Arabic.

Five ministries (Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Economy and Industry, Ministry of Science, Technology and Space, Ministry of the Interior, and Ministry of Welfare and Social Services) have no way to contact or send public inquiries in Arabic; these ministries constitute about 20% of the 24 government ministries and about 29% of the ministries.

The Mossawa Center The Advocacy Center for Arab Citizens in Israel has sent many letters to different governmental institutions during the pandemic, including National Security, demanding that they provide Arabic content to the public. When there was only minimal response, the Mossawa Center, along with other civil society organizations, took it upon itself to translate a major part of the important content to the Arab public.

According to a new study, 60% of museums in Israel do not have service or access to information in Arabic. The study, conducted by attorneys Hanan Margia and Idan Ring, examined parameters such as signage, website, Facebook advertising and marketing, newsletters and maps, videos, presentations, and audio guides. According to the studys findings, in 12 of the 20 museums examined, there is no Arabic at all, or the presence of the language is minimal and mainly includes signage referring to exits, entrances, and services.

For many years, the Mossawa Center demanded the Haifa municipality to renovate one of the old buildings in the historic neighborhood of Wadi Alsaleeb and turn it into an Arabic Museum. To this day, the Palestinian Arab society in Israel has no museums of its own nor a cinema that screens films in the Arabic language. The Mossawa Centers demand can solve not only a cultural need in Palestinian Arab society but also a financial one. By renovating beautiful, abandoned buildings in Palestinian Arab neighborhoods, it opens a door for businesses to set up shop in the area, providing a solution to the unemployment problem and lifting families from poverty.

A reduction of poverty rates can be the answer to the big question the government is failing to answer nowadays: how to stop the crime rates and the black market in Palestinian Arab society. It all starts by first and foremost recognizing Palestinian Arabs, their culture, their heritage, and their language.

Mondoweiss covers the full picture of the struggle for justice in Palestine. And for the next 10 days, every dollar you give will be doubled, up to $50,000, to support our unique journalism. Read by tens of thousands of people each month, our truth-telling journalism is an essential counterweight to the propaganda that passes for news in mainstream and legacy media.

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The absence of the Arabic language from the public sphere in Israel Mondoweiss - Mondoweiss

Q&A: How a retired stockbroker became the ‘Spinning Rabbi’ J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 30, 2021

Fred Fox thought he wanted to grow up to be a rabbi, comedian, therapist or entertainer. Instead, he became a stockbroker in his native New York City.

Now retired and living in Tiburon, Fox, 73, has pretty much achieved his childhood goals as the Spinning Rabbi. He earned the moniker years ago in the Bay Area gym where he led spinning classes intense workouts on stationary bikes, led by an instructor and was often told, You sound like a rabbi.

In 2011, Fox started the blog spinningrabbi.com motto: You cannot lower your mountain, but you can elevate yourself.

Though the pandemic brought his spinning classes to a halt, his blog is rolling along.

J.: How did you get into spinning?

Fred Fox: I was working out at the Bay Club and I met someone who wanted to open a gym and offer spinning classes. I said spinning? I hadnt heard of it; it had just become popular. We co-founded Gorilla Sports in San Francisco, I fell in love with spinning, and the next thing I knew I was teaching it.

What earned you the moniker Spinning Rabbi?

While people were warming up, I began giving them messages. They became a metaphor for life: I would tell stories that would inspire the class and that people could take with them as life lessons. Some were rabbinical stories with universal messages that would apply to anybody. It became very popular. There were people who would walk by my class just to listen.

Have you always been into physical fitness?

Yes. Im very active. I give myself a pretty hard workout six days a week. I played in the Maccabiah Games on the masters basketball team for the U.S. in 1989.

What is your religious background?

I attended an Orthodox shul until the sixth grade, then my family joined a Conservative congregation. We kept a kosher home. I went to Hebrew school every day.

Your parents were Holocaust survivors. Did they talk about it when you were young?

My mother spoke about it a lot, and cried a lot. My father didnt speak about it much, but he didnt hide it or deny it. My parents met after the war in a displaced persons camp in Italy.

My father was very active in the Jewish community in shul, Chabad, the UJA, JNF, philanthropic activities. When he was older, in his 70s, he started speaking at a Yom HaShoah event, broke down and started crying.

Most of the people we knew, particularly when I was young, were Holocaust survivors.

Did your parents experience inform your life?

Consciously, I didnt necessarily know the lessons that I learned. But as I look back, a lot of what I learned from them is infused in what I write. The resilience of Holocaust survivors My father was always my role model.

I was on the Yom HaShoah committee for Marin County and I have spoken as a child of survivors. The fact that my parents survived there had to be a reason why, and if I was born to them, there had to be a reason for that It had to do with doing good and keeping Yiddishkeit alive.

In your blog, you use the metaphor of climbing a mountain and encourage people to elevate themselves when faced with obstacles. What mountains have you climbed?

Being a child of survivors and seeing and hearing these stories its a lot to digest as a kid. Also, seeing those near and dear to me struggling and passing. And I was with [the investment firm] Bear Stearns when it collapsed as I was going through a divorce.

I was a serious cyclist until about five years ago when I was cut off by a car and broke my clavicle and two ribs. Then, about three years ago, another cyclist crashed into me and I fractured my hip, which required surgery. In both cases I stayed positive with my goal to heal. In both cases, I healed well and very quickly and was back to leading my spinning classes.

What do you get out of your blog?

Its like this: People would go to the rebbe and talk about their trials and tribulations. His advice: Once you have found what you are needed for, you will have all that you need. Maybe this is what Im supposed to be doing. Even if I have just one reader, the reward without being told is knowing that it helped.

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Q&A: How a retired stockbroker became the 'Spinning Rabbi' J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Parashat Ekev: Gratitude and showing favor – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 30, 2021

In this weeks Torah portion, we continue reading Mosess final speeches, incredibly beautiful and lofty addresses meant to prepare the Jewish nation for entering, conquering, and then living in, the Holy Land.

In the address asking the Children of Israel to worship God and walk in His path, Moses says:

For the Lord, your God, is God of gods and the Lord of the lords, the great mighty and awesome God, Who will show no favor, nor will He take a bribe. He executes the judgment of the orphan and widow, and He loves the stranger, to give him bread and clothing (Deuteronomy 10:17-18).

Moses describes Gods mightiness through the way He treats humans with justice, integrity, and compassion for the weak and oppressed. His mightiness is particularly emphasized in that He does not take a bribe nor does He show favor. Sycophantic behavior of a human toward God will not affect the virtue of justice with which He judges the world, and a good deed will not suffice to make up for acts that are unsuitable in His eyes.

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On the other hand, in Birkat Kohanim, the priestly blessing that took place in the Temple and nowadays takes place in the synagogue, the kohanim bless the nation as follows: May the Lord show favor toward you and grant you peace (Numbers 6:26).

Seemingly, there is a contradiction in Gods behavior toward people. On the one hand, He is described as not showing favor, but on the other hand, He commands the kohanim to bless the nation May the Lord show favor toward you.

The ministering angels said before the Holy One, blessed be He: Master of the universe, in Your Torah it is written: the great, mighty and awesome God, who favors no one and takes no bribe, yet You, nevertheless, show favor to Israel, as it is written: The Lord shall show favor to you and give you peace. He replied to them: And how can I not show favor to Israel, as I wrote for them in the Torah: And you shall eat and be satisfied, and bless the Lord your God, meaning that there is no obligation to bless the Lord until one is satiated; yet they are exacting with themselves to recite Grace after Meals even if they have eaten as much as an olive or an egg (Brachot 20b).

The Talmud describes a conversation between the angels and God. The angels claim a contradiction in Gods behavior. How can he show favor to the Jewish nation? God responds with a surprising answer connected with a commandment we read about in this weeks parasha: Birkat Hamazon, Grace after Meals.

The Torah commands that when the Children of Israel enter the land and eat of the goodness it has to offer, they should bless God for the good land. The sages determined a text for this blessing, which is recited after a meal in which we eat bread, known as Birkat Hamazon. In the spirit of this blessing, the sages determined additional, shorter blessings before and after anything we eat or drink, as well as blessings of gratitude and praise for different times, situations or places.

The minimum amount of food necessitating Birkat Hamazon is eating to the point of satiation, as can be understood by the words, And you will eat and be sated, and you shall bless the Lord, your God, but the sages through the generations added that we should make a blessing even on the smallest amount of food, such as the size of an olive or an egg.

Here lies Gods answer to the angels: How can I not show favor to the Jewish nation?! I commanded them to make a blessing when they are sated, but they added to it and bless when they eat even the smallest of portions.

BUT WE still need to understand: If the virtue of justice requires not showing favor, why is an exception made for the Jewish nation? And why is this strictness regarding Birkat Hamazon so significant that it leads to breaking all laws of justice?

Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hakohen Kook explained it this way: The basis of Gods just behavior toward humans stems from His desire to guide us to higher and proper behavior. Therefore, there is no showing favor, since it is does not lead to people becoming more complete. On the contrary, it shows that God seemingly turns a blind eye to inappropriate behavior. But, there are people who recognize the goodness with which they are blessed, to the point of being filled with gratitude for every morsel of food they receive, even the smallest. Those same people surely know that the best way to thank God for His grace is by fulfilling His desire that we be good people who are good to others. When God shows favor to those people and looks away from certain failures, it would only encourage them to reach higher and more complete modes of behavior.

This equation between God and His creations exists in every relationship in our lives. When we recognize goodness in our partners, friends and family members, they, too, are more likely to look away from our failures, without fear that we will take negative advantage of them doing so. This virtue of recognizing goodness, of gratitude, is therefore a strong basis for joy and serenity on our lifes journey.

The writer is rabbi of the Western Wall and holy sites.

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Parashat Ekev: Gratitude and showing favor - The Jerusalem Post

One year later: 10 life lessons from my beloved mentor, Rav Adin – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on July 30, 2021

Across the globe, people from all walks of life came together Monday, the 17th of the Hebrew month of Menachem Av, which corresponds with July 26, to mark the one-year anniversary of the passing of my beloved mentor, Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz of saintly memory.

Steinsaltz, lovingly known to his students as Rav Adin, was recognized as a once-in-a-millennium scholar, who revolutionized the world with his trailblazing translation and commentary of the entire Talmud, Bible, Maimonides Mishneh Torah, the Tanya; his authorship of many books on Jewish mysticism, philosophy and sociology; his educational institutions; and his life mission to let my people know.

Personally, I miss Rav Adin terribly. For close to 30 years, my mentor and I spoke regularly. He guided my every step, illuminated my every pathway, molded my every thought and inspired my every action. And now, ever since his passing a year ago, our world is so much dimmer, and our lives so much lonelier.

Nonetheless, and in spite of the profound pain and streaming tears, his spiritual presence continues to permeate our beings, his sweet voice continues to ring in our ears, his eternal teachings continue to lead our every way and his marching orders continue to propel us to do more and more and more, his parting words to me, just two weeks before his passing.

To encapsulate the genius of Rav Adin in words is impossible. Still, here is a humble attempt to provide a glimpse into 10 lessons of our beloved Rav Adin that changed my life and brightened our world:

Lifes most important question:

A few years ago, during a visit with Rav Adin, I asked him: In your eyes, what is lifes most important question?

Without skipping a beat, he replied: And then what? (In Hebrew, veaz ma?)

He then explained his statement: You see, it is easy to fly into a passion. But what happens after the passion is gone? And then what? What is left from that which we were so passionate about? Weddings nowadays resemble Holywood-style sound and light shows. But then what? Can our marriage continue to grow even when the sound of here comes the bride has been replaced with the sound of a baby crying? Can our love continue to blossom, even when the romantic scene of you may kiss the bride has been replaced with the unavoidable reality of bills that need to be paid?

7 billion people will care about your actions, not your feelings

Rav Adin once called me aside after noticing my despondence during my years of study at his Makor Chaim high school in Jerusalem.

The problem is that you focus on your feelings too much, he mentioned. Maybe thats why you seem so despondent.

So, what should I do? I retorted.

Instead of focusing on your emotions, focus on your deeds, he replied.

With his characteristic wit, he concluded: Remember, only your mother truly cares about your feelings, but 7 billion people will care about your actions so focus more on your good deeds, each and every day.

The difference between a wise man and a fool

A few years ago, Rav Adin, asked me, out of the blue:

What do you think is the difference between a fool and a wise man?

I did not know what to say. So, he replied in my stead:

The difference is simple: a wise man keeps the important issues of life important, and makes sure that the trivial issues remain trivial. The fool does the opposite. For him, important issues become the trivial ones, while he considers the trivial issues to be important.

Focus on the results, not so much the process

Following the failure of a project that I had launched a few years ago, I called Rav Adin to express my frustration and seek his advice.

After listening carefully, he replied with his characteristic smile:

Pinny, you focus too much on the results. But you forget that you were appointed to work, not to reap the fruits of your work. It sounds like you put in the right amount of work and that you did what you could. Now, let G-d take care of the results

Its like planting trees, he said. Sometimes, we plant a tree, and we think that well be able to enjoy its fruits within a year or two. But some trees, like the olive tree, take a few years to grow and produce fruits. Yet, once those trees grow, they turn into very strong trees that then never stop producing an abundance of fruits

Ask not how much have accomplished," ask how much more can I still accomplish

In an unforgettable address to our tenth-grade class, Rav Adin mentioned:

The main problem is that you ask yourself how much have I accomplished thus far, instead of asking yourself, how much more can I accomplish?"

You see, its not that the sky is not the limit. Rather, the sky is the launchpad of your life. Doing your best is not good enough. I know this may not sound like a recipe for an easy and comfortable life, but it is my expression of great hope. And it comes from my belief that people do not just have stomachs, but they also have wings with which to fly.

I would want for my students to take upon themselves what may seem like an undefined resolution, yet it is, nonetheless, very concrete. I would call this resolution: one step forward. Wherever you are in your life journeys, please, I ask you, take one step forward.

The power of now

A few years ago, I asked Rav Adin, which of his 80+ books was his favorite one. His answer baffled me, and it taught me volumes on how to appreciate the now.

It is the book I am working on right now, he mentioned.

Similarly, Rav Adin once lamented the mindset of many in our generation who focus so much on the future that they forget to live the present.

We devote so much time to the 'before' and 'after' [stages of life] that we no longer have time to experience the thing itself. When we are in the before stage, we think about what will be; in the after stage, we think about how things were. Either way, there is nothing to make us hold on to the present But the focal point of our thinking is not life for the sake of the morrow but rather life today. What matters now is what is now.

The best way to face challenges

Ill never forget that moment.

It was a late afternoon in 2001. I was visiting a Jerusalem hospital when I suddenly bumped into Rav Adin in the hospitals elevator.

Good afternoon, Rav Adin! I greeted him. What are you doing here?

Im going to study the Talmud, he replied with a playful smile.

To study the Talmud? In this hospital? Are there no better places to study? I retorted.

His wise response still reverberates in my mind: Well, the doctors here have to connect me to a dialysis machine for a few hours, and in the meantime, Ill study the Talmud.

At that moment I had learned that my beloved mentor suffered from a genetic condition named gaucher from a very young age, which required him to be connected to a dialysis machine each and every month, for approximately three hours. But what stunned me most is not the fact that he never shared this with me and his close students. Rather, it was the idea that Rav Adin never saw this monthly medical treatment as a challenge. For this giant of man, it was an opportunity to study the Talmud for three hours, without interruption. And even as his disease threatened to limit him, he felt free and limitless.

His approach taught me an invaluable lesson for life: We all face challenges, big or small. We all suffer from diseases, physical or mental. We all endure pain, temporary or permanent. But it is the way we choose to address them that makes all the difference.

Dont just say thank you, do thank you

I recall how my beloved mentor, who despised flowery words and superficial shows, once told me that the world would be a much more beautiful place if people would do thank you, instead of just saying thank you.

When I asked him what he meant, he replied:

Say you just gave a poor man some money. Now, if he is polite, he will probably say 'thank you.' But, imagine if this poor man would learn from you and, in return for your act of kindness, he would also do a good deed. Wouldnt that help our world much more than his words of gratitude?

The power of a smile

Rav Adin once shared with me that when he was a young 7-year-old boy, he found himself in an overloaded bus, surrounded by a group of beautiful girls, who were just a few years older than him.

His words were so sweet:

As I was observing them as a phenomenon of nature, one of these girls turned to me and gave me a big smile. I had never seen such a beautiful smile. I remember thinking to myself that it felt like I was walking in a dark street, when, all of a sudden, a ray of dazzling sunshine came out.

"I dont think that this girl and I ever saw each other again. But I will never forget her smile. And I will never forget how this beautiful girl came out of her circle, to brighten a little boys day with the unique gift of a smile that G-d had blessed her with.

"Sometimes, thats all it takes to fulfill our purpose: to smile at someone else, with our own unique smiles. Try it. You wont regret it.

How to achieve lasting happiness

In 2014, I had the privilege of escorting Rav Adin to a JLI conference in Chicago. There, he was asked about his view on achieving happiness. His words of truth still reverberate in my mind:

There are so many people all over the world that are searching for happiness, but they dont really know what they want because they cant define happiness.

"But we forget that happiness is a form of self-fulfillment. When a person does what he has to do, what he should do not necessarily what he wants to do, because what I want to do is, possibly, to sit and do nothing then he has a sense of fulfillment, and that engenders happiness. And to achieve fulfillment, I have to be in agreement and fully in tune with my unique purpose and with what I am supposed to do sometimes as a husband or a parent, or a workerwhatever that may be.

"So, if we wish to be happy, we first ought to be listening to that small, thin voice inside of each of us, which tells us what we are uniquely supposed to do. JN

Rabbi Pinchas Allouche is the spiritual leader of Congregation Beth Tefillah.

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One year later: 10 life lessons from my beloved mentor, Rav Adin - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Barnardo’s investigating teacher over social media posts about Israel and Jews – Jewish News

Posted By on July 30, 2021

Barnardos has investigated one of its teachers after Jewish News discovered social media posts apparently written by her, which claimed Israel has world governments in their pockets, controlled the media and massacres thousands.

Rubina Halim, a Yorkshire-based staffer with the leading childrens charity wrote on Linkedin this month: Israel is not looking at taking over Palestine. There is far more to it than that!

In an inflammatory message, Halim continued: Think about their spyware how they can hack anyone anywhere. Think about how they have governments around the world in their pockets why else are they able to massacre thousands of people?

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Think about how the media is controlled and manipulated how readily are unfavourable posts are (sic) taken down and the news prevented from being reported?

Halims post with a dollar bill in the shape of a star of David

In a further call for action, Halim wrote in the post made this month: Will we wake up in time to do something about it or will we keep our heads buried in the sand until its too late?

After we alerted Barnardos to its employees posts a spokesperson confirmed the charity had taken firm action against Halim pending a full and thorough investigation.

Halim herself told Jewish News last night: I am not antisemitic and truly do not recognise how my post could be described as antisemitic.

My sincerest apologies if my post has offended you in any way.

She did not respond after it was pointed out her claims about Israel having governments in their pockets and the allegation that the Jewish state controlled and manipulated the media could be interpreted as classic tropes.

A further scan of Halims page on Linkedin, generally renowned as a business networking page, revealed further disturbing posts from the last two months. The Barnados teacher had shared an article published by Middle East Monitor which concluded in an investigation that 33 per cent of UK cabinet members are funded by pro-Israel groups.

Her post about Israel manipulating and controlling the world.

Halim posted a comment saying: Are you surprised that the UK government have been bought by Israel.

She also shares an analysis of the Talmud, put up on LinkedIn. It suggests the Talmud became the view of life of Jews in general.

The post, under the name of Mohammad Sadat Ali, continues: Thats also why the Jewish state of Israel is referred to as a racist, chauvinistic, theocratic, conservative and highly dogmatic state. Above the post Halim writes: Need to read this!

Post accusing Israel of being a racist, chauvinistic, theocratic, conservative and highly dogmatic state

Elsewhere, Halim shares an infamous map of America with the headline Relocate Israel Into United States and writes herself: The perfect solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict. This was the same graphic shared by Labour MP Naz Shah, which led to her suspension from the Labour Party.

Danny Stone, director of the Antisemitism Policy Trust, said: Over the past few months weve seen a rise in antisemitism specifically in educational settings.

Her post saying Israel should be moved to the United States

As ever teachers have a vital role to play in educating against this and other forms of racism, not just in the classroom but through personal example outside it too. Anyone failing to meet these standards should be reprimanded appropriately.

Founded by Thomas John Barnardo, who was born into a Sephardic Jewish family in Dublin in 1866, Barnardos is the UKs largest childrens charity in terms of expenditure spending at least 200 million annually running around 900 local services to help vulnerable children. At its headquarters in Barkingside, east London it employs around 450 staff.

Posts shared by Rubina Halim accusing Israel of genocide and comparing Israel to the Nazis

In a statement Barnardos said: We are deeply concerned to learn of this LinkedIn post which has been brought to our attention by Jewish News.

We would like to assure the public that these are strictly the personal views of the staff member and do not represent the views of Barnardos.

Barnardos does not tolerate any kind of racism, including antisemitism and all our staff and volunteers are required to adhere to strict codes of conduct and policies on equality and diversity.

The individual has been instructed to remove the offending content immediately and firm action has been taken pending a full and thorough investigation.

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Barnardo's investigating teacher over social media posts about Israel and Jews - Jewish News

Hearing words that can define all of His praises – The Jewish Star

Posted By on July 30, 2021

By Rabbi David Etengoff

Our parasha, Eikev, contains a phrase, familiar to many, that is found in the first blessing of the Shemoneh Esrei: He is the great (hagadol), mighty (hagibor) and awesome (vhanorah) G-d. If this is acceptable, one might think it is permissible to add other descriptions of the Almighty during the recitation of the Shemoneh Esrei.

This approach was undertaken by an anonymous shaliach tzibbur who, to his surprise, was strongly criticized by Rabbi Chanina bar Chama, as recounted in Talmud Bavli, Berachot 33b: A certain [reader] went down in the presence of Rabbi Chanina and said, G-d, the great, mighty, awesome, powerful, mighty, awe-inspiring, strong, fearless, steadfast and honored. When he completed [his prayer] he said to him, Have you concluded all the praise of your Master? Why do we want all this?

Rabbi Chanina summarily rejected the shaliach tzibburs personal additions, asking him the rhetorical question, Have you concluded all the praise of your Master? Why do we want all this?

Moreover, in the continuation of our Talmudic passage, Rabbi Chanina further teaches that even the three praises would not have been included in the Shemoneh Esrei by the Anshei Kenneset HaGadolah had not Moshe Rabbeinu mentioned them in the Torah.

The Rambam codified this position of the Gemara: A person should not be profuse in his mention of adjectives describing G-d, and say: The great, mighty, awesome, powerful, courageous, and strong G-d, for it is impossible for man to express the totality of His praises. Instead, one should mention [only] the praises that were mentioned by Moshe, of blessed memory.

The Rambams reasoning as to why one is proscribed from adding new descriptions of Hashem in the Shemoneh Esrei is clear: For it is impossible for man to express the totality of His praises. Quite simply, finite man is incapable of properly depicting the majesty and greatness of the Almighty. Therefore, our praises must be limited to the Torahs own words, no matter how language-adept we may be.

Both Rabbi Chaninas position and the Rambams halachic conclusion were anticipated by Dovid HaMelech in Tehillim 106:2: Who can speak of the mighty deeds of the L-rd? [Who] can make heard all His praise? As Rabbeinu Ibn Ezra explains in his commentary on Sefer Tehillim: [Dovid HaMelech] provides us with the rationale as to why we laud Hashem, even though no one has the ability to [accurately] praise His mighty deeds and make known His true degree of greatness, but rather, only a portion thereof.

Closer to our own time, the Malbims gloss on this verse echoes this interpretation by emphasizing our inability to apprehend Hashems essence and the magnitude of His grandeur: This means we praise Hashem because He is wholly good and His kindness is forever, and not He, Himself [as His essence eludes us], since it is impossible to speak of His mighty deeds mtzad atzmam (as they are in reality).

With Hashems endless beneficience, may we be zocheh to grow ever closer to Him. May we realize His goodnesss and recognize that His kindness endures, forevermore. Vchane yihi ratzon.

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Hearing words that can define all of His praises - The Jewish Star

Who is the Stranger Here? Reading Torah through a Decolonized Lens Jewschool – Jewschool

Posted By on July 30, 2021

by Brant Rosen

This weeks Torah portion, Parashat Ekev, contains the well-known commandment:

You must love the stranger because you were strangers in the land of Egypt. (Deuteronomy 10:19)

While its often characterized as the most repeated commandment in the Torah occurring a total of 36 times, thats actually a bit of hyperbole it actually appears only six times.[1] The number 36 seems to have originated from a passage in the Talmud [2] but in the end, Id suggest that the accuracy of this claim is really irrelevant. For liberal American Jews in particular, this commandment looms large for because its a powerful statement of collective empathy. The Jewish people, who have historically lived as strangers in strange lands, are as such commanded to love and protect all who know the experience of the stranger.

The Hebrew word for stranger, is ger a legal term in the Bible for resident non-citizen.[3] Throughout the laws of the Torah, there is a clear concern expressed for the legal status of gerim, who are often included in the ritual life of ancient Israel. In the commandment to keep the Shabbat, for instance, the ger within your settlements is included in the list of those who must cease from work.[4] God also adjures Israelites repeatedly that there must be one law that governs the ger as well as the Israelites.[5]

Given the Torahs tolerant attitude toward the stranger, this commandment is popularly invoked by Jewish communal leaders, particularly in reference to the issues of immigrant justice and refugee rights. This statement from the Religious Action Center for Reform Judaism is a classic example, using the commandment to highlight the classic American dream of immigrant opportunity.

Our own peoples history as strangers reminds us of the many struggles faced by immigrants today, and we affirm our commitment to create the same opportunities for todays immigrants that were so valuable to our own community not so many years ago.

Upon deeper examination, however, this use of the commandment to love the stranger is not as powerfully straightforward as it may first appear. This commandment like all commandments in the Torah is directed toward the Israelites as they prepare to assume a position of power. Even more critically, their position of power will be attained by means of conquest.

In fact, this weeks Torah portion the very same one that contains this famously empathic commandment also contains a divine command to the Israelites to brutally dispossess and destroy the peoples of Canaan:

You shall destroy the peoples that the Lord your God delivers to you, showing them no pityThe Lord your God will deliver them up to you, throwing them into utter panic, until they are wiped out. He will deliver their kings into your hand, and you shall obliterate their name from under the heavens; no man shall stand up to you, until you have wiped them out. (Deuteronomy 7:16, 22-24)

In this context, we would thus do well to ask ourselves, what does it mean for Jews particularly white Jews to invoke this Biblical verse as we dwell on land stolen by a settler colonial power from its indigenous population? Or to put it another way, before intoning the commandment to love the stranger, we might first ask ourselves, who is the real stranger here?

Indeed, we cannot deny the fact the Biblical conquest tradition has historically been used and continues to be used to justify colonial dispossession, turning indigenous peoples into strangers in their lands. In other words, the definition of who is a citizen and who is a stranger is and has always been determined by those who wield the power.

Where does this leave us, then? Is it even possible for Jews who cherish Biblical tradition to read the Torah through a decolonial lens?

I believe it is. I would suggest that the first step is to ask questions precisely such as these. To avoid the temptation to ignore or wish away these kinds of texts; to actively challenge and interrupt Biblical conquest tradition head on. For these is no getting around it: the Exodus story is not only about a people liberated by God from slavery it is also about a people commanded by God to conquer and annihilate the Canaanites before occupying the land they inhabit.

Reading the Torah through a decolonial lens also means coaxing out and amplifying the voices of the strangers in the text the disenfranchised and colonized who are might otherwise be voiceless to us. In this regard, Ive learned a great deal from the pedagogy of commentators from outside Jewish tradition. One such teacher is the Indigenous Studies scholar Robert Warrior, who has written powerfully about the Biblical conquest tradition in his essay, Canaanites, Cowboys and Indians:

The obvious characters in the story for Native Americans to identify with are the Canaanites, the people who already lived in the promised land. As a member of the Osage Nation of American Indians who stands in solidarity with other tribal people around the world, I read the Exodus stories with Canaanites eyes.

I find another important teacher in the work of black womanist theologian Delores S. Williams, whose book Sisters in the Wilderness lifts up the voice of the Biblical character Hagar as a role model for African-American women:

Hagars heritage was African as was black womens. Hagar was a slave. Black women had emerged from a slave heritage and still lived in light of it. Hagar was brutalized by her slave owner, the Hebrew woman Sarah. The slave narratives of African-American women and some of the narratives of contemporary day-workers tell of the brutal or the cruel treatment black women have received from the wives of slave masters and from contemporary white female employers.[6]

I realize that interpretations such as these are undeniably challenging for Jews who read the text literally, identifying Jewish experience exclusively with the experience of the Israelites. It is even more challenging for white Jews who benefit from power and privilege to reckon with the ways we are complicit in the European Christian legacy of colonization a legacy that continues to do harm even now.

I would suggest that the commandment to love the stranger can never be truly honored if it comes from a position of power or noblesse oblige. It can only be honored when those in power step back and amplify the voices of strangers so that they may assume a rightful place of prominence in the narrative. In so doing, we may yet come to see that the decolonization of the text is in fact inseparable from the decolonization of the world in which we live.

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Who is the Stranger Here? Reading Torah through a Decolonized Lens Jewschool - Jewschool

A Jewish Library’s Treasure Surfaced at Auction. How Did it Get There? – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on July 30, 2021

The Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City, photographed on Oct. 17, 1934, is superimposed with an image of a page from a manuscript of a Tiberias rabbi who traveled to Europe on a fundraising mission in 1807. (MCNY/Gottscho-Schleisner/Getty Images)

By Asaf Shalev

When an auction house recently unveiled a newcatalogof rare Jewish books and manuscripts, Rabbi Elli Fischer was among the many who rushed to examine the goods.

An Israeli-American university researcher, Fischer was particularly intrigued by an old handwritten journal opening bid: $100,000.

The journal, known as a ledger, or pinkas, belonged to a rabbi from the holy city of Tiberias who had toured Jewish Europe some 200 years ago to raise money for his community. Fischer was fascinated to read the names of towns and rabbis visited on the tour. He even spotted the signature of one of his own ancestors, a German rabbi.

As Fischer looked through the digitized images of the ledger, he noticed a number stamped at the bottom of one page. The stamp, showing a faded 13723, told Fischer that this manuscript, now being sold by an anonymous owner on the private market, had once been part of a collection, probably at a public institution.

Theres something really curious, perhaps even suspicious, about one of the most remarkable items on auction, Fischer would later write in a series of tweets.

Fischer turned on his detectives brain, and what he would discover would soon scandalize the world of Judaica experts, help expose a controversial practice by a flagship institution of Jewish learning and raise questions about the commitment of the Jewish community to preserving its own history.

All he had now, however, was a serial number. Fischer decided to type the number into the search bar of the catalog for the National Library of Israel he got a hit. A description matching that of the auction noted that the manuscript was available in microfilm and digital formats on the library website.

But the item did not belong to the National Library, nor had it ever. Instead, the manuscript was described as part of the world-renowned collection of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York.

You read this right: A unique and valuable manuscript that was part of the [JTS librarys] magnificent collection is now on the auction block, Fischer would later tweet. How did it get there?

The manuscript page on the right, with a serial number stamped near the bottom, was featured in the online catalog of the Genazym auction house. It matches the manuscript page on the left found in the collection of digitized manuscripts maintained by the National Library of Israel. (Genazym and Jewish Theological Seminary)

Fischer also noted that a search for the item in the librarys own catalog yielded no results, only another question: Had someone removed the entry from the catalog?

One possibility was that the manuscript had been stolen from the seminary at some point and was now resurfacing. The other possibility even more worrying to some was that the seminary was quietly selling the manuscript and perhaps other precious items from its celebrated collection.

The library had sold off items in the past, doing so openly. The items were either duplicates and therefore less valuable, or works printed in Latin, a language that many other institutions better specialize in.

This manuscript was a distinctly Jewish and Hebrew text, and since it was handwritten, by definition it was unique.

As word of Fischers findings spread, librarians at JTS and elsewhere grew alarmed, according to interviews with about a dozen people, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity.

With the library shut down since 2016 for a campus redevelopment project and the books sitting in a warehouse, rumors had been circulating. Many suspected the library used the cover of renovations to make the controversial move of selling collectibles.

Fischer had delivered a smoking gun, as several Jewish book experts described his discovery that an item had been removed from the library. One person called it a catastrophe. Another expert said the sale of the manuscript was as if Hadassah had removed the Chagall windows from its hospital in Jerusalem. The subsequent removal from the catalog was as if Hadassah had been asked about the windows and responded, Windows? What windows?

Rabbi Elli Fischers discoveryhelped expose a controversial practice by a flagship institution of Jewish learning.(Kinneret Rifkind)

Located in Upper Manhattan near Columbia University, the Jewish Theological Seminary is the academic and spiritual heart of Conservative Judaism. Its library is arguably the most important repository of Jewish knowledge in the world, featuring some of the very first books printed in Hebrew, a letter written by Maimonides about 800 years ago, and thousands of other rare and unique texts.

A tension between the institutions mission of ordaining rabbis for Conservative congregations and its expensive archival responsibilities have existed for more than a hundred years, going back to the moment when rich New York Jews envisioned a Hebrew book museum at the seminary to rival the collections of imperial Britain.

We should hold in view the purpose to make our collection as nearly complete as the resources of the world may render possible, and in so doing, we should spare neither thought nor labor nor money, said Mayer Sulzberger at the dedication of a new building for the seminary in 1903.

Sulzberger and the rest of the eras mostly German Jewish donor class made good on that promise. Alexander Marx was tapped to head the library in 1903, and he embarked on a buying spree that lasted for decades.

Marx was the bibliographical equivalent of a kid in a candy shop, said David Selis, a historian studying the library. He would buy anything that has any relationship to Jews in any language.

But as it turned out, money for a museum of the Hebrew book did not remain as readily available in the 21st century.

In 2015, the seminary signed real estate deals that saw the library building demolished and replaced with a luxury residential tower. The proceeds, some $96 million, boosted the institutions endowment and paid for a campus redevelopment project featuring a new library with a much smaller footprint, as well as a new dorm and auditorium.

After having been closed for construction for years, the library is set to reopen in the coming months, COVID permitting, with only a fraction of the books available on site. The rest can be called up from a distant warehouse.

In the world of Jewish books,the real estate deal was widely understoodas a divestment by JTS from book custodianship in favor of its mandate to train rabbis. But most have refrained from saying so publicly, according to interviews, because they do not want to be seen as disparaging or undermining an institution that remains essential for serious scholarship about Judaism.

While the seminary was tapping its real estate for cash, it also decided to cultivate another revenue stream.

As many had suspected, and seminary officials confirmed to JTA, the library had quietly sold off rare items from its library.

The ledger of the rabbi from Tiberias went to a private collector in 2017 and eventually wound up on the auction block, served up by a Jerusalem-based firm called Genazym. The auction takes place on Wednesday.

The sale of this piece was deemed to be of minimum impact to the collection and financially prudent for the institution, JTS spokesperson Beth Mayerowitz said in an email to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency providing the first public confirmation of such a sale.

In an interview, the seminarys chief librarian, David Kraemer, described the instructions he had received from his superiors: The administration and the board of the seminary wanted him to sell items of his choosing in order to raise a specified amount of money. Kraemer did not disclose the dollar figure.

I asked, What in my collection would raise that amount without harming the core mission of the institution? Kraemer said, recalling a conversation with a few in-house experts whom he declined to name. It had to be an item we had digitized and that we deemed relatively low research value.

Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, left, of Israel views rare books and scriptures under glass in a case at the library in the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, 1960. (Getty Images)

The task facing Kraemer was not as unusual as it might seem. Libraries and museums periodically sell items, a practice known as deaccessioning, often to raise money for the purchase of other items but sometimes under financial duress.

Because the library at JTS was founded on almost indiscriminate buying, it had come to possess multiple copies of many books, even remarkably rare ones published at the dawn of printing.

In fact, the library had once held an extra copy of the first printed Hebrew book to be illustrated, Meshal ha-Kadmoni, or Fable of the Ancients, by Isaac ben Solomon Abi Sahula, printed in 1491 in Italy.

In 1986, the book was sold as part of an auction through Christies, fetching the highest price ever paid for a printed book in Hebrew at the time. The library sold 95 items in that round and raised a total of $700,000.

In the decades since, the library has gained a reputation for sometimes undervaluing its possessions. In 1998, for example, a copy of the first printed edition of the Torah in Hebrew that the library deaccessioned in a $50,000 deal quickly went on to sell for $310,000 at an auction.

By 2015, when JTS wasreportedlyamid a financial crisisgoing back years, the seminary again mined its library and set up an auction, this time through Sothebys. But now the library wasnt offloading duplicates.

JTS put up a series of works in Latin that are so old that they are not called books but incunabula, a designation for items printed before 1501. The sale included a 1455 edition of the Book of Esther from a Gutenberg Bible it had been among the items showcased for donors on private tours of the library. The eight pages,handsomely rubricated in red and blue,sold for nearly $1 million, far beating expectations.

Kraemer explained that books in Latin are outside of the librarys core mission and scholars rarely come asking for them. The money collected went to a fund to buy more relevant rare books, he added.

An academic library like that of JTS has the legal right to sell anything it owns for any reason without publicizing it. In practice, libraries turn to deaccession only when they are facing budget shortfalls or have an opportunity to trade up, and they tend to publicly announce they are doing so. There are different views on whats appropriate, but even those who frown upon particular deaccession decisions can accept the overall practice.

It was the lack of transparency around the sale of the manuscript that especially riled Judaica librarians and consultants, many of whom wondered what other items might have slipped away unnoticed.

Indeed, other such private sales have taken place in recent years, according to seminary officials.

The sale of Pinkas Shadar of Israel Hayyim Raphael Segre (1807-1809) and several other items took place in a private sale in 2017 and was one of a few sales that occurred since 2015, Mayerowitz said.

Among the items that went, she added, were several volumes of the Bomberg Talmud printed on blue paper and a copy of the Prague Haggadah on parchment.

Those of us who are book people in our blood, we see this and we get pissed off, a former library employee said. These books dont belong in a private collection. If JTS had been transparent I could almost understand. But they are selling books out the back door. The seminary is using the library as a cash cow.

Kraemer rejects the idea that the sale and subsequent removal from the online catalog were inappropriate.

The sale wasnt announced because it was a private transaction, he said. People will interpret it how they will interpret it.

Part of the reason why its hard to evaluate whether the seminary acted properly is that it doesnt have a set policy on deaccession. The library at nearby Columbia University has a blanket policy against it, as does Yeshiva University, another Jewish institution of higher learning with a substantial albeit lesser Judaica collection.

Absent laws and mutually agreed-upon rules, each institution sets its own policy. Thats different from the related field of museums. The powerful Association of Art Museum Directorslists guidelines against deaccession, which were temporarily relaxed at the start of the coronavirus pandemicbecause of an anticipated budgetary shortfall.

Some librarians would like to see a change in their field.

There arent norms and guidelines around deaccession, and thats a problem, said Michelle Margolis, the incoming president of the Association for Jewish Libraries.

Margolis, a librarian at Columbia, said shes part of a group thats working on a solution. Common ethics would make it easier to tell apart bad actors and suss out theft.

For all their desire to obtain whats in the public domain, thieves, as much as private collectors, need institutions to exist and thrive. By warehousing precious books, libraries create scarcity on the market, allowing the few items that do circulate to fetch high prices.

Kraemer said he knows of no plans to sell more rare books, and the seminary says it is financially healthy. Like many institutions dependent on donations, the seminary was making emergency cuts at the start of the pandemic. But 2020 turned out to be one of its best years for fundraising in the past decade, according to Mayerowitz, the JTS spokesperson.

A strong fundraising year would appear to come on the heels of years of consistent growth for the seminarys endowment. Tax audits disclosed through the IRS show an increase every year for which data is available, going from $113 million in 2015 to $142 million in 2019.

Mayerowitz also said that the seminarys strong position is evident in its redeveloped campus with a performance space, residence hall and library, which she called an investment in the future of not only JTS, but the entire Jewish community.

A reminder of the cost of that investment presents itself against a slice of sky above the seminary. Where stacks of books once took up space, there are now 33 floors of luxury apartments the towering Vandewater building is one of the tallest Manhattan buildings north of Central Park.

The bulk of the librarys books will now forever be stored in a remote warehouse, with any item available for recall within one business day. Thats common practice for research libraries, Kraemer noted, adding that the most commonly requested books as well as the entire special collection rare books and manuscripts will be housed on campus.

He said the decision to downsize the real estate and sell certain items was about being prudent and not a retreat from the 120-year-old promise to make the library the best of its kind in the world.

The library will never fail, Kraemer said. Its so valuable that it will always find supporters. I am very optimistic about the future.

Against the optimism projected by seminary leaders are two long-standing countertrends in American Jewish life.

Judaisms Conservative denomination, which counts the seminary as one of its essential institutions, was the largest Jewish denomination in the 1950s and 60s. It is no longer and is shrinking still. In 1990, the percentage of American Jews affiliated with the Conservative movement was estimated at 38%. A study from earlier this year pegged the number at 17%.

Meanwhile, Jewish librarians and historians of Jewish libraries speak with reverence and affection of benefactors past. They name-drop library donors who died early in the last century, such as Judge Sulzberger, Jacob Schiff and Felix Warburg. Nostalgia abounds for an era when philanthropists rich secular and liberal Jews were committed to preserving Jewish cultural memory as a service to the Jewish people.

There just isnt money for Jewish culture like there used to be, said Selis, the historian of Jewish libraries. A generation has passed. The culture has shifted in American Judaism.

That a rabbis 200-year-old travelogue could fetch $200,000 at auction suggests demand for Jewish artifacts has not exactly dissipated as much as shifted somewhat. The marketing materials for the manuscript, published by the Jerusalem auction house Genzaym, speak to the change.

A map of the journey of Israel Hayyim Raphael Segre in Europe in 1807-1809 (Getty Images)

After a nod to the ledgers historical value like documentation of the eras communal fundraising system the marketing message focuses on the priceless and exceedingly rare collection of autographs of great rabbis visited on the tour of Europe. These rabbis, who signed the ledger to certify their donations, are named, described and, in some cases, illustrated in the auctions catalog.

With its signatures, the ledger belongs to a class of books that have seen demand skyrocket, according to bookseller Israel Mizrahi of Brooklyn.

The market for books with provenance of important rabbinical figures, as well as anything signed or autographed by such figures, has exploded in recent years, with prices more than doubling every decade in the last few decades, Mizrahi said.

The increased competition for such titles is being driven by the growing upper class of Orthodox Jews, who see them as an investment but also as something else.

In the Orthodox Jewish world, many of the status-symbol purchases common in the secular world would be frowned upon, but items of religious significance are viewed in a positive light, Mizrahi said. There is widespread belief that owning something that was used or written by a righteous person will bring good will to its owner.

Its perhaps too early to tell what the rising influence of Orthodox collectors will mean for the ideal of public scholarship and communal memory in the digital era. Will more items disappear into the thicket of private vaults without notice, or will the archives persevere and somehow find new patrons?

If Orthodox Jewish researchers like Fischer have their way, the spirit of collective heritage will win.

These are treasures of the Jewish people, not of individuals, Fischer said. Its important people have access to them.

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A Jewish Library's Treasure Surfaced at Auction. How Did it Get There? - Jewish Exponent

These Jewish Athletes Have Won Medals at the Tokyo Olympics – The Jewish News

Posted By on July 30, 2021

(JTA) The Jewish highlights of the Tokyo Olympics kicked off with Jewish basketball superstar Sue Bird serving as one of Team USAs two flag bearers at the opening ceremony, a huge honor.

The lasting accolades, though, are the medals that winning athletes take home. Dozens of Jewish athletes are competing in the Games this year, but the fierce competition means that only some will enter the record books as gold, silver or bronze medalists.

Here are the Jewish athletes who have clinched a medal, in chronological order. Well continue to update this list until the last day of competition, Aug. 8.

Semberg, 19, was third in the womens under-49 kg category, giving Israel its first medal of the Tokyo Olympics and its first ever in the sport.

I said to myself, I want this medal more than she does, and I did it I have an Olympic medal at 19, its a dream come true, Semberg said following her win.

Because of the pandemic, Semberg did not stay in Tokyo long afterward, and she was greeted at Ben Gurion Airport with a festive reception and big celebration.

Fox, considered by many to be the greatest paddler of all time, was the only athlete to medal in both canoe slalom and kayak slalom. She finished a disappointing third in the kayak race, but rallied for the gold in the historic canoe event it was the first time that womens canoe slalom has been contested at the Olympics.

Fox had previously won two Olympic medals: silver in 2012 and bronze in 2016. Her mom, Jewish Olympian Myriam Jerusalmi, won bronze at the 1996 Olympics in kayak slalom. Jerusalmi now coaches her daughter.

Akhaimova, who is competing in her first Olympics, earned the top score on vault during the womens gymnastics team finals, helping propel the Russian Olympic Committee, aka Team Russia, to the gold medal.

Akhaimova will compete in the womens individual vault competition later in the Games.

By Emily Burack

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These Jewish Athletes Have Won Medals at the Tokyo Olympics - The Jewish News


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