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Zionism and Judaism: Are they interdependent? – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 5, 2021

Although some people such as those in the Reform and Reconstruction movements, Progressives, and some left-wing Israelis claim to support Judaism and Zionism, in fact, they do not. For example, on May 15, 2021, a large group of students, mostly from Reform and Reconstructionist colleges, published a letter condemning Israel for apartheid and for violating human rights in its war against Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip. This explains why some Jews in America have turned their backs on Zionism, Israel and Judaism.

Zionism is connected to Judaism because it provides a text, the Jewish Bible, or Tanach (The Five Books of Moses, Prophets, and other writings), as well as libraries of theological and philosophical writing that define and mandate the Land of Israel as the homeland of the Jewish people.

Judaism needs Zionism because it enabled Jews to return and to establish a state; this allows Jews to have a national identity and engage in fulfilling mitzvot (commandments) that can only be done in Eretz Yisrael. This is the basis for creating the Third Jewish Commonwealth/Civilization.

Although they need each other to become fulfilled, Zionism and Judaism can and do exist separately and independently in the Diaspora. One can practice Judaism without being a Zionist, just as one can be secular or a non-Jewish Zionist.

Without Judaism, however, Zionism is limited to its existence as a state; without Zionism, Judaism is a religion like many others in nation-states throughout the world. Although valid and important identity markers, they miss two essential ingredients: revelation and redemption. This is what defines the difference between galut (exile) and geulah (salvation) the parameters of Jewish historical consciousness.

Although the concept of God is central to Judaism, the interaction with human input is essential. This dynamic is in the everyday life of a Jew: prayer, Shabbat, celebrating the New Moon and holidays, especially Shavuot, which has no specific date and is totally dependent on human calculation.

Judaism and Zionism are not only rooted in commitment and continuity, they are also expressions of human creativity.

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Concerned with human rights and injustices to Palestinians, they support anti-Israeli and antisemitic organizations such as the Jewish Voice for Peace, J Street, Human Rights Watch, and BTselem, oblivious to the dangers of a Palestinian state and Palestinianism that call for Israels destruction.

The vital link between Judaism and Zionism, therefore, represents the essence of the Jewish people. That is what is at stake.

The author is a PhD historian and journalist in Israel.

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Zionism and Judaism: Are they interdependent? - The Jerusalem Post

Unchain your wife: the Orthodox women shining a light on get refusal – The Guardian

Posted By on June 5, 2021

On Route 59 in Monsey, New York, an Orthodox Jewish enclave in upstate New York, there is a large billboard that says in big block letters: Dovid Wasserman. Give your wife a get!

A get is a document Orthodox Jewish men give their wives as the couple is divorcing; it seals the divorce according to religious law, meaning that the husband decides if and when the divorce is final. Without it, the woman cannot move on with her life.

The billboard is meant to embarrass Dovid Wasserman, who for more than seven years has refused to give his wife, Nechama Wasserman, this document. If she doesnt receive it, she is considered an agunah, a chained woman, because she remains chained to her former marriage.

Shes now trying a new tactic: public humiliation.

Aside from the billboard, two rallies have been held on her behalf, one in March in front of the home of Dovid Wassermans mother, Rivka, where Dovid is now living, and another in April in front of the private girls school in Airmont, at which she teaches.

In a 2019 interview with the podcast Halacha Headlines, Nechama Wasserman said: Its mind-boggling, and its hard for people to understand. Hes not asking for anything. Hes not asking for money. Hes not saying that Im taking his money. He simply wants me to come back. Thats what he tells people. That its all a mistake and Im going to come back.

About 10% of US Jews identify as Orthodox, and their divorce rate is only about 10%. While divorce is not considered a sin, it is socially frowned upon. Some would even call it a tragedy, particularly because in Judaism the home is the center of life.

The Talmud states that when a couple divorces, the altar that was in the Temple in Jerusalem, cries for them, said Rabbi Meir Goldberg of the Meor Rutgers Jewish Xperience, a Jewish educational organization at Rutgers University.

Nechamas saga is not the only one being publicly aired. In the last two months, nearly a dozen Orthodox women have taken their cases public by using the online version of a billboard: social media.

Women in this community are posting about the plights of various agunot and their recalcitrant husbands on Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and on Jewish media websites, to shine a light on these so-called get-refusers. The hope is that if the husbands arent sensitive to public pressure, maybe their families will be.

In the beginning, the siblings may think, ah, my brothers crazy, or Im not getting involved, or its too political. But all of a sudden, when their names are publicized everywhere, and its not just their brother but about them, things get a lot more intense, said a woman involved in the publicity campaign who preferred anonymity because she feared speaking out publicly might jeopardize Wassermans get.

The movement, as some are calling it, began last March when Dalia Oziel, an Instagram influencer and singer in the Orthodox community, began posting about a woman called Chava Herman Sharabani, who married her husband, Naftali Eyal Sharabani in 2006, but they divorced in 2010 in civil court. Since then, he has refused to give her a get and will not appear before a beth din, or Jewish court.

Using the hashtag Free Chava, Oziel posted a video montage of Chava and her two daughters, now 12 and 14, as theyve grown up, underscoring how much time has passed that Chava has been waiting to be released from her marriage.

The posts were shared by some of Oziels 34,500 followers as well as other Instagram influencers, pinging on computers from Monsey down to Boca Raton, Florida, and as far west as Los Angeles.

Oziel also helped Chava Sharabani, a third-grade teacher, launch a GoFundMe-type campaign called the Chesed fund with the hope of raising $40,000. At last count, they had raised $86,766.

There are people who work within this space who are saying theyre seeing a trend among men who would otherwise be the perfect villains for get withholding, and that theyre scared because they know that right now, theres such an intolerance for it, said Adina Miles-Sash, known on Instagram as Flatbush Girl. They dont want to be the next face all over social media.

Miles-Sash has been using her 52,300 followers on Instagram to plead Nechama Wassermans case, as well as the plight of a handful of other women.

She likened this moment to a meteor hitting the earth. While Miles-Sash has championed feminist causes for years, most of the other influencers now involved in this campaign have not. In fact, they typically toe the Orthodox female line. One uses Instagram to sell lipsticks that stay for the entirety of shabbat. Another sells wigs. A third sells cozy blankets. But when they decided to come forward on this issue, they made sure their husbands and rabbis approved of everything they said, and they didnt make statements they couldnt support. That has lent legitimacy and credibility to the movement, Miles-Sash said.

They offered an angle: that you can be observant, and you can be maternal and nurturing and a mother, and your domain could be the home and maybe a job, but that you can also stand alongside other women and advocate for their rights, she said.

This measured approach spawned a large grassroots campaign among women who would otherwise be hesitant to get involved, said Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt, a journalist in Manhattan who is a member of the Orthodox Jewish community.

Thats one of the main factors that has shifted, Goldschmidt said. These women arent known for taking on the rabbinate. Theyre not known for taking on political issues. Theyre known for posting pictures of the dinners they make or the cute hats theyre wearing, and suddenly theyre going into this. Thats the shift.

Theres no shortage of agunot causes to take on. Keshet Starr, executive director for the Organization for the Resolution of Agunot (ORA), says at any one time she has about 75 cases. While women can also hold up a divorce by refusing to accept a get thats given to them, 95% of ORAs cases involve men withholding them.

Withholding the get is a way for a husband to maintain control. It is a way of manipulating Jewish law in order to retain power and control over your partner, Starr said. In the vast majority of the cases we work on, there is a prior history of pretty extensive domestic abuse. This is rarely the first abusive thing theyve done.

When people first hear about this issue, they think, well why doesnt the woman just walk away? Starr adds. After all, if shes already divorced in secular court, theres nothing stopping her from legally remarrying.

But leaving a religious community is a bigger deal than people think: its giving up your entire way of looking at the world, your systems of meaning, your social and professional networks, your family relationships. Its an enormous cost. For someone to be faced with the options of either having this untenable situation or walking away from my community, those are pretty terrible options.

Some men have used the get process to get a leg up in the divorce proceedings, whether its asking for money outright or negotiating a smaller child support payment, said Rabbi Efram Goldberg of the Boca Raton Synagogue.

There are men who will say, Ill tell you what. I will give the get. I want half a million dollars, Efram said. Theyll use it to extort or exploit the negotiations, which is terribly unjust.

He said hes dealing with a case right now involving a couple from Boca Raton, who married in 2009, separated in 2018 and were civilly divorced early last year, but the husband, Aaron Silberberg, has not given his wife, Devorah Silberberg, a get, because he is apparently dissatisfied with the divorce terms hammered out in court.

As far as the secular court is concerned, the custody and financial arrangements have all been concluded, with a final judgment. They are entirely divorced. Theres absolutely no justification for his not giving the get, Goldberg said. The best that we can do is to apply public pressure on him to do whats right.

And thats just what they did, a few weeks ago in Lakewood, New Jersey, when about two dozen people protested outside the home of his parents, and in Boca Raton, where people chanted over and over again, Aaron Silberberg, unchain your wife!

Aaron Silberberg disputes the notion that his divorce has not yet been finalized, in either a secular court, where he says an appeal is still pending, or in a Jewish court, known as a Beth Din.

There are some women who are agunot, and everything is finalized and theres nothing more. Perhaps giving a get in that situation would make sense, he said. In my situation, she still has to come to Beth Din. If she doesnt come, how are we supposed to help her?

Women arent the only ones victimized in the divorce process, said Rabbi Goldberg. While there are undoubtedly men who have abused their power, Goldberg said, there are women who have used the children as leverage, threatening to withhold visitation if they dont obtain the financial or custody arrangements they seek in the divorce negotiations.

He said he has several friends in that situation and has heard of men withholding a get because theyre afraid if they hand it over, they wont ever see their children.

Thats sometimes the instigator for why men act the way they do, Goldberg said. Theres bad players on both sides.

He notes that outside the home, men seem to hold the power in the relationship, but inside the home, women run the show.

While that may be the case, men in an Orthodox marriage, by virtue of the fact that they get to hand over a get or not hold the divorce power. In Israel, men who withhold gets can be jailed, their drivers license or medical license can be taken away. In America, where there is a constitutional separation between church and state, secular courts cannot meddle in a religious agreement.

Secular courts can, however, enforce contracts like pre-nuptial agreements, and thats why some in the Orthodox community have been pushing for pre-nups for years. A typical pre-nup mandates that in case of divorce, the husband will provide the wife with a get, and if he doesnt, he could be forced to pay thousands of dollars a month a financial penalty that a secular court could enforce.

In the Modern Orthodox community, this is routine. And rabbis wont do your wedding unless you sign one of these, said Michael Broyde, a law professor at Emory University School of Law.

Issues involving the get arose as far back as talmudic times 1,500 years ago, when the husband might go off into the forest and not come home, and the wife was stuck because the husband wasnt there to give her a get. In the 1850s, rabbinical courts began functioning as regulators of marriage, so when the parties fought about their divorce, the rabbinical court settled it. And men didnt withhold gets because the rabbinical courts had the power and authority to make sure that didnt happen, Broyde said.

But once Jews moved to places where there was a separation of church and state and religion became more of a voluntary arrangement, rabbinical courts lost their teeth, he said. Putting a financial penalty into a contract that is signed at a Jewish wedding puts teeth back into the process.

The metaphor I use is: theyre not a cure but theyre a vaccine, he said.

So why dont all Orthodox Jews sign them?

Why do people get polio? Why do people get smallpox? he asked. Because there are people out there who resist taking their vaccines.

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Unchain your wife: the Orthodox women shining a light on get refusal - The Guardian

Jewish adoption is a possibility for my family because of YATOM – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on June 5, 2021

My husband and I might not seem the likeliest Jewish parents.

Im from a small town in Iowa but growing up I had a friend that was Jewish. I used to ask her questions for hours about Judaism. The more I learned the more I realized that Judaism was the faith for me. I converted to Judaism in 2009.

When I made this choice, I vowed to raise my future children as Jews and to have a Jewish household. This is a promise I take very seriously.

When Yousef, my husband, and I started dating, I made my intention to have a Jewish family very clear. Yousef was not Jewish, but he was totally on board with my future plans. He saw how much joy being Jewish brought me and he was embraced by my community. And in 2017, he converted too.

Shortly after that, we got married at Beth El Synagogue in Omaha, Nebraska. Im happy to report we were the first same-sex couple to get married at our Conservative synagogue. We were married on Tu BAv and our little union even made the local newspaper.

I had two life goals: raise my kids as Jews and move somewhere else. I wanted to see what else is out there. Luckily, I was able to transfer to Greater Phoenix.

One of my two goals had been met, so it was time for Yousef and me to start thinking about the next priority: raising a Jewish family.

Yousef and I are at a unique disadvantage when it comes to children. As a same-sex male couple we have to have help if we want to add a child to our family. I personally didnt want to consider having a surrogate. For me, that didnt seem right since so many children are in need of a good home. Therefore, adoption is the most logical choice.

Then I heard about YATOM, the Jewish Foster and Adoption Network, and the timing couldnt have been better.

YATOM has brought together couples from across the nation in fellowship and learning. During the COVID-19 pandemic, this work has been done virtually.

Weve had workshops with several experts in the fields of foster care and adoption. In each session weve had plenty of opportunities to ask questions. It certainly has given us chances to think about questions presented in the workshop.

The two sessions that stood out most were about childrens health and conversion for adoptees. Something that Yousef and I never really considered was how health insurance would work for foster children. We also were unaware of the myriad mental and/or physical health challenges children in the child welfare system could be facing.

Many children come from dysfunctional homes. They might be malnourished or have mental health concerns arising from a less-than-ideal life. Yousef and I now have a better understanding of some of the care and needs that many children in the system might have.

We also studied with Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz, YATOMs founder, about Judaism and adoption, which was very meaningful and critical.

Adopting a child isnt easy and adopting a child thats already Jewish is even more challenging. I always had reservations about converting a child to Judaism. To be honest, I wasnt sure if that was allowed or generally practiced. I found out it is, but I still have reservations.

One of the biggest reasons we want to adopt is to have a child to whom we can pass down our faiths traditions. People often contemplate what they want their legacy to be. For me, its simple. I want to be responsible for making sure that Hazimeh remains a Jewish last name after my passing.

To be able to learn about adoption from a Jewish perspective and in a Jewish setting has given me the tools I need to make my dream happen. Its also given me the encouragement I need to pursue this dream.

Yousef and I dont have a timeline yet for adoption. But it is in our future and its an experience I look forward to so much. My advice to anyone who is Jewish and considering adoption is to apply for a future cohort with YATOM. Its never too early to start learning about the adoption and foster process if you think thats what your future holds.

We participated in YATOMs fifth cohort of its family fellowship and the sixth is about to begin. This might be your time. JN

Matt Hazimeh works for Progressive Insurance and lives in Tempe with his husband, Yousef, and their two cats.

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Jewish adoption is a possibility for my family because of YATOM - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Letters to the Editor June 6, 2021 – New York Post

Posted By on June 5, 2021

UFTs Stringer pushThank you, United Federation of Teachers head Michael Mulgrew, for endorsing Comptroller Scott Stringer for mayor and advising teachers to not rank candidates Eric Adams and Andrew Yang on their ballots (Desperate UFT targets Eric & Yang, June 2).

I think youve helped me and a lot more voters decide on our choices. Ill be voting for Adams and ranking Yang second. Stringer will not be ranked. If the parents of school-aged children do the same, we can send the message that the UFT endorsement is no longer a plus.

In a year when other city workers, utility workers, grocery and supermarket workers, truck drivers, mailmen and so many more stepped up, these spoiled, pampered teachers got paid to sit around in their underwear watching TV or going on vacation.

If you believe the city is doing great, vote for Stringer, and youll get more of the same.

George CzerniawskiBrooklyn

Hiding JudaismBruce Bawer asserts that Aaron Keyak, a staffer in the Biden administration, is an Orthodox Jew (Tellingly Terrible Advice for US Jews, PostOpinion, June 3).

It is difficult to understand what kind of Orthodoxy Keyak is practicing, as he encourages American Jews to hide their Jewishness.

One of the main tenets of Judaism is recited three times a day in Jewish prayer. In it, Jews affirm their belief in god by outwardly displaying their commitment to him, through affixing Mezzuot on doors inside and outside their homes, by displaying tzizit, fringes worn by men, as well as a yarmulke on their heads to further affirm that there is a higher power.

Denial of being Jewish and sending Jews into hiding is what causes Jews to be weak, cowering and targets for anti-Semitic attacks.

On the contrary, Jews should stand tall and proud of their Jewishness to show the world the pride and strength with which they display it. Aaron Keyak should hang his head in shame and be ignored.

Hindy KiermanEast Brunswick, NJ

BLMs faultsI take my hat off to Rashad Turner for speaking out for black children (BLM ugly truth, June 2).

All these organizations and politicians do nothing but make money off these children. Education is so important for children to have a chance in this world and succeed.

Its about time people start speaking out about these organizations, and maybe some positive things will happen not lip service with no action and no results.

P. FletcherMassapequa

Reform yeshivasIt may be June, but I skated on ice to work today: Hell has frozen over. New York State Assembly Member Simcha Eichenstein and I support the same education legislation (Holocaust teaching bill progresses in Albany, following roadblocks, June 1.)

Eichenstein has been a long-standing opponent of my organization, Young Advocates for Fair Education, and has worked to block oversight of New Yorks ultra-Orthodox yeshivas.

To see him support a bill that authorizes oversight of all schools Holocaust curriculum, including private schools, is a welcome change.

We can only hope that his support for transparency continues when inspection time actually comes, and the state Education Department sees that Holocaust history education is far from the only secular subject missing at these schools. That is, if yeshivas even let auditors in the door.

Naftuli MosterExecutive Director, YAFFEDNew City

Want to weigh in on todays stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) toletters@nypost.com. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy and style.

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Letters to the Editor June 6, 2021 - New York Post

ADAT YESHUA: PREACHING LOVE IN THE FACE OF HATE – Norwich Radical

Posted By on June 5, 2021

By Rabbi Binyamin Sheldrake, of the Adat Yeshua Messianic Synagogue, Norwich

CW: Antisemitism

In many ways we could be forgiven for feeling that the world is in a constant state of flux right now not just with the pandemic and how that has deeply affected us all, but also in terms of our economy, politics and, in a lesser-known arena possibly, the religious world too. While Messianic Judaism is not a direct by-product of the recent turbulence in the world today, the interest shown in it most certainly is. During the lockdown, the huge numbers of texts, calls and emails we received bore testimony to the exponential growth in interest in this modern (and not so modern) form of Judaism. Some fourteen years ago now, Time Magazine ran an article about an emerging idea that they suggested would go on to fundamentally change the world: that Yeshua was a Jew and nothing else.

For most, I suspect, even using his Hebrew name might be unusual and confusing, so accustomedare most people to assuming Jesus was a Christian and founded a new religion. The reality, I argue, could not be further from the truth. Today many Jewish and Christian scholars are publishing large amounts of material showing how our view of history needs challenging and reorientingin the light of new understanding. The implications of this paradigm shift in the Jewish faith are what our synagogue, Adat Yeshua, is built upon and seeks to live out. We are Jews, and converts, who together form a Jewish community in Norwich, faithfully following God and acknowledging the Jewish Messiah.

Messianic Judaism belongs to the radical class of thinking and practice. We have become used to disrupters questioning the status quo in all kinds of areas, and, in Judaism, Messianic Jews disrupt the accepted thinking. Our synagogue aims to take the words of the Scriptures seriously when we are commanded to love God and our neighbour as yourself. Part of our response to these words has been to develop the foodbank which has, over the many weeks of lockdown, consistently fed as many as 100 people a week. Our partners in this, the NR2 Skills Share group, have faithfully joined the dots in the supply chain for food donations and gifts, as well as providing the many delivery volunteers too, thus filling the gaps in what would have proven a huge undertaking for the synagogue alone.

The extension currently being built on the rear of the synagogue will eventually house the new modernised foodbank, plus a brand new creche area and ministry room to seat up to 50 people. We have been thrilled to receive over 100,000 in donations from our own community and other interested parties across Norwich. This has made the vision a reality and the building work has already begun. The new multi-purpose room will, we hope, in due course, meet the needs for a new childrens support area, be that in breakfast clubs or after-school homework clubs. In an area of real social need, we want to make a difference to peoples lives.

We have, however, been deeply saddened by what happened to the synagogue just a few weeks ago. The mindless act of anti-Semitic vandalism shocked our community, and the wider community of Norwich too. We were and still are overwhelmed with all the emails and letters of well-wishers and supporters across the city and region, even receiving mentions in the Guardian and the New York Times. The attack will not stop the work and acts of kindness that we are engaged in here; in fact, the opposite is true: where hate is shown we double down on showing love, the love that God has for all humanity yes, including the perpetrator of this evil act. We must be ready to forgive, whilst rejecting hate in all its forms, includingmindless attacks on people with whom we disagree. Opinions diverge, but we are all human.

For more information about the synagogue, please visit our website or Facebook page.

All images courtesy of Adat Yeshua Synagogue

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ADAT YESHUA: PREACHING LOVE IN THE FACE OF HATE - Norwich Radical

Conversion students are asking me if its safe to become Jewish. This is what I tell them. – Forward

Posted By on June 5, 2021

(JTA) Rabbi Adar, is it dangerous to wear my Jewish star?

In 12 years of teaching Introduction to the Jewish Experience through HaMaqom|The Place in the San Francisco Bay Area, no student ever asked me that question in those words.

This year three students have asked it of me. The first student who asked it was a young woman, a conversion candidate, and she made an appointment to talk to me outside of class.

I answered with a question: Why are you asking this right now? She talked about reading about attacks on Jews in New York City, and in West Hollywood. She talked about the fact that the synagogue she attends was vandalized a few months ago. She talked about how Jewish friends are concerned about safety.

Am I being silly? she asked. Do I need to worry about this on the streets of Oakland and Berkeley?

Yes, I said, this is real. We are living through a time of increasing antisemitism. As far as the jewelry is concerned, I said, it is like any other item of personal safety: Trust your instincts. If you dont feel safe, leave it off or put it out of sight.

Then I asked another question: This happens to the Jewish People from time to time. Are you sure you want to pursue conversion? I assured herthat I would not think badly of her if she chose the safer path. Confronting fears like those is how we sort out who we want to be, what we want for our children, what we want for our descendants. There is no single right answer, only the answer deep in each individual heart.

The young woman said, No, rabbi, I want to be a Jew! I recognized the passion in her voice, a passion that I still feel after 25 years as a naturalized Jew my word for a Jew by choice. We love the Jewish people and we are not going anywhere.

Conversion to Judaism is more complex than a change of creed. Judaism is not only a religion; it has elements of culture, ethnicity and peoplehood as well. To become Jewish is to become heir to a history and a way of being in the world. It is different from conversion to Christianity in that it means becoming a target for antisemitism. In the earliest description of a rabbinical court, orbeit din, for conversion, the Sages warned proselytes of the dangers inherent in becoming a Jew:

The Sages taught in a baraita: With regard to a potential convert who comes to a court in order to convert, at the present time, when the Jews are in exile, the judges of the court say to him: What did you see that motivated you to come to convert? Dont you know that the Jewish people at the present time are anguished, suppressed, despised and harassed, and hardships are frequently visited upon them? (BT Yevamot 47a)

Every convert to Judaism makes a journey across the religious, cultural and emotional frontiers of Judaism. One of the milestones on that journey is the moment when antisemitism ceases to be theoretical, when it is felt in the kishkes, in the gut.

I have never regretted becoming a Jew. I give thanks every morning that God has made me a Jew, and that the Jewish people were willing to have me. I feel sure, listening to my student, that she will say the same thing after 25 years, no matter what history brings, so I give her advice:

Go sit with the Jews, when you feel shaky. You will see, when there are frightening things on the news, synagogue services fill up, gatherings fill up, we all show up somewhere to be with the Jews. As a people, we draw strength from one another. When bad things happen, theres nowhere I would rather be than with my Jewish family.

Whether in my synagogue, or someone elses synagogue, or at the Jewish Film Festival, I feel better when I am surrounded by our people.

Rabbi Ruth Adar is executive director of HaMaqom|The Place in Berkeley, California.

The post Conversion students are asking me if its safe to become Jewish. This is what I tell them. appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

Conversion students are asking me if its safe to become Jewish. This is what I tell them.

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Conversion students are asking me if its safe to become Jewish. This is what I tell them. - Forward

US Jewry is shifting profoundly and Chabad is on rise – Pew research – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 5, 2021

US Jewry is changing and its heading in two different directions. That is whats clear from the new Pew Report.The number of Jews who dont identify with religion is rising, with many on a trajectory away from Jewish life. But on the other side, there is a spiritual rebound. Orthodox Judaism is continuing to grow and successfully retain its youth. And, with large families being the norm, it will become a larger segment of the community over the decades. This is coupled with the rise of Chabad, now equal in size to either the Reform or Conservative movements.The Chabad emergence, documented in this Pew Report, is a game changer for American Jewish life. The numbers are startling: 38% of all US Jews have engaged in some way with Chabad programs. 40% of those are active on a regular or semi-regular basis. 75% of those who are involved with Chabad do not self-identify as Orthodox. The younger the segment, the more connected they are with Chabad.This is clearly a result of Chabads massive expansion in the three youth sectors: teens, college students, and young professionals. The shift of millennials has been documented in a series of local Federation studies that reveal that more Jews age 35 and younger are involved with Chabad than any other Jewish group. At the rate its going, Chabads role in the US Jewish community will only expand in the years to come.On the other side of the ideological spectrum, we see the opposite. There are 37% who identify with Reform and 17% with Conservative, but identification is not affiliation. It does not mean those who identify are truly active in those movements. In fact, according to the 2013 Pew Study with similar stats on identification, the numbers of actual membership in the liberal Jewish movements are dramatially lower. That study found that just 14% of US Jews are members of Reform congregations and 11% of Conservative.And a second vital statistic shows that many of those members are older. As age drops, so does involvement in liberal movements. This is reflected by synagogue closures, since the 2002 Synagogue Survey, nonorthodox congregations are closing and merging. The Reform has downsized by 180, and the Conservative by over 350. In the same time frame the number of Chabad Centers has tripled.Chabad has created a new paradigm in modern Jewish life, reversing trends of over a century of Jewish disconnecting from orthodoxy as they became less observant. Todays Jews, many of whom are not fully observant, choose Chabad as their point of affiliation. They are open to more tradition.

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This historic realignment of the community has major implications for US Jewry and Israel.

Chabads growing leadership is good news for Israel. Chabads support has always been unequivocal. Its schools emphasize the centrality of the Jewish homeland and its rabbis are unafraid to speak up in support of Israels security. At the same time, Chabad stays clear of engaging in Israeli politics and instead strives to be the voice of historic tradition that connects all Jews to Israel.

THIS BECAME clear during the hostilities in Gaza. While many in the Jewish community hunkered down, fearing antisemitism, or wondering about the righteousness of Israels cause. Some even criticized Israel. Chabad rabbis acted, speaking out strongly in support of Israel.

This week Im in Israel with a solidarity mission of Chabad rabbis. One suggested to his local community leaders that he conduct a zoom session from an army base. He was told that might upset some in his city who questioned last weeks military tactics.

The writer is a rabbi and a Chabad shliach in California, He can be reached at: rabbi@ocjewish.com

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US Jewry is shifting profoundly and Chabad is on rise - Pew research - The Jerusalem Post

We must stand united in the fight against anti-Semitism – Jewish Community Voice

Posted By on June 5, 2021

For Jews around the world, the last few weeks have been chilling. A surge of anti-Semitism, including physical attacks against Jews, has swept the United States, Canada, and Europe. In Los Angeles, diners at a kosher restaurant were spat upon, while an explosive device was thrown at Jews in Manhattans Diamond District. A swastika was carved into the doorway of a synagogue in Salt Lake City, while a brick shattered the window of a kosher pizzeria on the Upper East Side.

Anti-Semitic harassment, vandalism, and violence in the U.S. are exploding, according to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). There is also a flood of anti-Semitic hate on social media and on thousands of websites. On Twitter, #hitlerwasright was posted 17,000 times, while the hashtag #Covid1948, which likens Israels independence with the pandemic, was shared 175 times per minute.

These times recall past eras, with a similar tension and fear. Jews are afraid to wear kippot in public or take their children outside on Shabbat. Alarmingly, many of the voices that were quick to denounce racism and bigotry in the United States have been notably silent when Jews are the victims.

The Jewish community, however, has responded swiftly and firmly. May 27 was a national day of action to fight against anti-Semitism, sponsored by ADL, The American Jewish Committee, Jewish Federations of North America, Hadassah, the Orthodox Union, Reconstructing Judaism, United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, Union for Reform Judaism, and others, and in which our own Jewish Community Relations Council took part. Events like these show the public our strength in the face of hate, and serve as an inspiration that Jews of all walks are one people who stand together in unity.

We can also take encouragement from President Bidens public support of the Jewish community and strong statement against anti-Semitism: The recent attacks on the Jewish community are despicable, and they must stop. I condemn this hateful behavior at home and abroadits up to all of us to give hate no safe harbor.

Added Vice President Harris on Twitter, The surge in anti-Semitic attacks against the Jewish community in the U.S. and around the world is despicableit must be called out, condemned and stopped. As a country, we must stand united against hate of any kind.

Though we may be targeted, we must continue to stand strong together now and not let the threat of violence keep us locked up in our homes or force us to hide our Jewish identities. It is how we have survived this long and how will survive now.

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We must stand united in the fight against anti-Semitism - Jewish Community Voice

‘Blaming the victim’ in Israel conflict – News from southeastern Connecticut – theday.com

Posted By on June 5, 2021

There is a curious dynamic known as blaming the victim. For example, a battered wife may be accused of being difficult or threatening to an abusive spouse thereby being accused of instigating the conflict and earning her spouse the role of being the victim. She, then, is labelled the perpetrator her spouse the victim.

For over two millennia, Jews persecuted and discriminated have sought protection by (1) accumulating wealth, (2) being clannish and (3) using their shrewdness as a lever against homicidal Jewish hatred and annihilation. These precautionary mechanisms, however, as seen as an offense against the non-Jewish world, make them the perpetrators and non-Jews as the victims.

So, literally millions of murdered Jews (pursuing a defense against brutal extinction) are seen as having victimized the non-Jewish world. Israeli Jews defending against the Palestinian chant of death from the river to the sea are branded wrongdoers. The Palestinians, sworn to obliterate Judaism, are the victims.

Ironic, is it not?

Mendy Gottesdiener

Boynton Beach, Fla.

Excerpt from:

'Blaming the victim' in Israel conflict - News from southeastern Connecticut - theday.com

As Jews, we believe in repairing the world and we believe in the Fair Chance in Housing Act | Opinion – NJ.com

Posted By on June 5, 2021

By Benjamin David, Peter Buchsbaum and Nilene Evans

A year ago, many of New Jersey Reform Jews left home after months of lockdown. We could not stay inside following the murder of George Floyd. Across the state, faith leaders and advocates, young and old, said it clearly: Black lives matter. In congregations in all parts of the state the message was the same: we needed to act to reduce racial injustice because the status quo, in which a Black man could be murdered by a state actor in broad daylight, was reprehensible.

On Thursday, the New Jersey Legislature can ensure that we begin to heal the legacy of our states shameful reality that at 12 Black adults incarcerated for every white adult, New Jersey has the nations highest disparity in Black/white incarceration rates. Over 60% of New Jerseys prison population is Black, although less than 15% of our states population is Black.

The Fair Chance in Housing Act, A1919/S250, seeks to disrupt New Jerseys cycle of recidivism by increasing access to safe and secure housing for returning citizens. A returning citizen with access to stable housing is far less likely to re-offend. The Fair Chance in Housing Act would prevent most landlords from collecting information regarding a potential tenants criminal history upfront. Landlords would still be able to run a criminal history check after making a conditional offer to enter a lease.

Putting such checks at the end of the process rather than the beginning gives potential tenants the chance to tell their stories to potential landlords of what we Jews call tshuvah returning to the right path. For example, a formerly incarcerated person might explain how she has earned a degree while in prison, or he might seek to rebuild a hands-on relationship with his children, and that living in this apartment complex with a public transportation route to her job or near his kids will be a next step on the returning citizens path.

For far too long returning citizens have been discriminated against when pursuing housing. Those who must check the box for having a criminal background are regularly turned away by landlords. But we can change these discriminatory practices by passing the Fair Chance in Housing Act.

This is why the New Jersey Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism (RAC-NJ) is using our collective voice in partnership with the Fair Share Housing Center to support the Fair Chance in Housing Act. Our 45 congregations are located in 27 of New Jerseys 40 legislative districts, and we are acting together with a united voice to find meaningful ways to address New Jerseys legacy of racial and economic injustice.

As part of a storied Jewish advocacy organization that continues to mobilize the Reform Jewish community to advocate for social and racial justice, including launching a movement-wide racial justice campaign, we take seriously the concept of tshuvah atonement and tikkun olam repairing the world. We believe that no humans should be permanently defined by their worst mistakes and that God offers each of us the opportunity to move toward a better future. This bill gives people who have completed their sentences a chance to shift their story to one of redemption, rather than tether them forever to past mistakes.

The bill would also help returning citizens rebuild their lives and move forward. One reason for the revolving door between incarceration and homelessness is housing discrimination against people with criminal records. Research shows that prior criminal history is not a predictor of tenant behavior.

As Jews, we believe that all people are created Btzelem Elohim in Gods image. We know from the clear-eyed study of our nations history that we need to address the ways in which mass incarceration is driven by the War on Drugs has served to criminalize a generation. As we reckon with our nations legacy of systemic racism and white supremacy and work to ensure that our children and grandchildren inherit a world, we are obligated to work to undo the harms caused by mass incarceration.

Rabbi Benjamin David, Judge Peter Buschbaum and Nilene Evans are members of the New Jersey Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism Core Team.

Rabbi David serves at Adath Emanu-El in Mount Laurel.

Judge Buchsbaum is a retired state Superior Court judge, a member of the North American Advisory Board of the World Union of Progressive Judaism and attends Har Sinai Hebrew Congregation in Pennington.

Nilene Evans is a member of Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge.

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As Jews, we believe in repairing the world and we believe in the Fair Chance in Housing Act | Opinion - NJ.com


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