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Children’s Book Combines the Wisdom of the Talmud with the Ancient Poetry of Rumi – Jewish Journal

Posted By on May 29, 2021

Its not every day that the sages of the Talmud and the ancient Persian poet, Rumi, cross paths. Thats why I was so thrilled to read The Adventures of Rumi and Baruch Bear, a vividly charming new childrens book by Yehuda Rothstein.

Its also not every day that the main character of a Jewish childrens book is an Iranian Jewish girl, especially when so many of these books depict Ashkenazi characters, Ashkenazi villages, and disproportionate references to, what else? Matzo balls.

The book begins by introducing a young girl named Rumi as she gazes out of a window in her room in Tehran. Yes, Jews live all over the world, even in Iran, and in recognizing this important fact, Rothstein demonstrates his transparent passion to shine a light on the beautiful diversity of global Jewry.

On Rumis wall is a drawing of the tombs of Esther and Mordechai in the northern Iranian city of Hamadan. On her desk: computer screen, a keyboard, and a book titled C++ Computer Programming. As my eyes caught sight of the dark-haired Rumi (accompanied by her imaginary companion, Baruch Bear)who seems to own her Jewish identity, Iranian roots, and yes, the study of computer scienceI realized how much I already like this unique little girl.

The book, which is meant for children seven years and older, follows Rumi as she tries to understand the questions of her heart. She is guided by her loving mother, grandparents, and her great-grandfather, as well as teachers and friends. One day, the reader learns at the beginning of the story, Iran was no longer safe for Rumi and her family. These are exactly the same words I use to describe my familys escape from Iran when I tell the story to my young children.

Rumis family resettles in New York and she admits that shes afraid to attend school because of a stutter, worrying that no one will understand her. In highlighting Rumis stutter, Rothstein again compassionately breaks out of the mold of most Jewish kid lit (childrens literature)especially picture booksby presenting a little girls struggles in direct parallel with her fears and potential.

An illustration from the book

Moses himself was a stutterer and accomplished great things after overcoming many different challenges, Rothstein told the Journal. I wanted Rumi to stutter because I wanted her to be different beyond just her Persian ethnicity in an Ashkenazi environment; a stutter is really a metaphor for what we all go through in life. We all try to strive in a way that moves forward our life agenda, but we often take missteps. We make mistakes, we say the wrong thingswe stutter. Accepting ourselves, but at the same time, moving forward and growing, is part of life.

Rothstein succeeds in creating an endearing compromise between telling a simple story about a girl who wishes to find her place in the world and rendering Talmudic wisdom (and the delicious poetry of Rumi) digestible for children. In fact, The Adventures of Rumi and Baruch Bear offers such a treasure trove of wisdom that adult readers will be hard-pressed to ignore its sage advice. When Rumis mother speaks harshly to her for hesitating to attend school, her grandfather intervenes, echoing the poet Rumi by advising, Raise your words, not your voice. It is rain that grows flowers, not thunder.

This is precisely how Rothstein manages to offer such complex poetic wisdom: eloquent counsel is offered by characters as a response to Rumis struggles to make friends and forge her own path. Even Baruch Bear espouses wisdom, such as when he responds to Rumis question about whether she will grow up to have a lot of friends: All I can say is this: Who is wise? She who learns from others, say Baruch Bear, quoting Pirkei Avot 4:1 (Ethics of our Fathers), while adding, But do not blindly follow the stories of others that came before you (wisdom from the poet, Rumi).

Its time for a childrens picture book as vivid and inclusive as The Adventures of Rumi and Baruch Bear. I wish I had had the poet Rumis words, decades ago after I first came to the United States, to soothe me each time I felt anxiety about attending my new American school. I was especially drawn to a conversation in the book in which Rumis mother reassures her, Ever since the dawn of your life, friendship heard your name and it has been running through the courtyard trying to catch you. You must let it.

Hows that for soothing? Yes, if only The Adventures of Rumi and Baruch Bear had existed when I was a child. While I deeply yearned for friends, sometimes I felt as though the only person who ever tried to catch me was Ayatollah Khomeini (and Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War).

The Adventures of Rumi and Baruch Bear is Rothsteins first childrens book. A New York-based transactional real estate and construction law attorney, he previously was a Fulbright visiting scholar at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, where he lectured on Comparative Islamic and Jewish Law. Rothstein specializes in Muslim-Jewish relations and in 2017 was appointed a board member of the New York Muslim-Jewish Advisory Council (he also served as a Broome Fellow of Muslim-Jewish Relations at the American Sephardic Federation in New York City). He is currently the Editor-in-Chief of the Jewish-Muslim Sourcebook Project, which works with the Center for Muslim-Jewish Engagement at the University of Southern California. Rothstein is also a World Jewish Congress delegate and a real estate investor.

Rothstein grew up in Monsey, New York, home to one of the largest Orthodox Jewish communities in the country, and studied Talmud and Jewish studies for more than six hours a day at an all-boys yeshiva.

In Monsey, the average family had five or six kids. And so everyone, including the men, learned a lot about children, how to nurture them, and to value them and appreciate family more generally, he said. Its a very different world than most readers probably know.

But growing up in Monsey, Rothstein seldom found depictions of Jews that closely mirrored him and his family. I come from a diverse multicultural and multiracial Jewish background, and as a child, I didnt see depictions of what we call Jews of Color or Mizrahi Jews in textbooks or learn about the rich history and diversity of our people, he said. In elementary school, Rothstein saw handouts featuring cartoon pictures of Moses, Aaron, and other Jews in the Torah. They all looked Ashkenazi and Haredi, he recalled. Moses and all of the Children of Israel who followed him into the desert were wearing shtreimels (fur hats worn by Hasidic men) and long coats.

Rothstein remembers being taught that even Jewish scholars were only Ashkenazi. Not only were all the biblical characters depicted as Ashkenazi, but all the heroes, all the great rabbis of history, were, too, he said. I remember my teachers saying to me that all the great rabbinical scholars or gedolim (great rabbis) of history were Ashkenazi Jews. I was told that there werent any great rabbinical figures in the Mizrahi world.

But Rothstein believes that excluding Sephardic, Mizrahi, and others Jews of Color isnt only a challenge in the Haredi world. It isnt only a problem relegated to the Orthodox world; it was true even in my secular Judaic Studies classes in university, he said. It occurs in Reform and Conservative circles Ive traveled in, too. Its a larger problem in American Jewry, and something that we need to repair in our culture. My book is a humble attempt to address this issue.

Still, he doesnt think of himself as one kind of a Jew or another kind of Jew, or Ashkenazi Jew or Sephardic Jew. Im just Jewish, and so I look at every single Jewish communal experience as part of my story.

Still, he doesnt think of himself as one kind of a Jew or another kind of Jew, or Ashkenazi Jew or Sephardic Jew. Im just Jewish, and so I look at every single Jewish communal experience as part of my story.

Rothstein was especially influenced by his friendship with an elderly Iranian Jewish man named Shlomo Sakhai, who passed away in 2019 in New York. He was a real hero and humble leader of Iranian Jewry, and one of the most generous but unassuming people Ive ever met, Rothstein recalled. Shlomo was an orphan child in Isfahan, selling matches on the street corner as an eight-year-old boy. A deeply spiritual man who was focused on helping the community, he became one of the leaders of Iranian Jewry, a bridge-builder and peacemaker. He secretly gave charity to his neighbors, both Jewish and Muslim, and even adopted an orphan Muslim child that he raised as his own. When he died, Muslims in Tehran set up a mourning tent.

Rothstein spent many Shabbat and holidays with Sakhai, where he learned the particulars of Persian culture: I knew from my experiences with Shlomo that Rumis words and ideas are on the lips and heart of every literate Persian. But likewise, the words of Torah were also on his lips, and on the elders of the community, at all times. And so, I thought, it would be interesting to marry the wisdom of Rumi and the wisdom of the Talmud together, much in a way that they came together in someone like Shlomo.

The illustrations by Nasim Jenabi, a non-Jewish Iranian immigrant who resides in Canada, are particularly striking. I think the best part of this book is Nasims art, Rothstein said. Jenabi demonstrates an instinct for drawing characters and scenes in ways that truly capture the richness of the Mizrahi Jewish experience: an artistic print on a little boys skullcap; a circa-1920s picture on a wall in Rumis house that shows fez-clad Iranian Jewish men gathered at a meeting of the Zionist Federation; Rumi and her family at the Shabbat dinner table, surrounded by heaping plates of gondi (an Iranian Shabbat specialty consisting of ground chicken, chickpea, and cardamom meatballs). Theres something almost mystical about Jenabis illustrations. Together with the text, this is a book I am deeply proud to show my own children.

The Iranian Jewish story is really part of one of the first diaspora communities, and its contributions to world Jewry are immeasurable, Rothstein said, adding, How is it possible that there are so many Persian Jews in the United States and there is little to nothing about them in our textbooks and cultural centers? How is it that everybody knows about matzo balls, but not gondi balls as a delicacy on Shabbat?

Rothstein also created a website where readers can download a free parent and teacher guidebook to facilitate discussion with children. The Talmud says that each child is a clean, smooth piece of paper ready to be inscribed with all the potential of the world, as opposed to us adults who are likened to crinkled sheets of paper, he said. If we educate our children correctly, as childrens books have the potential to do, then they will adhere to those values when they are adults and we are gone.

His commitment to ensuring that Jews around the world know and appreciate diverse Jewish customs is deeply inspiring: We are taught that a Torah that is missing even a single letter isnt kosher, he said. Our people belong to a single body. How can the left hand not learn about the right? If we dont show the diversity of our people, then we are missing a part of ourselves.

Tabby Refael is a Los Angeles-based writer, speaker and civic action activist. Follow her on Twitter @RefaelTabby.

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Children's Book Combines the Wisdom of the Talmud with the Ancient Poetry of Rumi - Jewish Journal

Outsmarting Anti-Semitism | Dovid Vigler | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on May 29, 2021

How those who outlived Anti-Semitism, responded to Anti-Semitism

What the Talmud says about the reason for Anti-Semitism

Why do they hate us so much?

Its the most irrational hatred, and it rears its ugly head practically everywhere. Now closer than ever before we see anti-Semitic violence on the streets of New York City and South Florida in ways we thought impossible.

We have never found a good reason for this hatred.

They hated us when we were poor, and they hate us when were rich. They hated us when we had no land of our own, and they hate us when we live on our own land. They attacked us when we had settlements, and they attacked us before the first settlement was ever built. They hated us when we assimilated into their culture, and they hate us when we live Jewish lives. They hated us when we had no way of defending ourselves and, now that we do, theyve invented a new problem called disproportionate response. We simply cant win.

The Israeli Ambassador to the UN walked out of a UN meeting this week when the Palestinian envoy made an impassioned speech saying that Israel has no right to defend herself! You simply cant make this stuff up!

But the Talmud actually makes it abundantly clear why they hate us. Its been clearly written, black on white, for over 2000 years:

The Talmud (Tractate Shabbos 89) cites the source of anti-Semitism using a play on words: The Torah was received at Mount Sinai.

The Hebrew pronunciation of Sinai is almost identical to the Hebrew word for hatred Sinah. Why was the Torah given on a mountain called Sinai? asks the Talmud. Because the great sinah the tremendous hatred aimed at the Jew emanates from Sinai.

Simply put they hate us because G-d chose us.

Identifying the illness is halfway to finding the cure. Once were able to understand the source of anti-Semitism, we can start to formulate a plan to overcome it. And indeed, when we look into the pages of our rich and miraculous history, we find a surprising pattern of how our ancestors outlived the lineup of anti-Semites that they faced.

Two thousand years ago, the evil Roman Empire had prohibited Torah study. Pappus the son of Yehuda came and found Rabbi Akiva making large public gatherings and teaching Torah. Pappus said to him: Akiva! Arent you afraid of the authorities? And Rabbi Akiva replied: I will give you a parable.

A fox is walking along a river. He sees the fish frantically scurrying from one place to another.

He says to them: From whom are you running?From the nets and traps of the fishermen.Why dont you come up to the dry land, and we will live happily together, just as our forefathers did!

The fish replied: Is it really you whom they call the cleverest of animals? You are not clever, rather a fool! If we are afraid in the place of our vitality, how much more so in the place of our death!'

Rabbi Akiva concluded: If life is tough as we are sitting and studying Torah, about which it is written, It is our life and the length of our days, how much worse it will be if we cease to study Torah.

It was clear to Rabbi Akiva that a life without Torah would result in spiritual death for himself and his people. Instead of cowering away from his Torah study, he intensified his efforts. Whilst he himself was eventually executed for his crime, his students, the Nation of Israel, accomplished the impossible by proving to be the only nation that survived and outlived the mighty Roman Empire!

When Esther and Mordechai found themselves facing the threat of national annihilation from Haman in the Purim story, they prepared by calling for a three-day fast during which the Jews repented their ways. Mordechai then gathered 22,000 Jewish children to teach them Torah.

Once they understood that the cause of the anti-Semitic decree was not Haman himself, but as a test from Almighty G-d, they redoubled their commitment to Torah and to G-d and ultimately experienced the greatest turnaround of events that became the Holiday of Purim.

Each and every single one of the miraculous survival stories of our nations history has an element of powerful spiritual awakening. Because our ancestors knew that the cause of anti-Semitism is a test from G-dand boy does He know how to get our attention! Only strengthening our connection to G-d through Torah and Mitzvos will carry us through to the finish line.

This does not mean that we dont need to exercise diplomatic efforts and train an effective and efficient army. G-d himself tells us to do so. But if we place our trust in the army or the politicians exclusively then we have shown our true colors and failed the test miserably.

Thus declares King David, the great warrior of Israel in Psalms: If G-d doesnt protect our homes then the guards at the door will be rendered useless. Hearts filled with faith coupled with guards to the teeth, is precisely what we need to find the victory that we so desperately seek.

You can shout down the TV and send angry letters to political figures and newspapers. But doing so exposes your belief that the person, not G-d, is the ultimate decision-maker.

I know its a tough pill to swallow, but the undeniable fact is that no other theory or remedy to anti-Semitism has ever worked! Thinking that we can somehow change the hearts and minds of those that hate us so virulently is the very definition of insanity.

Perhaps its time for us to apply this novel approach, which is actually not so novel at all. Its been the secret of Jewish survival for 4000 years and we had better apply it before its too late!

Lets outsmart anti-semitism by overturning primitive prejudice through Jewish pride and practice.

Dovid Vigler blends together the African culture in which he was raised with the esoteric Chassidic pulse of his passion.He serves as the Founder and Spiritual Leader of Chabad of Palm Beach Gardens FL together with his wife Chana.He is host of Schmooze Radio, South Florida's only Jewish Talk Radio Show. Archives, Blogs and more available at http://www.JewishGardens.com

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Outsmarting Anti-Semitism | Dovid Vigler | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Two rabbis meet at the blackboard basic research KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper – KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper

Posted By on May 29, 2021

By Edgard Pimentel

A stroll through mathematics in the Jewish tradition

* *

Thinking about math (or about it) is natural. As a result, several societies have dedicated themselves to the subject over time. For example, the contributions and advances made by the Greeks in Arabic mathematics are diverse. There are also the achievements of oriental mathematics and sub-Saharan mathematics that influence Egyptian mathematics or pre-Columbian mathematical knowledge. And there is the Jewish mathematical tradition.

The Talmud, a word that means study in Hebrew, is a series of books that cover various aspects of Jewish life. It was written in the 1st and 6th centuries and first printed in 16th century Venice. It consists of six large parts, which unfold into more than sixty treatises. In a very simplified way, the work records the oral Torah and its interpretation.

One of the discussions in the Talmud concerns the number pi, which is defined as the ratio of the length of a perimeter to its diameter. This number appears in a variety of situations, from civil engineering to aerospace navigation to telecommunications. In the Talmud it can be read that a circle whose circumference corresponds to three spans has a span in diameter. This means that the number Pi is equal to 3. The surprising thing is that the text seems to anticipate the inaccuracy of such a claim and cites the biblical book of Kings I as a justification. An important puzzle is installed here.

On the one hand, the biblical text says that pi is worth 3; On the other hand, sages or rabbis of the Talmud know approaches to pi that contradict this fact. In addition, they suspect that it is impossible to fully determine this number. How can the supposedly armored biblical statement be reconciled with the available knowledge on the subject? Countless attempts are presented, but the most curious claim that choosing the value 3 would simplify the calculations: it would be easier to understand a round value. A value of 3 would also be sufficient for ritual purposes.

It was not until 1168 that one of the leading intellectuals of the medieval Jewish tradition, Maimonides, offered an answer to the dilemma of his predecessors. In one of his comments on the Talmud, Maimonides states that the number pi is irrational, that 3.14 is a well-known approach accepted by educated people, and finally decides that once one has chosen the use of the number is impossible Whole number knows The entire part that is, the number 3 was justified.

Maimonides relevance to Jewish mathematics goes beyond this particular case. In his guide for the confused, he mentions without demonstrating geometric properties that he had learned from Apolnios Arabic version of the Conics. Since this work had not been translated into Hebrew, mathematicians from the Jewish tradition devoted themselves to establishing such properties on their own. Then came various demonstrations of the facts mentioned by Maimonides.

Jewish intellectuals interest in mathematics may have started with questions of religious observance for example, knowing how to build structures according to the principles of tradition. But it quickly became independent. In 1321 Levi ben Gershon published the work Maaseh Hoshev [A arte de calcular]. In many ways this text looks like it does today: a theoretical part, followed by applications and a list of problems.

Even earlier, Ibn Ezra in his Book of Numbers, 1146, gives several examples to discuss important facts about numerical series. Also in the 12th century, it is Abraham Bar Hiya who teaches us how to calculate the area of the circle by treating it like a triangle! Bar Hiya imagined the circle as a record: if we cut it lengthways and opened its grooves, we would have a triangle whose height is the radius of the circle and whose base is its diameter. His method was strictly formalized only in the 90s of the last century.

In the Jewish tradition, mathematics appears in several ways: in studying the pi number, in the interest of sums and approximations of important numbers, in search of rigorous thinking, and on many other levels. Incidentally, as in any society, at any time.

* *

Edgard Pimentel is a mathematician and professor at PUC-Rio.

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Ten things you didnt know about Hayyim of Volozhin on his 200th yahrzeit – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 29, 2021

The 14th day of Sivan, May 25, was the 200th yahrzeit of Rav Hayyim Ben Yitzhak of Volozhin (7 Sivan 550914 Sivan 5581).

Born in Volozhin, Lithuania (today Valozyn, Belarus), he studied at the age of 12 with R. Raphael Hacohen of Hamburg (who was head of the beit din in Minsk at the time), and at age 15 with R. Aryeh Leib Gunzberg, (the Shaagat Aryeh). R. Yisrael of Shklov claims that R. Hayyim finished all of Talmud with the commentaries by age 22. At age 19 he met the Vilna Gaon (Eliyahu ben Shlomo Zalman, the Gra) whom he visited several times a year, often for a month at a time. The Gaons sons, considered R. Hayyim to be their fathers most important student.

He founded the Volozhin Yeshiva in 1802, which became the prototype for all Lithuanian yeshivot in the 19th century and eventually for all yeshivot until today. After his death, the Volozhin Yeshiva was called Eitz Hayyim in his memory. R. Hayyim wrote one book, Nefesh Hahayyim, which his son Yitzhak had published after his fathers death in 1824. His commentary to Pirkei Avot, called Ruah Hayyim, was collected by his students and published by R. Yehoshua Heschel Levin in 1859. Another work, Hut Hameshulash, published by R. Hayyims grandson R. Hayyim Hillel Fried, contains 22 of his responsa in addition to responsa from his son-in-law and grandson. There are also few surviving letters.

In addition, there is a large collection of questions that the students of Volozhin asked R. Hayyim in the later years of his life. These questions and answers, regarding Jewish law and philosophical outlook (Halacha and hashkafa), are found in six different collections, some published and some not, the most popular of the published ones are found in a work called Keter Rosh published in 1917.

I have researched this latter material and the fruits of my labor will be published in Hebrew by Idra, in a book called Rav Hayyim Volozhins Conversations with Students of the Yeshiva.

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Our Rabbi said to one of his family members who was inclined to hassidism, at least be careful about three things:

a.) To study Talmud and its discussions and make this the main service of God in your eyes.

b.) To keep all the laws of the Talmud.

c.) For heavens sake [lemaan Hashem], to not to talk about our Rabbi, the Gra. (Sheiltot 88, Ms. London-Podro 44). This tolerance was despite R. Hayyims ideological differences. (see my article on the Polemic with Hassidism in Moreshet Yisrael, 18,2 pp. 269-298.)

2. R. Hayyim saw Torah study as the main service of God, the main way of repentance, and said that even ones prayer depended upon it.

3. R. Hayyim did not don tefillin of Rabbeinu Tam.

He [the Gra] answered: If you want to be exempt from all the opinions you must don 24 pairs of tefillin.

He [R. Hayyim] was surprised . How can one find 24 possibilities?

He [the Gra] answered: Check and see.

He checked and found them.... Then our Rabbi [Hayyim] said [to the Gra]: But in the holy Zohar it says that the tefillin of Rabbeinu Tam is [on the level] of the world to come, and the Arizal also said to put them on.

He [the Gra] responded, I do not concern myself with the world to come, and those who are mehader [concerned, or strict about] the world to come can put on Rabbeinu Tam tefillin. But the simple meaning of the Zohar is not like this. From the day that our Rabbi heard these words from the Gra he never put on Rabbeinu Tam tefillin. (Ms. London-odro 72)

4. R. Hayyim said the Zohar and the Talmud do not conflict.

Our Rabbi said in the name of the Gra of blessed memory that the Zohar never differs with the Gemara on any issue. What people say [that it does], is due to their not understanding the meaning of the Gemara or the Zohar. Only in one case do I follow the Zohar, not to pass four cubits around one who prays, whereas the Gemara mentions only in front of them, and this is not a dispute just a stringency. (Keter Rosh Maamarim uMaasiyot 15)

5. R. Hayyim told his students to study Zohar.

He [R. Hayyim] was in charge of the tzedaka [charity] money for the poor living in the Land of Israel. (Jacob Lifshitz, Dor veSofrav, Hakerem 1888 p. 180)

R. Aryeh Ben Yerahmiel, who was a member of the Kolel Haprushim (of the Gaons students) and made aliyah in 1813 wrote, In 5560 since creation, God remembered the Holy Land and aroused a pure spirit in the heart of the saint, the true genius, our rabbi and teacher Hayyim of Volozhin of blessed memory, student of our teacher and master rabbi of all the exiles Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna... and sent from among the students of the saintly Gaon, our teacher Rabbi Mendel, the memory of saints for blessing, student of the Gaon in Kabbalah, he and his son.

In a letter from R. Yisrael of Shklov to R. Avika Altschul, who was close to R. Hayyim, R. Yisrael advised him to meet with R. Hayyim before making aliyah: If you take my advice, you should not go without the agreement of the light of our eyes... our teacher and Rabbi Hayyim, may his candle continue to shed light, the Rav of Volozhin.

R. Hayyim Told R. Yisrael of Shklov that if he prays with a minyan of Sephardim (in Israel) he should not change from their custom: He [R. Hayyim] commanded his student R. Yisrael of Shklov who went to live among the Sephardim [in Safed] not to change from their custom and to pray like them. (SHaarei Rahamim 9A)

I heard from our Rabbi on the verse: She fell and will not rise again, the maiden of Israel, [Amos 9] that our sages interpreted in the Gemara [Brachot 4B] She fell and will not [fall anymore]. Arise again Oh maiden of Israel, and he [R. Hayyim] said that the maiden of Israel is called falling just like the sukkah of David which is called falling. For every day she falls further for there is no day whose curse is less than the previous one. Therefore she is referred to as the falling one, for she will continue to fall until she shall reach the lowest level and from there cannot fall anymore. And now we have reached the time of Arise oh maiden of Israel. (Keter Rosh and Sheiltot)

We know for sure from the holy mouth of the Gaon, and Rabbi Hayyim of Volozhin of blessed memory, when they asked him concerning money sent for holy purposes here [in Israel]. He said, The Torah and [Divine] service done there [in the land of Israel] even for a quarter of an hour, is more dear to God than the study of your yeshivot every day in the impure lands. (Letter of R. Yitzhak Kahana from Jerusalem on Rosh Hodesh Kislev 1858 to Rav Zvi Hirch KalisherArchive A9/55)

10. R. Hayyim ate soaked matza (sheruyah) on Passover. (Kneidelach and Farfel, Sheiltot Ms. London-Podro 70,71)

Quotes to remember

The Gra said that a persons main labor should concern [avoiding] the transgressions between man and his fellow in all its details. (London-Podro 2, 34)

If a person performs a mitzvah and their body is overly excited and enthusiastic to perform the mitzvah quickly, its probably a ploy of the evil inclination. (Commentary to Ruth 1,18)

He [R. Hayyim] said that he would exchange all of his prayers for even one new understanding [concerning Jewish law] in the Gemara. (Keter Rosh 48)

Studying Torah is the main thing, attaining knowledge is secondary. (Ruach Hayyim, 3,18)

People say that studying poskim without the Gemara is like eating fish without spicy peppers, and our Rabbi [Hayyim] said, like eating spicy peppers without fish. (Sheiltot 62)

Our Rabbi said, at the place where philosophy ends, from there begins the wisdom of Kabbalah, and from the place where the Kabbalah of R. Moshe Cordovero ends, there begins the Kabbalah of the Arizal. (Sheiltot 110).

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Ten things you didnt know about Hayyim of Volozhin on his 200th yahrzeit - The Jerusalem Post

Israel-Hamas ceasefire: US will make ‘significant contributions’ to rebuilding Gaza, Antony Blinken says – KABC-TV

Posted By on May 29, 2021

JERUSALEM -- The United States will make "significant contributions" to rebuild Gaza and reopen its consulate in Jerusalem following the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on the first day of his first official visit to the region.

Blinken, speaking alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, said the US would "work to ensure that Hamas does not benefit" from the aid

HIs visit comes on the heels of the worst violence in years between Israel and Hamas. Israeli strikes during the recent conflict killed at least 248 Palestinians, including 66 children, according to Hamas health officials. At least 12 people in Israel, including two children, were killed by Palestinian militant fire from Gaza, according to Israel's military and the emergency service.

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire on Friday, after 11 days of conflict.

Speaking on Tuesday, Blinken said the losses on both sides in the conflict between Israel and Hamas were "profound."

"Casualties are often reduced to numbers. But behind every number is a human being -- a daughter, a son, a father, a mother, a grandparent, a best friend. And as the Talmud teaches, to lose a life is to lose the whole world, whether that life is Palestinian or Israeli," Blinken said.

Blinken said he and Netanyahu had a detailed discussion about Israel's security needs, including re-supplying the Iron Dome aerial defense system with rocket interceptors.

Blinken also spoke about the right of Israelis and Palestinians, who he said "equally deserve to live safely and securely, to enjoy equal measures of freedom, opportunity and democracy, to be treated with dignity," but he did not specifically mention the two-state solution or suggest that comprehensive peace negotiations were imminent.

Netanyahu used the meeting to urge the US not to return to the Iran nuclear deal known as the JCPOA. He said the deal would allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons, and said Israel reserved the right to defend itself.

Blinken also met with the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah later on Tuesday.

Following that meeting, Blinken announced that the Biden administration will be reopening the US consulate in Jerusalem and providing $5.5 million in immediate disaster assistance to Gaza as well as additional new assistance to the Palestinian people.

Blinken said that opening the consulate, which was closed during the Trump administration and serves as the primary diplomatic post for US-Palestinian relations, is an important way for the US to "engage with and provide support to the Palestinian people."

"I am here to underscore the commitment of the US to rebuilding a relationship to the Palestinian Authority and with the Palestinian people," the top US diplomat said. "A relationship built on mutual respect and also a shared conviction that Palestinians and Israelis alike deserve equal measures of freedom, security, opportunity and dignity."

The US is working with the UN, the international community, the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli government to assist in recovery and relief efforts in Gaza. Blinken said these efforts are "urgent." Blinken said the US will work with partners to be sure that Hamas does not benefit from these reconstruction efforts.

"Asking all of us to help rebuild Gaza only makes sense if there is confidence that what is rebuilt is not lost again because Hamas decides to launch more rocket attacks in the future," he added.

In addition to the immediate disaster relief, the Biden administration is providing $75 million in development and economic assistance to the Palestinians this year and $32 million for UNRWA's emergency humanitarian appeal. The Trump administration shut off economic assistance to the Palestinian Authority and to UNRWA and the Biden administration already pledged to resume that support.

Blinken also said the US welcomes the ceasefire holding but said that is "not enough." He said the last round of violence was symptomatic of a "larger set of issues that we have to address if we are going to prevent its occurrence." He also conveyed the "deep condolences" of the US to the families of those who lost loved ones in recent violence.

"I say this as a father, no child whether Israeli or Palestinian or American is a statistic. We know the human consequences when violence takes the upper hand and we are determined that that not be the case. The loss of any child is a universe of loss and in some ways incomprehensible except to those who suffered the loss," Blinken said.

Abbas thanked the Biden administration for the resumption of assistance to UNRWA, for its commitment to a two-state solution and for its position on the expansion of settlements. He also said the Palestinian government stands ready to work on the reconstruction of Gaza and to establish a national unity government.

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New documentary explores the life and career of Menachem Begin – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 29, 2021

Just before midnight on May 17, 1977, a new word entered the Israeli Hebrew language encapsulating the unexpected success of an out-of-favor politician. It has since been picked up by marketers and applied in popular culture to describe revolutionary changes like a woman changing her hair color or a family moving from a backwater Israeli town to a high-rise condo in Tel Aviv. The word is mahapach.Creating the most iconic moment in Israels television broadcast history, Channel Ones avuncular and statesman-like anchorman Haim Yavin Israels Walter Cronkite had all eyes on him as election results slowly rolled in. As he recently related, there was no other way to report what I was witnessing, no one had in mind Menachem Begin becoming the leader of the people.I thought to myself as my statistician handed me the results and whispered, Hey, Begin won the election. I must tell the audience, not in a detailed way, but in a very short concise way: We were witnessing history.

Somewhere in my memory, Yavin recalled, a word from the Talmud I didnt know exactly from what connection but I knew the word, mapecha, the Hebrew word for revolution.

I played with the word, which was my second job, and modified it in the moment to mahapach. More revolutionary than revolution, as this was an election by ballots not a revolution of bullets.

The American filmmakers of a new documentary on the life of Menachem Begin to debut on June 7, found the May 1977 black & white film footage of Yavins election-night broadcast and knew the word captured both the moment and key events of Menachem Begins life.

I turned to the director, said Denver-based producer Rob Schwartz, and said thats the title! We translated it to upheaval which became the title of our film.

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In several conversations with the filmmakers, participants and nonparticipants who knew Menachem Begin, the iconic word was discussed. Some, like Ariela Cotler, who was a very young Likud Party parliamentary whip thought it had a negative connotation. She had worked side-by-side with Begin when he led the opposition and then when he became leader of the government and prime minister. Cotler views mahapacha as taking power by force, an upheaval.

Upheaval is not a positive change, the results of a democratic election were a turnover, a shift in the will of the voters, said Cotler. Yet, she agreed, Hayim Yavins use of the word that night was very powerful, he summed up the psychic state of the people who created a turnover.

The original footage of that television news broadcast moment is just one of many which make Upheaval an out-of-the-ordinary documentary on the life of one of Israels historic figures. Maryland-based director Jonathan Gruber recruited a research team to comb both American and Israel television news libraries and found many moments of the famous news anchors of the day reporting key events in Israel and the incredible life of Menachem Begin.

GRUBER AND Schwartz worked closely during the creative process as Gruber explained, theres the film making, the story and there is the challenge of presenting someone as iconic as Menachem Begin.

Using rarely seen archival materials and intimate interviews with Israelis and Americans who knew Begin personally and as prime minister, the Upheaval team has created a film covering the entire arc of his life.

Both Schwartz and Gruber have personal drives that impacted their decisions during the making of Upheaval.

I was 10 years old when the Camp David Accords peace agreement happened, thats mainly my memory of Menachem Begin, said Gruber.

Yet, we had to share Begins story in totality, the negative stuff also had to come out in order to have any credibility, we had to talk about things that didnt reflect well; that was very important.

For Schwartz, a retired healthcare executive, it was a book that sparked his interest that lit the fire to aspire to make, an award-winning documentary on the life of Menachem Begin.

I had read former political adviser, speechwriter and diplomat Yehuda Avners 2010 history The Prime Ministers and found the coverage of Menachem Begin the most compelling, Schwartz recalled. I was moved and tried to find an English language film to watch and couldnt find one.

Schwartz related a piece of synchronicity that provided the impetus behind getting Upheaval made when he recalled a dinner shortly after with former US senator Joe Lieberman from Connecticut.

Joe asked me if Id read any good books lately? Schwartz recalled, I said The Prime Ministers and he said, me too! Schwartz continued, Whos your favorite? Sen. Lieberman asked me, I answered, Menachem Begin, he said, Me too!

The next day, Schwartz and Lieberman met in the senators NYC office and Lieberman offered to help with Schwartzs concept to make a full-length documentary film and together they began the planning, fundraising and recruiting of people to appear in Upheaval.

Of the several notable people interviewed for on-screen roles, author Yossi Klein Halevi summed up the importance and centrality and continued relevancy in contemporary Israel of Begins life and motivations.

You cant understand Israel today without understanding the legacy of Begin versus Ben Gurion, we live between two visions, radical contradictions of both men who played such key roles.

To this day, said Halevi, I love him (Begin) and will always love him.

The filmmakers have also worked closely with the Jerusalem-based Menachem Begin Heritage Center to extend the reach and impact of the film and are creating additional educational material for Israeli and international audiences.

The film will be screened on June 7th at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem. Viewers can see Upheaval at its free international debut, outside of Israel, on June 7 at 8 p.m. ET on Facebook Live and streaming in virtual cinemas across the US beginning June 9. For more information and viewing options, visit the film website: upheavalfilm.com

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Not even remotely close: It’s time to return to our houses of faith | Opinion – NorthJersey.com

Posted By on May 29, 2021

Rabbi Moshe Hauer, Special to the USA TODAY Network Published 12:41 p.m. ET May 28, 2021 | Updated 12:41 p.m. ET May 28, 2021

Like every other aspect of society, we in the religious community are grappling with the challenges of reopening. Yet while debates rage about complete, partial, or no return to the physical business office, communities of faith must not settle for anything less than the real thing. We must return to our houses of faith.

The pandemic introduced the faith community tovirtual meetings, movingmany of usto develop a new model of remote religious services that in many cases reached and engagedwider audiences no longer defined by geography. The positive is that thismodel expanded the reach ofourservices and ministries, both in numbers of attendees and hours of participation. The benefits and advantages of that expanded reach to so many who had not previously engaged, prayed, or studied at that level must be creatively maintained post-pandemic.

But remote access is simply not enough and sooner than later we must all safely return to the unparalleled experience of in-person participation in religious services.

Many hundreds of our Orthodox synagogues that had closed their doors to in-person services last March have been back together in a limited, safe, and COVID-19-compliant manner since last June. The limitations we all put in place due to the pandemic have certainly curtailed the experience in some ways, but they have made our reopening safe and have redoubled our commitment to the value of being together.

For Orthodox Jews, in-person communal prayer is the norm. Traditionally, Jewish law requires the physical presence of a prayer quorum, aminyan, to formally and publicly read from the Torah and to recite critical prayers such as theKaddish. The quorum must be in a shared physical space and may not even be divided between two adjacent structures within earshot of each other. The remotevirtualminyancertainly does not satisfy these requirementsand thus limits our ability to experience the full prayer service.

The Talmud teachesusthe value behind this emphasis on communal prayer in ways that can be appreciated by all faiths. First, praying together as a group creates a participatory devotional community where we do not sit back to listen and observe but lean forward and raise our voices together in prayer and song. Additionally, a community that comes together in a space dedicated to G-d makes that space truly a House of G-d, a place of more immersive and tangible spirituality. In fact, there is nowhere that the Hebrew Bible is more detailed and explicit than in its instructions with regard to the construction of the Temple, thus underscoring the value of having a unique and carefully designed physical space to encounter G-d.

Returning home to the house of faith:: What will the future of religious worship look like?

Whilethese are some of the spiritual and religious benefits of praying together in a dedicated sanctuary, there are other fundamental advantages to the experience that accrue to our benefit as individuals and as a society.

In our time of division, alienation, and fracture, communities of faith are a critical place where we care for each other. Faith brings together the wealthy and poor, the thriving and the struggling, in a community formed around ideals and the striving to do and to be good. In a world where we bowl alone, the synagogue, church and mosque are places where we come and care together. This is an immense value for each and every one of us, but exceptionally so for the elderly, the ill and the lonely, and all those who benefit from the vigorous social safety net provide by faith communities.

This fundamental value of the in-person prayer community has generated the known phenomenon of densely populated Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods.For an Orthodox Jew who observes the religious law precluding driving on the Sabbath and wishes to attend a synagogue on the Sabbath to participate in the basic rite of communal prayer, there is no choice other than to live within walking distance of the synagogue. Hence the Orthodox Jewish neighborhood is more of a practical necessity than a sociological choice.

The sun shines through the Star of David on top of the Congregation Ahavas Israel on Van Houten Avenue in Passaic on Saturday, April 3, 2021. Passaic has a large Orthodox Jewish community and houses about 20 Orthodox synagogues.(Photo: Anne-Marie Caruso/NorthJersey.com - USA TODAY NETWORK)

But those neighborhoods have created in turn a social dynamic that nurtures its members very powerfully. A physical community of neighbors who share spaces of religious prayer and study has spawned in turn a powerful web of friendship that approaches the level of family, and a range of caring services to meet a wide variety of needs that benefit all members of the surrounding community.

We must return to our houses of faith, safely and comfortably. These are the places in our lives that while not immune to the fractures around us remain the islands of mutual commitment and social bond. These are the places where we feel G-ds presence, feel each others presence, and strive together to be better people, to care for each other and to build together the future of our blessed country.

Rabbi Moshe Hauer, Orthodox Union Executive Vice President(Photo: Orthodox Union)

Rabbi Moshe Hauer is the executive vice president of the Orthodox Union, the umbrella organization for American Orthodox Jewry.

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Not even remotely close: It's time to return to our houses of faith | Opinion - NorthJersey.com

Remembering the Farhud pogrom and its lessons for today – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 29, 2021

Now that the latest conflict between Israel and terrorist groups in Gaza has ended, it is important to look back at one of the more wrenching and unprecedented aspects of the recent conflagration.

One of the most important elements to this is how best to understand and then combat hate, incitement and violence between communities.

Jews had lived in what was variously named Babylon, Mesopotamia and Iraq for around two and a half millennia. The Iraqi Jewish academies in Sura and Pumbedita gave us the Babylonian Talmud, the compilation of texts that forms the backbone of the Jewish tradition to this day.

It witnessed the Chaldean Empire, Mongol invasion, Islamic Caliphate and the Ottoman Empire. Sometimes it thrived and contributed to society and the wider world and other times it merely survived.

Jews helped fight for Iraqs independence in the 20th century, and the authorities utilized the talents of the Jewish community and its expertise in areas such as the economic, judicial and postal systems. Iraqs first minister of finance, Yehezkel Sasson, was a Jew.

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Unfortunately, independence also provided power to some who would use malevolence, division and hatred to achieve their political goals.

During World War II, Rashid Ali al-Gaylani became prime minister and decided he would ally with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany to win support for his government. Gaylani was the person who introduced the rabid antisemite Grand Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini to Hitler, and Iraq became an early base for Nazi Middle East intelligence operations during World War II.

Gaylani used anti-British sentiment throughout Iraq, with the Jews as scapegoats, coupled with violent antisemitic incitement spread by the German embassy in Baghdad to foment hatred and mistrust towards the Jewish community.

The German embassy bought the newspaper Al-alam Al-arabi (The Arab world), which published, in addition to antisemitic propaganda, a translation of Mein Kampf in Arabic and supported the establishment of Al-Fatwa, a youth organization based upon the model of the Hitler Youth.

According to witnesses at the time, Nazi-like propaganda was regularly broadcast on the radio and throughout the country. Jewish businesses and homes were marked and false rumors that the Jews were helping the British in the war spread.

After Shavuot, on June 1st, 1941, Jews ventured out from the holiday to be met by mobs in an orgy of violence that lasted two days and left around 180 Jews dead, buried in a mass grave, hundreds more wounded and scores of Jewish homes, businesses and synagogues routed and burned.

It was a blow that the Jewish community never recovered from and led to the mass exodus of Iraqi Jews to the State of Israel after it was established. Between 1948 and 1951, 121,633 Iraqi Jews were airlifted, bused or smuggled out of the country, leaving only a few thousand left who fled the country after public hangings of prominent Jews in the 1970s.

Even up to the very end, many Jews and Arabs refused to be enemies and lived and worked side by side. Animosity was largely imported from outside and incitement as a tool for political goals.

Unfortunately, we see many similar worrying signs in the violence in mixed Israeli towns and cities.

There are many players in the region who seek to whip up the Arab citizens of Israel into a frenzy, whether Iran or extreme Sunni elements. They see Jewish-Arab coexistence as a challenge that needs to be dismantled and replaced with enmity and animosity.

Lies about Jewish takeover attempts to invade and destroy al-Aqsa Mosque originated with the very same Haj Amin al-Husseini a century ago. Unfortunately, it is a canard that has not gone away since and raises its head whenever necessary for those who wish to sew divisions in Israel.

It is exactly this type of incitement that Israeli politicians, religious leaders and other opinion-shapers should confront and demolish. Instead of driving communities apart, we should be investing in coexistence, collaboration and partnerships. We know that the silent minority in both communities do not seek violence and division, and we have witnessed in recent years tremendous steps in bringing Jews and Arabs together.

The creation of the State of Israel is a remarkable and unique event in Jewish history and became a refuge and a home to the hundreds of thousands of Jews from the Middle East and North Africa who had to flee their millennia-old homes.

Israel is a beacon of light in a region where there has been such a history of darkness for so many, including Jews. Now that we have reestablished sovereignty in our indigenous and ancestral homeland, we need to learn the lessons of the past and use them to create a more peaceful and secure future for all who live within its borders.

That would be the greatest memorial to the Jews murdered during the Farhud 80 years on.

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Remembering the Farhud pogrom and its lessons for today - opinion - The Jerusalem Post

Islam and Judaism on learning from questioning suffering – The Times of Israel

Posted By on May 29, 2021

For many people, especially in todays world, it is very hard to reconcile the personal suffering of good and pious people, with Divine justice and love. Believers of all religions face this challenge. There are many answers offered; from Karma to reincarnation.

Muslims and Jews have traditionally given the same answers with some variation. This is to be expected since both Jews and Muslims share the same belief in Gods oneness, goodness and justice; and both Jews and Muslims reject the doctrines of bad luck, or inherited sin from previous lives, or original sin.

The Quran tells us that just because you become, or already are, a believer doesnt mean that you are exempt from personal suffering. Do men think that they will be left alone on saying We believe and that they will not be tested? (29:2), this is not correct: Ye shall certainly be tried and tested in your possessions; and in your personal selves. (3:186)

You will be tested by fear of, and hunger for, the loss of material goods, loved ones lives, and the failure of your efforts to bear fruit. Yet if you patiently persevere all will be well Be sure We shall test you with something of fear and hunger, some loss in goods, or lives, or the fruits (of your toil); but give glad tidings to those who patiently persevere. (Quran 2:155)

The glad tidings might come from a reversal in your bad fortune in this world, as happened to Job: or in your life in the world to come.

Traditional Jewish sages and rabbis would have agreed with all of the already quoted verses in the Quran. The first thing you should learn from suffering, your own and that of others, is that different people react to suffering in very different ways. Our reactions to suffering rest upon the varied beliefs we hold both consciously and unconsciously.

I share a few Jewish reports about suffering along with several probing questions so that you can examine your own beliefs and those of others; and thus gain a greater understanding of one of the major challenges in life. The first story embodies the heroic perspective.

One day a young man stood in the middle of a town proclaiming that he had the most beautiful heart in the whole valley. A large crowd gathered and all admired his heart, for it was perfect. There was not a mark or a flaw in it. Yes, they agreed it truly was the most beautiful heart they had ever seen. The young man was very proud and boasted about his beautiful heart, which was the result of his following a path of calmness and detachment.

Then an old Rabbi named Akiba ben Yosef the convert appeared at the front of the crowd and said, Why your heart is not nearly as beautiful as mine. The crowd and the young man looked at the old mans heart. It was beating strongly, but full of scars, it had places where pieces had been removed and other pieces put in, but they didnt fit quite right and there were several jagged edges.

In fact, in some places there were deep gouges where whole pieces were missing. The people stared. How can Rabbi Akiba say his heart is more beautiful, they thought?

The young man looked at the old mans heart and laughed. You must be joking, he said. My heart is perfect and yours is a mess of scars and tears.

Yes, said Rabbi Akiba, yours is perfect looking but I would never trade with you. You see, every scar represents a person to whom I have given my love. I tear out a piece of my heart and give it to them, and often they give me a piece of their heart, which fits into an empty place in my heart. But because the pieces arent exactly equal I have some rough edges, which I cherish, because they remind me of the love we shared.

Sometimes I give pieces of my heart away, and the other person doesnt return a piece of his or her heart to me. These are the empty gougesgiving love is taking a chance. And then there are places where my heart is broken, reminding me of the love I have had, and lost. I then say the mourners prayer, the Kaddish, for it is better to love and lose than never to love at all.

The young man stood silently with tears running down his cheeks. He walked up to the old man, reached into his perfect young and beautiful heart and ripped a piece out. He offered it to the old man with trembling hands. Rabbi Akiba took his offering, placed it in his heart and then took a piece from his old scarred heart and placed it in the wound in the young mans heart.

It fit, but not perfectly, as there were some jagged edges. The young man looked at his heart, not perfect anymore but more beautiful than ever, since love from Rabbi Akibas heart flowed into his. They embraced and walked away side by side.

How sad it must be to go through life, calmly and dispassionately, without suffering and with a perfect heart. Rabbi Akiba taught that there were yesurin shell ahavah sufferings that come with love. There really are people who can accept suffering with love. Perhaps there is no gain without pain. After all, it is a Mitsvah to love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your might.

But Rabbi Akiba did not reach this view easily. The Talmud tells the story of how Akiba came to his belief.

What is the lesson from (the life of) Rabbi Nahum the optimist? This is his story: Rabbi Nahum the optimist had bad vision, and arthritis in both his hands and his feet. Once his disciples asked Rabbi, how can it be that someone as kind hearted and good as you should suffer such misfortunes?

He replied, I brought it on myself. Once I was traveling to my father-in-laws house with 3 donkeys loaded with food and drink. A poor scabby looking man came to me and said, Rabbi, help me stay alive. I replied, Wait until I unload the donkeys. While I was unloading the donkeys he died.

I felt terrible. In remorse I said, May my eyes that didnt see his needs grow dim. May my hands and feet that cared for my wealth before his health, bring me pain. His disciples said, It is awful to see you suffer so. He said, For me it would be awful if you didnt see me suffer so.

Is Rabbi Nahum overly strict on himself? Do people with very high standards for themselves suffer more? Do you admire someone who is overly sensitive more than someone who is insensitive? Why? Which way would you want to lean?

Some time later Rabbi Akiba visited Rabbi Nahum the optimist. Akiba said, It is awful for me to see you suffer. Rabbi Nahum the optimist replied, It is awful for me to see you reject my example. (I can bear my fate why cant you? I am positive about my circumstances, why cant you see the virtue of my accepting suffering as part of life and love. If it doesnt kill you, it makes you stronger. Admire how I bear my burdens, do not pity me. Does no pain, no gain apply only to exercise? to cancer? to sudden crib death?

In the end, Rabbi Akiba came to agree with his teacher and accepted from him his way of accepting suffering with love. (Talmud Taanit 21a)

The Talmud also says, The life of an overly sensitive person is no life.(Talmud Pesach 113b). Perhaps that applies to those who are overly sensitive about themselves and not about others. Perhaps Rabbi Nahum is a saint who goes far beyond the normal requirements of our duties, and is not to be copied.

Perhaps Rabbi Nahum is an extremist on one side just as Gautama Buddha, who taught that all suffering should be avoided through detachment, is an extremist on the other side. Would you choose to suffer from too much conscience or choose others to suffer because you have too little conscience? How do you find the correct balance between If I am not for myself, who will be for me, but if I am only for myself what am I? (Talmud Avot 1:14). Is this why we need community ethical and ritual rules to set the norm

Not every Rabbi welcomed suffering as the following story shows: Rabbi Heeya was very ill. Rabbi Yohanan visited him and asked. Is your suffering of any gain for you? Heeya replied Neither it nor its reward. Yohanan said, Give me your hand. Heeya gave him his hand and felt much better. (Talmud Berachot 5b )

Those who visited Rabbi Nahum expressed pity first. Rabbi Yohanan asked first. People handle pain, their own or others, in different ways. How do you respond when seeing others in pain? Do you think others should respond as you think you would or even as you did? How can one know when Rabbi Akiba is correct or when Rabbi Heeya is? Is there a great difference between physical and emotional pain?

Written on the shirt of a marathon runner Pain is the feeling of weakness being sucked out of the body. Is life a marathon? Is running a choice? Do you have to run in every race?

Judaism teaches by questioning. What other questions do these stories stimulate? As you think about your answers to these question would it be helpful to discuss your thoughts and feelings with others, both those who are close to you and those who are not.

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Summer camp in Otis finds a way to serve kids, despite COVID and last year’s wildfires – KGW.com

Posted By on May 29, 2021

B'nai B'rith Camp has delivered thousands of meals to Lincoln County kids who were forced to evacuate during last year's Echo Mountain Fire.

OTIS, Ore. BNai Brith Camp in Otis continues to serve kids and their families in Lincoln County, despite the pandemic and last year's wildfires.

I am beyond proud and honored that we are able to help our community, said food service director Becci Bazen.

Bazen has a passion for food and an even bigger passion for kids.

I miss kids running on the ballfields, I miss the, Hi Chef Becci!

Most people in Lincoln County need no reminder of what went down last year. First, COVID-19 canceled summer camp. Then there was the Echo Mountain Fire.

It's so easy for us to think that the fires are over," said camp board member Ruth Shelly. "But for those of us who live here, where we're driving past charred trees every day, where we see homes. Where we know that our friends or neighbors are still recovering, and such a long process,"

The camp may be quiet, but the kitchen has kept it going. Bazen and the kitchen staff have been providing meals to kids affected by last years wildfire. Every morning they come in, assemble the lunches, and get them out fast.

We come into the kitchen, we begin to prepare the food, whether it be sandwiches, whether it be a hot lunch, said Bazen. As soon as everything is ready, within 30 minutes before the food has to go out, we assemble all the food, we close them up, we put them in boxes so they're ready to go out the door by 11:45 a.m. to deliver at noon.

They make dinners and breakfasts seven days a week. Each meal is delivered.

Our facility is a perfect setup for us to be able to prepare the meals and get them out into the community, said Bazen.

When the program began, they were making 310 meals a day. That number is about 100 now, which is a good thing.

It means people are starting to be able to move back into their homes, people have been able to rebuild," said Bazen. "It is a very good thing to know that our community is somewhat coming back to normal.

Campers will come back on June 29. For Bazen and the kitchen staff, theyll continue making and delivering meals through December, or as long as needed.

We're excited to have the kids back this year. Although things are going to be looking different for us in the food delivery, we need the magic back of summer camp, Bazen said.

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