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A Rabbi’s Message on Coping With Covid | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com – Algemeiner

Posted By on February 1, 2021

A New York City Police officer takes a selfie while in the middle of the street in an almost-empty Times Square, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in New York City, March 31, 2020. Photo: Reuters / Brendan McDermid.

Loneliness pretty much sums up 2020. There are so many people who have not hugged someone, or given a handshake, since last March. Humans need human interaction. We are social beings. Shortly before the pandemic, my wife and I moved into a new community with no family. We have been married for three years and have begun our journey to build our family. Unfortunately, our first pregnancy ended in a miscarriage at 12 weeks. Thank G-d, our second pregnancy ended with our healthy baby, despite being six-and-a-half weeks premature and born at only 3.3 lbs.

Alone together, my wife and I began our second miscarriage shortly before Yom Kippur of 2020. Not only was the potential life in question, but our doctor, in this new place, spoke about the possible endangerment of my wifes life. Because of this, my wife needed to return to her doctor for more testing, even on Yom Kippur. Beyond the changes Yom Kippur in synagogue required by 2020, our Yom Kippur took a quick turn for the worse. Because of Covid, my wife had to go to her doctor alone, as I was not allowed to accompany her. Lamentably, we lost the baby; however my wife, Praise G-d, was and is healthy.

The verses from Psalms 130 really resonated with me this Yom Kippur as I davened home alone; Out of the depths I call out to G-d. As I said these words, I noticed the use of the Tetragrammaton to refer to G-d. The Tetragrammaton is a fascinating name of G-d, as it reminds and reassures us that G-d is beyond time. This name is a compound word of past, present, and future in Hebrew . For us, this was comforting, to an extent, as we understood that we can be in the dark, and yet, at the same time, know everything happens for a reason.

This is just one story during these challenging times. One of the things I have noticed and experienced is the lack of attention to mental health. While we are so obsessed about the medical research and latest ways to prevent Covid transmission, we often forget the need for social interaction. Yes, we need to take precautions and be safe, and that is exceptionally important. However, there is a way to treat both physical and mental health needs.

February 1, 2021 6:00 pm

This all serves as a reminder that you never know what is going on in anothers personal life. As Jews, we are obligated to give the benefit of the doubt, as the Torah says in Leviticus 19:15 With righteousness shall you judge your fellow fairly. . Something that my parents taught me growing up is that G-d judges you the way you judge others.

There have been many initiatives which have helped us to give back to the community financially. But thats not enough these days. So I would like to share a unique project that I hope will inspire you.

There is a rabbinic couple who are modeling the power of giving as they travel the United States by RV on a journey, or nesiya, to better understand and support the distinct needs of local communities while meeting heroes of everyday life. They arent just doing this through tzedaka, monetary needs, but they are placing a strong emphasis on visiting people (from a safe distance and with precautions).

Additionally, the way they go about their tzedaka is very much in lines of the Jewish value of human dignity, Kibud HaBriot. Kibud HaBriot is so important in Judaism that throughout the Talmud, it overrules various other commandments. The couple I mentioned, Rabbi and Mindy Glickman, are echoing these values by becoming members of synagogues along their journey and supporting local stores and venues when they visit small Jewish communities which have been so deeply affected by Covid.

Its time to wake up and realize the great need for attention to everyones mental health. As a mental health professional myself, I can anecdotally say that we can see such an impact on our clients mental health. Ask any mental health worker, and they can tell you the real impact of this pandemic. The statistics and studies have not come out yet, as the pandemic is still fresh but we can all see its effects. So please, send flowers to a loved one to show you care, make a visit (from a distance) to an elderly relative, reach out to someone who is single and ask how they are doing. The pandemic is rough, but together we can make it better for each other.

Rabbi Jonah Coffey-Keyak is a social worker, marriage counselor, and chaplain for World Mizrahi and others. He is based in Memphis.

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A Rabbi's Message on Coping With Covid | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner.com - Algemeiner

New Class on the Jewish Perspective of the Afterlife Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted By on February 1, 2021

What is it like to die? These are the words Dr. Raymond Moody uses to open his bestselling book;Life After Life. He writes, That is a question which humanity has been asking itself ever since there have been humans I can safely say that this topic excites the most powerful of feelings from people of many emotional types and walks of life.

Judaism has a lot to say on this topic. In addition to providing practical direction in end-of -life decisions, as well as the process of mourning, the Talmud and Kabalah (Jewish mysticism) address the more esoteric issues of death, how it is experienced by the soul, Heaven and Hell, and even reincarnation (gilgul).

Rabbi Shneur Silberberg, rabbi at Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield, will lead a six-part series titled Life After Life. The series is produced by the Jewish Learning Institute (JLI).

The classes are accredited (CE) for doctors, nurses and mental health professionals.

The classes will be offered twice weekly, beginning the week of Jan. 31. Sundays at 11 a.m. and repeated on Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. Classes will be available on Zoom.

For more information, visitwww.baischabad.com/SOULor contactrabbishneur@baischabad.com.

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New Class on the Jewish Perspective of the Afterlife Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

Boca Raton Synagogue and Church Team Up to Help the Homeless and the Hungry – The Boca Raton Tribune

Posted By on February 1, 2021

Boca Raton, FL As the old saying goes, cleanliness is next to godliness. Thats why two faith-based organizations in Boca Raton, Florida Bnai Torah Congregation and St. Gregorys Episcopal Church have joined together to offer a critical service to those in the community who need it most. As of February 2, each week on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., a mobile shower station will be open and available to the public at St. Gregorys, located at 100 NE Mizner Blvd.

In addition to receiving a hot shower, visitors will have access to new toiletries, towels, undergarments, and clothes, all of which have been donated by various community organizations and establishments.

We hope the shower program provides those who take advantage of it with a fresh, clean start both literally and figuratively, says Summer Faerman, Director of Bnai Torahs Tzedakah, Learning and Chesed (TLC) Program. The shower program will be managed by qualified, hand-picked volunteers who will be able to connect visitors to additional support services. They may stop by for a hot shower and a clean towel, but they will hopefully leave with the tools and information to get whatever services they may need such as housing, employment, healthcare, etc., says Faerman.

A free food pantry will also be made available at St. Gregorys beginning February 2. The pantry is part of Bnai Torahs TLC Little Free Food Pantry program that began this summer in an effort to combat food insecurity issues that became even worse during COVID. Through this program, small pantries were put up around Boca Raton and surrounding areas allowing those who need food to take, and those with extra food to give.

Gena Vallee,Director of Youth Ministry &Outreach Coordinator at St. Gregorys says, The opening of the Mobile Shower along with the Little Free Pantry is the epitome of what a community can and should look like at its best. When we spend time sharing love for each other and with each other, the goodness is endless. Regardless of where our place of worship might be, this community is united in love. And where there is love, there is beauty.

Shower service will be available during the operating hours on a first-come, first-served basis. No appointments are necessary.

For more information about the program, contact Summer Faerman at (561) 392-8566 or[emailprotected]or Gena Vallee at (561) 395-8285 or[emailprotected].

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Youve probably never heard about the worlds first female rabbi. Sigal Samuel wants to change that – Forward

Posted By on February 1, 2021

If you think female rabbis are a modern phenomenon, Sigal Samuel is here to change your mind just like she changed hers.

Samuel grew up in an Orthodox community where the idea of female clergy was considered deeply untraditional. So when, deep in an internet rabbit hole, she stumbled on the story of the worlds first female rabbi, she was astonished to learn that this sage lived and worked in the 16th-century.

Born in 1590, Osnat Barzani grew up in Mosul, a city located in modern-day Iraq. Her father was the head of a large yeshiva, and he gave her a thorough education in Hebrew Scriptures. As an adult, Osnat established herself as a Torah scholar in her own right. The respect she enjoyed is evident from the fact that, when her father and husband died, leadership of the Mosul yeshiva fell to her.

A Vox staff writer (Disclosure: Samuel previously served as the Forwards Opinion editor) and the author of several plays and the novel The Mystics of Mile End, Samuel now has a new notch in her belt: Shes the author of the first-ever book about the first-ever rabbi. In Osnat and Her Dove, an understated childrens book richly illustrated by Vali Mintzi, Samuel gathers the details of Osnats life and chronicles the folk tales that sprung up around her.

The Forwards Irene Katz Connelly reached Samuel at her Washington, D.C. home to talk about working through the pandemic and retrieving Osnats story from the annals of history.

The following interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Irene Katz Connelly: How do we know Osnat was a rabbi? Was she formally ordained?

Image by Sigal Samuel

The author and journalist Sigal Samuel.

Sigal Samuel: The men at her yeshiva actually called her by the title tanait, the female form of the title tana which is given only to the most respected rabbis. She did not have a formal smicha but she was widely recognized by her contemporaries as a rabbi. You can see that really explicitly in a letter one of her contemporaries, Rabbi Pinchas Hariri, sent where he calls her my mother, my rabbi. But even if we didnt have a letter like that, just the fact that she was a rosh yeshiva tells you that she was recognized as a rabbi.

How did you first learn about Osnat?

I ran across Osnats story five years ago while doing research for a stage play called Four Women Entered Paradise, a modern retelling of an ancient Talmudic story about four male rabbis who entered paradise. So I was researching various Jewish women leaders in history, and one night I went deep into an internet rabbit hole and landed on a page about Osnat. There are actually no books about her, only a few isolated scholarly articles. Which is stunning. She didnt make it into the play. But she ended up getting her own book because her story was so striking I thought it should stand alone.

If there werent many extant sources, what was the research process like?

I am lucky to be a fluent reader of Hebrew, which meant that I could read the few articles that have been written. I also relied on other sources for details about the historical setting where Osnat grew up. I consulted historians and ethnomusicologists to ask very specific questions, like What instruments would have been played at a Kurdish Jewish wedding?

And the other source of knowledge is my own Iraqi upbringing. My family on my dads side comes from Baghdad.

Did anything from your family background make it into the book?

Its funny, just a few days ago I finally sent my dad the book to read. And he said, You wrote your own autobiography. He is a former professor of Kabbalah, and when I was a young girl he taught me Talmud. He was a lot like Osnats dad, always encouraging me and telling me I could do anything I put my mind to. Even though I was going to an orthodox school where the idea of a girl becoming a rabbi was totally taboo, my dad would say, If you want to do that, you can.

What was the most surprising thing you learned?

What is most surprising to a contemporary Jew is the fact that when Osnat grew up and took over as the head of the yeshiva in Mosul, it wasnt controversial. Nobody freaked out. Nowadays, when you look at the movement of women entering the clergy in the Orthodox world, for example the women graduating from Yeshivat Maharat, its very controversial for them to want to be recognized as rabbis. You have a lot of the powers that be in the Orthodox world giving them a hard time. But by the time Osnat became the rosh yeshiva, she was already such a respected teacher that her gender wasnt seen as an issue. I think that can be a good reminder for Jews today that this is actually part of our history. We dont have to react as if its some kind of crazy thing for a woman to lead a spiritual community.

Having grown up on a diet of books about strong women, Osnat and Her Dove seems exceptional to me because its a story not so much of sexism or struggle but of a woman really flourishing in her field. Was that an intentional decision on your part?

I do think Osnat struggled in the sense that she was only able to become the head of the yeshiva after her father and her husband, who had previously held the position, died. But she had a super supportive father, a dad who was willing to see her as an equal to any of his male students, and that made a huge difference.

And she lived in the Kurdish community, where women enjoyed certain advantages. Not to say that they had perfectly equal rights in a 2021 sense, but Kurdish history contains a lot of examples of female leaders. So its not that shocking to me. If an Osnat Barzani was going to spring up anywhere, it makes sense to me that it would be in the Kurdish context. Relative to her European counterparts, she was very well-positioned to become a rabbi.

Many childrens books about forgotten historical figures are inspired by the stories authors wish had been available to them. Is that the case for you?

I grew up as a Mizrahi girl in an Orthodox community that was very much Ashkenazi-dominated. In my school library, in my synagogue, in all my educational settings, I didnt encounter any stories about Mizrahi girls or women that were positive. Its really important to have that kind of diversity. Especially in childrens books, because kids are just forming their perceptions of what it will be possible for them to be when they grow up.

When I was a kid, I had a secret dream of becoming a rabbi. But I assumed I couldnt do that, because I almost never saw female rabbis. And even when I did, that woman never looked like me. The women rabbis I knew of almost exclusively looked very Ashkenazi. I think if I had had a book like this growing up, it honestly could have changed the course of my life.

Most of your writing is aimed at adults. What did you have to change while writing for kids?

I definitely had to keep in mind a different vocabulary than what Im used to. But I am a firm believer that kids understand a lot more than we give them credit for. For example, in the scene when Osnat gets married, the text describes how the musicians trumpeted on the zurna and drummed on the davul. I didnt need to explain what a zourna or davul is, even though kids have almost certainly never heard those words, because theyll get it from the pictures. I didnt even want to italicize those words, because I want to normalize them. A person in that culture, theyre not living their life in italics.

What has it been like to work on this book during the pandemic?

Its been a strange process, but kind of therapeutic. Whenever Im immersed in Osnats world, Im very much removed from thinking about the coronavirus pandemic or political news or other stressful things happening in our current world.

Besides your various writing projects, have you developed any quarantine hobbies?

I have become one of those crazy birders who goes out with binoculars every weekend. Its funny, because Osnat has this pet dove who follows her everywhere. In the legends, the dove would hoot whenever Osnat was in danger and didnt know it. It would be pretty neat if I could have a bird like that. But so far, I just sneak up and look at them through my binoculars, and am generally just a big nerd about it.

Irene Katz Connelly is a staff writer at the Forward. You can contact her at connelly@forward.com. Follow her on Twitter at @katz_conn.

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Youve probably never heard about the worlds first female rabbi. Sigal Samuel wants to change that - Forward

Free Will Astrology | Astrology – North Coast Journal

Posted By on February 1, 2021

ARIES (March 21-April 19): In the 1950 film Harvey, James Stewart plays a middle-aged man named Elwood whose best friend is a tall invisible rabbit named Harvey. The relationship causes problems with the people in Elwood's life. At one point a psychiatrist tries to convince him to "struggle with reality." Elwood replies, "I wrestled with reality for 40 years and I am happy to state that I finally won." I'm happy to tell you this story, Aries, because it's a good lead in to my counsel for you: I suspect that one of your long wrestles with reality will yield at least a partial victory in the coming weeks. And it will be completely real, as opposed to Elwood's Harvey. Congratulations!

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The light of the North Star takes a long time to reach us, even though it's traveling 186,000 miles per second. The beams it shows us tonight first embarked when Shakespeare was alive on Earth. And yet that glow seems so fresh and pure. Are there any other phenomena in your life that are metaphorically comparable? Perhaps an experience you had months ago that is only now revealing its complete meaning? Or a seed you planted years ago that is finally ripening into its mature expression? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to take inventory of such things, Taurus. It will also be a favorable phase to initiate innovations that will take some time to become fully useful for you.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In 1971, astronaut Alan Shepard had the great privilege of landing on the moon in a spacecraft, then walking on the lunar surface. How did he celebrate this epic holy adventure? By reciting a stirring passage from Shakespeare or the Talmud? By placing a framed photo of Amelia Earhart or a statue of Icarus in the dirt? By saying a prayer to his God or thoughtfully thanking the people who helped put him there? No. Shepard used this sublime one-of-a-kind moment to hit a golf ball with a golf club. I'll ask you not to regard him as a role model in the coming weeks. When your sacred or lofty moments arrive, offer proper homage and honor. Be righteously appreciative of your blessings.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): William Shakespeare worked with another playwright in creating three plays: Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen, and Cardenio. The lucky collaborator was John Fletcher, who was popular and influential in his era. I propose that we name him one of your role models in 2021. Here's why: You will have an enhanced potential to engage in fertile partnerships with allies who are quite worthy of you. I encourage you to be on the lookout for opportunities to thrive on symbiosis and synergy.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Canadian journalist Nick Ashdown is amazed that white people in North America are so inhibited about revealing their real feelings. He writes, "How bizarre that in English, the word 'emotional' is used pejoratively, as though passion implies some sort of weakness." He marvels that the culture seems to "worship nonchalance" and regard intense expressiveness as uncool or unprofessional. I'm going to encourage you to embody a different approach in the coming days. I don't mean to suggest that you should be an out-of-control maniac constantly exploding with intensity. But I do hope you will take extra measures to respect and explore and reveal the spirited truth about yourself.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo actor Ingrid Bergman appeared in three movies directed by Alfred Hitchcock. In Notorious, set after the end of World War II, she played the daughter of a Nazi spy. During the filming, Bergman had trouble with a particular scene. She explained her doubts to Hitchcock, saying, "I don't think I can do that naturally." Hitchcock seemed receptive to her input, but in the end had an unexpected response: "All right," he told her. "If you can't do it naturally, then fake it." I'm going to suggest that you follow Hitchcock's advice during the next two weeks, Virgo. "Fake it till you make it" is an acceptableprobably preferableapproach.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The 17th-century Libran polymath Thomas Browne had a brilliant, well-educated mind. He authored many books on various subjects, from science to religion, and was second only to Shakespeare in the art of coining new words. He did have a blind spot, however. He referred to sex as the "trivial and vulgar way of union" and "the foolishest act a wise man commits in all his life." Most of us have pockets of ignorance like thataspects that qualify as learning disabilities or intellectual black holes. And now and then there come times when we benefit from checking in with these deficiencies and deciding whether to take any fresh steps to wisen them up. Now is such a time for you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): "There is no sunrise so beautiful that it is worth waking me up to see it," declares actor and comedian Mindy Kaling. Is that an unromantic sentiment? Maybe. But more importantly, it's evidence that she treasures her sleep. And that's admirable! She is devoted to giving her body the nurturing it needs to be healthy. Let's make Kaling your patron saint for now. It's a favorable time to upgrade your strategies for taking very good care of yourself.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): All of us go through phases when our brains work at a higher level than usual. I'm guessing that you're about to enjoy one of these times. In fact, I won't be shocked if you string together a series of ingenious thoughts and actions. I hope you use your enhanced intelligence for important matterslike making practical improvements in your life! Please don't waste it on trivial matters like arguments on Facebook or Twitter.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Today the Capricorn artist Paul Czanne (18391906) is regarded as an important and influential painter. Early in his career, though, he was rejected and even ridiculed by critics. One reason was that he loved making still-life paintings, which were considered low art. Of his 584 works, about 200 of them were of inanimate, commonplace objects. Fruit was his specialty. Typically he might spend 100 separate sessions in perfecting a particular bowl of apples. "Don't you want to take a vacation from painting fruit?" he was asked. In response, he said that simply shifting the location of his easel in relation to his subject matter was almost more excitement than he could bear. That's the kind of focused, detailed attitude I hope you'll cultivate toward your own labors of love during the coming weeks, Capricorn.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): "We all want everything to be okay," writes author David Levithan. "We don't even wish so much for fantastic or marvelous or outstanding. We will happily settle for okay, because most of the time, okay is enough." To that mediocre manifesto, I reply, okay. I accept that it's true for many people. But I don't think it will apply to you Aquarians in the coming weeks. According to my assessment of your astrological potentials, you can, if you want, have a series of appointments with the fantastic, the marvelous, and the outstanding. Please keep those appointments! Don't skip them out of timidity or excess humility.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): DON'Ts: Don't keep scratching an old wound until it bleeds. Don't try to snatch away the teddy bear that belongs to the 800-pound gorilla. Don't try to relieve your tension by pounding your head against a wall. Don't try to convince a stone idol to show you some tenderness. DOs: Do ask supposedly naive questions that may yield liberating revelations. Do keep in mind that sometimes things need to be a bit broken before you'll be motivated to give them all the care they need and deserve. Do extinguish the fire on a burning bridge, and then repair the bridge.

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In ‘Beyond the Synagogue,’ Jews find religion in delis and museums J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on February 1, 2021

Rachel B. Gross can pinpoint the exact moment the idea for her book was planted. It was when one of her undergrad professors introduced herself as an anthropologist of Jews.

I just thought that was the coolest thing possible, that you could study contemporary Jews for a living, Gross told J. I wanted to grow up to be that, to study living people and the ordinary things they did.

It was the genesis for what started as a masters thesis, developed into her doctoral dissertation and then, after many revisions, into a book, just published by NYU Press and available locally from Afikomen.

Beyond the Synagogue: Jewish Nostalgia as Religious Practice grew out of Gross interest in historic synagogues that now function as museums and what people feel while in those spaces, especially about community and family. That interest expanded to include material culture the study of people and their stuff, how they use it to tell stories, what meaning it holds for them, and how they buy, sell and create it.

In other words, nostalgia.

I think nostalgia is a really useful word that gets at our longing for the past, said Gross. It connects us to our families and bigger histories.

Gross, 35, who came to the Bay Area in 2016, is an assistant professor and the John & Marcia Goldman Chair in American Jewish Studies at San Francisco State University, where her course topics range from U.S. Jewish history to Jewish food and Jews in popular culture.

For her book, Gross wanted to look at the Jews today who are connecting deeply to their Judaism, but in nontraditional ways. They may not attend synagogue, but they have a religious experience nonetheless through other vehicles. In addition to synagogues-turned-museums, she focused on how Jews learn about their ancestors through genealogy, the study of Jewish foodways, and how children learn about Jewish nostalgia through books and toys.

You can absolutely go to synagogue regularly, and [also] find meaning in a deli.

In one example, the immensely popular American Girl company created a Russian Jewish immigrant doll from the Lower East Side as part of its historical series, which had enormous power in shaping a narrative familiar to many Jewish families while introducing it to non-Jewish consumers, too.

These kinds of institutions are not ones we normally think about when we think about the institutions that shape Jewish lives, she said. But what happens when we do take them seriously as public institutions?

The food section opens with an anecdote from Sauls Delicatessen & Restaurant. Its coincidental, since Gross had never been to the Berkeley food institution and did her initial research by phone before she knew shed be moving to the Bay Area. Boichik Bagels in Berkeley is also mentioned, as is Wise Sons Deli.

Gross writes about the new Jewish food movement, explaining for example how Jewish delis straddle the line between wanting to replicate dishes customers crave as they remember them vs. adapting tastes to new, healthier versions.

One of Gross favorite anecdotes is about the dilemma Sauls owners Peter Levitt and Karen Adelman faced over their pickles. They were committed to making their own full-sour and half-sour pickles in-house, with locally grown produce, which meant sticking to the cucumber growing season even though they knew not every customer would understand the farm-to-table thinking behind why they couldnt always have a pickle with their pastrami.

Gross has given numerous public lectures in the Bay Area, with Jewish food as a regular topic, and she teaches a class at S.F. State called Food Fights: The Politics of U.S. Jewish Consumption. But she said food represents only a quarter of her research in the book.

And, in fact, food is only one of the ways people are finding Jewish meaning outside of synagogues or institutional life. Gross found that the level of observance does not necessarily dictate their choices as they embrace different paths to Jewish practice.

I think of religion in terms of the ways we create meaning that connects us to our families, communities and the larger narratives in history, particularly those that connect us to these big stories, she said. You can absolutely go to synagogue regularly, and [also] find meaning in a deli. People can find great meaning in performing everyday activities.

Rachel B. Gross will be giving two virtual book talks as a scholar-in-residence for Congregation Olam Tikvah (her hometown synagogue) in Fairfax, Virginia, on Feb. 21 and 28. Her current S.F. State class Food Fights is open to the public with permission of the instructor through Elder College and Open University.

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In 'Beyond the Synagogue,' Jews find religion in delis and museums J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

The Great Maggid’s Storied Synagogue Is Rediscovered in Ukraine – A place where great rabbis and shopkeepers studied and prayed with the Baal Shem…

Posted By on February 1, 2021

When Rabbi Shneor Zalman Schneersohn first arrived as the Chabad-Lubavitch emissary in the small town of Rovno, western Ukraine, in 2004, he didnt think much of the ancient synagogue where he took up his position as the towns lone rabbi. Known as Rovne in Yiddish, Rovno in Russian, and today, in Ukrainian, as Rivne, the town had once been the thriving heartland of the heavily Jewish Volhynia region. But for Schneersohn and his wife, Rachel, there was too much work to do reviving Jewish life to focus on history.

I knew the synagogue was old, but to be honest I didnt think much about it, Schneersohn told Chabad.org. It was only after living here some time that I began delving into history, and the more I learned, the more interested I became.

Some 250 years ago, Rovno was home to the great Chassidic master Rabbi Dovber (d. 1772), famously known as the Maggid (preacher) of Mezritch, the primary disciple and successor of Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem Tov, who founded the Chassidic movement in the mid-18th century and initiated the Jewish renaissance felt to this day.

The Maggid was already a great scholar and mystic when he first traveled to the town of Mezhibuzh (Medzhybizh, Ukraine) to meet with the Baal Shem Tov in the summer or fall of 1752an encounter that would change the course of history. While the Maggids name is most associated with Mezritch, it is known that he served as a preacher in Rovno before and after his time in Mezritch (which is about 50 kilometers east of Rovno). Among his students were the greatest of Chassidic masters, known as the Chevraia Kadisha (Holy Brotherhood), including Rabbi Zusha of Anipoli and his brother, Rabbi Elimelech of Lizhensk; Rabbi Levi Yitzhak of Berdichev; Rabbi Aharon of Karlin; Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk; and Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad-Lubavitch. As they journeyed to Mezritch to visit their master, the Maggids disciples came to Rovno, and its known that both the Chozeh (Seer) of Lublin and Rabbi Elimelech of Lizhensk commonly referred to him as the Maggid of Rovno.

Little did Schneersohn know that the synagogue building out of which he has worked for the last 17 years was, in fact, the Maggids own. It was there that his disciples would gather. His teachingsin the words of the introduction to a compilation of the Maggids teachingsentered their hearts like a flashing fire, enthusing their souls to the service of the Creator and changing the world forever.

How Schneersohna descendent of Rabbi Schneur Zalman and a distant relative of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Shneerson, of righteous memorycame to discover this is a story of its own.

Rabbi Shneur Zalman Schneersohn, center, reviews old maps of the city with members of the Rovno Jewish community.

Rabbi Dovbers exact date of birth is unknown and details of his early life are relatively obscure. Tradition has it that he was born in the early 1700s to Avraham and Chava in the village of Lokachi (Lukatch), about 130 kilometers west of Rovno. One famous story, cited by Rabbi Shlomo Yozef Zevin in his Sippurei Chassidim anthology of Chassidic tales, tells how when the Maggid was 5 years old, his parents home burned to the ground. When he saw his mother overcome with grief, he asked whether it was truly worthwhile for her to cry so much for the loss of physical possessions.

Heaven forfend, she replied, as rendered by Rabbi J. Immanuel Schochet in The Great Maggid (Kehot Publication Society, 1974). I do not grieve over the loss of our home but over the document of our family tree that was burned with it. For this document traced out descent to Rabbi Yochanan HaSandler who was a direct descendent of King David!

If so, the young boy replied, I shall start for you a new dynasty.

Rabbi Dovber was a teacher and town preacher in Turchin before he met the Baal Shem Tov. According to Chassidic tradition, even after hearing of the Baal Shem Tovs fame, Rabbi Dovber at first resisted visiting him. Finally, he relented, traveling to Mezhibuzh, where he expected to hear profound expositions on Torah. Instead, the Baal Shem Tov began telling a seemingly odd story about his travels and his gentile wagon driver.

On his second day, the Maggid heard more of the same and decided to return home. At midnight, just as he prepared to head out, the Baal Shem Tov summoned Rabbi Dovber into his room and began expounding on a difficult passage in Etz Chaim, a collection of teachings of the 16th-century Kabbalist, the Arizal. Although it was said that there was not a single exoteric or esoteric text of Torah that Rabbi Dov Ber did not review at least 101 times, the Baal Shem Tov nonetheless awed him with his explanation.

The town of Rovne is located in what had once been the thriving heartland of the heavily Jewish Volhynia region.

The particular passage references the terms of various angels. Rabbi Dovber would later recall that as the Baal Shem Tov spoke the whole house was filled with light, a fire blazing up all around him, and we actually saw the angels referred to!

Following the passing of the Baal Shem Tov in 1760, his son, R Zvi, assumed leadership of the Chassidic movement. But on the first anniversary of his fathers passing, he rose and announced that his father had appeared to him in a dream, revealing his wish that Rabbi Dovber take his place and lead the nascent movement. It was primarily Rabbi Dovber who was responsible for disseminating the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov to Jewish communities throughout Eastern Europe although, unlike his teacher, he rarely traveled. Instead, he would send his students to convey the teachings and philosophy of Chassidus to Jews in towns throughout Russia, Poland, Galicia and Lithuania.

During the years of Rabbi Dovbers leadership, the persecution of Chassidim by their opponents, the misnagdim, led by the famed Gaon of Vilna (Rabbi Eliyahu ben Solomon, 1720-1797), came to a head. Throughout these trials and tribulations, the Maggid counseled his followers not to react or respond. Following the ban placed upon Chassidim and Chassidism by the Gaon and his followers in 1772, the Maggids disciples called a meeting in Rovno to present their case for fighting back. But even after Rabbi Levi Yitzchak of Berdichev read out a letter describing the suffering his family was enduring in their hometown of Pinsk, the Maggid refused to budge. Truth stands, falsehood does not stand, he said.

Believing it was their duty to protect their holy master, the Maggids followers eventually pronounced a counter-ban on the misnagdim. When the Maggid found out, he was dismayed by what they had done, intimating that while victory would eventually be theirs they would lose their head in the process.

The disciples had achieved a victory but at a costly price, Schochet writes. Within half a year they would lose their head, the crown of Chassidism .

Rabbi Dovber, the great Maggid, passed away on the 19th of Kislev, 1772, and was buried in the village of Anipoli (Hannopil). Meanwhile, the battle continued. As a result of the machinations of the opponents of Chassidism, 26 years later the Maggids student Rabbi Schneur Zalman was arrested on false charges of subversive activities against the Russian czar. He eventually prevailed, being released on the anniversary of his teachers death, the 19th of Kislev. So began a new chapter of the expansion of the Chassidic movement, one that would see Chassidism become the dominant stream throughout Eastern Europe and revive a broken people.

A Polish tax map pointing to the location of the Alter Kloyz, the old study house.

Following the Second Partition of Poland in 1793, Rovno became a part of the Russian Empire, remaining so until after the 1917 Communist Revolution, when it once again became Poland. Until World War II, Rovno was a prosperous town boasting at least 38 synagogues and Jewish communal properties, many of them grand and ornate. Among them was the approximately 10,000-square-foot Great Synagogue, which took 35 years to build and was completed in 1874.

Traditional Jewish life in Rovno came to an abrupt halt following the regions annexation by the Soviet Union after the 1939 Hitler-Stalin Pact, with the new Communist authorities confiscating most Jewish communal properties. Then came the Holocaust, when the Nazis invaded and together with local collaborationists murdered the vast majority of Rovnos 40,000 Jews. Only a tiny handful of Rovnos original Jewish inhabitants returned after the war, living together for a time in the Great Synagogue complex out of fear of Ukrainian nationalists roaming the region. Under the leadership of Soviet premier Nikita Khrushev came a revival of state-sponsored anti-Semitism, and in 1959, the Great Synagogue was commandeered by authorities, leaving Rovno without a legal synagogue for the first time in centuries.

Around 1989, in a very different Soviet Union, authorities attempting to curry international favor offered Rovnos greatly diminished Jewish community a synagogue building. Local Jews saw no need to seek the restoration of the former Grand Synagogue, which would have been costly to heat and upkeep, instead opting for a much smaller synagogue that likewise had been confiscated by the Communists.

My mother came to this synagogue when it was the Soviet Union, said Victoria Chymshyt, a Rovno-based historian and genealogist. Back then it was a library, and the synagogue hall was the reading room. Under the watchful eyes of the KGB, it later became a secular Jewish cultural center before being returned to the community, and Schneersohn has served as its rabbi ever since he arrived in Rovno.

The post-war memorial book of the Rovno Jewish community includes accounts of furniture used by the Maggid of Mezritch still being there in the early 20th century, including his lectern, chair and the table from which he taught.

As time went on and the rabbis own interest in history grew, he began reading anything he could get his hands on about Jewish Rovno and the Maggid. Various historic sources state that the Maggids synagogue had been a structure known as the Alter Kloyz; there are eyewitness testimonies from Holocaust survivors who recalled that until the beginning of the 20th century, the ancient synagogue even contained the original furniture. Even during this century children would climb up to the attic of the Alter Kloyz to see the Maggids original lectern and bench that were kept there, states the post-war memorial book to Rovnos lost Jewish community. A 1927 fire gutted the building, destroying the old wooden furnishings inside, including the table where the Maggids students had once gathered. But the stone building with its three-foot thick walls remained. Schneersohn began suspecting that this old synagogue was the very same one.

Not long ago, Schneersohn got a call from Rabbi Moshe Eliezer Rothenberg, a Jew from Toronto, who told him that while he had never yet been to Rovno, he felt he was from there. Rothenbergs grandfather and namesake, Rav Moshe Eliezer Rothenberg (late 1880s-1941) had been the last Chassidic rabbi in Rovno before the war, and Rothenberg had grown up with stories from that distant place. Among them was that his fathers older brother, Rabbi Dovid Rothenberg, had taught Torah at the very same table where the Maggid had taught the Holy Brotherhood generations earlier. The elder Rothenberg was murdered by the Nazis in 1941 together with his community, while the younger one, R Dovid, who was by then rabbi of a small nearby town, was murdered together with his. The father of Rabbi Moshe Eliezer Rothenberg from Toronto escaped to Vilna and then on to Shanghai, China, before eventually settling in Canada.

Around this time Chymshyt, the historian, began searching in city archives, where she discovered a detailed Polish-era tax map of the city denoting each plotthe names of every synagogue included. While Schneersohn had always known that the Alter Kloyz was somewhere in the vicinity of the Great Synagogue, the old map clearly named his synagogue as the Alter Kloyz (Stara Kloiz in Polish). Documents pertaining to the building further testified that it was already in existence in 1760, although it was likely built earlier, and that it was reincorporated following a fire in 1927.

Schneersohns hunch had proven correct.

Rabbi Schneersohn teaches a group of high school students about Judaism and the history of Rovnos Jewish community.

While Schneersohn is excited that the discovery has confirmed his long-held suspicion, he also feels it sheds a new light on his mission in the city.

In hindsight, the decision by the community to retain the synagogue seems to have been driven by the Divine hand of Gd, says Schneersohn. We were actually thinking about upgrading from the old building. It was small and falling apartthe interior structure mostly dating to the Soviet-eraand could no longer serve the needs of local Jewish life, which has, thank Gd, grown in recent years. We felt we needed a newer, more modern building.

But this revelation has changed everything.

The very foundations of the Chassidic movement are reflected in this building, its all here says Schneersohn. Imagine being able to come here, to the Maggids own synagogue, and see and feel what these holy leaders saw and felt.

Previous reconstruction plans for the synagogue have been shelved as Schneersohn currently works on carefully restoring the building to its former glory. Efforts have already begun on strengthening its foundations, and Schneersohn is now focusing on raising the funds necessary for a full restoration. Pre-war testimonies state that the original mikvah (ritual bath) used by the Maggids students was located just off the Alter Kloyzs entrance hall, and Schneersohn hopes to begin excavating there in the near future.

My wife and I always felt that Rovno is a special placethat there was something beautiful about our old synagogue and the Jews of all ages who come here to participate in Jewish life. Weve felt honored to live and work here, he says. Now we see that it was from this place that the Maggid and his students changed the world, and its clear that by following in their ways, its in our hands to do the same.

To assist with reconstruction efforts or support the work of Chabad of Rovno, click here.

The rabbi is working on carefully restoring the building to its former glory. Efforts have already begun on strengthening its foundations, and he is now focusing on raising the funds necessary for a full restoration.

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The Great Maggid's Storied Synagogue Is Rediscovered in Ukraine - A place where great rabbis and shopkeepers studied and prayed with the Baal Shem...

Worlds 1st female rabbi led a 16th century Mosul yeshiva for Kurdish Jewry – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 1, 2021

As she grew up, Sigal Samuel secretly dreamed of becoming a rabbi. Instead, she became a journalist and author.

My family is Iraqi on my fathers side, my mothers family is Moroccan, and I grew up in Montreals Orthodox Jewish community. I just couldnt imagine becoming a rabbi as an option, Samuel said.

The only women rabbis I saw were Ashkenazi and from the Reform and Conservative movements. I didnt see anyone who looked like me, she said.

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So, when Samuel recently discovered that the woman widely considered to be the first female rabbi in history was from the Middle East, she was amazed and thrilled. Her name was Osnat (alternately Asnat or Asenath) Barazani, and she lived in Mosul, Iraq, in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.

Osnat and Her Dove: The True Story of the Worlds First Female Rabbi written by Sigal Samuel and illustrated by Vali Mintzi (Levine Querido)

The daughter of Rabbi Shmuel ben Netanel Ha-Levi of Kurdistan, who had no sons, Osnat was trained to be a learned scholar of Jewish sacred texts and mysticism. She married Rabbi Jacob Mizrahi, one of the best students at her fathers yeshiva, and helped him run the school after her father died. In fact, Osnat did most of the teaching while her husband focused on his own studies.

After Jacob died, Osnat made a smooth transition to becoming the head of the yeshiva, splitting her time between teaching and making desperate attempts at fundraising to keep the institution afloat. In time, Osnats son Samuel became an outstanding scholar and was sent by his mother to Baghdad to run a yeshiva there. Osnat herself is remembered within the Jewish and general Kurdish communities as a great leader, teacher and mystical miracle worker.

Samuel, staff writer at Vox and former religion editor at The Atlantic, is intent on sharing Osnat Barazanis story with the next generation. She does this with a new childrens picture book titled, Osnat and Her Dove, which will be published on February 2 by Levine Querido, the new publishing company founded by Arthur A. Levine, who brought to light such blockbusters as the Harry Potter series during his 23-year tenure as the president and publisher of Arthur A. Levine Books, an imprint of Scholastic.

Illustrations from Osnat and Her Dove by Sigal Samuel, illustrated by Vali Mintzi, published by Levine Querido February 2, 2021

I wanted to correct the myth that there wasnt and cant be a woman rabbi in the Orthodox or Mizrachi worlds. This is very personal for me, Samuel told The Times of Israel in a video interview from her home in Washington.

Samuel said she identified strongly with Osnat not only because of their shared Iraqi backgrounds. Like Osnat, Samuel also grew up learning Talmud and Kabbalah with her father, who taught Jewish mysticism at Concordia University.

I would come home from my Jewish day school, where I would learn the usual Jewish subjects, and then sit and study the Zohar with my father, just as Osnat did, Samuel said.

Illustrations from Osnat and Her Dove by Sigal Samuel, illustrated by Vali Mintzi, published by Levine Querido February 2, 2021

Unusually, Osnat was never made to do typical womens work, and her father insisted that her husband Jacob promise never to demand she do household chores.

I grew up on the laps of scholars, anchored to my father of blessed memory I was never taught any work but sacred study, Osnat wrote in one of her surviving letters.

Samuel relied on the limited examples of Osnats own writing (letters and poems) that remain, as well as Kurdish legends about her, to create the narrative for her childrens book. The author had hoped to visit Jerusalem to view these preserved documents first-hand at the National Library of Israel, but the COVID-19 pandemic has postponed those plans.

Illustrations from Osnat and Her Dove by Sigal Samuel, illustrated by Vali Mintzi, published by Levine Querido February 2, 2021

Fortunately, she was able to rely on secondary sources written by scholars familiar with Osnats writings. These same scholars also examined additional surviving historical documents in attempts to learn more about early Kurdish Jewish communities. Osnat is sometimes mentioned, leaving the scholars to try to understand exactly what role she played.

Crucially, in a 2000 article published by Yad Izhak Ben Zvi (Hebrew only), husband and wife scholars Prof. Renee Levine Melammed and Dr. Uri Melammed contradicted earlier assumptions that Osnat was not as learned as men, and therefore incapable of producing letters in accomplished, scholarly Hebrew that referenced Jewish sources.

The article authors point out the biblical and Talmudic references in her writings, and that contemporary documents make not a single mention of opposition to Osnat taking over as yeshiva head after her husbands demise. Additionally, she is referred to in reverential terms by community leaders and great scholars, such Rabbi Pinchas Hariri, who addressed her in a letter as My mother, my rabbi.

I found the juxtaposition of those words just amazing, said Samuel, who used them in Osnat and Her Dove.

Illustrations from Osnat and Her Dove by Sigal Samuel, illustrated by Vali Mintzi, published by Levine Querido February 2, 2021

Having written an award-winning novel about mysticism, The Mystics of Mile End,Samuel was especially fascinated with the legends about the female rabbis supernatural abilities. Examples of Osnats miracle-working appear in Osnat and Her Dove.

Some people I showed the manuscript to questioned my decision to include this in a biography, which is something one might argue deals only with facts, Samuel explained.

But I really wanted to include Osnats performing mystical feats and miracles. I like magical realism, and Ill leave it up to the reader how to interpret it, she explained.

Samuel made sure to set the stage and provide context with the books opening sentences: Almost five hundred years ago, when almost everyone believed in miracles, a baby girl was born in the Middle East. Her name was Osnat. Nobody knew it yet, but she would become the first female rabbi in history.

Illustrations from Osnat and Her Dove by Sigal Samuel, illustrated by Vali Mintzi, published by Levine Querido February 2, 2021

However, the author drew the line at legends that although impressive, were not suitable for young audiences. For instance, there is one whereby Osnat froze an intruder in his tracks before he could rape her by merely calling out holy names.

The striking and vibrant illustrations in Osnat and Her Dove pull young and old readers alike into Osnats world.

Arthur A. Levine is himself a Sephardic Jew, and I trusted him to find an illustrator who would portray Osnat accurately. One thing I really did not want was for Osnat to be portrayed as white, Samuel said.

The publisher chose Vali Mintzi, a Romanian-born Israeli illustrator of childrens books, graphic designer, and puppetry designer for the project. Mintzi had previously illustrated a book about an Iranian child, The Girl with a Brave Heart by Rita Jahanfouz. Upon seeing the style, sensibility and palette used by Mintzi in that book, Samuel was confident that the illustrator was a good match for Osnats tale.

Writing about Osnat has whet Samuels appetite for writing more childrens picture books. Shes mastered being extremely economical with words in a genre in which each word pulls a lot of weight. Shes also learned that kids are very discerning readers.

They can tell if the writer has put their soul into it or not, Samuel said.

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Worlds 1st female rabbi led a 16th century Mosul yeshiva for Kurdish Jewry - The Times of Israel

Manspreading in the Womens Section: Keep Your Distance – Jewish Week

Posted By on February 1, 2021

At the beginning of Kabbalat Shabbat last week, I walked into the womens section at an out of town shul and found it filled with men. One man had his two young children with him and was sitting on a couch in the back of the womens section with his legs spread out into the aisle so I had to step over them to get to my assigned seat. Another was davening mincha in the back, I assume out of respect for the rabbi who was giving a shiur in the mens section before Shabbat davening.

I felt the anger building inside me, as I opened my own siddur and began to pray.

Seriously, its not enough that I need to contend with man-spread on subways and buses? Now Im dealing with this in synagogue?

To me, men taking over the womens section is an act of aggression. Ive seen it time and again and invariably, the men dont bother moving when they see women walking in.

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These men were violating Covid rules since the synagogue required pre-registration and provided assigned seating. They were also violating halakha by praying alongside female strangers in the synagogue sanctuary.

But most irksome of all, they were violating the laws of common decency, bein adam lchavero by not treating others as they would like to be treated.

I was tempted to walk into the mens section to begin davening there. I held myself in check for about five minutes until I walked to the back of the room and inquired of the man moving his lips silently with his siddur open. Do you really feel comfortable davening in the womens section with women present?

He put his fingers to his lips as if to shush me and kept on davening. I went back to my seat and when I turned around a few minutes later, all the men were gone.

Needless to say, this was not a joyous way to greet Shabbat, nor was this the first time Ive experienced such a total disregard for women when entering a synagogue. On several occasions, Ive encountered men davening in the womens section or, worse, been at services where no womens section was set up at all. My family had to fight on a kosher cruise a few years ago to get them to set up a mechitza so women could participate in the prayer services.

At an outdoor minyan over the summer, I found myself with five other women praying next to a trash dumpster because the men refused to get up and move to create a womens section.

Does this discourage me from attending Shabbat services? No, and thankfully, its never been an issue in my own synagogue where women show up in force at weekly minyanim and regularly recite Kaddish. Ive also reached an age where Im pretty comfortable pushing back on men who are my age or more often than not years younger than me. Someone needs to educate them on a vital issue that threatens the future of Orthodox Judaism.

Rabbi Ephraim Glatt, in his podcast on OU Torah, begins a shiur on this topic by saying that its never acceptable for a man to be in the womens section if women are present or likely to show up. He then goes on to cite the Mishna Berurahs and Aruch HaShulchans take on the issue: Regardless of whether women are present or likely to be present, its better to never daven in the womens section.

In other words, men need to know their place and stay there.

And, yes, I am worried that many women are being driven away from davening in shul. Isaac Moses, who addressed the question of whether men should daven in an empty womens section on the website mi yodeya, summed up my thoughts perfectly: Even if a womens section is usually empty, he wrote, when women do show up, they may feel unwelcome and unable/unwilling to either use the space alongside the man or to evict him. Part of the reason that women dont attend in the first place may be that they are aware that the womens section is not effectively reserved for them. He said he has heard this from women directly.

Ive seen this dynamic as well, especially among the growing force of young women who were raised in the Modern Orthodox tradition and are now graduating from prestigious universities and entering the workforce alongside their male counterparts.

These doctors, lawyers, investment bankers and computer programmers will not tolerate feeling disenfranchised when they try to daven in the tradition in which they were raised.

The sad truth is that during the pandemic, many people have been shut out of Orthodox minyanim altogether in universities across the country following strict Covid rules that restrict groups to no more than 10.

This guidance disproportionately impacts women who are not counted in a quorum of 10.

Instead of waging vigorous discussions with university administrators, campus Rabbis and Orthodox Jewish student leaders have acquiesced with female students suffering the fallout.

Even in the days before Covid, women have encountered men learning in the womens section during davening in shuls across New York, Boston and Los Angeles accosted by harsh words of Bittul Torah! when they try to take their rightful place in the womens section.

What these women are hearing is, You are insignificant and do not belong here. I, as a man, should not be taken away from my Torah learning or davening for even one second by your presence.

Some have stood their ground. Others have turned to egalitarian communities. But the sad truth is too many have opted out of attending synagogue altogether.

How can we solve this problem? Education and raising awareness are key.

Those in Orthodox communities, universities and Jewish day schools should understand that it is never acceptable behavior to exclude women from public ritual engagement opportunities.

There are concrete steps that can be taken which include setting up womens sections that are as appealing as mens, and putting up signage indicating that the space is reserved for women alone during times of prayer, and refusing to hold services that exclude women. And, yes, we especially the folks on the other side of the mechitza need to call out men who remain stubbornly in the womens section when we enter, and not let up on them until they leave. After Covid is behind us, we need to take a serious look at this issue and what we can do better as we face challenges in the years ahead.

Deborah Kotz is a former journalist and freelance writer from Silver Spring, MD.

Posts are contributed by third parties. The opinions and facts in them are presented solely by the authors and JOFA assumes no responsibility for them.

Continued here:

Manspreading in the Womens Section: Keep Your Distance - Jewish Week

Andrew Yangs $1000-a-month stipend reminds me of a time-honored Jewish tradition – Forward

Posted By on February 1, 2021

Read this article in Yiddish.

Imagine a world in the not-so-distant future when most jobs in our economy will be replaced by machines; not just blue-collar workers like truck drivers and garbage collectors, but also accountants, bookkeepers, teachers, even doctors and lawyers.

Lets face it, the rapid transition to automation is going to happen because it means increased productivity, more efficient use of materials, better product quality and improved safety. And also because we consumers want it. Self-driving cars and same-day delivery of Amazon products are innovations that we expect and desire, because it makes our lives easier and more rewarding.

But it does mean that by 2030, about a third of Americans will be displaced as a result of technological automation.

And now with the coronavirus pandemic casting a shadow for the unforeseeable future, the unemployed will undoubtedly also include those working in the arts particularly theater film and music, and those in the hotel and restaurant industries.

Andrew Yang, an entrepreneur whos running for mayor of New York City, says he has a solution. Since millions of people will likely be out of work with little or no chance of finding another full-time job because, he states, there is little evidence that retraining the unemployed is working hes proposing a radical solution: a monthly universal basic income (UBI) of $1,000 to all NYC residents over the age of 18 for life. Everyone, both employed and unemployed, would receive the money, so as to prevent the stigma often attached to jobless people receiving welfare checks.

Since no one can sustain themselves on $12,000 a year, most would need to find part-time jobs to supplement their income and probably have to accept a very modest standard of living.

But what will people do with so much free time on their hands? Maybe the kind of work many do each day that doesnt get recognized or compensated: taking care of their children or tending to elderly parents. Engaging in activities they find meaningful, like volunteering at a hospital or local charity. Or simply doing things they love to do like baking, hiking or playing an instrument.

In some ways, Yangs $1,000 a month sounds a lot like a kollel paycheck.

A kollel is an institute where newly married men come daily to study the Talmud and rabbinic literature and receive a regular monthly stipend from the organization, which is itself funded by private philanthropists and smaller contributions from many members of the community.

Most kollel students receive about $600 a month and an additional bonus of between $500 and $1,000 right before the week-long holidays of Sukkot and Passover to help their families pay for the holiday expenses. Their wives supplement their income by taking on jobs within the community and occasionally even outside of it.

For those who wonder why the community would pay someone to study, it derives from the belief that, unlike other pursuits, learning Torah and the exploration of Talmudic discussions changes the world for the better and brings one closer to God while spiritually lifting the entire Jewish nation.

Rabbi Bentzi Epstein, director of the Dallas Area Torah Association in Dallas, Texas, was part of a kollel in Lakewood, New Jersey right after he married, and said the experience wasnt just about learning from books.

The members of the kollel would learn each day from 9:30 am to 1:30 pm, go home for lunch, and then go back and learn from 3 to 7:30, he said. The real goal is to start off marriage on a Torah footing and about building character: learning how to problem-solve, how to show up on time, consistency, responsibility.

Eventually, most students leave the kollel to go for job training in trades that dont require a college education like accounting, real estate or computer programming. But some men stay in the kollel for years, especially if they become distinguished Torah scholars who regularly give shiurim, or Torah lectures, or tend to the religious needs of the community.

If Yang is right, that society is destined to become so automated and to be run so efficiently that a third of its adult population will no longer be needed in the workforce, it could mean a huge transformation of how we view ourselves in the world. In a worst-case scenario, not having a career could lead to widespread depression and feelings of failure and worthlessness. On the other hand, throughout history, most people have proven themselves to be resilient even in the most drastic of circumstances. Here too, I believe people will find ways to thrive in this new reality.

A kollel student may not have much money but he sees his learning Torah as a way of bringing spiritual sustenance to his own life, to his fellow Jews and to the world. I wonder if this focus on the non-material sphere could serve as inspiration for those of us who may someday find ourselves with much more time on our hands than we ever thought possible. Instead of focusing on doing things that make us richer, we might begin spending our time doing things that simply make us happier.

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

Andrew Yangs $1000-a-month stipend reminds me of a time-honored Jewish tradition

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Andrew Yangs $1000-a-month stipend reminds me of a time-honored Jewish tradition - Forward


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