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A Jewish Guide to Dealing With Demons – jewishboston.com

Posted By on October 28, 2020

As we know from the Talmud (or as youre learning right now), each and every one of us has 1,000 demons to our left and 10,000 to our right (Berakhot 6a:4). Its totally normal, but it can get annoying. Demons can cause everything from weak knees to contaminated drinking water (Pesachim 112a:5), and some have even been known to attack a persons self-esteem with extremely sarcastic and hurtful comments (Pesachim 110a:5).

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If you feel like you may be suffering because of the demons in your life, dont worry! Just consult these easy methods to find out if you have been targeted for special demonic harassment, either at home or outside, and how to handle and resolve the situation with confidence. Remember, problematic demon attention can happen to everyone! You are not aloneliterally.

Practice social distancing

When outdoors, its best to maintain proper social distancing, as demons require space to walk around humans. Always leave at least four cubits of space around yourself to avoid making the demon feel trapped and panicky (Pesachim 111a:3). (Tip: If you are a male human, try giving women you dont know on the street the same distance and respect that you would give to a demon. Demons, women and demon-women deserve to feel safe.)

Burn cat placenta

Warning: Incredibly dangerous; do not attempt!

The Talmud provides a step-by-step process (really!) for how to actually see the demons around you. The ritual below is for educational purposes only; we dont advise you do this. Really, dont do this.

*Caution: According to the Talmud, Rav Beivai bar Abaye performed this procedure, saw the demons and was harmed. Do not actually put ashes of any type into your eyes, unless directed to do so by a human ophthalmologist with a medical degree. And even then, dont, just in case the ophthalmologist is really Lilith in a lab coat.

Conduct the footprint test

You can also use a different, much less dangerous method of determining if you have a demon in the house: Place fine ash around your bed (any you have on hand will do). In the morning, if you see footprints in it that look like chicken feet, mazel tov, you have demons (Berakhot 6a:6).

Trust home remedies

Once you have ascertained that, yes, you do, in fact, have demons in your home, the first step is always to check your mezuzah and any other amulets you have around the house. And make sure you recite the Shema before you go to bed, obviously whenever youre done doom-scrolling the internet (Berachot 5a:5).

The 13th-century grimoire of practical Kabbalah, Sefer Raziel, suggests warding off demons using a mixture of wormwood and weed, but this may backfire and end up making the demon get the munchies and want to hang out with you longer.

Take away its power

A more surefire way to solve the issue is using a formulaic incantation where you reduce the demons name until the name is gone (Pesachim 112a:5). For example, if the demons name is Kayleigh, youd say, My mother said to me to beware of Kayleigh, the demon of emotional haircut choices.

Continue the incantation by saying the demons name in shorter and shorter iterations until it gradually disappears: Kayleigh: Kaylei; Kayl; Kay; K. When the letters are gone, the demon will disappear as well. Sadly, the bad quarantine bangs you cut with a pair of blunt craft scissors will have to grow out naturallywe have no magical incantation for that.

Want to learn more about monsters and demons in Jewish folklore? Listen to our Halloween-themed podcast episode here!

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A Jewish Guide to Dealing With Demons - jewishboston.com

The Vibe of the Tribe Podcast: Monsters and Demons in Jewish Folklore – jewishboston.com

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Never miss the best stories and events! Get JewishBoston This Week.

This Halloween, get spooked by monsters of Jewish lore as occult expert Peter Bebergal returns to The Vibe of the Tribe, escorting Miriam, Dan and Ashley on their ongoing quest into the Jewish supernatural world.

Discover your new favorite monster in Jewish tradition, what the Talmud recommends doing if you suspect youre infested by demons and how Solomon, King of Israel, and Ashmodai, King of Demons, became frenemies with the help of a magic worm. And, wait, does Lilith really sell cursed wedding dresses on Craigslist?!

In addition to being our Dantes Inferno Virgil-esque guide to the underworld and a three-time podcast guest (check out previous episodes here and here), Bebergal is the author of Strange Frequencies: The Extraordinary Story of the Technological Quest for the Supernatural, Season of the Witch: How the Occult Saved Rock and Roll and Too Much to Dream: A Psychedelic American Boyhood. Hes also the editor of the upcoming anthology Appendix N: The Eldritch Roots of Dungeons and Dragons.

For safety, please summon your personal protective angels and check your mezuzah before listening to this episode.

Edited by Jesse Ulrich, with music by Ryan J. Sullivan.

Subscribe to JewishBostons The Vibe of the Tribe podcast onApple Podcasts,Google Play,SoundCloud,Spotify,StitcherorTuneIn.

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The Vibe of the Tribe Podcast: Monsters and Demons in Jewish Folklore - jewishboston.com

In praise of the yeshiva and yet something crucial is missing – Forward

Posted By on October 28, 2020

I went to yeshiva for the reason I imagine many men do: because I didnt want to work. The summer after graduating college, I interned (unpaid) at a newspaper; toward the end, it was intimated that a job working for a columnist might be available. Having spent numerous afternoons listening to this person shout at their assistant, I passed.

My friends all seemed to be thriving: gambling for unfathomable sums on Wall Street, learning to wear tails and recognize good port at English universities, teaching or electioneering for America. Traipsing through humid Manhattan in business casual (my brothers castoffs), I wallowed in self-pity and sweat. In college, you can fantasize of infinite personal plasticity: You wander into an audition, say, and emerge a thespian. You remake yourself as easily as you apply for a summer travel grant. That flexibility had given way to the sober realities of something: The economic recession? Adulthood? The professional world? Neoliberal capitalism? I didnt know quite what was oppressing me, and attempts to narrow things down inconveniently highlighted how little I had to complain about. But I knew I didnt like it, so I hopped on a plane and left for the lower Galilee, to sit atop a mountain and learn Talmud.

I thought of my choice while reading Yeshiva Days, Jonathan Boyarins new book about his time in Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem, a Lower East Side yeshiva, despite the obvious differences. My yeshiva was religiously liberal, his centrist-Orthodox; mine ardently Zionist, his not particularly so; mine exotic and foreign, his rooted in a neighborhood to which he is deeply attached. I was a disaffected 21-year old, he a middle-aged anthropologist, who has been writing about Ashkenazi Jewish culture and learning for decades. I chose a yeshiva that incorporated historical, academic methods my major quarrel with the university, after all, was that I had to leave.

By contrast, the learning at Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem is apparently untouched by such critical forms of study, and Boyarin sharply distinguishes the university from the house of study. And while my study-house and the attached kibbutz were remote and rural wildflowers, aromas of turkey feces, residential dormitories, a patchwork of bus-rides and hitchhiking to reach Jerusalem Boyarin learned in a non-residential yeshiva in crowded, downtown Manhattan, a two minute walk from a Malaysian bakery; Catholic, Pentecostal, and Jehovahs Witnesses churches; a Chinese dance school; and an upscale cocktail bar.

And yet I recognize not only many incidentals from Yeshiva Days the comical attempts to dwell in Orthodox space as someone who isnt; the study partner (hevruta) who alternates between stand-up comedy and diagnosis of your spiritual woes; the odd importance that unpalatable, packaged junk foods acquire as tokens of affection but also one of the books major contributions: that the yeshiva offers, as he writes, a space where neoliberal rationality does not hold sway, where participants are not profit-maximizing, individual actors. The yeshiva remains not only a communal, collaborative space, but also one in which the hectic, productive base of economic life gives way to the slow reading of impossibly long books.

Even identifying such a contribution, though, involves interpretive effort and perhaps misprision. Yeshiva Days is an understated book, heavy on anecdotes and immediate reflection, with only three pages of notes, most of which are digressive trivia rather than scholarly annotation. In his introduction, Boyarin writes he will practice what anthropologists call ethnographic refusal, the idea that the ethical scholar must sometimes withhold information about his subjects. In another chapter, he anxiously describes the extensive process of getting approval from the Rosh Yeshiva (the head of the institution) to write the book. (That is Rabbi Dovid Feinstein, who uniquely appears under his real name: anonymity doesnt work when your subject has a Wikipedia page.) Though Feinstein seems unbothered, Boyarin worries about betraying the yeshiva to an academy he does not entirely trust.

Perhaps to allay these fears, he writes in a style comprehensible at Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem, and he imitates the plain, uncomplicated mode of learning they practice. While other yeshivas engage in the dialectical judo called Brisker lomdus, or incorporate the iconoclastic methods of historical philology, the classes here are modest and straightforward. They read the Talmud with its two most classical commentators, they struggle to understand, and if they dont, they shrug and turn the page. The Talmud praises the sort of scholar who uproots mountains, but at Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem, the mountains are expected, like everyone else, to follow the rules and stay in their place. In learning, as in their religious lives generally, these men value ehrlichkeit (honesty), disdaining anything perceived as excessive, demonstrative, or showy even, or especially, excessive piety. Boyarin is certainly an erhlikh ethnographer. The book is as fair-minded and careful as the best judge in small claims court, though it is perhaps similarly unlikely to arouse any overwhelming passions.

This is not to say that Yeshiva Days or the men it describes are dull. They are lively and funny, particularly Boyarins regular chavruta Nasanel. Nesanel is an ever-flowing spring of words, whether he is passing judgment on Herodotus and Homer, relating a dream about a grandfather who predicted a series of family deaths, or arguing about Star Trek with random visitors to the yeshiva. While he explicitly aims to convert Boyarin to Orthodoxy, he admits that transformation is a secondary goal: The real point is just to learn together. This is a somewhat paradoxical example of the rabbinic idea of torah leshma usually translated as learning for its own sake. Leshma is often opposed to pecuniary or egoistic motivations, yet in this yeshiva, it also trumps the purposes that ostensibly motivate study. The main point isnt that Boyarin evolve religiously, or that the students cover a certain amount of material, and it is certainly not to decide the law. Rather, the purpose is the activity itself, so that at times, I felt I was reading, Zen and the Art of Rabbinic Exegesis.

Such learning, defined as it is by its stubborn refusal to be well-motivated, cannot help but be countercultural. And indeed, Yeshiva Days is framed by an overdetermined sense that Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem is an endangered habitat. Real-estate patterns are pushing these Jews out of the Lower East Side, and as Orthodoxy slides rightward, the yeshivas uncompromising but not unfriendly attitude toward secular modernity starts to feel itself outdated. Even Boyarins dedication, to the Jews of Telz martyred in the Holocaust evokes the possibility of loss. He repeatedly flirts with the possibility of committing more fully to the yeshiva spending his retirement studying there, say, or studying for rabbinical ordination. Yet he holds himself in reserve, since the yeshiva remains alluring partly because it is different, offers a counterpoint to everyday life, and remains alien: When Im here I miss there theres always an element of longing for something I dont have at the moment.

Although Yeshiva Days documents a local community (many of whose members have ties to the Lower East Side stretch back several generation), that highly concrete, earthy place is constantly about to be absent, in the process of being lost, is seen through the shadow of absence. Where a strand of the Yiddish left celebrates doykeit (hereness), an ideal of rejecting far-off homelands for this-worldly politics, Boyarin seems more interested in golus, or exile, a diasporic condition defined by a constitutive lack.

That said, there is one painful lack in this otherwise wonderful book: gender. Though Boyarin mentions that this yeshiva exclusively admits men and admits that this fact will bother some readers, he says nothing further on this point. It is, it seems, what it is. (Readers looking to complement this book might be interested in Ilana Blumbergs memoir, Houses of Study: A Jewish Woman Among Books, which is about a very different branch of Orthodoxy but nonetheless pairs well with Yeshiva Days.) I recognize the omission, for it has been mine. I remember visiting Jerusalem late in my year at yeshiva, proud of the spoken Hebrew Id acquired, only to discover, while talking with an Israeli woman, that I remained completely flummoxed by verbs conjugated in the second-person singular feminine they hadnt come up.

It is hard to know what would change in Boyarins books if the subject of women did come up. Part of the books modesty, after all, is that it largely restricts itself to yeshiva days, mostly ignoring what happens at night, when the men go home. But I suspect that some of the romanticization of the yeshiva particularly the sense that the inefficient and meandering mode of learning represents a sharp alternative to the neoliberal demands of the workplace would have to be reconsidered. After all, for the men to play with the Talmud, someone has to work. Once learning leshma was contextualized in a world of work, family life, and so on, would it still seem like an alternative to late capitalism, or merely one of its more exotic forms of leisure-time consumption? (Burning Man too looks like cooperative, egalitarian utopia until you remember how much it costs.) To be clear: I certainly hope there are critiques of neoliberal individualism to be found in traditional religious communities. Thats part of why I myself learn and teach Talmud. But my own experience with yeshiva tells me that unless we pay attention to who is excluded, we can never clearly distinguish radical critique from mere escapism.

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In praise of the yeshiva and yet something crucial is missing - Forward

A 500-Year-Old Rif – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on October 28, 2020

Photo Credit: Jewish Press

I recently acquired a volume of the Rif printed in Venice by Daniel Bomberg in 1521.The Rif is the most significant halachic compendium prior to the Mishneh Torah, and R. Joseph Caro based his Shulchan Aruch on it, Maimonides, and the Rosh.

The edition I acquired was published alongside the first complete edition of the Talmud published by Daniel Bomberg, a landmark in Hebrew printing which standardized the layout of the Talmud daf.

The printer, Daniel Bomberg (c.1483 c.1549), was a Christian who employed in his printing press rabbis, scholars, as well as apostates. The local government in Venice at the time forbade Jews from owning printing presses, which is why Bomberg printed the first Hebrew books in Venice. (All printing presses that printed Hebrew books prior to Bomberg were owned and operated by Jews.)

Bombergs first printed volume was the first Mikraot Gedolot, which received the approval of Pope Leo X. This edition was also the first Hebrew Tanach to include chapter and verse numbers.

Bombergs most impressive achievement, though, was his first complete Talmud, printed between 1519-1523 and overseen by Rabbi Chiya Meir b. David, a rosh yeshiva and dayan on the Venice rabbinical court. Prior to his edition, no uniformity in layout and content existed in printed Talmud. Nearly all future editions, though, followed Bombergs edition.

The Rif described here was printed alongside and as a companion to the Bomberg Talmud. While Talmud editions today often contain the Rifs commentary, until the 19th century, they were generally published as separate volumes.

Bomberg editions were of the highest quality and were truly a luxury to acquire even 500 years ago. Unfortunately, surviving copies are rare since on August 12, 1553, Pope Julius III ordered the Talmud and related volumes such as the Rif and Ein Yaakov destroyed. On the following October 21, a large fire was made in Piazza San Marco into which was fed all the confiscated books dealing with the Talmud.

By the time the ban on the Talmud was lifted many years later, Venice ceased to be the center of Hebrew printing and no additional editions of the Talmud or the Rif were published in Venice.

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A 500-Year-Old Rif - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

I grew up in Orthodox Brooklyn. We must apply the same COVID-19 standards for all and Jews must choose life. – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on October 28, 2020

(JTA) I grew up in the Williamsburg and Borough Park neighborhoods of Brooklyn.At my Orthodox Jewish day school, I studied the Torah and Jewish law.Our rabbis, many of whom had been trained in the great Talmudic academies of eastern Europe, always focused on the primary role of choosing life.In Hebrew this is called Pikuach Nefesh.

The biblical commandment is derived from Deuteronomy 3:19-20: I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day: I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life so that you and your children may live

The Torah and the Talmud are filled with rules placing the value of life over nearly every Jewish value, including prayer and communal gatherings such as weddings and funerals.I understand how important these gatherings are to the vibrancy of religious life in these wonderful neighborhoods, but preventing the spread of a highly contagious virus with uncertain long term health implications should be more important.

It is shocking to me, therefore, to see so many of my fellow Jews in my old neighborhoods choosing illness and death over life not only their own but their family members and neighbors by not taking adequate precautions against the spread of the coronavirus, and by rejecting the advice of public health doctors.

The rate of illness in Williamsburg and Borough Park is significantly higher than in the city and state of New York in general. This is not Gods fault. Respectfully, it is the responsibility of those Jewish leaders who have not done as much as they could do to advise their followers and congregants to choose life over communal gatherings.

Alan Dershowitz (Getty Images)

I understand and am sympathetic to the argument that Orthodox Jewish communities are being discriminated against by rules that allow restaurants, protests and other secular public gatherings to go forward, while severely restricting the number of people who can attend synagogues, Jewish weddings and funerals, and other communal religious events. There has been far too much finger pointing at Orthodox Jews by civic leaders who should know better. Im on your side of these legal and political arguments.

But the appropriate response is to tighten the rules regarding dangerous secular events, not to loosen them regarding large Jewish gatherings that can become dangerous super spreader events if precautions are not taken. A single standard that does not discriminate against Orthodox Jewish events and that is based on objective factors is required, but that single standard must prioritize the health of the community.

During times of crisis and tragically Jews have a long history of dealing with crises ranging from pogroms, to plagues, to the Holocaust, to attacks on Israel Jewish law and customs have always adapted to the overriding the need to choose life.

Why is COVID-19 different? Why are so many Jewish leaders refusing to recognize the reality of contagion and of the need for masks, social distancing and limitations on the number of those attending large gatherings? Why am I getting so many emails and phone calls from Williamsburgers and Borough Parkers falsely stating that more people die of the flu than of COVID?

I was embarrassed, as a loyal son of Borough Park, by the burning of masks and spitting at journalists on the very avenue on which I attended yeshiva and shopped for Shabbos and Yom Tov food.I realize that the bad acts of a few Borough Parkers should not be attributed to an entire neighborhood, but these acts should have been widely condemned by all good people.

I know that this is not my Borough Park or that of my very religious parents and grandparents. But I am sad to say that it isnot the Borough Park of Jewish halacha, which demands compliance with the valid rules of the state in which Jews are citizens, as well as proper behavior towards outsiders.

So, with the utmost respect, I urge those Jewish communal leaders who are not satisfying their responsibility to protect life, to prioritize those religious sources commanding us to choose life over customs such as large weddings and funerals that are not mandated by halacha. These life affirming sources have served us well over millennia of crises.

Please emphasize those parts of the Torah that deal with mandatory isolation of contagiously ill Jews.Please recall the Talmudic wisdom that he who saves even a single human life, it is as if he saved the entire world and its relevant corollary that he who needlessly takes a single human life, it is as if he has destroyed the world.

Please do not politicize the worst health crisis in the last 100 years. Instead, choose life. That is the Jewish way and the right choice for all people during a worsening pandemic.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

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I grew up in Orthodox Brooklyn. We must apply the same COVID-19 standards for all and Jews must choose life. - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Unity’s no goal when not everyone’s the same – The Jewish Star

Posted By on October 28, 2020

By Rabbi Avi Billet

This column is reprinted from 2008.

Reading the story of the dispersion at the beginning of chapter 11, it is hard to see where the people went wrong. In the words of Targum Yonatan, they spoke one language and had the same mindset. Their achdut (communal unity) should be a model for all!

The Talmud (Sanhedrin 109a) has a few suggestions as to what the dor hapalaga had in mind when building their tower. The first suggestion, that they were trying to make a hole in the sky to create a constant flow of water, is quickly rejected. But then the Talmud explains that there were three groups.

The first wanted to live in the heavens, the second wanted to worship idols on top of the tower and the third wanted to wage war. The latter group may have wanted to use their position as a command center from which they could fight off attackers or, according to a different opinion, as a means to reach heaven to fight G-d.

None of these explanations are evident from the text. The only indication the text gives us is that they were looking for collective glory, to avoid becoming dispersed (11:4).

Rabbi Menachem Leibtag, of the Tanach Study Center (tanach.org), uses his Migdal Bavel vort as a primary base for teaching about Judaisms mission in the world. They wanted to make a name for ourselves, (11:4) while Abraham went out of his way to call in the name of G-d. (12:8, 13:4. 21:33) They placed themselves at the center of their universe, while Abraham put G-d at the center of his universe.

It is possible that they were building a tower to be prepared in case of a future flood. It is possible that they wanted to make a one-building city in which everyone would live together. It is possible that they wanted to create a standard under which everyone would live, and a society in which everyone would be doing the exact same thing.

To their credit, they all participated in the effort. To their credit, they seemed to share the same ideals. To their credit, they knew that when you want to live a certain lifestyle, you need to work hard to achieve that goal.

And yet they were worthy of punishment, a punishment in which their unified language changed and they could no longer understand each other. Rabbeinu Bachya says their unity caused G-d to merely disperse them instead of destroy them as He destroyed the generation of the flood. But, he says, they sinned with their speech, in the sentiments they expressed about building a city and making themselves a name, and so they were punished with their speech.

Perhaps their greatest sin was not in their admirable unity, but in their insistence that everyone be the same. We live in a world of many colors and stripes, in which there is room for differences of opinion. People are free to choose how they want to live their lives, and must be flexible in allowing others to be free to make their own choices.

Just as the rainbow has different colors which all equally contribute to the beauty of its whole, we have to train ourselves to see that people who do not look or think exactly as we do have a right to express an opinion and be heard.

This applies, most currently, in the election campaign, but has repercussions in every way in which we live our lives.

There is one major difference, however, between the Jewish community and the generally free society. We have a unifying language, Hebrew, and a guidebook with rules we are committed to following. There are different interpretations for some of these rules, but there is a general uniformity among the children of Abraham who seek to call in the name of G-d.

We have to remember that it is never about us. When we make it about us and our way of life instead of for G-d and the Torah (and some people have a difficulty discerning between the two), we are as guilty as the generation of the dispersion, who were spread across the globe because of their misguided principles.

Excerpt from:

Unity's no goal when not everyone's the same - The Jewish Star

Prop 14: Don’t Stand Idly By – Jewish Journal

Posted By on October 28, 2020

At the very heart of our Biblical tradition is this commandment from the Book of Leviticus: You shall not stand idly by the blood of your fellow. (Leviticus 19:16)

If we see our sisters or brothers in danger, our job is simple: provide that help, come to their aid, do what is in our power to protect them and save them.

In the midst of a global pandemic, we feel the call to protect and promote the health and well-being of others even more urgently. Right now, we hear the call to uphold the ultimate Jewish value of pikuach nefesh (saving a life).

Sometimes, we live out that value in an immediate way. We donate blood today, which can save lives in real time. We provide support for basic needs to ensure that people in our community have enough to eat right now. But if we truly wish to move the needle in the work of pikuach nefesh, we must also provide resources to fund research over many years, even decades, that will, ultimately, yield dramatic results.

To truly make a difference, to be Gods partners in bringing healing to the world, we must not stand idly by in both immediate and long-term ways.

California voters have an opportunity to do just this by voting Yes on Proposition 14, which will advance the California Institute of Regenerative Medicines stem cell research to help those who are affected by ailments including heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimers, Parkinsons Disease, sickle cell disease, spinal cord injuries, COVID-19, and so many other chronic illnesses and injuries.

Funding for this important and vital medical research help save lives, and it will provide immediate economic stimulus as well. Even as it funds long-term strategies to alleviate human suffering, Proposition 14 will create jobs during this challenging time. Recent studies suggest that Proposition 14 would generate approximately $20 billion in increased economic activity in California, yielding more than 100,000 new jobs at every level. This far surpasses Proposition 14s estimated cost of $5.5 billion in bonds.

Critics of the proposition question the need for such funding on a state level today. They argue that Proposition 71, the initiative that originally created the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, was passed in 2004 only because President George W. Bush had banned federal funding for stem cell research. Now that federal funding for stem cell research is allowed, the critic charge, its no longer Californias responsibility to fund such research; private and federal funding be used to continue this important work.

However, relying on federal and private funds is too risky. Many in our country wish to stifle and limit stem cell research on religious grounds. Far more importantly, Jewish law on this matter is unequivocal: stem cell research is not just permitted, but, arguably, required as a matter of pikuach nefesh. Numerous halakhic authorities have made this clear. It should, therefore, come as no surprise that some of the most exciting work in stem cell research is currently being done in Israel.

Medical experts agree that stem cell research and therapies will save lives and alleviate human suffering. In fact, it already has. One example is the stem cell Dr. Donald Kohn at UCLA conducted to cure ADA-SCID bubble baby disease.

This work is too important for us to leave it to chance or to allow it to be cut-off or limited. We see Proposition 14s opportunity to provide such resources for life-saving research as a blessing, the fulfillment of core Jewish values. Just one chapter before the commandment to not stand idly by, our Torah reminds us that the purpose of mitzvot, the very goal of Judaism, is to enhance life. We are commanded: in the pursuit of My laws and statutes you shall live ( ). (Leviticus 18:5) The Rabbis of the Talmud interpret this verse to mean that the ultimate value, above all else, is life itself.

To be sure, it will take many years to realize the promise of current research. But like the well-known story of Honi, who came upon an old man planting a tree that would not bear fruit for another seventy years, we recognize that our efforts are not for ourselves alone. Just as our ancestors sacrificed so that our lives would be better, we commit ourselves to doing the same for our descendants.

The voices of our sisters and brothers cry out to us: friends and family members with diabetes; co-workers fighting against cancer; loved ones slipping away due to the cruel ravages of Alzheimers. They call out to us in their pain. They are searching for hope. We cannot stand idly by. We must generously sacrifice so that they and subsequent generations might , live and be well.

There are quite literally lives to be saved. Join us by voting Yes on Proposition 14 on November 3rd.

To learn more, visit http://www.YesOn14.com

Rabbi Sydney Mintz is the Senior Associate Rabbi of Congregation EmanuEl in San Francisco.

Rabbi Yoshi Zweiback is the Senior Rabbi of Stephen Wise Temple in Los Angeles. (Rabbi Zweibacks spouse, Jacqueline Hantgan, isa staffmember for the Prop

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Prop 14: Don't Stand Idly By - Jewish Journal

Choose life! That’s the Jewish way, and it hasn’t changed – The Times of Israel

Posted By on October 28, 2020

JTA I grew up in the Williamsburg and Borough Park neighborhoods of Brooklyn. At my Orthodox Jewish day school, I studied the Torah and Jewish law. Our rabbis, many of whom had been trained in the great Talmudic academies of eastern Europe, always focused on the primary role of choosing life. In Hebrew this is called Pikuach Nefesh.

The biblical commandment is derived from Deuteronomy 3:19-20: I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day: I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life so that you and your children may live

The Torah and the Talmud are filled with rules placing the value of life over nearly every Jewish value, including prayer and communal gatherings such as weddings and funerals.I understand how important these gatherings are to the vibrancy of religious life in these wonderful neighborhoods, but preventing the spread of a highly contagious virus with uncertain long term health implications should be more important.

It is shocking to me, therefore, to see so many of my fellow Jews in my old neighborhoods choosing illness and death over life not only their own but their family members and neighbors by not taking adequate precautions against the spread of the coronavirus, and by rejecting the advice of public health doctors.

The rate of illness in Williamsburg and Borough Park is significantly higher than in the city and state of New York in general. This is not Gods fault. Respectfully, it is the responsibility of those Jewish leaders who have not done as much as they could do to advise their followers and congregants to choose life over communal gatherings.

I understand and am sympathetic to the argument that Orthodox Jewish communities are being discriminated against by rules that allow restaurants, protests and other secular public gatherings to go forward, while severely restricting the number of people who can attend synagogues, Jewish weddings and funerals, and other communal religious events. There has been far too much finger pointing at Orthodox Jews by civic leaders who should know better. Im on your side of these legal and political arguments.

But the appropriate response is to tighten the rules regarding dangerous secular events, not to loosen them regarding large Jewish gatherings that can become dangerous super spreader events if precautions are not taken. A single standard that does not discriminate against Orthodox Jewish events and that is based on objective factors is required, but that single standard must prioritize the health of the community.

During times of crisis and tragically Jews have a long history of dealing with crises ranging from pogroms, to plagues, to the Holocaust, to attacks on Israel Jewish law and customs have always adapted to the overriding the need to choose life.

Why is COVID-19 different? Why are so many Jewish leaders refusing to recognize the reality of contagion and of the need for masks, social distancing and limitations on the number of those attending large gatherings? Why am I getting so many emails and phone calls from Williamsburgers and Borough Parkers falsely stating that more people die of the flu than of COVID?

I was embarrassed, as a loyal son of Borough Park, by the burning of masks and spitting at journalists on the very avenue on which I attended yeshiva and shopped for Shabbos and Yom Tov food.I realize that the bad acts of a few Borough Parkers should not be attributed to an entire neighborhood, but these acts should have been widely condemned by all good people.

I know that this is not my Borough Park or that of my very religious parents and grandparents. But I am sad to say that it isnot the Borough Park of Jewish halacha, which demands compliance with the valid rules of the state in which Jews are citizens, as well as proper behavior towards outsiders.

So, with the utmost respect, I urge those Jewish communal leaders who are not satisfying their responsibility to protect life, to prioritize those religious sources commanding us to choose life over customs such as large weddings and funerals that are not mandated by halacha. These life-affirming sources have served us well over millennia of crises.

Please emphasize those parts of the Torah that deal with mandatory isolation of contagiously ill Jews.Please recall the Talmudic wisdom that he who saves even a single human life, it is as if he saved the entire world and its relevant corollary that he who needlessly takes a single human life, it is as if he has destroyed the world.

Please do not politicize the worst health crisis in the last 100 years. Instead, choose life. That is the Jewish way and the right choice for all people during a worsening pandemic.

Alan M. Dershowitz is professor emeritus at Harvard Law School and author of The Case Against the Iran Deal: How Can We Now Stop Iran from Getting Nukes?"

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Choose life! That's the Jewish way, and it hasn't changed - The Times of Israel

Learn how to respond to gossip – The Altamont Enterprise

Posted By on October 28, 2020

A new course taught by Rabbi David Katz at Bnai Sholom Reform Congregation in Albany will look at the effect of gossip and how individuals and society respond to it.

On Gossip will be offered four Tuesdays beginning Nov. 3, from 10 to 11 a.m. via Zoom.

Gossip weakens the moral fabric of society by rending relationships. The sages warned about gossipers: Gossip can jump out suddenly or insinuate itself in the most subtle ways and always for the best of intentions.

The sages also criticize the passive listener: one who does not stop the gossiper is compared to a hole into which a weasel can hop down; plug the holes and the gossip has no place to go.

This course will cover how to identify and respond to gossip. What do we say? What can we do? From everyday conversation to the media pundits who bombard us nightly, Judaism offers wise advice on how to listen and respond.

The course will draw from the Torah, the Talmud, modern literature, and personal anecdotes as sources.

On Gossip is open to the public. Registration is required. Cost: $20; for Bnai Sholom members, it is just $15. Registrants will receive a confirmation email with links to access the course.

For more information or to register, contact the Bnai Sholom office: 518-482-5283 or office@bnaisholom.albany.ny.us.

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Learn how to respond to gossip - The Altamont Enterprise

The Jewish people have much to thank President Trump for – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 28, 2020

As the US elections draw near, any number of Doomsday predictions fill the airwaves. In one scenario, Donald Trump is reelected. But even before the final tally is in, massive riots and looting some spontaneous, others pre-planned are launched on American streets. This results in the president invoking a national state of emergency and bringing in troops and tanks, sparking a full-blown race war. A different scenario has Joe Biden winning the race, which also causes mass demonstrations, this time sparked by radical elements who want to overturn the foundations of American democracy and culture and impose their own progressive agenda on the country.I dont know what will occur on November 3; the Talmud wisely teaches us that prophecy has been left in the hands of the immature and the foolish. But what I do know is that whatever occurs, I believe the Jewish people must thank President Trump for the many outstanding, historic things he has done in our benefit in the course of his presidency. One of the primary qualities of the Jewish nation is hakarat hatov, the recognition of the good that is bestowed upon us. Even if the bestower is not to our liking, the acts done in our favor must be acknowledged. This is why even Pharaoh who presided over the enslavement of the Israelites was accorded honor by Moses and spared the death of the first-born due to the initial benevolence toward us when we first came down to Egypt and dwelt in Goshen as privileged citizens.Thank you, President Trump, for standing up for Israel and pleading our case in the United Nations. Virtually since its inception, the UN some prefer to call it the UNAI, the United Nations Against Israel has obsessively focused on demonizing and denouncing the Jewish state. This has resulted in unending, unchecked slander against Israel, tainting us in the eyes of the world, challenging our legitimacy and fostering a denial of our basic rights in the community of nations. Even the previous Obama administration, in a reprehensible reversal of American policy, refused to veto Resolution 2334, which declared the Old City Palestinian territory. But over the last three-plus years, representatives Nikki Haley and Kelly Craft, as directed by the president, have boldly risen in our defense to counter the ugly rhetoric against us. And this has led, finally, to some semblance of decency in the General Assembly.Thank you, President Trump for recognizing Jerusalem as Israels capital and moving your embassy there. A major element of the Palestinian strategy for eradicating Israel has been its fervent denial of Israels connection to this land. Despite all the irrefutable evidence of our ancient presence here, despite the unbroken link of Jerusalem to the Jewish People since the days of King David, there has been an insidious use of the Big Lie strategy to deny history and to paint us as interlopers and carpet baggers a charge that is much more applicable to the Palestinians themselves. By simply stating what is real and self-evident that Jerusalem is central to Judaism and inextricably bound to our faith the record has now been indelibly set right for anyone with eyes to see. It reinforces the truth that we are here not because we need a place of refuge or to forestall another Holocaust, but because this is our rightful homeland and heritage.Thank you, President Trump for signing into law the Taylor Force Act as well as drastically reducing the flow of American money to the corrupt Palestinian Authority, money which was being used to reward Palestinians for perpetrating terrorist acts. This helped to spur our own Israeli government to finally pass a similar law, sending a strong message that crime does not pay at least as far as we can help it. Thank you, President Trump for standing firm against Iran and spurning the disastrous nuclear deal. Iran is arguably the most evil nation to come on the world scene since the end of World War II. In addition to brutally suppressing its own people, Iran funds global terrorism, works to replace democracies with radical, repressive Islamic theocracies, promotes Holocaust denial and openly calls for genocide against the Jewish state. America, the bastion of freedom and human rights, should be doing everything in its power to disable and degrade this rogue regime. The previous administration showered Iran with tens of billions of dollars money that was owed to victims of terror and yet was reprehensibly sent on to Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad and used to kill Jews and promoted a plan that ultimately will give these murderous maniacs a nuclear weapon. Standing alone with Israel against the world, this president has refused to afford any legitimacy or support to the Ayatollahs. Thank you President Trump for brokering the peace accords between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain, while moderating other Arab governments and urging them to recognize our country. For years, the Palestinians have held the Arab world hostage by making impossible demands, refusing any form of compromise and threatening terror attacks upon anyone who chooses a different path. They are like the neighborhood bully who delights in knocking the ice cream cone out of the others kids hands. Well, now the ice cream has been smacked out of their hands, and they are, predictably, whining and screaming because they didnt get their way. For seven decades, they ignored the dictum, When you snooze, you lose. Now, a new path has been laid down, one that rewards diplomacy, flexibility and fairness, and which punishes obstinacy and selfishness. Instead of coddling the corrupt, this president is promoting the peace-seekers, and we are the beneficiaries of this brave new policy.In addition to President Trump, I would be remiss if I did not also express sincere thanks to the presidents team, which includes Ambassador David Friedman, his senior adviser Aryeh Lightstone and special advisers to the president Jared Kushner and Avi Berkowitz. They have worked tirelessly and brilliantly to put the flesh on the bone and bring these initiatives to fruition. They are truly among the unsung heroes of Am Yisrael.It is the Jewish way to give credit where credit is due. Indeed the very word for Jew, Yehudi, has at its root todah thanks. The reality-changing gestures done for our benefit should be seen as much more than political or populist gimmicks; they are priceless gifts that will serve us for generations to come and for which we say, todah.The writer is director of the Jewish Outreach Center of Raanana. jocmtv@netvision.net.il

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The Jewish people have much to thank President Trump for - opinion - The Jerusalem Post


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