MASEI Vol.26 No.44:Layout 1
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Prepared David Skorton for the Challenge of Covid-19
MAY/JUNE 2021 IYAR/SIVAN/TAMMUZ 5781 FROM RABBI ZEMEL Nothing – and Everything — FINDING OUR OWN Prepared David Skorton for the PATH TO KNOWING WHAT BEING JEWISH Challenge of Covid-19 MEANS IN OUR By Fran Dauth DAILY LIVES You may recognize David Skorton, president and CEO of the Association DEAR FRIENDS, of American Medical Colleges, from I have been using these col- the Temple Micah YouTube videos on umns to try to work out my Covid-19 in the past year. Jewish theology. The isolation You may also know he was the of the pandemic has for rea- 13th Secretary of the Smithsonian, is a sons that I cannot fully under- board-certified cardiologist, a president stand pushed me to dig more emeritus of Cornell University, a past deeply into my innermost president of the University of Iowa and thoughts. But my ruminations never feel fully adequate. a member of the National Academy of The more I engage in this quest, Medicine. the more I realize, as I suggested in my What may surprise you is that noth- last column, that we really do lack the ing in his impressive career fully pre- language to say what we believe. Our pared him for the pandemic. inherited way of thinking about Judaism, “Nothing in my experience prepared that is, our inherited language, does us me completely for the enormous dis- little good. Let us begin by abandon- ruptions wrought by Covid-19: not only ing the phrase “good Jew,” as in, “Who the terror of the virus and its lethal- is a good Jew?” What can it possibly ity, but the economic dislocation, the response to questions from The Vine. -
The Giving Jew Their Homes to Strangers
RABBI AARON Editor, Torah Tidbits GOLDSCHEIDER who distinguished themselves in opening The Giving Jew their homes to strangers. Inviting those who are in need activates he Almighty’s visit to Avraham takes a key virtue which permeates the Jewish place when Avraham is seated at the heart: chesed, kindness, expressed namely entrance of his tent. Avraham, as is T through the mitzvah of hachnasat orchim, well known, is at this location seeking out hospitality. travelers he can potentially invite into his tent. An intriguing scene now unfolds: Rabbi Soloveitchik highlighted five aspects Avraham was basking in the aura of the of the mitzvah of hachnasat orchim which Divine Presence when suddenly he noticed imbue it with special significance: three travelers who he did not know. What 1. It is Difficult and Uncomfortable was Avraham supposed to do? We allow a stranger into our home. We According to one reading in the Talmud may find that the mannerism of our guest (Shavuot 35b) Avraham turned to God and is odd. He intrudes on our privacy, both in said, “My Lord, please wait for me for now a physical sense and emotionally as well. I have to attend to the travelers; “A-donai, if At times, having a guest means that we only I have found favor in your eyes, do not sacrifice a part of our own comfort or our pass on from beside your servant” (18:3). own privacy and private time which is not Then he turned around and addressed the easy to give up.1 travelers. “Please let a little water be taken and bathe your feet” (18:4). -
Chazara on Methodology of Psak All Shiurim and More Are Summarized on Shaashuim.Wordpress.Com
Chazara on Methodology of Psak All shiurim and more are summarized on Shaashuim.wordpress.com. Shiurim are on YUTorah. Background: What does it mean for something to be true Halachically? Are there multiple truths (within limits) and psak limits what possibilities are legitimate? (Rabbi Shaul Yisraeli in Ritva) Is there one truth but we are not necessarily expected to reach it? (Rabbi Moshe Feinstein) Is it okay to knowingly not reach it? (Rabbi Yehuda Amital) The Building Blocks of Pesak 1. Theory a. Analysis of Original Sources i. Emphasized by Yam Shel Shlomo (in opposition to Shulchan Aruch), Gra, Biur Halacha, Aruch HaShulchan (though you must add minhag) ii. Narrative in Halachic texts? 1. Support, Modify, Reject? b. Precedent שלשה עמודי הוראה i. Beit Yosef's 1. Assumes a kind of Rov that is not obvious. ii. Mishna Berurah iii. What do you do when there are new manuscripts or new Rishonim? 1. Machoket concerning Eruv (Mishkenot Yaakov vs. Beit Efraim) 2. Position of the Chazon Ish? 3. Techelet – Rav Schachter iv. What is the role of Kabbalah? 1. Stronger than other sources, a factor, or irrelevant? c. Minhag i. Rama’s addition to Mechaber ii. Aruch HaShulchan vs. Mishna Berurah iii. Minhag HaPoskim iv. Minhag Yisrael v. Minhag HaMakom 1. Classic sugyot 2. Can it be recreated in theory? Have we in practice? vi. Minhag Avot 1. Same as Minhag HaMakom? a. Rav Ovadiah Yosef’s position concerning Shulchan Aruch vii. Lo Titgodedu 1. Likula or Lichumra? 2. Two Torot or Machloket? a. Is it better or worse to agree to disagree? viii. -
Seeing Ourselves in the Story: Racial Injustice and the Radical Potential of Passover
April 2012 | Vol. 25, No. 8 | Nissan-Iyar 5772 Poverty and Racism: The Religious Mandate to Alleviate Suffering Issue Services in April Seeing Ourselves in the Story: Racial Injustice and the Radical Potential of Passover Shacharit Morning Minyan Thursdays at 7:45 a.m. hir Tikvah welcomes Unwanted Claims: The Politics of April 5, 12, 19, 26 Professor Joe Soss for Participation in the U.S. Welfare the sixth annual Robert Saturday, April 7 System (2000), co-editor of Race Tot Shabbat, 9:30 A.M. SN. Schlesinger Memorial and the Politics of Welfare Reform Led by Rabbi Simon & Wendy Goldberg Lecture on Saturday, April (2003), co-editor of Remaking Shabbat Services, 10:30 a.m. Led by Rabbi Latz & Wendy Goldberg 7, at 10:30 am. America: Democracy and Public Soss is the inaugural Policy in an Age of Inequality Friday, April 13 Shabbat Services, 8:00 p.m. Cowles Chair for the (2007), and author or co-author Led by Rabbi Latz & Steve Greenberg Study of Public Service of numerous scholarly articles. at the University of Friday, April 20 Soss’ lecture is titled “Seeing Shabbat Live! Services, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota, where he Ourselves in the Story: Racial Led by Rabbi Simon & holds faculty positions in the Hubert H. Shabbat Live Ensemble Injustice and the Radical Potential of Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, the Saturday, April 21 Department of Political Science, and the Passover.” The Robert N. Schlesinger Shabbat Services, 10:30 A.M. Memorial Lecture was established Led by Rabbi Simon & Rachel Lipkin Department of Sociology. -
Jewish Counterculture Oral History Project MICHAEL STRASSFELD
Jewish Counterculture Oral History Project MICHAEL STRASSFELD Interviewed by Jayne K. Guberman June 27 & September 20, 2016 A Project of the Jewish Studies Program at the University of Pennsylvania Michael Strassfeld, 6/27/16 + 9/20/16 Jayne Guberman (JG): My name is Jayne Guberman, and today is Monday, June 27, 2016. I’m here with Michael Strassfeld at his home in New York City and we’re going to record an interview for the Jewish Counterculture Oral History Project. Michael, do I have your permission to record this interview? Michael Strassfeld (MS): Yes, you do. JG: Great. So, as you know, today we’re going to explore your experiences during the early years of the havurah movement when you became involved with Havurat Shalom. And we’re going to focus particularly on the first five years or so of the havurah and your involvement in it — and frame that with your experiences earlier, and then what happens afterwards in your life as well. I’d like to start by talking about your personal and family background a little bit to set the stage for your involvement in Havurat Shalom. So let’s begin with your family when you were growing up. Can you tell me very briefly (00:01:00) about your family background — who they were and how your family actually first came to the United States? MS: So my father was born in the Ukraine in a town called Stanislav, and actually, his immediate family moved to Germany, so he really grew up mostly in Germany, from the time he was seven or eight until he was fifteen. -
Electricity and Shabbat
5778 - bpipn mdxa` [email protected] 1 c‡qa HALACHIC AND HASHKAFIC ISSUES IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY 87 - ELECTRICITY & SHABBAT: PART 1 - GENERAL PRINCIPLES OU ISRAEL CENTER - SPRING 2018 A] HALACHIC ISSUES CONCERNING ELECTRICITY1 (i) Melachot on Shabbat (a) Connecting/breaking an electrical circuit (b) Time switches (c) Use of filament/fluorescent /LED lights; other light generation (e.g. chemical) (d) Electrical heating/cooking - microwaves, solar heaters, central heating (e) Cellphones and computers (f) Hearing aids/microphones (g) Electronic keys - hotels, student accommodation (h) Electronic security equipment - metal detectors, cameras, motion sensors (i) Automatic doors, bells and chimes (j) Shabbat elevators (k) Dishwashers (l) Medical monitoring (m) Radio/screens (n) Watches (ii) Light for Mitzvot (a) Ner Shabbat (b) Ner Havdala (c) Ner Chanukah (d) Bedikat Chametz (iii) Electrical Power (a) Baking matzot (b) Making tzitzit (c) Shaving (d) Filling a mikva (iv) Electronic Media (a) Use of microphones for mitzvot of speech/hearing - berachot, megilla, shofar, kiddushin, kinyanim (b) Erasing Shem Hashem stored or displayed electronically (c) Kol isha through a microphone (d) Accepting witness testimony through telephone/video (e) Bikur cholim/ nichum aveilim on the telephone (f) Issurim via TV/video - e.g. pritzut (v) Kashrut (a) Kashering meat/liver using an electric element (b) Kashering electric appliances (c) Cooking meat and milk using electrically generated heat (d) Tevilat kelim for electrical appliances 1. For further reading see: The Use of Electricity on Shabbat and Yom Tov - R. Michael Broyde and R. Howard Jachter - Journal of Halacha and Contemporary Society - Vol. XXI p.4; Encyclopedia Talmudit Vol. 8 155-190 and 641-772; The Blessing of Eliyahu (pub. -
Supreme Court of the United States ______
No. 20-639 IN THE Supreme Court of the United States ________________________________ CALVARY CHAPEL DAYTON VALLEY, Petitioner, v. STEVE SISOLAK, GOVERNOR OF NEVADA, ET AL., Respondents. ________________________________ On Petition for Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ________________________________ BRIEF AMICI CURIAE ISLAM AND RELIGIOUS FREEDOM ACTION TEAM AND JEWISH COALITION FOR RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONER ________________________________ HUNTON ANDREWS KURTH LLP ERICA N. PETERSON ELBERT LIN MICHAEL C. DINGMAN Counsel of Record 2200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW 951 East Byrd Street Washington, DC 20037 East Tower [email protected] Richmond, VA 23219 [email protected] [email protected] Phone: (202) 955-1500 Phone: (804) 788-8200 KATY BOATMAN 600 Travis, Suite 4200 Houston, Texas 77002 [email protected] Phone: (713) 220-4200 Counsel for Amici Curiae i TABLE OF CONTENTS Page TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ....................................... ii INTRODUCTION AND INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE ................................................. 1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT .................................... 3 REASONS FOR GRANTING CERTIORARI ............ 4 I. This Court’s Review Is Necessary to Ensure Religious Freedom for Americans of All Faiths........................................................ 4 II. Nevada’s Directives Violate the Free Exercise Clause. ............................................... 16 A. Strict Scrutiny Analysis Applies to Nevada’s Directives. ............................... -
Aryeh A. Frimer Review of Daniel Sperber's
Aryeh A. Frimer Review of Daniel Sperber’s Darka shel Halakha Lo Zu haDerekh: A Review of Rabbi Prof. Daniel Sperber’s Darka shel Halakha by Aryeh A. Frimer Rabbi Prof. Aryeh A. Frimer is the Ethel and David Resnick Professor of Active Oxygen Chemistry at Bar Ilan University. He has lectured and published widely on various aspects of “Women and Halakha.” Among his many articles, Rabbi Frimer is the author of “Women and Minyan,” Tradition, 23:4 (Summer 1988): 54-77, available online here; “Women’s ‘Megilla’ Reading,” in Ora Wiskind Elper, ed., Traditions and Celebrations for the Bat Mitzvah (Urim Publications: Jerusalem, 2003), 281-304, available online here (PDF); “Guarding the Treasure: A Review of Tamar Ross, Expanding the Palace of Torah: Orthodoxy and Feminism,” BDD – Journal of Torah and Scholarship18 (April 2007): 67-106 (English), available online here (PDF); “Feminist Innovations in Orthodoxy Today: Is Everything in Halakha – Halakhic?” JOFA Journal 5:2 (Summer 2004/Tammuz 5764): 3-5, available here (PDF). Over a three year period, from 5758-5760 (Fall 1997-Summer 2000), Rabbi Frimer delivered in-depth high-level shiurim on “Women and Halakha” to the Women of Rehovot at the Tiferet Moshe Synagogue – Rabbi Jacob Berman Community Center. The basic sourcebook for these lectures was R. Elyakim Getsel Ellinson, haIsha ve-haMitsvot – Vol. I: Bein Isha leYotsra, and this series of classes were regularly recorded as MP3 files, and the source materials, handouts and lecture notes were converted into PDF files and these files are now available here. Aryeh A. Frimer and Dov I. -
I Resolve to Keep Stretching and Expanding My Horizons WORSHIP SCHEDULE
January 2018 = Tevet-Shevat 5778 = Volume 79/Number 5 = established 1867 = the-temple.org The Temple FROM THE DESK OF CANTOR DEBORAH L. HARTMAN: I Resolve to Keep Stretching and Expanding My Horizons WORSHIP SCHEDULE Friday, January 5 Shabbat Worship Service....................6:00 PM Meditation – Room 34 .......................7:00 PM Saturday, January 6 Torah Study...........................................9:00 AM B’nei Mitzvah of Ava L. Geller and Owen D. Ross ............................ 10:30 AM Mincha Bar Mitzvah of Henry S. Banner ..................................5:30 PM Friday, January 12 MLK, Jr. Shabbat Worship Service with Guest Speaker: Rev. Raphael Warnock ...................... 8:00 PM* Saturday, January 13 Torah Study...........................................9:00 AM Mini Shabbat Service ..........................9:30 AM don’t blog and I rarely post, but with your indulgence I’d like to tell you about my recent overseas travel Chapel Shabbat Worship Service ... 10:30 AM with my husband, Sandy. South Africa was on the top of Sandy’s bucket list, not mine. Nevertheless, we Friday, January 19 booked it and embarked on our adventure in mid-November (springtime in South Africa). Before I get Shabbat Worship Service with Itoo far into the travel log, let me tell you that Sandy is shomeir Shabbat which, in short, means he eats only Guest Speaker: Rabbi Rick Jacobs ....6:00 PM Kosher food and is Shabbat observant (doesn’t drive, ride, or use electricity on Shabbat). You may already be Meditation – Room 34 .......................7:00 PM wondering how a marriage of a modern Orthodox man and a true blue Reform woman can- The Well ................................................8:00 PM tor works so well—but that’s a story for another time! Saturday, January 20 Our first stop was Cape Town. -
Jews of Florida—Centuries of Stories
Editorials ..................................... 4A Op-Ed .......................................... 5A Calendar ...................................... 6A Scene Around ............................. 9A Synagogue Directory ................ 11A News Briefs ............................... 13A WWW.HERITAGEFL.COM YEAR 44, NO. 17 DECEMBER 27, 2019 29 KISLEV, 5780 ORLANDO, FLORIDA SINGLE COPY 75¢ Rosen receives Leadership award Harris Rosen (fourth from left) is flanked by three of his scholarship recipients and Alex Martins, (r) who presented the award. The Orlando Economic “Harris Rosen has been a Partnership has awarded its true leader in our Central James B. Greene award, the Florida community for de- highest honor bestowed by cades,” said William T. Dy- the Partnership to a local mond, Jr., Partnership board Chanukah menorah lights up Winter Park community leader, Harris chair, CEO and president of “Rain or shine, the menorah burns bright! Happy Chanukah night number 1!” said Rabbi Mendy Bronstein when Rosen, president and COO Lowndes and past James B. the Chanukah menorah was lit at Winter Park’s Central Park as rain gently fell throughout the day. of Rosen Hotels & Resorts. Greene recipient. “His dedi- The award was presented cation to the Orlando region at the Partnership’s recent and its residents is evidenced annual awards dinner held by a legacy of philanthropic at the Amway Center in impact that spans the edu- ‘Jews of Florida—Centuries of downtown Orlando. cational spectrum, from the The James B. Greene Award, Tangelo Park Program offer- first presented in 1990, rec- ing access to free preschool to Stories’ brings the past to life ognizes an individual whose the Rosen College of Hospital- work has contributed sub- ity Management, which has Stephen J. -
Jewish Organization Equality Index 2O12 Kavod Habriyot
Jewish Organization Equality Index 2O12 כבוד הבריות 1640 Rhode Island Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 TEL 202/628-4160 TTY 202/216-1572 FAX kavod 202/347-5323 SITE www.hrc.org/joei habriyot Advisory Board Members The Jewish Organization Equality Index was made possible through a generous lead grant from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation and supporting grants from The Morningstar Rabbi Camille Angel Foundation, Stuart Kurlander – a leader in several non-profit Senior Rabbi Jewish and Jewish LGBT community organizations – and an Congregation Sha’ar Zahav anonymous donor. Adina Dubin Barkinskiy Director of Programs The Morningstar Foundation About the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation Jeremy Burton The Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation is committed to strengthening the Executive Director Jewish people, public education in the United States and its hometown of Tulsa, OK. The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston Foundation achieves its mission by enhancing the lives of young people through high-quality Brian Elliot education, identity development, leadership training and service opportunities. Within the Jewish Founder world, the Foundation ensures vibrant Jewish life by empowering young people to engage in Friendfactor meaningful Jewish experiences, build inclusive Jewish communities, connect with the State of Israel and repair the world. The Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation is part of the Jeff Gabardi Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network. www.schusterman.org Senior Vice President of State Affairs America’s Health Insurance Plans (Retired) Idit Klein Executive Director About The Morningstar Foundation Keshet The Morningstar Foundation is a family foundation which awards grants to pre-selected Stuart Kurlander organizations dedicated to strengthening the Jewish community in the United States, in Israel, Partner and throughout the world, enhancing educational opportunities for inner-city youth, protecting Latham & Watkins, LLP the environment, and safeguarding civil liberties. -
1 "On the Limited Use of Electronics on Shabbat: Microwave Heating Of
"On the Limited Use of Electronics on Shabbat: Microwave heating of cooked foods and the reading and conversing on electronic devices." OH 305:18.2012d by Rabbi Elie Kaplan Spitz This paper was submitted, in November 2012, as a dissent to “The Use of Electrical and Electronic Devices on Shabbat” by Daniel Nevins. Dissenting and concurring papers are not official positions of the CJLS. A Preamble to a dissent On October 24, 2012 the CJLS discussed for several hours the teshuvah that follows and is now submitted as a dissent. The tenor of comments was largely personal practice, focusing on the need to keep Shabbat separate and distinct from the rest of the workweek. During those discussions Attorney Marc Gary, a representative of United Synagogue, rebutted that we cannot view electronic devices as necessarily anti- Shabbat. The terrain on which we live, he emphasized, is as much technology as nature, creating a need to distinguish between permitted and forbidden uses of technology on Shabbat. Mr. Gary concluded that reading a book on an electronic device is different than the creative act of writing and should be permitted. On the topic of reading devices, I now note that Rabbi Charles Simon in Conservative Judaism’s Kolot Magazine (Winter 2012) in an article entitled, “Can the People of the Book become the People of the IPAD?” wrote: “If we desire future generations of modern Jews to attend and become more learned and comfortable on Shabbat and holiday in our sanctuaries we need to recognize that the definition of book is changing from one which is printed on paper to one which is composed of pixels and we need to respond proactively.” As I will present in the dissent that follows the stated prohibition of using a reading device is largely a matter of trust.