CHELM in JERUSALEM by R. Seliger

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CHELM in JERUSALEM by R. Seliger CHELM IN JERUSALEM By R. Seliger It’s Sukkot, the holiday that requires observant Jews to feel the fragility of our existence by eating in the sukkah – the fragile temporary outdoor booth, exposed to the elements of early fall. I wrote this film review two years ago. If you have the opportunity, you should consider the delights of this unusual film. “Ushpizin” resembles an Isaac Bashevis Singer tale in its rendering of totally sincere (or naive) characters immersed in religious observances, a belief in miracles, and a personal relationship with the Almighty. The world of Jerusalem’s Hasidim is largely a ghetto in its isolation from the rest of modern Israel, but not quite. Two convicts, evading the law, show up at the doorstep of our hero, Moshe Bellanga, and his good wife Malli, on erev Sukkot. It turns out that one criminal was a friend from Moshe’s wayward days in Eilat before he became a Baal Tshuva [a newly observant Jew] as a Breslover Hasid. The Bellangas are overjoyed that the two can be their ushpizin – Aramaic for “holy guests” – for the holiday, as traditional lore enjoins. But there is nothing holy in how their low-life guests behave. That the virtually destitute Bellangas have a sukkah and the money to celebrate the festival at all are “miracles.” Actually, they are the result of perfectly explainable events, but the pious couple understands their dramatic change of fortune as divine intervention, as an answer to their devotion and a part of their ongoing dialogue with Hashem. Similarly, when bad fortune strikes, they are rendered bereft not only by the event itself, but also by the notion that they have done something displeasing in the eyes of God or, even more painfully, that their suffering has meaning they cannot fathom in the sacred scheme of things. Their fervor and the scenes of their acute questioning of God’s purpose make this more than a comedy. The authenticity of the convictions conveyed by the characters goes beyond roles portrayed by actors, for the Bellangas are played by an actual Hasidic couple, and the movie is anchored in a story that the scriptwriter knows to be true. Shuli Rand is both the writer and the star of this film, a real Baal Tshuva, who had left his career in acting eight years before to find a new ultra-Orthodox way of life with his wife. Now, to play a man with his wife, he had to enlist his spouse, Michal Bat-Sheva Rand– not an actress– as a co- star. She performs credibly and sweetly; their mutual love and high regard radiates even as their interactions are filmed entirely without physical contact. That Mrs. Rand is decidedly on the round side, yet nonetheless the genuine object of Mr. Rand/Bellanga’s romantic affection, is a refreshing reminder of how non-Hollywood this film is. The secular Israeli filmmaker, Gidi Dar, cast and directed “Ushpizin” with the advice and consent of Shuli Rand’s Breslover community rabbi. An outside observer might wonder, however, how members of such a close-knit group would be so impoverished that they had virtually no money for food and none for the most basic requirements of observing Sukkot – no sukkah, no lulav, no etrog – except for “miraculous” events at the eleventh hour. Would not such upright members of the community have been taken care of at least with invitations to share meals in the sukkahs of others? But maybe these realistic questions undermine the “magical” quality of this tale that is part of its charm. And the sweet and humane resolution of a real-life misunderstanding, which Shuli Rand expands upon in writing the screenplay, is a lesson that the world would do well to emulate. When a Hasid (or any profoundly observant Jew) realizes that he has inadvertently wronged another, he meets the wronged person face to face, asking his forgiveness. The wronged party is more or less obligated to absolve the wrongdoer of malicious intent. The confrontation is truly successful if the wronged one’s anger is transformed into good will and may even end with an embrace. So what is the lure of this way of life to outsiders? It is not that the questions and the struggles of everyday existence disappear, but that they are framed within a coherent worldview and, more importantly, buffered by rituals and a supportive community. One can also see the narrowness that drives many away – perhaps as many or more than there are newcomers – but that is the subject of other films..
Recommended publications
  • March Chronicle.Indd
    CONGREGATION NEVEH SHALOM March 2008/ADAR I/Adadr II 5768 CHRONICLE No. 6 This newsletter is supportedpp by y the Sala Kryszek y Memorial Publication Fund From the Pulpit Esther: The Paradigm of the Diaspora Jewish Existence If we accept the Exodus epic as our Jewish master story, then the drama contained in the scroll of Esther constitutes the paradigmatic story of Jewish existence in the Diaspora. A master story of an ethnic, religious or national entity is the central historical event or series of events that informs that society about its guiding values and principles. Clearly the Exodus from Egyptian bondage followed by the receipt of God’s revelation and wandering 40 years in the wilderness on their way to the Promised Land serves that primary purpose for Jews. God heard the cry of the oppressed and chose Moses as God’s instrument in challenging Pharaoh to liberate God’s own people. Once free, the Children of Israel came to Mt. Sinai where God gave them laws to live by in order to establish a moral society. Together they persevered until they were worthy of inheriting the land that God promised them as an everlasting inheritance. However instructive our master story is in defi ning our most highly treasured values, nearly 2000 years of our history were spent far from our ancestral home in lands of the Jewish Diaspora. We lived in foreign lands as a subject minority population. We did our best to simultaneously be loyal residents (because not until the French Revolution and the American experience were we considered full citizens) and maintain our distinct identity as Jews.
    [Show full text]
  • [email protected] (You Know, the Ones That Took the 126 That It Will Never Work
    ב''ה 230 hale lane , edgware middx, ha8 9pz Volume 29 • Tishrei 5775 HOLIDAYGUIDEHOLIDAYGUIDE HOWHOW WILLWILL HEHE EARNEARN AA LIVINLIVINGG FFIDDLERIDDLER’S’S QQUEUESTSTIONION Table of Contents 8 24 10 7 featured 7 That’s alright, you can do it . 8 How will he earn a living? 10 Holiday Guide 14 Tishrei Calendar 20 Fiddler’s question 24 Yusta regular From the Editor 4 Message from the Rebbe 5 Lubavitch of Edgware News 16 Candle Lighting Times and Blessings 19 Lubavitch of Radlett News 22 Letters 26 20 3 Editorial Torah PUBLISHER Chadron Ltd on behalf of Lubavitch of Edgware. A division of Chabad Lubavitch UK Registered Charity No. 227638 EDITORIAL Editor: Mrs. Feige Sudak JUST A PINHOLE rom my earliest days i had a knows that to us the whole concept of ADVERTISING fascination for science and Teshuva – return is daunting and leaves To advertise please call technology. i was only eight years us very scared. particularly, as we come 020 8905 4141 F old when i managed to collect enough close to rosh hashanah and then even to SUBSCRIPTIONS ‘cigarette vouchers’ from my father’s Yom Kippur, the notion that we can repair Phone: smoking habit (in those days smoking our past and come to be close with g-d 020 8905 4141 was an acceptable form of behaviour) to is so distant from us that we just do not Email: exchange for a Kodak instamatic Camera believe it. so, we fight it off with excuses [email protected] (you know, the ones that took the 126 that it will never work.
    [Show full text]
  • The Yeshiva University OBSERVER VOLUME LXIII ISSUE I September 2017/ ELUL 5777
    THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF STERN COLLEGE FOR WOMEN AND SY SYMS SCHOOL OF BUSINESS The Yeshiva University OBSERVER WWW.YUOBSERVER.ORG VOLUME LXIII ISSUE I September 2017/ ELUL 5777 YU Launches Makor College Experience Program for Young Adults with Intellectual Disabilities Sarah Casteel News Editor education, or have been granted some kind of state-funded training and building general life skills. This includes exploring Beginning in the fall of 2017, services for individuals with intellectual or developmental specific job fields in the classroom, real-life experience through Yeshiva University, in partnership with the Makor Disability disabilities in the past. Finally, applicants are required to job placements on campus, and academic advisors. The Services (formerly Women’s League Community Residences), have attended a high school program for students with such advisors will work with the students to determine an individual has launched its first year of the Makor College Experience disabilities. career path and to further develop career-building skills to help Program. A truly unprecedented and specifically designed them get there. In terms of life skills, the students will learn program, the Makor College Experience is a three-year, non- Each of the three years of the program has a specific focus. important skills such as cooking, traveling and budgeting. degree program for young men with intellectual disabilities. The first year will offer pre-vocational and job readiness The program is the first college dual curriculum for this type skills, interview training, workplace etiquette and budgeting. In addition to the secular education and various life skills of students. Participants will not only enjoy the specialized The second year is focused on “career exploration and incorporated into the program, Makor will offer a strong and education of the program itself, but a new and exciting experiences.” There will be opportunities to experience and meaningful Torah element as well.
    [Show full text]
  • © Cambridge University Press Cambridge
    Cambridge University Press 0521826926 - A Dictionary of Jewish-Christian Relations Edited by Edward Kessler and Neil Wenborn Excerpt More information AAAA Aaron Aaron, as a point of contact between Jews and Aaron is a figure represented in both Testaments Christians, was acknowledged in the Letter to and referred to typologically in both. His priestly the Hebrews as the founder of the Jewish priest- role is the dominant feature shared by Judaism and hood, who offered acceptable sacrifice to God. Christianity, but in the latter this role is appropri- The anonymous author appropriated the still- ated in order to highlight the superiority of the developing Jewish tradition and contrasts the once- priesthood of Jesus. Thereafter, because the Jewish and-for-all priesthood of Jesus (which was claimed tradition continued to stress his priestly status, he to derive from the priesthood of Melchizedek) with faded out of the Christian tradition. the inferior yet legitimate priesthood of Aaron. In the book of Exodus Aaron appears as the There is no polemic intent against Aaron in brother of Moses and Miriam, playing a subordi- Hebrews. Two texts, Ps. 2.7 and 110.4, are used to nate but important role as spokesperson for Moses show that God designated Jesus as the unique Son before the Pharaoh, although in the earliest literary and High Priest. His self-sacrifice, analogous to the strata of the Torah there is no evidence that he is sacrifice of the High Priest on the Day of Atone- a priest. His priestly role becomes clear only in the ment,isdepictedasacovenant-inauguratingevent, later so-called Priestly Document, in the descrip- fulfilling the expectations of the new covenant in tion of the construction of the Tabernacle and the Jeremiah.
    [Show full text]
  • Miri Talmon-Bohm Schusterman Visiting Israel Studies Professor Department of Hebrew & Semitic Studies George L
    FROM THE LAND OF OUR FOREFATHERS TO OUR MOTHER, THE HOME-LAND: NEGOTIATIONS OF CULTURAL IDENTITY IN ISRAELI CINEMA Miri Talmon-Bohm Schusterman Visiting Israel Studies Professor Department of Hebrew & Semitic Studies George L. Mosse/ Laurence A. Weinstein Center for Jewish Studies University of Wisconsin-Madison ABSTRACT Israeli-Hebrew culture was constructed in a conscious effort to create an authentic new culture in the land of Israel, which will articulate the national revival of the Jewish people in its ancient homeland, contain the different cultural heritages in-gathering to the new country from the diverse diasporas and create an indigenous authentic culture in its new geographical and cultural context. With time, these initial aspirations have adapted to the constraints and processes in Israeli and global history. Israeli Cinema, as an integral part of the construction of modern Jewish identity in its Hebrew-Zionist version, reflects the fluid and volatile nature of Jewish identity, as well as transformations in the unique negotiations of “Jewishness” within Israeli culture today. 1. Prologue: Here in the Beloved Land of Our Forefathers In 1912, on a field trip of the Tel-Aviv Hebrew school “Gymnasia Hertzliya”, the music teacher Hanina Kracevsky taught the students a new song, whose lyrics were composed by another teacher at school, Israel Dushman. Dushman composed new lyrics to a Yiddish song, whose lyrics were originally composed by Maurice Rosenfeld and published in a Yiddish magazine under the title: “Exile March”. Rosenfeld’s Yiddish poem describes the endless journey of the wandering Jew, which is so vividly visualized in the painter Shmuel Hircshenberg’s paintings, and in particular the one titled “Galut” (meaning in Hebrew: Exile).
    [Show full text]
  • CFP: Thou Shalt Make Cinematic Images! Jewish Faith and Doubt on Screen (6/1/16; 10/26-30/16)
    H-Film CFP: Thou Shalt Make Cinematic Images! Jewish Faith and Doubt on Screen (6/1/16; 10/26-30/16) Discussion published by Cynthia Miller on Friday, March 18, 2016 CALL FOR PAPERS CFP: Thou Shalt Make Cinematic Images! Jewish Faith and Doubt on Screen An area of multiple panels for the 2016 Film & History Conference: Gods and Heretics: Figures of Power and Subversion in Film and Television October 26-October 30, 2016 The Milwaukee Hilton Milwaukee, WI (USA) DEADLINE for abstracts: June 1, 2016 AREA: Thou Shalt Make Cinematic Images! Jewish Faith and Doubt on Screen Despite Judaism’s commandment against making graven images of God, films representing Jewish faith in God—or doubt in the face of collective and personal catastrophes and competing worldviews—have abounded from the advent of the movie industry. Since God cannot be visualized, movies must rely on depictions of an omnipotent historical and moral force, or a source of belief compelling Jews to endure martyrdom, persecution, and segregation, and to observe Jewish law and rituals. Motion pictures about how God informs modern Jewish lives have become more varied with the emergence of Jewish denominationalism and secular ideologies, like socialism or Zionism, often pitting factions within the Jewish community against each other. This area welcomes papers and panels that explore how Jewish belief and disbelief in God are constructed by filmmakers in documentaries and feature movies. The following themes are suggestions and should not be construed as the only topics that would fit in this area: The portrayal of Judaism in documentaries: Heritage: Civilization and the Jews (1984), A Life Apart (1997), and The Story of the Jews (2013).
    [Show full text]
  • Subjectivity, Institutions and Language in Contemporary Israeli Film
    CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture ISSN 1481-4374 Purdue University Press ©Purdue University Volume 21 (2019) Issue 2 Article 7 Subjectivity, Institutions and Language in Contemporary Israeli Film Ari Ofengenden Tulane University Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb Part of the American Studies Commons, Comparative Literature Commons, Education Commons, European Languages and Societies Commons, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, Other Arts and Humanities Commons, Other Film and Media Studies Commons, Reading and Language Commons, Rhetoric and Composition Commons, Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons, Television Commons, and the Theatre and Performance Studies Commons Dedicated to the dissemination of scholarly and professional information, Purdue University Press selects, develops, and distributes quality resources in several key subject areas for which its parent university is famous, including business, technology, health, veterinary medicine, and other selected disciplines in the humanities and sciences. CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture, the peer-reviewed, full-text, and open-access learned journal in the humanities and social sciences, publishes new scholarship following tenets of the discipline of comparative literature and the field of cultural studies designated as "comparative cultural studies." Publications in the journal are indexed in the Annual Bibliography of English Language and Literature (Chadwyck-Healey), the Arts and Humanities Citation Index (Thomson
    [Show full text]
  • Id Title Year Format Cert 20802 Tenet 2020 DVD 12 20796 Bit 2019 DVD
    Id Title Year Format Cert 20802 Tenet 2020 DVD 12 20796 Bit 2019 DVD 15 20795 Those Who Wish Me Dead 2021 DVD 15 20794 The Father 2020 DVD 12 20793 A Quiet Place Part 2 2020 DVD 15 20792 Cruella 2021 DVD 12 20791 Luca 2021 DVD U 20790 Five Feet Apart 2019 DVD 12 20789 Sound of Metal 2019 BR 15 20788 Promising Young Woman 2020 DVD 15 20787 The Mountain Between Us 2017 DVD 12 20786 The Bleeder 2016 DVD 15 20785 The United States Vs Billie Holiday 2021 DVD 15 20784 Nomadland 2020 DVD 12 20783 Minari 2020 DVD 12 20782 Judas and the Black Messiah 2021 DVD 15 20781 Ammonite 2020 DVD 15 20780 Godzilla Vs Kong 2021 DVD 12 20779 Imperium 2016 DVD 15 20778 To Olivia 2021 DVD 12 20777 Zack Snyder's Justice League 2021 DVD 15 20776 Raya and the Last Dragon 2021 DVD PG 20775 Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar 2021 DVD 15 20774 Chaos Walking 2021 DVD 12 20773 Treacle Jr 2010 DVD 15 20772 The Swordsman 2020 DVD 15 20771 The New Mutants 2020 DVD 15 20770 Come Away 2020 DVD PG 20769 Willy's Wonderland 2021 DVD 15 20768 Stray 2020 DVD 18 20767 County Lines 2019 BR 15 20767 County Lines 2019 DVD 15 20766 Wonder Woman 1984 2020 DVD 12 20765 Blackwood 2014 DVD 15 20764 Synchronic 2019 DVD 15 20763 Soul 2020 DVD PG 20762 Pixie 2020 DVD 15 20761 Zeroville 2019 DVD 15 20760 Bill and Ted Face the Music 2020 DVD PG 20759 Possessor 2020 DVD 18 20758 The Wolf of Snow Hollow 2020 DVD 15 20757 Relic 2020 DVD 15 20756 Collective 2019 DVD 15 20755 Saint Maud 2019 DVD 15 20754 Hitman Redemption 2018 DVD 15 20753 The Aftermath 2019 DVD 15 20752 Rolling Thunder Revue 2019
    [Show full text]
  • Shabbat Ki Tissa, 18 Adar, 5780 Endless Devotion
    Tikvah Daily: A Shabbat Reader Friday/Saturday, March 13-14, 2020 Shabbat Ki Tissa, 18 Adar, 5780 Endless Devotion By Hillel Halkin Spring 2010 A first reaction to the deluxe new siddur or prayer book recently issued in a Hebrew- Koren Sacks Siddur, English edition by Koren Publishers is that, Hebrew/English Prayerbook at 1,244 handsomely printed, imitation Koren, 1244 pp., $24.95 stamped-leather-bound pages, it is a bit hefty to be carried to synagogue on the Sabbath by the Orthodox users for whom it is primarily intended. To be sure, the ArtScroll Siddur, with which it is meant to compete, has only 200 fewer pages and, printed on thicker paper, is as bulky. But the ArtScroll, the standard siddur of most American Orthodox synagogues since its publication in 1989, is already on their shelves. The Koren Siddur must be brought by the congregant—at least until it gains a place on those shelves too, as its publishers clearly hope that it will. The Koren is large because, like the ArtScroll, it has facing English text and English commentary at the bottom of its pages, both the work of its editor, Great Britain’s distinguished Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks; a spatially generous layout less cluttered than the ArtScroll’s, and a comprehensiveness at least as great. Besides the regular weekday morning, afternoon, and evening services, and their Sabbath and holiday variations, which (with the exception of the long Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur liturgies) are found in any traditional siddur, the Koren includes numerous items that usually are not.
    [Show full text]
  • AVI CHAI Israel by the Numbers
    BY THE NUMBERS FILM & MEDIA 447 TOTAL BROADCAST HOURS OF FEATURE FILMS, TV DRAMA SERIES, DOCUMENTARY FILMS AND SERIES PRIMARY PROJECTS SHTISEL NEVSU TOTAL AVI CHAI INVESTMENT FOOTNOTE $13M FILL THE VOID 56 SALAH, THIS IS THE LAND OF ISRAEL MA’ABAROT ISRAELI ACADEMY AWARDS THE HEBREWS (HA’IVRIM) USHPIZIN MEORAV YERUSHALMI KATHMANDU BEN GURION EPILOGUE LONDON CORNER BEN YEHUDA 18 LEIBOWITZ, FAITH, COUNTRY AND MAN 20% YEARS OF GRANT-MAKING MY HERO BROTHER VIEWER RATINGS 2001-2018 WHO’S GONNA LOVE ME NOW FOR POPULAR DRAMAS BY THE NUMBERS RELIGIOUS ZIONISM TZOHAR 60,000 BEIT MORASHA COUPLES MARRIED BY 554 450 TZOHAR RABBIS GRADUATES 100 13,000 FROM 1986-2011 ($10.4M) COMMUNITY RABBIS OLIM AFFIRMED TRAINED JEWISH STATUS TOTAL AVI CHAI INVESTMENT FROM 1997-2012 ($8.3M) $24.6M YESODOT PEAK YEAR (2008) MATAN 63 480 36 SCHOOLS TEACHERS GRADUATES OF 27 4,500 3 YEARS OF GRANT-MAKING STUDENTS COHORTS OF THREE-YEAR PROGRAM 1986-2012 FROM 2002-2012 ($3.2M) FROM 1999-2006 ($1.5M) BY THE NUMBERS JEWISH COMMUNITIES BAYIT KIBBUTZ MOVEMENT PER ANNUM PER ANNUM 13 21 LOCALITIES COMMUNITY CENTERS 26 KIBBUTZIM 406 328 150 130 PROFESSIONAL NEW PROGRAMS TOTAL AVI CHAI INVESTMENT PROFESSIONAL NEW PROGRAMS AND LAY LEADERS AND LAY LEADERS 2,500 22,745 $11.2M PARTICIPANTS PARTICIPANTS MOSHAV MOVEMENT NITZANIM PER ANNUM PER ANNUM 15 23 11 249 MOSHAVIM LOCALITIES NEW PROGRAMS YEARS OF GRANT-MAKING 2004-2018 112 33 PROFESSIONAL NEW PROGRAMS 2,211 73,350 AND LAY LEADERS PROFESSIONAL PARTICIPANTS AND LAY LEADERS 2,475 PARTICIPANTS BY THE NUMBERS PUBLIC CAMPAIGNS SCHOOLS
    [Show full text]
  • Shabbat at Home Sukkot
    From: Educator's Guide to A Day Apart: Shabbat At Home Edited by Noam Zion www.haggadahsrus.com ©Reproduced with permission Sukkot - Brachot for the Sukkah Introduction After Sukkot Candle Lighting and Sukkot Kiddush on Yom Tov (see a Siddur) and after Havdalah when the first day of Sukkot falls on Saturday night, then if one is sitting in the Sukkah, one we adds a special blessing for residing in the Sukkah. Here I am ready to perform the mitzvah of my Creator who commanded: “Every member of Israel to reside in sukkot in order for us to know for generations that God caused us to dwell in sukkot when we were taken out of Egypt” (Leviticus 23). Blessed are You our God and God of our Ancestors who commanded us to reside in the sukkah. Baruch ata Adonai Eloheinu Melech HaOlam ahser kidhshanu b’mitzvotav v’tzivanu leisheiv BaSukkah.1 1 Baruch… leisheiv BaSukkah applies to residing in the Sukkah and since eating at one’s table is a central activity of living in a home, we recite this blessing just before eating. This is the dominant view of Rabeinu Tam and Rosh, however Maimonides and the Gaon of Vilna hold that we should say the blessing over residing in the Sukkah everytime we enter it even just to sit down. On Sh’mini Atzeret and Simchat Torah [8th day in Israel and 8th and 9th day in Diaspora] one does not sit in the Sukkah, and there is no Ushpizin, because Shemini Atzeret is not officially part of Sukkot even though its name means literally the 8th day of Sukkot.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2019 BJFF Catalog
    BOSTON JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL 31st ANNUAL FESTIVAL November 6-17, 2019 / bostonjfilm.org OPENING NIGHT SAFE SPACES WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 6 7:00 PM Josh (Justin Long, Dodgeball) has a lot going Coolidge Corner Theatre on. His job as an adjunct writing professor is being threatened after a student accused him of being inappropriate in class. His beloved Director Daniel Schechter grandmother (Lynn Cohen) is in the hospital, Narrative, 2019, USA, 93 min meaning his divorced parents (Fran Drescher, English The Nanny, and Richard Schiff, The West Wing) Boston Premiere and siblings (including Kate Berlant, Sorry to Bother You) need to all come together. This candid and often-humorous take on how we Join us for a Passholder Party deal with modern crises, both unexpected and at Osaka Restaurant following self-inflicted, is a testament to the importance the screening. of family—no matter how dysfunctional. Followed by a conversation with Actor Justin Long and Director Daniel Schechter 1 MIDFEST WEDNESDAY FROM SLAVERY TO FREEDOM NOVEMBER 13 7:00 PM The remarkable life of famous human Coolidge Corner Theatre rights activist, Natan Sharansky. In 1977, Sharansky was charged with spying Director Arkady Kogan for America, treason, and anti-Soviet Documentary, 2019, Israel agitation and was sentenced to 13 84 min, Russian with subtitles years of forced labor. No single person New England Premiere symbolizes the era more than he, a “Refusenik” who defied the entire Soviet system in his fight for freedom and national identification. After spending years in prison, he ultimately prevailed, paving the way for all of Soviet Jewry.
    [Show full text]