An Alternative Hero
Dec 19, 2014 By Alisa Braun | Commentary | Miketz
Joseph, not Moses, torn apart
dreams snakes brothers father
sins and returns loves and is silent
wanders between the gleanings of Ephraim and the delight of Manasseh
Joseph knowledge Joseph pain
Joseph summer
Making Space for Light and for Darkness
Dec 15, 2014 By Mychal Springer | Short Video | Hanukkah
Study these sources in Hebrew and English
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How Holidays Of Light Make Hanukkah Brighter
Dec 15, 2014 By Judith Hauptman | Short Video | Hanukkah
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Creating The Light Of Hanukkah
Dec 15, 2014 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Short Video | Hanukkah
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Hanukkah Amongst The Christmas Trees
Dec 15, 2014 By Burton L. Visotzky | Short Video | Hanukkah
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Taking Judaism Public: From The Maccabees To Adam Sandler
Dec 15, 2014 By Shuly Rubin Schwartz | Short Video | Hanukkah
Study these sources in Hebrew and English
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His Father’s Son
Dec 12, 2014 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Vayeshev
We stand in a very long line of children of Israel who have been fascinated with Joseph, the first person to have stood in that line. It’s hard in 2014 to see him, like the Rabbis, as a great tzadik, even if he did resist the temptation of betraying Potiphar by sleeping with his wife; brought his brothers to teshuvah (repentance) through an elaborate and risky ruse; forgave them for selling him into slavery; and apparently administered the entire wealth of Egypt without ever profiting personally from his position. Joseph seems too worldly for the role of tzadik, too complex, too much a man of action rather than reflection.
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Al Hanissim
Dec 10, 2014 By 91첥 | Prayer Recordings | Hanukkah
In preparation for Hanukkah, we are excited to share a recording of Al Hanissim, composed by Mike Boxer of the Jewish a cappella group Six13 and performed by the Chorus of the H. L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music.
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Living into the Mission of Our Lives
Dec 5, 2014 By David Hoffman | Commentary | Vayishlah
What are our greatest fears?
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Leah’s Song
Dec 5, 2014 By Yonatan Dahlen | Commentary | Vayishlah
When you fell in love
Under a copper sky,
I saw you with her.
Sweat on your gentle lip,
You were weeping
Like the wadi in the rainy season.
And in my dreams,
I caught your tears.
Each one
Before it could hit the dust at your sandals.
If only I could be your tear catcher.
I would swallow every star
If you told me
Your tears come from Heaven.
Hanukkah Reignited! 1 Wondering Jew, Lab/Shul, and Friends Light Up 91첥
Dec 2, 2014 By 91첥 | Public Event video | Hanukkah
A panel discussion with Jewish Daily Forward columnist Abigail Pogrebin and Lab/Shul founder Amichai Lau-Lavie (RS ’16) cohost this panel featuring Bruce Feiler, Rabba Sara Hurwitz, Rabbi David Ingber, Rabbi Jill Hammer, and Rabbi Burton L. Visotzky, and a performance with students from 91첥’s cantorial school, cantors and song leaders of New York City congregations, and Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul, and Mary.
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Reclaiming Our Dreams
Nov 28, 2014 By Marc Gary | Commentary | Vayetzei
This week’s parashah, Vayetzei, covers a critical 20-year period in the life of our patriarch Jacob: the two decades that Jacob spends outside the Land of Israel, in Haran, in the house of his conniving uncle, Laban. They are years of treachery, deceit, exploitation, and fear. They are pivotal years in Jacob’s life—years in which Jacob confronts who he is and sees in Laban what he will become if he doesn’t pull back from the abyss. In the words of Aviva Gottlieb Zornberg, this is “the night of [Jacob’s] soul.” And, as if to drive this point home, the parashah begins with the setting of the sun and the onset of night, and ends with sunrise and the beginning of a new day.
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How Full of Awe Is This Place!
Nov 28, 2014 By Marcus Mordecai Schwartz | Commentary | Vayetzei
In 1969, as a senior pursuing a BFA at the University of Memphis, my mother, Ann Kibel Schwartz, made a series of prints, including this one on themes from Genesis, as her senior thesis. She drew the images for these prints from magazines, newspapers, and print advertisements. The images were starkly modern, but their juxtaposition in collage, drawing on the ancient themes of the Torah, created an old-new whole.
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Father, Have You No Blessing Left for Me?
Nov 21, 2014 By Leonard A. Sharzer | Commentary | Toledot
In Parashat Toledot, the saga of our somewhat dysfunctional ancestral family continues, and included within is one of the family’s saddest and most poignant episodes. Yitzhak, scion of the family and heir to his father’s covenant with God, has just married at the age of 40. He and his wife, Rivkah, remain childless for 20 years, when, in response to his entreaties to God, she conceives. Unlike her late mother-in-law’s easy pregnancy at an advanced age, Rivkah’s pregnancy is complicated. We are told right away that “the children, the ‘sons’ in fact, were struggling within her womb” (Vayitrotzetzu habanim bekirbah; Gen 25:22). However, she does not know the reason for her discomfort and distress.
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Gaza, the IDF Code of Ethics, and the Morality of War
Nov 20, 2014
This summer, Israel faced a war with Gaza, but what are the moral implications involved in such a war? 91첥’s (91첥) Chancellor Arnold M. Eisen and Dr. Moshe Halbertal, Gruss Professor of Law at New York University School of Law discuss this complicated topic.
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The Bus on Jaffa Road: The Story of Middle East Terrorism and the Search for Justice
Nov 19, 2014 By Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary | Public Event audio
The Bus on Jaffa Road explores the 1996 incident that took the lives of 91첥 student Matthew Eisenfeld (”l) and his fiancée, Sara Duker (”l), and the couple’s legacy.
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Sharing the Well: A Resource Guide for Jewish-Muslim Engagement
Nov 18, 2014 By 91첥
Sharing the Well: A Resource Guide for Jewish Muslim Engagement is designed to assist and enhance Jewish-Muslim interactions at the community level.
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Who Inherits Abraham?
Nov 14, 2014 By Rachel Rosenthal | Commentary | Hayyei Sarah
It is a well-known, if vaguely uncomfortable, psychological phenomenon that when looking for a partner, people are often attracted to those who are similar to their parents in appearance and personality. It is easy to see the logic behind this; when planning our futures, we seek that which is familiar to us from our pasts. This notion is often thought of as a modern phenomenon, reflecting a time when people choose their own mates. However, closer examination dates this concept back to the Torah, starting with the marriage of Isaac and Rebecca.
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Abraham’s Search: A Hallmark of Human Grief
Nov 14, 2014 By Allison Kestenbaum | Commentary | Hayyei Sarah
In an oft-told Buddhist story, a woman loses her son and is inconsolable. She approaches the Buddha and begs him to bring her son back. He instructs her to go around the village from house to house, seeking a single mustard seed from any home where no one has died. If she can find such a mustard seed, he will restore her son to life. So the woman knocks on each door and finds that there is no household that has not experienced loss. She returns without the mustard seed but with an enlarged awareness of the universality of loss that leads her to a path of compassion and peace.
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