Category Archives: Articles

Liminal Space: Between Moral Judgement and Moral Certainty by Naomi Schlagman

I have become untethered from moral certainty. As an observant Jew, I adhere to certain moral truths. As a liberal humanist, I acknowledge cultural and moral relativism. But I am disoriented by the moral judgements made by members of my cultural groups. My identity is on shaky ground. Two experiences are illustrative of this liminality.

On Friday, May 18th, 2012 I stood in a crowd outside the former home of my grandparents, Sally (Shalom) and Elise Halpern, Z”L, in Konstanz, Germany. My grandparents died in the Holocaust, and the Stolpersteine project was laying stones in front of their former home in their memory. Most of the people in the crowd were strangers to me, except for my daughter, sister and brother-in-law, with whom I had traveled from the U.S., and my son and (future) daughter-in-law who had traveled from Israel to join us in Germany. Also, the day before, we had met Petra, a young German woman who researched our family for the Stolpersteine presentation and laying of stones in front of our grandparents’ home, and we were standing that day in the assembled crowd listening to Petra tell our family’s story before the stones were put into the sidewalk. Two women caught my attention at this event. The first was a woman who came out of the building and began yelling at the Stolpersteine volunteers and at the artist (Gunter Demnig). Petra explained that the woman was the current owner, and she did not want the stones placed before her doorway.   The woman angerly gave a number of reasons, such as the liability if the bronze nameplates became slippery in wet weather. Everyone ignored her, as she had no legal claim, and she quieted when the official ceremony began. Afterwards, she relented and gave our family a tour of her home. read more

How The Supreme Court Betrayed America by Ayala Emmett

SCOTUS 5-4 ruling

On Tuesday June 26, 2018 the Supreme Court in a 5-4 ruling, dealt a massive blow to democracy and delivered a victory to hatred. The five justices, with one stolen from President Obama, joined with President Trump to discriminate against Muslims. In historic terms, this ruling wiped out a sacred American principle of religious freedom, forged in the 18th century.

On September 17, 1787, after a long hot exhausting summer, America declared in Article VI of the Constitution that ‘No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.’ It began a process of etching religious freedom as a legal right and affirmed it on December 15 1791 in The First Amendment, ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” read more

Ring the Liberty Bell by Ayala Emmett


Yesterday I saw them
Generations of ancestors
Crying on the shores of Babylon
Chained slaves to be sold at dawn
Rising up in the Warsaw Ghetto
Taking the Great Spirit on the Trail of Tears.
Isaiah was at the Statue of Liberty
With the exiled, the poor and the stranger.

Yesterday I saw the Burning Bush and
Moses on the Rio Grande waving his cane
Let my people go.
In Pharaoh’s land the mothers wailed
In Texas their babies were jailed.

Yesterday I saw in the sea of refugees
Deborah the Judge and Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Holding the Declaration and God’s Rainbow
Hannah prayed with humanity
Spread over us the shelter of Your peace. read more

From Gaza to Jerusalem: The Ground Is Shaking By Hillel Schenker*

There is absolutely no justification for the current policy being used on the Gaza border.

Here in Israel/Palestine, we have just lived through some of the most dramatic days in recent memory. The calendar said it all: May 12 was the deadline for President Donald Trump to declare whether the American government was remaining committed to the Iran nuclear deal; May 14 was set for the transfer of the American embassy to Jerusalem; and May 15 was Nakba Day — the day the Palestinians mark the anniversary of the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 and their nakba (disaster or catastrophe). May 15 was also going to be the climax of the six-week-long March of Return, a mass Palestinian protest along the Gaza border. read more

Thoughts About Gaza by Peter Eisenstadt

It was like a football game of the damned, played in hell. You kept checking the score, every half hour. It was 14 dead, no, 22; no 35; no 42; no 55.   Meanwhile, 30 miles away, Ivanka Trump, justly described by Michelle Goldberg as a Zionist Marie Antoinette, was prancing and fluttering around the new US embassy in Jerusalem, toasting the murder of any chance of a peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. And apres Marie Antoinette, as they say, comes le deluge.

I don’t think the Israeli Palestinian conflict has ever made me angrier, and what was particularly infuriating was the vast number of commentators and acquaintances of mine who wanted to blame the victims, and called them Hamas terrorists or dupes of Hamas, denying the protestors their agency and more importantly, their humanity. With the events of this week, I have a deeper appreciation of how basically decent people can condone the worst forms of evil. read more

Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Pilgrimage to Israel by Peter Eisenstadt

“Dr. King to Lead Fall Pilgrimage to the Holy Land,” the New York Times reported on May 15, 1967. (When will the Times stop calling Israel the Holy Land?) Martin Luther King, Jr. had announced the previous day his intention to have the pilgrimage in the fall, with two main stops, one, to be held on Nov 14 on the Mount of Olives in the Jordanian sector of Jerusalem, the other, two days later, in a gathering on the Galilee. Of course, by May 15, 1967, it was very late in the day to be speaking of the Jordanian sector of Jerusalem. In less than three weeks, conquered by Israel, it would be no more. The Six Day War ended King’s thoughts of a Middle East pilgrimage. read more

So We Open Our Doors and Hearts by Ayala Emmett

The Passover Seder is the retelling of our passage from slavery to freedom, our defining central journey. We begin the Seder by opening the door and say, “All who are hungry, come and eat. All who are needy come and celebrate Passover with us.” This is the night that we are seated around the table, friends and families, to narrate our history as a people. We raise the Matzah plate and recite, “This is the bread of poverty that our ancestors ate in the land of Egypt.”

The exodus powerful narrative of freedom has produced enduring timeless Jewish values of care, compassion and justice as foundational and compelling. In some communities it is customary to put an empty plate on the table to remember those less fortunate, those who are suffering, those in need of shelter, refugees, asylum seekers, the homeless and the hungry. We who follow the custom, place verbal pledges on the plate and commit to do a mitzvah of our choice to alleviate suffering in the coming year. read more

Thinking About Hasidism by Peter Eisenstadt

The history of Hasidism is the history of Judaism at its best, Judaism at its worst, Judaism at its most liberating, and Judaism at its most confining. Of all the movements that have transformed Judaism in the past three centuries, only Zionism, perhaps, has had more of a transforming impact on how Jews understand their religion. These thoughts are occasioned by reading a massive new doorstop of a book, tipping the scales at almost 900 pages, Hasidism: A New History, collectively written by eight historians. read more

“Your Dreams Are Etched Into My Heart”– by Ayala Emmett

On Wednesday, I received an envelope with a letter asking for my contribution to Louse Slaughter’s Re-Election Committee. The envelope, torn at the top is now on my desk and inside is the form that I was planning to send with my check. On Thursday when we heard that she was hospitalized, we prayed for her healing. We held on to the hope that she would recover, as she has done in the past. She would return to work for the people and I would double my contribution.

Friday morning came the shockingly sad news that we have lost our warrior congresswoman. Many in Washington and around the country will offer fitting eulogies for this brave, upright, principled and highly effective congresswoman. We, her constituents, will remember her in our own way. read more

To Listen With Empathy: Things I Learned From My Niece by Ayala Emmett

Shunamit on Nurses Day at Hadassah Hospital

My niece Shunamit, nicknamed Shuni, a woman with disabilities wrote what she would like people to know about her life: “I am 40 years of age. I work in Jerusalem at Hadassah Hospital Mount Scopus as a support person in the daycare center for chronically ill children. I am well liked at work, I learn and I improve, I am content and I do my job well.”

Her work narrative would not surprise people in the U.S., in Israel and in many countries where work is an integral part of defining adulthood. For people with disabilities like Shunamit, however, participation in the workplace is far from taken for granted and was brought about by an innovative program initiated by The Feuerstein Institute. read more