David Ben-Gurion: Our Festivals of Freedom – by Matia Kam

David Ben-Gurion: Our Festivals of Freedom
Matia Kam

The day after the declaration of the establishment of the state of Israel, at the end of Shabbat (6 of Iyar 1948) Ben-Gurion addressed the citizens of Israel in a live radio address: “Yesterday Israel witnessed a monumental event that only future generations would be able to measure its full historic significance.” Four years later Ben-Gurion did not hesitate to declare that Independence Day is “a redemptive and revolutionary event in the history of our nation,” thus adding to our calendar the first freedom festival after two thousand years of exile. “We are the last generation of oppression and the first of deliverance.” read more

Let’s Hear It For Tazria – by Nick Clark

Let’s Hear It For Tazria
A D’var Torah
(Leviticus 12:1-13:59)
Nick Clark
Temple B’rith Kodesh, Rochester, NY
March 29, 2014

Today I’d like to dedicate my d’var Torah for Tazria to Rabbi Rebecca Gutterman, Suzanne (my wife) and my friends in our Tanach and Torah study groups.

As I was reading the Parsha for today and doing some research on it, I came upon the first line from a bar mitzvah boy’s d’var Torah…
This is the grossest part of the Torah!

I couldn’t agree with him more. read more

The Problem of Slavery, the Problem of Peace – by Peter Eisenstadt

The Problem of Slavery, the Problem of Peace
Peter Eisenstadt

I have been reading, with much admiration, the recently published final volume of David Brion Davis’s magnificent trilogy on slavery (which took half a century to complete), The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Emancipation. And of course, like anything I read these days, it made me think a lot about the current situation of Israel.

This isn’t hard, actually. Davis is Jewish, and the volume is filled with analogies, reflections, and musings on various aspects of Jewish history. Davis devotes four large chapters to the colonization movement, the effort, primarily by whites, starting around 1820, to settle free blacks outside of the United States; in Africa, in Haiti, in Central America, anywhere else but home. read more

Soldiers of the Yom Kippur War for Peace in 2014 – by Ayala Emmett

Soldiers of the Yom Kippur War for Peace in 2014
Ayala Emmett

We are soldiers of the Yom Kippur War of a wide political spectrum who want to support the government to achieve a decent agreement with Palestinians to separate the two nations. We call on friends who support our mission to support us.

Several days ago I received an e-mail from a soldier of the Yom Kippur War. The e-mail has been circulating a petition among soldiers and commanders of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. The circulated petition from which I quote in the epigraph and bellow has been sent to soldiers to join the Million Hands for Peace to support the government of Israel and Prime Minister Netanyahu to achieve a peace treaty with Palestinians and a two states solution. read more

ISRAELIS MOBILIZE FOR PEACE: ONE MILLION HANDS FOR A PEACE AGREEMENT

ISRAELIS MOBILIZE FOR PEACE:
ONE MILLION HANDS FOR A PEACE AGREEMENT
Ayala Emmett

“149,585 Israelis have already signed up to deliver a strong message to the Israeli government—the people expect a peace treaty in Spring 2014”

A strong demand for a peace treaty in 2014 is expressed by Israelis these days and offers us here in Jewish America an opportunity to support their efforts.

For many years it was tough to be a pro-Israel pro-peace Jew in America. J Street has changed the political monopoly of AIPAC and has insisted on the right of Jewish pluralism, that is the right have a peace and two-states treaty on the American political map. read more

David Ben-Gurion: Abraham the Father of the Hebrew Nation – by Matia Kam

David Ben-Gurion: Abraham the Father of the Hebrew Nation
Matia Kam

The topic of David Ben-Gurion’s lecture at the 10th TANACH Conference was Abraham, the father of the nation, the father of the faithful, and the one who loved God. In his lecture Ben-Gurion emphasized that, “it was natural in an independent Israel that young Jews would feel closer to the time of TANACH than to a shtetel in the diaspora.” Ben-Gurion explored the relationship between the state and the diaspora in terms of a relationship to TANACH, more meaningful in life on the land, and more specifically a strong connection to the life of Abraham, the father of the nation. read more

Banning “Bossy” and Banishing Women’s Clinics: Between Privileged and Low-income Women – by Ayala Emmett

Banning “Bossy” and Banishing Women’s Clinics
Between Privileged and Low-income Women
Ayala Emmett

Privileged and low-income women have reasons to confront discrimination. While privileged women want to ban the word “Bossy” as detrimental to female leadership, governors like Rick Perry of Texas, banish Whole Woman’s Health clinics that provide services and abortion to low-income women in underserved rural communities.

Sheryl Sandberg, Condoleezza Rice and Anna Maria Chávez want to ban “Bossy,” as a word used to mock women. “Bossy,” they argue, is demeaning, meant to cast women as out of the bounds of femininity, and unseemly aggressive. The three successful women, Sandberg, Rice, and Chavez claim that ‘Bossy’ deters girls from striving to become leaders. To open the gate of success for girls they are launching a project “Ban ‘BOSSY.’ read more

“12 Years a Slave” Meets Pesach – by Rabbi Sarah Friedson-King

“12 Years a Slave” Meets Pesach
By Rabbi Sarah Freidson-King

The movie “12 Years a Slave” took home three Academy Awards on March 2 nd , including “Best Picture.” The film tells the true story of Solomon Northup, a free black man living in Upstate New York who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in 1841. He remained a slave for twelve years, enduring back-breaking labor and horrific abuse. The film captures the atrocities of slavery: harsh labor, physical pain, merciless beatings, sexual abuse, and extreme degradation. read more

MARCH 18-20 2014 – POST/FEMINISM/MEDIA

POST/FEMINISM/MEDIA

Please join us for this three-day series of events, March 18-20th

Eleana Kim (Anthropology) and the SBAI
University of Rochester

Post/Feminism/Media offers an opportunity for scholars and practitioners to participate in a dialogue about the state of media and reporting on women in a “postfeminist” age. For media scholars, postfeminism emerged in the early 2000s in tandem with critiques of neoliberalization as a way to underscore the deep contradictions and confusing appropriations of feminist discourses and ideologies in mainstream media. read more

Jews and Orchestras – by Peter Eisenstadt

Jews and Orchestras
Peter Eisenstadt

My friend Doug Gallant has posted on The Jewish Pluralist an interesting d’var torah on Parasha Vayakhel. It says many instructive things, but I want to

focus on one sentence, “Today we [the Jewish people] compose an orchestra with no redundant parts, no instrument more vital than another. A healthy Jewish people is one big caring family where each individual is as concerned for the other as for own self.” Doug uses this as a metaphor for the necessary unity of the Jewish People, the need to avoid divisions, factions, and strife, to learn how to play together from the same score. read more