Today was a holiday in my neighborhood. Not a Jewish holiday, of course, but one I admire nonetheless: Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, a 40-day period of fasting and repentance before Holy Week and Easter. What I admire about Ash Wednesday is its AWESOME ritual: the smearing of a cross of ashes upon the […]
Archives for February 2012
Reaching Kitah Gimel: The Torah is like a tree…
I’d intended to include this creative writing activity in our Tu B’Shvat Seder, but there wasn’t time. However, since we’re studying the prayers for the Torah Service, this activity increases understanding in that context as well. Students are given 2 information sheets. One sheet,prepared by Jewish National Fund (JNF) www.jnf.org/treesource contains quotes from Judaic texts […]
Jewish Week Grand Wine Tasting Competition- Behind the Scenes
This week, Aaron Heman had the opportunity to go behind the scenes at the Jewish Week Grand Wine Tasting Competition.
In this episode, he explored what it takes to be a judge in a wine competition? How do you judge wines? He also had the opportunity to learn how the judges of the Jewish Week’s Grand Wine Tasting rate wines and pick the finalist for the wine competition.
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Hurray for February- the month of B.S. holidays!
Let’s say you’re someone who really enjoys fasting (bear with me, this is going someplace.) You don’t have an eating disorder and you’re not protesting anything, you just like to find any excuse you can to be really, really hungry. Well, if you’re a Muslim- you’re psyched- you’ve got Ramadan- a whole glorious month at the all you can’t eat buffet. If you’re Jewish, you may not get a full month, but there are still ample fasting opportunities- you’ve got Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement), Tisha B’Av (commemorating the destruction of the Second Temple), Tzom Gedalia (the fast of, um, Gedaliah?) and other fast days sprinkled throughout the year.
But what if you’re a Christian? If you’re Catholic, then you might fast by giving up Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups for Lent. If you’re a Protestant of some sort- well, the closest you’ll get to fasting is running out of Light Miracle Whip so you can’t bring deviled eggs to Bible study or skipping lunch after church because snake handling makes you queasy (I don’t know what you people do.).
So, clearly this doesn’t bode well for the Christian or secular fasting enthusiast- but, fortunately, there is a totally non-religious solution- the Master Cleanse. This invention gives fans of brutal self depravation a near endless opportunity to consume almost nothing save for a repulsive beverage with the sunny nickname “lemonade”, as in “when life gives you self-loathing- make lemonade!” The Master Cleanse doesn’t care what race you are or what god you worship or whether you bother to worship any at all- it just wants you to starve- a fast even Christopher Hitchens could have loved.
The holidays in February are just like the Master Cleanse- except they encourage you to fill your body with toxins rather than empty it. From Groundhog Day and Super Bowl Sunday to Valentine’s Day and President’s Day- the month is filled with special occasions that do not discriminate by religion or ethnicity and instead celebrate the All American universal traditions of rodent worship, overindulgence, gambling and exchanging Whitman’s Samplers for sex. Here’s a quick round-up of all this month’s bull-shit holidays:
Terumah
This week, we learn about the elaborate details surrounding the erection of the Mishkah – the tabernacle in the Wilderness. For a group of wandering former slaves, this was quite an edifice! Moses gave an elaborate list For the Mishkan that did consist Of lapis lazuli Gold Silver and Jewelry So God could live in our […]
A Study Guide to Episode Three: You Can Dance
After watching Hanan and his father in the episode “You Can Dance”, we invite you to use the following Study Guide to deepen your thinking about the topic of Gratitude and Happiness..
This study guide, by Rabbi Leora Kaye, deepens the conversation that this animation will ilicit.
E-Book PDF: Download
Episode Three: You Can Dance
In Episode Three of Jewish Food for Thought: An Animated Series, Hanan and his father discuss the need for gratitude.
They discuss what counts as accomplishments, and the difficulty in appreciating the little things in life.
Please let us know your thoughts. What did this animation make you think about? What is your concept of gratitude? Are you able to enjoy the little pleasures in life? Please comment below, and begin the conversation.
Jewish Food for Thought is made possible through the support of The Covenant Foundation and the Foundation for Jewish Culture.
Podcast: Download
Mishpatim: Responding to the Heartbeat of the Other משפטים
The question is not “were you at Sinai?” but “were you there after Sinai?” Rabbi David Ingber on Parshat Mishpatim. For more information please visit romemu.org. http://media.blubrry.com/jcasttotalfeed/www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/jcastnetwork.com/storage/romemu/060.mp3Podcast: Download
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Exuberance and Quiet, Respecting and Listening to Them All
These past few weeks there have been some interesting issues raised in the media concerning personality formation and temperament. The New York Times ran an article on Tuesday, February 14th entitled, “What’s New? Exuberance for Novelty has Benefits” which describes the ways in which novelty seeking, while often associated with Las Vegas gambling and sky […]
Episode Eighteen: Mishpatim
In this episode of Verse Per Verse, Amichai explore the torah portion Mishpatim.
More specifically, “Lauviticus” explores Exodus, Chapter 23, Verse 12 and the word Nafesh. Nafesh has many possible translations, but Amichai explores the connection between this word and it’s root word Nefesh. How do these two words connect?
Listen in to how Amichai explores grapples with this question.
Podcast: Download
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