Modeling Behavior for the Sake of Humankind
Jun 21, 2019 By Walter Herzberg | Commentary | Text Study | Beha'alotekha
In the last narrative in Parashat Beha鈥檃lotehkha, it seems that Miriam and Aaron are speaking against their brother Moses鈥攖hough the nature of the complaint is far from clear. Whatever the complaint may be, God summons Miriam and Aaron and takes them to task for not being 鈥渁fraid to speak against My servant Moses.鈥
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How We Build Character
Jun 14, 2019 By Marjorie Lehman | Commentary | Naso
Parashat Naso begins with the appointment of the Levite families of Gershon and Merari to take care of the Mishkan, the Israelites鈥 portable sanctuary in the desert. While Aaron and his family were given the responsibility of overseeing the actual service of God in the Mishkan, the descendants of Gershon and Merari were defined as mere helpers, charged with the role of caring for the structure of the Mishkan, its cloths, its equipment, its posts and their sockets, its planks, pegs, and furnishings.
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Counting Ourselves As Israel
Jun 7, 2019 By Leonard A. Sharzer | Commentary | Bemidbar | Shavuot
Sefer Bemidbar, the Book of Numbers, which we begin reading this week, opens with the taking of a census. After the rather arcane matters we have been reading about in recent weeks鈥攖he sacrificial cult, laws of purity and impurity, skin eruptions, bodily discharges, and so on鈥攖he monotony and repetitiveness of this week’s parashah comes almost as a relief.
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Remember the Land
May 31, 2019 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Behukkotai
Spring is my favorite season because it draws me outdoors, enticing me to leave the city and enjoy the rivers, fields, and mountains of this glorious earth. Even near the city I often find myself in nature, biking along the Hudson and up the Palisades past waterfalls and nesting eagles. Returning to the land reminds me of the many blessings of our world, filling me with gratitude and awe. It also causes foreboding since the signs of stress on the natural systems that make our lives possible are everywhere evident. While this era of anthropogenic climate change may be new, the concern that human conduct could lead to ruin and exile from the earth is found already in our Torah portion.
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Leveling the Field
May 24, 2019 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Behar
Growing up in Philadelphia, I often went with classmates to Independence Hall, where I swelled with pride to see that the Liberty Bell bore engraved words from the Torah:
Read More鈥淧roclaim liberty throughout the land, to all the inhabitants thereof.鈥 (Lev. 25:10)
Counting Whole Jews
May 17, 2019 By Arielle Levites | Commentary | Emor
We are in a season of counting. Beginning on the second night of Passover, Jews around the world began a collective counting project, marking the days from the Exodus from Egypt to the holiday of Shavuot, which celebrates the Israelites鈥 receiving of the 10 Commandments at Sinai.
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To Whom is Honor Due?
May 10, 2019 By Jeremy Tabick | Commentary | Kedoshim
Who deserves our respect and why? This vital question is encoded in the verse:
Read MoreBefore grey hair you should stand;
You should honor the face of an elder;
You should fear your God;
I am YHVH. (Lev. 19:32)
Does the Holocaust Play an Outsized Role in Contemporary Jewish Identity?
May 2, 2019 By Edna Friedberg | Commentary | Yom Hashoah
I am a Jewish historian鈥攁nd that is a deliberately ambiguous label. In one reading of that phrase, I am a historian of Jewish people and their experiences. But I am also proudly Jewish myself and as such not neutral about my subjects. Jewish history is personal for me, as is my daily work at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. When I began to work at the Holocaust Museum in 1999, I was wary that I would contribute to what some see as an unhealthy obsession with Jewish victimization.
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