Paying a price

From my blog:

This week, in Israel, has been particularly focused on the costs of establishing an idealist state in a previously inhabited plot of land. I’m not trying to dig too deep into the politics of it; rather I’m interested in the idea of the prices we pay to live where we do.

After all Carlos Arredondo, brought back into the public eye by the current tragedies in Boston, has paid high prices. It is not an infrequent thing, the terrible burdens families bear on their backs for their communities, for their countries.

This past Sunday, at my Yeshiva, we had a panel of faculty speaking about their personal Israel narratives. They spoke as individuals and then in a dialogue. In light of today’s theme, I’d like to highlight what Leah Rosenthal said.  Continue reading

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Highlights from a day in the life…

From my blog:

ד׳ באייר תשע״ג
April 14, 2013
יום ראשון Yom Rishon, the first day (of the week) meaning Sunday…

[I’ve decided to try to write seemingly mundane highlights for blog posts from now on since it has been so difficult for me to actually invest time in the extremely detailed descriptions I initially wrote many moons ago.]

I begin my day with the sunshine and birds’ sweet songs streaming into my bedroom from the window which opens onto my balcony.

On my walk to school two high school boys pass me, apparently reviewing for an exam, and I overhear one say to the other, ”רש”י אומר” which means “Rashi says” … Rashi is a French medieval commentator of Jewish text who is seen as the father of all commentators.

Starting last week, balconies and cars began to display Israeli flags in anticipation of the holidays observed this week and next, יום הזכרון, Yom HaZikaron, Memorial Day, יום העצמאות, Yom HaAtzmaut, Independence Day, and יום ירושלים, Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Day. This morning I noticed even more flags waving in the wind from balconies, in front of schools and businesses… Continue reading

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Sukkot 2.0

I have decided that Sukkot is my favorite holiday to celebrate in Israel.

Appreciating the simplicity of life. Showing gratitude for our blessings. Being in the great outdoors. Quality time with friends. An offensive amount of food. A reason for my family to say, “a week off from school? come home and get a job!”

What’s not to love? :)

(Here’s my post from last year’s Sukkot)

Sukkot in apartments…

Sukkot at restaurants…

Our humble, cozy sukkah :) We even slept in it one night!

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Never the Same River Twice

J. Benedict Roth will never forget the first time he learned Gemara (Talmud) 23 years ago with Pardes faculty member, Leah Rosenthal. “Leah showed me that the Gemara is like a rough diamond,” Benedict explains. “You take a stone which looks rather uninteresting, and you think you can understand it. But then you crack it open, and suddenly you discover countless different facets; you can see it from a myriad of different angles, lights shining from all directions.”

About four years ago, Benedict started teaching in his London community, both formally and informally. He taught Tanakh and Talmud, including a passage from tractate Yoma he had learned with Leah. “There were about 50 people in that class,” says Benedict. “Most had never learned Talmud before. They were just captivated.”

Benedict realized that if he wanted to continue to teach, he needed to deepen his learning and signed on for another Pardes learning experience, one he believes is unique in the Jewish world today. “The Torah being offered in the Diaspora is often very technical,” says Benedict. “People are intent on getting through material, but they rarely ask what is this text really telling me and what difference does it make to my life? They are not teaching Torah in a way that allows it to be internalized. I am very interested in what is going on in the Talmud and what is going on in day to day life and how they link up. Pardes is the best place to explore this connection.”

Both Leah and Benedict were pleasantly surprised to meet again over Gemara in this year’s summer program. “Benedict was in my very first Gemara class,” recounts Leah. “I will always remember every student in that first class.” Another layer to this teacher-student reunion is that Leah’s summer class is on the same tractate of Talmud that she taught to Benedict so long ago.

Leah remarks, “The meeting of two people over a text is what has always excited me. So the meeting of two people again over a text adds a whole new dimension to the learning experience. The fact that we are studying the same section of Talmud that I taught to Benedict so many years ago has been very eye-opening. It is fascinating to see what has changed in our reading of the text 23 years later and how much hasn’t changed at all.”

Benedict concurs, “I see things in the Gemara that I didn’t see that last time we learned it, perhaps as a product of my stage of life, my maturity. This is exciting. I can’t wait to bring this back to my home community. And I can’t wait to learn again with Leah in the future. I’ve already booked my ticket for next summer.”

Benedict is planning an online Gemara course with Leah that meets in London and parallels Leah’s class at Pardes. They will be learning Masechet Mo’ed Katan. For more information, please contact Dean David Bernstein at dav...@pardes.org.il.

Benedict Roth is from London. He received a BA in Hebrew from Oxford University and a Masters in Operations Research from Stanford. He works as a risk management specialist and is the proud father of three grown children.

This piece was written by Karen Feuer, Pardes alumna ’99-00, and Assistant to the Dean.

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Post-Modernity’s Footnote to Modernity

I just had the immense privilege of watching Footnote (הערת שוליים) with some fellow Pardesniks followed by a discussion with faculty who have intimate personal knowledge of the culture being described in the film.  First, I highly recommend watching the trailer and, if you are even remotely interested, watching the movie before reading what I have to say (in other words: spoiler alert).

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Week 35: Other Things I’ve Learned in Israel

(X-posted from my home blog, Yinzer in Yerushalayim)

I came to Israel wanting to learn Torah, and I have. Thank God, I’ve learned tons of Torah here and am privileged to learn more each day. But now that it’s May and I’m entering into the home stretch of my first year in Israel, I’ve gotten to thinking about some of the other things I’ve learned since coming here nine months and one lifetime ago, the bonus features of my Israel experience, those unexpected extra scoops of ice cream that have made spending nearly all my savings on this crazy adventure even more worthwhile.

While here, I’ve also learned:
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Week 29: Role-Playing, or Jesus, Death, and All Their Friends

(X-posted from my home blog, Yinzer in Yerushalayim)

Sunday night Pardes made history as the first yeshiva ever to host the launching event for a new edition of the New Testament. The Jewish Annotated New Testament, co-edited by friend of Pardes and Gene Wilder look-alike, Mark Z. Brettler, is actually a lot like the original New Testament, except the word “Jesus” is replaced by “Yeshka.”

No. In reality, Continue reading

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Week 22: Aramaic, Women, Meditation, and Other Foreign Languages

(X-posted from my home blog, Yinzer in Yerushalayim)

I decided to challenge myself this semester, to fully take advantage of my time here by trying new Jewish things and getting outside my comfort zones. Since every subject of Torah has its own special jargon, world view, sources, legends, authorities, inside jokes, the result has been that all day I’m learning new Jewish languages.

In its most literal sense, the new language I’m learning is Aramaic for my Gemara class. I moved from Hebrew level bet to gimel this semester, meaning I now have Gemara three days a week and Chumash two. As though studying Gemara in Aramaic for the first time wasn’t challenging enough on its own, its made even more complicated by the fact that we’re studying Tractate Bava Kama Chapter 8—the Rabbinic chains of reasoning proving that, in Prof. James Kugel’s terms, “’Eye for an eye’ really means ‘not an eye for an eye.’” Seeing a page of Talmud before you for the first time is intimidating, but even before coming to Pardes, a few friends at Shaare Torah told me not to worry since, as they put it, “Nobody actually knows Aramaic.”

“Really?” I challenged them. “Even the guys who study Talmud all day?”

One of them turned to a guy in shul who studies a lot. “Hey, does anyone actually know Aramaic?”

He said “No” without second thought, before returning to his page of Gemara. My friends went on to say that most people know enough of its structures and basic words to kind of fudge their way through it, but very, very few people actually know it fluently. This reassurance was repeated my first day of class when returning students went around the room offering their advice for us newcomers, and most of them also said something like, “It’s okay. We struggle with it, too.”

So while on the one hand, I knew I knew not to panic, on the other, all these reasons for not panicking made me panic that, as soon as I so much as looked at the Gemara before me, I would have no choice but to panic.

“What’s wrong with you, we told you not to panic!” they would all yell me once I came-to. Then I’d always be the kid from level bet who panicked even after everyone told him not to, and I could never become a talmid chocham. Little chance he’s ever going to understand Rabbi Dostai’s gezera shava in the second sugya, he can’t even get past the first Aramaic word (אמאי) without having a heart-attack.

Thankfully, that’s not what happened. Not only have I not panicked so far, but I actually think I’m getting the hang of it. Of course it helps that my teacher, Meesh, makes things so clear and that my chevruta Sam is brilliant and really knows what he’s doing. Besides “don’t panic,” the advice I would give to someone about to study Gemara for the first time would be, “Never have a Gemara chevruta with someone who doesn’t have an iPad.” Or even better, “Never have a Gemara chevruta with someone who isn’t Sam Rotenberg.” Any lingering fears I had that I wasn’t fully understanding what was going on in that class were eased Thursday afternoon when, just to be sure, I read the chapter in an Artscroll Gemara and was relieved to discover the arguments made as much sense to me in English as in Aramaic.

As someone who loves both women and mitzvot, the Women and Mitzvot class with Rahel Berkovits Mondays and Wednesdays from 12-1 sounded perfect for me. I thought many other guys would feel the same way, and was almost shocked when I ended up being one of two dudes in the class of around 20. But it’s their loss. As foreign a language as women might be to me, historically they have been at least 100 times more so for deciders of Jewish Law, and I think that is what makes this class so exciting, infuriating, and, above all, relevant—as anyone who’s been following the news in Israel (or reading my blog) knows, the status of women in society is one of the most defining issues and divisive points of departure in Jewish life today. In all seriousness, I took this class to because I think it’s vitally important to be a knowledgeable part of this conversation, to see what our sources actually say about women so I could cut through the all polemics and plaque of tradition and see what women’s roles in Jewish life and in mitzvah observance really are, and, more importantly, really can be. After only four classes I realize how little people from across the spectrum seem to actually know about women and mitzvot. By the time this class is over, I am going to be able to win so many arguments with people!

More alien to me than even Gemara or women is what we do in Self, Soul, and Text, a class that combines text study with meditative techniques and discussing our feelings. While I certainly do have a more mystical side (yes, that’s me on the right), I am not a meditative person. I prefer my spirituality practical and rational, insofar as possible. My attitude was always, “You hippies can have fun doing your whole Kaballaistic touchy-feely-meditatey thing over there, and in the meantime, I’ll just be over here watching the Steelers game until you’re done, thanks.” That’s why I took Rambam last semester in this time-slot, and I could almost feel him rolling over in his grave as I even pondered taking SST this semester over Rambam II. It wasn’t an easy decision, but I decided I should make the most of my time here and try something different.

Before I settled on taking this class, though I realized didn’t take a Halakha (Jewish law) class last semester either, so that would be something different for me too. So last week I decided to take one of each class to find out which one I liked better. I went into the first Self, Soul, and Text class with my arms folded wondering why I was even wasting my time and looking forward to Wednesday when I could get back to real Jewish stuff, i.e. Halakha. That class our teacher, R. James Jacobson-Maisels taught us a meditative technique developed by the Piasetzener Rebbe called quieting, where you slow yourself down and observe your thoughts, not judging them or acting on them or worrying about them, just passively watching them as they flicker through your mind then disappear, and I try my hardest not to bust out laughing while everyone else is meditating. I may not have been able to reach a fully meditative state, but I must have done something right because on our way out of class, my social worker friend Carolina told me she could see in my eyes that as much as I might not want to admit it, the class had already won me over. I tried real hard to pretend she hadn’t just read me like a book again when I told her I still needed to go to Halakha on Wednesday before I could make my final decision.

That Wednesday in Halakha, they were discussing laws of theoretical kashrut: If you have a mixture that’s 50% kosher meat and 50% kosher milk, how many units relative to its size of another substance—either meat or milk—must you submerge it in in order to nullify its trayfness and make it edible? The answer is that since either meat or milk can be nullified in something 60 times its size (a Halakhic concept called “beetul sheeshim”), and since an equal milk-meat mixture forms a new Halakhic thing called “milkmeat,” such a milkmeat substance could then only be nullified in a kosher meat or dairy substance 120 times its size—60 to nullify the milk half and 60 to nullify the meat half. Were the mixture of pork or some other unkosher meat and milk, you would only need to immerse it a meat substance 60 times its size since, as something inherently unkosher, the pork component counts as neither milk nor meat, and therefore, only the milk needs nullified.

While all this is fascinating, and a great workout for the brain, I ultimately decided I needed a class that would make me less neurotic, not more. Almost as soon as Halakha ended, I hugged my Self, Soul, and Text chevruta and told her I would be staying in that class over the rumble of the Rambam turning over in his grave again. A week and two classes later, I have no doubt I made the right decision.

In truth, I get to have my Halakha cake and make the appropriate brakha over it, too this semester, since Wednesday nights from 7:30-9:30 I’ll still be learning the language of Halakha in Thinking Like a Halakhic Sage with Rav Elisha Ancselovits. Less a class in practical Halakha than an exploration into its underlying philosophy, process, assumptions, and history, with class titles like “Beyond Formalism,” “Beyond Postmodernism,” and “Reasons to Maintain Forms,” this class will still twist my brain into knots, start some great discussions, and help me to be a more savvy, knowledgeable Jew, all while (hopefully) inculcating a minimum of fresh neuroses.

Even Jewish languages I thought I knew I’m learning new dialects of this semester. Chumash Gimel with Levi is a whole different world from Chumash Bet with Meir.

I’m getting so much deeper into and seeing whole new sides of Jewish philosophers I only thought I knew from last semester in Seminar in Modern Jewish Thought with R. Zvi Hirschfield. This time, instead of studying individual thinkers, we’re studying ideas. This approach puts thinkers diverse as Yeshayahu Leibowitz, Art Green, Mordechai Kaplan, and Joseph Soloveitchik, among many others , into conversation with each other and us over little things like God, the origin of the Torah, authority of Halakha, Jewish chosenness and peoplehood, the role of the State of Israel, and feminism.

If there was one language I thought I was an expert in, it’s that of storytelling. The concise, cryptic narratives in the Talmud and Mishna, however, are one dialect of storytelling I’ve never quite understood. Until now. In Talmudic Personalities, by taking us deep into the stories of the Sages, showing how a deceptively simple description of a rabbi, like “flowing spring” or plastered cistern,” seen in one part of the Talmud contains a whole world of depth that sheds so much light and gives so much perspective on his subsequent sayings and actions over all the rest of the Talmud, Leah Rosenthal is uncovering their tremendous depth, beauty and subtlety. It amazes me how one or two very intentionally ambiguous words in a narrative can lead to two or more radically different readings, not only of a text, not only of a person’s life and personality, but of the whole endeavor and philosophy of Rabbinic Judaism. Like any new dialect, the storytelling methods and philosophies I’m seeing in these classes seem vaguely familiar, yet amaze me with where and how they differ from the one I’m comfortable in.

One language I hope I am never fluent in is the language of good-bye, which, unfortunately, this new semester has already seen its share of. So far the most painful good-bye has been to my friend מיכאל (pronounced “mee-kha-el”), who left Monday to go exploring through India and China before starting grad school at Yale in the fall. More than just a friend, מיכאל hosted a huge Thanksgiving dinner, our 29 November Pizza and Partition party, several fantastic Shabbat meals, had a big ice cream party the night before he went away, introduced me to his awesome roommate, Jonah and mother, Rabbi Laurie, and took me along to his Cheredi cousin’s son’s upshearnish. Above and beyond that, we had some great conversations together and he taught me how to cook. This means that no matter what or how much I cook for the rest of my life, I’ll always be indebted to him as the one who, with great patience, taught me how and made it fun. But most of all, I’ll remember him as the one who taught me that sometimes Reform rabbis choose to grow payos on their sons.

If you’re reading this, I miss you already.

All this, and I still really need to work on my Hebrew.

Quote of the Week: “A logical argument [only] ceases to sound like nonsense when it matches your view of reality.” – Rav Elisha

Hebrew Word of the Week: שפה (“safah”) – language

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[Student Profile] Michael Rutenberg Schoenberg

Michael (pronounced Mee-kha-el) originally hails from Portland, Oregon, where he was the only person in the whole city who had shoulder-length payos (sidecurls), and he was often mistaken for a girl until the age of eight or nine because many people did not know what payos were. His parents, two Reform rabbis, had followed a Chassidic custom, and did not cut Michael’s hair until he turned three years old, leaving his payos to grow.

The reason that my payos became so important to me lies in the manner in which my Ima explained my payos to me.  She made a connection to another mitzvah… that is also called pe’ah.  In Leviticus 19:9 it says:

“…ובקוצרכם את קציר ארצכם לא תכלה פאת שדך”
“When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not reap the corners of your field…”

These parts of the field are to be left for the poor, and this explanation was very salient to me.  In fact, when I was five or six and my barber asked me why I had payos, I once replied. “To feed the poor.”

Wordplays aside, as I got older, it became very meaningful that a physical part of me could represent two things that I viewed as so important: Judaism and the quest to help those in need.

Michael’s parents ran a Jewish outreach program out of their home, inviting dozens of people to their house every Shabbat, and as a child he “didn’t have a concept of not having guests for Shabbat dinner.” Michael recalls complaining to his parents on those very rare occasions when they weren’t hosting, and as a college student he continued to host Shabbat guests himself through a like-minded organization called ‘Heart to Heart’, which a friend of his founded at UPenn.

While his parents are Reform rabbis, Michael found his Jewish home in the ‘Orthodox Community at Penn’, as it was the dominant Jewish community at his university. “It was the community for whom Jewish living was central to their lifestyles, which is what [he] was used to from [his] childhood.” Now having graduated from UPenn, Michael continues to feel that he’s most likely to find the intensity of Jewish living that he is most comfortable with in the Orthodox community; although he doesn’t “have a fixed religious philosophy, and intend[s] to spend [his] whole life answering theological questions.”

Unfortunately for us, Michael will be leaving Pardes next semester to travel around southeastern Asian before he begins his doctoral work in molecular biophysics and biochemistry at Yale, but his kind smile and easy manner will be remembered. In fact, many of Michael’s teachers also remember his sister Avital (2009-10) with great fondness, and we’re all very thankful that she recommended Pardes to her younger brother :)

I knew I would be comfortable at Pardes. It’s a wonderful community – a very comfortable community for me – and the learning at Pardes is exciting! Leah Rosenthal’s Gemara class is very intersting – she’s a clear communicator – and she’s really helping me understand the details – not just conceptually – of how things are working mechanistically. It’s really fundamental to ultimately being able to learn on my own!

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[Student Profile] Amy Kaldor

“All of my grandparents were holocaust survivors, and they all grew up in traditional Jewish families in Hungary… I want to be a part of the tradition that they grew up with… and at Pardes, I can begin to reclaim it.”

Amy arranged her arrival to Israel to overlap with the final weeks of her brother’s Israeli army service. After all, she had to ensure that her homemade batch of hamentashen reached its intended recipient before Purim! Her semester-long WUJS Jerusalem Program began in March, allowing her to spend time with her family after college graduation before flying off for a semester of Torah study in Israel.

She’d first heard of Pardes during her 2010 AJWS summer volunteer mission to Peru; volunteering had long been a significant part of Amy’s life, and she ultimately received the ‘Tzedek and Social Justice Award’ from the Hillel of Greater Toronto for running the York Hillel’s “Bathtub Project”, which collected toiletries from students on campus, and donated them to women’s shelters in the city. She was also involved in other Hillel volunteer projects, such as “sandwich-making for the homeless”, and “packaging Chanukah gifts for children”.

As a certified personal trainer and dancer of many, many years, Amy continued volunteering in Israel through WUJS, working at a Jerusalem community center for the elderly, even as she studied at Pardes in the Spring. The pluralistic community at the Pardes Institute was very comfortable for Amy – very similar to her AJWS volunteer group – and she eagerly enrolled as a full-time Pardes Summer student. In Leah Rosenthal’s Gemara class, the young woman was excited to hone her text skills, marking the first time she had ever studied the Talmud.

“It’s nice to know that when you get older, you don’t lose your sense of humor!”

Her Bat Mitzvah had been in Israel (at Masada), and Amy had been to Israel several times as a college student on Hillel trips, but her time at Pardes was particularly special for her- and it allowed her the flexibility of studying Torah during the summer before she began graduate school :)

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