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April 25, 2013

This week in power: UN agreement, Marathon security, Florida law, Bible winner

A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:

New deal
An “unusual partnership” was struck this week, ” target=”_blank”>said. “It’s a move toward confidence building and an attempt to see whether there is forward movement.”

Boston lockdown
“I am not judging the people of Boston and their leaders and yes, there is something to be said about being safe rather than sorry. But, I wonder about the long-term strategic ramifications and if this won’t be viewed as a near-surrender to terrorism,” ” target=”_blank”>handles tough security situations like these. Yet, some took exception to these comparisons. “We can choose whether and how, with what nuance or with what lack thereof, we draw comparisons between terror in Boston and terror in Israel. And we can remember that comparisons, like all speech acts, are not morally neutral: somebody always benefits, and somebody always loses,” ” target=”_blank”>according to Jacksonville.com. It's being called “anti-Sharia law,” and Gov. Rick Scott supports the bill. “But hey, you want to make a culturally homogenous omelette, you gotta crack some multi-ethnic huevos,” ” target=”_blank”>announced on Tuesday that he will step down as executive vice president and CEO of the world’s largest local charity on June 30, 2014. Under Ruskay's direction, the UJA-Federation has led the charge for Jewish organizations in the region in communal planning and philanthropy. The organization works with nearly 100 network beneficiary agencies, synagogues, and other Jewish organizations — and 60 other countries around the world. “This has been a fabulous, wonderful professional journey,” ” target=”_blank”>led to a tie between Elior Babian of Beit Shemesh and Yishai Eisenberg of New Jersey, a student at Yeshiva University High School. The two contestants both achieved perfect scores in the final, challenging rounds, and the judges ultimately decided that they couldn't take away the win from either boy. It's the first time in contest history that there was a tie. “It makes me very happy to see young people from Israel and from the world that are so interested in our Book of Books,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu This week in power: UN agreement, Marathon security, Florida law, Bible winner Read More »

April 25, 2013

The US

Headline: Kerry pushes economic plan for peace

To Read: Leon Wieseltier writes about America's obsession with 'Moving on':

Moving on is of course one of the quintessential expressions of the American spirit, and of the American shallowness. Our religion is the religion of movement; stillness offends our sense of possibility. We dodge the darker emotions by making ourselves into a moving target for them. We feel, but swiftly. This emotional efficiency, this cost-benefit calculus of the heart, is at once a strength and a weakness: you cannot be damaged by what cannot sink in. And so we acquire resilience through transience, and stoicism through speed. We cling desperately to the illusion of our immunity, even after it has just been disproved by experience, and to the fiction of the pastness of the past: we call it “closure,” which is just a decision not to care anymore, and not to let experience intrude any further. We need desperately to know that our insulation is intact. Hence the haste to get the marathon massacre behind us, to hold the memorial service and plan the next marathon. We are sometimes so anxious not to overreact that we underreact. Perhaps some people worried, in the aftermath of the Boston bombings, that if we lingered too long over the outrageous fact of what had been done to us, if we were patient with fear and tolerant with anger, then we, I mean our government, might be tempted to do something, and some airborne division might be dispatched for some more shock and awe.

Quote: “The United States did not discourage us from this direction”, Dutch envoy to Israel, Caspar Veldkamp, claiming that the US tacitly agrees to the European labeling of West Bank settlement products.

Number:  60, the percentage of Americans who believe that the measures taken after 9/11 have made the country safer.

 

Israel

Headline: Olmert announces: I will run for prime minister in next Israeli election

To Read: Amir Fuchs examines Israeli founding father Ze'ev Jabotinsky's vision of Jewish Arab relations, a vision which he believes to be under attack these days-

Current public discourse in Israel reflects an increasing belief that Zionist nationalism is incompatible with a commitment to liberalism, democracy, freedom, and equality. But the writings of of Ze’ev Jabotinsky – soldier in the Jewish Legion in WWI, ideologue, and leader of the nationalist, pre-state Revisionist Zionist movement – attest that no such contradiction exists.

Jabotinsky’s commitment to equality was total and complete. In particular, his attitude toward the Arab minority in the Land of Israel and his vision for the Jewish State stand in stark contrast to the philosophy underpinning recent attempts to introduce illiberal legislation in the Knesset.

Quote:  “As a human being and as a Jew, I am deeply ashamed that an issue of such basic principle and ethics has been turned into a pawn”, Professor Yair Auron, Israeli genocide scholar, about the political calculations surrounding Israel's age-old policy of not recognizing the Armenian genocide.

Number: 6.5, the percentage of Israel's GDP which is spent on Defense.

The Middle East

Headline: Minaret of ancient Aleppo mosque destroyed

To Read: RAND's Alireza Nader takes a look at Iran's alliance with the Assad regime, an alliance which he claims is based on power and politics rather than religion:

The Syrian-Iranian alliance has largely lacked an ideological or religious dimension. The secular Syrian regime is dominated by members of the Alawite sect, which is distantly related to the Shi'a religion practiced by the majority of Iranians. Yet the Islamic Republic, the world's only theocracy, has displayed little religious affinity for the Assad regime. Rather, Tehran views Syria as a strategic gateway to the Arab world, a bulwark against American and Israeli power, and, perhaps most importantly, a crucial link to Lebanese Hezbollah. Syria is also a buffer against internal instability in Iran.

Quote: “Controversial and tasteless statements, slogans and charades damaged us and weakened our rightful position”, Iranian Presidential candidate and mayor of Teheran, Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, criticizing President Ahmadinejad's holocaust denial.

Number: 355,000, the number of members in 'YaLa Young leaders', a Facebook group for Middle Eastern youth which has made an optimist out of Aaron David Miller.

 

The Jewish World

Headline: KKL-JNF transfers millions for Holocaust restitution

To Read: Rabbi Jonathan Sacks writes about the mitzvah of job creation and Jewish tradition's warning against the perils of unemployment-

Judaism recognises that unemployment has a psychological as well as economic dimension. Jewish law represents the sustained attempt to create a society that honours human dignity, and an essential part of this is that everyone should have the opportunity to contribute to the common good through their own endeavour. As Psalm 128 says, “When you eat from the labour of your hands, you will be happy and it will be well for you.

As a matter of religious principle, job creation must be at the centre of any long-term welfare policy. Human dignity requires no less.

Quote:  “The reason why Maharat needs to exist is because unfortunately, we are not capitalizing on the talent of half our population by only giving men the spiritual roles in the religious community”, Ruth Balinsky Friedman, graduate of Yeshivat Maharat,  Orthodoxy’s first institution training women as spiritual and religious leaders.

Number: 79, the percentage of British Jews who believe that the BBC is biased against Israel.

April 25, 2013 Read More »

Why Today’s Western Wall Court Decision is a Blessing, a Problem, and a Blessing

Three days ago, I wrote an article for IHT-NYT on Women of the Wall, one in which I shared with the readers my usual plea for compromise and, more specifically, for implementing the Sharansky plan (if you aren’t familiar with it, you can read about it here, here and here):

Sharansky’s deal, almost finalized, is a measured compromise with a grain of irony. To accommodate American Jews’ liberal leanings he brokered a “separate but equal” arrangement: The area near the wall where visitors can worship  will be expanded to include a new section in which WoW — and all other Jews wanting to avoid strict Orthodox custom — can pray as they wish. Women will be able to wear a prayer shawl without being detained by the police; men and women will be able to mix, pray and celebrate together.

From the view of the women’s movement, this is both good politics and good policy. Good politics because the burden now shifts to the Israeli government, which will have to prove that it is serious about implementing the deal. And good policy because it achieves three goals: Jews of all stripes will now have a place at the Kotel; an ugly clash between the Orthodox and other Jews has been avoided; and relations between Israel and the wider world of religious-but-not-Orthodox Jews will improve.

This was true three days ago, but life may have become a little bit more complicated by a court decision today:

Police say the women, who pray at the wall once a month and are fighting for acceptance of liberal Jewish custom there, are violating a 2003 Supreme Court decision barring them from wearing prayer shawls and reading from the Torah because those actions deviate from the Orthodox “tradition of the site,” upset other worshipers and cause disturbances.

The new ruling, however, said that Supreme Court decision… “is not phrased as an order directed at the Women of the Wall, but as a recommendation,” Sobel wrote in the decision, and the ruling “did not ban the Women of the Wall from praying in any particular place.”

This decision is: A. a blessing, and B. a problem (and it can still be overturned by the Supreme Court).

It is a blessing because it recognizes the absurdity of the current state of affairs, and takes away the power to decide what “Jewish practice” is from the hands of strict rabbis. It is a problem as it emboldens the initial claim of WOW, and might lead them into reconsidering their acceptance of the Sharansky plan (if they can pray at the existing plaza, why move to a new plaza?).

But then again, it is a blessing, as it puts the government on notice: If it doesn’t act quickly and decisively to demonstrate its seriousness about the Sharansky plan, the court might force it into a less convenient arrangement – into having to send the police to guard WOW whenever they feel the urge to pray near the Kotel.

This issue is far from settled.

Why Today’s Western Wall Court Decision is a Blessing, a Problem, and a Blessing Read More »

Israel shoots down drone from Lebanon, Israeli Military says

An Israeli fighter plane shot down a drone from Lebanon over the Mediterranean sea on Thursday as it was approaching the Israeli coast, the military said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was flying in a military helicopter to an event in northern Israel when the unmanned aircraft was spotted along the Lebanese coast by Israeli air defences. His helicopter landed briefly until the interception was completed.

There was no indication from Israeli officials who provided information about the incident that Israel suspected any connection between the dispatch of the drone and Netanyahu's flight, whose details had not been made public.

“I view with great gravity this attempt to violate our border. We will continue to do what is necessary to defend the security of Israel's citizens,” Netanyahu said in a speech at his destination, a Druze village where he met community leaders.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the alleged aerial infiltration.

Asked whether Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Lebanese guerrilla group that sent a drone into southern Israel in October, was behind the incident, a military spokesman said an investigation was under way and the navy was trying to salvage wreckage from the aircraft.

“On my way here, in a helicopter, I found out there was an infiltration attempt by a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) into Israeli air space,” Netanyahu said in the Druze village of Julis, some 15 km (9 miles) from the Lebanese border.

“Within a short time, Israeli pilots intercepted this aircraft and shot it down over the sea.”

The military said the unmanned aerial vehicle was detected in Lebanese skies and intercepted by a F-16 fighter jet some 5 nautical miles west of the Israeli port city of Haifa.

A military spokesman said the drone had been flying at an altitude of about 6,000 feet and had been monitored by Israel for about an hour before it was destroyed by an air-to-air missile.

“We don't know where the aircraft was coming from and we don't know where it was actually going,” the spokesman said.

In the incident in October, a Hezbollah drone flew some 35 miles into southern Israel before being shot down by an F-16.

Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in 2006, and Lebanon has complained to the United Nations about frequent Israeli overflights, apparently to monitor the group's activities.

On Monday, Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon said Israel would not permit “sophisticated weapons” to fall into the hands of Hezbollah “or other rogue elements” in Syria's civil war.

“When they crossed this red line, we acted,” Yaalon said at a news conference with U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, in comments widely interpreted as confirming reports that an Israeli air strike in Syria in January had targeted a Hezbollah-bound arms convoy. (Editing by Alison Williams)

Israel shoots down drone from Lebanon, Israeli Military says Read More »

Meditation 101

Meditation is one of those things that until you do it, it’s really hard to understand why you should even start doing it. There are so many ways to meditate that it seems there is a method for everyone. True meditation is a peaceful, thoughtful state of awareness where the mind is calm but alert and begins an inner transformation that brings us to a higher level of awareness. Furthermore, there are countless medical benefits associated with consistent meditation practices.

Why should you be meditating?

Do you experience stress, anxiety, difficulty sleeping, negative attachment to people (like bosses, ex’s, parents), frustration, feelings of being a victim, detachment, or simply want to be healthier? The answer to all of this is meditation.

Hospitals, clinics, and integrative medicine practices are increasingly recommending that people use meditation as part of a preventive health care plan and to manage symptoms of disease. Meditation inspires spiritual, mental, and physical transformation, which helps regulate the daily frustrations of life, understand why certain events are occurring in life, gives solace to unanswered questions, ignites creativity and ideas, and sets the tone for a mindful day. I swear.

Fun Fact: Sex lights up the same parts of the brain as meditation. It throws you into a more visceral, non-censored state. You act without thinking. You act from a place of knowing. And being. ( Meditation 101 Read More »

Israel’s women worshipers score legal victory

This story originally appeared on themedialine.org.

Women praying at Judaism’s holiest site, the Western Wall, need not fear police threats of arrest if seen wearing traditional ceremonial attire associated with the religion’s males following a Jerusalem District Court ruling handed down on Thursday. The order, which says women may pray with prayer shawls and phylacteries, is seen as a major victory for a group called Women of the Wall, which has been struggling for almost 25-years against police and Orthodox Jewish authorities in charge of the site, for the right to defy traditional restrictions.

The case again brings to the fore the issue of religion’s role – and the authority wielded by religious authorities associated with religious practice – in the modern state of Israel. In addition to being portrayed as the epicenter of Jewish prayer, the Western Wall is simultaneously a holy site and a site used for ceremonies such as soldiers’ swearing-in ceremonies and other national activities.

“It’s a holiday of liberation,” Anat Hoffman, chairwoman of Women of the Wall, told The Media Line in response to the court decision. “And unless the police appeal, it means that we won’t get arrested anymore for wearing prayer shawls and phylacteries [leather boxes containing Biblical scripture worn on the arm and head].”

Hoffman has been attending a prayer service at the start of every month for the past 24 years, except when a police injunction kept her away from the site. Last October, she was arrested for wearing a prayer shawl, dragged by her hair, and kept in jail for 24 hours: an experience she describes as “traumatic.”

Although Hoffman believes it is unlikely that the police will appeal, what still remains unclear is whether the women will be allowed to publicly read the Torah scroll [Five Books of Moses handwritten on parchment] at the Wall. Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, the rabbi of the Western Wall, has previously forbidden the women from doing so at the site.

In a statement, Rabbi Rabinowitz said he will investigate the ruling and what it means for the Supreme Court decision. He also called on all parties to behave responsibly.

“The Western Wall is the last place that unites us,” the rabbi said. “It is easy to burn the Wall up in the fire of disagreement. It is much harder to find the middle way that will allow everyone to feel connected to the site. I beg the silent majority not to allow the Wall to become a focus of controversy.”

Until now, the site has been run in the manner of an Orthodox synagogue, with a high partition separating men’s and women’s prayer areas. Women coming to attend a bar-mitzvah (a coming-of-age ceremony for boys at age 13) have had to climb up on chairs to peek over the partition in order to be part of the festivities.

The ban on women wearing prayer shawls has extended to doing so even while remaining within the area designated for women.  While both the wearing of prayer shawls and reading the Torah are activities traditionally performed by men, many rabbis suggest they are not prohibited for women by Jewish law. Others cite a Biblical verse that says women should not wear men’s clothing, extending it to include traditional male prayer accessories.

In 2003, the Supreme Court ruled that the women could begin their prayer service at the Western Wall, but partway through must move to a nearby site called Robinson’s Arch to read the Torah. Last month, five women were briefly detained for wearing prayer shawls at the site. A police official later wrote a letter that listed forbidden acts, although other officials, including Rabinowitz, promised there would be no arrests.

What is most unique about today’s ruling is that the court said that the wearing by women of traditional male prayer accessories is not a violation of “local custom” or a “provocation,” the legal reasoning that allows police to act. The ruling also said that women are not obligated to pray at the alternative Robinson’s Arch site.                  

“This is a legal precedent; now we can pray as we have been doing,” Shira Pruce, director of public relations for Women of the Wall told The Media Line. “But it’s going to take a lot of legal consulting since the decision doesn’t mention a Torah.”

For many of the women in the organization, the ruling is a vindication of their belief that the Western Wall should belong to everyone. “It’s just amazing – justice and common sense prevailed,” Cheryl Birkner Mack, a board member of the organization, told The Media Line. “I was in court and the judge seemed like he really understood that we want to participate in prayer at the kotel,” she said using the Hebrew term for the site.

The women, many of whom are English-speaking immigrants to Israel like Birkner Mack, have been praying monthly at the site on Rosh Chodesh, the first day of each Hebrew month, which tradition deems to be a special holiday for women. They say they are not trying to be provocative, only to have a religious experience. But they have been cursed and had chairs thrown at them by both ultra-Orthodox men and women at the site, who claim they are violating Jewish law by praying aloud and wearing prayer shawls.

“We believe that the Divine Presence never left the Wall and sometimes when we are all praying and singing there, I really feel that,” Birkner Mack said. “Other times, when the police were harassing us, it was hard to concentrate on prayer.”

While the image of the group has been that of Reform Jews, it actually includes women from all denominations including Orthodox women – the most rigorously observant of Jewish denominations. Until recently the group was small, with between 15 and 50 participants braving the elements and the 7 a.m. start-time.

The women’s struggle has received prominence in recent months as several newly-elected women members of parliament have joined the monthly prayer service. For the first time, the issue seems to be reverberating among Israeli women as well.

“We have 12,000 “likes” on Facebook,” Pruce said. “And everyone is welcome to join us on May 10 at 7 a.m.”

Israel’s women worshipers score legal victory Read More »

Boston bombers had planned to attack N.Y. next, Mayor Bloomberg says

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on Thursday the suspects in last week's Boston Marathon bombing had intended to attack New York City next.

“Last night we were informed by the FBI that the surviving attacker revealed that New York City was next on their list of targets,” Bloomberg said at New York City Hall. Surviving suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his older, now dead, brother Tamerlan, had built additional bombs beyond those set off at the race, Bloomberg said.

“He and his older brother intended to drive to New York and detonate those explosives in Times Square,” Bloomberg said.

Reporting by Edith Honan, writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick

Boston bombers had planned to attack N.Y. next, Mayor Bloomberg says Read More »

U.S. believes Syria used chemical weapons but says facts needed

U.S. intelligence agencies believe Syria's government has likely used chemical weapons on a small scale, the White House said on Thursday, but added that President Barack Obama needed “credible and corroborated” facts before acting on that assessment.

The disclosure of the assessment, which Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said was made within the past 24 hours and the White House said was based in part on physiological samples, triggered immediate calls for U.S. action by members of Congress who advocate deeper U.S. involvement.

But while President Barack Obama declared that Syrian use of chemical weapons would be a game-changer, his administration made clear it would move carefully – mindful of the lessons of the start of the Iraq war 10 years ago.

Then, the George W. Bush administration used faulty intelligence to justify the Iraq invasion in pursuit of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons that turned out not to exist.

“Given the stakes involved, and what we have learned from our own recent experiences, intelligence assessments alone are not sufficient — only credible and corroborated facts that provide us with some degree of certainty will guide our decision-making,” Miguel Rodriguez, White House director of the office of legislative affairs, said in a letter to lawmakers.

One senior U.S. defense official told reporters that “we have seen very bad movies before” where intelligence was perceived to have driven policy decisions that later, in the cold light of day, were proven wrong.

The White House said the U.S. intelligence community assessed with varying degrees of confidence that the chemical agent sarin was used by the Syrian government. But it noted that “the chain of custody is not clear.”

“So we cannot confirm how the exposure occurred and under what conditions,” according to the White House letter, sent to lawmakers.

The term “varying degrees of confidence” also usually suggested some debate within the intelligence community about the assessment, the defense official noted.

The scale of the sarin use appeared limited, with one U.S. intelligence official noting that nobody was “seeing any mass casualties” from any Syrian chemical weapons use.

France, Britain and Israel have concluded evidence suggests chemical arms have been used in Syria's conflict.

A top Israeli military intelligence officer said on Tuesday that evidence supported the conclusion Syrian government forces had used chemical weapons – probably sarin – several times against rebels trying to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.

RED LINE CROSSED?

Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona, one of the leading advocates of deeper U.S. involvement in Syria's civil war, said the U.S. intelligence assessment demanded Washington follow with action.

“The president of the United States said that if Bashar Assad used chemical weapons, it would be a game changer, that it would cross a red line,” he said.

“I think it's pretty obvious that red line has been crossed.”

Senator Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said there was likely still a need to check on chemical weapons use.

“There realistically is probably some additional steps that need to be taken to verify, but … there are indications a red line has been crossed,” he told reporters.

Syria's deputy foreign minister, Faisal Mekdad, told Reuters that U.S. aid to the rebels may backfire and lead to attacks on American soil like those of September 11, 2001.

“Once the fire of terrorism spreads in Syria it will go everywhere in the world,” he said in an interview in Damascus.

The White House has not specified what action Obama might take if he determines with certainty that Syria has used chemical weapons. But in its letter to lawmakers, it said it was “prepared for all contingencies.

Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Patricia Zengerle, Tabassum Zakaria, writing by Phil Stewart; Editing by Xavier Briand

U.S. believes Syria used chemical weapons but says facts needed Read More »

Murder-suicide by despondent senior reported in Sherman Oaks

Burton Levin, an 88-year old Sherman Oaks resident, apparently shot himself Tuesday morning, shortly after phoning relatives to tell them that he had just given a lethal dose of medication to his 85-year old wife Lenore.

The report from www.shermanoaks.patch.com cited an assessment by Los Angeles police detectives that the couple’s deaths were motivated by despondency over their declining health.

Police examining the Levin home in the 3500 block of Weslin Ave. found a firearm and medication. No other details are available at this time.

Murder-suicide by despondent senior reported in Sherman Oaks Read More »

“To be Holy!” Simple But Not So Easy – Parashat Emor

There is a story told in the Rabbinic literature that “Rabbi Shimon ben Shetach one day commissioned his disciples to buy him a camel from an Arab. When they brought him the animal, they gleefully announced that they had found a precious stone in its collar, expecting their master to share in their joy.

“Did the seller know of this gem?” asked Rabbi Shimon. On being answered in the negative, he called out angrily, “Do you think me a barbarian that I should take advantage of the letter of the law by which the gem is mine together with the camel? Return the gem to the Arab immediately.”

When the Arab received it back, he exclaimed: “Blessed be the God of Shimon ben Shetach! Blessed be the God of Israel!” (Deuteronomy Rabba 3:3)

When my sons were young, their mother and I told them more than once that what they did, how they behaved, and the way they spoke to and treated others outside the home would reflect not only on them, but on us, their parents and on our family name. We reminded them to be honest, kind, modest, and to reflect those values always.

I often tell the story of Rabbi Shimon to students in my synagogue and remind them that what we do not only says much about who we are, but about our families and the Jewish people.

Until the modern period when communal values began to change broadly, the most respected Jew in the community was not necessarily the wealthiest and most politically influential, nor the celebrity, business maven, professional, or even the largest financial benefactor to community causes, as important as these people have been historically in Jewish communal life. Rather, the highest moral, ethical and religious virtues were expected to be emulated first and foremost by the Torah scholar. However, our sages understood that even the Torah scholar struggled mightily against the dominance of his yetzer hara (“the evil inclination”). [Note that almost all scholars before the modern period were men].

Here is Maimonides’ classic description of what is expected of the great Torah scholar:

“…When a person …is a great scholar, noted for his piety, people will talk about him, even if the deeds that he has committed are not offenses in the strict sense. Such a person is guilty of profaning the divine name (hillul ha-Shem), if he, for instance, makes a purchase and does not immediately pay for it, in the case where he has the money and the sellers demand it, but he stalls them; or if he indulges in riotous behavior and in keeping undesirable company; or if he speaks roughly to his fellows and does not receive them courteously but shows his temper and the like. All is in accordance with his status as a scholar. He must endeavor to be scrupulously strict in his behavior and go beyond the letter of the law. If he does this, speaking kindly to his fellows, showing himself sociable and amiable with the welcome for everyone, taking insult but not giving it; respect them, even those who make light of him; in all his actions until all praise and love him, enraptured by his deed – such a man has sanctified the name of God (Kiddush Ha-Shem). Regarding such a person scripture states: ‘You are my servant, Israel, in whom I will be gloried.’” (Moses ben Maimon, Yesodei Ha-Torah 5:11)

“Sanctifying God’s Name” (Kiddush Ha-Shem), as RAMBAM teaches, concerns the entirety of life including business ethics, one’s conduct in mundane affairs, one’s refinement of behavior and public demeanor, one’s kindness and humility before one’s fellows and God.

Except for the very rare individual, each of us is a continuing battleground between our two yetzers (i.e. good and evil inclinations) and we must choose between them. For so many of us, base instinct rules. We are driven by need, desire, greed, jealousy, envy, lust, anger, impatience, fear, and hate. Others have an easier time being kind and generous, and struggle less. But we all struggle.

The reason Torah study is determinative for the scholar and is so important for all of us is because we can find ourselves everywhere in the sacred text. Every instinct and virtue is addressed.

My friend, Rabbi Mark Borowitz of Beit T’shuvah in Los Angeles, rightly teaches that anyone who says that the Torah is irrelevant to his/her life is hiding something. To the contrary, it is there that we can discover our deepest selves, a sense of meaning and purpose that will sustain and strengthen us for noble ends.

“To be Holy!” Simple But Not So Easy – Parashat Emor Read More »