The Best Domain Name in Jewish Social Justice | The Justice File

By awiner October 14, 2011

Question: What’s the first page that appears when you Google “Jewish social justice”? Answer: The Progressive Jewish Alliance and Jewish Funds for Justice. In addition to having an awesome domain name (jewishjustice.org!), this organization is also doing amazing things to engage the Jewish community in justice work. To quote their own vision statement, “In 25…

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Y-Love in The End of Days | The Product

By mekeisler October 14, 2011

For me, hip hop is my secular music. After I’ve been working a shift at the Hillel for like 10 hours surrounded by Hillel-y Jews, I want to put on some grimy stretch and bobbito freestyles or some dirty south trap music. So I wasn’t sure how I felt about Shemspeed artist Y-Love, a Chassidic…

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The Holy Alliance of Occupy Wall Street and DIY Judaism

By David A.M. Wilensky October 13, 2011

Sukkot began last night. Since the 1,000-strong Kol Nidrei service at Occupy Wall Street that kicked off Yom Kippur this year, an Occupy Judaism page has appeared on Facebook. That’s how I found out that Jews for Racial and Economic Justice and Occupy Judaism organizer Daniel Sieradski were planning to erect a sukkah at Zuccotti Park,…

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There are No Anti-Semites at Occupy Wall Street. Except for This Guy.

By David A.M. Wilensky October 12, 2011

Commotion surrounds a man holding a large sign that proclaims, “Google: Zionists control Wall St.” To his right, another man holds a sign that displays the word “ASSHOLE,” accompanied by an arrow pointing at the first man. Several more people are standing near him devoting their energy to telling passersby that the first man is…

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Our True Religion=Money; The Old City=Tourist Trap

By aborenstein October 12, 2011

In a fruitless attempt to feel more spiritual and escape the close quarters in which I live, I spent Rosh Hashanah in Jerusalem.  I figured heavy exposure to Judaism’s holiest sites on one of its holiest holidays would increase my spirituality via osmosis.  (Shortly after beginning this trip, I realized the futility of that desire,…

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Israel’s Pioneer Status is Slipping | Long-Range Israel

By greback October 11, 2011

Israel is considered a pioneer. Its technological and medical developments might be the results of years of input from a culture of research and development. But even after one of the country’s top chemists’ latest Nobel Prize win, Professor Ehud Keinan of the country’s educational advisory board on chemistry has been very public with his…

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It’s hard to focus in seminary. And then the AC starts dripping on you.

By awasserman October 11, 2011

Sheer panic. That was my first reaction when I saw my seminary schedule. Back in high school—oh so very long ago—my longest class was an hour. And that was endured with several lengthy “bathroom trips.” Now, my shortest class is a grand total of two hours, with the strong recommendation not to leave the class…

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Kosha Dillz has a new video called ‘Sweatpants Song’

By mekeisler October 11, 2011

Dude hit me up on twitter so I had to post it. He says, “I’m late at night wasted with my sweatpants on”.  He talks about cutting a hole in his sweatpants for sexual purposes. Like I said, I had to post it. Required reading: My interview with Kosha Dillz from a few weeks ago.

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California to Palestine: Fasting in Solidarity | Other Voices

By gmschivone October 10, 2011

Ilana Rossoff is a daycare worker by day and political organizer by night. She recently graduated from Hampshire College, where she studied US History, race studies, and Jewish studies, and completed a senior thesis on the history of Jewish anti-Zionism (mostly) in the US. At Hampshire, was active in Students for Justice in Palestine, Student…

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Occupy Kol Nidrei in the press: both the expected media and the not-so-expected | Parsing

By David A.M. Wilensky October 10, 2011

I’ll have some analysis up soon. For now, here’s folks are saying about the service, which I’m fully prepared to call greatest Yom Kippur experience of all time: My post at the Forward: I’ve got a post on Forward Thinking blog about my experience at the service. This is the most concise assessment of the phenomenal…

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Looking for Yom Kippur in Williamsburg, VA | The Jew in the Boonies

By Laura Cooper October 9, 2011

I’m trying to start a haunted (i.e. outside) minyan for next Shabbat. Conveniently, a friend wrote me an email making an offhand comment about my patrilineal descent (something I’m already highly self-conscious about), and its effect on my minyan: “Either accept fate as a reform [Jew] whose lineage will die out with her and organize…

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Kapparot: in which a chicken dies for our sins

By Simi Lichtman October 9, 2011

It was 2:00 AM and the joint was jumping. Men in suits bustled through the crowded street. Here and there, small pockets of girls were gathered as well. In the snippets of overheard conversations, I picked up Hebrew, Yiddish, and English. Everywhere, an overwhelming, unfamiliar, and putrid smell, the source of which was also the…

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Is There a Crisis of Jewish Continuity? | J-Studs

By dbloom October 8, 2011

My last post, “How Do We/I Connect to God,” mentioned several ways to revitalize Reform and Conservative Judaism. One of these avenues relied on self-exploration and creating one’s own personalized Judaism. This leads to the question of how to keep the Jewish community together when everyone practices differently. Some historical analysis is very helpful in…

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Jewish Food History 101 | Matzah Ballsy

By bbrasch October 7, 2011

When the classic beet soup arrived at the table my brother complained “I don’t eat anything that ends in ‘scht.’” Borscht, a soup of Ukrainian origin, served hot or cold, is popular all over Eastern and Central Europe.  How did it become Jewish? Throughout history, Jewish people have absorbed and adapted the culinary traditions of…

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Shakespeare and the defense of Israel

By eglogauer October 6, 2011

“My words fly up, my thoughts remain below: Words without thoughts never to heaven go.” –Hamlet, III. iii. 98-99 Shakespeare: The name that many high school students have come to dread hearing. Each year of high school, the curriculum required English students to analyze a specific Shakespearian play. The year that I was in 12th…

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