Where am I from? As perennial immigrants, Jews have been asking themselves this question from time immemorial. For many scions of families who survived the Holocaust (as mine did), this…
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The Passover Haggadah offers the traditional Exodus origin story basing itself on a rabbinic understanding of the Hebrew Bible. One of the most powerful sayings in the Rabbinic compilations of…
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The Jewish calendar generally associates spring with the holiday of Passover, but since the calendar fluctuates with the tides of the moon, this year the beginning of spring coincides with…
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More than a week ago, my rabbinic colleague Ed Klein died at his home in Queens New York. I knew Ed and his passing is a great loss to the…
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In the middle of frigid February, the secular calendar dedicates a holiday for lovers, Valentine’s Day. When I came back to North America after fourteen years in Israel with my…
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I remember Jerusalem. I remember Jerusalem twenty years ago, when weekend after weekend the morning news started with another bus blowing up, another mass shooting, another bulldozing of someone’s home.…
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Let the names of those who perished be magnified, made special, remembered : Emet In this world which we did not create, let us take counsel, let us choose worthy…
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The Jewish holiday of Sukkot began as a harvest holiday, an event celebrated since time immemorial all over the world and in many different cultures. Because the exact time of…
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Like most all of you, I find our government’s response to the refugee crisis to be utterly despicable. The world is engulfed in a refugee crisis the likes of which…
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On September 10, City Congregation starts its calendar with a bang, celebrating the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah. It will be my first time officiating as TCC’s Rabbi, and for many of you, the first…
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