Sabbath/Holidays

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Tzav/shabat Hagadol

The parsha of Tzav more often than not coincides with the Shabat preceding Pesach – Shabat Hagadol, the “great Shabat.” At first glance there does not seem to be any inherent connection between the parsha of Tzav and Shabat Hagadol and Pesach. However, since Judaism little recognizes randomness or happenstance regarding Jewish life, and certainly regarding Torah itself, a further analysis... READ MORE →

Pesach And Locusts

Over the past weeks the plague of locusts in a relatively minor form infested our area of the world. The locusts apparently did do great though not catastrophic damage to crops in Egypt before crossing the Sinai peninsula and turning north to invade Israel. The Israel Agricultural Ministry sprayed extensively from the air to destroy the streams of aggressive locusts and achieved success in... READ MORE →

Vayikra

This week’s parsha marks another new beginning in our public reading and personal understanding of the Torah. Whereas the first two books of the Torah are mainly narrative in nature and content, the book of Vayikra is mainly a book of laws and commandments and of the nature of purity and impurity, sacrificial offerings and priestly obligations. Vayikra not only offers us a change of... READ MORE →

Ki Tisa

Moshe is absent from the people of Israel for forty days. This seems to trigger a disastrous turn of events that results in the incident of the Golden Calf. Why is Moshe’s absence such a cataclysmic event in the evolving story of the constant and continuing backtracking of Israel from its Sinai commitment? After all, every rabbi is entitled to a vacation away from his flock. The... READ MORE →

כי תשא

משה נעלם לבני ישראל למשך 40 יום, ונראה שההיעדרות הזאת מובילה לשרשרת אירועים טרגיים שמסתיימת בתקרית עגל הזהב. מדוע ההיעדרות של משה היא אירוע כל כך נורא בסיפור המתפתח של הנסיגה המתמשכת של בני ישראל מהמחויבות שלהם בהר... READ MORE →

Zachor/purim

The current spate of anti-Semitic media cartoons, op-eds and boycott movements serve to remind us that Amalek is alive and thriving as usual. There was a short period of time a few decades ago when many Jews were lulled into thinking that all of this baseless hatred and nastiness was a thing of the past. Even the most naive among us today realize that this is unfortunately not the case.... READ MORE →

זכור - פורים

הפרץ האחרון של קריקטורות, מאמרי מערכת אנטישמיים וניסיונות להחרים את מדינת ישראל רק מזכיר לנו שעמלק עדיין חי ופעיל כמו תמיד. לפני כמה עשרות שנים הייתה תקופה קצרה שבה נדמה היה ליהודים שהשנאה הגועלית חסרת הפשר כלפי... READ MORE →

תצוה

התורה מצווה אותנו להדליק את המנורה, את נר התמיד, בשמן זית זך כתית, השמן הכי טהור והכי משובח. יש היגיון ברור בדרישה הזאת. שמן שאיננו זך גורם ללהבות לרטוט ולהבהב וגם להדיף ריח לא נעים ולהפוך את המטלה של ניקוי המנורה לבלתי... READ MORE →

Tetzaveh

The Torah ordains that the olive oil used to light the eternal menorah - candelabra - must be of the purest and best available. There is obvious logic to this requirement. Impure oil will cause the flames to stutter and flicker. Impure oil also may exude an unpleasant odor and make the task of the daily cleaning of the oil lamps difficult and inefficient. Yet I feel that the basic underlying... READ MORE →

Terumah

Giving away some of one’s material wealth is never an easy thing. Our instinct tells us that what is mine, earned through my efforts, should always remain mine and in my possession. In the phrase of the rabbis, we have “a jaundiced eye” towards others and we resent their imposing themselves upon us for continued help and financial donations. We do not even think ourselves to be selfish for... READ MORE →

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