Tag: Jewish

  • Behar 5782

    Behar 5782

    Parashat Behar, our Torah reading for this week, introduces us to the Shmita year. Every seven years, Leviticus/Vayikra instructs us that the land must lie fallow—no agricultural or food production is permitted and there are a number of other restrictions put into place in addition. As it so happens, 5782…

  • Pesach 5782 On The Seder As A Living Experience

    Pesach 5782 On The Seder As A Living Experience

    This piece can now be found on ExploringJudaism.com as part of EJ’s 5784 Passover Reader. Download the entire reader here. On seder night, we embark on a holy commemorative journey through the Haggadah as we move spiritually and temporally from degradation to praise. We do not merely recount by rote…

  • Finding My Possibility Model

    Finding My Possibility Model

    A version of the below piece originally appeared as part of Hot Off The Shtender, a series of reflection pieces from SVARA.   It is hard, nay impossible, to adequately capture the feelings that came over me when I learned about the passing of a dear friend: the fierce and…

  • Shabbat HaChodesh 5782

    Shabbat HaChodesh 5782

    I wish to dedicate this dvar Torah to the memory of Sheryl Grossman. Her love of Torah and her steadfast, unapologetic commitment to justice for people with disabilities will remain with me always. She taught me that one could both be a lover of Torah and a fighter for justice…

  • Thoughts For Yom Kippur 5782

    Thoughts For Yom Kippur 5782

    Yom Kippur is often translated into English as the Jewish day of atonement, though I feel that this is a mistranslation. Yom Kippur’s awesomeness, in the literal sense of the word, is that the Jewish tradition provides us with a 25-hour period, Shabbat Shabbaton (the sabbath of sabbaths) to focus…

  • Bamidbar 5781

    Bamidbar 5781

    This week, we begin the fourth book of the Torah, Sefer Bamidbar. In Hebrew, bamidbar means wilderness or desert. In English, the title Numbers derives from the multiple censuses taken throughout the book. Bamidbar is a much more apt title for the journey that we will be taking these next…

  • Kedoshim 5781

    Kedoshim 5781

    Our double parsha this week, Acharei Mot-Kedoshim, as with so much of Torah, covers a lot of ground and is multi-faceted and multi-layered. These parshiyot contain verses that have provided considerable strength and inspiration to us throughout the centuries, as well as verses that have caused tremendous pain. I am…

  • Tazria Metsora 5781

    Tazria Metsora 5781

    Tazria-Metsora 5781 Lauren Tuchman   This week’s parsha, Tazria-Metsora is both incredibly timely and deeply complex. Now that the Kohenim have been ordained, their functions are beginning to be outlined. The Book of Leviticus is arguably the Torah’s most complex and least understood book, given that it is largely concerned…

  • Memory and Moving Forward: A Reflection on Purim 5781

    Memory and Moving Forward: A Reflection on Purim 5781

    A version of this piece was originally published by SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva.   Today, I remember. I remember vividly the all-consuming sadness I felt last Purim, as the sun was setting and my celebratory seudah was ending, the last event I attended with a large Jewish community. I…

  • The Importance of Hallel on Passover A Reflection on Pesachim 95

    The Importance of Hallel on Passover A Reflection on Pesachim 95

    This piece was originally published as part of My Jewish Learning’s Daf Yomi page of the day Talmud project.   Today’s daf opens with a Mishnah. “MISHNA: What is the difference between the Paschal lamb offered on the first Pesaḥ and the Paschal lamb offered on the second Pesaḥ? On…