What kind of cheese do we eat on Pesach (Passover)?
Matza-rella!
Have a happy end to your Pesach everyone!
rashi comments that the angels visit avraham during pesach, and some say that he fed his guests matza, despite the fact that the commandment to eat matza on pesach doesn’t kick in for generations.
in bereishit, the sun and moon are put in the sky for a number of listed reasons, and all are significant. hashem says, (all translation approximate and mine) that the sun and moon are there so that we can tell between night and day, “for symbols and for appointed times, for days and for years.” and there, rashi comments: once a certain amount of time has passed, they “return and start over again, to go around their way like the first path.”
that is, time is a spiral. it’s not that we tread the same path every year, but that time is cyclical. and what we can learn from avraham is that events that were powerful enough can echo through time. avraham can know that it is time for pesach even though it has not yet happened. similarly, the jewish month of av is a bad month; the jewish month of adar is a happy month; elul is an auspicious month. purim was set as a holiday the second year around, because they could still feel the purim in the air, the essence of it.
time is a spiral. it moves forward, but our past - and future - will always be there.
Anonymous asked:
jewish-privilege answered:
In Jewish custom, you’re not supposed to write or enunciate the full name of G-d outside of formal liturgical situations–in prayerbooks and in prayer, for example. So, outside of those settings, the name isn’t written or pronounced in full, or substitutes are used (“Hashem” simply means “The Name”, for example).
Personally I object a little bit to hyphenating the English word “God,” as it bears no relationship whatsoever to the actual Name. (As I’ve occasionally put it, “It’s not a name, it’s a job description.”) I don’t know of any formal opinion that agrees with me on that, though.
I had a rabbi in high school (he ended up being the m'sader kedushin for my sister and brother-in-law and was a survivor who had taught at the school since 1945) who said that writing “G-d” is unnecessary because it is nowhere near the real name of Hashem. He said if you insist on writing “G-d,” you should also say “ginger kale.” Ever since then, I’ve written “God” with no compunction.
I enjoy seeing the way it’s done in different languages. I’ve seen d-eu, d’us and d-os.
I mostly do it as a cultural marker: Jews omit the middle letter, I am a Jew, therefore I omit the middle letter
Yeah there’s no actual need to do it (certainly not in English) but for personal emotional reasons I don’t like writing out a full Divine name, but I also don’t like the implications of taking something away, so I follow a Renewal practice of writing G!d with an exclamation point to remind myself of G!d’s overflowing expansiveness… I have a friend who writes G?d for their own well-thought-out reasons. :)
I like “G@d” myself - it’s not as in-your-face as “G!d” to me, and also, isn’t mixing the @ in such a perfect analogy for Judaism you guys
Anonymous asked:
animatedamerican answered:
I … that’s a really good question. I can’t think of any immediate reason why not, but there may be something I’m forgetting.
Jumblr? Any thoughts?
Ooh, pick me!
Okay, I don’t know of a definitive answer, though I’m leaning towards “probably okay,” but I can definitely complicate this scenario!
1. Background:
Jewish burials demand that when a person is buried, they be buried in the ground in a plain wooden casket, so that they can “return to the earth” as quickly as possible. We’re pretty extra about the caskets. Wooden dowels used in place of screws so that there’s no metals, biodegradable materials only, etc. Also, in my experience, we’re not very squeamish about the caskets. I built a casket at age 13 at a synagogue event. (On second thought, that may not actually be considered normal.)
2. The question:
The relevant question, then, is whether the burial facilities on the moon count as “the ground.” I’m thinking about the creation story: Adam is created from ״עפר מן האדמה״, afar min ha-adama, or “dust from the ground.” (Bereishit/Genesis 2:7). Rashi comments on the seeming repetition of using both afar and adama: the double language is because Adam was created out of earth from all of the world, so that in every place that a person would die, in that place they could be buried.
So what does Rashi mean when he talks about the whole world?
Rashi uses the very vague term “from the four winds,” or “four directions.” (For the verse with Rashi in both Hebrew and English, see here). It is thus useful to look at the broader context of what is categorized as “the earth” vs. “the heavens.”
Generally, when the Torah or halacha wants to talk about something applicable to the whole world, they use the phrase “on the earth.” Similarly, a distinction is drawn between the “earth” and the “heavens” - the Torah is not in the heavens, for example, or see the verse in Psalms: the heavens are heavens for Hashem, and the earth was given to the children of man. There is a split between those who define the earth as literally the Earth and the heavens as anything, say, outside the atmosphere, and those who define the heavens as something spiritual, beyond our reach. In the second category, you can find older commentators such as the Ramban (Nahmanides), who defines “heavens” as the category of things that have no physical bodies, along with more modern rabbis who lived to see space travel and greater understanding of space generally. The first category contains more literalist interpretations of the world.
As far as I can tell, the definition of “the heavens” as something spiritual, leaving “reachable space” under the category of “earth,” is the better-supported one. After all, if the Torah is not in the heavens, but we are… does that mean we don’t have to keep halacha? What about the fact that in Devarim (Deutoronomy) there is a commandment to keep the Torah all the days you are alive on earth?* In addition, more and broader-accepted rabbis are behind the second category.
3. TL; DR - Conclusion:
As a result, it makes sense to conclude that Rashi’s “all four directions” could plausibly include “every physical celestial body,” making it permissible to bury Jews on the moon: it will count as “returning to the earth,” which, as mentioned above, is what Jewish burial is trying to achieve.
4. Footnotes and sources:
Footnote: if you have to live on a colony, I would imagine that rabbis would be pretty lenient in deciding whether you could have a proper burial there. After all, better an approved, if by small margins, Jewish burial than someone remaining unburied.
Second footnote: You would probably want a system that allows for decomposition of the body, since that’s part of “returning to the earth.” I don’t know how that would work on the moon.
Asterisk: There is actually an opinion that halacha doesn’t apply in space for these reasons, but it is pretty broadly rejected and viewed as radical. See here for some more details.
Some sources and relevant links: Is there a legal minimum on the amount of soil needed to make a grave, Can a Jew who dies on Mars be buried there (too literalist in my opinion, but presents one argument), What defines the earth from a halachic standpoint, and Does the Torah prohibit leaving Earth, all from Mi Yodeya. Also For it is not in Heaven…or is it?: On the Halakhot and Hashkafot of Space Travel, and this site about Halacha and space [responsa are in Hebrew, message me for translations]. Additional source: my grandfather.
They can never have a normal Sukkos… or Seder… or Purim…
(assuming the 14th and 15th of a 28-day lunar month are the wolf-out nights)
Tu B’Av might have been fun for the amorous ones, though
oh no! what would they do?
… i say with serious concern, briefly forgetting that werewolves aren’t real
(interested in hearing suggested solutions though)
Hey, anyone interested in a jumblr book club? Maybe tie it in some way to @alternativetodiscourse? I’m right now mostly up for Jewish mysticism stuff, and could try to organize around that topic, but if people are interested in other things, we can talk.
I have created a sideblog https://jumblrbookclub.tumblr.com/ there are no posts currently, but if it gets enough followers that it seems like discussions could actually happen, I’ll start organizing through there. @alternativetodiscourse, could you signal boost this?
I was thinking “Jewish Magic and Superstition” by Trachtenberg to start, which I know @zookmurnig is supposed to be reading, I’m reading, and is theoretically available at sacred-texts, but the whole site is down at the moment. Sometime in the next couple of days I’ll list a bunch of books as possible options on that blog, and we’ll vote.
Yep! Sounds like it would be pretty cool. Signal boosting. (I’m not actually familiar with the book, if someone would care to enlighten me.)
“It’s That time of year again!”
– Goy
But seriously. It’s time for Chabad Chanukah Mitzvah Tank Mivtzoyim - we go around in an RV, giving out menorahs, candles, doughnuts, and anything else for your basic Chanukah needs! If you’re interested, I’ll be posting our locations on here.
For jumblr guys in the brooklyn area who would like to participate and join us on the “Mitzvah Tank”, please send me a message!
“Tis’ the season…”
- Goy
But seriously. It’s time for Chabad Chanukah Mitzvah Tank Mivtzoyim - we go around in an RV, giving out menorahs, candles, doughnuts, and anything else for your basic Chanukah needs! If you’re interested, Please spread this around, and stay tuned in for our locations for each Night of Chanukah. We will be in Manhattan and Brooklyn, and doing a few daytime runs as well, where we’ll also give out shabbos candles and opportunities to put on Tefillin!
Hello friends! I would like to Take This Time to point you to an interesting new online magazine, jGirls. It’s a space for creations by all self-identified Jewish teenage girls - a “forum for girls to create and engage in a Jewish community of peers on their own terms,” in their own words. They’re super cool! The actual content is going to start rolling out really soon, and until then, any submissions you have would be Very Much Appreciated.
Here is the link to their current webpage, and here is a link to Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up.”
Anonymous asked:
Aaah sorry I sat on this for so long that is Good Positivity!
Anonymous asked:
Hey anon!
It took me a long time to answer this because I wanted to reach out to queer Orthodox people I knew first to see what they said, because I thought their voices might be more helpful than mine.
As I probably should have expected, they had a lot of different answers. The key point they all made, though, is this: nowhere in the Torah is attraction prohibited. It’s that simple. Nowhere in the Torah is attraction prohibited. If someone is trying to tell you that it’s bad for you to like the same gender, they don’t have anything close to a foot to stand on. (Also, I will fight them for you.)
In terms of further discussion - for example, saying attraction is okay works, but people tend to feel the need to express sexuality - I would recommend talking to people one-on-one. There are a lot of answers that speak to different people. On tumblr, a few people offered to talk to you over private-message, whose blogs I can tell you if you message me and I can connect you to other people as well off tumblr.
(I won’t give anyone else your information, if you’re worried about that.)
One last thing: being queer and Orthodox can be hard and lonely. I don’t like that that’s the case, and I hope that will change over my lifetime. I just… hope that you know that, no matter what, there are frum people who will fight for you, who will accept you without a second thought, who will share your simchas, no matter what your gender is and what gender you love.
“Choni Ha-Ma’agel,” or in English, “Honi the Circle-Man,”