From Redemption to Responsibility: Spiritual Introspection During the Omer
Meets: Thursdays
Hosted by: My Jewish Learning
How mindfulness can deepen your Shabbat experience — and vice versa
The celebration of Israeli independence is marked each year on the fifth day of the Hebrew month of Iyar.
The preeminent figure of American Modern Orthodoxy, the man known as ‘the Rav’ ordained thousands of rabbis.
From Hitler’s rise to power to the Nuremberg trials, key events of the Shoah.
Is it an offer you can’t refuse?
In this Torah portion, God describes to Moses many ethical and ritual laws aimed at helping people live lives of holiness. The laws described include some of those recorded in the Ten Commandments, such as respecting one’s parents, keeping the Sabbath and not stealing. God also introduces laws about farming and about belief in supernatural beings.
Featured Commentary
Only through the combination of ritual and ethics can Judaism fully express itself.
Meets: Thursdays
Hosted by: My Jewish Learning
Meets: Tuesdays
Hosted by: Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA)
Hosted by: Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA)
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Converted interest.
Stranger confusion.
Living the Jewish calendar is to be bound by Jewish peoplehood and Jewish solidarity
In this moment of crisis, we need to let things arise and evaporate, leaving us unburdened enough to do the work of peace.
Why does Jewish tradition instruct us to endlessly retell the story of our ancestors’ enslavement?
Asenath Barazani (also spelled Asnat or Osnat) led a yeshiva in 17th century Kurdistan.
From cabal to camel, a list of English words that derive from Hebrew.
The Jewish concept of a divinely ordained soulmate dates back at least to the Talmud.
Dreaming was a major source of prophetic insight in the Torah, but Jewish texts also betray a certain anxiety about dreaming.