Showing posts with label Hamas war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamas war. Show all posts

Friday, December 08, 2023

Poison Ivy?

Table Talk from the desk of Rabbi Alexander Seinfel
December 8-9, 2023 • 26 Kislev 5784 • VaYeishev (Gen 37-40). 
The purpose of this blog is to foster colorful conversation at the Friday night dinner table ... please forward/print/share.

Happy Chanukah! Check out our Hannukah page at BestJewishKidsBooks.com

And check out our Chanukah special download at TorahHealth.org.



Mein Kontext
Do you remember last week when I quoted the controverisal Mr. Hitchens — because "a wise person learns from everyone" (Talmud).

On that theme, here's an opening question for your table: 

What can we learn from the presidents of Harvard, MIT and Penn?

Hat-tip to Rep. Elise Sefanik 
holding three Ivy League college presidents' feet to the fire.

(Yes, I know that MIT isn't an Ivy, but it might as well be.)  

But here's the follow-up questions I wish she had asked:

If a group of students dressed up like the KKK and marched through campus chanting for black women to be lynched, would that be allowed, prohibited, or would it depend on context?

What if they chanted for women to be raped, 
would that be allowed, prohibited, or would it depend on context?

What if they called for the destruction of Asians, or Arabs or any other group in the world besides Jews?


(It's also too bad they didn't call in many other college presidents who should be held accountable for blatant antisemitism on campus from Yale to UNC and everywhere i.

Maybe we should learn from Harvard President Claudine Gay and take a peek at some context.

In my first job after college I was surrounded by all kinds of Christians — Baptists, Methodists, Mormons, Presbyterians, Seventh Day Adventists and even a few Witnesses. I remember being struck by the seriousness and sincerity of these folks' faith - they studied their religious texts, believed deeply, and carried their faith openly wherever they went. Their religiosity was a far cry from the Judaism I had grown up with, which was joyful ritual, but very much limited to those rituals. I certainly can't recall my parents or any adults every discussing how the Torah might inform business ethics etc., let alone attending regular Torah study.

It seems to me that the great mistake of Hamas's non-Moslems supporters is the very common human fallacy known as projecting: "I assume that you must be more-or-less similar to me. All humans are basically good, and if we give you freedom and dignity, you'll stop fighting."

A liberal who projects liberal values onto others despite evidence to the contrary simply cannot believe that there are actually people in this world who are that evil; Hamas must be a legitimate political struggle, not a religious-ideological one. It cannot be that these Hamas guys - mimicing their patron, Iran - really mean it when they say that they intend to make the Land of Israel Judenrein and from there lead a worldwide Islamic movement to convert or kill every non-Moslem human being on the planet.

Their statements and actions are 100 percent consistent with the proposition that they actually believe this, and any peaceful offers they make are actually a strategem of deception or taqiya toward their stated goal. 

For the Harvard president, the possibilty that Hamas really wants to destroy Harvard and its faculty and students (unless they convert to Islam of course) is so crazy an idea and so remote a possibility that it's easy to dismiss and just regard this as hyperbole in a poitical struggle.

Easy to say when the rockets can't reach you... yet...

(In case you didn't hear, they appear to be receiving weapons from their buddies in North Korea. Can you imagine what could be unleashed on the world were the Palestinians to have their own sovereign state?)

There were an estimated 30,000 Hamas fighters at the start of this war. That's a about 1.5 percent of the Gaza population. If that rate of conversion to terrorism were applied to worldwide Islam, we'd be looking at nearly 30 million committed terrorists worldwide. That's a lot of people who could do a lot of damage. Even 1/10 of that is frightening. Was Hitchens right, that "the worst is yet to come?"

So then, now what? Wither Harvard? 

Final q
uestion for your table: Are these elite college presidents morally vacant? Antisemitic? Brain-washed? All of the above? 


Happy Chanukah and

Shabbat Shalom,


Alexander Seinfeld


PS - Check out our Hannukah page at BestJewishKidsBooks.com





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The mission of Jewish Spiritual Literacy, Inc. (JSLI) is to foster a paradigm shift in spiritual and moral education to enable every human being to access and enjoy the incredible database of 3,000 years of Jewish wisdom.

Friday, October 13, 2023

Sitting's Over, Time to Stand?

Table Talk from the desk of Rabbi Alexander Seinfeld
October 13-14, 2023 • 28-29 Tishrei 5784 • Bereishis (Gen 1-6). 
The purpose of this email is to turn sitting into standing... please forward/print/share.
Happy birthday shout-out to my dear Mother... may you have another year of many blessings!


see-saw2
Last week we were still sitting in the sukkah and I asked, "Is life too complicated?"

None of us imagined how complicated it could get.

So this week, we stand up and be counted.

Stand and be counted means one thing if you are living in the Land of Israel right now.

First question for your table: What does it mean if you're not living in Israel right now?


In my opinion, the rest of us should be doing at least one (preferably all) of three things:

1. Communicate

Everyone you know who lives in Israel and everyone you know who knows someone who lives in Israel - send them an email or text:

"It must be extremely stressful - if you have the wherewithal, please let me know how you guys are doing. But if you don't, no worries, just know that you are in my thoughts and prayers."

Even if you're not the sort who prays, say it anyway. They need to hear it. It means a lot to them. (If you want to be a fully truthful person, so utter a prayer already, what could it hurt?)

But don't assume that they know how you feel. Their fear is real. They need to hear from us.

2. Give
 
 

3. Take it personally

The Simchat Torah War is existential for Israelis but is also a war against the entire Jewish People and indeed the entire world. It started thousands of years ago. They hate you because you're Jewish. If you are fortunate, you and your immediate family were spared this time

Therefore, it's a wake-up call to increase our Jewish connection. How about committing - starting right now - to 5 minutes a day of increased Judaism? That could be something as simple as learning Torah or Jewish wisdom for 5 minutes a day. Join an online class. Read an article online. Listen to Torah audio. Get a meaningful book and read it for 5 minutes a day.

The teeter-totter of history

There are two threads that link you and me to our grandparents and great-grandparents, all the way back: These three pillars (Torah / kindness / prayer) and anti-Semitism. The Talmud predicts that history will be like a see-saw - when these three pillars are up, anti-Semitism will go down, and when these three pillars go down, anti-Semitism will go up. 

Those on the front lines are doing what they need to do. The rest of us also have work to do. 
We're all in this together.

Let's end as usual with a question for your table: 

What's a bigger surprise to you - that human beings could be capable of such evil, or that they could get away with it?



Wishing you and all of Israel a Shabbat Shalom,


Alexander Seinfeld


PS - In response to people asking me for suggested prayers to say I have prepared a small packet (PDF) - let me know if you'd like a copy.

 
Enjoyed this Table Talk? Vote with your fingers! Like ittweet it, forward it....
  
  

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The mission of Jewish Spiritual Literacy, Inc. (JSLI) is to foster a paradigm shift in spiritual and moral education to enable every human being to access and enjoy the incredible database of 3,000 years of Jewish wisdom.