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Many Voices Blog – Rachael’s Centre for Torah, Mussar & Ethics

The Jewish Adjustment Bureau

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Rachael Posted:

A few days ago I saw the movie “The Adjustment Bureau” starring Matt Damon and Emily Blunt.  I liked the movie because it was fun and not the thriller/chaser/blood & guts film you might expect.

 

For anyone who hasn’t seen the movie and wants to, please stop reading now because I’m going to discuss some of the core ideas.

 

The movie plays with the idea that there are many levels of ‘messengers’ or ‘agents’ who do the bidding of a higher power called ‘The Chairman’.  For every person there is a plan and these agents make sure that we are all staying on our plan because chance circumstances can sometimes derail things.  It’s a great concept to play with even to the point of having someone trip and fall which delays them just those few seconds needed to miss a bus etc. etc.

 

The bump in the plan is when the two heroes are determined to be together even though they’re not supposed to be.  The movie raises the question of whether or not you can change your plan.  After the movie I had a fantastic discussion about the Jewish themes that weave throughout the movie.  The concept of ‘angels‘ or ‘agents’ follows a Jewish thread but most importantly, the idea that determination and genuine heartfelt commitment can indeed change our fates, our ‘plans’.

 

That is the essence of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.  The idea that there is a destiny drafted for each of us but that we can effect that draft before it is sealed.  We are in part the creators of our own destinies.  That’s why Judaism says we should choose every action we take and not allow things to ‘just happen’.

 

I definitely recommend the movie. Â

 

Removing the Women, Missing the Bigger Picture

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Jacob Posted:

 

The above photograph was taken in the Situation Room of the White House on the eve of the Pakistan raid that led to Osama Bin Laden’s death. Der Zeitung, a Hasidic Jewish newspaper based in Brooklyn, published the photo with some very obvious changes. The version printed by Der Zeitung edited out the two women in the picture: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Director for Counterterroism for the National Security Council Audrey Tomason.

 

This sort of censorship and tweaking of reality is an example of the misogyny and fundamentalism that all religious institutions must seek to avoid. By distorting truth to conform to their own worldview, Der Zeitung is not practicing ethical journalism and is doing a disservice to their readers. A Washington Post article connects the dots between this example of extremism in the orthodox Jewish community and the treatment of women in Islamic fundamentalism.

 

The statement issued by Der Zeitung in response to the controversy said that, “because of laws of modesty, we are not allowed to publish pictures of women, and we regret if this gives an impression of disparaging to women, which is certainly never our intention.”

 

Of course, the problem with all fundamentalism is the strict adherence to a code of conduct without bothering to ask questions or rationalize. A completely literal interpretation of religion can lead to an oppressive mindset that perverts and undermines the original intention of righteousness in thought and action. All people should have the right to think for themselves and it is the responsibility of newspapers to present objective facts, not whitewashed versions of facts that do nothing to challenge the status quo.

 

Half Shabbos

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

Have you heard about Orthodox Jews who send texts on Shabbat? There’s no punchline here. Originating from groups of Orthodox Jewish teens, “Half Shabbos” is keeping Shabbat yet using your cell phone to stay connected to friends. Watch this video to learn more about the growing conversation occurring across Shabbat dinner tables.

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

In recent times the left-wing hive mind seems to have collectively aligned itself with an anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian stance, but there is no real reason that Israel’s right to exist should be incompatible with a liberal worldview. With terms like “apartheid” and “illegal occupation” being bandied about, there is a gross misconception that Zionism equates to a kind of colonialism, and this is the kind of ignorance that perpetuates violence in the region.

Tel Aviv Pride Parade

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Posted by Jacob:

 

Today in Tel Aviv there was an event that could not have taken place anywhere else in the Middle East – a gay pride parade. According to an article on ynetnews.com, this year’s parade was the biggest in the city’s history with over 100, 000 people in attendance. Religious people marched alongside secular folks, and Israeli flags flew alongside rainbow banners, in a powerful celebration of freedom of expression.

 

Tel Aviv’s successful pride parade is a display of the progressive attitudes that are prevalent in contemporary mainstream Israeli society. Just as in any modern democracy with a pluralistic populace, there are extremists with homophobic and repressive worldviews who represent a small minority in a country with many voices.

 

With all the revolutions and uprisings sweeping the Arab world, media coverage in the region does not extensively focus on positive stories like this one. The bloody silencing of civil protests in Syria and Yemen, the violent civil war in Libya, and the successful ousting of dictators in Egypt and Tunisia (among other similarly startling stories), are all far more cataclysmic political current events. I think that the best possible outcome of the so-called “Arab Spring”, is for the people in these countries to one day enjoy the freedom to be able to openly welcome LGBT communities as they do in Israel.

 

Looking Forward To Shavuot

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

Posted by Rachael:

 

Shavuot is just a few hours away and I’m really looking forward to it. I’m not exactly looking forward to the spirituality of it or the meaningfulness of the Jewish people accepting the Torah (though we know how beautiful and meaningful that part is) but at this moment in time, I’m really looking forward to spending good time with family and friends. It’s been a tough few weeks in my house. The kids at school have just gone through the ‘crunch’ time with their classes – 1500 things assigned and all due today by 2 pm. It’s been weeks of anxiety, sweat, all nighters and meltdowns. On more than one occasion I laid down on the couch with one or another of my children lying in my arms crying…as I said, I’m really looking forward to Shavuot.

 

Aside from the rest and recovery, there’s a game I’m planning to play with the family that should allow for some good Jewish speculation as well as some wholesome venting. It’s called: ‘Why do you think God -’ and you play it by having to finish that sentence. There are no limits applied to the context or idea used to finish the sentence and everyone around is welcome to offer an explanation to your question.

 

But even playing this game, a small part of me wonders if in the wee wee hours of the night on Shavuot, I won’t wondering if God is sitting in the Divine Realms with the angels all around playing the game: ‘Why do you think people -’

 

Have a great Shavuot!

Why Does God Allow Natural Disasters?

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

It is easy to notice that the Earth’s weather has become more extreme with an increasing number of natural disasters over the past few years. From Katrina a few years ago, to the forest fires all over North America year after year, to the devastating tornadoes recently in the Midwest United States. Each time disaster strikes we ask “where is God?” and we often get two very different answers. Rachael explains.

What to do on Shavuot When You’re Lactose Intolerant

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

It’s always a challenge to look past the dairy piece of Shavuot especially if you have an intolerance to the food group. But Rachael explains what you can do to celebrate the holiday without eating dairy food.

 

Israeli Politics on Campus

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Throughout my undergrad experience at Queen’s University I was confronted on several occasions with aggressive anti-Israel rhetoric. I’m not a particularly religious person, but the climate on campus was enough to make me aware and self-conscious of my minority status as a Jew. In this blog post I’d like to relate one of the more uncomfortable situations I was presented with during my time as a student, and invite readers to commiserate with me about the new face of Antisemitism that has infiltrated left-wing politics.

 

 

I began university as a fresh-faced film major, eager to get involved with a faculty that initially seemed hip and open-minded. But unfortunately it didn’t take long for this arty department to rear its ugly head and make me feel alienated enough to switch from a double major in film and drama to the only slightly more conservative English literature.

 

 

In a first year lecture sized film course, taken by hundreds of freshmen, one particularly charismatic and radical professor thought it appropriate to subject the entire class to an interactive presentation regarding “Israeli Apartheid”. Not only is the very name of this concept disingenuous and hurtful, but the manner in which she raised the topic was distasteful, left no room for discussion and was entirely unrelated to film studies.

 

 

I arrived at the lecture hall one spring afternoon to find that all the students were being lined up outside, and a separate group of students who were not signed up for the course were checking ID cards. The students running the screening process singled some of us out at random to wait outside and enter the class late. As it turns out, the purpose of this exercise was to demonstrate how Israeli checkpoints ostracize and persecute Palestinians trying to enter the country. (I won’t even get in to the racial profiling that occurred when I was ‘randomly’ selected to wait outside by a girl in a hijab who read that my name was Jacob Abba Morgan).

 

 

Upon entering the class, those of us who were admitted with late entry were made to sit in a separated area at the back. At the front stood this film studies professor standing proudly with her small legion of militant looking students who were all dressed in black. On the screen there was a ridiculous bit of propaganda that showed an army helicopter marked IDF looming over a lone Palestinian boy sitting dejectedly in a fiery wasteland dotted with barbed wire. I couldn’t believe my eyes.

 

 

It’s difficult enough to raise your hand and make a comment in a lecture filled with hundreds of your peers, let alone when you are trying to argue a counterpoint. So perhaps because I was shy, or perhaps because I was just too offended to think straight, I didn’t say anything and simply got up and left the classroom. I studied hard for the exam but quickly made the decision to leave the film department and find a place where hate-filled and one-sided politics were left out of the picture. What is clear to me is that this professor abused her position of authority, and despite the fact that I complained to my teaching assistant and I know others did the same, this angry professor never saw any repercussions for her actions.

 

 

To condemn checkpoints with no mention of the terrorism that warranted these checkpoints is blatantly biased. This is just one instance of how the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is distorted within the halls of Canadian universities and how many professors perpetuate the problem by abusing their positions to push their warped agendas.

Pesach Prep… Again?

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Rachael posted:

Wow, it’s Pesach prep again. I feel like I was just blogging about Pesach prep.  I don’t mark the year by when the school year begins for my kids, or by my birthday or any of the usual markers, but somehow when it’s Pesach prep I can’t believe that a whole year has gone by.

 

I also know Pesach is getting close because everyone I speak to has asked me if I’m ready for Pesach yet.  Every time I get asked that question I get a pang of panic flash through my stomach.  Then my head kicks into the conversation and reminds me that there is still a full week to complete the job.  I think the question ‘are you ready for Pesach yet?’ should be in the same category as ‘hot enough for you?’ or ‘so when is that baby due?’  All of these questions have no correct answer to them.

 

For instance, ‘am I ready for Pesach?’ is always answered with ‘no’.  I can guarantee that I’m never ready for Pesach, there will always be one more thing I could have done, one more wipe of a cabinet, one more shopping trip, one more dish to prepare, one more SOMETHING. So, no, I’m never ready.  I think I can also confidently answer the question about the heat with a resounding ‘yes’.  Yes it is hot enough for me.  I am not a heat loving person.  Because I’m fair I have to stay out of the sun and you can’t solve the heat.  When it’s cold you can always put on another layer but when it’s hot, well, there’s only so much you can take off.  While we’re on the subject…the baby is due when it’s ready.

 

Phew, I feel so much better.  Sorry for the rant but I have to release some nervous Pesach prep anxiety.  So when I go home today I will try my best to see my house as my lovely home rather than seeing it as one, big, giant cookie box.  I’m sure the holiday will be beautiful and I’m also sure that once Pesach is done, within the blink of an eye, it’ll be Pesach prep again.

 

Chag Samaiyach

Rachael's Centre for Torah, Mussar and Ethics is a not-for-profit pluralistic website dedicated to online Jewish learning. We offer video and audio classes on Jewish themes such as Family, Lifecycle Events, Torah, Jewish Laws and much more. We also feature a Jewish Calendar, Interactive Blog, Video Reflections, Torah Podcasts, and Holiday Insights. We invite you to subscribe to Pathways to Learning and join our growing online community today.

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