Does anyone know why it is not being publicized elsewhere?
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Refuah Shleima needed for Rav Nota Greenblatt
This sign has been hanging in Lakewood Yeshiva for several day - and was posted on R Yudel Shain's blog R Yudel Shain's blog.
Does anyone know why it is not being publicized elsewhere?
Does anyone know why it is not being publicized elsewhere?
Austria's obscene brand of justice: Holocaust historians condemn Austria jailing of Jewish writer
BBC Holocaust historians have hit out at
the Austrian government after a Jewish writer, who catalogued the
state's failure to return properties seized by the Nazis, was jailed in
Vienna.
Stephan Templ, 54, has begun a one-year sentence for defrauding the state.
He
was convicted in 2013 after omitting the name of an estranged aunt in
an application on behalf of his mother for the return of property seized
in 1938.
But legal experts said it was not his responsibility to find other heirs.
The
lengthy case has drawn widespread condemnation amid allegations Austria
has not done enough to return property looted under the Third Reich.
Historian
Efraim Zuroff, renowned for his efforts at bringing Nazi war criminals
to court, told the BBC on Tuesday the jailing of Templ was "absolutely
outrageous".
Meanwhile, Templ's lawyer, Robert Amsterdam, described it as "outright injustice".
Vienna prosecutors have not commented on the case. [...]
Meanwhile Efraim Zuroff, one of 75 Holocaust historians who signed a letter
urging the government to cancel the sentence, criticised Austria's
handling of cases relating to the Third Reich - including the
prosecution of Nazi war criminals.
"This a country that has a really very twisted way of dealing with Holocaust related issues," he said.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Tamar Epstein: Conjecture on how Rabbi Greenblatt decided that Aharon Friedman was not fit to be a husband?
Tamar Epstein has gotten remarried without a Get - the question is how? I would like to offer some conjecture on the matter since Rabbi Greenblatt has refused to explain the matter - as has Rabbi Shmuel Kaminetsky and Rabbi Shalom Kaminetsky. I repeat that this is conjecture - and I welcome evidence that either supports or refutes it.
It is clearly on the basis of unknown rabbis paskening - kiddushei ta'us - that her marriage to Aharon Friedman was viewed by them as a mistake and thus had no validity and she was therefore not an eishis ish. The question is on what basis did they determine this. The gemora does not provide such a solution nor does Shulchan Aruch.
In recent years some rabbis have claimed to rely on the psak of Rav Moshe Feinstein to declare marriages to be non-existent. The most notorious of these rabbis was Rabbi Rackman - whose beis din and heterim were widely despised and discredited. As Rabbi Bleich wrote in his critique, according to Rabbi Rackman the mere fact that a husband refused to give a get was a sign that he was a cruel person and if the wife had known he was so cruel she would never have married him. Thus the marriage is a mistake. Thus any marriage where the husband refuses to give a Get is considered a mistake and there is no need for a get!
In general Reb Moshe requires the establishment of 3 factors. 1) The husband has a serious condition that preexisted the marriage that the wife did not know about- such as homosexuality or schizophrenia. 2) The condition has to be so severe that most women would not be able to deal with it 3) As soon as the wife discovered this condition she left her husband.
Obvious number 3 is the most easy to establish. Did Tamar Epstein leave her husband upon finding that he had an impossible condition? For the sake of argument let us assume that at some point a rabbi or psychologist or friend or family member told her that he was never going to be capable of being the person she wanted. Upon hearing this she left him. That should be sufficient to fulfill this condition. She clearly did leave him - though it has not been established that that was the motivating factor. But let's assume it was fulfilled.
The difficult problem is establishing condition 1 and 2. We do have a list from Tamar about the good and bad points that she saw in her husband [Tamar's diary entry]. None of them fit the description of an impossible condition - not even the claim that her parents didn't like him. At most they can be described as disappointment that while he was a good man he was not as good as she had hoped and that she thought she could do better. Clearly implying that if she didn't think she had a choice she could have learned to live with him - and been happy. She obviously was getting feedback from her parents and others that she was still young and she could find someone better to spend the rest of her life with.
It thus seems clear that awareness of this impossible condition did not come spontaneously from Tamar - but it is something that an outside source must have told her. Otherwise she would have left him sooner. I was told by Aharon that he and his wife went to two different therapists. Were they the cause? One clearly stated that he thought the marriage could be saved. Perhaps the second therapist thought it couldn't.
Let us assume for the sake of argument that the second therapist told Tamar that he thought that Aharon had a personality disorder or mental health issue that he didn't think was amenable to change or that the change would not be great enough to make him the man she wanted. Is that enough? The answer is clearly no unless it was very severe - such as bipolar or schizophrenia - that was not amenable to psychotherapy or drugs. It is important to note that Tamar never mentioned such psychopathology in her complaints about Aharon. It was primarily that he was shy and introverted. Thus if he in fact had such a severe diagnosis - it was not likely that it prexisted the marriage and not likely that it preexisted the visit to this therapist.
But let us assume for the sake of argument that one therapist did in fact tell Tamar privately that he thought Aharon was suffering from an incurable and unpleasant mental health condition. Is that enough according to Reb Moshe Feinstein to declare the marriage a mistake? The answer is no - because there are many married couples in which one of the spouses has such a diagnosis - and they remain married. It has to be determined that most women would not be able to put up with such a condition - and from Tamar's own description of Aharon - that is clearly not true.
But let us assume for the sake of argument that she did accept the diagnosis of the therapist and changed her perception of her husband and that henceforth she decided she could not live with him and in fact left. Is that enough to invalidate the marriage? The answer again is no. She would need to convince a beis din that in fact that is why she left and they would have to agree with her.
It is clear from the Baltimore Beis Din - which is the only beis din to be authorized to deal with the case - that Aharaon manifested no such condition in their extensive and intensive dealings with him and his wife. So such a psak obviously did not come from them.
So who issued such a psak. It clearly wasn't Rabbi Greenblatt who never spoke with Aharon because he says he relied on gedolim that Tamar was not married. So who is the source for paskening that Aharon was not marriageable? It most have been Rabbi Shmuel and Rabbi Sholom Kaminetsky. But considering their considerable bias (because her father was a major supporter of the yeshiva as well as its doctor) in favor of Tamar getting a divorce - it would be rather unethical - though not against halacha - for them to issue such a statement.
It is reasonable that they tried being fair and consulted with therapists regarding the matter. But such therapists never spoke with Aharon and needed to rely entirely on the views of Tamar and the one therapist who had dealt with Aharon as well as the Kaminetskys. It is highly likely that such therapists were close with the Philly Yeshiva and wanted to please the Kaminetsky's. It is also quite possible that the therapists were friends of the Epstein family.
Thus it is highly unlikely that that an unbiased professional with full knowledge of the the situation actually declared Aharon to be unmarriageable and that such a condition preexisted his marriage to Tamar. Without an unbiased authority - such an opinion in worthless. Finding a single therapist or therapists to make such a ruling is also worthless unless it can be established that most therapists would agree - something which is highly unlikely. In addition having spent significant time talking with Aharon as well as having many email exchanges - I as a psychologist do not see any evidence of a mental health problem that would preclude being a good husband.
To summarize. My conjecture - and that is all it is at this point - is that Rabbi Greenblatt decided that Tamar could remarry based on the psak of the Kaminetskys which was serverely biased because they were looking for a way to free Tamar from marriage. They have functioned from the beginning as her advocates and thus should not also serve as poskim. The psak was clearly not an objective evaluation of the full range of opinions of professionals in this matter but was a target drawn around the arrow after it had been shot. It is also not clear that whatever the blemish that they claim Aharon suffers from - is something that most women could not live with. It is also clear that Tamar would have been able to live with it - if her parents and friends had encouraged her to stay in the marriage - rather than to try for something better. In short - Tamar has no valid basis for viewing her marriage to Aharon as a mistake - and she is committing adultery in her second marriage.
Gevald!!! The sounds of silence after Gedolim approve the marriage of an eishes ish.
Disclaimer: I am willing to publicize any reasoned defense of the rabbonim and couple involved as well as any reasoned condemnation.
Update - My brother spoke a 2nd time with Rabbi Greenblatt - but he still refuses to divulge the names of the gedolim that he relied on in order to officiate at the 2nd marriage of Tamar Epstein - even though she has not been divorced from Aharon Friedman.
This is very unfortunate as it seriously undermines the credibility of these rabbis who have been supporting her as well as the perceived competence of Rabbi Greenblatt.
Update Background information
Update - My brother spoke a 2nd time with Rabbi Greenblatt - but he still refuses to divulge the names of the gedolim that he relied on in order to officiate at the 2nd marriage of Tamar Epstein - even though she has not been divorced from Aharon Friedman.
This is very unfortunate as it seriously undermines the credibility of these rabbis who have been supporting her as well as the perceived competence of Rabbi Greenblatt.
Update Background information
For the last few years we have covered a number of unpleasant divorce cases. Cases where public relations have been used to compensate for the lack of halachic justification. Cases where respected gedolim have either chosen to ignore halacha or were unfortunately pressured to take a stance which not only has not halachic justification - but was clearly wrong according to the Shulchan Aruch.
Concerning one of the more notorious cases -that of Tamar Epstein - her rabbinic advisers claimed after 4 years of trying to pressure her husband to giver her a Get - with the aid of ORA and various rabbonim who had no jurisdiction in the case - that in fact there was no need for a Get. They claimed that the marriage was retroactively annulled because she and her family found that he was a bit socially awkward. Despite the fact that she had nice things to say about him she had decided that she could do better.
After her husband Aharon Friedman refused to give a Get until more equitable custody arrangements were made - it was decided to get the young lady out of the marriage without a Get. The only possible justification that I can think of that they could rationalize is to rely on modern psychology. There are some who claim that it is enough to fit a diagnostic category in the DSM-V to be declared incapable of concluding a halachically valid marriage. However this is far from being an objective proof and in fact such a diagnosis by itself has no halachic significance. Anyone familiar with the DSM-V knows that it doesn't fit the requirements set down by Rav Moshe Feinstein. Nonetheless it has been confirmed that she has in fact remarried without a Get.
From Wikipedia
From Wikipedia
From Wikipedia
While the DSM has been praised for standardizing psychiatric diagnostic categories and criteria, it has also generated controversy and criticism. Critics, including the National Institute of Mental Health, argue that the DSM represents an unscientific and subjective system.[1] There are ongoing issues concerning the validity and reliability of the diagnostic categories; the reliance on superficial symptoms; the use of artificial dividing lines between categories and from "normality"; possible cultural bias; and medicalization of human distress.[2][3][4][5][6] The publication of the DSM, with tightly guarded copyrights, now makes APA over $5 million a year, historically totaling over $100 million.[7]
From Wikipedia
Despite caveats in the introduction to the DSM, it has long been argued that its system of classification makes unjustified categorical distinctions between disorders and uses arbitrary cut-offs between normal and abnormal. A 2009 psychiatric review noted that attempts to demonstrate natural boundaries between related DSM syndromes, or between a common DSM syndrome and normality, have failed.[3] Some argue that rather than a categorical approach, a fully dimensional, spectrum or complaint-oriented approach would better reflect the evidence.[65][66][67][68]
In addition, it is argued that the current approach based on exceeding a threshold of symptoms does not adequately take into account the context in which a person is living, and to what extent there is internal disorder of an individual versus a psychological response to adverse situations.[69][70] The DSM does include a step ("Axis IV") for outlining "Psychosocial and environmental factors contributing to the disorder" once someone is diagnosed with that particular disorder.
Because an individual's degree of impairment is often not correlated with symptom counts and can stem from various individual and social factors, the DSM's standard of distress or disability can often produce false positives.[71] On the other hand, individuals who do not meet symptom counts may nevertheless experience comparable distress or disability in their life.So what does a woman do when one of the gedolim tells her that she has no need for a Get? What does that woman do when her rabbis say to trust them and get remarried without a Get? What does a man do when faced with the reality that he will be declared to be in an adulterous relationship as the result of the marriage? Is is an indication of great emunas chachomim to in fact remarry without a Get and face the reality that any children will be considered mamzerim? or is it stupidity?
A tree fell recently in Memphis - and there was no sound - because the rabbis don't want to hear about it.
=========================================================
My brother Rabbi Dovid E.
Eidensohn just wrote the following:
Today Thursday Chol HaMoed Succos I received a call
that Rabbi
Notto Greenblatt of Memphis married Tamar Epstein to somebody although she had no GET from Aharon Friedman her husband. I called Rabbi Greenblatt and he said that he
had performed the ceremony. When I told him that great rabbis forbad the
remarriage without a GET he replied that Gedolim had permitted her to
remarry.
He told me that if Rabbi Elyashev zt”l would disagree it would not
change his
mind, and that the rabbis who disagree with his “Gedolim” just have
chutzpah.
He asked me what a person like me has to do with this that I disagree
with him.
I told him that the Gaon Rab Yosef
Shalom Elyashev zt”l gave me a semicha to have a Beth Din for Gittin and
further he gave permission for me to use his name for it.
I called up a Rov who
was intensely involved in the couple when they discussed their marital
problems, and I asked him if there was any chance that the husband has some
kind of defect that could have cancelled the marriage and thus allowed her to
remarry. He told me there was no such defect and that if the woman has any
children they will be mamzerim.
I quoted to Rabbi Greenblatt from him the pesak of Chazon Ish
EH 99:12 that if the Torah does not require a husband to be coerced to divorce
his wife but a Beth Din told the husband he is worthy of being forced to
divorce and he gives the GET because of that statement, the GET is invalid.
First it is invalid because the Torah did not require a coercion and the Beth Din
did require a coercion. Thus, the Beth Din coerced the GET in violation of the
Torah and the coercion is invalid and the GET is invalid. Secondly, the husband
gave the GET under false pretenses thinking that he must be coerced to give a GET.
Therefore, the GET is invalid by the Torah not just rabbinic level. Anyone who learns carefully the laws of Gittin
regarding this issue knows that there was no source to permit a married woman
to just remarry and the “Gedolim” like Rabbi Greenblatt who permit these things
are just making mamzerim. I wonder how many mamzerim Rabbi Greenblatt has made.
Any woman married with his special inventions should ask a proper Beth Din if
she is permitted to remain with her husband and if her children are mamzerim.
But the main problem is that married women cannot remarry
without a GET or the death of their husband. Reb Moshe Feinstein was asked
about a husband who was discovered to be strongly addicted to homosexuality and
the wife ran away. He said that the great authorities of all generations had
refused to permit her to remarry for various reasons. But he showed that in this
extreme case there is room for leniency but since the great authorities
disagreed with him he ruled that the woman must do everything possible to get a
GET. Only if all fails does he permit this. And this only in this extreme case
and with the understanding the no other great authority in centuries permitted
it.
In this case , I spoke to the husband months
before and he told me he would give a GET if the wife would allow him proper
custody rights. Therefore, Reb Moshe would never have permitted her to remarry.
Therefore, in this case, not only do all of the great rabbis of the generations
forbid the woman to remarry without a GET, but even even if there were a preexisting disorder in this case, even Reb Moshe
would not permit remarriage without a get because a get would be
available if the custody arrangements were appropriate. Reb Moshe would forbid it
until she gave in to the custody demands.
I can be reached at 845-578-1917 or eidensohnd@gmail.com.
Chief rabbinate rejection of US conversion ‘casts shadow over American Orthodox institutions’
JPost A Jewish convert from the US who made aliyah to Israel had her
conversion rejected by the Chief Rabbinate’s department for matrimony
and conversion earlier this year, despite having a conversion approval
certificate from a rabbinical court presided over by the head of the
Beth Din of America, Rabbi Gedalia Dov Schwartz.
Although her conversion was subsequently approved by the Tel Aviv Rabbinical Court, the incident is the latest in a series of such rejections, which are being viewed in some quarters as a rebuff by the Chief Rabbinate of the legitimacy of Orthodox Jewish institutions in the US. Hauna, 24, converted in Minnesota in 2006 with senior Chabad emissary Rabbi Moshe Feller. She received a conversion approval certificate from the rabbinical court of the Chicago Rabbinical Council in 2009 before she emigrated to Israel in 2010. [...]
Although her conversion was subsequently approved by the Tel Aviv Rabbinical Court, the incident is the latest in a series of such rejections, which are being viewed in some quarters as a rebuff by the Chief Rabbinate of the legitimacy of Orthodox Jewish institutions in the US. Hauna, 24, converted in Minnesota in 2006 with senior Chabad emissary Rabbi Moshe Feller. She received a conversion approval certificate from the rabbinical court of the Chicago Rabbinical Council in 2009 before she emigrated to Israel in 2010. [...]
After making aliyah, Hauna became engaged and, six weeks before the
wedding date, approached her local rabbinate in Herzliya to approve her
Jewish status and register her and her fiancé for marriage.[...]
But Rabbi Itamar Tubol, the director of the department under the
auspices of Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef, wrote in a letter to the
Herzliya rabbinate that “after verification and clarification the
conversion needs to be checked by a rabbinical court as to the essence
of the matter.” [...]
In a response to The Jerusalem Post, the Chief Rabbinate said that
Feller was not authorized to serve as a rabbinical judge and that the
various officials Tubol spoke with were unaware of his conversion
activities.
The Chief Rabbinate added that because the conversion approval certificate was from Schwartz’s rabbinical court they had not rejected the conversion out right but passed it on to the Tel Aviv rabbinical court. [...]
Farber also argued that Orthodox conversions in the US have always been
done by local rabbis and ad hoc rabbinical courts, and that the Chief
Rabbinate’s refusal to rely on Schwartz’s conversion approval violated
the terms of a deal worked out between the Rabbinical Council of
America, with which Beth Din of America is affiliated, and the Chief
Rabbinate in 2008.[...]
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Why did Rabbi Nota Greenblatt condemn IBD for relying on a Ritva when he used a "heter" based on unreliable and halachically invalid views of a psychologist?
IsraelReader raises an important question. Rabbi Greenblatt just was mesader kedushin for a married woman based on a "heter" of the DSM pychological diagnostic manual. Why should he be condemning the International Beis Din for Agunos for relying on a Ritva. Is a psychologist more authoritative than the Ritva?
=============================
Strange,
that R' the same Notta Greenblatt who allegedly presided at the
marriage of Tamar Epstein, signed a letter of protest against the
incompetence of the IBD. How do understand this?
http://daattorah.blogspot.co.il/2015/08/protest-against-incompetence-of.html
In other news:http://daattorah.blogspot.co.il/2015/08/protest-against-incompetence-of.html
http://www.onlysimchas.com/news/12660/memphis-welcomes-new-yeshiva
IsraelReader
Judge Dismisses Majority of Vaad’s Claim Against Kehot
A portion of a “seemingly never-ending dispute” in New York Federal
Court came to an end when a district judge dismissed a major part of a
lawsuit filed by Vaad L’Hafotzas Sichos and Zalman Chanin against Merkos and Aguc”h over the printing of the Rebbe’s Sichos.
In a decision issued yesterday, the first day of Chol Hamoed Sukkos, senior district judge Frederic Block dismissed claims of copyright infringement and unfair competition which were brought by Chanin.
This lawsuit was originally brought by Vaad and Chanin as a challenge
against Merkos’s trademark of the Kehot logo in 2001 and again in 2011
in federal court. The plaintiffs claimed that the logo was simply a
‘spiritual mark’ and was not that of a publishing house.
Both the U.S. Copyright Office and the United States District Court
ruled against the plaintiffs and dismissed a lawsuit seeking $21
million, as well as granting Kehot exclusive use of their logo. The
ruling was based on “the record [which] shows that both the Previous
Rebbe and the Rebbe… each took the business steps that any trademark
owner would take with respect to a trademark, including filing for
protection of the mark under the laws of New York State.”
Now, in a twenty-six page ruling, judge Block noted that “For the
third time, the Court is called upon to adjudicate an aspect of the
seemingly never-ending dispute precipitated by the passing of the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson” and that “Even a matter
as final as death is a subject of debate in the Lubavitcher community,
with some holding the “heartfelt belief that, notwithstanding his
physical passing in 1994, the Rebbe still lives.””
He went on to say “Though perhaps more mundane, the matter before the
Court is no less fiercely disputed. At issue is the right to publish
the Likkutei Sichos…”
Friday, October 2, 2015
Karbanos of Sukkos: Mathematical trick or Torah insight??
Rabbi Shlomo Pollack
The Yalkut ילקוט שמעוני relates to us, how a particular Amora - ר' ברכיה
- counted up the cows- The פרי החג - to arrive at the correct 70
number....
It would seem we are being introduced to a mathematical method to count up consecutive numbers, commonly referred to as "The Gauss Trick". Indeed that is the explanation given by the זית רענן (commentary on the page).
Could it be, that we are actually be given an insight into the Karbanos themselves??....
For questions or comments please email salmahshleima@gmail.com
It would seem we are being introduced to a mathematical method to count up consecutive numbers, commonly referred to as "The Gauss Trick". Indeed that is the explanation given by the זית רענן (commentary on the page).
Could it be, that we are actually be given an insight into the Karbanos themselves??....
For questions or comments please email salmahshleima@gmail.com
Monday, September 28, 2015
Rebbitzen granted right of privileged communication by Oregon court
Yated Is a rebbetzin a religious leader? Or is the term an honorary title denoting nothing more than “wife of a rabbi?”
The
question lay at the heart of an unprecedented court case in Portland,
Oregon, in which Mrs. Esther Fischer and Mrs. Sarah Goldblatt, two
kollel wives employed with their husbands by the Portland Community
Kollel, were subpoenaed in a divorce trial. The women were asked to
disclose personal and confidential information they had received from
the wife in the divorce case, which might have bearing on child custody
issues coming before the court.
The women responded that such information, including confidences
shared in person, by letter, over the phone and through emails and
texts, was protected by the statute governing clergy privilege, similar
to the law granting attorney-client privilege.
As rebbetzins in the Portland community, they said, their
conversations with community members fell under the rubric of a state
law protecting the confidentiality of information entrusted to
clergymen. As advised by rabbonim, the women said they were not
permitted to share personal information they had received from a woman
they had taught or counseled.[...]
As the testimony and deposition continued, the atmosphere in the room
seemed to change. The questioning came to an end and Judge Beth Allen,
in an unusual departure from protocol, issued her ruling on the spot.
“It
seems pretty clear,” she said, “that the issue here is not about
official ordainment as a means of identifying Orthodox Jewish clergy.
The state is not in a position to dictate to religious organizations how
to define their clergy. The key seems to be how the movement itself
identifies its religious leaders.”
“In Orthodox Judaism, where
only men can be rabbis, men can have their confidences protected by the
law when they talk to the rabbi. But what about the women who prefer not
to talk to male clergymen about deeply personal matters and turn to
women religious leaders for guidance? Is it reasonable that women who
prefer to open their hearts to other women should be deprived of the
law’s protection?
“I don’t believe that is what the statute
governing clergy privilege intended,” the judge concluded, granting the
kollel wives in this precedent-setting case their motion to void the
subpoena.[...]
Effectiveness of Psychotherapy for Depression Is Overstated, a Study Says
Medical literature has overstated the benefits of talk therapy for depression, in part because studies with poor results have rarely made it into journals, researchers reported Wednesday.
Their
analysis is the first effort to account for unpublished tests of such
therapies. Treatments like cognitive behavior therapy and interpersonal
therapy are indeed effective, the analysis found, but about 25 percent
less so than previously thought.
Doctors
have long known that journal articles exaggerate the benefits of
antidepressant drugs by about the same amount, and partly for the same
reason — a publication bias in favor of encouraging findings. The new review,
in the journal PLOS One, should give doctors and patients a better
sense of what to expect from various forms of talk therapy, experts
said, if not settle long-running debates in psychiatry about the
relative merits of one treatment over another.
Five million to six million Americans receive psychotherapy for depression
each year, and many of them also take antidepressant drugs, surveys
find. Most people find some relief by simply consulting a doctor
regularly about the problem, experts said. Engaging in a course of
well-tested psychotherapy, according to the new analysis, gives them an
added 20 percent chance of achieving an even more satisfying
improvement, or lasting recovery. Before accounting for the unpublished
research, that figure was closer to 30 percent, a difference that
suggests that hundreds of thousands of patients are less likely to
benefit.[...]
The way to think about the results, Dr. Hollon said, is that
antidepressant drugs and talk therapies are modestly effective, and the
combination is better than either approach alone. But for those who do
well or fully recover, “psychotherapy, particularly cognitive behavior
therapy, seems to be most effective in cutting the risk for a relapse
long-term,” Dr. Hollon said. [...]
Sunday, September 27, 2015
Nachlaot abuse scandal - What is the significance of an apology?
I received this document and comments today
Thought you might find this interesting and would like to post it on your site. This was posted in the neighborhood of Nachlaot during the 10 days of Tchuva.
It obviously raised many questions.
1. If M is writing a letter of apology stating that SKV is innocent of what he thought she was guilty of as is implied in the Hebrew, does this mean that he no longer believes his children were molested by a cult to convert them to Christianity? (Since she was believed to be the head of this cult?)
2. If this is true, where does he draw the line of reality and rumor?
3. What implications does this have for Rav Berkovitz in his belief of what he is claiming in Sanhedria?
Around the same time that this apology was put up, most of the material on Rotternet was taken down.
Regards, and Chag Sameach
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Learning that touches the heart and soul by Allan Katz
Va'yelech 74 Hakhel - Learning that touches the heart and soul
Guest post by Allan Katz
The Parasha-Portion of Va'yeileich - Devarim- Deut. 31:10-13 deals with the mitzvah of ' Hakhel where the king read passages from the Torah in the presence of the whole nation. All the men, women, and children - including infants had to attend the event. It was a re-enactment of giving of the Torah on Mount Sinai. It took place in the temple in Jerusalem after the Sabbatical year during the festival of Succoth, once in 7 years. The Shmittah -Sabbatical year and Succoth allude to God's divine protection and providence, and Israel's faith and loyalty to their God.
The Talmud – Cha'giga 3, asks why the ' infants- ha'taf ' had to attend? Two answers are given. Even if these infants do not benefit directly from the ' hakhel experience', their parents and especially their mothers are credited for bringing them. The underlying reason is - by bringing their infants and making sure every person would be present at this event, they show an appreciation of the importance and centrality of the Torah for the Jewish nation and for future generations. The Talmud – Masechet Sofrim adds the following reason - there is in fact a benefit and intrinsic reward for the infants themselves from the Hakhel experience. People would according to their intellectual levels and obligations, either engage in studying the words of the Torah, or just listen to the reading of the king, but all would be emotionally moved by the ' Hakhel ' experience which would make them more appreciative of the wonder and awe of God, to love his law and be more committed to God and his Torah. The Malbim explains that the toddlers and infants will be affected emotionally in a bigger way than the adults by the incredible atmosphere of fear and love for God and awesome sight of millions of Jews standing united for hours for the sole purpose of hearing the lessons that the king is reading from the Torah. Their lack of intellectual understanding allows the imagination to make an indelible impression of what they see and experience. This experience is intrinsically valuable as it will contribute to the love and fear of God when they become obligated to do the mitzvoth.
The purpose of the Hakhel experience is to move people emotionally, so that their learning experience will touch their hearts and souls and motivate them to higher levels of love and fear of God. The big events such as the festivals do the same thing and give us an ' emotional lift' out of our routine existence. But our aim should be that all our learning and experiences should touch our hearts and souls.
When it comes to our kids' education, people are becoming aware of the importance of social-emotional learning to help kids regulate their emotions and improve their social skills, but no attention is being paid to something equally important – that a kid's learning should touch their hearts and souls. The reason that this does not happen is that learning is driven by extrinsic motivators like grades and competition. Kids, parents and teachers focus on how well kids are doing, and any emotional input is put into the ' good job' praises or expressions of disappointment. Instead success or failure should be experienced only as information. This allows parents and teachers help kids to focus on what there are doing and learning , making meaning of what they are doing, sharing their learning and learning from others , and ' connecting to ' the learning so that the learning touches their hearts and souls. Instead the emotional connection is not with the learning but with the grade or position in the classroom rankings.
Curriculum should be based on kids' interests and what is relevant and meaningful to their lives. They should be expressing their opinions and perspectives in the context of a caring, cooperative learning community and not just giving the answers that teachers want. In this way they will develop a love for learning, act on newly acquired knowledge in other areas as well and show a commitment to the values underlying their learning. They should be hearing stories of real people whose lives give expression to lessons learned and they should also tell their own stories and share their own experiences. The Mitzvah of ' Hakhel' comes to remind us to open our hearts to our learning and that all learning and experiences can and should touch our hearts and souls and those of our children and students.
Friday, September 25, 2015
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