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ב"ה

Tishah B'Av 5768 - August 10, 2008

Seasons
Stones with a Soul

The Western Wall is a place of national nostalgia, a focal point for our collective pining over a lost glory. It is the symbol of our hopes for the future. But it’s also a symbol of what still exists...
Subliminal Advertising

I don’t know if the communists or Madison Avenue ever perfected the art of subliminal suggestion, but I am sure that G‑d has the requisite skills to pull it off . . .
Kamtza and Bar Kamtza

It happened this way: A certain man had a friend named Kamtza and an enemy called Bar Kamtza. He once made a party and said to his servant, “Go and bring Kamtza” . . .
About Tishah B'Av

The saddest day on the Jewish calendar is the Ninth of Av, “Tisha B’Av.” It is the date when both our Holy Temples were destroyed, and exile, persecution and spiritual blackness began.
Living
Mind Your Business!

"Live and let live!" "It's not your place to mix in!" Are these tolerant voices of acceptance or words cloaking our apathy in our age of impersonalization?
Facing Grief

Any loss, especially one involving the loss of love, independence, structure or identity, causes a temporary loss of balance—physically, emotionally and spiritually.
Why We Yell

There's lots of "legitimate reasons" for why we yell at our kids. But are the consequences too high a price to pay for gaining of a little cooperation?
Caught in the Middle

My wife and my mother don't get along. Both of them complain to me about the other one. I'm caught in the middle and I feel like I am balancing on a high wire. What can I do?
The Jewish Woman
Peering From Behind the Lattice

I surf between CNN, Fox, and the Jerusalem Post scanning photos of our soldiers: rough beards, weary postures. I squint, searching for Akiva's face among them...
Tanks 'n Tractors

The internet's down! And with it, the phone. It's a silence about the texture of a goose-down cushion....
Never Forgive or Forget

He pulled back his sleeve and I saw the numbers every living Jew recognizes
Pilgrimage

Every prayer is a conversation with the Creator. To lose this awareness is to transform the dialogue into a monologue...
Parshah
The Parshah in a Nutshell
For thirty-seven days Moses talks: recalling, reminding, rebuking, warning, promising; about the revelation at Sinai and their journeys through the desert, about spies and wars and victories and the Land, and what it’s like to serve as a leader of G‑d’s chosen people.
Words

Why do we talk so much? Witness the endless self-explaining we engage in, the perpetual conversation we feel obliged to "make", the quadrillions of words unleashed each day in every imaginable media...
Know Where You Are Coming From

Moving forward is essential, but in order to do so we must understand where we are coming from
The True Translation

Translation is a sensitive and possibly dangerous process. Our sages commented that the day the Torah was translated into Greek “was as difficult for the Jewish people as the day when the Golden Calf was made.”
Torah in Chinese

The Talmud teaches that G‑d uttered the Ten Commandments in all 70 languages, though only the Hebrew version was heard. What was the point of speaking in languages that no one understood, let alone heard?
When Moshiach will come (speedily in our time, amen), then we will truly long for the days of the exile. Then we will truly feel distress at our having neglected working at our service of G-d... These days of exile are the days of serving G-d, to prepare ourselves for the coming of Mashiach, speedily in our time...
— Rabbi Sholom DovBer of Lubavitch (1860-1920)
Print Magazine

True peace is not a forced truce, not a homogenization of differences, not a common ground that abandons our home territories.

True peace is the oneness that sprouts from diversity, the beauty that emerges from a panorama of colors, strokes and textures, from the harmony of many instruments each playing a unique part, n...

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