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Posts Tagged ‘chabad’

The Reading List: Student Anger in the West Bank

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira Closeup No GlassesAs students and the rabbinate try to reconcile in Israel proper, violent followers of a Chabad rabbi in the West Bank are attacking military and security personnel. [Failed Messiah]

Meanwhile, here’s a guide to how Chabad does its kiruv, or religious outreach, on campus — the final installment of a three-part guide to kiruv. [Frum Satire]

A student at the Arava Institute, which advocates for coexistence between Palestinians and Jews, responds to an attack on Masa, the umbrella group for long-term Israel programs and a sponsor of some Arava students. [The Masa Israel Blog]

Two from the Huff: First, banks are spending $83 million on promoting student credit cards… and leading more students into debt? [HuffPo]

Second, a professor dispels myths about elite professors. [HuffPo]

Judaism in Chicago: Vandalism and Thwarted Explosives

Monday, November 1st, 2010
The vandalized menorah at Northwestern's Chabad

The vandalized menorah at Northwestern's Chabad

This is a post by Coco Keevan, the student editor of the New Voices-Northwestern blog.

Frankly, it’s been a rough weekend for the Jewish community here at Northwestern University and in Chicago. On Friday, word reached Northwestern’s Fiedler Hillel Center that several explosive packages were intercepted by government officials en route to Jewish institutional targets in Chicago.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, President Obama confirmed that two packages, addressed to at least one Chicago synagogue and one Chicago JCC, are not part of a “dry run” but rather a credible threat to the U.S.

Authorities suspect the packages were sent from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, a terrorist group out of Yemen; officials in Dubai intercepted one explosive device, and the second package was aboard a plane searched near London. [Chicago Sun-Times]

The threat, it seems, extended to Northwestern’s Evanston campus. On Saturday, October 30, vandals targeted the large Chanukah menorah outside of Tannenbaum Chabad House, inciting what local police are labeling a hate crime. While it is unclear whether or not it was merely a Halloween prank, it does seem to bring the threat close to home.

Below is a note from Rabbi Dov Hillel Klein, Director of the Chabad House, regarding this incident.

Check out New Voices: Northwestern Wednesday for an editorial from yours truly about the climate of Judaism in Chicago and here at Northwestern specifically. We live in a tenuous socio-political world, and I think it’s important that the community at large stand united against this sort of hateful action.

Sunday October 31, 2010

The Tannenbaum Chabad House was the victim of vandalism this past Saturday, October 30th, sometime between the hours of 7:30 pm and 10:15 pm. The vandalism was directed at the large Chanukah menorah (picture below) which has proudly stood in front of our building as Chabad House’s religious symbol for many years. The Evanston Police Department has classified this incident as vandalism to property and as a hate crime, and their investigation is ongoing at this time.

The past few days have been filled with many conflicting emotions for me personally. When I was notified by Homeland Security on Friday afternoon that two packages containing explosives en route to Chicagoland Jewish institutions were intercepted by government officials, I quickly reached out to the Evanston Police Department and requested that all area synagogues receive extra police patrols. Thank G-d no related incidents took place in Evanston.

Shabbat at Chabad was a wonderful and peaceful emotional high, with loads of students and community members coming through our doors. At the conclusion of Shabbat Saturday evening, I went to the Hotel Orrington to support the Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity, who was hosting a philanthropy that raised over $1,100 for Keshet, an organization that works with children and young adults with disabilities. I then went to support the Jewish Theatre Ensemble, who produced an outstanding and thought-provoking performance of Equus. I ended the evening at a housewarming party for Rebitzen Yehudis Hecht, who leads our Shabbat Cooking Classes at Chabad. Shabbat and Saturday evening were truly filled with the joy and inspiration that defines the very best of our Northwestern student and Evanston communities.

To my surprise, I received a phone call from the Evanston Police Department early this morning with the news of the vandalism at our Chabad Center. After a truly wonderful weekend filled with what makes me most proud about our community, I felt saddened, ashamed, hurt, and most of all, violated. After living as part of the Evanston and Northwestern University communities for twenty-five years, it is very disturbing that someone or some group of people could break and attempt to destroy one of our religious symbols. I ask myself whether this was just a prank or an opportunity to make an anti-Semitic statement. Whichever the true intent, it portrays the lack of sensitivity and tolerance coupled with hatred, anger, and rage that some individuals still possess and how much more education remains necessary.

I share this incident with the community so that we can use it as a springboard to learn about the importance and power of respecting each other’s differences as well as an opportunity to learn how to foster a society which can work together, care for each other, and love one another.

May G-d continue to bless our community and each one of us.

Rabbi Dov Hillel Klein
Director

Labelship Down

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

As another Friday night set in, I pondered whether to schlep out of my warm house into the snow flying sideways to make the long trek (a seven-minute bus ride) down to Hillel, and after I coordinated with some friends at the University of Pittsburgh–whom I hadn’t seen all week–I decided that the schlep was worth it. I’ve talked about community more than once before–twice, in fact. But this time, I want to talk about the labels that define our community, as you might have guessed from the title.

For the past several years, the Hillel-JUC of Pittsburgh has offered three services on Friday night: Reform, Conservative and Orthodox. There are entirely student-run and student-organized. For the first year-and-a-half that I was here, I helped lead and organize Reform Shabbat services, as well as High Holiday services. Although I really enjoyed this in the beginning, the numbers soon dwindled until we didn’t even have a minyan (not that we cared). Occasionally, we combined with the Conservative kids who didn’t have a minyan (and actually cared). But after one of the leaders in the Reform campus community decided to go abroad this spring, I realized I couldn’t handle Reform services on my own. There were few other kids attending, and even fewer people willing to lead services.

Long story short: there are no more Reform services offered at Hillel. Do I still go to Hillel? Shockingly, yes, as was displayed in the first paragraph of this post. I just go to the Conservative service. I was raised a Reform Jew, and as I edged closer and closer to college, I became more involved with my temple youth group (which was NFTY-affiliated). I would say I’m learning a lot by attending the Conservative service–but I’m really not. I often feel lost among the Hebrew, am unsure when to stand or sit, when to say the Hatzi Kaddish or let the reader do that. This isn’t a criticism of the movement, necessarily–a good friend and I often dissect how the way we were raised dictates the kind of Jew we are today.

Last weekend, I was lucky enough to attend Jewlicious Festival in Long Beach, CA. (I’ll be writing more about it in an article soon). Just as most people have been saying in the blogosphere, there were all different kinds of Jews there–I won’t bother to name every denomination, country of origin, or political movement they align themselves but you can easily apply the old adage of “three Jews, ten opinions” to this festival. Anyway, there were various services offered throughout Friday night and Saturday morning. Sometimes they were called ‘Reform,’ sometimes ‘Carlebach,’ sometimes ‘Traditional.’ It was usually clear what kind of service it would be from the one-line description (“Take a step back to your days of camping, accompanied by sweet guitar melodies”).

On the plane ride home, I discussed the festival with the director of my Hillel, Aaron Weil. He loved how they termed services there and proposed doing the same thing for our Hillel. “Let’s call them Carlebach, Traditional, and Camp Style,” he said. I made a ‘hm’ sound. On one hand, I like the idea of redefining how our own community defines ourselves–and on the other hand, they’re just labels, right? It’s semantics. No matter how you wrap the present, there’s still a box of raisins inside. They’re just words.

To my surprise, Aaron made the change swiftly–in our weekly email newsletter, he announced that there would be Carlebach and Traditional services available (because we still don’t have Reform back). However, when I got to Hillel, the student announcing which floor to go to still used the words ‘Orthodox’ and ‘Traditional.’ I think it will take a while for this language to pervade our Friday nights, if it ever does. Because no matter what you call it, that type of service or a certain type of Jew is still, usually, affiliated with a movement–whether it’s the Union for Reform Judaism or the Chabad Lubavitch movement. What do you think? Do the words matter? Should we even bother trying to label our own people? Others do that enough for us, don’t you think?

There Are Religious Jews Outside of Orthodoxy, I Promise.

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Shabbat

Last week, I attended a fantastic Shabbat service and dinner with dozens of students from all around Manhattan, through NYU’s Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life, which I cannot gush about enough. (They’re fabulous.) It was a wonderful experience and full of people from all different backgrounds and every possible kind of observance. But in the midst of all the wonderfulness, I heard something that really irked me.

A girl beside me began talking about Chabad on campus. She said, “I love Chabad. I grew up with Chabad, because I came from an area where there are no synagogues.” I was intrigued, wondering if she came from a really rural area in the Bible Belt. She continued, “I mean, there are reform and conservative congregations, but there are no religious Jews in Orange County, California.”

Even though I don’t necessarily identify with a particular denomination and definitely don’t do all the “right things” all the time (pass the fried shrimp), I was outright offended by this declaration. Since when are reform and conservative Jews separate from religious Jews? I’m sure there’s a reform rabbi somewhere who takes her religion a hell of a lot more seriously than a disenfranchised young Orthodox Jew. A person’s affiliation with a particular denomination says absolutely nothing about his or her affinity toward the religion; it speaks only to the way he or she expresses it.

In fact, I fully believe it is possible to be a strongly religious person with no loyalty to a synagogue at all. Especially in Judaism. Don’t we teach about the importance of things that are deeply personal, like building your own Jewish home, praying silently, and acting out the mitzvot, among many other things? Being a good Jew isn’t about which seminary the rabbi you most respect attended. It’s not about the siddur that you read from on the High Holidays. You can be a religious Jew no matter what variation of Judaism you subscribe to–that’s one of the most beautiful things about Judaism. It’s about taking what matters most to you and making it part of your life.

Judaism is a journey, not a destination. So Whether a Jew begins his religiousness in Orthodoxy and becomes more Reform in his ways, or a Conservative Jew spends her whole life adhering to the same sets of rules, regulations, and beliefs, or a Christian converts and finds a home in a Reconstructionist synagogue, the religion is about the journey and about what each Jew makes of it. Don’t ever try to define levels of religiosity based on denominational subscription. We as Jews should know, nothing should ever be that simple.

Shabbat Shalom to all the Jews out there, no matter how you identify.

Driving the Jewish conversation

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Our post last week on Rabbi Manis Friedman’s statement to Moment magazine calling for the murder of Palestinian civilians seems to have generated a bunch of attention. The JTA and Failed Messiah linked to us on Monday, and tonight both the Forward and the JTA have features on Friedman’s comments, as does the Pioneer Press in St. Paul, which quotes us. (A side note: the Pioneer Press quotes a line I wrote that refers to BTs and makes a half-joke about Mayanot. Do people in St. Paul actually know what those things are?) Rabbi Friedman himself has stepped back from the original remark in a statement on his personal site, and Lubavitch HQ has distanced itself from Friedman in a separate statement.

The Forward’s Nathaniel Popper has a great lede:

Like the best Chabad-Lubavitch rabbis, Manis Friedman has won the hearts of many unaffiliated Jews with his charismatic talks about love and God; it was Friedman who helped lead Bob Dylan into a relationship with Chabad.

But Friedman, who today travels the country as a Chabad speaker, showed a less warm and cuddly side when he was asked how he thinks Jews should treat their Arab neighbors.

Popper follows with a breathtaking quote from ADL chief Abe Foxman, who told him, “I am not shocked that there would be a rabbi who would have these views…but I am shocked that Moment would give up all editorial discretion and good sense to publish this as representative of Chabad.”

Never mind Foxman’s unfounded assumption that these views are totally alien to the Chabad mainstream. I’m troubled by the proposition that we can only allow official spokespeople of Chabad to speak on its behalf. It would be one thing if Moment had lined up Manis Friedman with URJ president Eric Yoffie and JTS chancellor Arnie Eisen, the de-facto heads of the Reform and Conservative movements, and presented him as the second coming of the Rebbe. But the Moment feature, which appears in every issue, makes a point of selecting rank-and-file members to represent each movement. Given that the Rebbe is dead (sorry, guys), I don’t understand the terror of ascribing beliefs to the Lubavitch movement that don’t come out of the mouths of the Chabad PR apparatus.

Anyway, congratulations to Moment for getting this out there.

Chabad rabbi to Moment: “Destroy [Muslim] holy sites”

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Rabbi Manis Friedman

Rabbi Manis Friedman

In the latest issue of Moment magazine (which features a cover story by New Voices contributor Jeremy Gillick), a group of American rabbis respond to the question, “How Should Jews Treat Their Arab Neighbors?” Most of the responses emphasize equality, morality, and restraint. Then a Chabad rabbi wheels out the crazy:

I don’t believe in western morality, i.e. don’t kill civilians or children, don’t destroy holy sites, don’t fight during holiday seasons, don’t bomb cemeteries, don’t shoot until they shoot first because it is immoral.

The only way to fight a moral war is the Jewish way: Destroy their holy sites. Kill men, women and children (and cattle). [Emphasis mine.]

The first Israeli prime minister who declares that he will follow the Old Testament will finally bring peace to the Middle East. First, the Arabs will stop using children as shields. Second, they will stop taking hostages knowing that we will not be intimidated. Third, with their holy sites destroyed, they will stop believing that G-d is on their side. Result: no civilian casualties, no children in the line of fire, no false sense of righteousness, in fact, no war.

Zero tolerance for stone throwing, for rockets, for kidnapping will mean that the state has achieved sovereignty. Living by Torah values will make us a light unto the nations who suffer defeat because of a disastrous morality of human invention.

Rabbi Manis Friedman
Bais Chana Institute of Jewish Studies
St. Paul, MN

When we published Jeremy’s piece on Lubavitch rabbis on the radical fringe of the settler movement, we were accused of exaggerating their importance. We were told that they were marginal figures, outside of the influence of Lubavitch HQ in Crown Heights, and that few American Lubavitchers shared their extremism. Rabbi Friedman’s wacky-if-it-weren’t-scary comment in Moment should defuse some of that criticism. Friedman seems to be a fully integrated into the mainstream American Chabad movement. He was the Rebbe’s translator until 1990, he has almost 200 articles and videos up at chabad.org, the movement’s official propaganda arm, and his Minnesota women’s yeshiva is listed in the official online directory of Chabad outposts. His website is fancy and looks well-funded.

When I come across this sort of thing, I wonder at Chabad’s popularity among secular Jewish students. These aren’t just bad politics, they’re insane politics. At what point does the Chabad rabbi tell the prospective Ba’al Teshuva that he thinks that Israel should “destroy their holy sites”? Probably not at the first Shabbat dinner, right? Maybe after two Shabbat dinners, a “lunch and learn,” and a Birthright trip through Mayanot?

For more on these subjects, check out my editorial on how Israel should treat Israeli Arabs from our February issue, and our September issue on Lubavitch.