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eCLAL
September 18, 2009
Have you ever felt left out?
September 18, 2009 "Locked out by the circumstances of your life? At one time or another, most of us have. As Yom Kippur ends, the final words of the day remind
us that we hold more keys than we often imagine to the locked places in our lives...."
More...
By Rabbi Brad Hirschfield from Clal
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Awesome Days: An Interview with Rabbi Kula
September 11, 2009 There really are three basic questions that these
ten days invite us to think about. One is can I change as a human being? Can I
really become better? I think that’s a really hard question to ask ... [the]
second question is, is forgiveness possible? Can I forgive other people, and can
I feel forgiven? I think that’s also a very difficult question ... the third
question that runs through all of these days is am I accountable for my
behavior?...
More...
From Religion & Ethics Newsweekly
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Forgiveness: A How To Guide
September 17 2009 "Like all New Years celebrations, it’s a chance to start over. And starting over often involves forgiveness—both giving it and
getting it. Neither of those is easy, but both are within our grasp...."
More... By Brad Hirschfield from Beliefnet.com
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Compassion and Civility in Society
September 15, 2009
Mike Collins interviews Brad Hirschfield about civility in public discourse, compassion and polarization.
Listen...
From Charlotte Talks with Mike Collins, WFAE (Charlotte, NC, Public Radio)
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A Traveler’s Guide to Uncertain Times: Time-tested Wisdom for Navigating the Economic Crisis
with Rabbis Telushkin, Blech, Kula and Jacobs
September 15, 2009 JInsider.com’s documentary is airing on
Shalom-TV during the High Holidays. How can we deal with the financial crisis,
how do we step back, anchor ourselves and put current events into a contextual
perspective?
More.... From Jinsider.com
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Jewish High Holy Day Service to be Streamed Live
September 16, 2009 Outside of the biblical gathering at Mt. Sinai, the annual televised Kol Nidre service that streamed online to more than 220,000 people last
year may be the world’s largest single Jewish service ever. On September 27, JewishTVNetwork.com (www.jewishtvnetwork.com)will stream its third annual Kol Nidre
service....
More.... From JTN Productions
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Apologizing Is Hard, Just Ask Joe, Kanye and Serena, But We Can
September 17, 2009
"An American Jewish leader is unimpressed by the public apologies offered by rapper Kanye West, tennis star Serena Williams and Congressman Joe Wilson after their
televised outbursts.Rabbi Irwin Kula ... says the apology that matters is the one that’s made to the person who was actually offended ... apology also helps reconcile
the offender to God...."
More...
From AP/KXnet.com (the #1 TV news website in North Dakota)
Other interviews Rabbi Kula did on celebrity apologies:
—A Closer Look, AP Radio, 9/15/09 (national broadcast)
—Erik and Jack Attack, CRN, 9/16
—The Lars Larson Show, Westwood One, 9/17/09
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Apologizing Is Hard, Just Ask Joe, Kanye and Serena, But We Can
September 16, 2009
"The past week’s event provide important reminders of why we all of need Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, whether we are Jewish or not ... the recent actions of Joe
Wilson, Kanye West, and Serena Williams remind us that we all have things for which to apologize and many of us find it hard to do so...."
More... By Brad Hirschfield
from Beliefnet.com’s Windows & Doors
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Bringing Guns to Church Fosters Danger, Not Safety
September 12, 2009 The Washington Post features an excerpt of Rabbi Hirschfield’s blog: "It’s both empowering and healing for people who are threatened to take some control over a situation that threatens them....."
More... By Brad Hirschfield from The Washington Post-Newsweek’s "On Faith"
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Irwin Kula on Healthcare, Obama’s speech, and the civility or lack of it in the public discourse
September 12, 2009
Rev. Welton Gaddy discusses these issues with Rabbi Kula.
Listen...
With Rev. Welton Gaddy from State of Belief, Air America
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Health care debate even splits religious audience
August 31, 2009
"...‘We have to ask: Do we believe that health care should be treated as a commodity, to be bought and sold no different than a car?’ said Rabbi Irwin Kula..."
More...
By Jeff Brumley from Florida Times Union
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Rabbis mull ‘God’s Partners’ line
August 24, 2009 "...‘When you say ‘who shall live and who shall die, who by thirst and who by fire,’ it can also be who by getting medical
care and who by not getting medical care,’ he said. ‘If we actually find a way to ensure that there’s universal access to medical care, then we will be
God’s partners in matters of life and death. It was a kind of inspirational moment speaking to religious people using religious language,’ Kula said..."
More... By Ben Smith from Politico.com
Brad Hirschfield was interviewed on this topic on The PM Show on Cable Radio Network, 8/20/09, and on The Busted Halo on Sirius Satellite Radio, 8/26/09
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The Health Care Debate: "Bending the Curve: Effective Steps to Address Long-Term Health Care Spending Growth"
September 9, 2009
"...‘The health care debate has become polarized between right and left, conservatives and liberals, and Democrats and Republicans in ways that have not only
undermined substantive conversation on one of the most important personal and public issues — our own health and the health of our families and fellow citizens, but has dangerously
pitted people against each other...The Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings has just released a paper called Bending the Curve which is a result of
serious conversation across significant divides resulting in a remarkable consensus...."
More...
By Irwin Kula from Clal
Executive Summary and Full Report...
From The Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings Institute
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9/11: A Ritual to Remember
September 11, 2009 I live in New York City. Two friends, including someone at whose wedding I had recently been the rabbi, died in the World Trade Center.
The acrid smell came through my apartment windows for days and sacred ashes, which I wiped away with tears, fell on my window sills for weeks.
My children, who were 13 and 10 at the time, were cut off from me and my wife, as they could not get home from school on 9/11 because the subways were closed. The father of one
of my daughter’s playmates, from the time she was a toddler, was killed on 9/11. The fear we felt was unforgettable and the innocence our kids lost forever so very sad.
So what message would I like to send out today 9/11? What memories do I want to preserve and wisdom do I want to learn at least for today? No words at all. Simply the
following chant (using an ancient melody used to chant the Biblical book of Lamentations which describes the destruction of Jerusalem) of actual final cell phone
conversations of people, who in the face of terror and the dearness of the vanishing moment, showed no anger or any desire for revenge, but simply and heroically witnessed a
yearning to love and the faith that love ultimately swallows up death.
Listen... By Rabbi Irwin Kula from Clal
Published as "Sacred
Memories: A 9/11 Ritual" in
Irwin Kula’s blog on The Huffington Post
Also available on
The Washington Post
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Learning How to Remember
September 11, 2009 We have discovered the limits of our collective national memory. It's about eight years. There was almost nothing about 9/11 in the news until
this morning, and even today's headlines in the nation's leading papers reflect the sense that we have moved on, that if anything, we are remembering an event that not only
occurred in the past, but is no longer a real part of our present ... guess it's a good thing that we are making so little of the eighth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks
— good insofar as it reflects a diminishing level of fear, anxiety and suspicion in our country. A certain amount of forgetting is appropriate — it's part of the
healing process. But we need to figure how to let go a little w/o forgetting almost entirely.
I cannot help but wonder if we have not strayed too far down that latter path, the one of forgetting the past so much that we learn no lessons from it...
More... By Rabbi Brad Hirschfield from Washington Post/Newsweek‘s "On Faith"
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Is It Possible for a Brother to Murder His Twin?
September 9, 2009 Ashleigh Banfield talks with ethical expert Rabbi Brad Hirschfield about the trial of Derris Lewis who is charged with his twin brother’s
murder.
Watch... From In Session with Ashleigh Banfield Tru-TV
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"Love your enemies, civility advocates say"
August 26, 2009 "...‘The first question when things start to spin out of control ... is not to get in the person’s face and preach about
what’s right with a capital R,’ said [Rabbi Brad} Hirschfield ... ‘But asking the person who’s bent out of shape, ‘What is it you’re really
terrified about?’..."
More... By Adelle M. Banks from Religion News Service
This article also appeared in The Oklahoman, 8/26/09
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Schools Must Avoid Imposing Religion If They Teach About It
September 5, 2009 The Washington Post features an excerpt of Rabbi Hirschfield’s blog: "How much theology should be taught in our nation’s public schools? None, zip, nada...."
More... By Brad Hirschfield from The Washington Post
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Worse than War— New Film
August 7, 2009
A pre-release screening of Worse than War, co-produced by JTN Productions and 13 WNET took place on August 6, 2009. Post-screening program with Brad
Hirschfield and JTN CEO and Exec. Producer Jay Sanderson ...."The real
challenge in recalling any trauma is not how many facts are preserved, but how our memory of the past prevents a recurrence of its horrors for any potential victim,"
said Brad Hirschfield...."
More... By Judy Epstein from Clal
Hear the discussion...
Listen to news coverage: Mitzi Rapkin from KAJX Aspen Public Radio...
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Clal Selects Inaugural Class
for Its Ground-Breaking
Rabbis Without Borders Fellowship Program
June 5, 2009
"Rabbis Without Borders (RWB), CLAL’s new initiative to help rabbis make Jewish wisdom accessible to the wider American public, selected its first group of fellows
for its competitive rabbinic fellowship program...."
More...
By Judy Epstein from CLAL
For more about RWB and Fellows around the country:
New Jersey Jewish Standard...
Detroit Jewish News...
The Jewish Daily Forward
Washington Jewish Week
Metro West New Jersey Jewish News
New Mexico Jewish Link
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
St. Louis Jewish Light
St. Louis Dispatch
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American Pilgrimage with Rabbi Brad Hirschfield
June 24, 2009
Aired on Bridges TV—American Muslim TV Network, the series provides an
in-depth look at the issues dividing people of faith. In these episodes, Rabbi
Brad Hirschfield speaks with various Imams from around the country. In this latest episode, Rabbi Hirschfield speaks with Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, who is the Director of
Outreach at the Dar Al Hijrah Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia.
View American Pilgrimage
episode 12...
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Hirschfield and Kula: Intelligent Talk Radio
Incivility in the Healthcare Debate, And the Culture Wars’ New Front: Education
September 12, 2009
Listen to Brad and Irwin as they discuss whether he level of public discourse out of control, and a new debate in Texas: How much God should be taught as part of the history curriculum?...
Be sure to check the website each
week for more riffing with the rabbis on topics of the day.
Listen ....
From Hirschfieldandkula.com, broadcast on KXL, Portland, OR |
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Torah Portion of the Week Commentary
from Remember for Life: Holocaust Survivors’ Stories of Faith and Hope Edited by Brad Hirschfield
Featuring Rosh Ha-shanah
September 16, 2009
"Rosh Hashoneh was the selektzia—the selection about who was next to be killed..."
Read more... From Remember for Life
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