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Talmud Class: What Does Stephen Sondheim Mentoring a Young Singer Teach Us about Our Relationship With Israel?
Talmud Class: What Does Stephen Sondheim Mentoring a Young Singer Teach Us about Our Relationship With Israel?
ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Sep 17, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
For my money, the best, simplest, shortest expression of the complexity of Israel remains the opening chapter of Ari Shavit’s classic My Promised Land. Shavit’s grandfather was among the first Zionists who settled Eretz Yisrael. Shavit himself served in the Israeli army as a paratrooper. The book opens: “For as long as I can remember, I remember fear. Existential fear.” Two pages later: “For as long as I can remember, I remember occupation. Only a week after I asked my father whether the Arab nations were going to conquer Israel, Israel conquered the Arab-populated regions of the West Bank and Gaza.”
How do we, and our children and grandchildren, respond to this complexity?
One response is, it’s exhausting. We have enough problems here in America. Disconnection.
Another response is indictment. Using words like Apartheid. Hostility.
That is where a lot of American Jews (especially young American Jews) are, somewhere between disconnected and hostile.
Tomorrow we are going to consider a model of wisdom from an unlikely source: Stephen Sondheim mentoring a young singer in singing Send in the Clowns . Could this model a different move to keep American Jews in loving dialogue with Israel?
This clip of Sondheim working with a young singer embodies a classic source, Maimonides’ teaching on repentance, which is about a directional energy of moving towards in love rather than away from in anger. Maimonides offers: “Repentance brings near those who are far away.” What does this text about directional energy have to say about bringing our disconnected or hostile generations closer to Israel?
How do we, and our children and grandchildren, respond to this complexity?
One response is, it’s exhausting. We have enough problems here in America. Disconnection.
Another response is indictment. Using words like Apartheid. Hostility.
That is where a lot of American Jews (especially young American Jews) are, somewhere between disconnected and hostile.
Tomorrow we are going to consider a model of wisdom from an unlikely source: Stephen Sondheim mentoring a young singer in singing Send in the Clowns . Could this model a different move to keep American Jews in loving dialogue with Israel?
This clip of Sondheim working with a young singer embodies a classic source, Maimonides’ teaching on repentance, which is about a directional energy of moving towards in love rather than away from in anger. Maimonides offers: “Repentance brings near those who are far away.” What does this text about directional energy have to say about bringing our disconnected or hostile generations closer to Israel?
Released:
Sep 17, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Shabbat Sermon: Love in Paradise with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz by From the Bimah: Jewish Lessons for Life