Year: 2003
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 What’s the darkest night of the year? You might guess the winter solstice on December 21st! But that’s the shortest night of the year, not necessarily the darkest. Each year, on the sixth night of Hanukkah, we mark the new moon of Tevet. Hanukkah begins on the 25th of Kislev, …
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 Contrary to popular opinion the Hebrew word “shalom” does not mean “peace,” at least not in the English sense of the word. It comes from a Hebrew root-word that means “wholeness.” And what is wholeness? In the Hebraic way of thinking wholeness is the joining together of opposites. That’s why …
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 1. God Has a Plan If you accept the idea of Divine Providence then bear with my thesis for a moment even if you disagree with some of my conclusions. G-d spread the Jewish people out throughout Europe during the Middle Ages on a special mission. After the folly of …
by Rabbi David ZaslowNovember, 2003 I was eight years old in 1955 when Hurricane Diane struck the East Coast. I lived in in a little beach community called Sea Gate, in Coney Island, Brooklyn. The day of the storm was dark, and the rain soared downward and even sideways across our front window. I was …
by Rabbi David Zaslow October, 2003 I remember being at the film “Schindler’s List” with an Israeli friend who pointed out that everytime Hebrew was spoken a different accent was used. Jews from German pronounced a Hebrew word one way, Jews from Poland pronounced the same word differently. But my Israeli friend pointed out that …
by Rabbi David ZaslowSeptember, 2003 As I think about my father’s life, the distance between 1930 and 1963 seems vast. So many stories took place within those years: the Great Depression, World War II, the 50’s, and the start of the 60’s. Yet, in an odd way, the distance in time within my own life …
by Rabbi David ZaslowApril, 2003 As we know, there are many levels of freedom. One person is free on the outside and bound on the inside. Another is bound in chains and free in her soul. Passover in Hebrew is פֶּסַח pesach and the word has its etymology in the leaping or skipping movement of …
Year: 2003
The Interplay of Light and Dark
Posted: December 31, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 What’s the darkest night of the year? You might guess the winter solstice on December 21st! But that’s the shortest night of the year, not necessarily the darkest. Each year, on the sixth night of Hanukkah, we mark the new moon of Tevet. Hanukkah begins on the 25th of Kislev, …
Category: Blog
Shalom
Posted: December 31, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 Contrary to popular opinion the Hebrew word “shalom” does not mean “peace,” at least not in the English sense of the word. It comes from a Hebrew root-word that means “wholeness.” And what is wholeness? In the Hebraic way of thinking wholeness is the joining together of opposites. That’s why …
Category: Blog
The Shifting Paradigm Within Islam
Posted: December 31, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowDecember, 2003 1. God Has a Plan If you accept the idea of Divine Providence then bear with my thesis for a moment even if you disagree with some of my conclusions. G-d spread the Jewish people out throughout Europe during the Middle Ages on a special mission. After the folly of …
Category: Blog
The Kites We Fly
Posted: November 28, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowNovember, 2003 I was eight years old in 1955 when Hurricane Diane struck the East Coast. I lived in in a little beach community called Sea Gate, in Coney Island, Brooklyn. The day of the storm was dark, and the rain soared downward and even sideways across our front window. I was …
Category: Blog
The Accent of Faith
Posted: October 31, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David Zaslow October, 2003 I remember being at the film “Schindler’s List” with an Israeli friend who pointed out that everytime Hebrew was spoken a different accent was used. Jews from German pronounced a Hebrew word one way, Jews from Poland pronounced the same word differently. But my Israeli friend pointed out that …
Category: Blog
Our Fragmented Sense of Time
Posted: September 1, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowSeptember, 2003 As I think about my father’s life, the distance between 1930 and 1963 seems vast. So many stories took place within those years: the Great Depression, World War II, the 50’s, and the start of the 60’s. Yet, in an odd way, the distance in time within my own life …
Category: Blog
Freedom in This Season
Posted: April 1, 2003 by ayala
by Rabbi David ZaslowApril, 2003 As we know, there are many levels of freedom. One person is free on the outside and bound on the inside. Another is bound in chains and free in her soul. Passover in Hebrew is פֶּסַח pesach and the word has its etymology in the leaping or skipping movement of …
Category: Blog