debka_notion: (Default)
( Jan. 29th, 2006 02:35 pm)
[livejournal.com profile] redlily just did my dishes And figured out how to fix our internet connection. She's got a bunch of brownie points in my books right now.

ANd now I really Ought to get some real work done.
debka_notion: (Default)
( Jan. 29th, 2006 02:35 pm)
[livejournal.com profile] redlily just did my dishes And figured out how to fix our internet connection. She's got a bunch of brownie points in my books right now.

ANd now I really Ought to get some real work done.
debka_notion: (Default)
( Jan. 29th, 2006 05:48 pm)
I was just thinking of some changes in the Brandeis Jewish community over the last 4ish years that I've been noticing lately, and finally remembered when I could write them down.

1. Freshman year there was a huge ruckus about the suggestion to include non-Orthodox books in the Beit Midrash. The suggestion was voted down, just barely. I have seen a copy of the Hertz Chumash, a Siddur Sim Shalom, and a Plaut Chumash on the regular Beit Midrash shelves of late. The Beit Midrash Co-ordinator has also been putting up "displays" of books (from the school library) by different important Jewish thinkers, usually putting them up for Shabbos and leaving them for a few days. One of them was Mordechai Kaplan. I'm fairly sure that there's more comfort inside the liberal community with using the Beit Midrash. In my mind, this is a positive shift.

2. The Egal community broke out into spontaneous singing and dancing after havdalah this week. It was rather surprising (they did this once before, but that was when Steve found a shofar in the rabbi's office and blew it and people decided to run with it for a bit), and remarkably high energy and just generally happy. Similarly, I don't think that Kiddush Levanah was even in the communal vocabulary freshman year. It's a larger community, with what seems like a much stronger tendency towards neo-hasidism.

Interestingly, the spontaneous dancing happened in gender-segregated cirlces. Steve remarked that the minyan has a tendency to have trouble maintaining its egalitarianism. It really is a matter of much debate: it's hard to work out a stance that works both for the folks who are egalitarian to the point of wanting to get rid of the kohen and levi aliyot and people who are egalitarian in their view of prayer obligations, but not necessarily in regards to other aspects of halakhic life. But this problem/issue is not at all new.
debka_notion: (Default)
( Jan. 29th, 2006 05:48 pm)
I was just thinking of some changes in the Brandeis Jewish community over the last 4ish years that I've been noticing lately, and finally remembered when I could write them down.

1. Freshman year there was a huge ruckus about the suggestion to include non-Orthodox books in the Beit Midrash. The suggestion was voted down, just barely. I have seen a copy of the Hertz Chumash, a Siddur Sim Shalom, and a Plaut Chumash on the regular Beit Midrash shelves of late. The Beit Midrash Co-ordinator has also been putting up "displays" of books (from the school library) by different important Jewish thinkers, usually putting them up for Shabbos and leaving them for a few days. One of them was Mordechai Kaplan. I'm fairly sure that there's more comfort inside the liberal community with using the Beit Midrash. In my mind, this is a positive shift.

2. The Egal community broke out into spontaneous singing and dancing after havdalah this week. It was rather surprising (they did this once before, but that was when Steve found a shofar in the rabbi's office and blew it and people decided to run with it for a bit), and remarkably high energy and just generally happy. Similarly, I don't think that Kiddush Levanah was even in the communal vocabulary freshman year. It's a larger community, with what seems like a much stronger tendency towards neo-hasidism.

Interestingly, the spontaneous dancing happened in gender-segregated cirlces. Steve remarked that the minyan has a tendency to have trouble maintaining its egalitarianism. It really is a matter of much debate: it's hard to work out a stance that works both for the folks who are egalitarian to the point of wanting to get rid of the kohen and levi aliyot and people who are egalitarian in their view of prayer obligations, but not necessarily in regards to other aspects of halakhic life. But this problem/issue is not at all new.
.

Profile

debka_notion: (Default)
debka_notion
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags