Arthur Green on Abraham Joshua Heschel and Hasidism

Rabbi Jeff Marker's synopsis of Arthur Green's talk on Abraham Joshua Heschel and Hasidism.

"For Heschel the most significant mitzvot are
  Feeding the poor, ending war, marching with MLK.
  These are spiritual acts, not just political.
  These are the acts for which we were created.

"Heschel’s God was very personal, but we must do the work for God."

Originally posted by at Arthur Green on Abraham Joshua Heschel and Hasidism

On Thursday evening I went to the Abraham Joshua Heschel School and heard a lecture by Arthur Green titled “What Heschel Learned From Hasidism.”  Green was a close student of Heschel when he was a rabbinical student at the Jewish Theological Seminary in the 1960s.  It was a brilliant talk, though I thought I would share what I managed to take down and remember.

First of all, Green said, Heschel would have hated the title of the talk.  He did not like divisions in Jewish life.  He bridged worlds and was critical of all of them.  He wrote about many of them.

Heschel was a living link to the lost world of Jewish Europe.  In his first real appearance on the public stage in Americal, at YIVO in 1944, he spoke about that lost world.  He later expanded this into his book “The Earth is the Lord’s.”  Around the same time, in 1943-44, he reclaimed his middle name.  Before that he was known, and wrote as, Abraham Heschel.  After this he was Abraham Joshua Heschel.  This was the name of his famous great great grandfather and reflected his Hassidic identity.  His family was from the Ukrainian school of hasidism which was a kind of peasant hasidism.  His father was an immigrant to Warsaw which was generally dominated by the Ger/Kutsk school, which was more rational and skeptical of miracle workers and similar stories.  There were no yeshivas reflecting his heritage, and his early education was under the influence of Ger.  Heschel later said he lived between these two worlds, Medzibush and Kutsk.

Heschel grew to see the Hasidic world as “small minded” and wanted a secular education.  It would have been a scandal for him, scion of a Hasidic dynasty, to go to a secular gymnasium in Warsaw.  His tutor arranged for him to attend a gymnasium in Vilna, a center of the anti-Hasidic misnagdim.  After a year he enrolled in university in Berlin.  He also wrote poetry.  In time he learned to speak in Biblical language which was accessible to both Jews and Chrisitians.

So, what did Heschel learn from Hasidism?  Green says five things, and he will especially expand on the fifth.

A sense of wonder -  “The whole world is full of God’s glory!”

There is nothing you can prove
    Religious truth is about testifying, not proving.  His book “The Sabbath” is an expansion on ideas in
    “Sfas Emes,” a book by an earlier Gerer rebbe.

He understood the need for charismatic religious figures, but saw corruption in the Hasidic world.
    So he went back to the prophets as his authentic “rebbes.”
    (Buber, the outsider, could romanticize Hasidic leaders, not Heschel)
    His lecture “Did Maimonedes think he had attained prophesy?” actually applies to him also.
    He did become a prophetic figure, and saw it in Martin Luther King Jr. which led him to accept it             also in himself.
    There is a Hasidic expression “Zogt Torah” - to speak Torah (different from to learn or teach).
        The word IS the Torah.

Chesed and Simcha - Loving Kindness and Joy
    Even his criticism is through chesed.  
    His Judaism is of love and joy.  He rarely spoke about sin or repentance (unlike Solevetchik)
    He focuses on action, to do good, not focus on sin and guilt.  There not much reference to                 Messianism.  He is more interested in We redeeming God, not God redeeming us.

“God in Search of Man” - God needs us!
    The way we act is meaningful to God, it makes a difference, even in a cosmic sense.
    (This is contrary to Mainmonedes who says God is perfect, has no needs)
    This idea goes back to Ramban, Nachmanedes.  Mitzvot bring the Shechinah out of exile.

Heschel traced this debate back to Rabbis Akiba and Ishmael in the second century of the common era.
    Ishmael - the Mishkan (Tabernacle) is only post Golden Calf.  The people need it.
    Akiba - Mishkan is renewal of creation, full of secrets of creation.

Heschel derived this from Hasidism
    For early hasidim, all mitzvot/acts have cosmic significance.
    For later hasidim, the acts of the rebbes have this significance.

For Heschel the most significant mitzvot are
    Feeding the poor, ending war, marching with MLK.
    These are spiritual acts, not just political.
    These are the acts for which we were created.

Heschel’s God was very personal, but we must do the work for God
    (still balancing Metzibush and Kutsk)

These are my rough notes on a very polished talk, but I hope they give a sense of it.

Davar Torah Shabbat Ra'eh

Deathofkingjosiahatmegiddo

 

This morning I delivered a Davar Torah on Parashat Ra'eh, the weekly Torah portion, at Park Slope Jewish Center in Brooklyn. My talk's sources include Deuteronomy 11:26 -12:28, Max Vogelstein's book "Fertile Soil: A Political History of Israel Under the Divided Kingdom," and "A Homily on Political Messianism," a blog post by my American-Israeli cousin Sam Shube. Here is a link to the text of my Davar Torah:

David Cooper, Davar Torah, Shabbat Ra'eh, PSJC 27 Aug 2011 

Boy donates bar mitzvah money to help "Liberty" musical make it to Broadway

Joanna Molloy

Boy donates bar mitzvah money to help 'Liberty' musical make it to Broadway

Joanna Molloy

Wednesday, April 6th 2011, 4:00 AM

 

Jesse Naranjo (c.) stands with his mother Rachel, father Rodrigo, and sister Sophia. He donated all of his bar mitzvah money.
Adams for News
Jesse Naranjo (c.) stands with his mother Rachel, father Rodrigo, and sister Sophia. He donated all of his bar mitzvah money.
Read the entire article on nydailynews.com

"A lot of people aren't familiar with the story of how the Statue of Liberty came to the U.S., and I learned about it from this musical, not from school," Jesse said.

Tablet Magazine: Nuclear Options


At some point in the near or not-distant future, the State of Israel will face the question of nuclear retaliation. Consider the following not unlikely scenario: A nuclear-armed nation, or nuclear-armed terrorists, detonate enough nuclear devices to destroy utterly the land of Israel and most of its people, rendering it uninhabitable.

Israel has been called “a one-bomb state” in that a single megaton-sized bomb detonated in Tel Aviv could accomplish such destruction. Many prefer to live in denial of this possibility. The people of Israel don’t have this luxury. If you don’t think they’ve war-gamed this possibility, think again. Many focus on Iran’s potential nuclear weaponry and the statements of Iranian leaders such as Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani that Iran would “welcome” a nuclear exchange with Israel because while it might lose 15 million people there would be a billion and half Muslims left on earth and no Jews in what was once Israel. But there is less focus on the current reality of the so called “Islamic bomb”—Pakistan’s 60 to 100 nukes, now ever more vulnerable to takeover by Taliban al-Qaida sympathizers. Seizable by or salable to terrorists.

What happens if it happens? A “second Holocaust”? One thing we can be fairly certain of: Israel will have the capacity for nuclear retaliation. Israel has purchased and put into operation at least three German-manufactured (!) long-range “Dolphin class” submarines, capable of being fitted out with nuclear weapons.

There has been all sorts of information and disinformation about the disposition of these subs, but most analysts seem to believe they are cruising the waters of the Persian Gulf or the Red Sea, within range of the most likely targets. And, many believe, they are armed with nuclear-tipped Harpoon cruise missiles. Ready to retaliate.

This is complicated by the potential of an attack from a terrorist “bomb with no return address,” smuggled across any one of three borders, or lobbed in from off shore. Whom to retaliate against? And is retaliation moral under Jewish law?

From How the End Begins: The Road to a Nuclear World War III by Ron Rosenbaum. Copyright © 2011 by Ron Rosenbaum. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

Ron Rosenbaum, the author of How the End Begins [11], Explaining Hitler and The Shakespeare Wars, is a columnist for Slate. He lives in New York.

Read the entire article on tabletmag.com

This is the unshakable foundation of Halbertal’s thinking: “You cannot save your life at the expense of actual targeting of innocent people.” But his thinking can lead to some surprising conclusions such as his argument that in certain cases a preemptive nuclear strike can be moral while retaliation after being struck by nuclear weapons cannot be.

Edgar M. Bronfman: Opening Our Tent – Forward.com

Opening Our Tent

Opinion

By Edgar M. Bronfman

Published December 08, 2010, issue of December 17, 2010.

In this article Bronfman argues that intermarriage presents an opportunity rather than a threat and advocates outreach to the intermarried. Several of the comments below the article provide anecdotal evidence that supports Bronfman's points.

Jewish Museum 11/19/10-01/20/11: Daniel Libeskind does Hanukkah - New York NY

Libeskind_036

 

In "A Hanukkah Project: Daniel Libeskind's Line of Fire"  40 hanukkiot (Hanukkah menorahs) selected by curator Susan Braunstein from The Jewish Museum's permanent collection of over 500 hanukkiot are displayed on a stand designed by architect Daniel Libeskind.


Read the entire article and view a slideshow of the exhibited hanukkiot.


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Jewish education 101: 90@190: Open Beit Midrash Mondays at Mechon Hadar

Mechonhadar

 

Do you have ninety minutes a week to dedicate to Jewish study? For the next four Mondays Mechon Hadar offers free classes on Monday evenings:

90@190: An Open Beit Midrash at Mechon Hadar

 

Read the entire article and view a sample lecture on examiner.com.

 

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Jewish non-fiction author talks in Brooklyn and Manhattan this week and next - New York NY

Beckerman_launch_evite2
Forward writer Gal Beckerman will speak at several events this week and next to promote his new book  "When They Come for Us, We’ll be Gone -  The Epic Struggle to Save Soviet Jewry," as will Daniel Gordis, author of "Saving Israel - How the Jewish People Can Win a War that May Never End." 

Read the entire article on examiner.com