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14 Kislev 5770 / December 1, 2009 Torah Reading: Vayishlach
 #725 Treat All Human Beings With Respect We have an obligation to treat all human beings with the highest level of respect. Our politeness should spring from an awareness that we are all created in the image of God. Today, think of someone you don't treat with the respect that you know you should. The next time you interact with that person, go out of your way to treat him or her with the respect due to someone created in the image of God. (see Rabbi Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler - Michtav MaiEliyahu, vol.4, pp.246-7; Rabbi Pliskin's "Consulting the Wise") 14 Kislev  Birth of Reuven, Jacob's first son and the first of the Twelve Tribes of Israel (Genesis 29:32). Jacob had originally worked for seven years in order to marry Rachel, but at the last minute Leah appeared under the chuppah instead. On their wedding night, Reuven was conceived. Though he was first-born, he eventually lost his leadership role, due to a reputation for impetuousness. 14 Kislev And if not now, then when? (Ethics of the Fathers 1:14). Hillel's famous statement is a bit enigmatic. The simple answer is, "Later." Why can't we take care of whatever it is some other time? Granted that procrastination is not a virtue, why does Hillel imply that if not now, then it will never be? The Rabbi of Gur explained that if I do something later, it may indeed get done, but I will have missed the current "now." The present "now" has but a momentary existence, and whether used or not, it will never return. Later will be a different "now." King Solomon dedicates seven famous verses of Ecclesiastes to his principle that everything has its specific time. His point comes across clearly: I can put off doing a good deed for someone until tomorrow, but will that deed, done exactly as I would have done it today, carry the same impact? The wisdom that I learn at this moment belongs to this moment. The good deed that I do at this moment belongs to this moment. Of course I can do them later, but they will belong to the later moments. What I can do that belongs to this moment is only that which I do now. Today I shall ... ... try to value each moment. I must realize that my mission is not only to get something done, but to get things done in their proper time, and the proper time may be now. See more books by Rabbi Abraham Twerski at Artscroll.com Click here to read an array of articles on the Weekly Torah Portion What do you think of this email? Help us make these personalized newsletters ? and our site ? better. Send us your questions and comments to tellus@aish.com. Aish.com is the most complete online Jewish resource. We hope you enjoy receiving this personalized newsletter. Aish.com One Western Wall Plaza PO Box 14149 Jerusalem 91141 Israel Tel - 972-2-628-5666 Fax - 972-2-627-3172 © 2009 Aish.com 
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Watermelon Slices Soap, Watermelon Taffy Fragrance
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By Nathaniel Popper
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Medical student Nofrat Frenkel was recently arrested for wearing a tallit at the Kotel. Authorities said she was "performing a religious act that offends the feelings of others." In this essay, Frenkel writes about her arrest. Read more
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The latest report by the FBI contained alarming news: There were 1,013 cases of hate crimes motivated by anti-Jewish bias in 2008. But analyzing the report's numbers demands a heavy dose of perspective. Read more
By Nathan Jeffay
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By Matthew E. Berger
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By Beth Schwartzapfel
Beth Schwartzapfel looks at the work of Moshe Frumin, an Israeli sculptor and musician who recreates biblical instruments with clues from the Tanach and archeology. His work is currently on display at the Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art in Tulsa, Okla. Read more
By Jacob NeusnerRenowned Judaic scholar Jacob Neusner, who was educated at the Conservative-affiliated Jewish Theological Seminary and raised his children in the Cosnervative movement, explains why he has returned to the Reform Judaism of his youth. "After a half-century of apostasy, I affirm Reform Judaism as the American Judaism both of my personal choice and of our communal necessity," he writes. Read more
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What if Kafka had been hip? Eli Valley's latest comic delves into the world of cool Jews in the Habsburg Empire circa 1903. Read more
By Lawrence Grossman
Penguin Classic's imprint began in 1946 and it has since published more than 1,300 titles, under the motto: "The best books ever written." The inclusion of a volume of selections from the Talmud in a series of world classics is long overdue. Read more
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What if the story of 1989 is not one of popular uprising but a tale of a corrupt order collapsing after a light shove rather than being demolished by a stampede? Two books offer new views of the Berlin Wall's fall. Read more
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A recent "Curb Your Enthusiasm" show-within-a-show plot-line hinged on Bernard Madoff's scam. The Forward has dug up some other notable examples of how the Ponzi schemer has seeped into pop culture. Read more
By Lisa Alcalay Klug
With Hanukkah approaching, the Forward has a guide to kitschy holiday gifts. Among the offbeat items to make our list: "Jewish Mother" chewing gum, a dreidel-poker hybrid, a latke spatula, and a stack of "Plotz" magazines. Read more
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The Talmud: A Selection
Selected, translated and edited by Norman Solomon
Penguin Classics, 896 pages, $16.00
By Lawrence Grossman
The distinguished Penguin Classics imprint began in 1946 with a translation of ?The Odyssey,? and it has published more than 1,300 titles since, under the motto: ?The best books ever written.?
The inclusion of a volume of selections from the Talmud in a series of world classics is long overdue, since the Talmud is, in the words of Norman Solomon, editor of this anthology, ?the classic text of Judaism, second only to the Bible.? The fact that it was never finally edited, Solomon explains, in no way diminishes its significance, since ?Talmud is essentially an activity, not a book,? whose purpose is ?to facilitate a discourse in progress? about how to apply Scripture ? and hence the will of God ? to every aspect of daily life. One would hardly guess from such a benign description that the Talmud has been vilified more bitterly and over a longer period of time than any other Jewish literary production. In the Middle Ages, Christian spokesmen accused it of mocking the fundamentals of their faith, teaching contempt for Christians and delaying the conversion of the Jews by setting up a legalistic smokescreen that prevented them from seeing how the New Testament fulfilled the teachings of the Old. Copies of the Talmud were censored, confiscated and destroyed, largely explaining why the earliest extant manuscript of the entire Talmud dates back to only 1343. The Talmud has not fared much better in modern times.
Antisemites ascribed to it every vice they associated with Jews: xenophobia, materialism, aspirations to world domination and more. August Rohling titled his classic 19th-century work of Jew hatred ?Der Talmudjude? (?The Talmud Jew?). The 19th century also saw many Jews turn against the Talmud. As ghetto walls fell and Enlightenment liberalism began opening up Western society to Jewish participation, Jews eager for acceptance were embarrassed by a Talmudic legacy that presupposed an autonomous Jewish community closed off from broader cultural trends, posited a system of Jewish law separate from that of the host nation and, for good measure, operated according to a system of reasoning seemingly alien to modern modes of inquiry. Far more congenial for such Jews were the prophetic books of the Bible, with their universalistic message of ethics, social justice and peace. Zionist thinkers also denigrated the Talmud, but from the opposite standpoint: Unlike the Bible ? the inspiring record of ancient Jewish political sovereignty ? the Talmud reeked of exilic powerlessness and meek submission to the gentile. Those eager to retrieve the Talmud?s good name were reduced to cherry-picking quotations from the work that they deemed wise or charming and passing them off as the Talmud, much as many Jews identify Sholom Aleichem?s character Tevye with prewar Eastern European Judaism. Emanuel Deutsch, the scholar who tutored novelist George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) in rabbinics, noticed this as early as 1867, when he criticized those who ?have torn a few pieces off that gigantic living body.? A good example is ?The Talmudic Anthology,? a very popular book, published in 1945, whose title page announces the real content: ?Parables, Folk-tales, Fables, Aphorisms, Epigrams, Sayings, Anecdotes, Proverbs and Exegetical Interpretations.? One would never know that the Talmud is primarily concerned with the legal analysis that is the basis for living a Jewish life. The publication of ?The Talmud: A Selection? suggests that we have entered a new era in which the Talmud can be discussed objectively, without Jewish defensiveness or fear of antisemitism. By presenting meaty selections from every one of the 63 Talmudic tractates in English translation, the book conveys something of the real feel of the Talmud as a whole, interspersing complex legal discussions with stories, practical rulings and wide-ranging biblical commentary. Solomon?s introduction, which covers the history and literary character of the Talmud, and his erudite footnotes to the selections themselves, admirably convey the insights of both traditional and modern authorities, ranging from the classic Medieval commentary of Rashi to 20th-century figures like Rabbi Moshe Feinstein and philosopher Emmanuel Levinas. ?The Talmud: A Selection? is so instructive and well crafted ? as well as accessible to the educated reader who has never before studied Talmud ? that it seems ungrateful to ask for more. But in truth, it could have used a short epilogue that would step back from the texts and examine the Talmud?s formative role in shaping the Jewish people, a long-range influence that takes the work out of the category of ancient literary curiosity and renders it a true ?classic.? The reader ought to be told, even in summary form, how the centuries that Jews spent steeped in the Talmud laid the basis for the contributions that their secularized descendants would make to world culture. The penchant for studying godly law and lore, for example, engendered the interests and habits that sparked later Jewish intellectual achievement; the open-ended Talmudic debates set the stage for some Jews to think ?outside the box? and chart new paths in science and mathematics; the stress on rationality and quantification sharpened Jewish business acumen, and the wordplay, irony and whimsicality encountered in the Talmud bred a distinctive Jewish humor ? no Talmud, no Woody Allen and no Seinfeld. The publication of this impeccably scholarly and nonpolemical book of extensive selections from the Talmud comes at a time when serious Talmud study and the determination to live by the light of its teachings are almost exclusively confined to Orthodox Jews. If secular Jewish high achievers have been living largely off the cultural capital of their Talmudic progenitors, how many more generations will it take before the legacy of the Talmud fades out completely for them, leaving such Jews with? what? Lawrence Grossman is editor of the American Jewish Year Book. *********************************************************************************************************************************************************
The most important text in Judaism after the Old Testament- available for the first time in Penguin Classics
One of the most significant religious texts in the world, The Talmud is a compilation of the teachings of major Jewish scholars from the classic period of rabbinic Judaism. In a range of styles, including commentary, parables, proverbs, and anecdotes, it provides guidance on all aspects of everyday life. This selection of its most illuminating passages makes accessible to modern readers the centuries of Jewish thought contained within. Norman Solomon's lucid translation from the Bavli (Babylonian) is accompanied by an introduction on The Talmud's arrangement, social and historical background, reception, and authors.
About the Author
Norman Solomon is a fellow in Modern Jewish Thought at the Oxford Center for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.
Product Details
* Paperback: 896 pages
* Publisher: Penguin Classics; 1 edition (June 30, 2009)
* Language: English
* ISBN-10: 014144178X
* ISBN-13: 978-0141441788
* Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 1.8 inches
* Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
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