Jesus in the Talmud – Wikipedia

Jesus in the Talmud

There are several passages in the Talmud which are believed by some scholars to be references to Jesus. The name used in the Talmud is "Yeshu", the Aramaic vocalization (though not spelling) of the Hebrew name Yeshua.[1][2]

The identification of Yeshu as Jesus is problematic. For example, the Talmud mentions Yeshu ben Pandera/ben Stada's stepfather, Pappos ben Yehuda, speaking with Rabbi Akiva,[3] who was executed at the culmination of the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE.[4][5] Furthermore, Yeshu the Pharisee student is described as being a student of the second-century BCE nasi Joshua ben Perachiah, as well as being among the exiled Pharisees returning to Israel following their persecution[6][7] by John Hyrcanus,[8] an event which occurred in 74 BC. Additionally, Yeshu the sorcerer was executed by the royal government which lost legal authority in 63 BC. These events would place the lifetime of either Yeshu decades before or after the birth and death of Jesus.[9][10] Still, there are numerous other passages pertaining to an individual named "Yeshu" that either do not provide a specific time period or else specify a time where it is reasonable to assume mentioning of Jesus would even be possible (take for example a notable passage, Gittin 57a mentioning the nobleman Onkelos conjuring the tormented spirit of "Yeshu" Onkelos lived more than a century after Jesus, thus making it possible the Yeshu mentioned could indeed be Jesus, though the likelihood of this is still questionable) still opening the possibility that whichever Yeshu mentioned might be Jesus.

The first Christian censorship of the Talmud happened in the year 521.[11] However, far better documented censorship began during the disputations of the Middle Ages. Catholic authorities[who?] accused the Talmud of containing blasphemous references to Jesus and his mother, Mary. Jewish apologists during the disputations said there were no references to Jesus in the Talmud. They asserted that Joshua was a common Jewish name, along with its derivations, and that the citations referred to individuals other than Jesus. The disputations led to many of the references being removed (censored) from subsequent editions of the Talmud.

In the modern era there has been a variance of views among scholars of the possible references to Jesus in the Talmud, depending partly on presuppositions as to the extent to which the ancient rabbis were preoccupied with Jesus and Christianity.[12] This range of views among modern scholars on the subject has been described as a range from "minimalists" who see few passages with reference to Jesus, to "maximalists" who see many passages having reference to Jesus.[13] These terms "minimalist" and "maximalist" are not unique to discussion of the Talmud text; they are also used in discussion of academic debate on other aspects of Jewish vs. Christian and Christian vs. Jewish contact and polemic in the early centuries of Christianity, such as the Adversus Iudaeos genre.[14] "Minimalists" include Jacob Z. Lauterbach (1951) ("who recognize[d] only relatively few passages that actually have Jesus in mind"),[13] while "maximalists" include Herford (1903), (who concluded that most of the references related to Jesus, but were non-historical oral traditions which circulated among Jews),[15][16] and Schfer (2007) (who concluded that the passages were parodies of parallel stories about Jesus in the New Testament incorporated into the Talmud in the 3rd and 4th centuries that illustrate the inter-sect rivalry between Judaism and nascent Christianity[17][pageneeded]).

Some editions of the Talmud are missing some of the references, which were removed either by Christian censors starting in the 13th century,[18] or by Jews themselves due to fear of reprisals, or some were possibly lost by negligence or accident.[19] However, most modern editions published since the early 20th century have restored most of the references.[citation needed]

During the Middle Ages a series of debates on Judaism were staged by the Christian church including the Disputation of Paris, the Disputation of Barcelona, and Disputation of Tortosa and during those disputations, Jewish converts to Christianity, such as Pablo Christiani and Nicholas Donin claimed the Talmud contained insulting references to Jesus.[20] An early work describing Jesus in the Talmud was Pugio Fidei ("Dagger of Faith") (c. 1280) by the Catalan Dominican Ramn Mart, a Jewish convert to Christianity.[21] In 1681 Johann Christoph Wagenseil translated and published a collection of anti-Christian polemics from Jewish sources, with the title Tela Ignea Satan, sive Arcani et Horribiles Judorum Adversus Christum, Deum, et Christianam Religionem Libri (Flaming Arrows of Satan, that is, the secret and horrible books of the Jews against Christ, God, and the Christian religion) which discussed Jesus in the Talmud.[21] The first book devoted solely to the topic of Jesus in the Talmud was the Latin work Jesus in Talmude published in 1699 by Rudolf Martin Meelfhrer, a student of Wagenseil at Altdorf.[22] In 1700, Johann Andreas Eisenmenger published Entdecktes Judenthum (Judaism Unmasked), which included descriptions of Jesus in the Talmud, and which would become the basis of much anti-Semitic literature in later centuries such as The Talmud Unmasked written in 1892 by Justinas Bonaventure Pranaitis.[23]

Starting in the 20th century the topic of Jesus in Judaic literature became subject to more unbiased, scholarly research, such as Das Leben Jesu nach jdischen Quellen written in 1902 by Samuel Krauss, which was the first scholarly analysis of the Judaic anti-Christian polemic Toledot Yeshu (The Biography of Jesus).[22] In 1903, Unitarian scholar R. Travers Herford wrote Christianity in Talmud and Midrash, which became the standard work on the topic in the Christian world, and he concluded that a large number of references referred to Jesus, not as a historical individual, but instead as the messiah of Christianity.[24] In 1910, Hermann Strack wrote Jesus, die Hretiker und die Christen nach den ltesten jdischen Angaben, which found no evidence of a historical Jesus in the Talmud.[22] In 1922 Joseph Klausner wrote Yeshu ha-Notzri (Jesus of Nazareth) which concluded that "the evidence [for a historical Jesus] in the Talmud is scanty and does not contribute much to our knowledge of the historical Jesus; much of it is legendary and reflects the Jewish attempt to counter Christian claims and reproaches" but he did conclude some material was historically reliable.[25] In 1950 Morris Goldstein wrote Jesus in the Jewish Tradition, including sections on the Toledoth Yeshu. In 1951, Jacob Z. Lauterbach wrote the essay Jesus in the Talmud.[26] In 1978 Johann Maier wrote Jesus von Nazareth in der talmudischen berlieferung, in which he concludes that there is virtually no evidence of the historical Jesus in the Talmud, and that the references to Jesus were "legendary" and probably added late in the Talmudic era "as a reaction to Christian provocations".[27] In 2007, Peter Schfer wrote Jesus in the Talmud in which he tried to find a middle ground between "anti-Jewish Christian" and "apologetic Jewish" interpretations. He concluded that the references to Jesus (as the messiah of Christianity) were included in the early (3rd and 4th century) versions of the Talmud, and that they were parodies of New Testament narratives.[28]

In the first few centuries CE, there were many sects of Judaism (such as Pharisees, Essenes, and Sadducees) each claiming to be the correct faith.[29] Some scholars treat Christianity, during that era, referred to as Early Christianity, as simply one of many sects of Judaism.[30] Some sects wrote polemics advocating their position, and occasionally disparaging rival sects. Some scholars view the depictions of Jesus in the Talmud as a manifestation of those inter-sect rivalries thus the depictions can be read as polemics by the rabbinic authors of the Talmud which indirectly criticized the rival sect (Christianity), which was growing and becoming more dominant.[31]

Peter Schfer concluded that the references were not from the early tannaitic period (1st and 2nd centuries) but rather from the 3rd and 4th centuries, during the amoraic period.[32] He asserts that the references in the Babylonian Talmud were "polemical counter-narratives that parody the New Testament stories, most notably the story of Jesus' birth and death"[33] and that the rabbinical authors were familiar with the Gospels (particularly the Gospel of John) in their form as the Diatessaron and the Peshitta, the New Testament of the Syrian Church. Schfer argues that the message conveyed in the Talmud was a "bold and self-confident" assertion of correctness of Judaism, maintaining that "there is no reason to feel ashamed because we rightfully executed a blasphemer and idolater."[34]

By way of comparison the New Testament itself also documents conflict with rabbinical Judaism, for example in the John 8:41 charge "We are not born of fornication."[35] and "Are we not right in saying that you are a Samaritan and have a demon?"[36] and in return in the description in Revelation of a "synagogue of Satan."[37]

In contrast to Peter Schfer, Daniel J. Lasker suggests that the Talmudic stories about Jesus are not deliberate, provocative polemics, but instead demonstrate "embryonic" Jewish objections to Christianity which would later "blossom into a full-scale Jewish polemical attack on Christianity [the Toledoth Yeshu]".[38]

Jeffrey Rubenstein has argued that the accounts in Chullin and Avodah Zarah ("Idolatry") reveal an ambivalent relationship between rabbis and Christianity. In his view the tosefta account reveals that at least some Jews believed Christians were true healers, but that the rabbis saw this belief as a major threat. Concerning the Babylonian Talmud account in Avoda Zarah, Boyarin views Jacob of Sechania as a Christian preacher and understands Rabbi Eliezer's arrest for minuth ("heresy") as an arrest by the Romans for practising Christianity. When the Governor (the text uses the word for chief judge) interrogated him, the rabbi answered that he "trusted the judge." Boyarin has suggested that this was the Jewish version of the Br'er Rabbit approach to domination, which he contrasts to the strategy of many early Christians, who proclaim their beliefs in spite of the consequences (i.e. martyrdom). Although Rabbi Eliezer was referring to God, the Governor interpreted him to be referring to the Governor himself, and freed the rabbi. According to them the account also reveals that there was greater contact between Christians and Jews in the 2nd century than commonly believed. They view the account of the teaching of Yeshu as an attempt to mock Christianity. According to Rubenstein, the structure of this teaching, in which a biblical prooftext is used to answer a question about biblical law, is common to both the rabbis and early Christians. The vulgar content, however, may have been used to parody Christian values. Boyarin considers the text to be an acknowledgment that rabbis often interacted with Christians, despite their doctrinal antipathy.[39]

Between 1239 and 1775 the Catholic Church at various times either forced the censoring of parts of the Talmud that were theologically problematic or the destruction of copies of the Talmud.[40]

During the Middle Ages a series of debates on Judaism were held by Catholic authorities including the Disputation of Paris (1240), the Disputation of Barcelona (1263), and Disputation of Tortosa (141314) and during those disputations, Jewish converts to Christianity, such as Nicholas Donin (in Paris) and Pablo Christiani (in Barcelona) claimed the Talmud contained insulting references to Jesus.[41][42][43]

During these disputations the representatives of the Jewish communities offered various defences to the charges of the Christian disputants. Notably influential on later Jewish responses was the defence of Yechiel of Paris (1240) that a passage about an individual named Yeshu in the Talmud was not a reference to the Christian Jesus, though at the same time Yechiel also conceded that another reference to Yeshu was. This has been described as the "theory of two Jesuses" though Berger (1998) notes that Yehiel in fact argues for three Jesuses.[44] This defence featured again in later Jewish defences during the medieval period, such as that of Nachmanides at the Disputation of Barcelona, though others such as Profiat Duran at the Disputation of Tortosa did not follow this argument.[45]

Amy-Jill Levine notes that even today some rabbinical experts do not consider that the Talmud's account of Jesus' death is a reference to the Jesus of the New Testament.[46] Gustaf Dalman (1922),[47] Joachim Jeremias (1960),[48] Mark Allen Powell (1998)[49] and Roger T. Beckwith (2005)[50] were also favourable to the view the Yeshu references in the Talmud were not to Jesus. Richard Bauckham considers Yeshu a legitimate, if rare, form of the name in use at the time, and writes that an ossuary bearing both the names Yeshu and Yeshua ben Yosef shows that it "was not invented by the rabbis as a way of avoiding pronouncing the real name of Jesus of Nazareth"[51]

Numerous times between 1239 and 1775 all copies of the Talmud were destroyed. In 1280 following the Disputation of Barcelona the Talmud was censored.[52] Following the invention of the printing press, the Talmud was banned by the Pope. All printed editions of the Talmud, including the Basel Talmud and the Vilna Edition Shas, were censored. In 1559 the Talmud was placed on the Roman Index and banned. In 1564 under the Tridentine Index an expunged version of the Talmud was allowed. In 1592 the pope ordered all copies of the Talmud and other heretical writing destroyed expunged or not. The total prohibition would stay in place until 1775. Even then the censorship system would remain in force.[40] As a result of these disputations many manuscript editions had references to Jesus removed or changed, and subsequent manuscripts sometimes omitted the passages entirely. Few copies would survive.

In the 20th century, new editions began restoring the censored material, such as in the 1935 English Soncino edition.[53]

Starting in the 13th century, manuscripts of the Talmud were sometimes altered in response to the criticisms made during the disputations, and in response to orders from the Christian church. Existing manuscripts were sometimes altered (for example, by erasure) and new manuscripts often omitted the passages entirely. Peter Schfer compared several editions and documented some alterations as illustrated in the following table:[54]

Bart Ehrman, and separately Mark Allan Powell, state that the Talmud references are quite late (hundreds of years) and give no historically reliable information about the teachings or actions of Jesus during his life. Ehrman clarifies that the name "Son of Panthera" (Roman who allegedly was the seducer of Mary) was a tradition, as scholars have long recognized, that represented an attack on the Christian view, that he was the son of a virgin. In Greek, the term for virgin is parthenos, which is similar to panthera, implying that "son of panthera" is a pun on "son of a virgin".[55][56] The name "ben Stada", used for the same figure, is explained by Peter Schfer as a reference to his mother's supposed adultery:

His mother's true name was Miriam, and "Stada" is an epithet which derives from the Hebrew/Aramaic root sat.ah/sete' ("to deviate from the right path, to go astray, to be unfaithful"). In other words, his mother Miriam was also called "Stada" because she was a sotah, a woman suspected, or rather convicted, of adultery."[57]

Peter Schfer states that there can be no doubt that the narrative of the execution of Jesus in the Talmud refers to Jesus of Nazareth, but states that the rabbinic literature in question are from a later Amoraic period and may have drawn on the Christian gospels, and may have been written as responses to them.[57]

Scholars debate whether the Talmud provides any evidence of Jesus as a historical individual. Van Voorst (2000) describes this as a spectrum of opinion:

There are several Talmudic passages that are said to be referring to Jesus. The following are among those considered the most controversial, contested, and possibly the most notable.[60][61][62]

Our rabbis taught Jesus the Nazarene had five disciples, and these are they: Matthai, Naqqai, Netzer, Buni, and Todah.[63][64][65][66]

The master said: Jesus the Nazarene practiced magic and deceived and led Israel astray.[67][8][68][69]

"Jesus son of Stada is Jesus son of Pandira?"

Rav Hisda said, "The husband was Stada and the lover was Pandera."

"But was not the husband Pappos son of Yehuda and the mother Stada?"

No, his mother was Miriam, who let her hair grow long and was called Stada. Pumbedita says about her: "She was unfaithful to her husband."[70][71][72][73]

On (Sabbath eve and) the eve of Passover, Jesus the Nazarene was hanged and a herald went forth before him forty days heralding, "Jesus the Nazarene is going forth to be stoned because he practiced sorcery and instigated and seduced Israel to idolatry. Whoever knows anything in defense may come and state it." But since they did not find anything in his defense they hanged him on (Sabbath eve and) the eve of Passover.Ulla said: "Do you suppose that Jesus the Nazarene was one for whom a defense could be made? He was a mesit (someone who instigated Israel to idolatry), concerning whom the Merciful [God] says: Show him no compassion and do not shield him (Deut. 13:9). With Jesus the Nazarene it was different. For he was close to the government.[64][74][75][76]

There are still noticeable challenges to the identification of Yeshu as Jesus, as elsewhere in the Talmud his stepfather, Pappos ben Yehuda, is mentioned as being martyred with Rabbi Akiva[3] and is himself mentioned as being among the Pharisees returning to Israel following their persecution by John Hyrcanus,[8] which would place Yeshu's lifetime anywhere between 130 and 70 years before the birth of Jesus.

Sanhedrin 43a[77] relates the trial and execution of a sorcerer named Jesus (Yeshu in Hebrew) and his five disciples. The sorcerer is stoned and hanged on the Eve of Passover.[78]

Sanhedrin 107[79] tells of a Jesus ("Yeshu") "offended his teacher by paying too much attention to the inn-keeper's wife. Jesus wished to be forgiven, but [his rabbi] was too slow to forgive him, and Jesus in despair went away and put up a brick [idol] and worshipped it."[80]

In Gittin 56b and 57a,[81] a story is told in which Onkelos summons up the spirit of a Yeshu who sought to harm Israel. He describes his punishment in the afterlife as boiling in excrement.[82][83]

Some scholars claim that the Hebrew name Yeshu is not a short form of the name Yeshua, but rather an acrostic for the Hebrew phrase "may his name and memory be blotted out" created by taking the first letter of the Hebrew words.[84]

In addition, at the 1240 Disputation of Paris, Donin presented the allegation that the Talmud was blasphemous towards Mary, the mother of Jesus (Miriam in Hebrew), and this criticism has been repeated by many Christian sources.[85] The texts cited by critics include Sanhedrin 67a,[86] Sanhedrin 106a,[87] and Shabbath 104b.[88] However, the references to Mary are not specific, and some assert that they do not refer to Jesus' mother, or perhaps refer to Mary Magdalen.[89]

Scholars have identified the following references in the Talmud that some conclude refer to Jesus:[90]

Sanhedrin 43a relates the trial and execution of Jesus and his five disciples.[91] Here, Jesus is a sorcerer who has enticed other Jews to apostasy. A herald is sent to call for witnesses in his favour for forty days before his execution. No one comes forth and in the end he is stoned and hanged on the Eve of Passover. His five disciples, named Matai, Nekai, Netzer, Buni, and Todah are then tried. Word play is made on each of their names, and they are executed. It is mentioned that leniency could not be applied because of Jesus' influence with the royal government (malkhut).

Scholars have identified passages in the Talmud and associated Talmudic texts that involve invoking Jesus' name, as the messiah of Christianity, in order to perform magical healing:[92]

Scholars have identified passages that mention Jesus, as the messiah of Christianity, in the context of a Torah teacher:[92]

Sanhedrin 103a and Berachot 17b talk about a Yeshu ha-Nosri (Jesus of Nazareth) who "burns his food in public", possibly a reference to pagan sacrifices or a metaphor for apostasy.[94] The account is discussing Manasseh the king of Judah infamous for having turned to idolatry and having persecuted the Jews (2 Kings 21). It is part of a larger discussion about three kings and four commoners excluded from paradise. These are also discussed in the Shulkhan Arukh where the son who burns his food is explicitly stated to be Manasseh. The passages identified by scholars in this context are:[92]

Passages in Sanhedrin 107b and Sotah 47a refer to an individual (Yeshu) that some scholars conclude is a reference to Jesus, regarded as the messiah of Christianity. In these passages, Jesus is described as a student of Joshua ben Perachiah (second half of the 2nd century BCE), and he (Jesus) was sent away for misinterpreting a word that in context should have been understood as referring to the Inn; he instead understood it to mean the innkeeper's wife (the same word can mean "inn" and "hostess").[95] His teacher said "Here is a nice inn", to which he replied "Her eyes are crooked", to which his teacher responded "Evil one! Is this what you are occupied in?" (Gazing at women was considered sinful.) [96] After several returns for forgiveness he mistook Perachiah's signal to wait a moment as a signal of final rejection, and so he turned to idolatry. Some passages that have been identified by scholars as mentioning Jesus, as the messiah of Christianity, in this context include:[97]

The full passage is:

In all circumstances (one should exercise) use the left hand to push (away) and the right (to) bring closeward ... not like Yehoshua ben Perachya who pushed himto Yeshuwith both hands... (here the Talmud begins a narration) at the time that Yannai the king was executing the Rabbis, Shimon ben Shatach('s sister) hid Rabbi Yehoshua ben Perachya, he (then, subsequently was able to) go and run (escape) to Alexandria of Egypt. When there was (came) and (an era of) peace, Shimon ben Shatach sent to him (a letter:) "from me Yerushalayim the holy city to you Alexander of Egypt -my sister, my husband dwells amongst you and I am sitting lonely" said (Rabbi Yeshushua ben Perachya) "I deduce (from the letter) that he (is enjoying) peace. As he (Rabbi Yehoshua ben Perachya) came they went up to a lodge, (they -at the lodge) stood for him with exemplary honor and did for him extended goodness. He sat and was in the midst of praising 'how beautiful is this lodging (which also means innkeeper in Aramaic)', (Yeshu) said to him "My master, her eyes are misshaped". He said to him "Evil one!, is this how you conduct yourself?!" he brought out four hundred Shofars and excommunicated him.

Every day he would come before him (intent on being readmitted,) and he did not accept him. One day he was reciting Kriat Shema,[98] he (Yeshu) came before him (the Rabbi)it was on his (the Rabbi's) mind to accept himhe (the Rabbi) showed him with his hand, he (Yeshu) thought 'he is pushing him', (Yeshu then) went erected a fish worship, he (his Rabbi) said to him 'return yourself' he (Yeshu) said to him '(so) I learnt from you; 'all who sin and cause others to sin we do not give (are not given) him the ability to repent'.

Sotah 47a, Sanhedrin 107

The story ends by invoking a Mishnaic era teaching that Yeshu practised black magic, deceived and led Israel astray. This quote is seen by some as an explanation in general for the designation Yeshu.

According to Dr. Rubenstein, the account in Sanhedrin 107b recognizes the kinship between Christians and Jews, since Jesus is presented as a disciple of a prominent Rabbi. But it also reflects and speaks to an anxiety fundamental to Rabbinic Judaism. Prior to the destruction of the Temple in 70, Jews were divided into different sects, each promoting different interpretations of the law. Rabbinic Judaism domesticated and internalized conflicts over the law, while vigorously condemning any sectarianism. In other words, rabbis are encouraged to disagree and argue with one another, but these activities must be carefully contained, or else they could lead to a schism. Although this story may not present a historically accurate account of Jesus' life, it does use a fiction about Jesus to communicate an important truth about the Rabbis. Moreover, Rubenstein sees this story as a rebuke to overly harsh Rabbis. Boyarin suggests that the Rabbis were well aware of Christian views of the Pharisees and that this story acknowledges the Christian belief that Jesus was forgiving and the Pharisees were not (see Mark 2:12), while emphasizing forgiveness as a necessary Rabbinic value.[39]

In Gittin 56b57a a story is recorded in which Onkelos, a nephew of the Roman emperor Titus who destroyed the Second Temple, intent on converting to Judaism, summons up the spirits of Yeshu and others to help make up his mind. Each describes his punishment in the afterlife.

The complete passage from the 1935 Soncino edition is:

Onkelos son of Kolonikos ... went and raised Titus from the dead by magical arts, and asked him; 'Who is most in repute in the [other] world? He replied: Israel. What then, he said, about joining them? He said: Their observances are burdensome and you will not be able to carry them out. Go and attack them in that world and you will be at the top as it is written, Her adversaries are become the head etc.; whoever harasses Israel becomes head. He asked him: What is your punishment [in the other world]? He replied: What I decreed for myself. Every day my ashes are collected and sentence is passed on me and I am burnt and my ashes are scattered over the seven seas. He then went and raised Balaam by incantations. He asked him: Who is in repute in the other world? He replied: Israel. What then, he said, about joining them? He replied: Thou shalt not seek their peace nor their prosperity all thy days for ever. He then asked: What is your punishment? He replied: With boiling hot semen. He then went and raised by incantations Jesus [in Vilna edition: "the sinners of Israel"; "Jesus" appears in Munich 95 and Vatican 140 manuscripts and "he went and brought up Jesus the Nazarene" (Editions or MSs: Vatican 130)]. He asked them: Who is in repute in the other world? They replied: Israel. What about joining them? They replied: Seek their welfare, seek not their harm. Whoever touches them touches the apple of his eye. He said: What is your punishment? They replied: With boiling hot excrement, since a Master has said: Whoever mocks at the words of the Sages is punished with boiling hot excrement. Observe the difference between the sinners of Israel and the prophets of the other nations who worship idols. It has been taught: Note from this incident how serious a thing it is to put a man to shame, for God espoused the cause of Bar Kamza and destroyed His House and burnt His Temple.

Babylonian Talmud, Gittin 56b-57a

Scholars[who?] have identified passages that mention Jesus in the context of his execution:

The complete passage is: "On (Sabbath eve and) the eve of Passover Jesus the Nazarene was hanged and a herald went forth before him forty days heralding, 'Jesus the Nazarene is going forth to be stoned because he practiced sorcery and instigated and seduced Israel to idolatry. Whoever knows anything in defense may come and state it.' But since they did not find anything in his defense they hanged him on (Sabbath eve and) the eve of Passover. Ulla said: Do you suppose that Jesus the Nazarene was one for whom a defense could be made? He was a mesit (someone who instigated Israel to idolatry), concerning whom the Merciful [God]says: Show him no compassion and do not shield him (Deut. 13:9). With Jesus the Nazarene it was different. For he was close to the government."[75][99]

In the Florence manuscript of the Talmud (1177 CE) an addition is made to Sanhedrin 43a saying that Yeshu was hanged on the eve of the Sabbath.[100]

Some Talmudic sources include passages which identify a "son of Pandera" (ben Pandera in Hebrew), and some scholars conclude that these are references to the messiah of Christianity.[101] Medieval Hebrew midrashic literature contain the "Episode of Jesus" (known also as Maaseh Yeshu), in which Jesus is described as being the son of Joseph, the son of Pandera (see: Episode of Jesus). The account portrays Jesus as an impostor.

The Talmud, and other talmudic texts, contain several references to the "son of Pandera". A few of the references explicitly name Jesus ("Yeshu") as the "son of Pandera": these explicit connections are found in the Tosefta, the Qohelet Rabbah, and the Jerusalem Talmud, but not in the Babylonian Talmud.[102] The explicit connections found in the Jerusalem Talmud are debated because the name "Jesus" ("Yeshu") is found only in a marginal gloss in some manuscripts, but other scholars conclude that it was in the original versions of the Jerusalem Talmud.[103]

The texts include several spellings for the father's name (Pandera, Panthera, Pandira, Pantiri, or Pantera) and some scholars conclude that these are all references to the same individual,[104] but other scholars suggest that they may be unrelated references.[105] In some of the texts, the father produced a son with a woman named Mary. Several of the texts indicate that the mother was not married to Pandera, and was committing adultery and by implication Jesus was a bastard child.[104] Some of the texts indicate that Mary's husband's name was Stada.

Some Talmudic sources include passages which identify a "son of Stada" or "son of Stara" (ben Stada or ben Stara in Hebrew), and some scholars conclude that these are references to the messiah of Christianity.[106]

Two talmudic-era texts that explicitly associate Jesus as the son of Pantera/Pandera are:

Both of the above passages describe situations where Jesus' name is invoked to perform magical healing.[107] In addition, some editions of the Jerusalem Talmud explicitly identify Jesus as the son of Pandera:[108]

However, some editions of the Jerusalem Talmud do not contain the name Jesus in these passages, so the association in this case is disputed. The parallel passages in the Babylonian Talmud do not contain the name Jesus.

Other Talmudic narratives describe Jesus as the son of a Pantiri or Pandera, in a teaching context:[109]

However, the parallel accounts in the Babylonian Talmud mention Jesus but do not mention the father's name:

The Babylonian talmud contains narratives that discuss an anonymous person who brought witchcraft out of Egypt, and the person is identified as "son of Pandera" or "son of Stada". The Talmud discusses whether the individual (the name Jesus is not present in these passages) is the son of Stada, or Pandera, and a suggestion is made that the mother Mary committed adultery.[102]

There is no Talmudic text that directly associates Jesus with Mary (Miriam), instead the association is indirect: Jesus is associated with a father ("son of Pandera"), and in other passages, Pandera is associated with Mary (as her lover).[110]

Typically both Jerusalem and Babylonian Talmuds use the generic minim for heretics. Aside from mentions of the five disciples of "Yeshu ha Notzri," the plural Notzrim, "Christians," are only clearly mentioned once in the Babylonian Talmud, (where it is amended to Netzarim, people of the watch) in B.Ta'anit 27b with a late parallel in Masekhet Soferim 17:4.[111] And then "The day of the Notzri according to Rabbi Ishmael is forbidden for ever" in some texts of B.Avodah Zarah 6a.[112]

The Toledot Yeshu (History of Jesus) is a Jewish anti-Christian polemic that purports to be a biography of Jesus.[113] The work is an early account of Jesus, based on contemporary Jewish views, in which Jesus is described as being the son of Joseph, the son of Pandera (see a translation of the Yemenite text: Episode of Jesus, or what is also known as Toledot Yeshu). Some scholars conclude that the work is merely an expansion and elaboration on anti-Christian themes in the Talmud.[114] Stephen Gero suggests that an early version of the Toledot Yeshu narrative preceded the Talmud, and that the Talmud drew upon the Toledot Yeshu, but Rubenstein and Schfer discount that possibility, because they date the origin of the Toledot Yeshu in the early Middle Ages or Late Antiquity.[115]

The Platonistic philosopher Celsus, writing circa 150 to 200 CE, wrote a narrative describing a Jew who discounts the story of the Virgin Birth of Jesus.[116] Scholars have remarked on the parallels (adultery, father's name "Panthera", return from Egypt, magical powers) between Celsus' account and the Talmudic narratives.[110] In Celsus' account, the Jew says:

"... [Jesus] came from a Jewish village and from a poor country woman who earned her living by spinning. He says that she was driven out by her husband, who was a carpenter by trade, as she was convicted of adultery. Then he says that after she had been driven out by her husband and while she was wandering about in a disgraceful way she secretly gave birth to Jesus. He states that because he [Jesus] was poor he hired himself out as a workman in Egypt, and there tried his hand at certain magical powers on which the Egyptians pride themselves; he returned full of conceit, because of these powers, and on account of them gave himself the title of God ... the mother of Jesus is described as having been turned out by the carpenter who was betrothed to her, as she had been convicted of adultery and had a child by a certain soldier named Panthera."[117][118]

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Jesus in the Talmud - Wikipedia

In Defense of King Louis IX | Thomas F. Madden – First Things

The current iconoclastic moment in the U.S. has taken an odd turn here in the city of St. Louis. As protesters across the nation tear down or deface statues of Confederate generals and American founders who owned slaves (among others), the statue that has drawn the most attention in St. Louis is one depicting a medieval man who did not know that America existed.

The Apotheosis of St. Louis is a massive equestrian statue inspired by the citys namesake, King Louis IX, who ruled France from 1226 until 1270. It portrays the king seated on his horse and adorned in a Romantic imagining of a triumphant Crusaders garb. In 1764, the French founders of the city of St. Louis gave it that name to honor their king, Louis XV, and his patron saint. Like Joan of Arc, St. Louis was revered by the French of the eighteenth century as a person of heroic virtue. The modern statue was originally a plaster sculpture executed by Charles Henry Niehaus for the 1904 Worlds Fair, hosted by St. Louis. After the fair had concluded, the organizers recast the sculpture in bronze and placed it prominently on Art Hill in Forest Park, the site of the fair. It immediately became the beloved symbol of the city, only edged out slightly in the 1960s by the new St. Louis Arch.

So, what is wrong with this statue? Plenty, according to the authors of a change.org petition. Louis IX was a rabid anti-semite [sic] who spearheaded many persecutions against the Jewish people. The petitioners also blame him for giving inspiration and ideas to the Nazis seven centuries after his death. And finally, Louis was vehemently Islamophobic and led a murderous crusade against Muslims. The petition demands that the statue be removed and that the city change its name.

The petition never received much support. It struggled to garner even a thousand signatures, while counter-petitions have attracted thousands. But the demand was so audacious that local news media could not keep away. In response, a group of Catholics mobilized to protect the statue with vigils and prayers. At one such event on June 27, St. Louis police had to form a barricade between Catholics praying the rosary and protestors demanding that the statue be removed. Tempers flared and protestors punched one of the Catholics after the police left the scene. Since then, an increasingly large group of Catholics has come to the statue every evening to recite the rosary and offer prayers for peace. For the moment, those prayers seem to be working. There has been no further violence. On June 30, the Islamic Foundation of Greater St. Louis stated that the removal of the statue will not erase the history, but our present-day collaboration can help us move forward. And the mayor of St. Louis, Lyda Krewson, has made clear that she does not favor removing the statue or changing the citys name.

As a medieval historian, I always cringe when medieval people are judged by modern standards. Their world was very different from our own. Yet the virtue and piety of St. Louis IX of France have always seemed to transcend his age. The crimes leveled against him in this petition are at best misleading. Although praiseworthy today, religious toleration was regarded as dangerous in the Middle Ages. Yet Louis IX (unlike other medieval rulers) still obeyed the Catholic Churchs admonition that Jews were not to be harmed. Like St. Paul, Louis hoped for the conversion of the Jews. Indeed, more than once he served as a godfather for the baptism of a converted Jew. From a modern perspective, Louiss part in the burning of the Talmud in Paris in 1240 is indefensible and certainly constitutes persecution. The theologians at the University of Paristhe best minds of their agejudged that the Talmud contained heresy and blasphemous references to Jesus. From Louiss medieval (not modern) perspective, it was a threat to his kingdom and a hindrance to the conversion of the Jews. That does not excuse it. Louis followed the advice of churchmen, yet as St. John Paul II eloquently expressed it, those churchmen made grave errors. The pope sought pardon for the sins committed by not a few (Catholics) against the people of the Covenant. He continued, We are deeply saddened by the behavior of those who in the course of history have caused these children of yours to suffer, and asking your forgiveness we wish to commit ourselves to genuine brotherhood.

As for the eastern Crusades, they were wars aimed at recapturing territories in and around the Holy Land that had been conquered by Muslim armies. Louiss first Crusade (124850) was a response to the conquest of Christian-controlled Jerusalem by a Turkish and Egyptian force in 1244. After the Holy City was taken, the victors massacred the Christian inhabitants and desecrated the churches. Louiss Crusade was set to punish Egypt for that attack and ultimately restore Jerusalem to its Christian king. It failed. Louiss army was defeated, and he was thrown into prison until his wife, Queen Margaret, paid 400,000 bezantsliterally a kings ransom. After the Crusade, Louis spent the next four years in the Holy Land trying to stabilize the situation for Christians. He even struck up an alliance with his former Muslim captors in Egypt.

Left unmentioned by Louiss modern detractors is his lifelong devotion to issues of social justice in a world that cared little for such ideas. At his own expense, he continually paid to feed and clothe hundreds of Pariss poor. Every evening he shared the royal table with local homeless and usually insisted that he wash their feet before they left. He established several hospitals for the poor and homes for battered women and ex-prostitutes. He personally visited lepers and washed their sores. After his humiliation in Egypt, Louis refused to don the rich regalia of the French crown, dressing simply and living humbly for the rest of his life. He was the sort of person, like Mother Teresa or John Paul II, whose reputation for piety and virtue was so great that contemporaries had no doubt he would one day be a saint. He was canonized in a record 27 years.

What both sides have overlooked about the statue, I believe, is that this triumphal equestrian image was never meant to depict a medieval saint. Its title says it all. An apotheosis is a coming into greatness or an ascent into glory, and that is certainly what the statue evokes with its horse proudly sauntering forward and the king triumphantly holding aloft his sword. Yet the real Louis IX suffered humiliating defeats in his Crusades. In truth, this statue, which presided over an international gathering to celebrate a new century of progress, has nothing to do with the Middle Ages. It was a symbol of the city of St. Louis, which in 1904 was one of Americas most prosperous urban centers. The attendees of the Worlds Fair saw in this sculpture the promise of confident progress for St. Louis and the world. Even the sword, held with the blade down in a gesture of peace, was a sign of hope for the future. Those who commissioned the statue and those who viewed it had little interest in medieval kings; they were focused on building a bright and prosperous future.

The Apotheosis of St. Louis is not religious art nor was it meant to be. Rather, it was designed to evoke civic pride. Catholics can confidently look to the life of St. Louis IX for his example of Christian charity and seek his intercession in the struggles of our age. But we should take care not to confuse the sacred with the profane. Let the city of St. Louis have its proud, beautiful, and triumphant symbol of modern progress. Catholics will always have the humble and pious king who, although not perfect, still devoted his life to the service of Christ and his Church.

Thomas F. Madden is Professor of History and Director of the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Saint Louis University in St Louis, Missouri.

Photo byRyan Ashelinvia Creative Commons. Image cropped.

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In Defense of King Louis IX | Thomas F. Madden - First Things

Don’t hide from the sins of St. Louis – America Magazine

I will pour forth tears until like a river they reachUnto the tombs of your most noble princes,Moses and Aaron, on Mount Hor, and I will ask: Is thereA new Torah, that your scrolls may be burned?

This is part of the lament Shaali Serufah Baesh, O you who are burned in fire, written by Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg in the aftermath of the burning of thousands of copies of the Talmud at the French royal court in Paris in 1242 and recited to this day by Ashkenazi Jews on the fast day Tisha BAv. King Louis IX, whom Catholics know as St. Louis, ordered the burning after a rigged disputation in which a Jewish convert to Christianity debated a rabbi about whether the Talmud was blasphemous.

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This was the first such disputation but not the last, always held in the shadow of Christian political power. Talmuds burned across Europe into the early modern eraand Jewish people were at times burned as well. Nor did St. Louiss persecution of French Jewry end with destroying their sacred books. Under the pretext of combating usury, he threatened to arrest and expel all Jews in his kingdom; he forced Jews to wear a badge on their clothing, in accordance with a decree of the Fourth Lateran Council.

Tisha BAv falls at the end of July this year, but the 13th-century lament became painfully relevant a month earlier, when people in St. Louis, Mo., protested a statue of the citys namesake. Some Jewish leaders called for the statues removal. On June 27 crowds chanted, Take it down! while Catholics rallied to protect the statue, including praying the rosary at its base. The archdiocese issued a statement arguing, For Catholics, St. Louis is an example of an imperfect man who strived to live a life modeled after the life of Jesus Christwith no mention of the persecution of Jews.

The archdiocesan statement describes St. Louis welcoming beggars to the royal table, washing their feet, paying for their needs; the saint worked with lepers, built hospitals and served some of his kingdoms lowliest subjects. St. Louiss charity is startling: personal, lavishthe true medieval touch.

But the archdioceses defense of the citys patron saint, in which persecuting Jews becomes an abstract imperfection, does the saint himself a disservice. Louis is in heaven now; he knows that his humiliation and persecution of the Jews was evil. As the archdiocese notes, canonization is not a declaration that every decision a person made was holy. Saints have been complicit and even active participants in social evils of their time. It is especially necessary to confront this truth in its specifics when the evils they succumbed to are still with us, like racism, misogyny, protection of sexual abusersas with St. John Paul IIs support for the Rev. Marcial Macieland hatred of the Jews.

[Want to discuss politics with other America readers? Join our Facebook discussion group, moderated by Americas writers and editors.]

We are in a season of statue-razing. It began as a revolt against the widespread presence of statues of Confederate generals and other defenders of slavery, but crowds have also protested statues in Boston and Washington, D.C., which show a kneeling slave being freed by Abraham Lincoln. In San Francisco, protesters toppled a statue of Ulysses Grant, who held one man in slavery for two years before freeing him in 1859 and also helped win the Union victory in the Civil War. A San Francisco protester even vandalized a statue of Miguel de Cervantes, whose sole connection to slavery is that he himself was enslaved.

It might be tempting, therefore, to assume that St. Louis is a victim of ignorance. Maybe those chanting around his statue did not know anything about medieval French Jewry until they looked him up on Wikipedia. Maybe St. Louis is like the Roman poet who had the ill luck to share the name of an opponent of Julius Caesar. At Caesars funeral, a mob captured the poet; Shakespeare has him defend himself with I am Cinna the poet!, but the mob cries out, Tear him for his bad verses! Is St. Louis just a convenient target?

It doesnt matter. First of all, even those who think some protesters concern for Jews is disingenuous should concede that Rabbi Susan Talve, who has called for the statues removal, is sincere. So are those who read reports of the statue controversy in the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, The Times of Israel and other Jewish news sources. Actual Jewish people want to know if Catholics have really rejected our shameful history of persecution, as we promised in Nostra Aetate.

Moreover, this is not about protesters integrity. It is about ours. If there is one thing a church facing a catastrophic sexual abuse crisis needs, it is willingness to admit the sins of our heroes. If our first instinct is to defend the church, not to defend the truth or the victims, have we really learned the lessons of the abuse crisis?

I was raised somewhere between secular and Reform Judaism and converted to Catholicism as a young adult. Many of the medieval disputationsshow trials of the Jewish religion and communitywere led by Jewish converts to Catholicism. That is one way to understand our responsibility as converts: to defend the truth we have come to know. A better way is shown by Jewish converts of the 20th century, like Cardinal Aaron Jean-Marie Lustiger or Rassa Maritain. These French Jews defended Christ by defending the Jewish people.

Jewish Catholics should have always been advocates for the Jewish people, not weapons against them. Catholics should have always been shields for the vulnerable, not persecutors. The protests in St. Louis give us a chance to speak the whole truth. Willingness to be totally honest here will make our churches safer for everyone who has been harmed by Christians. Failure to be honest will further alienate those who believe Catholics care more about our public image than about truth or justice.

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Don't hide from the sins of St. Louis - America Magazine

How Two-and-a-Half Tribes Ended Up Over the Jordan – Chabad.org

The Story in Short

As the People of Israel geared up to finallyenter the Promised Land, two tribes expressed their desire to opt out. Ladenwith more animals than their brethren, the descendants of Gad and Reuben wishedto settle outside of Israels borders. The land is a land of livestock andyour servants have livestock, they told Moses.

Unhappy, Moses explained that their reluctanceto enter Israel could be interpreted as fear of the Canaanites who inhabitedthe land. This would scare the people like the spies had done. To allay their fears, thedescendants of Gad and Reuben promised to fight on the front lines until theconquest was complete. Only then would they return and settle the land theydesired.

Moses ultimately agreed and gave the land eastof the Jordan to the tribes of Reuben and Gad, as well as half of the tribe ofManassah, on condition that they wage battle ahead of the other troops.

Their story is told in Numbers 32.

In the penultimate year of their desertsojourn, the People of Israel people found themselves in what is now Jordan. They had defeated Sihon andOg, survivedthe saga with Balaam and Balak, and exacted vengeanceon the Midianites. And finally, after four decades of wandering thedesert, they were preparing to enter Israel.

The descendants of Reuben and Gad had morelivestock than the rest of the nation. Some say they were more efficientwarriors and had collected more spoils of war.Others posit that Reuben and Gad had an affinity for the manna and were,therefore, less inclined to slaughter and eat their livestock.

The land of the Amorites, from the Arnon River until MountHermon, was mountainous and fertile. After the Jews conquered that area, thetribes of Reuben and Gad preferred its vast pastures to the urban and dryIsrael.

The tribes of Reuben and Gad approached Moses,the nobles, and Eleazar the high priest with two requests: [a.] Give thisland to us as our plot, and [b.] do not take us across the Jordan River.

Gad and Reuben didnt feel it necessary tocross the Jordan and fight alongside their brothers in Israel. After all, theJews victories werent natural; Gd was the one who brought them triumphagainst the Amorites. What would their contribution accomplish?

Moses was displeased by their request. Heagreed that Gd was integral to victory, but maintained that the act of goingto war remained necessary, and it would be unfair if the tribes of Gad andReuben remained behind while their brothers crossed the Jordan, donned theirarmor, and fell into rank to battle the Canaanites.Shall you remain here while your brothers come to war?! he retorted.

Moses then leveled a second criticism at Gadand Reuben. You will scare the People of Israel from entering the promisedland, he said.

Moses understood that Gad and Reuben meantwell but was worried about the other Jews, who might attribute their choice tofear.

Moses chastised them for neglecting to learnfrom history. This is what your ancestors did when I sent them to survey theland, he said,comparing them to thespies, who, with their negative testimony about Israel, frightenedthe people.

The Rebbeexplains that the tribes of Gad and Reuben were more faithful than the spieswho had said (according to the Talmud), The people of Canaan are stronger thanGd. Nonetheless,the very request to remain on the Jordans east bank revealed a preference fora land other than Israel, mirroringthe spies negative attitude toward the Promised Land.

The descendants of Gad and Reuben yielded toMoses rebuke. Moreover, because the tribe of Gad was renowned for theirphysical prowess, they agreed to fight on the front lines;the descendants of Reuben promised to join them there as well.

The tribes of Gad and Reuben announced theirintention to build corrals for their sheep and towns for their children in thearea they desired. Then, once their livestock and families were settled, theywould remain at battle alongside their brethren until the conquering wascomplete and all the Jews had settled on their land.

The Midrashobserves that Reuben and Gad mentioned their animals before their children,which seems to indicate that they had more concern for their money than theirfamilies. In a moving commentary, the Midrash reminds its readers that allsuccess comes from Gd and that no wealth is permanent:

That is whybelongings are called nechasim, asthey are covered (nichsim) from oneand revealed to another. And why is zuzimthe name of [common coins]? Because they move (zazim) from one and are given to another. [It is called] money (mammon), because what you count (mah [sheatah] moneh) is not anything.[They are called] coins (maot),because they are from time (meet) totime.

His concerns now addressed, Moses agreed toallow the tribes of Reuben and Gad to dwell outside of Israel. If you do this,if you bear arms for Gd before your brothers then this land will become yourinheritance.

According to some traditions, Moses choice ofwords can be understood as guidance for proper warfare. He knew that Gad andReuben had an ulterior motive. They were fighting alongside the people onlybecause they knew it was a necessary prerequisite to their inheritance of theland. But, that isnt how an Israelite ought to fight. Moses instructed them tobear arms for Gd, i.e., to intend, with war, to sanctify Gds name. Only thencan the war be honest and just with peace as the primary objective.

Read: 10 Facts to Know about War and Judaism

Moses also leveled a veiled criticism at themby changing the order of their request. Build towns for your children and pensfor your sheep, he exhorted. A personspriority must be family before money and career.

In fact, according to Midrash, the tribesof Gad and Rueben were later punished for their preference of money overchildren and the Diaspora over Israel. When Sennacherib, king of Assyria, exiled the tentribes, he captured those outside of Israel 10 years before thoseinside.

Reuben and Gad agreed to Moses provisionspromising that [a.] Our children, wives and [b.] livestock will remain inGilead and Your servants will arm themselves for war before Gd.

Moses was happy. He turned to Joshua and theelders and used, what would later be coined, The Condition of Gad and Reuben:

Rabbi Meir said:Every stipulation which is not like that of the descendants of Gad and Reubenis not legally binding. For it is written: And Moses said unto them: If thechildren of Gad and Reuben cross the Jordan, [...you shall give them the landof Gilead as their possession], and, But ifthey will not ... then they shall have possessions among you in the Land ofCanaan. (Thus, both sides of the condition have to bespelled out: if the condition is fulfilled, then such-and-such will happen, butif the stipulation is not fulfilled, then such-and-such will be the case.)

Read: The Danger of Suspicionto discover another importantprinciple of Jewish law gleaned from the story of Gad and Reuben.

Until this point in the story, there are onlytwo parties in the deal with Moses: The descendants of Gad and the descendantsof Reuben. Suddenly, a third party is introduced. And Moses gave thedescendants of Gad and Reuben and halfof the tribe of Manasseh, son of Joseph, the land of the Amorites.

Tradition suggests a few explanations fortheir sudden inclusion:

Abraham ibn Ezra theorizes that they werealways party to the negotiations, but the Torah chooses not to mention themuntil the end because they were not a full tribe.

Nachmanides explains that Moses saw a lot ofextra land on the east bank of the Jordan and offered it to any willing tribe.Some of Manasseh came forward, possibly because they were also herdsmen.

The Rebbeexplains that Moses wanted to instigate the process of expanding Israelsborders. The Torah informs usthat with the advent of the Final Redemption, Gd will grant the Jewishpeople the lands of the Edomites, Ammonites, and Moabites which were previouslyforbidden.

Things of extreme importance to the Jewishpeople need to have Moses involvement.For this reason, the land expansion associated with the Redemption had to beinstigated by Moses. To do this, he gave land outside of Israel to half of thetribe of Menasseh. Gad and Reuben wouldnt cut it for this purpose because theyhad asked for the land.

Why Menasseh? According to our tradition, thetribe of Manasseh had a special relationship with Israel. The daughters ofZelophehadwho demanded from Moses their fathers plot of land inIsraelwere from the tribe of Manasseh.Joseph, Menassehs father, also demonstrated his love for the land byrequesting that his bones be buried there.As such, Moses gave them the land which would commence Israels expansion.

Homiletically, Manassehs name reflectsJosephs desire to return to his fathers homeand that symbolizes the Jewish hope for Redemption. Therefore, Moses gaveMenasseh the land that would act as the catalyst for the End of Days.

Before Joshua led the Jews across the Jordan,he reminded the descendants of Gad, Reuben and Manasseh about their promise. And true totheir word, when the war started, the warriors from Gad, Reuben, and half ofManasseh fought at the front of the army. In addition, they remained behind foran extra seven years as the land was divided amongst their fellows.

The Midrashrelates that when the descendants of Gad and Reuben entered Israel, theyexpressed regret at choosing to live outside it. A small portion of thePromised Land would be more valuable than twice the amount on the east bank!they cried.

Shepherding is a craft of isolation. In ourhistory, spiritual seekers would spurn industrial and agricultural occupations,afraid that the involvement would stunt their spirituality.In a similar vein, the tribes of Gad and Reuben wanted to remain shepherds as ameans to pursue spirituality without the distractions present in Israel.

While the spies wanted all of the people to remain outside of Israel for this reason, Gad and Reuben wanted to bethe only ones to do so. Moses wasokay with their request because the community needs to have at least somemembers that are uniquely devoted to Gdly pursuits.

Ultimately, however, the true purpose of lifeis to be engaged with and transform the physical world. Therefore, despiteMoses permission, the tribes were eventually punished for their decision whenSannecheirib exiled the ten tribes.

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How Two-and-a-Half Tribes Ended Up Over the Jordan - Chabad.org

Crew For Korean Thriller The Negotiations Arrives In Jordan, A Booming Location For Global Film Production – Forbes

'The Negotiations' crew from South Korea arrived in Jordan on July 5.

Jordans dramatic deserts and historical cityscapes, which have graced the likes of Star Wars Rogue One and The Rise of Skywalker, will now play host to South Korean production, The Negotiations, for the next few months. The film features top-billed stars Hyun Bin (most recently, of Crash Landing on You fame) and Hwang Jung-min (Battleship Island, Ode to My Father, Veteran), and will be directed by Yim Soon-rye, a leading female auteur of Korean New Wave cinema.

Originally, filming was scheduled to start in Jordan earlier this year, but was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The Negotiations (also referred to as Bargaining in some reports, because it is a direct translation of the Korean title) began shooting some of its Korea-set scenes first. The film, based on true events, tells the story of a National Intelligence Service (NIS) agent and diplomat working together to rescue South Koreans taken hostage in the Middle East.

The South Korea-Jordan filmmaking connection is historically strong, with the award-winning and highly popular 2014 South Korean TV series, Misaeng,filmed in Jordan's Wadi Rum, Amman and Petra. Jordans Royal Film Commission (RFC) is also the only Arab organization part of the Asian Film Commissions Network, headed by the Busan Film Commission based in South Korea.

While border closures and travel restrictions still remain in Jordan, special arrangements were made for the South Korean film crew to enter the country and begin production work on The Negotiations. The crew first flew on a commercial flight from South Korea to Qatar, before boarding a chartered plane from Qatar to Jordan.

According to a press release from the RFC, the crew arrived at Queen Alia International Airport, located 20 miles south of the capital city of Amman, on July 5. A video published by the RFC shows the crew arriving at the airport and undergoing Covid-19 precautionary measures.

Mohannad Al-Bakri, the RFCs managing director, said, During the whole period, we went all over and formed a task force from every single entity of the government, and we agreed, we want to open the film industry. Keeping productions going in the country, for both local and foreign titles, was critical, as the pre-Ramadan period also usually sees an increased number of shoots for television series. Jordans coronavirus caseload has remained relatively low, with a total of 1169 cases and 10 deaths, as of July 10.

Al-Bakri also shared in detail the numerous safety and health measures in place to keep everyone involved with The Negotiations safe: All cast and crew are tested for Covid-19 in South Korea, prior to their travel to Jordan. They also have to serve a quarantine of eight days, of which three days can be observed in their home country, with the remaining five days carried out at a hotel in Amman.

Though a total of around 110 cast and crew from South Korea will be in Jordan for the production, they are arriving in three different groups, depending on their involvement with the film. Production teams are kept as small as possible, which will help with safe distancing requirements and other health regulations.

Another overseas production, Indias Aadujeevitham (Goat Days), starring Prithviraj Sukumaran, had arrived in Jordan in mid-March, as the Covid-19 pandemic around the world grew more severe. While a government lockdown halted production in Jordan for a short period, arrangements were made for the crew to continue production, as they were filming in the remote Wadi Rum desert. Production wrapped in mid-May and the crew returned to India.

The South Korean crews arrival in Jordan is just a small reflection of how the host country has served as a vibrant location for global film production for decades. Rising to prominence onscreen in the 1962 epic directed by David Lean, Lawrence of Arabia, Jordan has also served as a filming location for Hollywood blockbusters like Aladdin, Zero Dark Thirty, Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, and Netflix NFLX s Sergio.

Jordan's Wadi Rum Desert, where films like 'Rogue One' and 'The Rise of Skywalker' from the Star ... [+] Wars saga, were filmed.

Jordans geographical diversity and variety of landscapes and terrains, along with the countrys position as a stable and safe destination, have allowed it to grow as a popular filming location. The local film commission has organized a yearly familiarization tour for Hollywood film executives for the past nine years, not just to promote Jordans breath-taking desert landscapes, ancient cities and Dead Sea waterfronts as filming locations, but also allow them to meet with Jordanian film companies, producers and writers and discuss potential collaborations.

Local film crews play a significant role in the foreign productions shooting in Jordan, working across above-the-line and below-the-line positions. For example, around 150 Jordanian crew and extras were involved with Aladdin in 2017. Several Jordanian crew members also followed the production to London for studio work.

Al-Bakri also shared, Now Im looking at not only the Hollywood familiarization tours, but also the Asian, because also we are part of the Asian Film [Commission] Network, we go to Korea every year. Im also trying to arrange trips...to Europe. Because we usually receive a lot of European projects, but on a smaller scale. We receive so much from the region.

Cash rebates and tax exemptions are in place to encourage foreign productions to shoot in Jordan and also employ local filmmaking talent. Maximum cash rebates for production-related expenses in Jordan were raised from 20% to 25% last year. To be eligible for cash rebates, productions should employ at least 50 Jordanian crew members and train 20 interns, but the commission has also indicated that it was considering moving towards a percentage system for local crew involvement instead ofrequiring fixed numbers.

According to the RFC, in the past ten years, the Jordanian film industry has brought in an estimated $372 million to the Kingdoms economy and created 106,000 jobs. In the last quarter of 2019, there were 18 productions filming in Jordan, with a total spend of around $50 million and approximately 7,000 jobs created.

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Crew For Korean Thriller The Negotiations Arrives In Jordan, A Booming Location For Global Film Production - Forbes

People That Would Vote for Michael Jordan Dont Have the Perspective: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar not Amused by All-Time Rankings – Essentially Sports

Horace Grant, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kurt Rambis, and James Worthy. What do these names have in common? They are all NBA legends who also wore glasses each time they stepped into the court. They say the NBA in the 60s and 70s was different than what it is today. Now, this can be said for every sport under the sun. So why is it that we forget about this when we vote for an all-time greatest list? Is Michael Jordan really the best ever?

In the UFC, we have this widely used term called pound-for-pound. Using this, it is analyzed and measured who is a better player relative to various weight categories. It is interesting to see whether a welterweight can be better than a middleweight. However, there is no such data analytics tool in place, at least not until today, that can measure and claim that a given player from the 90s is better than one who played in the 60s. So how fair is it to compare two legends who played in totally different eras?

ESPN dropped its rankings of the College Basketballs Greatest of All Time bracket poll earlier this year. Fans voted for these NCAA level plays, with some head-turning results. Jordan and Larry Bird made it successfully to the Top 2 with a tie. Later on, Jordan was given the top rank after polling on Instagram.

Shaquille ONeal and Magic Johnson were some of those other big names that made the list. However, MJs following beat everyone.

In an interview, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar explained why this comparison does not make any sense. He said, Its not important to me because the people that would vote for Michael Jordan dont have the perspective. They didnt see me play. I wish I had seen Oscar [Robertson] play. They really change their mind about that Michael wasnt anywhere near the college flavor that Oscar was. So you know, it all depends on your perspective.

Although The Tower from Power is bigger than any ranking published out there, he looked disappointed. He would take names of many legends who played even before him and spoke about why the comparison is not good. He added, People who didnt see Bill Russell play have no idea. Hes stifled the whole league for 11 world championships. Michael Jordan had six. Its no comparison but people dont understand whats being compared.

The man with six rings and the whole of the 90s to his name had a charisma that was unbeatable. He scored a grand total of 1788 points in three college seasons. But still, players like Larry Bird comfortably averaged better than MJ. None of it mattered much to the millennials because they would majorly vote for the NBA champion they grew up watching.

So what is your take on this? Do you believe such rankings point towards anything or are they just to satiate a curious mind? Let us know your important views.

Read also- Hated To Leave: LeBron James Unhappy About Being Away From Family

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People That Would Vote for Michael Jordan Dont Have the Perspective: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar not Amused by All-Time Rankings - Essentially Sports

RFC Jordan ties with VentureX to launch creative accelerator for film projects – BroadcastProME.com

Film-related projects, ranging from an idea to be developed to an existing project that needs revamping, can submit for support as of July.

The Royal Film Commission Jordan (RFC) and VentureX have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to support, develop and sustain the filmmaking industry through the Cultural and Creative Accelerator. The partnership seeks to place Jordan at the forefront of creativity and innovation.

The Cultural and Creative Accelerator is being built from the bottom-up and will help artists and creative businesses to overcome the challenges and risks associated with a startup. It has been established by VentureX in partnership with the Jordanian Ministry of Culture.

Film-related projects ranging from an idea to be developed to an existing project that needs revamping can submit for support as of July. Selected projects will benefit from three-phase support: advisory, mentorship and funding and administrative support.

The project also aims to create educational programmes for Jordanians working or aspiring to work in the film industry, promote film culture throughout Jordan and positioning Jordan as a location for international audio-visual productions.

The Minister of Culture Bassem Al-Tuwaisi stressed that the opportunities that partnerships can generate through the accelerator and that benefit Jordans creative and cultural industries play a vital role in the economy by providing an innovative and entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Commenting on this partnership, Mohannad al-Bakri, Managing Director of the RFC said: Young and creative minds in Jordan have something special to add to the way we create or consume films. We want to capitalise on the unique industry talent pool to empower the filmmaking market, through adopting new ideas and helping them achieve the best potential growth. We strongly believe that this project will be an opportunity for Jordanian talent to offer new services to the industry.

Yousef M Hamidaddin, Managing Partner of VentureX, remarked: Our partnership with the RFC is about developing a toolbox dedicated to unleashing the creative potential of those working in the film industry. We want to connect participants with a supportive network and resources through mentoring and engagement.

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RFC Jordan ties with VentureX to launch creative accelerator for film projects - BroadcastProME.com

Increasing access to quality education: Jordan – Jordan – ReliefWeb

The United States and Jordan share a longstanding partnership in education, beginning with teacher and technical training in the 1950s, and expanding through today. Jordan has made great progress in increasing access to education, with nearly universal primary enrollment and gender parity in Jordanian schools.

Despite widespread access to education, challenges remain. Schools are overcrowded and in varying states of disrepair, teachers receive limited training and support, and learning outcomes remain low, with only a fifth of second and third graders reading at grade level. A growing population of Jordanians and the influx of refugees have placed additional pressure on Jordans public education system, and children and youth who fall out of the system lack opportunities to get back on track.

In 2018, the Ministry of Education launched its five-year Education Strategic Plan to ensure that all children and youth can gain the skills and knowledge to succeed in a 21st-century knowledge economy. USAID supports the Government of Jordan as it expands access to quality education for children and youth throughout Jordan and makes sure aspiring teachers have the skills to engage their students and prepare them for lifelong learning.

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Increasing access to quality education: Jordan - Jordan - ReliefWeb

Jordanian Christian Warns Israel of the Effects of Annexation – Israel Today

In a previous article, Israel Today contributor Rami Dabbas wrote that his native Jordan will begrudgingly accept Israels annexation of the Jordan Valley and the long-overdue final demarcation of the Jewish states eastern security border. But that doesnt mean such a move is without significant risk, both for Jordan and Israel.

The goal of those looking to annex the Jordan Valley are clear: To cancel the Oslo Accords and the process leading to a two-state solution. It also seems that they want to push the Palestinians eastward toward Jordan.

The current government of Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made the annexation of the Jordan Valley and other parts of the so-called West Bank a top issue. Even so, most Israelis may not be aware of the side effects that such a unilateral move will impose on their lives. They may not realize the risks to which they will be exposed as a result of this process.

Area C are those areas of

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Jordanian Christian Warns Israel of the Effects of Annexation - Israel Today

Strange 10,000-year-old artifacts from Jordan tied to cult that dug up the dead, archaeologists say – Haaretz

Enigmatic flint artifacts unearthed at a large Neolithic village in northern Jordan were not tools, archaeologists have concluded. The violin-shaped artifacts dating to nearly 10,000 years ago may actually be crudely shaped figurines that represented deceased relatives, and were likely part of a complex ancestor cult that involved the ritual burying and exhumation of the dearly departed.

These unique figurines were part of a broader artistic and conceptual revolution in the Near East that accompanied the dawn of agriculture, which placed humans, instead of animals, at the center of prehistoric imagery, concludes a team of Spanish archaeologists that published its findings Tuesday in the journal Antiquity.

The putative figurines now reported from Jordan stand alone in the archaeological record of the period for the use of flint as a material. Earlier Paleolithic and Neolithic art does include some advanced human representations, generally carved in ivory or limestone. Just one example are the so-called Venus female figurines from Europe that date back to more than 30,000 years ago. But this anthropomorphic imagery paled in size and quantity to animal representations, particularly the spectacular animal scenes that adorned the caves of our hunter-gatherer ancestors in Europe.

In the Near East however, if there was paleo-cave art, it hasnt been preserved and rock art found throughout the region, including riddling the Negev, has been impossible to date.

Something completely different

More than 100 double-notched flint artifacts have emerged since 2016 amongst the remains of houses unearthed at Kharaysin, 40 kilometers (25 miles) north of the Jordanian capital, Amman. The ancient settlement covered an area of 25 hectares (62 acres) and was occupied at different times from the late ninth millennium B.C.E. to the early seventh millennium B.C.E.

The archaeologists found these puzzling flint objects, which measure between one to five centimeters (0.4 to 2 inches) in layers carbon-dated to 9,500 to 10,000 years ago, says Juan Jose Ibanez, the archaeologist from the Spanish National Research Council who led the study.

The flint tools from this period are very standardized: sickles, knives and so on, but this was something completely new, Ibanez tells Haaretz.

Notches were sometimes carved into flint tools to facilitate hafting, that is, using rope to attach the stone to a handle to create more powerful, levered tools like axes or spears, he notes. But this was not the case here since the ends of the artifacts were flat and dull, lacking the sharpness and pointiness needed to make any of these objects useful.

At some point after their discovery, one of the excavators suggested the enigmatic flints could be anthropomorphic depictions. With a bit of imagination, the notches carved into the sides of the artifact seem to create the stylized shape of a human figure with a head, shoulders and lower body.

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We were very skeptical initially but now our analysis indicates that this is the most logical conclusion, Ibanez says.

The researchers studied about half of the mystery flints under a microscope, seeking signs of wear and tear on the stone and found virtually none. The lack of abrasions indicates the artifacts did not have any practical use in everyday life, the study published in Antiquity says.

The archaeologists also compared the artifacts to later Neolithic statuettes from another site in Jordan which more clearly depict the human form, and found they shared similar proportions in representing different body parts, further strengthening the figurine theory.

For an expert flint knapper it would have taken about half a minute to create such an artifact, but that does not detract from the major significance of the find, says Avi Gopher, a Tel Aviv University archaeologist.

Anthropomorphic representations in flint are a really a unique phenomenon not known from any site from this period, says Gopher, an expert on the Neolithic who was not involved in the study. Its such a simple, minimalistic representation of a human figure, but it is also so clear everyone would read it like that.

The Kharaysin artifacts can also be clustered into two different groups: one in which the lower body of the putative figurine has the same width of the upper body, and a second one in which the hips are wider than the shoulders. This may have been a way to distinguish between depictions of males and females, though this hypothesis still requires further study, Ibanez says.

Rest in pieces

As to what function these figurines may have had, the researchers note that most of the artifacts were found at a small cemetery, indicating they were part of funerary rituals held there.

The 10 burials that archaeologists dug up in this area remind us that, in the Neolithic, people could hardly expect to rest in peace once they were dead. The study of the skeletons showed that many of the tombs were reopened after the initial burial to remove some of the bones, especially the skull and mandible.

In some cases, the archaeologists found partially articulated bones in the disturbed burials, meaning that the remains had been manipulated before the flesh had completely decomposed. Some of the tombs were so-called secondary burials, that is, caches in which the bones were laid once the remains had been used for whatever purpose they had been dug up in the first place.

What happened to the bones in between is still a mystery, but Ibanez speculates that the flint figurines from the cemetery may have been used and then discarded there as part of these rituals of burial and exhumation, likely to represent specific deceased people that were being remembered.

Rituals involving human remains were common throughout the Near East during the Neolithic, a time when people in this region first began domesticating crops and animals.

One example, roughly from the same period as the Kharaysin remains, are the dozens of plastered skulls that have been found from Israel to southern Turkey. These were actual human crania whose facial features were reconstructed with plaster and seashells so they could be prominently displayed. A few centuries earlier than these are the 11,500-year-old skull fragments with signs of carving that have been found at Gbekli Tepe, a Turkish site that has been dubbed the worlds oldest temple for its impressive megalithic circles.

At Kharaysin, Ibanez and his team found three skulls inserted in the plastered wall of one of the houses in the ancient village.

People back then were definitely living with the remains of their ancestors, Ibanez says, adding that in some Neolithic communities it was also common to bury the dead under the floors of houses.

Just another skull in the wall

Most scholars today believe these behaviors were linked to an ancestor cult that arose in parallel with the dawn of agriculture. As humans across the Near East increasingly abandoned the hunter-gatherer way of life and settled into permanent farming communities, enormous amounts of resources and time were invested in tending crops, building houses and raising animals.

This meant that larger communities formed and needed to create a sense of shared identity, while also being able to stake their claim to the land they had toiled so much on. And the best way to accomplish both goals was to identify their shared ancestors and invoke their original ownership over the area, Ibanez notes.

This is my house because my father built it so I keep my father inside the wall to prove it, is how the archaeologist sums it up.

Plastering skulls or setting them inside house walls may seem like a macabre and alien custom, but the principle of using ancestral ties to define a peoples shared history and bolster a claim to a certain territory is still the basis for constructing common identities in many modern nation states to this day. Disagreements over whose ancestors were the first to live in a certain region also continue to fuel conflicts over land ownership (think Israelis and Palestinians).

The Neolithic ancestor cult and the beginning of agriculture were also likely connected to an artistic and conceptual revolution, of which the Kharaysin figurines (if indeed they are figurines) may be a prime example. Whereas during the Paleolithic and the beginning of the Neolithic, animals were the main focus of prehistoric artists, this began to change around 11,000 years ago, when depictions of humans started to become more frequent and predominant.

While we cannot know for sure why this change occurred, many scholars suggest it may be linked to the growing importance of the ancestor cult and the need to depict and venerate the deceased as well as the power over nature that humanity gained by domesticating crops and animals.

Neolithic glocalization

The Neolithic fascination with the human form is probably related to the new beliefs about the deceased and ancestors but also to sedentarism and agriculture, because there is a new conscience of what humans are capable of, Ibanez says.

In fact, it may have been this very conceptual revolution, which viewed humanity as a newly dominant force over nature, that steered us away from the hunter-gatherer lifestyle, says Gopher, the archaeologist from Tel Aviv.

You cannot domesticate a plant or an animal unless you change your perception, he posits. In in the old, animistic, world view you are part of nature and you have the same rights and opportunities as other living beings. With the Neolithic revolution, you are putting yourself a step above nature, you are saying here I am, I am at the center of the stage.

The notched artifacts from Kharaysin would be the first known example of figurines made of flint in the Neolithic Near East, but the centrality of the human form is apparent across the region in different forms: from the anthropomorphic features of the monoliths at Gbekli Tepe, to the above-mentioned plastered skulls, to human figurines made of clay and plaster.

These variations on a theme give us insight into how Neolithic cultures were in touch with each other over vast distances, Ibanez notes. The patchwork of early farming communities formed a region-wide network in which not only artifacts were traded across hundreds of kilometers but also new ideas could be shared and adapted to each local reality, Ibanez says.

We thought innovation was something that appeared in one place and then spread, but now we know that Near East communities were inventing new things and then transmitting them in a network, Ibanez says. The region was a melting pot in which things were happening in the same direction but with local peculiarities. They were inventing agriculture, livestock and sedentary living. They were all doing similar things that were going to change humanity, but they were doing these things each in their own particular way.

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Strange 10,000-year-old artifacts from Jordan tied to cult that dug up the dead, archaeologists say - Haaretz

Hyun Bin And Hwang Jung Min Depart For Jordan To Film Upcoming Action Movie – soompi

Actors Hyun Bin and Hwang Jung Min have flown to Jordan to film Bargaining (literal translation).

Bargaining will tell the story of a kidnapping that takes place in the Middle East and the attempted rescue of the 23 kidnapping victims. It is based on the 2007 South Korean hostage crisis in Afghanistan. Bargaining will be the first Korean film to film overseas since COVID-19 hit.

On the morning of July 13, Hyun Bin, Hwang Jung Min, and the films production team went to Incheon International Aiport and left for Jordan.When they arrive in Jordan, they will undergo inspections in accordance with local quarantine procedures and then immediately begin self-isolation to continue filming in safety.

Bargaining was supposed to start filming in March, but the unexpected spread ofCOVID-19 around the world forced the cast and crew to put their plans to a halt. The production team continued their discussions with the Jordanian government, and after much waiting, they finally received permission to enter the country for filming.

Some of the new films that are currentlyaffectedby theCOVID-19 incident includeBogot starringSong Joong KiandLee Hee Joon, Kidnapping (literal title) starringHa Jung WooandJoo Ji Hoon, and The Outlaws 2.

Megabox Plus M, the distributor of Bargaining, shared, Bargaining will focus on filming in Jordan for the time being. The specific dates of filming and their return to Korea will depend on the situation at the site. Both thecast and crew will return safely from filming.

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Hyun Bin And Hwang Jung Min Depart For Jordan To Film Upcoming Action Movie - soompi

Heatwave scheduled to hit Jordan on Tuesday – Roya News English

Jordan will be affected by a hot air mass starting Tuesday, according to Arabia Weather.

During Tuesday daytime, a remarkable rise in temperatures is expected, where they will be 3-5 degrees above their annual average.

The weather will be relatively hot in most regions and extremely hot in the Jordan Valley, the Dead Sea, Aqaba and the Badia region.

Northwesterly moderate-speed winds are forecast and may be present in the afternoon and evening in the desert areas and the Badia region.

On Tuesday night, temperatures will be higher when compared to the previous nights of the week, and the weather will be hotter than usual.

On Wednesday, the air mass will peak, where temperatures will be 4-6 degrees higher than their average during this time of the year.

The weather will be hot in most regions of the Kingdom and even hotter in the Jordan Valley, the Dead Sea, Aqaba and the Badia region.

At night, the weather will be hotter when compared to the previous nights.

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Heatwave scheduled to hit Jordan on Tuesday - Roya News English

Twitter turned Will Smith into the 2020 version of the crying Jordan meme and it’s hilarious – MSN Money

Provided by For The Win

The Will Smith memes have only existed for just under 24 hours now but we can already tell that this is going to last fora while.

Smith appearance on Jada Pinkett-Smiths Red Table Talk showwhere the couple talked about their split and Jada Pinkett-Smiths relationship or entanglement with August Alsina. They had an interesting conversation about it, certainly. And points were definitely made.

However, we are here to talk about absolutely none of that.

What we are here for to discuss, folks, is how the internet took a heartfelt conversation between Will Smith and his wife and turned him into the new crying Jordan meme of 2020.

During the conversation the two were having, Pinkett-Smith began to describe her relationship with Alsina as an entanglement. While she explained, Will Smith madethisface.

And this one.

Now, to be clear, there was no beef between these two during this conversation. They were broken up. It was fine for Jada to be in a relationship with whoever she wanted.

But this is the internet. And in this digital world we live in, jokes are much, much better than facts. And so all the jokes poured in.Twitter went crazy.

But then, even outside of their conversation, the meme just took on a life of its own. Smiths face became the internets face for 2020.

Throw this one in the Twitter history books, folks. Well be seeing it for years to come.

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Twitter turned Will Smith into the 2020 version of the crying Jordan meme and it's hilarious - MSN Money

Jordan Henderson avoids surgery and will lift Premier League trophy – The Guardian

Jrgen Klopp has confirmed Jordan Henderson will miss the rest of the season through injury but will lift the Premier League trophy at Liverpools final home game against Chelsea.

Henderson injured his left knee during Liverpools 3-1 win at Brighton on Wednesday to leave Klopp fearing a lengthy absence that could impact on the 2020-21 campaign. The Liverpool manager admits it came as a big relief when scans revealed surgery would not be required and he expects the influential captain to be available for the start of the title defence.

Hendo is the best possible of all bad news, Klopp said. It is a knee injury but no surgery is needed. He will not play any more this season but I am pretty positive he will start the new season. It is not cool but it is the best news we could get. Hendo is a quick healer and he will be back soon.

It was an awful moment when he went down. We knew immediately. In Germany you would say he is an animal Hendo fights with everything and if he has pain he will never tell you. He can really deal well with pain so it was a complete mood killer.

Klopp admits Henderson could have missed Liverpool receiving the Premier League trophy at Anfield had he required surgery. Instead the midfielder will be in rehab when Frank Lampards side visit on 22 July and available to add the Premier League to the Champions League, Club World Cup and Super Cup trophies he has lifted in the past 14 months.

Hendo will be there and he will wear the match kit and everything will be fine, Klopp said before Saturdays game against Burnley. When we knew the injury was not as serious as we first thought it was a big relief for all of us, a big relief because we really thought for the role he played in the last few years until now he deserves to be in that spot at that moment [when the trophy is presented].

But life is like it is. If he would have had the surgery he would have been in hospital and it would have been difficult. But now no surgery needed, rehab starts immediately and in a few weeks training and playing again.

All the boys want him to be there. One of the first things I heard after we won the league was Virgil [van Dijk] telling Hendo: You can do the shuffle again! I am not sure he will be able to do the shuffle now but that is the biggest problem now.

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Jordan Henderson avoids surgery and will lift Premier League trophy - The Guardian

Why we still haven’t cloned humans it’s not just ethics – Business Insider – Business Insider

Following is a transcript of the video.

Narrator: We've been able to clone human embryos for about seven years. But as far as we know, no one's actually cloned a whole person. Turns out, ethics aren't the only thing holding scientists back. Cloning isn't the sci-fi marvel we think it is. It can be dangerous, often ineffective, and, most of all, we just haven't thought of a good enough reason to do it. So, here's why you'll probably never have to fight your evil clone.

This is Dolly. Just kidding, that's a regular sheep. This is Dolly, the first mammal cloned successfully from an adult cell. She was born in 1996 after scientists figured out how to remove the DNA from the egg cell of a Scottish Blackface sheep and basically replace it with the DNA of a mammary cell from a Finn Dorset sheep. They gave it a little electric shock to fuse the cell and get it replicating, placed the cells in the uterus of another sheep, and boom, clone. This method, called reproductive cloning, could theoretically be used on humans. But this is a best-case scenario. It took 277 tries for the scientists to get one Dolly. Nowadays, cloning mammals generally has a success rate of about 10% to 20%. Better than one in 277, but still a majorly inefficient process.

Jose Cibelli: Technically, it's not difficult to produce a clone embryo, but human cloning has other hurdles that need to be considered.

Narrator: To even research human cloning, scientists would need to ethically collect a large amount of donated eggs and find enough surrogates to carry them. But even if they made it through that logistical nightmare, the biggest issue is this:

Cibelli: They're gonna hurt the baby, or they're gonna hurt the person carrying the cloned fetus.

Narrator: Across the board, scientists have found that some embryos expire before they're implanted. Others result in miscarriages. And those that make it to term often die soon after birth or end up with severe abnormalities. Simply, these are risks that are easier to take when it comes to experimenting with sheep than with people. But arguably the biggest reason we haven't cloned a human being? There's not a good enough reason to.

In pop culture, cloning is used to bring people back from the dead. But that's not how it works. Cloning someone would only create a twin, not a replica, since identical twins have the same genetics, but not necessarily personalities. And a "Never Let Me Go" scenario, where organs are harvested from clones to save the rich, is not only unethical, but unnecessary. Why clone an entire person when you can just make the part you need? Something, theoretically, therapeutic cloning can solve.

Therapeutic cloning is almost identical to reproductive, except the cloned embryo is never implanted in a uterus. Instead, the embryo is cloned for the sole purpose of extracting stem cells. Stem cells have the incredible ability to turn into any other cell in the human body, which means they're great for developing new treatments for disease and have the potential to repair or regenerate tissues and organs.

But, no surprise, there are a lot of downsides with therapeutic cloning. The thing about stem cells is that they're a pretty limited resource. The most substantial source for embryonic stem cells? Three- to five-day-old embryos, cloned or otherwise. And when someone else's stem cells are transplanted into a patient, the body will sometimes fight them off like a disease. Some researchers believe that cloned stem cells, since they share the patient's DNA, would be less likely to be rejected. But this use case is still in the research stage.

And, finally, therapeutic cloning is an individualized treatment in a world where drug companies are more interested in standardized ones. And there are easier ways to create multipurpose cells nowadays, like the method for creating induced pluripotent stem cells. They're basically adult cells that have been reprogrammed to be a different type of cell.

Cibelli: The problem with therapeutic cloning, of course, is that you need a lab personnel that is qualified to do it, specific equipment to do it. Whereas the other technique, you can just buy a kit and one person can do it in a lab that has some expertise in tissue culture.

Narrator: Cloned cells still have an advantage when it comes to healthier mitochondria and the ability to grow into entire animals, whereas iPSCs often peter out. But since iPSCs safely and reliably do most everything but create entire living animals, why fund the harder, ethically ambiguous thing? So, cloning might actually have a bigger place in movies than it does in real life, because the money just isn't there. And just because we can do something doesn't mean we need to.

Ian: Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should.

Abby Tang: So, in the research for this video, I did come across one very interesting tidbit, and that is the announcement of cloned human baby Eve, who was born on December 26, 2002. And the source of this announcement is a company called Clonaid, which was formed in 1997 by the Raelian cult. And they're a cult that believes that humans were cloned from aliens and the only way for us to reach immortality is to clone ourselves. It's been 18 years, and we haven't gotten any proof that baby Eve exists or has ever existed, but the company is still alive and well. So if any proof does come through, we will update you.

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Why we still haven't cloned humans it's not just ethics - Business Insider - Business Insider

Cat Cloning Market Size By Product Analysis, Application, End-Users, Regional Outlook, Competitive Strategies And Forecast Up To 2026 – 3rd Watch News

New Jersey, United States,- Latest update on Cat Cloning Market Analysis report published with extensive market research, Cat Cloning Market growth analysis, and forecast by 2026. this report is highly predictive as it holds the overall market analysis of topmost companies into the Cat Cloning industry. With the classified Cat Cloning market research based on various growing regions, this report provides leading players portfolio along with sales, growth, market share, and so on.

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Cat Cloning Market Report covers the manufacturers data, including shipment, price, revenue, gross profit, interview record, business distribution etc., these data help the consumer know about the competitors better. This report also covers all the regions and countries of the world, which shows a regional development status, including Cat Cloning market size, volume and value, as well as price data.

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The report of the Cat Cloning market is an in-depth analysis of the business vertical projected to record a commendable annual growth rate over the estimated time period. It also comprises of a precise evaluation of the dynamics related to this marketplace. The purpose of the Cat Cloning Market report is to provide important information related to the industry deliverables such as market size, valuation forecast, sales volume, etc.

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Multiply the Bounty by Cloning Free Plants | MOTHER EARTH NEWS – Mother Earth News

Several weeks ago, when it became clear that we would not be able to have monthly garden club meetings, I began a podcast about gardening in St. Johns. I also put together short videos as I was doing things around my garden and put them on TikTok, as well as posting to our Garden Club Facebook page. One thing I had several people asking me about was how to take cuttings and turn them into new plants.

Many plants can be cloned through taking softwood stem cuttings. I've used Wisteria for this blog post, but I've done grapes, Rose of Sharon, roses, hydrangea, and many more. If you want to know if you can propagate your plants from softwood stem cuttings, do a general web search. Most deciduous shrubs can be copied this way.

In St. Johns and the surrounding area, maintaining moisture while cuttings take root is the hardest part, so preparing your rooting area should take place before you go to cutting stems off of plants.

Fill a pot with some soilless mix.When you are going to take cuttings, rooting them in soilless mix is much easier and more successful than it would be to try to root them in heavy soil. It is easier to water and is more consistent.

When I water potting "soil" for the first time, I always overwater, making sure water runs all the way through and out the holes in the bottom of the pot. Northern Arizona in incredibly arid, with "humid" days being somewhere around 25 to 30% humidity. Extra water will drain out of the pot very quickly.

Knowing when to take cuttings, and how to take them and prepare them to root is the first step. Most cuttings should be taken from soft wood, before the bark has hardened.

The cuttings themselves should only be about 6" long, at a maximum, and all but the top couple leaves should be cut off. This not only helps the cutting to send out roots rather than sending energy to the leaves, but it also helps the cutting to lose less water through respiration out of the leaves.

**Note** This next part can be done with or without rooting hormone. I have had less than 60% success with wisteria in the past without rooting hormone, so I did use it for this round.

After you have your stem cuttings (notice how they are still somewhat green, rather than covered with bark), dip them in rooting hormone. Shake off the excess powder.

Whether or not you used rooting hormone, it is best at this point to poke holes in the soil with a stick or something, about 4 inches deep. The potting soil will rub off the hormone if you used it, or can plug the phloem at the bottom of the cutting if you didn't use it, so it is best not to use the cuttings and press them right into the soil. Blocking the phloem, or the little channels water runs up the stem through, will cut down your success rate. Just poke a hole with a pencil or small stick, set the cutting in it, firm the soil around the cutting, and then continue with all the rest of the cuttings.

In a pot this size, about 8 inches in diameter, you can place 10 or so cuttings. Once the soil is firmed up around each of the cuttings, water well, allowing water to run through the bottom of the pot. This pushes out air from around the cuttings, and will allow the stems to be in good contact with the potting soil.

Because we are in this arid area, I always set my watered pot in a seedling tray to allow a small amount of water to sit to increase the humidity immediately around the pot. Then cover the pot with a big trash bag or other plastic cover, making sure the plastic doesn't touch the leaves (more important in more humid areas). In 4 to 6 weeks, the cuttings should have roots strong enough to allow you to transplant each new baby plant into its own pot or directly in the ground where it will be growing.

Make sure you water well, until the plant recovers from the shock of transplanting, and then enjoy your new babies as they grow!

Regina Hitchockis a high school biology teacher in St. Johns, Arizona, where she co-founded the Gardeners with Altitude organic garden club and brings gardening, aquaponics, aeroponics, hydroponics, and seed starting into her classrooms. She serves as Secretary for White Mountain Community Cooperative to promote food- and economically secure self-sufficiency in Arizona. Connect withRegina on Facebook, and read all of her MOTHER EARTH NEWS postshere.

All MOTHER EARTH NEWS community bloggers have agreed to follow our Blogging Guidelines, and they are responsible for the accuracy of their posts.

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Multiply the Bounty by Cloning Free Plants | MOTHER EARTH NEWS - Mother Earth News

Dog Cloning Market Size By Product Analysis, Application, End-Users, Regional Outlook, Competitive Strategies And Forecast Up To 2026 – 3rd Watch News

New Jersey, United States,- Latest update on Dog Cloning Market Analysis report published with extensive market research, Dog Cloning Market growth analysis, and forecast by 2026. this report is highly predictive as it holds the overall market analysis of topmost companies into the Dog Cloning industry. With the classified Dog Cloning market research based on various growing regions, this report provides leading players portfolio along with sales, growth, market share, and so on.

The research report of the Dog Cloning market is predicted to accrue a significant remuneration portfolio by the end of the predicted time period. It includes parameters with respect to the Dog Cloning market dynamics incorporating varied driving forces affecting the commercialization graph of this business vertical and risks prevailing in the sphere. In addition, it also speaks about the Dog Cloning Market growth opportunities in the industry.

Dog Cloning Market Report covers the manufacturers data, including shipment, price, revenue, gross profit, interview record, business distribution etc., these data help the consumer know about the competitors better. This report also covers all the regions and countries of the world, which shows a regional development status, including Dog Cloning market size, volume and value, as well as price data.

Dog Cloning Market competition by top Manufacturers:

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Dog Cloning Market Size by End-user Application:

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Dog Cloning Market Size By Product Analysis, Application, End-Users, Regional Outlook, Competitive Strategies And Forecast Up To 2026 - 3rd Watch News

JioChat is a WhatsApp clone from the maker of the popular Zoom knockoff – Android Police

Indias biggest telecom operator Reliance Jio got richer by billions of dollars in the last couple of months with funds coming from left, right, and center. But it seems that instead of finding some good use for all that cash on hand, the companys been busy cloning popular apps to offer its own alternatives. Last week, JioMeet was called out for being a Zoom rip-off, and now Jio is back with JioChat, which looks like a photocopy of WhatsApp.

JioChat isnt a new app under Jios massive portfolio; in fact, its been around since the early days of the carrier. But it only recently got a major facelift that brought a host of visual changes making it look brazenly similar to WhatsApp. While JioMeet was a picture-perfect copy of Zoom, the redesigned JioChat app is a little more forgiving it only mirrors the tabbed home screen and the unmistakable green shade of WhatsApp.

As compared side-by-side in the images above, the top menu tabs look basically identical on both apps, including the camera icon and the app name towards the left along with the ellipsis dropdown menu on the right. Jios version also has an extra Channels tab that lists a bunch of branded accounts for its users to follow. The green color palette, on the other hand, is just the default theme option (changed from blue in previous app versions), which you can tweak from the apps settings menu.

The investment spree we were talking about earlier was, in fact, kicked off by Facebook, which happens to own the messaging platform WhatsApp. The social media giant invested $5.7 billion in Jio back in April for close to a 10-percent stake in the carriers various businesses. Despite that, accusing Facebook of "allowing" or having a role to play in Jios latest cloning job is a little far-fetched. Doing so would only sabotage its own uber-popular global messaging service for a relatively small-time local alternative.

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JioChat is a WhatsApp clone from the maker of the popular Zoom knockoff - Android Police

Global Voice Cloning Market is accounted for xx USD million in 2019 and is expected to reach xx USD million by 2025 growing at a CAGR of xx% : IBM,…

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This study covers following key players:IBMGoogleLyrebirdNuance CommunicationsBaiduMicrosoftAWSAT&TNeoSpeechSmartbox Assistive TechnologyexCloneLumenVoxKata.AiAlt.AiCereProcAcapela GroupVocaliDVoiceryAristechCepstralIspeechVivoTextVoctro LabsrSpeakCandyVoice

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Market segment by Type, the product can be split into CloudOn-premises

Market segment by Application, split into Healthcare and life sciencesEducationMedia and entertainmentTelecomTravel and hospitalityBanking, Financial Services, and Insurance (BFSI)Others

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Some Major TOC Points:1 Report Overview2 Global Growth Trends3 Market Share by Key Players4 Breakdown Data by Type and ApplicationContinued

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Global Voice Cloning Market is accounted for xx USD million in 2019 and is expected to reach xx USD million by 2025 growing at a CAGR of xx% : IBM,...