Daily Archives: May 7, 2022

California Sports Betting Initiative Backed by Gambling Giants Would Block Startups – Times of San Diego

Posted: May 7, 2022 at 7:43 pm

Horse racing. Photo via Pixabay

One of the measures Californians will likely get to vote on this fall does more than just allow betting on sports: Critics are concerned it will effectively block smaller gaming companies and startups from operating in the state.

Those arehigh stakesfor an industry that could rake in over $3.5 billion each year from California bettors and for a state that prefers to see itself as the startup capital of the world.

Of the four sports betting initiatives competing to make Novembers ballot, one,paid forby online sports betting giants FanDuel, DraftKings and BetMGM,would allowgaming companies and Native American tribes to provide sports betting online across the state.

But embedded in the initiative are requirements that would be very difficult if not impossible for the companies smaller competitors to meet, experts say.

If the initiative passes, gaming companies would have to pay a $100 million licensing fee to do business in the state, as well as already be licensed in 10 states, or be operating in five states and running 12 casinos.

I think its absolute nonsense, said John Holden, a professor at Oklahoma State University who studies sports gambling policy. I think whats effectively happening is, basically, the 5 to 10 frontrunners in the market have decided Alright, lets ensure that theres no one else who can compete by agreeing to pay these exorbitant license fees.

The $100 million fee, Holden said, essentially ensures no startups will be able to operate in California.

The fee is one way the measure generates significant revenue to fund homelessness housing and mental health treatment and provide financial support for California Tribal nations, Nathan Click, a spokesperson for the initiatives campaign, wrote in a statement.

California is best served by creating a safe and tightly regulated sports betting market, one where customers can know they are working with experienced platforms with a proven track record of safe and responsible operation in other markets, Click wrote.

FanDuel and BetMGM did not respond to CalMatters request for an interview. DraftKings directed CalMatters interview request to Click, the campaign spokesperson.

Theinitiativebacked by sports betting companies would:

The states Legislative Analysts Office wrote in itsassessment of the measurethat its uncertain how much money the new taxes and fees would generate for the state, but it could reach the mid-hundreds of millions per year.

The measure hasnt qualified for the ballot yet its still gathering signatures. But Click, the spokesperson for the campaign, said the measure is well ahead of where it needs to be to qualify.

Other measures that legalize sports betting could make the ballot or are already eligible. One, backed by a coalition of tribes, wouldallow sports betting at tribal casinosand four horse race tracks only, while another, backed by a separate coalition of tribes,would allow tribes to offer online and in-personsports betting exclusively. Native American tribes have long had the exclusive right to offercertain forms of gamblingin California. Many tribesare campaigningagainst the gaming companies initiativearguing, among other things, that it would threaten tribes sovereignty and self-reliance.

If one of the initiatives passes, California would become one ofover 30 statesto legalize betting on sports. The industry could generate $3.57 billion per year in net revenue for entities offering sports betting to people in California if online and in-person betting is legalized and many companies are able to operate, according to projections from Eilers & Krejcik Gaming LLC, a research firm. Thats larger than the firms projections for Texas, New York, or Florida.

The $100 million licensing fee is much higher than what any other state has on the books, said Becca Giden, director of policy for Eilers & Krejcik. Now, New Yorks $25 million licensing fee is the highest, she said. Most states that have legalized sports betting have licensing fees in the low single-digit millions or hundreds of thousands and no other state requires companies to already be licensed in other states, according to Giden.

The requirement that a company already be licensed in 10 states would cut off smaller companies and startups that are only licensed in a few states, Giden said. That, combined with the fee, would meaningfully limit the ability of small companies and startups to participate in the market, she said.

Early-stage startups that get money from venture capitalists generally raise around $5 million to $20 million in their first round,said Olav Sorenson, a sociologist at UCLAs Anderson School of Management who studies entrepreneurship. But only about 1 out of every 100 startups get any venture capital money, Sorenson said. When you include startups that rely on credit card loans and other sources of funds, the amount of money new companies have at their disposal shrinks.

Very, very few startups would be able to afford that kind of fee, Sorenson said. I think its going to dramatically limit competition.

A few companies already dominate online sports betting. FanDuel commands 31% of the U.S. market, followed by DraftKings with 26%, BetMGM with 16% and Caesars with 12%, according to research from Eilers & Krejcik.

The goal of this seems to be to create an oligopoly market for sports betting, said Marc Edelman, a law professor at Baruch College who specializes in sports, gaming, and antitrust law. It would, he said, benefit a limited number of companies to the detriment of smaller companies and consumers.

MaximBet, a sports betting company launched in 2021, is so far licensed in one state: Colorado. The company tries to set itself apart by offering bettors in-person experiences glitzy masquerade parties, meet-and-greets with pro players, or the opportunity to drive a Ferrari around a race track, said Doug Terfher, vice president of marketing for the company.

MaximBet is working on getting licensed in 10 states and in Ontario, Canada, but the process is slow. If the company is able to get licensed in five states this year, itll be an amazing year, said Terfher.

Most states are restricting the number of companies that can offer sports betting, said Daniel Wallach, a Florida-based gaming lawyer who has testified in front of state legislatures considering legalization. States do this with other forms of gambling too. Its commonplace, he said, for gaming not to be a free for all, where any company can participate. There have to be some baseline standards, he said, that ensure that a companys integrity, experience, and track record are closely scrutinized.

Historically, organized crime groups have been involved in the gambling industry, Wallach said, so state legislatures and gaming agencies are very careful to limit who can operate in this heavily regulated industry.

If smaller companies cant do business in California, that means fewer options for would-be bettors and potentially less innovation.

Youd basically end up with a lot less choice, said Holden.

One up-and-coming product Holden cited is exchange-based wagering, where bettors can trade wagers with each other throughout a game, similar to how day traders buy and sell stocks.

Sporttrade, a Philadelphia-based startup that offers stock-market-like sports betting, is working on getting licensed in New Jersey, Colorado, Indiana, and Louisiana. Could it cough up $100 million and get licensed in 10 states in order to come to California?

No chance, said Alex Kane, the companys CEO. Hes all for regulations that protect consumers, he said, but thinks a $100 million licensing fee doesnt have anything to do with that. Instead, Kane said he thinks the bigger companies writing the initiative dont want to face competition. Theyre looking at What would we be willing to pay to get rid of competition altogether? Kane said. You can see that its worth a lot of money to them.

And if its difficult for new companies to reach customers in California, that could wind up shaping not just what services are offered, but who offers them. Such a high financial barrier to entry makes it nearly impossible for minority-owned businesses or new businesses or entrepreneurial ventures to even attempt to compete, said Edelman, the law professor at Baruch College. If theres not a lot of competition between sports betting vendors, that might also lead to worse prices for customers, he said.

If the initiative backed by the gaming companies passes, California wouldnt be the most restrictive state not even close. Delaware has essentially limited sports betting to three casinos. Washington D.C. enabled one app, run by the DC Lottery, to offer online sports betting city-wide, while other companies are limited to the geographic areas surrounding sports arenas theyve cut deals with. Somes states have set limits on the number of licenses theyll offer. Washington state made sports betting theexclusive domain of Native American tribes, and Maine seemspoised to make a similar decision.

Regulators can make rules that protect consumers and ensure gaming companies act responsibly without limiting the number of companies that can operate. The fact that many states have limited the number of licenses theyll give out isnt necessarily because thats the optimal set up for consumers. Its because theyve been lobbied by casinos, racetracks, and other groups that already have a stake in gambling, said Giden.

If the goal is to ensure that companies operate ethically, then regulators should be reviewing companies past business practices across all lines of business, said Edelman, the gaming and antitrust law professor.

To presume that a company that could spend a lot of money is ethical and a company that could spend a small amount of money is not ethical is very dubious logic, he said.

CalMattersis a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how Californias state Capitol works and why it matters.

Continued here:

California Sports Betting Initiative Backed by Gambling Giants Would Block Startups - Times of San Diego

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on California Sports Betting Initiative Backed by Gambling Giants Would Block Startups – Times of San Diego

Menorah bongs and Talmudic toking: The secret history of Judaism and cannabis – Gothamist

Posted: at 7:42 pm

For Eddy Portnoy, it started with a bong. Not just any old bong you can pick up in a local smoke shop, though.

"I saw a photograph online of a really beautiful glass bong in the shape of a menorah," Portnoy told Gothamist. "And I thought to myself, wow, this is really an amazing artifact."

Like many people, Portnoy got into smoking marijuana during college, but his interest in the drug faded away over the years.

"I may still have THC in my system from that time, but it's something that I really only use occasionally now," he said.

But in his current role as the academic advisor and exhibitions curator at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Manhattan, he's always on the lookout for artifacts connected to Jewish material culture.

Something about this menorah bong, made by the company GRAV, lit up his imagination. And since that acquisition, he has spent the last two years researching the somewhat unexplored history of Judaism and cannabis, from Talmudic mentions to religious rituals, from pioneering scientific research to the legalization movement and modern counterculture.

"Through my research, I discovered that Jews have been using cannabis for centuries, and there's a pretty significant history that I think most people are not familiar with at all," he said. "And had I known that in Hebrew school, I might have been a little bit more interested in what was going on."

That research and those artifacts are now the subject of Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis, a new exhibit at YIVO, located in the Center for Jewish History building near Union Square. It is the institute's first on-site exhibition since COVID began, and it explores the contributions Jews have made in "the field of cannabis" alongside dozens of relics and photos.

See the rest here:

Menorah bongs and Talmudic toking: The secret history of Judaism and cannabis - Gothamist

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Menorah bongs and Talmudic toking: The secret history of Judaism and cannabis – Gothamist

The Lethal Challenge of Learning Torah from Others – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted: at 7:42 pm

One of the most outstanding features of the Jewish tradition is its willingness to engage in self-critique and look at the failings of our greats. Though some rabbis have wanted to limit this out of concern that we might misunderstand it, the Talmud and Midrash are clearly full of such observations.

One such critique is aimed at the 24,000 students of Rabbi Akiva, whose death we mourn this time of year. Clearly, men of great knowledge and stature, the Talmud (Yevamot 62b) tersely informs us that they all died because they did not honor one another.

At first, this seems rather surprising. However, in order to understand it, it may be useful to look at a more extreme but paradoxically more understandable expression of the same flaw: The famous story of Rabbi Elazar ben Shimons encounter with a man the Talmud (Taanit 20b) describes as exceedingly ugly. If that description strikes us as rather sharp, it pales in comparison with our shock at this great sages reaction. When the man greets him, R. Elazar is first silent. Then he says to him, Empty one, [] are all the people of your city as ugly as you? Though many commentators point out that the ugliness here was likely not physical, the Talmud still appropriately censures R. Elazar for his response.

The Talmud focuses on how inappropriate it was for R. Elazar to call him ugly. But I believe the first term he uses empty one is perhaps even more important, in that it sets up the tone and framework for R. Elazars attitude. Like any pejorative, it was likely meant as an exaggeration. Moreover, there really was a vast chasm between one of the top (perhaps the brightest) scholars of the generation and this simple man that even the Talmud describes as ugly. Even so, it reveals a far from uncommon thought process in which we totally discount the value of someone beneath us. Rather than seeking that which there is to learn from such people, we too facilely discount them as having nothing to offer at all. This is, after all, what is implied by the term, empty one.

If we know from elsewhere (for example, Avot 4:1) that there is no such thing as an empty man, why did so wise a man as R. Elazar make this mistake? While some of the reasons are specific to him and the particular situation, he was also likely moved by the natural tendency to focus on self and resultantly consider ourselves in a more favorable light than others.

If this attitude is more easily applied towards those who are really far less accomplished or talented than us, as in the story of R. Elazar, we nevertheless find ways of applying it to our peers as well. Since it is natural to prefer ones own work, it is natural to discount that of others as not quite up to par. It is therefore rare for someone to think of his peers as truly equal to himself, rarer still to think of them as having something to teach him. With this in mind, we can go back to the students of R. Akiva. Whether their punishment occurred before or after R. Akiva become famous for his emphasis on the centrality of loving ones fellow, he was not able to have this idea overcome his students natural tendency to love themselves a little more.

Given their failure and the obvious difficulty involved, there are many who find it impossible to imagine truly loving ones neighbor as oneself. The pernicious difficulty of keeping self-love in check and not having it warp the way in which we see others is brought to our attention in the story of R. Elazar, who is the son of one of R. Akivas few surviving students, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai. Apparently, even after the death of R. Akivas other students, it was not completely absorbed.

Given that the plague occurred among students of Torah at a time of year when we commemorate the receiving of the Torah, the punishment comes as a stark reminder that Torah cannot be built on this type of attitude. If other disciplines can survive in spite of the arrogance of their practitioners, the same cannot be said about Torah. Indeed, that is why Moshe a man who was simultaneously the greatest and the humblest was chosen to receive it.

So in the case of R. Akivas students, it was apparently a choice between their survival and that of the Torah. Learning this critical lesson is what can turn their sacrifice into a blessing.

See the original post here:

The Lethal Challenge of Learning Torah from Others - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on The Lethal Challenge of Learning Torah from Others – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Rabbi Reveals Why Abortion Access Is Importantand Supported by Scripture – Newsweek

Posted: at 7:42 pm

A Rabbi is going viral on Twitter for his thread explaining why abortion access is supported by scripture amid the leak of a Supreme Court decision draft that would overturn Roe v. Wade.

Rabbi Daniel Bogard of the Central Reform Congregation in St. Louis, Missouri, wrote a thread Tuesday evening, which has been liked over 64,000 times and retweeted more than 16,000 times. In it, he cites the Torahwhich Christians recognize as the first five books of the Bibleto make his case.

"For Jews who can become pregnant, access to abortion services is a religious *requirement*, and has been for thousands of years. Surprised? Let's dig into some of the texts," Rabbi Bogard opens.

First, he cites Exodus 21:22: "If men strive and hurt a woman with child so that her fruit depart from her and yet no mischief follow he shall be surely punished according as the woman's husband will lay upon him and he shall pay as the judges determine," in the King James Version translation, and the following verse: "And if any mischief follow then thou shalt give life for life."

"The Torah literally couldn't be more explicit: a fetus is not a human life," Bogard says.

He follows up with a quote from the Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi that appears in the Talmud, the text that's the primary source of religious law and theology for the Jewish people. HaNasi said that "A fetus is its mother's thigh," or, in other words, part of the pregnant person's body.

Bogard points to other scripture as backing up HaNasi's view of the fetus. In the Mishnah, sometimes called the "Oral Torah" as it's a collection of Jewish oral traditions, if a pregnant person is to be executed, lawmakers should not delay the execution unless the person is in labor.

The Mishnah is even more explicit when it comes to abortion in the case the pregnant person is in danger if a birth occurs.

"A person who is having trouble giving birth, they abort the fetus and take it out limb by limb, because existing life comes before potential life. If most of the child has come out already they do not touch it, for we do not push off one life for another," Bogard writes, quoting Mishnah Oholot 7:6.

"'Rodef' is a legal category in Judaism for someone/something on the way to kill a human being. Jewish law obligates us to stop a Rodef at any cost--up to and including taking their life. Thus, a pregnancy that endangers life is considered a Rodef and *must* be terminated," Bogard continues.

Bogard says that though this may look like abortion is only an option for pregnant people in the case where carrying the fetus to term could cause death or physical injury, that isn't the case.

"Not just literally their life, but also their well-being, their mental health, and all sorts of other explanations that encompass the vast majority of the reasons that folks pursue abortions," he says. "All of which is to say: laws that limit or criminalize abortion aren't just violations of the human rights of every person who can become pregnant, but are also infringements on the religious liberty of every American Jew, and an imposition of governmental Christianity on us all."

Christian anti-abortion advocates, however, argue that Bogard's reading of Exodus 21:22-3 isn't correct. In 1989, Christian anti-abortion activist John Piper argued that some translations of the verses, Exodus 21:22 refers to a miscarriage being caused, while others refer to a premature birth.

"In the former case the unborn is not treated with the same rights as the mother, because the miscarriage is not counted as serious loss to be recompensed life for life. In the latter case the unborn is treated the same as the mother because the child is included in the stipulation that if injury comes there shall be life for life," Piper wrote.

His argument is that though the Hebrew verb for "to miscarry" appears later in Exodus, but not in this verse, saying that the verb for "go forth" only applies to a live birth.

Bogard, however, tells Newsweek that comparing his interpretation and Piper's is like "apples and oranges."

"Fundamentally Christianity and Judaism operate in really different ways. Judaism has thousands of years of conversations/interpretations/philosophy/legal rulings/precedent that inform the conversation and the understanding of issues, rather than an approach which is based on how we interpret a particular text," he said.

Update 5/4, 8:10 p.m.: This article has been updated to include comment from Rabbi Bogard.

More:

Rabbi Reveals Why Abortion Access Is Importantand Supported by Scripture - Newsweek

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Rabbi Reveals Why Abortion Access Is Importantand Supported by Scripture – Newsweek

Opinion: Alice Walker Is an Icon, But Her Antisemitic Views Are Problematic on Campus – Times of San Diego

Posted: at 7:42 pm

San Diego Community College District headquarters in Downtown San Diego. Photo by Chris Stone

The San Diego Community College District has asked Alice Walker to speak at the investiture of the new chancellor, Carlos O. Cortez.

Walkers continuing popularity is not hard to explain. She won the Pulitzer for her novel, The Color Purple, back in 1983, and since then has become something of an icon in the Black community. Even though she has not produced any fiction or poetry of note for years now, she continues to receive awards, honors, and invitations to speak.

Most recently, Simon & Shuster has published the first volume of her journals to lavish reviews in The New Yorker and the New York Times. And now, she will grace the San Diego Community College with her presence.

Yet Walker has recently expressed views that make her appearance at the investiture problematic.

In 2018, Walker revealed in an interview with The New York Times that she is a fan of David Icke, whose book, And the Truth Shall Set You Free, she called a curious persons dream come true. The Times let Walkers comment go by without challenge. But Icke is, in fact, a conspiracy theorist who believes that shape-shifting lizards rule the earth. He also hates Jews.

His book draws liberally on the infamous anti-Jewish forgery, The Protocols of Zion. He considers the Talmud among the most appallingly racist documents on the planet and suggests the service organization, Bnai Brith, was behind the Atlantic slave trade. Even more weirdly, he argues that radical right wing groups are, in fact, fronts for Jews: I am told by an extremely reliable source very close to the intelligence organizations that the far Right group, Combat 18, is a front for the sinister Anti-Defamation League, the United States and of the Israeli/Rothschild secret service, Mossad.

Walker, however, thinks all this poisonous nonsense is great. Even worse, Walker wrote a poem that is equally repellent To Study the Talmud. This antisemitic bit of verse starts off denouncing Israels treatment of the Palestinians, which is finethe woman is entitled to her opinionsbut then, veers off the deep end:

Subscribe

By clicking subscribe, you agree to share your email address with Times of San Diego to receive a free newsletter with the latest local news delivered at 8 a.m. daily. You can opt out at any time via an unsubscribe link.

Success! You're on the list.

Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.

Walker seems to have suffered no consequences, no embarrassment, for holding explicitly anti-Jewish views. Instead, as part of the publicity blitz for the publication of her journals, The New York Times offers a fawning profile of her. The author, reporter Elizabeth A. Harris, admits that Walker has taken positions, including in The Times, that many have found to be antisemitic and deeply troubling. But note the qualification, many have found to be. Which says the matter is up for debate, like inflations cause.

When Harris asks Walker about To Study the Talmud, Walker deflects, asserting her criticism is not of Jewish people but of Israel, as well as of the ancient texts and practices of all religions, including Christianity, Islam and Buddhism. Harris, however, does not press further. She lets Walkers assertion stand unchallenged. She does not ask Walker for the references to Christianity, Islam and Buddhism in her poem.

The New Yorker review of her journals by Lauren Michelle Jackson, Assistant Professor of English at Northwestern University, also treats Walkers more untoward opinions with kid gloves, trying to explain away Walkers deep dive into the bizarre, antisemitic world of David Ickes: Having grown up in a place where conspiracies, racial and sexual, were daily realities to be reckoned with, Walker may have developed a belated hunger for more.

The question is why Walkers antisemitism gets a pass. You might think that a time when the slightest hint of racism will get you cancelled (recently, a philosophy professor at San Diego State was pulled from two classes for citing racially charged language), Walkers antisemitism would elicit strong and unambiguous condemnations.But apparently not.

The answer is that in todays progressive world, antisemitism is just not that big a deal. Last year, David Baddiel, wrote a book, Jews Dont Count, arguing that a sacred circle is drawn around those whom the progressive modern left are prepared to go into battle for, and it seems as if the Jews arent in it.

Even more worrisome, antisemitism in the United States continues to rise. According to the ADLs most recent survey, 2021 saw more antisemitic incidents than ever before: 2,717, a 34% increase from the previous year. And that includes San Diego.

To be clear, I am not calling for the San Diego Community College District to retract their invitation. I dont believe in cancel culture, Ive written against cancel culture, and Im not going to be a hypocrite and call for Walkers cancellation. If this is who the SDCCD wants to spend public funds to bring in for a speaking engagement, thats their right.

But the people who arranged this visit should ask themselves why, at a time when antisemitic attacks have reached an unprecedented level Weve never seen data like this before, ever, says Jonathan Greenblatt, national director of the ADL they thought Alice Walker would be an appropriate choice?

Why didnt her antisemitism matter to them? Why didnt her adherence to hateful conspiracy theories disqualify her?

They need to ask themselves some hard questions.

Peter C. Hermanis professor of English literature at San Diego State University. He has published on Shakespeare, Milton and the literature of terrorism, and has published essays in Salon, Inside Higher Ed, as well as Times of San Diego. His most recent book is Unspeakable: Literature and Terrorism from the Gunpowder Plot to 9/11 (Routledge, 2020).

With the generous support of readers like you, Times of San Diego publishes timely and accurate news coverage for a better-informed community. Helps us grow with a monthly contribution.

See the rest here:

Opinion: Alice Walker Is an Icon, But Her Antisemitic Views Are Problematic on Campus - Times of San Diego

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Opinion: Alice Walker Is an Icon, But Her Antisemitic Views Are Problematic on Campus – Times of San Diego

Women’s independence: We’re not there yet | Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted: at 7:42 pm

Omg the daf yomi today.

This text from my daughter made me smile for many reasons. Mostly, because these five words encompass so much more than her frustration with a talmudic passage about accidental intercourse.Not only does my daughter speak languages that I dont, not only is she learning in-depth, understanding Judaism, Jewish history, and Jewish law in ways I never will, but her story of being an Orthodox Jewish woman will be so different from mine. This brings me joy, as well as some pain.Unlike me, she will be able to bring sources, and speak of sages and rabbis in ways that show a level of learning, an understanding, and familiarity that I never had. Unlike me, she wont have horror stories of bringing personal questions and intimate items to a rabbi, waiting in mortification to be told whether she can be with her husband. She will be able to seek her own sources, determine her own answers, and when she needs a higher authority, ask a woman if she prefers.God willing, she will sign a halachic prenup before she marries, recognize warning signs of abuse and red flags. She wont accept, what do you need that for, as I had to, after a serious inquiry about birth control, nor Dont worry, if he tries anything, Ill break his legs, as a replacement for a halachic prenup.

But our story isnt just about one mother and daughter; it represents the ways that women have gained independence in Orthodox Judaism in the past decades.In the courtsNow, there are women in rabbinic courts, Toanot who represent women in divorce proceedings. Having women advocating for women armed with knowledge of halacha and secular law has changed womens experiences in rabbinic courts. Thanks to government policy initiated by MKs such as Limor Livnat and Aliza Lavie, women now sit on the committee to elect dayanim another game changer, shattering the old boys club that saw family members and friends elected to these vital positions.

In the bedroom

Yoatzot Halacha women trained in the laws of intimacy and family purity have not only given women independence in a distinctly female space, but they have also enabled more women to keep these laws now that they do not need to seek information or approval from men. Women being able to immerse in the mikva according to their traditions and desires, brought about by women activists and Supreme Court cases, has strengthened womens connection to the mitzvah and freed those with trauma and reluctance to return to the mikva with joy.In the beit midrashAcross Israel, and to a lesser extent the greater Jewish world, institutions of higher learning for women abound. More and more women speak the language of halacha at high levels at a scope that has never been seen before. They own their Judaism and are part of the beautiful tradition of a living Torah.I was privileged to attend the Hadran Siyum HaShas in January 2020, led by Rabbanit Michelle Farber who teaches a womens Daf Yomi class and podcast. The deafening roars and cheers for women who had taught, learned and completed the 7.5 year cycle of learning Talmud easily competed with noise levels of rock concerts Id been to at my daughters age. Now, women all over the world have signed on to learn the daf in the thousands. And Rabbanit Michelles podcast is not the only one hosted by a woman anymore. Among others is Talking Talmud, hosted by Anne Gordon and Dr. Yardaena Osband, and weekly video episodes (Hebrew) available on Farbers Hadran. On lineOn social media, especially on Instagram, frum women rule. Many have more followers than most Hasidic rebbes do. Access to social media has given women massive platforms to speak, teach, discuss issues, and the platforms have turned women into major influences, advocating for change. Some womens organizations use social media to talk about intimacy, abuse, and the need to free agunot. Others use it to create worldwide prayer groups or discuss fertility challenges.

And yet in so many ways, we are not free and we are not independent. In marriage Every woman who marries in a traditional Jewish ceremony is a potential agunah. According to Jewish law Israeli law only a man can decide to end a marriage. Thus, while in Israel a woman can be a Supreme Court judge, she cannot be free of a man who beats her, until and unless he and the three men who adjudicate divorce, free her. She is chained to her husband and cannot move on or have children. Here in Israel, that also means legally and financially. Even if he runs away, lives with another woman, or simply plays games with the court, in Israel, his debts are her debts, dragging her down.

(courtesy)

(courtesy)

In our imagesThe erasure of women, which started as an extreme practice in small communities, has spread like wildfire, and is now not only the norm in Orthodox publications, but is being done by commercial businesses, government and municipal institutions, despite being illegal. Women often cannot advertise properly with their faces, and, worse, are often replaced with objects when listed beside men. Government officials and even MKs are blurred and victims of terror attacks, or their wives, are distorted in news stories. Bus lines exist with women and girls seated in back as policy despite this being illegal.

In representationTwo Israeli political parties again, contrary to law ban women from running on their lists. These parties, both Haredi, represent over 13% of the government. Despite claiming to represent Haredi women, they do not advocate for their womens rights or represent their concerns. They do not attend the committee meetings on womens health or domestic violence despite both being a problem in the community. In each of the areas where women have gained independence, it has been hard won. Women and men, understanding the importance of representation and independence for women not only in life, but particularly in Judaism, those who understand the difference between halacha and social or cultural norms, and the urgency for Judaism to not be static in the face of cultural changes have sought ways to include women, to add their voices and perspectives into Orthodoxy and Israeli society.

And we as a whole have gained from it.Womens voices are vital to the continuation of Judaism and Israeli society. Women being active participants in Jewish law, its development and application, brings better understanding and a more just application. Policies are more in line with reality and the way people practice, lessening tension and allowing for more alignment and comfort with practice. We, as a community and society must find more ways for womens participation and representation and fight against the incessant trends towards our exclusion. We must aim to make Judaism and Israel the very best they can be. Chag Atzmaut Sameach!

Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll is a writer and an activist. Cofounder of chochmatnashim.org She loves her people enough to call out the nonsense. See her work at skjaskoll.com

See more here:

Women's independence: We're not there yet | Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Women’s independence: We’re not there yet | Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Five Hundred Years of Communal Post-Temple Jewish Life in Palestine – Jewish Journal

Posted: at 7:42 pm

Political scientist Shlomo Avineri argues that the resilience of the democratic tradition in modern-day Israel stems from centuries of communal self-governance experienced by Jews in the Diaspora. He writes that as a result of the lack of statehood and sovereignty the communities were ruled by its own members. I think it important to add that this description also applies to centuries of post-Temple communal self-governance by Jews in the Holy Land.

While Passover is over for this year, it is still useful to point out that the Passover Haggadah is a time capsule that describes the onset of a lengthy period of Jewish self-governance in Palestine. The clues lie in the identities of the nine sages mentioned in the Haggadah.

Five of them, Rabbis Tarfon, Elazar ben Azariah, Eliezer ben Hyrcanus, Yehoshua ben Hananiah and Akiva, spend a night together at the home of Akiva discussing the departure from Egypt. Additional sages mentioned in the Haggadah are: Shimon ben Zoma (who died before being ordained), Rabbi Yehudah (Yehudah bar Ilai, who provides an acronym for the ten plagues), Rabbi Yose the Galilean and Rabban Gamliel. Gamliel is credited with saying that whoever does not explain the three symbols of the Sederthe Passover offering, matzah and bitter herbshas not fulfilled his duty. This Gamliel, Gamliel II, is the second of six Gamliels who were prominent Jewish leaders in Judea/Palestine from the first to the fifth centuries of the Common Era. The honorific Rabban was given to those who served as head of the Sanhedrin.

The Sanhedrin (from the Greek synedrion, for assembly) was a Jewish legislative and judicial court that existed during the Second Temple period. While the existence of the Sanhedrin ended after the Temples destruction, a Sanhedrin (also called a Patriarchate), headed by rabbinic sages and having some political and judicial relevance, was reconstituted at Yavne and at locations in the Galilee. This court deliberated on matters of Jewish law, set the Jewish calendar and was the central body of authority of Jewish life. It was responsible for communicating with the Imperial authorities. At the end of the first century CE, for example, four of the sages mentionedGamliel II, Akiva, Elazar ben Azariah and Yehoshua ben Hananiahvoyaged to Rome to lobby on behalf of the Jews of Palestine.

Both Gamliel II and Elazar ben Azariah served terms as President (Nasi) of the Sanhedrin. Elazar ben Azariah assumed the position after Gamliel II was deposed by the Sanhedrin, for what was deemed imperious behavior. Gamliel was later reinstated. (This is not unlike contemporary politics!)

The nine sages were contemporaries. They were nine of the 120 Tannaim whose views are recorded extensively in the Mishnaic writings of the first and second centuries CE. The date of the meeting of the five sages portrayed in the Haggadah has to be between the first two (of four) Jewish revolts against Roman rule in Palestine. (A fifth major uprising, by Diaspora Jews against the Romans, the Kitos War, erupted in the years 115 to 117 CE in Egypt, Cyprus and Cyrenaica.)

The first Jewish revolt took place from 66 to 73 CE and ended with the fall of Masada. The details are well known from the writings of Josephus. It is common to describe the dispersion of the Jews and the subsequent 2000 years of wandering to the failure of this revolt. Yet, a significant number of Jews remained and prospered in the land for at least 600 years after the fall of Masada. Estimates suggest that after this first revolt the Jewish population in Palestine was two to two and one half million, about half the world total. Ironically, the same war that led to the destruction of the Temple and the end of Temple worship, also contributed to the ascendency of Rabbinic Judaism and the writing of the Talmud and Midrash.

Ironically, the same war that led to the destruction of the Temple and the end of Temple worship, also contributed to the ascendency of Rabbinic Judaism and the writing of the Talmud and Midrash.

The second rebellion against the Romans, the Bar Kochva Revolt, began in 132 CE and ended with the fall of the fortress of Betar in 136 CE. Until the 1960 discovery of correspondence between Bar Kochva and his subordinates, the main source of information about this conflict was provided by the Roman historian Cassius Dio. Significant numbers of Jews continued to live in Palestine (the name given by the Romans after the Bar Kochva rebellion) for a considerable time afterward. The reconstituted Sanhedrin was not discontinued until 358 CE (its last function contributed to establishing the Jewish calendar), and the Romans recognized a Jewish Patriarch in Palestine until 425 CE.

The intensity of post-Temple Jewish life in the Holy Land, especially in Galilee, is obvious from the number of archeological sites and synagogue ruins in evidence at sites such as Bar-am, Beit Shearim, Beit Alpha and Tzippori (the Roman Sepphoris). In Twenty Centuries of Jewish Life in the Holy Land, published in 1975 by the Israel Economist and edited by Dan Bahat, the remains of at least 80 synagogues, dating from the first to the sixth centuries CE, are mentioned. While many are concentrated in the Galilee, synagogue remains of this period have been found throughout the Holy Land, including east of the Jordan River.

There were two additional uprisings by Jews in Palestine against Roman rule. In both, the rebels tried to take advantage of Roman preoccupation with disturbances elsewhere. The Gallus Revolt, directed against Constantine Gallus, ruler of the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantium), took place from 351 to 352 CE. The focal points were at Tzippori and Tiberius, but there is evidence that it extended as far south as Lod (Lydda). The senior Roman commander, Ursicinus put down the revolt, killing thousands of rebels.

The last Jewish effort to gain autonomy in Palestine before modern times, the revolt against Heraclius, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, broke out in 614 CE in the midst of a broader conflict between Heraclius and the Sasanians (Persians). Twenty thousand to 26,000 Jewish men, recruited from a Jewish population estimated to range from 150,000 to 400,000, fought in this campaign. There were heavy losses on both sides. Initial Jewish successes, including a Jewish takeover of Jerusalem, came to naught in 617 CE when the Sasanians reneged on their support for the Jews.

Each of the four revolts failed and each loss resulted in a further reduction in the number of Jews living in the Holy Land. After the revolt against Heraclius, the Jews of Palestine no longer occupied a central position in the Jewish world.

The origins of the Passover Haggadah are uncertain, but it is believed that most of the version widely used today was compiled by the end of the Talmudic period (500-600 CE). The Haggadah reminds us that communal self-governance characterized the Jewish community in Palestine for more than half a millennium after the destruction of the Second Templean important point at a time when the historical connection between the Land of Israel and the Jewish people is being widely denied.

Jacob Sivak, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, is a retired professor, School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Waterloo.

Visit link:

Five Hundred Years of Communal Post-Temple Jewish Life in Palestine - Jewish Journal

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Five Hundred Years of Communal Post-Temple Jewish Life in Palestine – Jewish Journal

A Time For Healing Body And Soul – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted: at 7:42 pm

Rebbe Nachman of Breslov tells us that in the month of Iyar (usually around the month of May), all medicinal plants and herbs have a greater power to heal (Likutey Moharan I:277).

In fact, the Talmud (Shabbos 147b) mentions cures that are effective only at this time of year. The Chozeh of Lublin explains that this quality is alluded to in the very name Iyar, which can be read as an acronym for Ani Hashem rofecha I am G-d, your healer (Exodus 15:26).

After mentioning the special power of healing in the month of Iyar, Rebbe Nachman also points out that the word Iyar can be read as an acronym for Oivai yashuvu yeivoshu raga My enemies will turn back and be ashamed in an instant (Psalms 6:11). As Rabbi Yaakov Meir Shechter explains, this is related to the idea that we should do good even to our enemies, because when we overcome the spiritual enemy within us our desire for revenge and our bad character traits we automatically subdue the supernal source of all evil in the world.

The nature of Hashems creation is such that when we encounter adversaries and difficulties in our lives, it is because there are accusing forces working against us in the spiritual worlds above due to our aveiros and misdeeds. But if we silence these accusing forces by engaging in teshuva and refining our characters, our human adversaries will automatically disappear.

Rebbe Nachman is telling us that since Iyar is a month of healing, it is a good time to work on healing our souls, which will in turn cause our earthly enemies to disappear automatically. This can be done by uprooting the bad traits in our personality and replacing them with good ones, for this is the truest form of spiritual healing.

The Chida, Rabbi Chaim Dovid Azulai, also writes about the importance of spiritual healing during the springtime: At the beginning of summer it is customary to engage in healing The procedure for healing those who are spiritually ill is to purge the character from the filth and mildew of negative traits, to free the mind from false and harmful beliefs, and to expand the heart with a love for G-d and an understanding of His Torah (Chadrei Beten, ch. 8:24, as quoted in the book The Scent of Eden, p. 46-47). May Hashem help us to utilize this special opportune time to engage in much spiritual healing.

See the original post:

A Time For Healing Body And Soul - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on A Time For Healing Body And Soul – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

A Word of Torah: Is Self-Interest Incompatible with Altruism? Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Posted: at 7:42 pm

From the moment of our birth, we clamor for our wants and needs, and we spend the rest of our lives pursuing them. Clearly, God has hard-wired self-interest deep into the human psyche, so its certainly not something we view as necessarily evil. On the contrary, halachah Jewish law explicitly reflects this. The Talmud sets out the following scenario: two people are walking in the desert, and one of them has a flask of water. Theres only enough water for one of them to make it to civilization; if they share the water, they will die. The great Talmudic sage, Rabbi Akiva, rules that in such a case, your life comes first; the one who has the water drinks it. Survival of the self comes first.

At the same time, while self-interest is a powerful and unshakeable force of human nature, it can also be extremely destructive. Even self-destructive. As the Mishna in Pirkei Avot says: Jealousy, physical desires and the pursuit of honor remove a person from this world.

Jealousy, desire and honor are all self-centered forces within a person, and the Mishna is saying that a person who is self-centered ultimately brings destruction on himself. God has created the world in such a way that when a person blindly pursues self-gratification, he paradoxically does grave harm to himself. Those who are consumed with jealousy, with the pursuit of their physical desires, with acquiring honor and recognition from others at all costs, find no peace of mind and are drawn to act in ways that harm not just the people they perceive to be standing in their way they harm themselves, too.

It goes beyond that, to our ultimate calling in this world, which is a calling toward holiness. This weeks parsha, Kedoshim, opens with a clarion call to the Jewish people: You shall be holy, for I, Hashem your God, am holy. (Vayikra 19:2) What is this call to holiness? What does it mean to be holy? And what does it mean that God is holy?

Rabbi Shimon Shkop, one of the great Lithuanian sages of the pre-war years, has a fascinating explanation. He says Gods essential characteristic, as far as we can talk about such things, is His pure goodness and kindness. God is completely self-sufficient; He needs nothing, nor does He receive anything, and everything He does is therefore an act of pure, unreciprocated kindness from the creation of the universe to taking care of our smallest needs, and the needs of the smallest and seemingly most insignificant of creatures. This selfless giving is how Rabbi Shkop defines holiness, and it is this we are called on to emulate so that we, too, can become holy.

Its a beautiful idea, but the Midrash gives us pause for thought, saying God reaches a level of holiness that no human being can. Rabbi Shkop explains the Midrash: No human being can ever attain this ideal like God because we have been created with an intrinsic love of and concern for the self, which will always factor into the equation.

So, we have a dilemma: How do we attain holiness defined as acting purely selflessly when we are unable to do so? How do we reconcile the conflicting ideals of self-interest and pure giving?

Rabbi Shkop has an answer that is deep and beautiful. If the self is getting in the way of helping others, then we need to expand our definition of the self.

When we refer to I, who are we talking about? Who or what is contained in our definition of self? Rabbi Shkop explains that a lowly, coarse person sees himself, defines his I, as purely a physical body. Someone slightly more elevated sees his soul as part of his self-identity. At a higher level, ones identity encompasses ones spouse and children, and then ones community, and so it goes. An even greater person includes the entire Jewish people in his sense of I, and even beyond that the entire world. The more spiritually elevated a person, the more people included in that persons sense of I.

So, the call to holiness is not about self-denial. It is a call to become a greater person by expanding the definition of self and, in so doing, unleashing the powerful force of giving and kindness to so many more people, and in a much richer, more fulfilling, far holier way.

Of course, its not so easy; it is, indeed, a lifelong journey. Initially, life is only about meeting our own needs. Then we graduate from this survivalist state of being; we marry and start a family, assuming greater responsibility, expanding our definition of self to encompass others. And we continue expanding our world, taking on responsibility for our community, for those around us, for the Jewish people as a whole and even for the entire world. Its a cosmic journey of self-discovery and self-transformation whose destination is the souls perfection and its ultimate expression.

Essentially, the more we reach out to others, the greater we become. This is why, when a child is born, we pray: May this katan this small one, become gadol become big. We pray for this infant, so naturally preoccupied with meeting its immediate physical needs, to become an adult in the fullest sense of the word, to become someone who sees the people around him, really sees them, and has an expansive perspective of the world and an expansive definition of self.

This worldview touches on so much of Judaism. There are many mitzvot of chessed (lovingkindness): comforting mourners, visiting the sick, burying the dead, tzedakah helping those in need. So much of the Torah is about reaching out to others, about taking responsibility for community and making the world a better place.

On a personal level, it is also about building family. The act of constituting a marriage is termed by our sages as kiddushin, which comes from the Hebrew word kedusha, meaning holiness. In what way is marriage an act of holiness? Creating a marriage should be the ultimate act of giving to another. By defining marriage as an act of holiness, our sages are teaching us that marriage is all about selfless giving, and that the creation of a family is all about expanding the concept of self and reaching out to others; transcending the self to becoming a greater person.

When fulfilling each other is a priority for husband and wife, other desires and preferences become subordinate. By putting our own needs aside, we dont feel that we are sacrificing anything.

Essentially, then, through marriage a person expands his definition of self and demonstrates that his life is not only about his own immediate, personal, selfish needs, but rather the needs of another human being, to constitute a broader, greater human being. As it says in the book of Bereishit, when God gave direction for the very first marriage in history between Adam and Eve, He said: Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and cleave to his wife, and they shall become one flesh. (2:24)

Marriage is about two people becoming one, a process of transcending the self and evolving to become a greater being. And that is why the bringing together of Adam and Eve is prefaced with the words: It is not good for a person to be alone. It is not good for us to be limited, when this expanded definition of the self, this broadmindedness, this human greatness and holiness is ours for the taking. That definition of self is further expanded as children are born.

Life is a journey toward holiness, a journey toward expanding the self and achieving the greatness that God knows we are capable of.

Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein, who has a PhD. in Human Rights Law, is the chief rabbi of South Africa. This article first appeared on aish.com.

Read more from the original source:

A Word of Torah: Is Self-Interest Incompatible with Altruism? Detroit Jewish News - The Jewish News

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on A Word of Torah: Is Self-Interest Incompatible with Altruism? Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News

Mammon In Light of Torah – The Commentator – The Commentator

Posted: at 7:42 pm

I read the recent essay Torah Umammon by my friend Rabbi Yitzchak Blau with great interest, as I do his writings in general. In fact, I have been enthusiastically sharing one of his previous articles, Rabbinic Responses to Communism (Tradition, Winter 2007), with my students at the Sy Syms School of Business for more than 12 years.

Part of the beauty of that richly researched and greatly valuable article is how it was able to take an issue that to many is a matter of money, income, labor and capital, and display how beneath the surface, major principles of our worldview were at stake, being honored or breached.

I am privileged to have the opportunity to attempt something similar (if not as skillfully) several times a week, in teaching multiple courses at Syms. It is true that Syms is different in many ways from Yeshiva College. However, the differences do not reflect negatively on either school; Syms is structured to best accomplish its particular mission, which is unique in the world.

The students at Syms are indeed largely headed for a world that is defined by a goal to succeed financially at all costs, as quickly and as single-mindedly as possible. Recognizing that, the leadership of the school has created a framework that is dedicated to preparing these students to encounter that world equipped with the values to navigate its challenges, the moral grounding to appreciate its implications and the internal fortitude to maintain their character throughout.

Yeshiva University as a whole is committed to both protecting and projecting its traditions and its values within the modern world. Every division of YU ideally seeks to accomplish those directives in the fashion best suited to its particular aspects. For students who will eventually be told that the dollar is everything, a program must first be provided that will teach them what it is and what it is not, what it can accomplish and what it cannot, and what must not be sacrificed in its pursuit.

Over the course of many years and with much careful attention, focus, collaboration and creativity, the Syms administration has created and recreated, refined and then refined again, a program that surrounds its top-notch preparation for business success with a deep and broad grounding in Jewish values. Courses are crafted with a deliberate, tailored approach to best fit the specific needs of the bnei Torah who will confront the modern marketplace.

Further, it is not only the Jewish Values Program that is harnessed to this purpose. The class in which I teach Rabbi Blaus communism article is The Ethical and Legal Environment of Business. It is a secular class with a secular textbook. Still, on the first day, I tell the students, a class such as this in Yeshiva University must be different than this class in any other university.

The Yeshiva this year is learning Masechet Bava Basra, and when I gave the first shiur in Elul to my students in MYP/RIETS, we introduced the first mishnah with an explanation of the foundations of halakhic ethics. It was exhilarating to realize how much overlap there was with what I would be teaching a few hours later, in the introductory Ethical and Legal class. It was of further inspiration to me that I was able to share that realization with Dean Wasserman (along with the recording of the shiur) and know just how meaningful that would be to him as well.

The Talmud teaches that a professional gambler is disqualified from testimony because he is disconnected from any productive employment (eino osek byishuvo shel olam; Sanhedrin 24b). It follows that, conversely, one who is actively involved in building up the settlement of society and does so with honesty and integrity is accorded affirmative credibility. It is not merely that he is fulfilling the imperative of supporting his family in dignity; he is making contributions to the advancement of society that ideally reflect his value system, and, through implementation, expand it further.

Rabbi Blau makes reference to the high cost of Orthodox Jewish practice, due to tuition and other expenses. This is undeniably true, and it is relevant to Syms for more than just the school's ability to train financially successful professionals. The ever-increasing problem of the affordability of Jewish life is an existential challenge practically, and a profound and underappreciated moral challenge in the priorities it creates and the decisions it provokes.

Syms did not create this problem, but perhaps it will be some of our schools students who will solve it. Perhaps our students, proficient in both the principles of business efficiency and the values of a Jewish community that cherishes family harmony, genuine spirituality and broad educational opportunity (and knowledgeable that this, too, is a sugya in Bava Basra) will have the initiative, insight and inspiration to positively remake our society.

Rabbi Blau wishes that Syms students would take a class with Rabbi Shalom Carmy. As a grateful student and tremendous admirer of Rabbi Carmy, I share that wish. However, college requirements are not the only or even the most effective way to encourage exposure to great teachers. The overall impact of the Syms educational message is to instill the students with an appreciation for Jewish practice, ideals and learning so that they will seek out inspiration and instruction throughout their lives, in and out of the classroom, during and after their college years.

I know this to be true because I see it every day. I see it in the questions I get from current students, that are not only about their final requirements or attendance records but about navigating the demands of their internships and interviews while maintaining their integrity and intensity. And I know it because so many of these questions come a year, five years, 10 years after graduation.

This past week, the yeshiva hosted a conference in which fellows of the Post-Semicha Kollel Elyon presented to the public on the themes of the values of Shemittah. I take some pride in the fact that a number of these fine young rabbis were my students in courses at the Syms School. And all of them were taught Rabbi Blaus communism article in preparation for their presentations. Together, this deepened the message that while to too many in today's world, the dollar is the goal, we know it to be a tool: a tool of kindness, to establish one's integrity and to build and perfect the world in G-ds Majesty.

It is an unavoidable reality that the demands of the business world will govern the circumstances of our students lives. A YU/Syms education can, nonetheless, govern their minds, and, most importantly, their souls. For that, we can all be grateful.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Continue reading here:

Mammon In Light of Torah - The Commentator - The Commentator

Posted in Talmud | Comments Off on Mammon In Light of Torah – The Commentator – The Commentator