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ruchikoval

Uncategorized April 15, 2012

Mixed Marriage

Dennis Prager.  You either love him or hate him.  Since I’m not into politics, I find his political stuff kind of boring.  But his theological and people stuff?  Fascinating.

So I’ve got him on the radio on Thursday – the Seder was the following day and I’m driving around on some final errands with Dennis on the radio.  I pull into the store I need but I can’t turn the car off because I can’t stop listening.  BTDT?

A guy called in and is telling Dennis this (subject to my memory):

Dennis, I’m a liberal Reform Jew from New Jersey [Dennis himself is sort of a Reformadox Jew and is very outspoken about his Judaism].  In college I became an evangelical Christian and I eventually met a Christian woman.  Well, her values are very conservative and she’s a Republican, and Dennis, I gotta tell you, sometimes I just feel like I’m in a mixed marriage.

He went on to describe some of their differences and how he is finding himself coming around to her way of thinking, etc.  While I’m thinking, gosh, when I hear someone say mixed marriage, the first thing I think of is Jew/Christian.  This guy did not appear to be conflicted about his religious crossover but his political crossover was a big deal.  What a leap for me to even try and understand that!

My husband was once talking to a family prior to a bris (he’s a mohel, and yes, we’ve already heard that joke).  The dad was describing his son, who had become religious.  “Rabbi,” he said, “It was so hard for our family.  I would have EVEN preferred that he become a  REPUBLICAN!”

Which was extraordinarily enlightening for us, on a few fronts.  One, how very, very awful it can feel to Jewish liberal family members when “one of theirs” becomes religious, and two, how very, very wrong it seems to Jewish liberal folks to be a Republican.  (And finally, the things people will say to Rabbis could fill a book.)  Which is worse?  I guess it depends for whom.

Is religion, then, the culture, and political ideology the religion, as Dennis asserted after the call concluded?  Would your family consider it worse if you married “out” religiously or politically?

One of the things that interest me greatly about liberal Judaism is a sort of generalized agreement that intermarriage is something to avoid as a nation.  I’m not really sure where this fits into liberal “as long as we’re good people” kind of thinking.  And in my unofficial research, I find most Jews that think intermarriage is unwise are hard-pressed to come up with a solid reason WHY.  Is this attitude, that intermarriage ought be avoided, fading with time in our post-modern world?

What do you think?

Uncategorized April 11, 2012

Dear Ashley Judd

Dear Ashley,

Your recent piece responded strongly to media speculation about the “puffiness of your face” and broadened that to include the “assault on our [women’s and girls’] body image, the hypersexualization of girls and women and subsequent degradation of our sexuality as we walk through the decades, and the general incessant objectification.”  Further, you conclude that this is the very antithesis of feminism, and is most disturbingly a patriarchy that includes women as well – as the aggressors.

My heart broke when I read your article.  Not because you’re wrong, and not because your piece wasn’t intelligent and articulate, but because there is so much work to do in enlightening the world about the truths you mention.

See, Ashley, in a funny way you and I are in the same business.  I’ll sidestep the entertainment industry because, well, I’m not in it, though I did dream of being a famous actress long ago.  And also because it so complicates your message.  You yourself allude to this:

“I am also aware that inevitably some will comment that because I am a
creative person, I have abdicated my right to a distinction between my
public and private selves, an additional, albeit related, track of
highly distorted thinking that will have to be addressed at another
time.”

Distorted, yes.  But the entertainment industry is distorted to begin with – it deliberately presents a distorted image of life to entertain and, sometimes, educate.

The business we share is education.  You seek to educate the public about body image, misogyny, and feminism.  Allow me to share your mission by shedding some Jewish wisdom on the conversation, as you invite us to join it at the end of your moving and passionate piece.

1. The Hebrew word for face (panim) is etymologically linked to the word for internality (p’nim)?  That’s because our faces reveal that which is on the insides of our souls.  Not our skin tone or flaw scale, but our eyes, our smiles; the body language that speaks so loudly from our faces should others but care to hear the message.

2. Did you know that Jewish Bible tradition teaches that our patriarch (the irony of that title is not lost on me) Abraham was married to our matriarch Sarah for decades before it dawned on him that he was married to a physically beautiful woman?  And even then, he only noticed because he was trying to determine if it was safe for them to travel openly through Egypt, a notoriously immoral country, and therefore attempted to see her through the eyes of the natives.

Do you know why, Ashley?  Because, the tradition continues:  Physical appearance meant nothing to him.  Beauty was not just in the eye of the beholder, but for some of those beholders, purely spiritual in nature.  This is MY hero.  This is MY patriarch.

3.  There are laws in Judaism about dissing other people?  They’re called the laws of lashon hara – literally, evil speech.  In fact, there are volumes, texts, and libraries about this.  You can get a law a day via text or phone or email.  My kids’ Jewish day schools have ongoing programs and learning sessions about it.  There are entire video presentations and educational days about it.

Would you believe it’s one of the worst sins in Judaism ever?  Did you know it includes dissing of public figures as well as unknown nobodies; dissing in print, in speech, with body language, or via text?  To one person or a whole group?  And online dissing is the worst because of the exponential damage.  In fact, the Jewish Talmud goes so far as to state that the victim of the dissing earns the merits of all the good deeds that the perpetrator has achieved throughout his life to date.

I don’t know if you’re a religious person, Ashley, but you’ve gotta admit these are really powerful ideas.  I’ll end with just one more.

4. Judaism teaches that we are both body and soul.  We choose if we’d like to identify more with our bodies or more with our souls.  The problem is that the world, as you’ve so articulately observed, chooses body so much more loudly and so much more often than soul.  This is sad and unfortunate, but Ashley, I’m here to tell you that we can fight the fight.  We can choose soul.  The misogyny and the pettiness will never go away, because humans are flawed, but you and I can continue to be souls more than bodies.  There’s a fine line between fighting the good fight and getting sucked into the drama.

Me?  I’m not playing the game.  I try to live and dress according to the Jewish codes of modesty, as do many other co-religious men and women.  I limit the media exposure in my life.  I strive to learn the Torah regularly to fortify myself with these truths.  I seek out spiritual people who are choosing soul over body.  I’m definitely far from perfect but that’s the fight worth fighting.

I hope you think so too.

Your fellow female non-misogynist soul,

RK

Uncategorized April 5, 2012

49 Days of Inspiration

Hey readers,

There’s a pretty cool thing I did last year, and this year I’d like to offer it to the readers of OOTOB.

There’s a period of time on the Jewish calendar called “sefirat ha-omer.”  It’s the counting of the 49 days from Passover (Pesach) till the holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates the acceptance of the Torah at Sinai.  There are 7 major character traits that we are meant to focus on at this time, and each of the seven gets paired with another for each of the 49 days to produce a very fine-tuned trait to focus on.

I used a book by Rabbi Yacov Haber to convey the trait of the day with a particular action point that I sent out on each of the 49 days (usually the night or afternoon before), either via text or email.  Last year 75 friends were on the list, and I’d like to offer it to you, my readers.  If you wish to receive the message (you can cancel at any time) you may comment below or email me with your preference (text/email) and contact info.

I am at ruchi@jewishfamilyexperience.org.

Have a wonderful Passover to my Jewish readers!

Uncategorized April 2, 2012

The Deification of the Children

My friend Adina Soclof is a parenting expert, blogger, and all-around good person.  Today I’m over at her site, parentingsimply.com, blogging about the Deification of the Children, which originally appeared on my “other blog,” jfxramblings.blogpost.com.

An interesting trend is emerging in the way some parents recognize
their children’s milestone events, that I believe is
generation-specific: Facebook birthdays posts, for instance: have you
ever seen friends post happy birthday messages to their “awesome,
accomplished, talented” kids (who are turning 5) who have “taught me so
much, inspired me” and thanking them for the “honor and privilege of
being your mom”?

Which leaves me to wonder what exactly has a five-year-old
accomplished on this earth that hasn’t been facilitated by, organized
by, paid for and dutifully recorded digitally by his parents?

Click here for the rest!

Uncategorized March 29, 2012

The Most Important Word of the Seder

Hey readers… today I’m blogging over at Life in the Married Lane, a blog by my friend Rivki Silver.  Rivki is my band-mate, fellow can’t-stop-thinking-about-random-things-usually-connected-to-Judaism girlfriend, and grammar geek.  I like her.  And her blog is great reading too.

“Word association game:  Seder.

What do you think of?
Brisket.  Matza.  Family.  Bitter herbs (maror).  The Four Questions.  The Four Cups.  Afikoman.
Yup, all those are features of the seder.  But I’ll bet the most important word is the one you haven’t thought of.”

To read the rest, head over this way.  And have a wonderful Passover – if you’re Jewish!

Uncategorized March 21, 2012

What Makes a Proud Jew?

Quick poll:

Do you consider yourself a proud Jew?

If so, what was the primary contributing factor to that pride?  (You may choose more than one – this is not House Hunters.)

1. Your home/parents
2. Grandparents
3. Jewish day school (through 8th grade)
4. Jewish day school (through 12th grade)
5. Time spent in Israel
6. Jewish summer camp
7. Other (what?)

Ready?  Go.