Jewish Ideas to Change the World
Religion & Spirituality:Judaism
A hybrid event (in-person and virtual) by Rabbi David Kasher
The event was co-sponsored by Temple Chai
About the Event:
We often divide the Torah into two categories: narrative and law. But the laws of the Torah themselves are often written in poetic language, inviting us to use the tools of literary criticism to analyze them. That poetic quality is prominently on display in one of the Torah’s most (in)famous legal formulations: An Eye for an Eye. A careful literary reading of this law in the Torah can reveal hidden layers of meaning.
About the Speaker:
Rabbi David Kasher serves as the Director of Hadar West Coast. He grew up bouncing back and forth between Berkeley and Brooklyn, hippies and Hassidim – and has been trying to synthesize these two worlds ever since. After graduating from Wesleyan University in 1998, he studied for several years in yeshivot in Israel before heading off to rabbinical school at Yeshivat Chovevei Torah. He was ordained there in 2007 and returned to Northern California, where he became the Senior Jewish Educator at Berkeley Hillel. He was part of the founding team at Kevah, a nonprofit specializing in Adult Jewish Education, where he worked from 2012 to 2018 and developed the Kevah Teaching Fellowship. He has served on the faculty of Berkeley Law, the Wexner Heritage Program, Reboot, and the BINA Secular Yeshiva, and also taught courses at Pardes, SVARA, The Hartman Institute, AJR, and HUC. Rabbi Kasher is a teacher of nearly all forms of classical Jewish literature, but his greatest passion is Torah commentary, and he spent five years producing the weekly ParshaNut blog and podcast exploring the riches of the genre.
In 2018, he began work as an Associate Rabbi at IKAR, a non-denominational spiritual community in Los Angeles, where he teaches a weekly parashah class and has a new parashah podcast called Best Book Ever. He published an essay, ‘Eating Our Way from Justice to Holiness,’ in Kashrut and Jewish Food Ethics (Academic Studies Press, 2019), completed a translation of Avot d’Rabbi Natan for Sefaria, and is the author of ParshaNut: 54 Journeys into the World of Torah Commentary.
*Source Sheet: https://smallpdf.com/file#s=8b6eadb7-9fe7-4d78-9019-ce3b204d4c51
★ Support this podcast ★Radical Jewish Views of God: Maimonides vs Spinoza
But What If I Love The Greeks?!: Chanukah for Philosophers
Finding Light in Darkness
Self & Mystical Identity in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah - Class #5
Who Is in Charge? Philosophy of Halakhah Through the Eyes of Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik and Rabbi Moshe Feinstein
Self & Mystical Identity in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah - Class #4
Jewish Military Ethics: Part II
Self & Mystical Identity in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah - Class #3
Jewish Military Ethics: A Comparison of Being a Soldier in the Diaspora and the Israeli Army Today
Antisemitism: Why Is It Still Around and Whose Fault Is It?
The Sacred Earth: Jewish Perspectives on Our Planet
Self & Mystical Identity in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah - Class #2
Jews on the Move: The Geographic Dimension of Jewish Survival in North America
Self & Mystical Identity in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah - Class #1
Women’s Sexual Assertiveness: An Exploration of Talmudic Perspectives
Mayko-Mashmelon: A Survey of Yiddish Art Song
Highlights of 50+ Years of Women in the Rabbinate
Mystical Hebrew Letters
Eilu v’Eilu – A Debate on Jewish Values and American Politics
Interview with Rabbi David Saperstein: Serving as an Ambassador for International Freedom
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
18 Questions, 40 Israeli Thinkers
Unpacking Israeli History
Wondering Jews with Mijal and Noam
For Heaven’s Sake
18Forty Podcast