News and Essays In and Out of Orthodoxy – Parshas Korach 5776

Harav Mordechai Krausz, Zt”l, Rosh Yeshivas Ohr Hachaim

My Last Meeting With Elie Wiesel

Remembering the Ungvarer Rov zt”l with Elie Wiesel

Father of 10 killed in terrorist shooting remembered as intellectual and giving man

Condemn the Killing of a Gorilla, but not the Murder of a young Innocent Girl in her bed?

Quartet: Nearly 600,000 Jews Now Live in Yehudah and Shomron

Rabbinic Court permits ‘convert’ to marry Cohen

Rabbi’s Daughter Honors Family Who Saved Great-Grandmother

Tunnel used by Jews in Lithuania to escape Nazis uncovered

An Open Wound: The Scandal of the Kidnapped Yemenite Children

Amazing Database of Torah Textual Resources

God and the Fourth of July

Orthodox leaders to join Conservative, Reform worshippers at Western Wall protest – This is misleading, as the two Orthodox leaders do not represent any Orthodox institutions or groups. The Shalom Hartman Institute, which these two men represent, does not identify itself as Orthodox, but as pluralistic.

How the Lubavitcher Rebbe Gets Turned into a Cliché

Secular Israeli Parents Say Religious Summer Camps ‘A Better Deal’

Last week’s installment of Weekly Digest – News and Essay In and Out of Orthodoxy can be viewed here.

You may also like...

5 Responses

  1. Julie says:

    The Matzav article on Elie Wiesel should be corrected. His father died prior to liberation, so was never in a DP camp.

  2. Nachum says:

    Two of these headlines are rather inflammatory:

    -First, the one about conversion is given with no context whatsoever. Click on it and you’ll see it’s about an Indian Jew- Bene Israel to be precise, one of several distinct groups of Indian Jews. The status of the Bene Israel was somewhat controversial back in the day, but is less so now. Indeed, the article points out that no less than R’ Ovadia Yosef ruled them to be Jews. I certainly hope he’s authoritative enough for Cross-Currents. This woman happened to convert l’chumra in a charedi beit din.

    Furthermore, the headline is very misleading, as this woman actually married a kohen long ago. (Indeed, almost all the Indian Jews made aliyah back in the 1950’s, so it doesn’t really make sense that there’d be someone of questionable status in today’s day and age.) The issue now is, now that they’re divorcing, do they need a get or were they never supposed to be married in the first place. (It’s a bizarre question now that I think about it, as the marriage between a kohen and someone he can’t marry is still valid.) The ruling was that they needed the get, i.e., she was always Jewish. Maybe they ruled this way l’chumra, who knows. Like I said, it’s very, very odd.

    I’d say the Bene Israel are even more accepted than Ethiopian Jews, who, of course, were also ruled 100% Jewish by R’ Ovadia (following the Radbaz).

    I certainly hope R’ Gordimer is not extending his attacks to the Israeli Chief Rabbinate and R’ Ovadia, of all people.
    -Second, one note about the Yemenite children: There has never been a shred of evidence they were kidnapped. At the very most, one may argue that there was an insensitive bureaucracy and a chaotic situation that led to kids being adopted by others- but there is no evidence even of that! That is, not a single person has ever come forward as one who was separated from their parents back then. (Hanoch Teller notwithstanding.) That’s a pretty powerful proof.

    As a side issue, one possibility is that Yemenite parents were not told of their kids’ deaths and not allowed to know where they were buried. Interestingly, anonymous burial of fetuses is still a horrifying practice of the Rabbinate today. People have to work hard to find where their children are buried. It’s kind of appropriate that the only way to avoid this is to insist on the Yemenite Chevra Kadisha, but that shouldn’t be necessary.

    • Avrohom Gordimer says:

      “I certainly hope R’ Gordimer is not extending his attacks to the Israeli Chief Rabbinate and R’ Ovadia, of all people.”

      No, I am not attacking anyone. I merely copied and pasted the title of the article, which may be sensationalist. I made no comment, critique, or attack.

      • Nachum says:

        Sorry. This column certainly seems to have the reputation of “who’s outside of Orthodoxy” unless explicitly otherwise, and this headline (misleadingly) certainly fits into that category.

  3. YbhM says:

    The Israeli summer camps article is actually talking about day camps, which in many cases is the same thing as gan except with an extra charge.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This