The news & schmooze center

The news & schmooze center

Video: Class on Passover

Friday, April 15, 2011 - 3:29 pm
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

Tanya Class 1

Friday, March 25, 2011 - 1:30 pm
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

Introduction, Life of the Alter Rebbe and Title Page.

Click here (open in new tab/window) for the worksheet for this class.

This class is given every Monday evening at 7:30 - 8:45 PM
All are welcome.

An intreasting article from the NY Times

Tuesday, January 12, 2010 - 5:57 pm
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

The New York Times

January 11, 2010

Op-Ed Columnist

Let’s Talk About Faith

By ROSS DOUTHAT

 

Liberal democracy offers religious believers a bargain. Accept, as a price of citizenship, that you may never impose your convictions on your neighbor, or use state power to compel belief. In return, you will be free to practice your own faith as you see fit — and free, as well, to compete with other believers (and nonbelievers) in the marketplace of ideas.

That’s the theory. In practice, the admirable principle that nobody should be persecuted for their beliefs often blurs into the more illiberal idea that nobody should ever publicly criticize another religion. Or champion one’s own faith as an alternative. Or say anything whatsoever about religion, outside the privacy of church, synagogue or home.

A week ago, Brit Hume broke all three rules at once. Asked on a Fox News panel what advice he’d give to the embattled Tiger Woods, Hume suggested that the golfer consider converting to Christianity. “He’s said to be a Buddhist,” Hume noted. “I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith. ”

A great many people immediately declared that this comment was the most outrageous thing they’d ever heard. Hume’s words were replayed by Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, to shocked laughter from the audience. They were denounced across the blogosphere as evidence of chauvinism, bigotry and gross stupidity. MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann claimed, absurdly, that Hume had tried to “threaten Tiger Woods into becoming a Christian.” His colleague David Shuster suggested that Hume had “denigrated” his own religion by discussing it on a talk show.

The Washington Post’s TV critic, Tom Shales, mocked the idea that Christians should “run around trying to drum up new business” for their faith. Hume “doesn’t really have the authority,” Shales suggested — unless of course “one believes that every Christian by mandate must proselytize.” (This is, of course, exactly what Christians are supposed to believe.)

Somewhat more plausibly, a few of Hume’s critics suggested that had he been a Buddhist commentator urging a Christian celebrity to convert — or more provocatively, a Muslim touting the advantages of Islam — Christians would be calling for his head.

No doubt many would. The tendency to take offense at freewheeling religious debate is widespread. There are European Christians who side with Muslims in support of blasphemy laws, lest Jesus or the Prophet Muhammad have his reputation sullied. There are American Catholics who cry “bigotry” every time a newspaper columnist criticizes the church’s teaching on sexuality. Many Christians have decided that the best way to compete in an era of political correctness is to play the victim card.

But these believers are colluding in their own marginalization. If you treat your faith like a hothouse flower, too vulnerable to survive in the crass world of public disputation, then you ensure that nobody will take it seriously. The idea that religion is too mysterious, too complicated or too personal to be debated on cable television just ensures that it never gets debated at all.

This doesn’t mean that we need to welcome real bigotry into our public discourse. But what Hume said wasn’t bigoted: Indeed, his claim about the difference between Buddhism and Christianity was perfectly defensible. Christians believe in a personal God who forgives sins. Buddhists, as a rule, do not. And it’s at least plausible that Tiger Woods might welcome the possibility that there’s Someone out there capable of forgiving him, even if Elin Nordegren and his corporate sponsors never do.

Or maybe not. For many people — Woods perhaps included — the fact that Buddhism promotes an ethical life without recourse to Christian concepts like the Fall of Man, divine judgment and damnation is precisely what makes it so appealing. The knee-jerk outrage that greeted Hume’s remarks buried intelligent responses from Buddhists, who made arguments along these lines — explaining their faith, contrasting it with Christianity, and describing how a lost soul like Woods might use Buddhist concepts to climb from darkness into light.

When liberal democracy was forged, in the wake of Western Europe’s religious wars, this sort of peaceful theological debate is exactly what it promised to deliver. And the differences between religions are worth debating. Theology has consequences: It shapes lives, families, nations, cultures, wars; it can change people, save them from themselves, and sometimes warp or even destroy them.

If we tiptoe politely around this reality, then we betray every teacher, guru and philosopher — including Jesus of Nazareth and the Buddha both — who ever sought to resolve the most human of all problems: How then should we live?

It’s reasonable to doubt that a cable news analyst has the right answer to this question. But the debate that Brit Hume kicked off a week ago is still worth having. Indeed, it’s the most important one there is.

Society these days isn't what it used to be, or is it?

Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - 9:14 am
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

During my Parsha class on Tuesday, a passionate discussion was held on the question whether society is heading down hill and is worse off, from a moral stand point, then the past generation. No conclusion was reached, as can be expected when discussing such a broad and complicated topic, but great points were raised.

My reaction to this topic was, that regardless if there is truly a moral change from one generation to another, from parents to children, it seems one thing wont change, people will always (shake they’re head and) say: this new generation is completely overboard, parents will always be telling they're children, that they were raised in a society that was morally superior to today. I may be wrong, but from my experience, there seems to be a universal assumption, that in the olden days, things were different, things were better.

Whether things were truly better then, I will leave for others to decide, but, when you consider the progress society has made on issues like race, environmental responsibility, to mention a few; I don't think it's a simple issue. 

The assumption that things were better in the past, comes more from a change to good within people then from a change to bad within society. Life is the greatest teacher, and therefore as people age they're moral standards are raised. But people will always see themselves as part of the generation of their youth, and since, with age, they now identify with a higher value system, they attribute that identity to their generation, assuming that in the past, that is the way it was.

Just a thought…

Friday night beginner service

Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - 5:18 pm
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

 

The latest is, I'm looking into starting a Friday night service geared for the beginner. It’ll be held once a month and will focus on understanding and experiencing the prayers. I've always felt that Friday evening, as Shabbat enters, there is a special energy of spirituality and beauty. In fact, as the sun sets on Friday, many have the custom to go out into the field to greet that special aura of Shabbat.

The plan is that following the prayers, there will a Shabbat dinner at our center.

I'll keep you posted as things develop.

Netanyahu Recalls the Rebbe's Advice

Monday, October 12, 2009 - 2:09 pm
Posted by Rabbi Yisroel Zavdi

Following his address at the UN general assembly, September 24th 2009, Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at the 92nd Street Y.In his speech, he spoke about what drives him, and recalls his visit to the Lubavitcher Rebbe, in 1984. Light a candle of truth, dispell the darkness and lies.

 


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