Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’Category

Happy Labor Day

“If, as we believe and as we have resolved on numerous occasions, unionization is an indispensable means of securing justice for workers in our society, then our dedication to tzedakah requires that we not set the “fair market value” of labor according to the wage level for non-union workers. Read the rest of this entry →

31

08 2011

Shomer Shalom: Keep the Peace

Dear friends

A quick update about Shomer Shalom to those of you who agreed to be part of the Elder’s Council,  or have participated in our programming, or believe in our work.
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21

08 2011

Shomer Shalom Elders’ letters to UC student government supporting divestment

At least two member of the Shomer Shalom Elders’ Council have sent letters to the University of California student senators, strongly supporting their resolution calling for divestment in holdings in General Electric and United Technologies because of “their military support of the occupation of the Palestinian territories.”

Shomer Shalom founder Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb’s statement is here.

Shomer Shalom Elder Rabbi Brant Rosen’s statement is here.

You can read letters from other supporters at Jewish Voice for Peace.

Varied perspectives can also be found at Tikkun.

15

04 2010

Reflection on Amalek, by Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb

Shabbat Zachor:

Remember what Amalek did to you
on your journey
as you came out of Mitzryim
how he surprised you/chilled your spirit
on the road
smote those lagging behind
all that were enfeebled,
when you were faint and weary;
not fearing his own act.
When Adonai Elohekha gives you safety
from all your enemies round about,
in the land which Adonai Elohekha gives you as a hereditary portion
you shall blot out the remembrance of Amalek
from under the heavens.
Do not forget. Deuteronomy 25: 17-19

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26

02 2010

Shomer Shalom Open House, Feb. 21, 2010

Sunday * February 21 * 1-5PM
180 East Main Street, Stony Point, NY 10980

Join the Community of Living Traditions at Stony Point Center as we celebrate the opening of the Shomer Shalom House and launch Jewish programing and holy days that lift up The Torah of Nonviolence.
The Community of Living Traditions is a multifaith residential community dedicated to nonviolence and peace advocacy in study and practice. Shomer Shalom is a network of Jewish individuals committed
to the Torah of Nonviolence.

1-3 PM Meet, greet and schmooze
3 PM Affixing the mezuzah with prayers from CLT multifaith partners
3:15-4:00 PM Teachings from The Torah of Nonviolence with Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, and Islam and nonviolence with Rabia Terri Harris
4-5 PM Enjoy CLT hospitality and a delicious meal.

Shomer Shalom embraces a compassion centered, eco-kosher, wildly creative, human rights honoring, inter-generational, multi-cultural, queer embracing, text studying, ceremonial making, peace activist vision of Judaism

28

01 2010

Steven Schwarzschild on the obligation of religion to advocate for only peaceful means even when our best judgement calls for the use of force

“When God, the Radical, demands that we seek peace, He demands that we radically seek radical peace…not only when it fits into the political plans of our government, nor only when it is socially safe to talk about it, nor yet to the degree to which this seems practically prudent and promising of results, but under the irresistible command of God, always, everywhere, in every way, and totally, religion must insist on, explore, and practice the ways of peace toward the attainment of peace.” – Rabbi Steven Schwarzschild, Judaism, Fall 1966.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Schwarzschild

07

01 2010

Living together, faithfully

Interfaith residential community at Stony Point to focus on nonviolence
by Bethany Furkin
Presbyterian News Service

STONY POINT, N.Y. — Dozens of old friends and former directors of the Stony Point Center gathered here Oct. 17-18 for a 60th anniversary and homecoming celebration of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)-related conference facility.

But the weekend gathering wasn’t all about looking back.

Co-directors Rick and Kitty Ufford-Chase — who arrived at the financially troubled center in August 2008 — outlined plans for the “fifth generation” of Stony Point, designed to revitalize the storied center just north of New York City.

A centerpiece of the new Stony Point is the Community of Living Traditions — an interfaith intentional community dedicated to nonviolence and peacemaking. For at least five years, Christians, Muslims and Jews will live together at Stony Point, working, worshipping and learning together side by side.

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22

11 2009

Ta’anit Tzedek – Jewish Fast for Gaza

Ta’anit Tzedek – Jewish Fast for Gaza is an initiative that seeks to end the Jewish community’s silence over Israel’s collective punishment of Palestinians in Gaza.

Initiated by Rabbis Brant Rosen and Brian Walt, Ta’anit Tzedek began with a commitment by a minyan (“quorum”) of rabbis to engage in a fast in order to support relief efforts, to call for a lifting of Israel’s blockade of Gaza and to support all efforts toward a substantive resolution to this dire humanitarian crisis.

Ta’anit Tzedek is supported by a growing number of rabbis, interfaith leaders, and individuals from a variety of faith traditions. We invite all people of conscience to join us in this effort.

Ta’anit Tzedek is an ad-hoc initiative and is not affiliated with any specific organization or institution.

You can follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/fastforgaza.

10

07 2009

New Profile Activists Need Our Help

From Jewish Voice for Peace:  We have just learned that a number of Israeli peace activists have had their computers confiscated, have been called for interrogations, and have only been released upon signing agreements not to contact their political friends for 30 days.  We are asking you to contact the Israeli Attorney General to demand an immediate stop to this harassment.

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28

04 2009

As Jews committed to nonviolence…

As Jews committed to nonviolence, we express our sorrow and outrage over Israel’s latest military operation in Gaza. Judaism teaches that all human beings are created in the image of God and that one who takes a single life destroys an entire world. We condemn the firing of missiles from Gaza that forced so many Israelis to live in fear and we mourn the loss of life that resulted from these attacks. However, we are devastated by Israel’s disproportionate use of force, killing more than 1,300 people, including over 450 children. In the wake of such overwhelming civilian carnage, we can only ask, in the words of the Talmud, “How do we know that our blood is redder than the blood of our fellow?”

Jewish tradition also teaches that “when an arrow leaves the hand of a warrior he cannot take it back.” From this we learn that violence unleashes a myriad of consequences that we cannot control or reverse. We cannot begin to fathom the depths of trauma this action has caused for those living in Gaza and the grief for scores of individuals, families and loved ones around the world. Moreover we can only imagine the growing fury it has inspired in Gazans, Palestinians and the greater Arab world and the serious damage it has inflicted upon prospects for peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

In the wake of the recent cease-fire the task before the new American administration is all the more daunting – and all the more critical. We urge our new President to turn back the policies of previous administrations – policies which have given Israel a blank check to take numerous measures that we believe are counter to the cause of peace, including the expropriation of Palestinian lands, destruction of Palestinians homes and businesses and the widespread building of settlements in occupied Palestinian territory, to name but a few. We sincerely hope the Obama administration will find the courage to insist that the Israeli government end these actions in the strongest terms possible.

As Jews committed to nonviolence, we believe the pursuit of peace and justice to be our most sacrosanct value. We reject the vision of this conflict as an “Us vs. Them” zero sum game. We urge all who seek an end to this tragic conflict to commit themselves to peace, reconciliation and restorative justice. We call for a political solution that ends the occupation, addresses the needs of Palestinian refugees and constructs a positive future by and for Israelis and Palestinians in the holy land.

02

02 2009