Tazria - Revitalize and Replenish Your Soul
April 8/9, 2016 Adar2 29/Nissan 1, 5776
12:1 G-D spoke to Moses
saying,
2 Speak to the Children of
Israel, saying, when a woman conceives and gives birth to a male child she will
be ritually unclean for seven days; as the days of her menstrual flow, she will
be unclean.
3 On the eighth day, the flesh of his foreskin shall be
circumcised.
4 For thirty-three days she will remain [in the status] that the
blood [she sees] is ritually pure. She
shall not touch anything holy and she shall not come into the Sanctuary, until
the days of her purity are completed.
5 If she gives birth to a female she will be unclean for two weeks
as during her menstruation. For
sixty-six days she will remain [in the status] that the blood [she sees] is
ritually pure.
6 When the days of her purification are completed, be it for a son
or for a daughter, she shall bring a lamb, in its first year, as a
burnt-offering and a young pigeon or a turtledove as a sin-offering, to the
entrance of the Tent of Meeting, to the Kohen.
The above can be seen as (Niddah) Menstrual cycle, (Taharat
HaMishpacha) Family Purity, and (Mikvah)the ritual cleansing of the
impure! In addition to the physical
manner mentioned and The Jewish Law, let’s look at ‘Purity and Cleansing’ from a different perspective; Cleansing of One’s Soul, and Revitalization
of Judaism
Example One:
Opening the Gates: How
Proactive Conversion Can Revitalize the Jewish Community, a book by Gary
Tobin. Tobin, president of the Institute
for Jewish and Community Research in San Francisco and director of the Leonard
and Madlyn Abramson Program in Jewish Policy Research at the University of
Judaism. He has published extensively in the areas of antisemitism, synagogue
affiliation, Jewish organizational planning, and philanthropy and foundations
in the Jewish community. Tobin is the recipient of the 1997 Koret Foundation
Prize for his research in the American Jewish community. In this work, Tobin challenges his fellow
American Jews to avoid the process of entropy that could take a devastating
toll in the Jewish community. "This should be our primary task,"
Tobin passionately argues. He confronts his community with the eye-opening
reality that "in order to rebuild and REVITALIZE Judaism in this country
we must rethink our religion as something both born Jews and converts must
actively choose and stop blaming intermarriage for Judaism's decline." He
implores the Jewish community to shift its focus from preventing intermarriage
to embracing an open, positive, accessible, and joyful process of encouraging
non-Jews to become Jews. As Tobin bluntly puts it, "We must abandon the
paradigm that our children and grandchildren may become Gentiles and promote
the thought that America is filled with millions of potential Jews."
Opening the Gates examines the role conversion should play in the
Jewish future. It looks at the way the Jewish community currently handles
issues of intermarriage and conversion and recommends strategies to incorporate
conversion into a larger vision of building the next Jewish civilization. Tobin
suggests what Judaism might look like if it were to promote itself as a
positive choice for both Jews and non-Jews in the marketplace of religious
affiliation-and tells us what the community needs to do to mold this future.
Tobin's controversial plan is sure to spark productive dialogue throughout the
Jewish community.
Is his opinion and book that of Controversy? Yes to some, and refreshing to others. It’s how we paint OUR own Jewish Picture
that determines our own precepts and our own beliefs. Do the Bubbe and Zayde feel a loss about
their grandchild, the child of their son, who married a gentile? Or is their
approach different, and that of Tobin’s?
Do they have a ritual and proverbial cleansing of self, and don’t live
with guilt, and rather hold their grandchild’s hand and encourage and SHOW proactive Jewish Behaviors, education
such as Religious school and Hebrew lessons, and leadership through such groups as BBYO? Instead of losing one, let’s work on gaining
one!
Example Two:
Steven Windmueller in a recent essay titled "Sustaining 21st
Century American Judaism: Examining New Options.
In his essay, Windmueller, who is the Rabbi Alfred Gottschalk
Emeritus Professor of Jewish Communal Service at Hebrew Union College-Jewish
Institute of Religion (and a Jewish Journal blogger), begins by setting out the
premise:
"Based on current research related to the status of religious
movements, it is important to begin to design strategies for synagogue
organizations and their affiliates to move toward 'sacred innovation,' the idea
of re-imagining congregational life. These initiatives come up against the new
realities of the decline in American religiosity."
Windmueller identifies "a number of operational roadblocks
facing our established national religious movements and their affiliates,"
such as "decision-making malaise, defining the competitive edge, focusing
on leadership capacity and identifying alternative revenue streams."
To address these roadblocks and confront "today's complex
realities," he adds that movements and their congregational affiliates
will need to pay specific attention to things like establishing institutional
identity, managing partnerships and collaborative arrangements, and operating
from "the outside in."
The words, “The outside in” mean a lot. The traditional religious sector is still
very present, although the NON-traditional, newer outreach is definitely coming
of age and has most definitely arrived!
If the Congregation does not come to the Synagogue, the Synagogue MUST
come to Congregation, to the masses.
The decline in Congregational Membership is at an all-time high,
and the Unaffiliated Jewish sector is on the rise. Does that mean these Jewish persons, who are
Unaffiliated, don’t want to have a Jewish Influence? May be not within WALLS???!!??? Or maybe walk a different path; maybe a
Shabbat in the Park,? Or a Community
Seder? , or setting up a Havurah Group within your community?
We as Jews, as Humans must look inside
our very own souls, our own hearts, at our Jewish Identity, and have a look at
some of our thoughts, a cleansing of sorts, and a virtual renewal and
revitalization.
We, as a very small sector have a very important choice. A very important choice indeed; a choice to
adapt ‘some-what’ and carry on, and choose to survive and educate those who
might not have been raised like we were, be they Jewish or Not, or choose to
walk a Jewish path that differs a little from what our comfort zone dictates,
or what our precepts are and the manner we believe.
It is our job daily to offer a hand to ALL (Jews), and those that we
are able to help develop. Clean, Purify,
Educate and Revitalize; SAVE ONE OR……………..
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