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I call on the OU undertake a study of the collective health of Orthodox people, and especially men between the ages of 35 and 65. The OU's done great work helping Torah Jews put more into our mouths. Now it's time for the O.U. to take the lead in helping us put a little less in as well.Well, as of Friday, they still hadn't gotten the message.
Donuts vs. CupcakesWas it an article about the relative health of one dessert over another? An interesting Shabbat contest in which a shul pitted the doughnut lovers against cupcake connoisseurs? Hardly. It was a recipe suggestion. And I quote:
Sorry, but is that really the best that the OU can do to promote kosher food? After eating a meal of carrot "kugel" (er, cake) and cranberry crunch as a side-dish, is one dessert not enough, that we need two desserts, piled on top of each-other? It just seems like a bad rip-off of Paula Deen's famous hamburger sandwiched between two a doughnuts. Really. (See above photo. I heard about it on "Wait Wait Don't Tell Me!")I think I’ve died and gone to “Snack Cake” heaven. My daughter Shani recently came up with the ideal snack cake recipe she found online. A cupcake topped with a donut!
Some permit one to tell a non-Jew to play with a musical instrument at chuppahs. (Rama adds) And even to tell the non-Jew to fix the instrument is permitted for the sake of the honor of the groom and bride, but without this [cause] is forbidden. Yet, in this time they customarily are lenient...
דאיסור השמעת קול בכלי שיר אינו אלא איסור דרבנן גזירה שמא יתקן כלי שיר ואמירה לא"י ג"כ אינו אלא איסור דרבנן והוי שבות דשבות ובמקום מצוה היא דאין שמחת חתן וכלה אלא בכלי שיר ושרי וכנ"ל בסימן ש"ז ס"ה ע"ש ויש מקומות שנהגו להחמיר בזה אם לא שהכינום לזה מע"ש ולא יאמר לו בשבת כלום או שבא מעצמו לנגן [כה"ג]:For the prohibition of hearing the sound of musical instruments is a rabbinic prohibition - a decree lest on come to fix the instrument. And telling a non-Jew [to violate the Shabbat] is also only a rabbinic prohibition. [So combining the two] is a decree on a decree in the situation of a mitzvah, for there is no joy of groom and bride without music, and for this reason, it is permitted...and some places had the custom to be stringent in this matter if they had no prepared [the musicians] from before Shabbat, but they should not say anything to [the musicians] on Shabbat...
וְהַלֻּחֹת--מַעֲשֵׂה אֱלֹהִים, הֵמָּה; וְהַמִּכְתָּב, מִכְתַּב אֱלֹהִים הוּא--חָרוּת, עַל-הַלֻּחֹתAnd the tables were the work of God, and the writing was the writing of God, graven upon the tables.
אומר: "והלחת מעשה אלהים המה והמכתב מכתב אלהים הוא חרות על הלחת".אל תקרא "חרות" אלא "חירות", שאין לך בן חורין אלא מי שעוסק בתלמוד תורה.and it says, "And the tables were the work of God, and the writing was the writing of God, graven upon the tables." Do not read [the word} as (charut) - "graven" - rather read the word as (cheirut) - freedom. For there is no free person like the one who immerses himself in the study of Torah
"I went to public school. There were no yeshivas at that time...I went to the public elementary school. I had very good teachers; one teacher, Mrs. Bernstein, my father insisted that I had her for fourth, fifth and sixth grade. She had excellent penmanship, and taught everyone to read beautifully. And that gave me my start in...penmanship - safrut. Then went to public junior high school...There I had one fabulous math teacher who inspired me and gave me an excellent mathematics education. For high school I went to the Baltimore City College - which was a high school, and I took three streetcars to get there. That was my secular education. My religious education - I went to a teacher - they used to have teachers who would teach in their own homes. One house of their homes was dedicated to the school. They taught children from four years old straight through until my Bar Mitzvah. He happens to be Jason Rosenblatt's great-grandfather. After Bar Mitzvah I went to a private rebbe for Talmud who was excellent. He was an old man, but he was excellent, and I went to his house. "
Addressing the North American Jewish Day Schools Leadership Conference here Sunday night, Rachel Abrahams of Avi Chai, a leading supporter of day schools, also emphasized the financial benefits of an approach being used in more and more schools around the country.On one hand, we often generally shy away from students so integrated with their non-Jewish peers. The powers of acculturation and outside influence do rightly generate great concern. Then again, many of these same children will one day leave home for the college campus, and be forced to confront these very issues. Could there be a benefit to having them confront them while still living with their parents, who might provide guidance and counsel?
“Day school students could potentially enroll” in charter schools “and have parts of their general studies education funded by the government, while their Judaic studies would be offered in a bricks and mortar learning center (perhaps incorporating some online Jewish studies courses as well).
Telling people that they should make Aliyah to solve the exorbitant tuition costs in Jewish schools in America does nothing to bring those costs down. It's like telling someone who's not happy with their job that they should just get another job. It's not an answer, and it's honestly not very helpful to people who are really struggling to pay for their kids' tuition.Point well taken. People should move to Israel because that's where Jews belong. Affordable tuition is an entirely different issue. I've got a couple of suggestions which obviously aren't going to be mainstream, but perhaps will light a fire under some creative, forward-thinking people.