Podcasts about modern orthodox jewish

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Best podcasts about modern orthodox jewish

Latest podcast episodes about modern orthodox jewish

College Bound Mentor
Finding a Queer-Friendly College, Part 2

College Bound Mentor

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2024 22:14


Feeling safe and supported on a college campus is important for any student. For students in the LGBTQ+ community, it can be an even more important factor when deciding where to go to college. In this Part 2, Stefanie interviews a college student, Ben, about his experience being a member of the queer and Modern Orthodox Jewish community on a college campus. Hear his experience coming out, what went into his college decision, how to get the pulse of the straight people on campus, how to get involved on campus, and his advice to queer students just starting college. Subscribe to College Bound Mentor on your favorite podcast platform and learn more at CollegeBoundMentor.com

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 28, 2024 is: flout • FLOUT • verb To flout something, such as a law or rule, is to treat it with contemptuous disregard. A teenager flouting a curfew, for example, will not hide the fact that they are out past the time they are required to be home. // The court found that the company had continued to flout the law despite multiple warnings. See the entry > Examples: "Bringing a queer sensibility and a deep understanding of Modern Orthodox Jewish tradition to novel writing, [Temim] Fruchter asks whether finding comfort in mystery is a viable alternative to standard happy endings or bleak fates. 'City of Laughter' argues that flouting convention makes space for more authentic, expansive stories and more authentic, expansive lives." — Lauren LeBlanc, The New York Times, 13 Jan. 2024 Did you know? If you flout a rule or societal norm, you ignore it without hiding what you're doing, or showing fear or shame; you flout it "out" in the open. The similar-sounding word flaunt is sometimes used in the same way, though that word's older and more common meaning is "to display ostentatiously," as in "people who flaunt their wealth." Critics have been objecting to the confusion of these two words since the early 1900s, but use of flaunt with the meaning "to treat with contemptuous disregard" is found in even polished, edited writing, and so that meaning is included in dictionaries as an established use of the word. Nonetheless, you may want to avoid it: there are still many who judge harshly those who (they feel) are flouting proper English usage.

Rabbi Yaron Reuven
JEREMY NEW YORK Why I Stopped Being A Modern Orthodox Jew RTH PODCAST #18

Rabbi Yaron Reuven

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 47:06


JEREMY NEW YORK: Why I Stopped Being A Modern Orthodox Jew RTH PODCAST #18 https://youtu.be/JbjrGnR1AcI In Episode 18, we meet Jeremy Braunstein from Staten Island, New York. Growing up in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community with its local yeshiva education, Jeremy felt like a robot repeating the same thing day after day without connecting to the purpose of life. After being introduced to Rabbi Yosef Mizrachi and Rabbi Yaron Reuven's shiurim on YouTube, he realized it's time to step up in the spiritual department. Step by step, Jeremy tells us his story of how he dropped the Modern in Modern Orthodox, and is careful not to miss any of the details you're all going to enjoy. Watch this detailed story, and don't be surprised if you're even more inspired to serve HaShem better in every aspect of your life. Enjoy, Share, and Be Holy.

Rabbi Yaron Reuven
JEREMY NEW YORK Why I Stopped Being A Modern Orthodox Jew RTH PODCAST #18

Rabbi Yaron Reuven

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 47:06


JEREMY NEW YORK: Why I Stopped Being A Modern Orthodox Jew RTH PODCAST #18 https://youtu.be/JbjrGnR1AcI In Episode 18, we meet Jeremy Braunstein from Staten Island, New York. Growing up in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community with its local yeshiva education, Jeremy felt like a robot repeating the same thing day after day without connecting to the purpose of life. After being introduced to Rabbi Yosef Mizrachi and Rabbi Yaron Reuven's shiurim on YouTube, he realized it's time to step up in the spiritual department. Step by step, Jeremy tells us his story of how he dropped the Modern in Modern Orthodox, and is careful not to miss any of the details you're all going to enjoy. Watch this detailed story, and don't be surprised if you're even more inspired to serve HaShem better in every aspect of your life. Enjoy, Share, and Be Holy.

Identity/Crisis
Clergy at the Courthouse (Re-Release)

Identity/Crisis

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 53:07


Maharat Rori Picker Neiss serves as the Executive Director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of St Louis. Prior to that she was the Director of Programming, Education and Community Engagement at Bais Abraham Congregation, a Modern Orthodox Jewish synagogue in University City, MO. She is one of the first graduates of Yeshivat Maharat, a pioneering institution training Orthodox Jewish women to be spiritual leaders and halakhic (Jewish legal) authorities. She previously served as Acting Executive Director for Religions for Peace-USA, Program Coordinator for the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance, Assistant Director of Interreligious Affairs for the American Jewish Committee, and Secretariat for the International Jewish Committee on Interreligious Consultations, the formal Jewish representative in international, interreligious dialogue. Rori is the co-chair of the North American Interfaith Youth Network of Religions for Peace, a CLAL Rabbis Without Borders fellow, and co-editor of "InterActive Faith: The Essential Interreligious Community-Building Handbook." She is married to Russel Neiss, a Software Engineer for Sefaria, and they have three wonderful children. This episode originally aired on February 14th, 2023.

Mother Daughter Connections™
167_Spirituality & Raising A Daughter: A Dad's Experience (w/ GUEST: Eli Weinstein, LCSW)

Mother Daughter Connections™

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2023 55:07


On today's episode of Mother Daughter Connections®, I'm joined by my friend and host of The Dude Therapist podcast, Eli Weinstein.   Eli Weinstein is a Social Work therapist (LCSW) who has worked in a psych hospital, intense outpatient clinic and currently works in private practice in Las Vegas, Nevada.   He created ELIvation, The Dude Therapist Podcast and became a therapist to fill a need while creating a modern outlook on mental health that is more digestible and relatable and helps those who are struggling by adding some extra inspiration and motivation into their everyday life.   Eli has been featured on the Kelly Clarkson show, IVF Warrior, Fruitful, Breaking Taboo and on multiple podcasts.   His heart is to supportively help people with care, empathy, expertise, and insight.   Eli speaks, runs events, seminars and does individual coaching on topics of mental health awareness, confidence, relationships, marriage, and infertility.     Today, Eli and I discuss  . . .   The #1 big misconception people have about spirituality. How spirituality is expressed in an Modern Orthodox Jewish home. The power women have with their spirituality. The role of spirituality in his parenting his children.   …and a WHOLE LOT MORE! __________________________________   To Connect With Eli:   Website: www.eliweinsteinlcsw.com Instagram: @eliweinstein_lcsw (https://www.instagram.com/eliweinstein_lcsw/ ) @thedudetherapist (https://www.instagram.com/thedudetherapist/)   Book Eli likes: The Grumpy Monkey, by Suzanne Lang (https://www.amazon.com/Grumpy-Monkey-Suzanne-Lang/dp/0553537865)       ____________________________________________________________________________ Let's Get To Know Each Other

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Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Standing in Two Worlds-Episode 71-Psycho Drama-Theater as a Medium of Self Awareness

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 50:23


The discussion begins with a review of a recentproduction of “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf” by a Modern Orthodox Jewish cast and crew at the Jerusalem Theater. Prof. Juni had organized a sizable group of friends and colleagues who attended the play and then participated in a focuseddiscussion group with the producer, crew, and key actors. The discussion is enriched by R. Kivelevitz's encyclopedic mastery of the world of cinema and theater and its history. The discussants compare and contrast the dynamics ofthe intended message (if any) which is evident in Method Acting vs. those one observes in such popular critically acclaimed fare as The Marvelous Miss Maisel and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Juni argues that – in the latter – Larry David actually manages to bring Method Acting to a new high as he merely assignsspecific roles and scenarios allowing each actor to improvise their lines while the camera rolls. The main focus of the discussion between Juni and Rabbi Kivelevitz was on the pros and cons of Method Acting, with particular attention to its potential as a means to insight and self-discovery. Whereas the Stanislavsky approach was designed with attention to the psyche of the actors, Juni is a proponent of using theater as a vicarious therapeutic emotional experience for the audience. Elaborating on his approach, Juni grounds hisposition on several postulates: Freud's idea of Polymorphous Perversitywhich asserts that we all have unresolved conflicts in every feasible conflictarea; Jacob Moreno's hypotheses that actionengenders latent underlying emotions; Cognitive Dissonance Theory which claimsthat feelings will be created artificially when one behaves in a dramatic manner. Juni extolls the psychological virtues of Method Acting (in contrast to the Classical R. Kivelevitz introduces the “Jewish connection”into the discussion by pointing to Stella Adler's adaptation of Method Actingand its pivotal role in shaping Yiddish American Theater. He also engages Juni as they critique the confabulation of modern theater and the worldview of Orthodox Judaism – as the pair explore the dissonance that may be experienced by Modern Orthodox directors, actors, and audiences which elicits visceral responses totheir presentations.

Standing in Two Worlds with Doctor Sam Juni
Psycho Drama-Theater as a Medium of Self Awareness

Standing in Two Worlds with Doctor Sam Juni

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 50:23


The discussion begins with a review of a recent production of “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf” by a Modern Orthodox Jewish cast and crew at the Jerusalem Theater. Prof. Juni had organized a sizable group of friends and colleagues who attended the play and then participated in a focus group with the producer, crew, and key actors. The discussion is enriched by R. Kivelevitz's encyclopedic mastery of the world of cinema and theater and its history. The discussants compare and contrast the dynamics of the intended message (if any) which is evident in Method Acting vs. those one observes in such popular critically acclaimed fare as The Marvelous Miss Maisel and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Juni argues that – in the latter – Larry David actually manages to bring Method Acting to a new high as he merely assigns specific roles and scenarios allowing each actor to improvise their lines while the camera rolls. R. Kivelevitz manages to maneuver Juni into sharingsome of his personal experiences as a “ham actor” in a number of performances –and to relate them to his current psychoanalytic perspective. The main focus of the discussion between Juni and Rabbi Kivelevitz was on the pros and cons of Method Acting, with particular attention to its potential as a means to insight and self-discovery. Whereas the Stanislavsky approach was designed with attention to the psyche of the actors, Juni is a proponent of using theater as a vicarious therapeutic emotional experience for the audience. Elaborating on his approach, Juni grounds hisposition on several postulates: A. Freud's idea of Polymorphous Perversitywhich asserts that we all have unresolved conflicts in every feasible conflictarea; B. Jacob Moreno's hypotheses that actionengenders latent underlying emotions; C. Cognitive Dissonance Theory which claimsthat feelings will be created artificially when one behaves in a dramatic manner. Juni combines these diverse ideas as he argues that theateraudience members will inevitably be “dawn into” identifying with the protagonists if they leave themselves open to the experience. R. Kivelevitz points out that classic authors of fiction capitalize on this very orientation as well asin the construction and wording of their narratives. Juni extolls the psychological virtues of Method Acting (in contrast to the Classical Shakespearean Style which stresses context and the Objective Approach). R. Kivelevitz introduces the “Jewish connection”into the discussion by pointing to Stella Adler's adaptation of Method Actingand its pivotal role in shaping Yiddish American Theater. He also engages Juni as they critique the confabulation of modern theater and the worldview of Orthodox Judaism – as the pair explore the dissonance that may be experienced by Modern Orthodox directors, actors, and audiences which elicits visceral responses to their presentations. R.Kivelevitz concludes by lauding a novel contemporary approach in self-discovery known as Improv Therapy, relating its rationale to a number of the points and dynamics raised in the discussion. Prof. Juni is one of the foremost research psychologists in the world today. He has published ground-breaking original research in seventy different peer reviewed journals and is cited continuously with respect by colleagues and experts in the field who have built on his theories and observations. He studied in Yeshivas Chaim Berlin under Rav Yitzchak Hutner, and in Yeshiva University as a Talmid of Rav Joseph Dov Soloveitchik. Dr. Juni is a board member of the Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists and has regularly presented addresses to captivated audiences. Associated with NYU since 1979, Juni has served as Director of PhD programs, all the while heading teams engaged in cutting-edge research. Professor Juni's scholarship on aberrant behavior across the cultural, ethnic, and religious spectrum is founded on psychometric methodology and based on a psychodynamic psychopathology perspective. He is arguably the preeminent expert in Differential Diagnostics, with each of his myriad studies entailing parallel efforts in theory construction and empirical data collection from normative and clinical populations. Professor Juni created and directed the NYU Graduate Program in Tel Aviv titled Cross-Cultural Group Dynamics in Stressful Environments. Based in Yerushalayim, he collaborates with Israeli academic and mental health specialists in the study of dissonant factors and tensions in the Arab-Israeli conflict and those within the Orthodox Jewish community, while exploring personality challenges of second-generation Holocaust survivors. Below is a partial list of the professional journals where Professor Juni has published 120 theoretical articles and his research findings (many are available online): Journal of Forensic Psychology; Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment, and Trauma; International Review of Victimology; The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease; International Forum of Psychoanalysis; Journal of Personality Assessment; Journal of Abnormal Psychology; Journal of Psychoanalytic Anthropology; Psychophysiology; Psychology and Human Development; Journal of Sex Research; Journal of Psychology and Judaism; Contemporary Family Therapy; American Journal on Addictions; Journal of Criminal Psychology; Mental Health, Religion, and Culture. As Rosh Beis Medrash, Rabbi Avraham Kivelevitz serves as Rav and Posek for the morning minyan at IDT. Hundreds of listeners around the globe look forward to his weekly Shiur in Tshuvos and Poskim. Rav Kivelevitz is a Maggid Shiur for Dirshu International in Talmud and Halacha as well as a Dayan with the Beth Din of America.

Good Girls Gone Sad
Gone to Tour with TLC (with Olga Namer)

Good Girls Gone Sad

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 62:08


This week, the Good Girls are joined by Olga Namer (Ladies of Laughter). We chat about her experience growing up in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community, dating "bad boys," and going to the VMAs with TLC. And it wouldn't be GGGS if we didn't end with a game! It's "Olga Namer Names Names." (tw: disordered eating)   And save the date for our LIVE COMEDY SHOW December 15th at Stand Up NY! Tickets are available now HERE. Enter promo code GOODGIRLS10 for $10 off. Stay tuned for the lineup!   Special thanks to DJ Skip to my Luke for our fabulous intro! Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts and we will mail you a GGGS sticker! Just screenshot the review, send us a DM and an address where you would like the sticker sent!    Follow the Good Girls on Instagram @goodgirlsgonesad And Twitter @goodgrlsgonesad Follow Olga @olganamer Follow Becca @thebeccastephenson Follow Syd @syd.the.king

Babbles with Besties
Busting Myths about Being Jewish

Babbles with Besties

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 40:16


Hey Babblers! Today I am joined by educator, mentor and friend Gila. As a Modern Orthodox Jewish woman living in Australia, sometimes Gila can look and feel out of place. It's very easy for people make assumptions about her based on external factors such as the way she dresses or certain lifestyle choices. In this week's episode, Gila gives us an insight into her experience navigating life as a religious woman in a secular world. We talk dating culture, intimacy, friendships, university, modesty, timelines and societal expectations around being a young mum. We also go into myth buster mode, unpacking some of the most common myths about Modern Orthodox Judaism, and if there is potentially any truth to them... This is an independent podcast created by Madison Lunz. The best way to support Babbles with Besties is by subscribing and leaving a review and 5 star rating (pretty please x) To stay up to date be sure to also follow this podcast on Instagram @babbleswithbesties and check out babbleswithbesties.com

Showing Up With Asher Gottesman
BEST OF: Emmanuelle Chriqui

Showing Up With Asher Gottesman

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2021 53:18


BEST OF: Actress Emmanuelle Chriqui joins us for an equally fun and deep conversation about Hollywood, and more importantly spirituality. While you might know her best as Sloan from HBO’s Entourage, what you probably don’t know is that she was raised in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community in Canada. In this episode, Asher and Emmanuelle talk about the importance of Shabbat (the Jewish Sabbath), the death of her mother and father, the experience of ayahuasca, her current relationship, and her new show, Superman & Louis on CW. If you enjoyed this episode, please show up for us by subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show. Connect With Emmanuelle Chriqui https://www.instagram.com/echriqui/ https://twitter.com/echriqui Connect With Asher Gottesman http://ashergottesman.com/ https://www.instagram.com/theasherg/ https://twitter.com/TheAsherG --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Space: What The F**k, Dude?!

Olga shares her life story of growing up as a Modern Orthodox Jewish person who pursued stand-up comedy in New York City.Follow her on social media!Insta: @olganamerolganamer.comMy stuff:@dannypalmernycdannypalmercomedy@gmail.com

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Showing Up With Asher Gottesman
Emmanuelle Chriqui Shows Up To Get Deep

Showing Up With Asher Gottesman

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2020 50:43


Actress Emmanuelle Chriqui joins us for an equally fun and deep conversation about Hollywood, and more importantly spirituality. While you might know her best as Sloan from HBO’s Entourage, what you probably don’t know is that she was raised in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community in Canada. In this episode, Asher and Emmanuelle talk about the importance of Shabbat (the Jewish Sabbath), the death of her mother and father, the experience of ayahuasca, current relationship, and her new show, Superman & Louis on CW. If you enjoyed this episode, please show up for us by subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show. Connect With Emmanuelle Chriqui https://www.instagram.com/echriqui/ https://twitter.com/echriqui Connect With Asher Gottesman http://ashergottesman.com/ https://www.instagram.com/theasherg/ https://twitter.com/TheAsherG

The Creative Zone with Tali Brash
Speaking Your Truth

The Creative Zone with Tali Brash

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 35:05


In this episode I reflect on having grown up in a Modern Orthodox Jewish community where I learnt pretty early on that it wasn't ok for me to have my voice and share it publicly as a woman. I dive into how I learnt to no longer shut down my voice and share ways you can go about speaking your truth with others when it's vulnerable and how to unblock your voice and creative channel. You can listen to more episodes of The Creative Zone Podcast here.Where to find Tali:Buy my meditation albumsInstagram: @talibrashFacebook: Tali BrashLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tali-brash-62107178/Website: www.talibrash.comI would really appreciate if you would share, rate, review & subscribe to The Creative Zone Podcast - so we can inspire more people to get out of their heads and live in their creative zone.Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=XMQYWY7JKWCF2&source=url)

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Showing Up With Asher Gottesman
Elizabeth Sutton Shows Up To Create Art

Showing Up With Asher Gottesman

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2020 40:29


Artist, mom, and entrepreneur Elizabeth Sutton is an artist known for her whimsical, beautiful art, hardware, handbags, and other designs, but her life hasn’t always been butterflies and roses. She’s overcome so much in life, yet she doesn’t consider herself a victim. In this conversation, she talks about growing up Modern Orthodox Jewish, her issues with her father, deciding to divorce her husband and finding out she was pregnant the next day, as well as loss and grief. We also get deep about faith, the importance of God in her life, and why she prays every day. Connect With Elizabeth Sutton http://elizabethsuttoncollection.com/ Connect With Asher Gottesman http://www.ashergottesman.com/ https://www.instagram.com/theasherg/ https://twitter.com/TheAsherG

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MamaFuel: The Podcast
EP045: Shari D Teigman on carving her own path as a woman and a mother, the maverick way

MamaFuel: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 64:58


I love all my guests, and this week's is no exception. Shari Teigman is a whirlwind of straight-talking, powerhouse New York determination and grit. In this week's conversation we talk about her realisation that to live and thrive, she needed to break away from the traditional mother and matriarch roles handed down through her Modern Orthodox Jewish upbringing, and what it meant to do that in the community where she was raised.Shari still lives and mothers in the place where she grew up; she's founded her business, launched three podcasts, raises her two boys on her own and keeps exploring different ways to belong in this new, truer form of herself. Shari and I talk about the insidiousness of mothers being valued for being selfless, how living in the place you grew up can blind you to the structures that others impose upon you, and how damaging it is that we don't learn to trust ourselves from the outset. We talk about Byron Katie's The Work, which you can learn more about here, how important it is to choose the stories you believe, the importance of learning to be ok with yourself FIRST and foremost, how damaging it is to judge and compare ourselves to others, and so much more.I know I'll be listening over and over to this episode, and I can't wait to hear what you think of it. Make sure you visit us over in the free Facebook group here to continue the conversation about this episode.If you'd like to learn more about Shari and her work, you can find her here online, check out her Facebook profile or follow her on Instagram. 

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The Comedian's Comedian Podcast
261 - Alex Edelman

The Comedian's Comedian Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2018 58:42


Responsible for the best reviewed comedy show at Edfringe 2018, Alex Edelman is an irrepressibly funny comic, with a grasp of joke structure and narrative arc that is both innate and studied. We cover his Modern Orthodox Jewish upbringing, and as well as identifying a "a confessional arms race" in modern comedy, he reveals a desperate need to be accepted by his peers. But is he really "solicitous and pandering"? Extra content for this episode includes Alex's hypothetical "formula" for an award-winning first hour, and why although prescriptive it isn't actually that formulaic. We also get to hear him review himself honestly... Sign up for all the extras at www.comedianscomedian.com/insiders Find out more about Alex at www.alexedelmancomedy.com @alexedelmanwww.comedianscomedian.com @StuGoldsmith @ComComPod See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

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BUnconventional's Podcast
The Business of Summer Fun – Episode #28, Segment 1

BUnconventional's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2012


Students and faculty from The Denver Academy of Torah are in the studio as Business Unconventional presents its first annual “Business of Summer Fun” special edition.  The segment begins with each of the students introducing themselves.  Guests include Dr. Juli Kramer and Mrs. Naomi Lev from the high school, and Colorado’s legendary rock concert producer, Barry Fey, author of Backstage Past. Denver Academy of Torah is a Modern Orthodox Jewish day school committed to providing excellence in education in both general and Judaic studies.  Business Unconventional is hosted by David Biondo and Dean Rotbart and airs each Sunday morning at 8 a.m. (Mountain Time).  The program is also streamed over the Internet at www.710KNUS.com. Biondo and Rotbart invite high school and middle school classes to visit the radio station during the show’s weekly taping.  For more information, phone: 303-800-6081. B. Unconventional is sponsored in part by Signal Butte Financial Corp., which provides individuals and businesses no-risk, proven methods to safely grow their wealth and wave goodbye to conventional banks and other lenders.  For more information, click here or phone David Biondo for a free, zero-obligation personal briefing.  His number is 303-800-6420.  Original Air Date: May 6, 2012Photo: A student from Denver Academy of Torah at the April 27th taping. 

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Talkline Communications
Talkline 12-19-09

Talkline Communications

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2009 125:03


RABBI BARRY FREUNDEL Geirus policy and Status CONTEMPORARY ORH JUDAISM RESPONSE TO MODERNITY Barry Freundel is the rabbi of Kesher Israel congregation in Washington DC, and a leading rabbi in the Modern Orthodox Jewish world.

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