Podcasts about nachem

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Best podcasts about nachem

Latest podcast episodes about nachem

LottasLust: Erotische Geschichten
Folge 56: BDSM Teil 2 mit Nicola

LottasLust: Erotische Geschichten

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2024 24:23


Willkommen zum Teil 2 der BDSM-Reihe mit Nicola (@nico.lamarie)!!! Nachem wir in der ersten Folge Grundsätzliches zu BDSM erklärt haben, geht es heute um Praktiken und wie man es schafft, ein lustvolles Spiel aus Dominanz und Leidenschaft zu gestalten. Lernt etwas über die Vorbereitung der Pleasure Islands und erfahrt was es für Toys innerhalb einer Ausrüstung geben kann. Behandelt dieses Thema mit 100% Einvernehmen von allen Parteien und bedenkt, dass es körperliche sowie psychische Auswirkungen haben kann, wenn Grenzen nicht eingehalten werden! ********************************* Infos zum Sponsor dieser Folge: Im Webshop von ⁠anuux.de⁠ bekommt ihr mit dem Code "Lotta" einmalig 10 % beim Kauf der Kapseln. Bitte bedenkt, dass es kein Medikament ist und nicht bei jedem die gleiche Wirkung hat. Weitere Faktoren, die auf den Magen-Darm-Trakt wirken, spielen ebenfalls eine Rolle. Schreibt Marius und seinem Team auch gerne Feedback zu den Kapseln und mir Feedback zur Folge! (unbezahlte Werbung)

Daily Halacha Podcast - Daily Halacha By Rabbi Eli J. Mansour
Tisha BeAv- Do We Wear Tefillin On Tisha BeAv

Daily Halacha Podcast - Daily Halacha By Rabbi Eli J. Mansour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024


The Maharam of Rotenberg (Germany, 1215-1293) was of the opinion that Tisha B'Av, the saddest day of the year, has the same status in Halacha as the first day of mourning, and thus just as one does not wear Tefillin on his first day of mourning, Heaven forbid, so do we all refrain from wearing Tefillin on Tisha B'Av. Other authorities, however, held that on Tisha B'Av one must, indeed, wear Tefillin, and this is the accepted position. There is, however, considerable controversy regarding the question of when one wears Tefillin on Tisha B'Av. The Gaon of Vilna (1720-1797) had the practice of donning Tefillin only at midday on Tisha B'Av. He apparently held that the first half of Tisha B'Av was a period of intense mourning, whereas the second half the day, when we begin to recite "Nachem," marks a period of lesser intensity and thus warrants wearing Tefillin. This is indeed the practice of many Ashkenazim. Other Ashkenazim have the practice to don Tefillin on Tisha B'Av only during the Mincha service. What is the practice of the Sepharadim in this regard? From numerous sources, including the Kaf Ha'chayim, Ben Ish Chai and writings of the Kabbalists, it emerges that the Sephardic practice is to wear Tefillin on Tisha B'Av during Shacharit in the morning, as on all other days, with the standard Beracha. People with the practice of wearing Tefillin Rabbenu Tam every morning should do so on Tisha B'Av morning, as well. We do, however, find divergent customs as to where the Tefillin should be worn. The Kaf Ha'chayim and Ben Ish Chai mention that on Tisha B'Av one dons Tefillin and recites Shacharit privately, at home, and then comes to the synagogue – after removing his Tallit and Tefillin – for the repetition of Shemona Esrei, Kinot and Eicha. Others, however, held that one prays on Tisha B'Av in the synagogue with Tallit and Tefillin as usual, just as on other days, and the Tallit and Tefillin are removed after the repetition of Shemona Esrei. This was the ruling of Chacham Baruch Ben-Chaim. Both practices have roots in Halachic literature, and thus each community should follow the guidance of its Rabbi. It must be emphasized that according to all authorities, one does not wear Tefillin – which serves as a sign of glory and royalty – while reciting Kinot to lament the destruction of the Beit Ha'mikdash. Summary: Tefillin are worn on Tisha B'Av with the Beracha. Ashkenazim have the custom of wearing Tefillin on Tisha B'Av only in the afternoon, whereas Sepharadim wear Tefillin already in the morning, as usual. Some Sepharadim wear Tefillin and pray Shacharit privately at home and then come to synagogue without Tefillin, whereas others pray with Tallit and Tefillin in the synagogue as usual. Each community should follow its custom as instructed by its Rabbi.

The Weekly Torah Controversy
Do We Need a New Nusach for Nachem?

The Weekly Torah Controversy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 33:08


UniUssicht
#8 Wie witer nachem Bachelor? - Es Bispiel vo Biomedical Engineering

UniUssicht

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2024 54:48


Ih dere Folg hemmer euse erste Master-student de Liam als Gast. Er verzellt eus vo sim Werdegang und git spannendi Ihblick vo sim Informatikbachelor. Momentan studiert er Biomedical Engineering ade ETH und git eus en Usblick wie es nachem Bachelor witergah chan.

los emmal
s'läbe nachem gymi

los emmal

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2024 37:10


#51: i ha mi richtig gfreut, usem gymi z'cho und endlich s'läbe gnüsse z'chönne. im nachhinein hani da no paar anderi gedanke dezue, woni euch hüt gern verzell :) danke fürs zuelose - für meh:  tiktok: jucktdochkeine / wemmse instagram & youtube: wemmse und falls en gast wünsche wettsch oder öpis zverzelle/zfroge hesch, machs da:  ⁠https://forms.gle/vnfRRBqPxZtrxNPk8⁠ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/losemmal/message

nachem
Die Zentrale
Die drei ??? - Böser die Glocken nie klingen: Vandalismus

Die Zentrale

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2023 50:23


Nachem wir 2 Türchen mit Leonie aufgenommen hatten, wurde es ihr zu bunt und sie hat uns vor die Tür gesetzt! Dumm nur, dass unser Bus von Hambug nach Berlin noch nicht fuhr, also haben wir Unterschlupf bei Torben gesucht. Torben kennt ihr vielleicht schon von unserer Folge unseres Schwesternpodcast "Der Pädagoge und die Altenpflegerin", in der er zu Gast war und über seine Mathe-App "Mambio" erzählt hatte (wenn nicht, solltet ihr das ganz schnell nachholen!). Auch Torben bringt ein bisschen frischen Wind reint und entpuppt sich als der wahre Skriptautor unseres Podcasts. Oder doch nicht? Ihr habt Fragen, Feedback oder Kritik? Dann meldet euch doch einfach bei uns über Twitter: @zentrale_die @friday5782 @Kasperwelten oder über unseren Instagramaccount die_zentrale rotzundwasserpodcast oder sprecht uns was auf unseren Anrufbeantworter Tel.: 0178 134 5227

The Jewish Hour
Jewish Hour-Nachem Kaplan – Education Imperative

The Jewish Hour

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 55:33


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Basketball – meinsportpodcast.de
Wie guet sind Lakers nachem Hachimura trade?

Basketball – meinsportpodcast.de

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 46:07


I dere Episode diskutieret mir de Hachimura trade und wer buyers und sellers i de NBA sind. Mir händ denn no en 2023 Draft preview.  Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten. kostenlos-hosten.de ist ein Produkt der Podcastbude.Gern unterstützen wir dich bei deiner Podcast-Produktion.

Daily Halacha Podcast - Daily Halacha By Rabbi Eli J. Mansour

There are certain additions that are added to the Amidah throughout the day and the night of Tisha BeAv. Of course the most common addition that we add to all our Tefilot during fast days is ‘Anenu.' Our custom is to add the Anenu in all the Tefilot of Tisha BeAv beginning with Arbit, and of course the following day in Shacharit and in Mincha. Anenu is inserted in ‘Shomea Tefilah.' When the Chazan repeats the Amidah, he would insert this Anenu in between the Beracha of ‘Goel Yisrael' and ‘Rifaenu'.It should be pointed out that if one forgets Anenu, he does not have to repeat the Amidah. Missing Anenu does not invalidate the Amidah.There's another addition to the Amidah that is specifically applicable only on Tisha BeAv. We insert the Beracha of ‘Nachem' into the Amidah. ‘Nachem' is a special insert that is put into the Beracha of ‘Tishkon Bitoch Yerushalayim'. It's a special Tisha BeAv Beracha that talks about the destruction of Jerusalem, and how G-d, B'Ezrat Hashem, is going to console us with the rebuilding of Jerusalem. We end that Beracha with "Baruch Ata Hashem Menachem Tzion BiVinyan Yerushalayim."Now, there is a great Machloket as to how many times one must mention ‘Nachem'. According to Maran in Shulchan Aruch, the Beracha of ‘Nachem' is mentioned in all the Tefilot, starting with Arbit of Tisha BeAv, and continuing through Shacharit and Mincha. That's the opinion also of Rav Chida(Rav Chaim Yoseif David Azulai, 1724-1806), and that it seems was and is the Minhag of Eretz Yisrael, which again, is to say ‘Nachem' in all the Tefilot.The Ashkenazim however, follow the ruling of Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, 1530 - 1572), who says to only say the Beracha of ‘Nachem' in Mincha of Tisha BeAv. He says this is because Mincha was the time exactly when the Romans came and lit the fire to burn the Bet HaMikdash. So it is at that point that we start to mention about the destruction of Jerusalem officially in the Amidah. Our Minhag is to follow the Ashkenazim on this, and we thus say ‘Nachem' only in Mincha of Tisha BeAv. Again, only Mincha Tisha BeAv, is where we say ‘Nachem.' Now if somebody forgot ‘Nachem', he has a few places where he can make it up. If he forgot it when saying ‘Tishkon Bitoch Yerushalayim', he can make it up in ‘Shema Kolenu'. If he forgot in ‘Shema Kolenu', he could make it up in ‘Ritze' in the place where you say ‘Yaale VeYavo' which is after the words ‘Avodat Yisrael Amecha.' Now, in that place you can not say the Beracha with a Chatima (ending) of ‘Baruch Ata Hashem Menachem Tzion BiVinyan Yerushalayim', but rather you would just say up until the Beracha and then continue ‘VeAta BeRachamecha'. If he still forgets to insert ‘Nachem' at that point, he can still make it before he finishes the Amidah after the second ‘Yehi Ratzon', right before the last part. Finally, if he forgets it there, he does not go back and repeat the Amidah. This is a once a year item. Therefore, everyone should prepare themselves and be ready to say the Amidah with the proper inclusions in the Amidah on Tisha BeAv. Specifically, don't miss out on the important addition of ‘Nachem' in Mincha. It's in the siddur, and one has to be cognizant while reading from the siddur. It's in the middle of ‘Tishkon', which is a Beracha that otherwise never sees an addition or insert. So be careful not to daydream, as it would be very easy to miss, since it is a once a year item. You can't make it up, so again, make sure to be aware and make the necessary additions as mentioned above to the Amidah on Tisha BeAv.

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Rebuilt in Fire-Churban in the midst of Binyan-Should we upgrade the "Nachem" tefillah on Tisha BAv?- A Tshuvos and Poskim Classic

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 50:37


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Madlik Podcast – Torah Thoughts on Judaism From a Post-Orthodox Jew

A conversation between Geoffrey Stern and Rabbi Adam Mintz on Clubhouse where we explore the sanctification of powerlessness in Rabbinic Judaism and the internalization of failure. We discuss the tendency of Jews to seek fault in themselves as individuals and as a people as part of a harmful pattern that gave rise to anti-Semitism. Source Sheet: www.sefaria.org/sheets/335498 Transcript: Geoffrey Stern  What are you going to be talking to your congregation about? Either on Shabbat or Tisha B'av or both?   Adam Mintz  I'm going to give them a sermon that was written by Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch in 1855. And in 1855, Samson Raphael Hirsch, in Germany, the Orthodox Rabbi in Germany, talked about a preacher who 20 years earlier, you know, a rabbi Reform rabbi, who had ordered his congregation on Tisha B'av night to wear their finest, most beautiful clothing, and to come in to celebrate a Tisha B'av night in the synagogue, because he believed that mourning was over. There's no place for self evaluation and for mourning and for thinking about the past, it was a time of emancipation of hope. Hirsch's entire sermon was why that was wrong. That it's exactly when you're doing well, that you need to be humbled, and you need to fast addition.   Geoffrey Stern  So that really ties into some of the things that I'm going to be discussing. So we're perfect. That's perfect. I remember one summer I was at Camp Torah Vadaas for Tisha B'av  and my dad came up with a friend to visit me. And we were sitting on the floor with ashes on our forehead. Yeah. And he you know, it from his perspective, it was probably very similar to when Franz Rosensweig walked into a shul for Kol Nidrei, you know, it was so dramatic. He always used to talk about it. And clearly, it is very dramatic. You would think, walking into a typical traditional synagogue on Tisha B'av that something terrible happened last week, not 1,900 years ago.   Adam Mintz  That's right. Not not 2000 years ago.   Geoffrey Stern  And I think the night that my dad came, it was thundering and lightning That's a good segway to say welcome to Madlik. And we are disruptive Torah every week at four o'clock Eastern. And we are recording, and therefore this recording will go on to the Madlik podcast, which typically gets published on Sunday, and becomes part of the record. So welcome, all of you. And that's not to inhibit any discussion. It just means that what you say will go down into posterity. So we normally talk about the portion of the week that is read in synagogues on a particular week of Shabbat. And this week, we have the beginning of the book of Deuteronomy Devarim, which has begun in the cycle. And we also have on Sunday, Tisha B'av. So I had wanted to talk about Tisha B'av, it's something that I've been given a lot of thought about for the last few years. But as I was also studying the book of Deuteronomy, the very first verse and the very first comment by the traditional classical sources,  formed an amazing introduction to what I want to talk about. So you should know whether you higher biblical critic, or you're a classical scholar of Judaism, somehow or other  the book of Deuteronomy is the fifth book of the Torah, but somehow it's different. It has a different voice. It has a different perspective. The higher biblical critics think that it might have been even written at the time of Ezra during the Babylonian exile, and that'll become relevant later. But whether you believe that or not, it has a different function and a different purpose. And it recaps many of the things that were said in the prior four books of Moses. So in this sifrei Devarim, it says, "These are the words which Moses spoke", and it asks the obvious question, well, Moses has been speaking for the last four books. So what do you mean to say "these are the words that Moses spoke", and it says that we are there taught "Sheharay divrei Tochachot" that the words in the book of Deuteronomy are words of rebuke. So even this classical source is questioning the purpose, the function, the intention of The Book of Deuteronomy, and it's positing that the purpose of it is to rebuke, to check, to take castigate or forwarn the Jewish people. And then in Devarim Rabbah, which is also a very old classical commentary, it adds to that. And it says, In the name of Rav Acha the son of Rabbi Hanninah If you're going to rebuke the children of Israel, why have Moses do it? Why have a friendly do it? Why wouldn't you have Bilam rebuke? The children of Israel, enemies are much better at criticism. And it answers that it's was decided that because Moses loves them, he said, rebuke them, rather than to have the rebuke of our adversaries, if we're going to be held in check and account, let those who love us do it. So before we segway into that the commemoration of the destruction of the temple on Tisha B'av, that contains many texts of rebuke, I just want to open it up to conversation rabbi, in terms of the purpose of Devorim, the insight that I bought from these classical sources. Where do you stand   Adam Mintz  it was really dramatic. First of all, Shabbat Shalom, and it's exciting. We're beginning the fifth book of the Torah. That's always exciting. And Devarim has been a problem, literally, since the beginning of time, exactly what is the role of Devarim, and that midrash that you quoted that classical source that you quoted, which tells us that Devarim is different  because it's rebuke, because it's Tochacha is really a very interesting idea. Because that really talks about I think, Geoffrey, what is the role of Moshe? Is Moshe, a defender of the people, or is Moshe a rebuker are of the people? And then let me just raise that a step, maybe being a rebuker is also part of being a defender. Maybe if I want to defend you, sometimes I have to be willing to rebuke you. So maybe that's really the tension here in Devarim. And that's what exactly is Moshe's role. At the end of his life. This is the last 30 days of his life. At the end of his life, what is his job, rebuker? Or defender? Or and/or, rebukr? are rebuker/defender, really two sides of the same coin?   Geoffrey Stern  I think that's a great question. And obviously, we feel like we've been living with Moses. So many of the previous podcasts where he was totally surprised, totally undermined by the people that he really carried out of Egypt. There's a real dialectic here between the leader and the flock, so to speak. And so I do think that's a great question. I wanted to give an example of what one would mean by rebuke, or at least the way I take it, from something that everyone who is at all familiar with the prayer book would be aware, the iconic Sh'ma prayer begins with the call to faith, Sh'ma Yisrael. And then the first paragraph that we say, is all about you should Love the Lord your God, with all your heart and with all your soul. And by the way, that comes from Deuteronomy. But then the second paragraph that we say, starts out in the same way that you should do it with all your heart and soul. But then in Deuteronomy 11: 16, it says, "Take care not to be lured away to serve other gods and bow to them, for the Lord's anger will flare up against you, and He will shut up the skies so that there will be no rain and the ground will not yield its produce, and you will soon perish from the good land that the Lord is assigning to you." And I think as I was trying to understand because I never thought of Devarim, of Deuteronomy, as necessarily full of rebuke. It's not simply rebuke, but it gives a sense of the tenuous nature of the Israelites, the Jewish people on this land, the really conditional nature of it, and that if you misbehave and if you don't follow the rules, and if you don't love your neighbor and take care of the the widow and all that you will be shucked out, you will be put into exile. And that to me again is a perfect segway into a commemoration of the destruction of the Temple, but it really was the destruction of the first and the second Commonwealth. It's where we lost our political independence. And sure enough, that is I think, and I'd love to hear what what you feel about it, Rabbi, that is the biggest leverage. That's the biggest stick that Moses and Moses as the spokesman of God is waving .... I'm taking you into the promised land, I might not be able to come with you. But be aware that if you do not fulfill your side of the bargain, you will be kicked out.   Adam Mintz  I would agree with you. It's interesting, that exile is the classical punishment. And obviously, that's true. And I think you see, that's true, because what strikes me most about Tisha B'av, of all the traditions that we have, is the fact that according to tradition, both the first and the second Temples were both destroyed on the ninth day of aV, let's be honest, what is the chance of that? What is the chance that both temples are going to be destroyed oN exactly the same day? And I think the idea is that the date is not what's so important. It's the idea of emphasizing the fact that exile is the ultimate punishment, that whenever bad things happen, whenever you you don't behave properly, that you're going to get be exiled. There's a wonderful midrash that says that the reason that the temple was destroyed on Tisha B'av is because when the spies came back from their trip to Israel, and they gave a bad report, it says that the Jewish people cried that night. And  it says thatVaivku..  they cried and the rabbi's say about that, that you cried Bechiya shel Hiunam.. you cried an unnecessary cry. Because there was no reason for you to cry You should have trusted in God.   I'm going to establish a reason for you to cry. That's such a powerful idea. You cried for no reason, you cried that you're going to have to enter the land. And therefore as a punishment, you now are gonna have to be in exile. That's the punishment, exile is always the punishment.   Geoffrey Stern  So I'd like to pick up on what you said about somehow the confluence of bad things on Tisha B'av, the First Temple and the Second Temple. And we can  we can say, okay, it was a coincidence. But at the end of the day, more and more things started to happen, a bad for the Jewish people in Tisha B'av. And in a sense, it wasn't so much self fulfilling prophecy. It is that word got out that this was the day of calamity. So if your Yemach Shemam... the Nazis wanted to beat the Jews, or there was a pogrom in the works, it was more likely than not that if it was around Tisha B'av, they would attack them on Tisha B'av.  In the nomenclature in the vernacular in Israel today. If you meet somebody and they have a long face in Hebrew, you don't say "What's with the long face"? You say what's with Tisha B'av face? The  newly elected President of Israel, Isaac or boogie Herzog coined a phrase, he was being critical of Netaniyahu, a number of years ago, and he was criticizing him for trying to scare and frighten the Jewish people and running a politics of fear in fright. And he called it the Tisha B'av syndrome. So even Jews and non Jews who do not observe Tisha B'av, they understand what a Tisha B'av face is, they understand the inport that it has for the Jewish people. So it's almost grown beyond the particular day. But you are right, it's focused, and it's focused particularly on one type of calamity. And that is the Jewish people losing autonomy, losing political autonomy and any control over their their well being and decisions that affect their life.   Adam Mintz  And I think that's a very powerful point. Really, really powerful. The idea of exile. We don't think Geoffrey today about exile much. When you think about a punishment to a country, you talk about losing your autonomy. You know, you think about a country that doesn't do well, they're not going to be exiled. France is not going to be exiled from France, the UK is not going to be exiled from the UK, New Yorkers are not going to be exiled from New York. It's actually an idea that had its moment. I don't think exile is something that speaks to people the same way anymore. And that's why I think and this is an interesting question, that when we talk about Tisha B'av now, we kind of are using a language that is not so familiar to people, and therefore we try to talk about Tisha B'av, in a language that people will understand, even though exile is not something we really understand anymore.   Geoffrey Stern  So so I'm going to say something rather radical, even for Madlik disruptive Torah. And it's really going to be the premise of the rest of our discussion today. And that is that, you know, we Jews, lovers of Israel today, are always asking the question, why when you criticize the Jews, or when you criticize Israel? Do you question its right to exist? Why can you criticize us like anybody else? There are plenty of progressives, who are critical of the way the US operates in Afghanistan, or how it treats minorities in this country. Never do they say, "and therefore you have no way to live there". Why is it always Israel that we question the right to exist. And what I want to say that is slightly radical is here, and I want to pick up on what you were saying a second ago, Rabbi, here, the lever that we introduce to the world is if we are bad, we become stateless. And we introduced this concept that we are unique, and that our connection with the land and our political autonomy is tenuous and contingent. And I think that we always throw up our hands, us lovers of Israel, and they go, why are they treating us differently? And what I would like to kind of explore for the rest is so many of the tropes of anti semitism, actually are the flip side of the arguments that we are seeing in our own tradition. And I'm starting with this argument that if you Jews are bad, you're going to be kicked out of your land.   Adam Mintz  Right. Okay. And do you think that that resonates with people today?   Geoffrey Stern  So so I think for me to make that argument, I've got to drill down and continue, because I do agree with you that it's fairly sophisticated to say, Oh, yeah, most people living on this planet know about the second paragraph of Sh'ma, where it says, if you don't behave, we're going to kick you out of the country. So let's delve into this a little bit deeper. My guess would be that if I asked the typical knowledgeable Jew, about why the temple was destroyed, specifically the Second Temple, they might tell me a story about two guys named Kamtza. They might go into the Talmud, and look for all of the reasons that different rabbis have given through the ages for why we lost the the Temple and the land. And I can assure you that not one of the answers given by those rabbis, is authentic or practical, because I believe the reason that the Temple was destroyed is because we got in the way of the Roman Empire. That's the long and the short of it. It wasn't about me. It wasn't about you. It was about the fact that Israel is somehow between Babylonia and Rome, and in the First Temple we got in the way of the Babylonian Empire, and in the second we got in front of Rome. The rest of my argument is going to be that we were very successful in teaching the world the perspective that we Jews have, that does relate our condition to our moral and religious adherence. And that everybody who was a follower of Christianity and a follower of Islam is aware?   Adam Mintz  Good. So there is an awareness of this kind of punishment, and it's a religious awareness of this kind of punishment. It's not political. It's religious.   Geoffrey Stern  Yes, yes,   Adam Mintz  That's an important distinction. I think   Geoffrey Stern  So there's two books and two thinkers that I want to really rely on, and one is Ruth Weiss, Professor, I believe at Harvard, who wrote a book called Jews and Power, and the other is Yitz Greenberg. But let's start with Ruth Weiss. The premise of her book is exactly the question that I just asked, which is, how did this happen? How did this become so persuasive? And she starts with Josephus Flavius now Josephus Flavius was a Jew, who moved over to the Roman side. And he asks, Why was the Tmple destroyed? And he gives a bunch of reasons. And one of those reasons even refers to "what caused the Romans to purify the temple". Now I get it. He was on the payroll of the Romans. He was a Roman historian. But he he lists again, just as the rabbi's of the Talmud do, a bunch of assassinations that were incurred by sectarian fighting. He talks about all of the corruption that was there. And Josiphus was translated into every language of the civilized world. He and the rabbi's were literally on the same page, in terms of ...  and this is a quote, "when the Romans came to purify thee from the internal pollution". And if you understand what the ramifications of that is, that not only the rabbi's and not only the Roman historians, but ultimately the the Jews themselves promulgated this concept that if bad things happen to the Jews, it's because we sinned. I think you can begin to see that, in fact, yes, every one of..... I wouldn't even call it the Abrahamic religions, I would call it the successionist religions, the religions that believe that they replaced the Jews. And that really did feed into their narrative that they replaced the Jews because the Jews had sinned. And proof evidence, number one is look at the Jews, take a look at that ghetto, take a look at these people who can't farm the land, (because we won't permit them to do it.) So I do believe there is a direct connection between our perception of what brought on the the trauma of Tisha B'av and the world's perception.   Adam Mintz  I think that's a really, that's a powerful idea. I wonder...  you talk about the succesionist religions, do the other religions focus on exile the same way? The Muslims have the idea of exile.   Geoffrey Stern  I'd love it if we have a historian and a comparative, either religion or archaeologist or a sociologist here. I think that getting back to the way I began the discussion with the rabbi's of the Midrash saying, if the book of Devarim is about rebuke, why not get the enemies of the Jews to mouth that rebuke? I think the knee jerk reaction is that civilizations are criticized by their enemies, and they are not at least (and now I'll get into washing one's laundry in public), certainly not publicly are they criticized in the ancient world in the medieval world in the world of the Middle Ages.  We can talk about modern times later. But no, I don't think that number one. Other religious cultures are so so self critical. And to answer your question, I don't believe especially because Christianity and maybe Islam too were not as rooted in a particular locality or location. But certainly even if one gets away from the location, it's really, the destruction of the Temple was more than just exile from a particular piece of land. It was the end of the Temple culture. It was, for a large degree, the end of a language. I mean, I believe that Rome even changed the name from Judea to Palestinia just to literally make Israel Jew-free.   Adam Mintz  know or have an idea. I always say it that way, the end of an idea, Jewish autonomy, as reflected in the temple was a religious idea. We have been working for the past 2000 years to restore that idea, the prayer service, but we call davening is an attempt to restore what we lost on that day, in the year 70, when there was no longer a Temple, how do you get back to that idea of connecting to place and to God, without something. And that's what the prayer service did. Instead of sacrifices. We had a prayer service, we had this idea of three times a day, we had this idea of synagogue, you know, synagogues a new ideas, synagogue really only came about after the destruction of the Temple. Because when there was a Temple, you weren't allowed to have synagogues, because the synagogue was the Temple. But once there was no more Temple than all of a sudden they created synagogues. So we've been trying to restore that idea. Now, I think Geoffrey been interesting conversation, maybe for another time and to say, did we do a good job, because I would make the argument, we've done an amazing job, we actually have replaced that idea that it's not the same as having a Temple. But we have done very well in terms of unifying the Jewish people. And I think Tisha B'av is an example of that. The fact that Jews around the world know that it's Tisha B'av whether they fast or they don't fast, but they know that it's Tisha B'av , they know that it's Rosh Hashanna, they know that it's Yom Kippur means the idea is maintained.   Geoffrey Stern  So I think that you you make a compelling argument for the fact that the rabbinical response, actually, was greatly beneficial. And the proof is in the pudding, we survived for 2,000 years of exile. Again, as long as we're talking about what makes the experience of the Jewish people unique, you can't say that about a lot of cultures or religions. So I would like to segway and use your question to segway a little bit away from Ruth Weiss and into Yitz Greenberg. Ruth Weiss is actually a conservative thinker and she is very into realpolitik, and as her book progresses, and I really think anyone who's interested in the subject, should read it. She's very critical. She writes at the beginning of her book, that her book is "against the tendency of Jews to seek fault in themselves as part of a harmful pattern, I hope to expose". So the whole purpose of her book, and she will look at a statement that you just made now, which is "Well, we survived didn't we?" She would critique that as the pacifism that we survived for 2,000 years bending over like Fiddler on the Roof, saying this too,will pass is what kept us in exile so long, but I want to go to a religious thinker. And Yitz Greenberg believes that if there were two epochs of Judaism before the Holocaust, meaning when we were in the land, then after we were expelled, that literally turned Judaism on a dime. I think that one of the things that you were just saying a second ago, is that the paradigm shift that Judaism went through, after the Temple was destroyed, was just just unheard of in the history of religion and of society. They the rabbi's literally changed the face of Judaism, and yet Greenberg believes that the Holocaust is a similar episode. It is the Third Epoch of in Judaism. And he argues that those who say that we all you know, It's it's bad, but look at all the other bad things that have happened to us. He points to instances such as the Spanish Inquisition that created the Kabbalah. He focuses on the Shabtai Tzi and the false messiah, as something that that totally created the Hasidic movement and all that. So we do have to react. And we do have to change Judaism. But in his case, the Holocaust is on a different level. And what he argues is that after the Holocaust, we can no longer follow.....and here he's in agreement with, with Ruth Weiss. And he's also in agreement with you the type of Judaism that enabled us to survive, to get through it, to persevere, under great odds no longer worked. He argues that without the State of Israel, there would probably have been another two Holocausts since 1945. His famous phrase is that "power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely, and powerlessness is worse than all". And he makes a very compelling argument, that now we have to stop blaming ourselves, we have to take responsibility for our future that the God of maybe exile was the God who is hidden. The God after the Holocaust is a God who says you have the keys, you control your own fate. It's all up to you. So it's almost a religious push for the secular to take over the role of that. And again, you should read his work as well. But it's a fascinating turn. And it segways into what you will be talking about tomorrow, Rabbi, in terms of when do we celebrate Tisha B'Av? So before we talk about celebrating Tishas B'av? What are your feelings about Yitz Greenberg's approach? Do you feel that the Holocaust changes everything?   Adam Mintz  I think the Holocaust changed everything. I think the question we have to ask is and I think that's a question that is really the next chapter in Yitz Greenberg's book is what's the therefore? So the Holocaust changed everything. The State of Israel changed everything. What are we supposed to do about it? I'll tell you a little story. in the service on Tisha B'Av, in the afternoon service, the Mincha service, there's a paragraph that we recite on Tisha B;Av, it's the only time we say it the whole year long mincha on Tisha B'Av. It's called "Nachem". And it says God should console us. And in Nachem, we talk about a Jerusalem that is destroyed. And many of the rabbis in Israel, Yitz Greenberg included, he changes the entire language of this paragraph. This paragraph talks about "and the city that is in sorrow, laid waste, scorned and desolate, that grieves for the loss of its children that is laid waste of its dwellings robbed of its glory, desolate without inhabitants." I don't know Geoffrey the last time you were at the Waldorf in Jerusalem, but that is not a description of the Waldorf in Jerusalem. And these rabbis have taken out that paragraph. And they basically said that that's just not true anymore, that the Holocaust changed everything. But we have to realize  that the traditions, the way that traditionally Tisha B'Av has been looked at is just not true anymore. And we have to be willing to recognize that. I'll just tell you one more story. Rabbi David Hartman ... the famous David Hartman, before he moved to Israel was a rabbi in Montreal in 1967. It was a Six Day War.... Israel reconquered Jerusalem in June. That Tisha B'Av, the tradition is that David Hartman in the afternoon of Tisha B'Av took his family on a picnic because he said we can't fast the whole day. Tisha B'Av is just not the way Tisha B'Av used to be anymore. We can't have Jerusalem and still observe Tisha B'Av the same way. I think those ideas are very powerful ideas.   Geoffrey Stern  So Rabbi as usual, you created a greast segway for me to to finish up. But I think what everybody is kind of echoing is that even the rabbi's of the Talmud understood.. in Taanit they say whoever mourns for Jerusalem will merit to see her future glory. In the Tractate of Rosh hassanah it says that when there will be peace, that all of the fast days that are associated with the destruction of the Temple will be feast days that you won't be able to have a funeral on, you won't be able to do anything related to mourning, which seems kind of strange until you couch it slightly differently. Whereas on Tisha B'Av we mourn our powerlessness. On a Tisha B'Av that is commemorated after we have our own State. And after we have power without putting any silver coating on power, power is a responsibility. But we can celebrate our power as we mourned our powerlessness. And I think that's why we do have to start considering segwaying from a Tisha B'Av of mourning, where we mourn our powerlessness to a Tisha B'Av of celebration, where we celebrate respectfully, our ability to control our own destiny, and to take the future into our own hands.   Adam Mintz   Thank you, I think that's beautiful. Shabbat shalom everybody. Have an easy and a meaningful fast, and we look forward Geoffrey to many years of celebrating Tisha B'Av in a smart and productive way, the way Yitz Greenberg talks about it.   Geoffrey Stern   Amen, Shabbat Shalom to you all.   Adam Mintz  Shabbat Shalom, everybody, bye bye.

Magen Avot Halacha  & Parasha by Rabbi Lebhar
Is Nachem said in Birkat Hamazon on Tishea Beav

Magen Avot Halacha & Parasha by Rabbi Lebhar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 4:31


beav nachem daily halacha
Rabbi David Bar-Hayim
Truth In Prayer: Nachem or Rachem on Tisha B'Av?

Rabbi David Bar-Hayim

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2020 19:21


In this episode, Rav David Bar-Hayim explores whether one should say the standard 'Nachem' prayer on Tisha B'Av or the more accurate 'Rachem' prayer. Originally uploaded to YouTube on July 24, 2015. For sponsorship opportunities and all other inquiries, please email office@machonshilo.org

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Rischa Daraiisa 30-Tisha BAv Special!- Tweaking the Nusach of Nachem -Could it help in bringing the Geualah?

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 22:11


Rabbis Kivelevitz and Bechhofer take on the very well discussed question of altering the Tisha BaAv Tefillah of Nachem.Click on these hyperlinks for a thorough description of the opinions ofRav Chaim Dovid HaLeviRav Shlomo Goren,Rav Yosef Dov SoloveichickChacham Ovadiah Yosef Rav Aharon Lichtenshteinand Rav Nochum Eliezer Rabinovich Zt"l.The pair present a recipe for reconciliation and suggestions for what to concentrate on during this saddest day of the Jewish Calendar.Please respond with your input to these issues at ravkiv@gmail.comFor more information on this podcast visityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Rischa Daraiisa 30-Tisha BAv Special!- Tweaking the Nusach of Nachem -Could it help in bringing the Geualah?

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 22:11


Rabbis Kivelevitz and Bechhofer take on the very well discussed question of altering the Tisha BaAv Tefillah of Nachem.Click on these hyperlinks for a thorough description of the opinions ofRav Chaim Dovid HaLeviRav Shlomo Goren,Rav Yosef Dov SoloveichickChacham Ovadiah Yosef Rav Aharon Lichtenshteinand Rav Nochum Eliezer Rabinovich Zt"l.The pair present a recipe for reconciliation and suggestions for what to concentrate on during this saddest day of the Jewish Calendar.Please respond with your input to these issues at ravkiv@gmail.comFor more information on this podcast visityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Tshuvos and Poskim-Rebuilt in Fire-Churban in the midst of Binyan-Should we upgrade the "Nachem" tefillah on Tisha BAv?

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2020 48:50


The Tshuvot Viposkim Shiur of Yeshivas Issar ViYitzchak(The Yeshiva@IDT)Presented a special shiur in 2017that tackled one of the greatest challenges confronting the communal mourning experienceof the Three WeeksShould we upgrade "nachem"?How the Gedolei Rabbanim and Poskim have counseled regarding the melancholic description of Yerushalayim and Eretz Yisroel in our tefilos despite the astonishinggrowth of the past fifty years.Featuring the hoaros insights (and personal qualms)ofזצוק"ל זי"עRav Yosef dov Soloveichick-Rav Chaim Dovid Halevi-Rav Aharon Lichtenstein-Rabbi Kivelevitz delves into the origins and meaning ofour Nusach from a historical and mystical perspective andthe possible mechanisms suggested to change terminology that seems dated and inaccurate.Please leave us a review or email us at ravkiv@gmail.comfind out more about this podcast fromyeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast
Tshuvos and Poskim-Rebuilt in Fire-Churban in the midst of Binyan-Should we upgrade the "Nachem" tefillah on Tisha BAv?

Yeshiva of Newark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2020 48:50


The Tshuvot Viposkim Shiur of Yeshivas Issar ViYitzchak(The Yeshiva@IDT)Presented a special shiur in 2017that tackled one of the greatest challenges confronting the communal mourning experience of the Three WeeksShould we upgrade "nachem"?How the Gedolei Rabbanim and Poskim have counseled regarding the melancholic description of Yerushalayim and Eretz Yisroel in our tefilos despite the astonishing growth of the past fifty years.Featuring the hoaros insights (and personal qualms) ofזצוק"ל זי"עRav Yosef dov Soloveichick- Rav Chaim Dovid Halevi-Rav Aharon Lichtenstein-Rabbi Kivelevitz delves into the origins and meaning of our Nusach from a historical and mystical perspective andthe possible mechanisms suggested to change terminology that seems dated and inaccurate.Please leave us a review or email us at ravkiv@gmail.comfind out more about this podcast fromyeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Pirkei Avos (Rosh Yeshiva)
Lo Soguru & Nachem or Rachem (Devarim 5780)

Pirkei Avos (Rosh Yeshiva)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020


Lo Soguru & Nachem or Rachem (Devarim 5780)

devarim nachem
Supportcast
Schminktipps mitem pinke Glitzer-Nici - Supportcast #17

Supportcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2020 70:59


Nachem ewig lange Wucherückblick plant de Nici sini neui YouTube-Karriere und mir rede über üsi Lebensziu.

nici glitzer wucher schminktipps nachem
Eifach so aber irgendwiä macht's Sinn
"S'Isfeld isch mis Dehei" / mit Ivo Pina

Eifach so aber irgendwiä macht's Sinn

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2019 32:54


Nachem fulminantä Start mit dä Jil Zeller wird diä nöchsti Episode sehr sportlich. Dä nöchsti Gast isch dä Ivo Pina. Än Nachwuchsishockeyspieler vom EHC Klotä wo nebeddra no im Ochsner Sport schafft und d BMS nahholt. D'Episode mit erä saftige ladig Sportenergie.

Politik – detektor.fm
Westbank: ziviler Protest und Zukunftsperspektiven - "Das Ziel ist Frieden"

Politik – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 14:55


Nachem sich der Nah-Ost-Konflikt in den letzten Monaten wieder verschärft hat, scheint eine Zwei-Staaten-Lösung für Israel und die palästinensischen Gebiete kaum noch denkbar. Doch inzwischen sehen viele Menschen in den besetzten Gebieten neue Alternativen. >> Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/politik/ziviler-protest-zukunft-westbank

YIOT Torah
Should We Still Be Saying "Nachem" on Tisha B'Av? Halachic Ramifications of the Six Day War

YIOT Torah

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2019


Privatchat
Der Dichter und sein Burger | Privatchat #02

Privatchat

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2019 63:08


Nachem erfolgriiche Start vo üsere erste Podcast-Folg diskutiere mir hüt über Vegetarismus und Marc si Entscheid, wider Fleisch z'konsumiere. Natürlech werde mir üsem "Immer-aktuell-Status" grecht und rede oh no über d'Oscars sowie üse lieb Bundesrat, wo dr Zivildienst wott unattraktiver mache.

Anti Aging Lifestyle Academy
Schlaf verbessern

Anti Aging Lifestyle Academy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2019 3:57


Nachem wir letzte Woche erfahren haben, wie wichtig Schlaf für den Menschen ist, folgen nun handfeste Tipps, wie man besser schlafen kann.

Israel Show
Featuring: Meir Weingarten unpacks the "Nachem Controversy," discusses Zev Jabotinsky's revolutionary speech in Poland 80 years ago and presents a great Israeli music mix

Israel Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2018


On this edition of The Israel Show Are we lying before Gd when, yesterday, we said in the Nachem prayer: that Jerusalem is "laid waste", "desolate without inhabitants", "In mourning without her children" ? Is it ? On the other hand can we change age old prayers ? TIS will present the Nachem controversy. Imagine a lay leader coming to NY, the most established community in the US and telling the Jews to get out "before it's too late." Exactly 80 years ago Tisha Be'Av 1938, Zev Jabotinsky spoke to a huge crowd in Warsaw, Poland. TIS shares part of his revolutionary speech. and the "not to be missed" weekly Israeli music mix.

Rabbi Dovid A. Gross

nachem
Israel Show
TIS presents an update to last week's discussion on amending the prayer of Nachem in the post 1967 era. Also, the Jew with the most Olympic medals lives in Israel? Hear the amazing story of triumph against all odds.

Israel Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2016


GuerrillaFM
GFM Folge 36 - Internet-Marketing, Teil 6

GuerrillaFM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2009


Heute gehen wir einen nächsten Schritt zur eigenen Website! Nachem die Texterstellung schon in weiten Teilen geklärt wurde, kümmern wir uns nun darum, dass unsere Webseite überzeugt! Wie schafft Ihr, dass der "fremde" Besucher Euch vertraut? Wie begeistert Ihr ihn für Euch? Was wollen Eure Besucher wirklich wissen? Wieviel wollen die Nutzer über Euch erfahren?