Inside Chanukah

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1.4.    Why is the month in which Chanukah falls out called “Kislev”?

On Chanukah, sparks of the ohr haganuz, the tremendously awesome primeval light that was hidden by Hashem at Creation after shining for thirty-six hours, are revealed (see 3.24 for elaboration). The name כִּסְלֵו (Kislev) can be broken into the words כִּס and ל”ו. A כִּס is a pocket, similar to the word כִּיסוּי,which means“covering,” and ל”ו has the gematria of 36. Therefore, the month during which Chanukah falls out is called כִּסְלֵו because it contains כִּיסוּי ל”ו, the hidden thirty-six (referring to the ohr haganuz, which shone at Creation for thirty-six hours).

 (Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 2:52)

1.5.    Why does Chanukah fall out in the month of Kislev?

1. Chanukah falls out in Kislev because Kislev is the darkest and coldest time of the year. It is the month in which the winter solstice (when the sun is furthest from the Earth) occurs, and when daylight is at its minimum. It is thus a time that symbolically represents the blanket of darkness (of anti-Torah culture and values) that Yavan spread across the world and brought to Eretz Yisrael. In fact, the Midrash refers to Yavan as darkness (see Bereishis Rabbah 2:4). Because Yavan is darkness and Kislev is darkness, the miracle that dispelled the darkness occurred in Kislev.

Correspondingly, Chanukah transpired in Kislev because winter means darkness on many levels. In addition to the physical aspect of the short and cold days, Kislev is an island in a sea of potential spiritual darkness, as it is a time distant from the spiritually charged yamim tovim of the fall (Rosh HaShanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkos) and of the spring (Purim, Pesach, and Shavuos). During the dark winter months, when the potential to lose hope and spiral downward is present, Chanukah comes to dispel the fear, the lost hope, and the spiritual agony. It comes to kindle a small beacon of inspiration for us, to help us recognize that there is always hope, that all is not lost and that there is so much potential to grow. We just need to kindle that first light, and the result will be a conflagration!

This is clearly demonstrated by the fact that while there is only one light on the first night of Chanukah, there are suddenly two on the second night. They then become three and four. And then, before you know it, the eighth night sees a menorah brilliantly aflame! The miracle occurred in the dimness of Kislev to show that even in the most piercing darkness, one little candle can re-inspire, give hope, and light up the entire world.

(A.P.S.; see also Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 4:113,4:86)

2. The tribe of Yissachar was known to have many exceptionally great Torah scholars, and because of this a significant portion of members of the Sanhedrin (Supreme Rabbinical Court) in Yerushalayim were from Yissachar (see Esther Rabbah 4:1). In fact, theBnei Yissaschar points out that it was the Sanhedrin led by the tribe of Yissachar at the time of Chanukah that established the holiday of Chanukah, as it says in Maoz Tzur: בְּנֵי בִינָה יְמֵי שְׁמוֹנָה קָבְעוּ שִׁיר וּרְנָנִים — Men of insight established eight days for song and jubilation. The בְּנֵי בִינָה,men of insight, refers to those scholars from Yissachar. Fascinatingly, the Bnei Yissaschar says that Yissachar himself, the patriarch of the tribe, was born on the 25th of Kislev! Since the Torah was saved from being forgotten on Chanukah, and since Yissachar carried the banner of Torah knowledge in the Sanhedrin, it can be nothing less than the poetic justice of hashgachah peratis (Divine providence) that Chanukah took place in Kislev, and on the 25th day, no less.

 (Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 4:33, 4:57)

3. The mazal (zodiac sign) of the month of Kislev is the קֶשֶׁת(keshes), the archer’s bow (referred to in the astrological vernacular as “the Archer” or Sagittarius). The Bnei Yissaschar points out that the kingdom of Yavan was called קֶשֶׁת because it enacted decrees against the mitzvos of Shabbos, Rosh Chodesh, and bris milah, which form the acronym קֶשֶׁת, as follows: קִדוּשׁ שַּׁבָּת תָמִים. The word קִדוּשׁ, sanctification, refers to קִדוּשׁ הַחֹדֶשׁ, sanctification of the new moon (i.e., Rosh Chodesh); שַּׁבָּתrefers to Shabbos; and תָמִים, perfect, refers to bris milah, because milah brings a person to perfection, as Hashem said to Avraham regarding performing his bris milah: הִתְהַלֵּךְ לְפָנַי וֶהְיֵה תָמִים — Walk before Me and be perfect (Bereishis 17:1). As such, the salvation of Chanukah providentially took place in Kislev, the month of קֶשֶׁת, because this highlighted the fact that a miracle crushed the Yevanim, whose seminal decrees were against Shabbos, Rosh Chodesh, and bris milah.

(Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 4:109)

4. As mentioned (in answer 3) above, the mazal of the month of Kislev is the קֶשֶׁת. Chanukah specifically falls out in Kislev, because the קֶשֶׁת comes to highlight that it was not through our own physical strength that we were victorious over the Yevanim. Instead, our tefillos (prayers) were the medium of our success, as קֶשֶׁת symbolizes prayer.

How so? Rashi indicates that when Yaakov stated that he was able to conquer Shechem בְּחַרְבִּי וּבְקַשְׁתִּי — with my sword and my bow (Bereishis 48:22), he was referring to his intense tefillos. The Gur Aryeh writes that tefillah is like a bow because just as the effectiveness of an arrowshot depends on the pressure exerted on the bow, so too does the effectiveness of a person’s tefillah depend on the level of his concentration and sincerity. The Jews were victorious in battle on Chanukah because before each battle, they sat in fasting and prayer, beseeching Hashem for His mercy to deliver the Yevanim into their hands. (See 4.37 and 4.21.)

(HaRav Avraham of Sochatchov, cited by Sefer Pardes HaChanukah, p. 126)

5. Because the miracle of Chanukah came about as a result of the emunah (faith in Hashem) and bitachon (absolute trust in Hashem) that the Chashmonaim demonstrated, it providentially occurred in Kislev, since the root of the word Kislev (כִּסלֵו) refers to emunah and bitachon. Furthermore, since Chanukah is all about bitachon, it came about through the kohanim, who are priests and not warriors, and had to invest their full trust in Hashem to win. A hint to this can be found in the fact that the word כֹהֵן (kohen) has the same gematria as the word בִּטָּחוֹן (bitachon).

(Chesed L’Avraham [Radomsk], vol. 2, Moadim, L’Chanukah)

 1.6.    Why did, and does, Chanukah fall out precisely on the 25th of Kislev?

The first day of fall is known as the autumnal or fall equinox because it is a day of equilibrium, when day and night (the time between sunrise and sunset and the time between sunset and sunrise) are equal throughout the world. It was on this day that the world was created, and while the date of the fall equinox varies from year to year on the Jewish calendar, during the year of Creation, the fall equinox fell on the 25th of the month of Elul.

Each of the four seasons of the year lasts three months. From the fall equinox onward, the days begin to grow shorter, with increasingly more darkness than light each day. The swell of darkness continues for three months until the first day of winter, known as the winter solstice, which is the shortest day of the year, having the longest night. At that moment, the track reverses, and there begins to be increasingly more light each day until the spring and summer. Fascinatingly, three months from the fall equinox (i.e., the 25th of Elul) is exactly the 25th day of Kislev, the first night of Chanukah!

As such, while the date of the winter solstice varies from year to year on the Jewish calendar, Chanukah is the symbolic winter solstice, because the winter solstice fell out on the 25th of Kislev in the year of Creation. The first day of Chanukah is thus the darkest day of the year, and the day from which darkness begins to retreat and light begins to increase. This was divinely arranged, because Chanukah represents light overpowering darkness, both in regard to ruchniyus (spiritual well-being) and gashmiyus (physical well-being).

(Maharal, Sefer Ner Mitzvah, pt. 2; see also Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 4:113)

 1.7.    What is the significance of the month of Teves beginning during Chanukah?

1. As mentioned above (in 1.5.1), Chanukah more than symbolically comes during the darkest time of the year, in order to illuminate our lives and invigorate our souls, which may become somewhat disheartened as we move farther and farther away from the spiritually uplifting yamim tovim experienced in the fall.

The month of Teves immediately follows Kislev and Chanukah. It is the month in which the days begin to get longer, as the light begins to increase. Hashem connected Teves to Chanukah, such that Teves actually begins during Chanukah, in order to extend the light sparked by Chanukah, to sustain us through the bitter and dark winter months until we can once again grasp the uplifting light of Purim and the spiritually nourishing heights of Pesach.

Hashem gave us Chanukah for spiritual reinvigoration, and then He gave us Teves to fan the flames of that inspiration. Chanukah is the refueling station and the jumping-off point, while Tevesis the first leg of the road ahead to be traveled. But even more so, Teves is an outgrowth of Chanukah, meant to motivate us into utilizing the spiritual energy and resolve gained on Chanukah toward moving forward and lighting up the world, just as the sun begins to light up the world more and more beginning with Teves. It is Teves that carries the holiness and potential of Chanukah into the rest of the year.

In fact, the Sefas Emes points out that the thirty-six Chanukah candles kindled throughout the course of Chanukah correspond to the thirty-six days from the first day of Chanukah through the end of Teves,hinting to the fact thatTeves carries the light onward and upward. Moreover, the Chiddushei HaRimindicates that the name Teves(טֵבֵת) derives from the phrase הֲטָבַת הַנֵּרוֹת, preparing the candles (or more literally, making good the candles), a phrase which appears in connection with the preparation of the lights of the Menorah in the Beis HaMikdash (see Shemos 30:7). That the word הֲטָבַת stems from the word טוֹב, good, further highlights how Teves relays the goodness of the Chanukah candles. In addition, the purpose of the הֲטָבַת הַנֵּרוֹת was to clean out the Menorah each morning for the next kindling, facilitating the continuation of its illumination the following night.

Moreover, just as the Chanukah candles are kindled via the procedure of מוֹסִיף וְהוֹלֵךְ, adding and continuing, by adding an additional candle each subsequent night,so too is Teves מוֹסִיף וְהוֹלֵךְ, adding and continuing the light of Chanukah. Teves begins on Chanukah and extends past Chanukah because it is the continuation of Chanukah!

(Chiddushei HaRim, Chanukah; Sefas Emes Al HaTorah, Derush L’Chanukah 5650)

2. The month of Teves is considered a hard month (full of troubles) in that three tragedies occurred in it. It therefore begins during Chanukah, so that the light of Chanukah can extend into Teves (as explained above), acting as a balm by way of showing us how to overcome the pain of those tragedies (and others), and how to rise to spiritual heights despite them.

(Sefas Emes Al HaTorah, Derush L’Chanukah 5673, 7th night)

 

1.8.    Why is it that Chanukah always coincides with a Rosh Chodesh and at least one Shabbos?

Not only will Chanukah always coincide with a Rosh Chodesh (Teves) and at least one Shabbos, but because Chanukah is eight days long, there will always be the possibility that a baby boy born on the first day of Chanukah will have his bris milahon the eighth day of Chanukah!

Chanukah coincides with these three mitzvos in particular because the Yevanim specifically targeted these three mitzvos for eradication (see 4.24). By performing these three mitzvos specifically on Chanukah, we highlight the fact that, not only were the Yevanim not successful, but in addition, while they and their decrees have faded into history, am Yisrael chai! The Jewish people and the Torah are still here and thriving, baruch Hashem!

(See Bnei Yissaschar, Maamarei Chodshei Kislev-Teves 4:88, 97; A.P.S.)

1.9.    Why is Chanukah, in contrast to most other holidays, celebrated on regular weekdays, with no work restrictions?

The Greek culture and way of life stressed aesthetic beauty and the perfection of the human body above all else. Athletics were of primary importance, and self-glorification was the philosophy. Any thought of God interfered with Greeks’ sense of human supremacy, and was therefore abhorrent.

In contrast, Jews do not disregard their spirituality to focus exclusively on the physical and material pursuits of this world, nor do they isolate themselves from the world to serve Hashem in seclusion. Instead, the Torah way of life directs one to elevate the physical world to a spiritual plane, by focusing and using all of our activities in the service of Hashem. As Chazal say in Maseches Avos (2:12), כָל מַעֲשֶׂיךָ יִהְיוּ לְשֵׁם שָׁמָיִם — All your actions should be for the sake of Heaven (see also Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 231; Mesillas Yesharim 26). This way, for example, even sleeping and eating can become elevated, if done with the intention of maintaining one’s health and building one’s strength in order to be able to serve Hashem better. (See Mishnah Berurah 231:1:5.)

On Chanukah, the Chashmonaim stood against the forces of materialism propagated by Yavan and reestablished the Torah ideals of elevating the physical and mundane to the service of Hashem. For this reason, Chanukah is celebrated on regular weekdays, which have no intrinsic holiness and during which there are no restrictions on work as there are on Shabbos and yom tov. (This is in contrast to even Chol HaMoed, which has some restrictions and significant levels of holiness.) By experiencing Chanukah on the mundane weekdays, we learn the lessons of the Chashmonaim as to how we can permeate our everyday lives with holiness and spirituality. We obviously gain also from the other “holy”-type holidays, such as Rosh HaShanah or Pesach. But without the Chanukah weekdays, one might come to think that spirituality and holiness are relegated to those holy days alone, and incorrectly assume that it is only on those days that one can grow spiritually and come closer to Hashem. This is why Chanukah comes along during the week and trains us in the skills of turning even a regular Monday or Tuesday into a vehicle for growth in spirituality and closeness to the Torah and Hashem.

 

Excerpted with permission from Inside Chanukah by Aryeh Pinchas Strickoff, published by Feldheim


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COMMENTS
  • Donna

    I took my first trip to a public library when I was in third grade. I wanted to learn more about the Jews. I read a book called, “Why I am Jewish.” I knew I wanted to join the Jewish people. I converted when I was 19. That was 35 years ago. Not long after I converted I spent shabbos with the family of the local Chabad rabbi. It was Friday afternoon and almost time to light. The rabbi’s wife asked me to go to Target and buy a tablecloth for her. I knew I couldn’t get back before shabbos started. I didn’t know what size or shape of tablecloth she wanted. I told her I would be happy to watch her kids while she went to the store. She declined. It took a while, but I realized that it didn’t matter to her that I had the credentials, she still didn’t consider me Jewish. It was o.k. for me to be mechalel shabbos. I thought she was a friend, but learned otherwise. A few years later, I married a wonderful man, and had 4 children. My children are known for their middos and are all Torah observant. My “friend” went through a nasty divorce, and several of her children are no longer observant.
    As a Jew, I have been truly blessed. The road has been very tough, but I always know I made the right decision. Keep on truckin’ fellow converts.

  • LookingForAJewishMom

    I am a giyores, married to a baal tshuva. We both feel the lack of a support system acutely- together. Not having family support or understanding is heartbreaking and difficult in practical ways for me and for our family, but I believe that my husband actually has it worse than I! He not only does not have a support system because no one else in his family is frum, but he also has family members who actively oppose his actions with regard to living a frum life– and they think they know better than he does!

    As a giyores, I should feel flattered by the attention given by the above article, and by the 36 or 46 mitzvos designed to protect me, but instead I can’t help be feel that this article misses the point. The community issue is not about gerim. It is about supporting any individuals who are new to frumkeit, whether their path is through gerus or through tshuva. Communities need to do much more in this regard- both gerim and ba’alei tshuva are desperately in need of support. We need mentors- not the kind who can explain theological or halachic matters (we’re already past that point!), but who can give us good ONGOING advice about how to raise children in an atmosphere totally unlike our own upbringing. The real issue of support, then, is that there is no follow-through once one has become frum, regardless of the background. Too often we simply get a “Hurray, for you for joining the frummy club” and then we’re left on our own to sink or swim. It would be nice to see mentorship programs supported by the OU, with the goal of giving us all the “FRUM Mamme or Tatte” that we did not have.

  • Joshua .

    I am a convert from the UK, who moved to Eretz Yisrael immediatly after my giur to learn in yeshiva. I can honestly say I have never experienced any negativity or feelings of alienation and have only be welcomed with open arms – in fact, I am never reminded of my status or is it ever even a conversation point.
    Interstingly I was discussing with a friend, who had an opposite experience and we came to the conclusion that the frummer the kehilla, the easier it is to be accepted. People who take torah and mitzvos as the ikkur in their life, can find no justification for such behaviour. Yet someone who doesn’t make torah the ikkur, if they are not holding in all areas of yiddishkiet, this is a difficult place to start…!

    Human nature is to put someone down to go up a bit, and we’re at the bottom of the pile haha. Even the baalei teshuva have someone to put down when it gets to us ;-)
    In the end, everything is an interaction with HaShem and everything that happens to us is orchestrated by HaShem. Sometimes He pushes us closer to him from such external events, somtimes He pushes us to have more confidence in our status…
    I would be very happy to hear with anyone who wants to share experiences – take out the brakets and that is my email address – (joshua)(5768)@gmail.com
    As Yisro comes we can accept the Torah upon ourselves again and through this action of devikus to HaKodesh Boruch Hu, may we witness achdus through out all of klal yisrael

  • http://www.facebook.com/ruchama.kneisel Ruchama Kneisel

    Thank you Ger and Ccarter18!
    I have nothing to add, you said it all! We should all find our real Zivug very very soon!

  • Guest

    In the process of conversion my adopted children ages 6, 8, 9, and 10 were called “bastards, foster, adopted, whatever…” by a “Rabbi”, a rabbi in the Kosher business who asked us to leave the Shul his family founded. He said we were you to ruin his Shul. The diatribe went on as to reference the color of my eyes in a scatogical statement…

  • disqus_skhHhgVmhR

    I was recently called before a Beit Din to defend my position as a Jew. I expect anti-semites to throw insults at me, and of course that has been done. I did not expect fellow Jews to question my status.

  • dvdcnl

    This convert has always felt welcomed and a part of the family, however I attend a conservative synagogue.

    • Mordy

      There seems to be a far more reasonable approach to Gerim in the Conservative world. In the Orthodox world you spend your entire time having to be Shtarker than the anyone else.

  • Gabriel Lopez

    Not to mention the Jews such as myself that are involved in the community, observe the laws and because of a last name such as mine (Lopez) are consistently asked to prove their “JEWISHNESS”. I was asked at Shul by someone last Shabbat if i was able to trace my ancestry. He said that he was able to trace his 500 years… He found awkward that i had a Spanish last name. This person only comes around on High Holidays or special events!!. I have been asked all sorts of questions by my own community… WHY? I have tons of stories to share but like Rabbi Akiva said, the major tenet in the Torah is “Love thy neighbor”. Let’s stop neglecting our converts, our neighbors, our community and build a stronger Jewish Community.

  • Shaindy Lander

    It is both somewhat comforting and disturbing at the same time that so many have had the same experience as I have. I was called a shiksa, told that I couldn’t possibly be a ‘real’ Jew because I wasn’t born Jewish, asked to be a Shabbos goy in the shul while I was undergoing conversion. The local Chabad rabbi refused to call me by my Hebrew name for years because he didn’t accept my conversion. It was only after living a frum life for a few years and working at the local Jewish Community Centre that I was finally accorded that privilege. I know my husband had things said to him for marrying a convert, though he’s never told me in detail what was said.

    Though I have no regrets, and wouldn’t change my life for anything, I wouldn’t wish conversion on my worst enemy. One must be certain down to their bones that they wish to be Jewish in order to go through this process and the derision and prejudice it brings.

  • DS

    The rabbinic establishment has abandoned scores of gerim. By taking wonderful, ehrlich Orthodox rabbis and either annulling their conversions or declaring their converts “not approved” or “non-accepted,” the batei dinim themselves are committing as many as 46 issurei d’oraita. Rabbi Marc Angel (one of the greatest mumchim on giyur in the world), Rabbi Avi Weiss (one of Am Yisrael’s greatest leaders and activists), Rabbi Manny Vinas (who learned under R’ Zweig and at R’ Ziegler’s kollel), and Rabbi Haim Druckman (Rosh Yeshiva of Ohr Etzion) have been railroaded and thrown under the bus by the rabbinic establishment, with absolutely zero evidence they violated any concrete halakhot. To declare an observant Jew pasul because their tevilah, milah, and kabbalat hamitzvot was witnessed by three rabbis in kippot serugot and not Borsalino fedoras is immoral, irrational, ungodly, and anti-halakhic. A ger’s status depends more on their lifestyle choices than the political stature of the Orthodox rabbis witnessing the conversion.

    The RCA GPS standards wresting away the Orthodox rabbi’s authority to perform conversions (a conversion with a bet din of hedyotot suffices, according to the Rambam, Hilkhot Issurei Biah 13 and Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh Deah 268) represents another attempt at centralizing religious authority. Gone are the days of the respected communal rabbi who performs conversions, paskens she’eilot, and expressed opinions of their own. The understanding in many yeshivot b’zman hazeh is that a heter hora’ah is really a heter to call up mori v’ rabbi when something comes up. Perhaps this is all due to the influence of “daas toyreh,” which the late, great Jacob Katz points out is directly influenced by the Roman Catholic teaching of papal;infallibility. R’ Zvi Romm, who heads the RCA conversion program in New York, has directly stated that politics are a large component of their functioning, and has also stated that the halakha peshuta in Rambam and Shulchan Aruch is of no use to his bet din. (Ironically, unlike Rabbi Angel, who has published scores of scholarly articles and books on the topic, I have yet to see any serious work on the issue published by Romm, yet the Orthodox establishment would reflexively accept a convert who worked with Romm, whereas one of Rabbi Angel’s gerim would be rejected. Incidentally, Rabbi Reuven Feinstein and Romm are dear colleagues on the Lower East Side; R’ Feinstein was one of the biggest sponsors and supporters of the ill-fated “Eternal Jewish Family” conversion program, led by Rabbi Leib Tropper, who solicited sexual gratification from a giyoret, in a widel-publicized sex scandal).

    When people found guilty of lecherous activities get to determine the terms of discussion on inyanei giyyur, where is our moral consciousness? When individuals raised Jewish (with holidays, Hebrew School, demonstrable Jewish knowledge, even degrees in Jewish Studies, kashrut, etc., as either patrilineals in the Reform or Reconstructionist movements or with non-Orthodox-converted mothers in the Conservative Movement) need or desire halakhic conformation of their status through the act of giyyur le humra, they are turned away, under the extortionary guise of “needing” to study in an “approved” institution, such as Ohr Somayach (where Tropper was active in calling for a ban on the seforim on Rabbi Natan Slifkin, where Rabbi Dovid Orlofsky has called those Orthodox Jews not believing in “daas toyreh” “fools and kals,” and where Modern Orthodoxy and its leaders are maligned (the Jewish Observer’s 1994 “hesped” article for Rav Yosef Dov Soloveitchik, zt”l speaks volumes on how these individuals view the Modern Orthodox world and its leaders, as does the ban Ohr Somayach placed against its students dialoguing with the great rosh kollel R’ Aharon Rakeffet Rothkoff- see his shiur 29-10-12 Contemporary Hashkafa- 09:00 mark). The shitot of R’ Benzion Uziel, zt”l, Rav Shlomo Goren, Rav Isser Yehuda Unterman, Rav Tzvi Hirsch Kalischer, the Achiezer, and countless others (arguably also the Rambam and Maran haMechaber) have been rejected in favor of a unilaterally strict standard without halakhic basis.

    When incorrect and draconian standards (which do not reflect historical halakhic realities of giyur- see the brilliant analysis of Avi Sagi and Zvi Zohar in “Transforming Identity”) become the normative de facto standard, we can better understand that negative attitudes towards conversion stem from an ignorance of the classical sources and the desire to turn mevakshei emet away, as opposed to bringing them under the wings of the shechina.

  • Guest

    I felt strengthened in my thoughts by reading the other comments here.

    Like, I think, the person who identified herself as LookingForAJewishMom, I see the convert as a person alone in the community without a support system, and also as the most potentially isolated subset of a larger group that includes all those who chose to become Jewishly religiously observant though their family background is not so or not fully so, a group that includes baalei teshuva. (This group is also part of a larger group of people who want to be and remain observant though lacking a family or community support group, a group that can include orphans and widows and widowers, people left behind in changing neighborhoods, and even students on college campuses that are far from an active religious community.)

    Programming for any larger group that also includes converts somewhat addresses the problem of aiding the convert in a way that does not cause one to be continually reminded that one is a convert or that one is viewed as a convert (a consideration raised by the person who signed their comment with the ID of Ger) .

    I differ from some here who believe that solutions must depend mostly on others – i.e. the communal rabbi, or organizations like the OU. Perhaps the best way to see our needs addressed is to organize ourselves, give a name to our organization and a way for others to be in touch and participate, and set a social agenda that identifies and tries to respond to our needs. We don’t have to wait for any rabbi to get started (though we could certainly approach rabbis to get statements of approval, blessings, or even suggestions). Chazak, chazak, vnischazek.

  • BAT-EL

    Yashar Ko’ach to you.