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As a Christian I don't get it. What is so wrong with women wearing tallit and tefillin? More to the point, what does the Torah say about it? Are only males allowed/comanded to wear them? The way I understand it, Hebrew verbs must match the gender of the subject, so it should be relatively simple to answer that question.

In another article in the Times of Israel the paratroopers are quoted as saying that they "liberated the Old City of Jerusalem so that all people would be free to pray there, not only the ultra-Orthodox". It makes sense to me.

1 posted on 02/12/2013 4:03:11 PM PST by Former Fetus
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To: Former Fetus

I don’t understand. I thought women were suppose to wear a scarf over their head when praying at the wall.


2 posted on 02/12/2013 4:08:39 PM PST by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously, you won't live through it anyway)
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To: Former Fetus

If Sarah Silverman supports it, its probably blasphemous and wrong


3 posted on 02/12/2013 4:10:34 PM PST by GeronL (http://asspos.blogspot.com)
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To: Former Fetus

I thought they’d invaded the men’s side or something - but they wore prayer shawls?

Is it because prayer shawls are “a garment pertaining to a man” or because they are usurping a male prayer function?

And why is ultra-Orthodox custom writing the law at the Wall, as you ask.


4 posted on 02/12/2013 4:14:33 PM PST by heartwood
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To: Former Fetus

Playing Soon:
The Shawlshank Redemption


6 posted on 02/12/2013 4:17:15 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

.. and “Saving Sarah Silverman’s Sister”


7 posted on 02/12/2013 4:18:04 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

Tallit to the judge.


8 posted on 02/12/2013 4:19:38 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

... or is she like the tefillin Don, and will get off scot-free?


9 posted on 02/12/2013 4:20:49 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

You’d think there would be a sunrise/sunset clause covering this sort of thing.


11 posted on 02/12/2013 4:21:27 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

Okay, on a more serious note, a question:

“The women had gathered at the back of the women’s section, as they have at the beginning of every new Jewish month since 1988, for rosh chodesh services...”

“In 2003, Israel’s Supreme Court upheld a government ban on women wearing tefillin or tallit prayer shawls, or reading from a Torah scroll at the Western Wall.”

“Women participating in the rosh chodesh service have been arrested nearly every month since June for wearing prayer shawls or for “disturbing public order.”

From 1988 to 2003, the women have gathered and there was no law they broke.
From 2003 to 2013, there was a law, but they didn’t break it. Or else it wasn’t enforced.
From June, 2012, to February, 2013, there was a law and it was at least minimally enforced, perhaps with a fine.
In February, 2013, Obama announced his intention to visit Israel, and the issue suddenly became a human-rights story with at least two media figures (sister of c-list celebrity and soldier in presumably iconic photo).

Hmmm. Democratic spinmeisters feeling bored?

Obama need some political prisoners to facilitate the release of?

I’m totally serious.

Remember those Current TV “reporters” “detained” by Norht Korea and released after Bill Clinton’s personal, “heroic” intervention?

And the theory that Benghazi was a botched kidnapping attempt to give O a boost during the election?

Jeez. If at first, you don’t succeed, eh, Dems?


14 posted on 02/12/2013 4:35:17 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

One last question:

What are they trying to accomplish?

Are they trying to change the Orthodox religion? They must know that is not going to happen. Five thousand years of tradition. That can’t be it.

So, are they trying to affect Israel’s government in some way? How?

By painting them as enemies of human rights?

Who would this benefit?

The Palestinians, perhaps? [Isreali women are already ruled out, as noted above.] The Democrats? Obama?

Qui bono?

Nice rack, though. I’m glad they distributed that in order to sway our sympathies her way.


16 posted on 02/12/2013 4:47:46 PM PST by Chad N. Freud (FR is the modern equivalent of the Committees of Correspondence. Let other analogies arise.)
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To: Former Fetus

Rabbi Susan Silverman...

Throughout the years Laura, Jodyne and I loved to make Sarah perform. Even when she was a preteen she was the size of a 9-year-old, so the juxtaposition of cute and inappropriate still worked. A long-time favorite was “Time Warp” from the “Rocky Horror Picture Show”: “...and do the pelvic thru-ust, until it drives you insay-ay-ay-ay-ane. Let’s do the time warp again,...” One night, the four of us performed it as a sister act at the local White Horse Tavern. The audience — rural New Hampshire diners out for an evening — stared in, well, horror.

We didn’t care. Then, like now, our favorite audience is ourselves. When all four sisters are together, we lie on our mother’s bed, with our mother, Beth Ann O’Hara, and stepmother, Janice Silverman, and talk and laugh. The fathers (Donald and our step-father, John) wander in and out, impatient for us to come into the living room with them and the grandchildren (my kids), but we want girl time. We want to laugh in the way we only laugh with each other. Now my older daughters, Aliza and Hallel, pile on as well. It makes us all happy that a third generation is growing to laugh with us.

As kids we were more likely to sing at the White Horse Tavern than in synagogue. We did not have a religious upbringing, and my parents and sisters still marvel at my having become a rabbi. We sisters associated being Jewish with being liberal. That’s how the lines were drawn in our New Hampshire culture: Christians celebrate Christmas and vote Republican. Jews celebrate Chanukah and vote Democratic.

Liberal values and arts replaced synagogue life. (Most years we joined the Reform Temple but very rarely went, except when my father was social action chair.) The soundtracks of our ranch house — on a quiet street in the middle and upper middle class North End of Manchester, N.H. —were the records “Pearlie,” “Godspell” and “Hair.” Our father, a retailer, was a social worker by training and would one day return to it. Our mother, McGovern’s personal campaign photographer, later founded New Thalian Players — a theatre company in Manchester.

http://www.jewishjournal.com/hollywood_jew/page2/my_sister_sarah_20071116


22 posted on 02/12/2013 6:33:37 PM PST by kcvl
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To: Former Fetus

Sarah and her boyfriend Jimmy Kimmel

Sarah is concerned about Israel — both its well-being and its behavior as a moral actor on the world stage. Recently Sarah e-mailed and asked what Yosef (my husband) and I were doing to make sure Sudanese refugees found sanctuary here. I wrote back with a list of what Israeli organizations were doing on behalf of the refugees here, and how Yosef was involved. I also reminded her not to be too hard on Israel — Sudan is an enemy state and terrorism is a very real threat, so if Israel is hesitant and cautious, it’s understandable. There is a tension between the government’s job to protect the nation and the popular desire to take in refugees. The latter urge should, and I believe will, prevail, but the former cannot be ignored.

Sarah wrote back, impressed at all Israel was doing to give safety to refugees (a small example: two Sudanese families live on our kibbutz, and other kibbutzim have welcomed many such families) and said, “God, the U.S. is freaking out over Mexicans — and all they want to do is clean our houses.”

It is fitting that Sudanese seeking refuge live on Ketura, home to the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies, where people of many cultures call upon humanity — like the biblical prophets did on this same land so long ago — to make the earth a sanctuary for all life. And I am proud to say that at their benefit for the Arava Institute my sisters Sarah and Laura will use obscenity, racism and sexism to proclaim this conviction. Like the ancient prophets did. Sort of.

http://www.jewishjournal.com/hollywood_jew/page2/my_sister_sarah_20071116


23 posted on 02/12/2013 6:38:40 PM PST by kcvl
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To: Former Fetus

Husband of Rabbi Susan Silverman

Named by CNN as one of the top six Green Pioneers worldwide, Yosef Abramowitz serves as President of the Arava Power Company and Energiya Global, founding both companies with partners David Rosenblatt of New Jersey and Ed Hofland of Kibbutz Ketura. Arava Power is Israel’s leading solar developer and a pioneer in mid-size and large-size solar fields. Arava Power built the first grid-connected solar field in Israel and recently closed on $204 million for the next eight solar fields in Israel, with a further $1.5 billion worth of projects in the pipeline. Energiya Global develops affordable solar projects worldwide, with the goal of providing clean electricity for 50 million people by 2020.

An entrepreneur, environmentalist and human rights activist, Yosef has established Energiya Global to bring solar power on a commercial basis to developing nations. Yosef was named to the Jerusalem Post’s list of 50 most influential Jews worldwide in 2011 and 2012, joining the ranks of Mark Zuckerberg (#1), Shimon Peres (#22), Jon Stewart (#27), and Bar Refaeli (#50) among others — including Sarah Silverman, who happens to be his sister-in-law.[1] He was also named by Calcalist, a leading economic daily, as one of Israel’s top environmentalists in 2010 and, in 1991, as the most influential Jewish student leader of the previous decade, according to Moment Magazine.[2] Abramowitz was named by Haaretz as one of 2011’s top ten most influential Anglo immigrants.[3] He has been co-nominated 3 times for the Nobel Peace Prize. Yosef was also awarded “Person of the Year” by the 2012 Israel Energy and Business Convention.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yosef_Abramowitz

Activism

Abramowitz was active in the anti-apartheid and divestiture movement at Boston University, he led the Jewish community’s successfully campaign to reinstate $7 billion to the US federal budget as corrections to the Welfare Reform Act. Abramowitz served as the president of the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews from 1997–2007, and has been co-nominated three times for the Nobel Peace Prize.[citation needed] He was the keynote speaker at Russia’s national human rights convention in 2004. He helped to establish the Ethiopian Atid Ehad political party in Israel. Abramowitz is an active advocate of Solar power in Israel in Israel, both for Jewish Israelis and for Israeli Arab Bedouins.[14] While investigating the burning of Jewish homes in Ethiopia, Arbramowitz was held up at gunpoint. He has organized various human rights demonstrations in 23 countries.[15]

He has been arrested two times. The first arrest, outside of the Soviet Embassy in Washington, D.C. in October 1985, was on behalf of Boris Lifshitz. “The U.S. Supreme Court overturned [Abramowitz’s] conviction, setting precedent on First Amendment rights outside embassies.” The second arrest was on behalf of Ethiopian Jewry. Border police beat Abramowitz outside of the Jerusalem Convention Center at the World Zionist Congress in 1987. The then-newly elected Chairman of the Jewish Agency, Mendel Kaplan, freed him from the police van before police could bring record the arrest in record.[15]

Abramowitz has led two hunger strikes. The first was a fourteen-day strike that protested Boston University’s investments in South Africa, during apartheid. Abramowitz was banned from pre-democratic South Africa for his anti-apartheid leadership. The second was during Abramowitz’s time serving as the WUJS chairperson. This two-week strike was held on behalf of the Soviet prisoner Zion Alexei Magarik, “who was subsequently released from prison and flown to Israel. [Abramowitz] organized 23 demonstrations and events worldwide in February 1987 for the most successful ever International Jewish Student Solidarity day for Soviet Jewry.” Alexei, subsequent to his release from solitary confinement and his release to Israel, was the last prisoner of Zion in the USSR.[15]
Abramowitz won a U.S. Supreme Court case for free speech. In addition, the case Abramowitz v. Boston University helped set a precedent for free speech rights at private institutions in Massachusetts.[16]
[


24 posted on 02/12/2013 6:50:07 PM PST by kcvl
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To: Former Fetus
In 2003, Israel's Supreme Court upheld a government ban on women wearing tefillin or tallit prayer shawls, or reading from a Torah scroll at the Western Wall.
Women participating in the rosh chodesh service have been arrested nearly every month since June for wearing prayer shawls or for "disturbing public order."

This is disturbingly close to sandmaggot koranimal behavior. Hard to believe that this is enforced by the national government.

I may have to reassess my attitude towards Israel, upon learning more clarifying explanations.

25 posted on 02/12/2013 7:19:37 PM PST by publius911 (Look for the Union Label -- then buy something else)
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To: Former Fetus

Were they staying at the Kotel Hotel?


32 posted on 02/13/2013 5:10:11 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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