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Midrash [ . . . ] is not mere reference to the past: it is the enlistment of the past in the service of the present. Even more specifically, it is a reinsertion into the present of the original divine…
Contributor:
Judah Goldin
Places:
New Haven, United States of America
Date:
1965
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In what sense is Judaism racist? Does it in general recognize the “holiness” of race and if so, what practical deductions have Jews made from such a theory?
In connection with the Nazi racist…
Contributor:
Hayim Greenberg
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1945
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The ancient Judaic midrash paved the way for a certain type of biblical hermeneutics while also using the master pre-Text as a pretext for creating a new tale. The midrash is the prototype of creative…
Contributor:
Nehama Aschkenasy
Places:
Stamford, United States of America
Date:
2004
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[ . . . ] A few remarks on foreign words in the literature which for the sake of brevity is here called Talmudic, may not be out of place in this preface.The intercourse between the Jews of the…
Contributor:
Marcus Jastrow
Places:
Philadelphia, United States of America
Date:
1903
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Shulḥan ‘Aruk, a term taken over from early rabbinic exegesis in the Midrash and applied to one of the most influential, truly epochal literary creations of Jewish history, has a double or even triple…
Contributor:
Isadore Twersky
Places:
Cambridge, United States of America
Date:
1967
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Is the Jewish tradition inherently liberal or inherently conservative? The answer to this much-debated question is quite simple: yes.
Which is to say that if by “the Jewish tradition” we mean what is…
Contributor:
Leonard Fein
Places:
Boston, United States of America
Date:
1995
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It was one of the stories from Genesis that most frightened me as a child: the story of Lot’s wife.
She was told not to look, and she looked; and her punishment came swift and horrible. Frozen in…
Contributor:
Rebecca Goldstein
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1992
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The fourth letter, ד, has the shape of an open doorway and its name, דָּלֶת, dalet, is cognate with דֶּלֶת [deles], door. The ד also alludes to דַּל, pauper, who knocks on doors, begging for alms. In…
Contributor:
Michael L. Munk
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1983