L’Hayim: 18 Jewish Touchstones to Help Navigate the Years Ahead

Rosh Hashanah 5783 By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar It’s been a rough year. Years? Decade? Century? We’re weary. How much longer is this pandemic going to last, we wonder? How many times do we have to turn on the news and encounter another attack on our democracy, or our personal autonomy? How many images of a […]
A Bat Mitzvah Teaching on Curses and Blessings

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat we were treated to the celebration of Josie Chrismer becoming Bat Mitzvah. Josie’s Bat Mitzvah parashah portion was Ki Tavo, one of the final portions of the entire Torah. Ki Tavo means “when you enter” or “when you arrive,” the context of which is Moses advising the Israelites what rituals that she undertake […]
What “Open House” Really Means

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar We’ve affixed the term “open house” to tonight’s celebration. I helped generate that label, but I have to ask the question, could there be a more generic term than “Open House?” Realtors use it when showing off a house for sale; private elementary and high schools use it when trying to […]
The Dream-like Shabbat That Was

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar As I’ve said a number of times now in various contexts, this past Shabbat was, for me, a dream. Friday night was the return of TGIShabbat, and the inauguration of TGISHabbat as a weekly institution at SHS, from September through May each year, where each week we gather, through music, through song, through […]
A Bat Mitzvah’s Teaching on the Downstream Effects of Kashrut

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat we celebrated the Bat Mitzvah ceremony of Claire Englander. Claire’s Torah portion falls in the Book of Devarim (Deuteronomy) where Moses is delivering his parting address to the Israelites as they get ready to cross over into the promised land. A central part of this address is a recapitulation of […]