A Bat Mitzvah’s Teaching on Impressionability; And Reflections on Isolating with a Toddler

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar What a lovely Shabbat we spent this past weekend as we celebrated Talia’s Bat Mitzvah. Talia’s Torah portion was Bo, the third portion in the Book of Exodus, which picks up in the midst of the ten plagues with God telling Moses “Bo el Paroah,” meaning, essentially, “Go before Pharaoh,” so that Moses would […]
Response to the Tragic Fire in Philadelphia

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar The news out of another part of our community yesterday was wretched: twelve people dead, eight of whom were children, as a result of a fire in a house on the 800 block of North 23rd Street in the Fairmount neighborhood of Philadelphia, a mere couple of miles from our synagogue. […]
Finding a Middle Path to Forgiveness

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past week we celebrated Jonah’s Bar Mitzvah. What a joyous occasion it was. Jonah’s Torah portion was Miketz. Miketz means, at the end. Whether this is referring to the end of the two years that our ancestor Joseph spends in prison before he is released, or the end of the era of the […]
Remarks from Hanukkat Mezuzah — Building Dedication Ceremony

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar I’d also like to share with you the remarks I offered at our Hanukkat Mezuzah, our modest Building Dedication Ceremony on Sunday, in the hopes that they help lay out for us an intention as we occupy our newly revamped spaces, including the Paula Kline Learning Center: Mai Hanukkah. What is Hanukkah? […]
Who’s Directing What?

By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past week we studied Parashat Vayeshev, the Torah portion known as Vayeshev, which means “He [Jacob] dwelled.” The Torah portion begins with Jacob having settled down as the scene shifts to the lives of his twelve sons, most notably Joseph, to whom, as the eldest of his beloved wife Rachel, Jacob […]