On Sacred Ground Hadar Institute
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- Religion & Spirituality
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The news from Israel can feel overwhelming – but Torah gives us language for understanding current events with complexity and compassion. From Hadar’s Beit Midrash in Jerusalem, Rabbi Avital Hochstein joins Rabbi Avi Killip to unpack some of the most pressing spiritual and moral questions in Israel today.
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"In Every Generation"
The Haggadah describes how "in every generation, they stand against us to destroy us." At the same time, the lesson of the Exodus from Egypt in the Torah is to translate our suffering into empathy, to remember that we were strangers in Egypt and therefore look after the strangers today. As we enter a complicated Pesah, how can we hold these two narratives together?
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Is Israel Fighting Amalek?
Rav Avital and Rav Elazar reflect on what it means to celebrate Purim in the shadow of war. They explore how we might grapple with the suffering of innocent people in Gaza through Torah.
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Feminism in a Time of War
The reality in Israel today is that the people on the battlefield are mostly men and the people left behind to look after their homes and children are mostly women. Rav Avital shares some reflections on this situation through the lens of the women's contribution to the mishkan (tabernacle).
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Mistakes and their Aftermath
This week's parashah has the biggest mistake in the Bible: the building of the Golden Calf. How do huge mistakes like this happen? What are their consequences? What about for the people who didn't prevent it from happening? Rav Avital and Rav Elazar use this story as a framework to think about the terrible mistakes that led up to the October 7th attacks.
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The Qualities of a Leader
What qualities do we want in a leader? Rav Avital and Rav Elazar consider what leaders today could learn from the models of Moses and Aaron and the disposition required to keep the menorah lit.
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Mandatory Volunteerism
The opening words of this week's Parashat Terumah contains a tension that Rav Avital and Rav Elazar have felt since the beginning of the war. It's inspiring that Israelis—and Americans too—are coming together in a spirit of donation and volunteerism to fulfil urgent needs in Israel, but it raises deep questions as to who was supposed to take care of these needs in the first place and why they failed to do so.
How should we think about volunteering when it feels actually mandatory? And when we do offer our time and resources, what are we offering it for and for what larger purpose?
Customer Reviews
A different kind of conversation
These conversations offer an intimate window into lives of Israelis as they navigate the day to day impact of this time. Different from all the news and opinions, it’s personal and beautifully complex, with a frame of accessible Torah.
Powerfully heart-opening
I look forward to each conversation and find myself yearning for the next. Life is so devastatingly complex and challenging right now, and each of the hosts brings their full, vulnerable self to the conversation. Their Torah is powerful, soulful, and meaningful, speaking to the current moment in ways that are both deeply personal and communally resonant.
Thank you
These conversations are so moving. Thank you.