Shoot!

Jesse Paikin
Shoot!

Welcome to the short-form Jewish explainer podcast. One big question each episode. With answers that have integrity and inspiration, and the stories behind the questions. And always where to turn next to learn more. All in around 30 minutes or less.

Episodios

  1. Is Judaism a Religion? (Part II)

    12/01/2022

    Is Judaism a Religion? (Part II)

    Who gets to decide what counts as “religion,” and how that should shape our understanding of how Judaism can be meaningful in our lives? What happens when a revolutionary Jewish thinker - fed up with his lower status as a Jew in 1700s Prussia - wants people to start thinking about the very essence of Judaism in a new way? And what happens when a Prussian Christian theologian has a very different idea of what Judaism should look like? In Part II of this episode, we reach the conclusion of figuring out: can we even call Judaism a religion? In This Episode, we learn about… What on earth is meant by “Judeo-Christian”? How being “spiritual” is not only an inner experience in Judaism The problem with “kids these days,” not wanting religion (in the 1700s) The radical ideas of Jewish individualism that Moses Mendelssohn proposed How a German theologian invented “religion” How “religion” can be (or was) anti-Jewish What Jews Have to Give Up in Exchange for Citizenship A Brief Tale of Historical Jewish-Christian-Muslim Relations How Eastern Europe, North Africa & Central Asia are playing a completely different ball-game Today’s Jewish Identities & Geo-Politics My own answer to the question - “Is Judaism a Religion?” And why does all this matter for how we understand what it means to talk about or be Jewish today? Lots more details and extras can be found in the show notes, including translations of the Hebrew terms we used in this episode. Read a transcript of this episode.  Credits Shoot! is written, hosted, and produced by Jesse Paikin. You can always say hi, share your thoughts, or ask your own question at hello@shootpodcast.com  All audio credits for this episode can be found on our website. Shoot! is supported in part by a grant from the Hadar Institute.

    36 min
  2. Is Judaism a Religion? (Part I)

    05/01/2022

    Is Judaism a Religion? (Part I)

    Turns out we actually aren’t entirely sure how to define “religion.” And we’re not even sure if Judaism fits the description to begin with. If we’re using the lens of “religion” to understand Judaism, what is the nature of that lens? How does its clarity and focus affect what we’re looking at? Is it magnifying or distorting things? When we use that lens, what are we seeing, and what are we not seeing? And who built that lens? Can we even call Judaism a religion? In This Episode, we learn about… What the controversial ending of the TV show LOST clues us into about the nature of Judaism. How notoriously hard it is to define what is meant by “religion.” Anger, and the historical psychology of Jews. A thought experiment to help out with that problem. The relationship between Jewish ethnicity, law, philosophy, politics, culture, and religion. What happens to Judaism when a young Jew from the countryside is forced to enter Berlin through a city gate meant for cattle? Felix Mendelssohn and German Romantic Classical Music (just a little bit). And why does all this matter for how we understand what it means to talk about or be Jewish today? Lots more details and extras can be found in the show notes, including translations of the Hebrew terms we used in this episode. Read a transcript of this episode. Credits Shoot! is written, hosted, and produced by Jesse Paikin. You can always say hi, share your thoughts, or ask your own question at hello@shootpodcast.com  All audio credits for this episode can be found on our website. Shoot! is supported in part by a grant from the Hadar Institute.

    29 min
  3. The 1,200 Year Old Question

    29/12/2021

    The 1,200 Year Old Question

    1,200 years ago, one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world asked a question. It was a question that would reverberate through history, and still impact us today. What does this simple act teach us about the role of questions and answers in Judaism, and how Jewish practice works and evolves across space and time? In this episode, we learn about... How Jews have asked questions throughout history, and how the answers have helped form unique cultures, rituals, and communities. How the once-great centre of Jewish life, in what is today’s Iraq, inspired communities around the world to this day. One of the oldest and longest running institutions of learning in human history. Are answers actually more important than questions? How Jewish prayer evolved into what it is today. Why this podcast exists Learn more in the show notes on our website. Lots more details and extras can be found in the show notes on our website, including translations of the Hebrew terms we used in this episode. Download a transcript of this episode. Credits The translation of Rav Amram’s letter is from Abe Silver at The Open Siddur Project, an open-source, community contributed archive for those sharing prayers and crafting their own prayerbooks. Used under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 International copyleft license. The recording of the Jews of Kochi, India is courtesy of the Johanna L. Spector Papers and Audio-Visual Materials, The Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, New York, (N.Y., ARC. 2008.03). The recording, along with others, is available in its entirety here. Guest vocal talent by dear friends: in Aramaic/Hebrew by Rabbi Jason Fenster and in English by Aron Katz.

    23 min
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Welcome to the short-form Jewish explainer podcast. One big question each episode. With answers that have integrity and inspiration, and the stories behind the questions. And always where to turn next to learn more. All in around 30 minutes or less.

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