
This week we introduce Issue #5: Death and Tragedy
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It may seem strange to have the first issue of the new year focus on death and tragedy. The beginning of a new year is typically a time for excitement and enthusiasm, an opportunity to create new beginnings and improve ourselves through resolutions. But the American New Year, or in general, the secular observance of the new year in the Gregorian calendar, is a moment in time, a clock striking midnight. In that second, one year is completely gone and a new one is suddenly upon us. This concept, however, sits in stark contrast to our observance of the Jewish New Year – a period of 10 days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur that serves as a time to embark on a process of repentance, reflection, and renewal.
While it is nice to imagine that a singular instance can bring about all the change that hope for, the reality – and particularly the Jewish reality – is often not so simple. While this is the perfect time to start over or try again, it is also a time to ponder what we have lost and learned, and to use the lessons from our lives to help us become better people for the coming year.
We have all experienced loss. Many of us have lost grandparents, parents, or friends. As Jews we are also affected by the vastness of our collective historical death and tragedy, underlined most violently by the Holocaust. Just as the Jewish New Year is a 10-day stretch that takes us from one of the most joyous Jewish holidays (Rosh Hashanah) through to the most somber (Yom Kippur), grieving, healing from that grief, and growing from it, is all part of a very similar process, one that isn’t an instantaneous transformation, but is rather one that takes time.
In this issue, we explore death and tragedy as a way of reminding ourselves that, as Jews, we have a responsibility to remember those who have come before, even as we celebrate the possibilities inherent in the concept of a new year. We’ll look at how death has affected some us, maybe changed us, or in certain cases, not affected us at all. Although this is an incredibly vast topic, we hope these stories will shed light on how we experience death and tragedy through a Jewish lens.
- Alef
Photo by jpc101 licensed under Creative Commons.
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Death and Tragedy Posts:
Grave Recollection
Clear
Inglourious Basterds
To Mom With Love
Sitting Shiva in the Land of Oz
My Jewish Jeanne
January 14
This week we introduce Issue #4: The Holiday Season
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The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is over, the Christmas Tree at Rockefeller Center has been lit, and the tourists are out in full force. It can only mean one thing: the winter holidays are upon us. It is a time of eating and drinking and a time of embracing family (or avoiding it). But for the Jews – a people who have always had the task of juggling tradition with their status as “outsiders” – it’s also a time of multiple identities. While Hanukkah (regardless of how you spell it) remains reserved for members of the Tribe, there is no question that secular versions of Christmas have pervaded some Jewish communities, and provided a nice celebratory stepping stone between the festival of lights and the New Year. After all, Jewish composer Irving Berlin didn’t have to reject his status as the cantor’s son to dream of a “White Christmas.”
So how do we juggle our Jewishness with our love of Christmas carols? From evergreens and poinsettias to dreidels and gelt, our traditions seem to run the spectrum of ways in which we celebrate the holiday season. In this issue of Alef, we’ll hear stories about everything from Kosher Turkeys on Christmas to New Years resolutions made not once, but twice. Join our discussion about how we celebrate being Jewish during this – in the words of Andy Williams – “most wonderful time of the year.”
-Alef
Photo by Rob Blatt, licensed under Creative Commons.
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The Holiday Season Posts:
Hanukkah Music: A Video Tribute
Growing up with Chanukah in (718)
Waiting for Adam Sandler
My Guilt-Free Holiday
Happy Holidays, From Alef
Kosher for Christmas
Tropicana Christmas
‘Tis the Season
Tangled up in Bad
The Jew Who Loved Christmas
Italian-Jewish for the Holidays
The New Years Tree
New Years Resolutions
A Decade’s Send-Off
The Importance of Lights in Winter
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