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A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

Dvar Torah

Rabbi Justin Kerber visits patients in hospice care and in acute care hospital settings. In addition, he teaches Judaism to young people and adults and serves as the rabbi of Congregation B’nai Sholom, Quincy, Ill.

Take vows and oaths seriously

By Rabbi Justin KerberPublished July 3, 2013

Promises, promises.“I do.” “I, Barack Hussein Obama, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United...

Rabbi Josef Davidson is Adjunct Rabbi at Congregation B’nai Amoona and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association.

Parasha Pinchas: The danger of the true believer

By Rabbi Josef DavidsonPublished June 26, 2013

Jewish women congregate at the Wall in Jerusalem to pray.  Because they are wearing Tallitot and chanting from the Torah, they run a gauntlet of “true believers” intent on preventing them from reaching their destination.  These “true believers”...

Rachel LaVictoire,  is a recipient of the prestigious Nemerov Writing and Thomas H. Eliott Merit scholarships at Washington University, where she is a sophomore. She grew up in Atlanta, where she is an active member of Temple Emanu-El and the Marcus Jewish Community Center.

Third side to nature vs. nurture debate

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished June 26, 2013

For over two centuries, professionals in the field of psychology have been interested in human development: Do we all develop similarly? Are our personalities predestined or are they the result of our environment? How can we most effectively impact another’s...

Rachel LaVictoire,  is a recipient of the prestigious Nemerov Writing and Thomas H. Eliott Merit scholarships at Washington University, where she is a sophomore. She grew up in Atlanta, where she is an active member of Temple Emanu-El and the Marcus Jewish Community Center.

The value of chance: accident or G-d’s design?

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished June 21, 2013

Before he was “Dad,” he was Timothy Gerard LaVictoire—a baby boy born June 24, 1952. Throughout his first 10 years, Tim welcomed one sister and four little brothers into his humble home in Mt. Morris, Mich. He learned how to shoot a gun from his...

Rabbi Mark Fasman serves Congregation Kol Rinah and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association.

Parasha Balak: Is ‘dwelling apart’ a curse and a blessing?

BY Rabbi Mark FasmanPublished June 19, 2013

When is a curse a blessing? Sometimes it’s hard to tell which is which. In our parasha this week, the non-Israelite prophet Balaam is summoned by Moabite King Balak to curse the Israelites. Somehow, throughout Jewish history, we have been seen as a...

Rabbi Suzanne Brody

D’var Torah: Keeping attuned to tone

By Rabbi Suzanne BrodyPublished June 5, 2013

Sometimes, it’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.As a parent, there are moments when I find myself suddenly furious. It seems as if my children have made just one demand too many. All of the whining and insistence that I drop whatever I am doing...

Rachel LaVictoire

Seeing isn’t always believing

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished May 30, 2013

Animals can speak. Flowers can be painted. Mice can sew.  Lamps can house genies. Dragons can be trained. Toasters can have feelings.  If I told you these things, you’d think I was crazy. Surely, none of these things is true. And yet, as children...

Rachel LaVictoire

D’var Torah: Ask and receive

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished May 23, 2013

I was a really picky eater when I was young, and I mean really picky. I didn’t like tomatoes, onions, lettuce—well, pretty much all vegetables—corned beef, thin salami (thick was OK), mayonnaise, pepper, fish, beans, sausage, honeydew, cherries…...

Rabbi Brigitte Rosenberg

D’var Torah: To complain or not to complain?

By Rabbi Brigitte RosenbergPublished May 22, 2013

I am always intrigued by the minds of b’nai mitzvah students, especially the lessons they glean from their parshiot. This week, my daughter celebrates becoming bat mitzvah. As with all of my students, I have had the opportunity to peer into her mind...

Rachel LaVictoire

Mine, yours and ours

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished May 15, 2013

They say the first step towards change is admitting you have a problem, right? Well, today I’d like to own up to one of my most unattractive qualities, something I’ve dealt with since I was very young: I’m extremely possessive.In kindergarten, I...

Rabbi Roxanne J.S. Shapiro

D’var Torah: Making our way through the wilderness

By Rabbi Roxanne J.S. ShapiroPublished May 8, 2013

We sometimes forget, since it has been a long trek through the [Book of] Exodus, that as we get to B’midbar, the Israelites have only been out of Egypt for a little over a year.  They are not aware that there are decades of wandering to come and that...

Rachel LaVictoire, 18, is a recipient of the prestigious Nemerov Writing and Thomas H. Elliott Merit scholarships at Washington University, where she is a freshman. She grew up in Atlanta, where she is an active member of Temple Emanu-El and the Marcus Jewish Community Center.
Rachel will be contributing regular commentaries and d’var Torah reflections, which will be posted on the Jewish Light’s website,  stljewishlight.com — some of which will also be included in the Jewish Light’s print editions.

Money, career choices and lessons from Leviticus

By Rachel LaVictoirePublished May 2, 2013

Money is important. No one can deny that fact. We love it and we hate it, but ultimately, we need it. And in college, it’s on everyone’s minds. Whether graduating in four years or one month, every student is thinking about how he or she might get...

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