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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

Judaism

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose: Address to Mirowitz graduates

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished June 5, 2020

Below please find some words of Torah that I was able to share with the recent graduates of the Saul Mirowitz Jewish Community School. Though the message is clearly addressed to the graduates, I have been asked by several parents, grandparents, educators...

Rabbi-Cantor Ronald D. Eichaker

Venturing into the world again can be, well, hairy

BY CANTOR-RABBI RON EICHAKERPublished June 3, 2020

“Give me a head with hair, long beautiful hair …” So goes the title song from the 1967 musical “Hair” that became a major hit for the Cowsills two years later. Some of us may look at ourselves today and recall that or another song or verse...

Rabbi Lori Levine

Lesson of inclusion is amplified by pandemic

By Rabbi Lori LevinePublished May 28, 2020

As summer begins and a period of calmer, warmer days sets in, our tradition calls us back to the wilderness. This week, Jewish communities all over the world will prepare to retell the story of the giving and receiving of the Torah at Mount Sinai recounted...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose

Unique Shavuot is celebrated every day of our lives

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished May 28, 2020

In our tradition, the Holy-Day of Shavuot, the middle of our Shalosh Regalim, our three pilgrimage festivals of Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot, is unique in several ways. First, it is the only one not assigned a specific date by the Torah on the Jewish calendar...

Rabbi Tracy Nathan

Fear, uncertainty and faith in the wilderness

By Rabbi Tracy NathanPublished May 21, 2020

With Parashat B’midbar, we begin reading Sefer B’midbar, the Book of Numbers, which recounts the stories of the people of Israel’s time living in the midbar, the desert wilderness. It is to the midbar that the Israelites go upon leaving Egypt, and...

Rabbi Scott Shafrin

The quiet work of spiritual uplift

By Rabbi Scott ShafrinPublished May 7, 2020

D’var Torah:  Parashat EMORAdonai said to Moses: Speak to the priests, the sons of Aaron, and say to them: None shall become ritually impure for any [dead] person among their kin, except for the relatives that are closest to them: their mother, their...

By Sofia Puerto

Sharing the joy of a Passover seder

By Sofia PuertoPublished April 30, 2020

Imagine sitting around a large dinner table with your family, singing and celebrating the great history and traditions of your culture. The flowing music fills your ears, the decadent scents fill your nose and the comfort of family fills your heart. This...

Rabbi Josef Davidson is affiliated with Congregation B’nai Amoona and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association, which coordinates the d’var Torah for the Light.  

Hold on to hope for a post-pandemic world

By Rabbi Josef DavidsonPublished April 23, 2020

Imagine that a disease breaks out in the community, actually a family of diseases, perhaps, because it presents differently in many cases. No one knows exactly how it is transmitted, and no one knows who patient zero is. Worst of all, no one knows exactly...

Rabbi Mordecai “Yari” Yaroslawitz (right) holds frequent, large gatherings at his home in University City but was unable to do so this year because of the coronavirus pandemic. File photo: Bill Motchan

For St. Louis Jews, Passover seders featured more empty chairs, not empty rituals

By Eric Berger, Associate EditorPublished April 14, 2020

One might think that Passover seders, the meals during which we eat matzah, the bread of affliction, and other special foods, might have been dry occasions this year because of people’s inability to gather in large numbers due to social distancing guidelines.And...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose

Finding the words to comfort the afflicted

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished April 14, 2020

“And Aharon’s sons, Nadav and Avihu, each took his offering pan, put fire in it, placed incense upon it, and brought before God a foreign fire, which God had not commanded. And a fire went forth from before God and consumed them both, and they died...

In new Passover children’s books, meet a googly eyed gator and spend a seder in outer space

Penny SchwartzPublished April 3, 2020

BOSTON (JTA) — Miriam the Prophetess, Elijah the Prophet and the Four Questions take center stage among this spring’s crop of new Passover books for kids penned by some of today’s best writers.The sparkling assortment includes stories by Jane Yolen,...

Marcie Handler conducts a Zoom videoconferencing meeting with her family.

Families will grow real memories from virtual, Zoom seders

By Ellie S. Grossman, Special to the Jewish LightPublished April 2, 2020

Passover is a cherished Jewish holiday that celebrates our journey from the bitterness of slavery to the sweetness of freedom, a paradoxical theme amidst the plague of COVID-19. During this global pandemic, we are socially distant and socially isolated,...

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