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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

Gay Goldenberg seder plate

Seder plate stories

Ellen Futterman, EditorPublished April 2, 2020

When we asked readers to send us unique and/or interesting stories about their favorite seder plate, we weren’t sure what we would get back. But luckily, a few had some entertaining tales to tell.From Gay Goldenberg, 72, of Town & Country, a B’nai Amoona...

Rabbi Andrea Goldstein

The sacrifice of well-being

By Rabbi Andrea GoldsteinPublished April 2, 2020

The Book of Leviticus, especially the first few portions, are filled with intricate details of the many types sacrifices God commanded the Israelites to make. In Hebrew, the word for sacrifice is korban, which comes from a Hebrew root, meaning “to draw...

Having a solo Passover seder? There are plenty of guides for you.

Gabe FriedmanPublished March 31, 2020

(JTA) — Social distancing, stress, fear, a real-life plague — Passover amid the COVID-19 outbreak is shaping up to be a once-in-a-lifetime event. As many Jews across the country and the world prepare to hold seders on their own, apart from family...

A very overwhelmed Maya Mirsky in the Passover aisle at the grocery store. (Nina Lukacs) 

Let my people know: This is the first time I’ve had to plan a seder

Maya MirskyPublished March 30, 2020

(J. The Jewish News of Northern California) — How long does a seder really have to be? “No, we can’t just say ‘They tried to kill us, we survived, let’s eat!” I tell my daughters. There’s some negotiation until I promise it’ll be 10 minutes....

Rabbi James Stone Goodman

I hear Leviticus, and baseball, speaking

By Rabbi James Stone GoodmanPublished March 26, 2020

I hear Leviticus speaking. Leviticus and Dante got together in the form of a virus, a nonlocal reminder in the language of Leviticus – purity and impurity — that all of us are in this together. I hear Deuteronomy speaking. We will be judged by the...

Margi Lenga Kahn

Challenging times call for a different kind of seder

By Margi Lenga Kahn, Special to the Jewish LightPublished March 26, 2020

What frightening and challenging times we are living in, when our daily lingo now includes “social distancing,” “self-quarantining” and “sheltering in place.”One of the four questions asked each year at the Passover seder is, “How is this...

Passover in a pandemic: Families on Zoom, solo seders and broken traditions

Ben SalesPublished March 17, 2020

(JTA) — Rena Munster was looking forward to hosting a Passover seder for the first time.In past years, her parents or another relative hosted the meal. But this year she had invited her parents, siblings and other extended family to her Washington,...

Rabbi Tracy Nathan

Halves make a holy whole for the Divine Presence

By Rabbi Tracy NathanPublished March 12, 2020

We have been reading this richly symbolic section of the Torah on the Mishkan, the mobile sacred dwelling place for the Divine Presence. As we complete the reading of the instructions in Parashat Ki Tissa, it is worth thinking about how we create the...

Rabbi Noah Arnow

Reading the scroll of Esther: Hope or warning?

By Rabbi Noah ArnowPublished March 5, 2020

Is  every mitzvah, every commandment equally important?  In some sense, of course — if we understand God as the source of mitzvot, commandments, then every mitzvah is an equal opportunity to obey or disobey God and God’s will for us.  And plus,...

Rabbi Andrea Goldstein

Parashat Terumah: Building a sanctuary within

By Rabbi Andrea GoldsteinPublished February 27, 2020

Just two short weeks ago, in Parashat Yitro, we read of the revelation at Mt. Sinai. Each Israelite – rich and poor, young and old, female and male – experienced the reality of the Presence of God in their lives. Then last week, in Parashat Mishpatim,...

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

Rules for avoiding servitude in the ‘company store’

BY RABBI JOSEF DAVIDSONPublished February 20, 2020

As a child, I used to watch the Tennessee Ernie Ford show on television every week. I loved his deep, resonant, baritone voice, and the songs that he sang were about everyday people and situations. One of my favorite songs of his was “Sixteen Tons.”...

Rabbi Scott Slarskey is Director of Jewish Life at Saul Mirowitz Jewish Community School and a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association.

Teach, learn Torah in radically accessible places

By Rabbi Scott SlarskeyPublished February 13, 2020

D’VAR TORAH — Parashat YitroAs a Jewish educator, it is not uncommon to think about or to discuss with colleagues what it is specifically that make Jewish education Jewish. Is it the “chosen” content or the identity/ideology of the teacher? Are...

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