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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

Dr. James Hinrichs

Your coronavirus questions answered

By Dr. James HinrichsPublished April 14, 2020

Editor’s note: This column by Dr. James Hinrichs was made possible thanks to the generosity of Dr. Jonathan Root, Dr. Norman Druck and Galia Movitz. Thank you for your kind responses to my article last month in the Jewish Light on COVID-19. The situation...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose

Let Passover begin our release from the coronavirus plague

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished April 2, 2020

Simchah Rabbah, Simchah Rabbah, Aviv Hegeea Pesach Ba! Great Joy, Great Joy, spring has arrived and Pesach is upon us! Each year, as we begin to see the first signs of spring, I am reminded of this lovely song from my childhood. It is of course common...

Letters to the editor: April 1, 2020

Letters to the editor: April 1, 2020

Published April 2, 2020

Commentary leaves out crucial contextI am writing regarding the recent op-ed in The New York Times that compared Israel’s current coronavirus quarantine to the Israel Defense Forces military curfew of the Palestinians that occurred in 2002 (“Stay...

Rabbi Cantor Hillary Chorny

I thought coronavirus would make my congregants feel far away, but I’m seeing them more closely than ever

By RABBI CANTOR HILLARY CHORNYPublished April 2, 2020

If you glanced at my work calendar, you might not know that the world is turned inside out. As a cantor and rabbi at a Los Angeles synagogue, I am continuing to lead services and counsel congregants. But like so many others, all of my meetings have been...

Dr. James Hinrichs

‘A critical time for our region and for the world’: Doctor offers key takeaways on the pandemic

By Dr. James HinrichsPublished March 26, 2020

Editor’s note: This column by Dr. James Hinrichs was made possible thanks to the generosity of Dr. Jonathan Root, Dr. Norman Druck and Galia Movitz. I was asked by Jewish Light to host a column on the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.  I am board certified...

Amy Fenster Brown

Inconvenience vs. danger: A learning moment

By Amy Fenster BrownPublished March 26, 2020

As you’re reading this, my younger son, Leo, has just turned 13. In just a few days, I turn 50. One-third of my life is over just like that. And this weekend was supposed to be Leo’s bar mitzvah.  I don’t expect 50 to be that different than...

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...

Stephanie Kutner

I’m staying sane during the pandemic by reclaiming an age-old Jewish tradition: Baking challah

By Stephanie KutnerPublished March 26, 2020

CHICAGO (JTA) — As the world grapples with the coronavirus pandemic, we’re all tasked with slowing its spread through social isolation. That’s not necessarily a big ask for someone like me. I can deal with people in short bursts but, for the most...

Rabbi Seth D. Gordon

Finding our bearings in this surreal moment

By Rabbi Seth D. GordonPublished March 26, 2020

Surreal.My most vivid surreal experience was on Sept. 12, 2001, or 9/12. We then lived on Long Island, about 45 minutes from the World Trade Towers in Manhattan. We saw the news the day before — an airplane had hit one of the buildings. What happened?...

Stacey Newman, a former Missouri state legislator, is the executive director of ProgressWomen, a statewide social justice group focused on justice and equality issues. 

Lack of action on gun violence hurts the most vulnerable

Stacey NewmanPublished February 6, 2020

The astronomical number of people harmed by guns last year — children, domestic violence and suicide victims — had me expecting that someone in charge might want to “do something” about it. In a six month span last year, more than nine...

Diplomat Carl Lutz, who worked in St. Louis in from 1933-1934, would later save thousands of Jews during the Holocaust.  

Holocaust hero had early roots in St. Louis

By Amy LutzPublished January 30, 2020

On March 18, 1934, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch ran a short announcement entitled, “Chancellor of Swiss Consulate to Wed.” The chancellor, Carl Lutz, was engaged to another Swiss immigrant, Gertrude “Trudi” Fankhauser, and the two returned to Switzerland...

 

Even though anti-Semitism is rising, we can still appreciate how far the acceptance of Jews has come in America

By Rabbi Levi ShemtovPublished January 30, 2020

WASHINGTON — Early Friday afternoon, I received a call inviting me to the White House to participate in a same-day signing ceremony for legislation authorizing $375 million in Homeland Security grants to help protect synagogues, churches, mosques and...

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