B"H

Introducing PunkTorah Radio!

We are excited to announce the launching of PunkTorah Radio, our new radio station through 8tracks.com. You can find us on 8tracks at 8tracks.com/punktorah. Here, every mix we publish on PunkTorah Radio can be accessed, not just the mix you find on the PunkTorah homepage.

Our station will promote music from Jewish artists all over the spectrum: rock, pop, indie, commercial– with or without Jewish subject matter.

This week’s 15-track mix features music from JDub artists Girls in Trouble, DeLeon, CAN!!CAN, Sagol 59, and The Sway Machinery. Other artists/bands include Matisyahu, Mirah, Rilo Kiley, Animal Collective, and more.

Do you make music? Are you in a band? If so, send it our way and we’ll review it to be added to the station. Have any ideas or suggestions of artists or songs for us to include? Let us know! Have questions about the radio or 8tracks.com? Send your mp3s, suggestions and inquiries to ashton@punktorah.org.

PunkTorah Radio is funded by generous donations. Support us by donating at punktorah.org/donations.

 

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A Number of Numbers (Parshat Bamidbar)

Parshat Bamidbar is the beginning of the Book of Numbers, or as I like to call it, “the last Torah portion anyone bothers to read”.

The Torah is painfully redundant and boring at times. That’s why we at PunkTorah have searched low and high for the best Bamidbar videos we could find to inspire you to look past some of the Torah’s less exciting parts and trudge through it…

G-dCast

PunkTorah (last year)

Rabbi Johnathan Ginsburg (famous Jewish blogger)


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PunkTorah Coming To Colorado, Los Angeles, Virginia, Minneapolis and more

The G-d Project is taking over America this summer with tapings in Denver/Boulder, Los Angeles, Richmond/Fredricksburg, Minneapolis and more to come.

Our current calendar…

June 19 – June 21st
Denver/Boulder including a visit with Rabbi Zalman Shachter Shalomi

June 26 – 30th
Fredricksburg/Richmond, Virginia

July 29th
Minneapolis, MN with Congregation Shir Tikvah

August 7 – 11th
Los Angeles, Long Beach, Tustin and more of California with YentaPunker

For more information and to set up your own taping, email patrick@punktorah.org

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Help NewKosher Create a Wine and Cheese Party Menu!

We’re working on a wine and cheese party menu and we want to know what’s most important to our NewKosher readers!

When buying wine, how important is hechsher?



View Results

When buying cheese, how important is hechsher?




View Results

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PunkTorah Will Publish Your Book

PunkTorah, the Jewish non-profit that brought you the OneShul Community Siddur, Birkat Hamazon: A Community Bencher, Kosher Cocktail Party and The NewKosher Cookbook will be launching a new series of books this August.

And we need you to write them!

So if you’d like PunkTorah to publish your book in one of our digital or print outlets, please send it to us.

Our submission guidelines are pretty simple:

  • Non-fiction submissions must be related to independent Jewish spirituality, culture or learning.
  • Fiction submissions must have Jewish characters or in some way speak to the Jewish experience. Please note that fiction is not one of our top areas of interest, but we are still open minded.
  • We are currently not interested in children’s “picture books” or works which require a lot of illustration (such as art books, zines, etc.)
  • Submissions must be original and not have been published before or released anywhere including online or as a blog series
  • Please, no literary agents. This is DIY, kids.

Before submitting your manuscript, please do the following:

  • Familiarize yourself with PunkTorah, the projects we do and the types of books we have published. When proposing a book, please consider whether it is a good fit for us. I’m sure your book on the history of cheese problems is great, but we’re not the right people for it.
  • Send an email to Ashton@PunkTorah.org with a short “cover letter” describing the work, an outline of the book and some info about who you are and why you think we’re the right people to put out this book

After we read your email, we will decide if we think the book is right for us and ask you to send us the manuscript. If you have any questions, please email us at Ashton@PunkTorah.org

In receiving a submission, we do not assume any duty not to publish a book based on a similar idea, concept or story. We will not consider manuscripts that are currently on submission to another publisher.

We receive a ton of emails every day. If we don’t respond immediately, please don’t email us over and over again. We promise we have it and we are reading it. We’ll get back to you in no more than three to four weeks.

Looking forward to reading your stuff!

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NewKosher Goes Live…Again!

We’re thrilled to announce that NewKosher is back and better than ever! With a new mission statement, new volunteer director and new, delicious recipes, NewKosher is not your bubbie’s Jewish food website.

NewKosher is all about making delicious food for you, your friends and your family. We fully back the idea that anything can be kosher if you put the thought and creativity into it! We offer many vegetarian, vegan and healthy options.

At NewKosher we promise:

  • All of our recipes are pork, shellfish and other non-kosher animal free
  • No recipes or menus will mix meat and milk
  • All of our recipes are tried and tested
  • That when the ingredients of certain products (fish sauce, baked beans, etc.) are potentially not kosher, we will suggest a known kosher-certified brand.
  • To post any and every (kosher) recipe you send in!

We have two different parts of the website. The first is full menus for events, parties and everyday meals. The second is our Recipe Box, which is an archive of all the recipes on NewKosher. We have different bloggers who contribute to NewKosher on a regular basis and we also encourage you to submit your own recipes and menus. We provide recipe cards for all set menus and also include a printable shopping list.

Additionally, we feature Jewish parties and events. Do you and your friends throw amazing Shabbat dinner parties? Let us know! Do you and your parents make a special meal for a certain holiday? Send it in! Throwing a party for a holiday, bridal shower or birthday? Check out NewKosher for special menus, party themes, and custom invitations. For more information, click on the Host a Party tab.

We hope you use NewKosher as the resource for all your kosher cooking!

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Robo-Goys, Kosher Phones and Other Jewish Technological Innovations

People don’t like to think very far into the future. I understand that: I can barely think about next week, let alone a decade from now.

But if the Tribe is going to survive, we need to learn to adapt. Judaism came from a pre-modern era. Now, more than ever, we need to find creative ways to use technology to bring the Tribe into the 21st Century…kicking and screaming if we have to.

So here are five technological innovations, which I feel will greatly improve Jewish life and further the Jewish People.

Twitter Minyans: It makes no sense to me that technology and prayer have not been fused together. Most of the prayers are short enough that they will work in Twitter, and we can shorten the other ones to fit in the 150 character box.

Digital Shabbos Candles: There’s nothing that requires a Shabbos candle be a physical candle (haters beware, I did look in Code of Jewish Law for this), so we can assume that a candle screen saver would work just as well for Friday night. If you want something a little more low-tech, a simple flashlight would work just as well. But remember that if you do that, you have to let the battery run out, as switching the light off is “work.”

Robot Shabbos Goys: Need a Shabbos goy but don’t want to bother the nice Christian family next door? In the future, we’ll have robots to do that for us. Even today, modern conveniences like the Roomba by iRobot take away any pressure to work on Shabbat.

Kosher iPhone: The future is here and it’s called the iPhone. iBlessing and ParveOMeter are two amazing iPhone/iTouch apps to appease the yiddishkeit desire to introduce efficiency into the Jewish lifestyle. Future apps that I would like to see include the Modeh Ani alarm clock and a call-your-mother app that sends pre-recorded voicemails to your mom, letting her know you haven’t dropped out of med school (yet)!

Insta-Conversion: Utilizing the power of the Internet, we can completely re-think how new Jews are brought into the Tribe. The general requirements are a pre-interview, some kind of Judaism 101 class, Bet Din, bris, mikvah and a public ceremony. If we break this down, we find that most of this can be done quickly and efficiently, utilizing e-technology. Pre-conversion interviews between rabbi and convert can easily be done via IM or Skype. Classes can be modeled after distance learning with e-books to read and online exams. The Bet Din can be turned into a teleconference, or again, another Skype adventure. The bris (for men) and mikvah would need to be in person, but as far as I’m concerned a public ceremony could be a mass update on your Facebook/Myspace/Twitter. We could also use webcams to broadcast this event.

Stay tuned; I am sure I’ll come up with more.

Originally posted on Jewcy.com and photo stolen from Scienceandhalacha.org

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Meditation on the Omer

49, 48, 47…

The opening moments of Passover are behind me, and I’m left with a sense of something momentous having passed with it. There’s a dryness in my mouth and heaviness in my gut that has nothing to do with the matza I’ve consumed.

…46, 45, 44…

I’ve traveled out of Mitzrayim (“the narrow place”, the place which may once have been big enough for me, but which became constricting); I’ve run pell-mell through the gauntlet of nature’s forces, chased by the demons of my past to emerge out into vast unknown desert where I apparently must wander. Without a guide, I will easily lose my way.

…43, 42, 41, 40, 39…

Each day, each step, is a single drum beat, counting out a steady rhythm of moments. The days of the Omer, marking time from Pesach to Shavuot, also note the potential for the transformation of the rough, low-quality barley of my soul into a pure, humble, chometz-free offering.

…38, 37, 36…

Where will these days take me? I feel like I need to have a plan, even as I know that anything I expect to happen most likely won’t. But without a goal, what would keep me moving at all?

…35, 34, 33…

Do I know where I want to be? Is it even possible for me to imagine how this geography and community will shape me? What opportunities will be presented to me? Which ones I’ll be brave enough to take advantage of? Who, of those around me will be persistent enough to overcome my fear and doubt?

…32, 31,…

Still…
Even if, 49 days from now, I look back and say “I had no idea I’d end up here”, I still must start the process, if I expect to get anywhere.

…30, 29, 28, 27…

Originally posted here.

 

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Submit Your Ideas For PunkTorah Projects…And We’ll Actually Do Them!

I want an online rabbinical school…

When are we going to have a PunkTorah convention…

I want you to build a OneShul synagogue in my basement…

Everyone has dreams for PunkTorah. That’s how we created OneShul, 3xDaily and The G-d Project.

On Thursday, May 12th, PunkTorah will have its one year board meeting where we will discuss the future of Punktorah. This includes all the programs, websites, fundraisers and other projects we will do for the next year…and our plans for the next five years.

Submit what you want PunkTorah to do from now through next April, and we’ll make it happen! Not sure what to say? Here’s a few questions to start you off…

What is your idea for a PunkTorah project?

How much do you think this would cost to do? How long would it take?

Are you willing to volunteer your time and/or fundraise to make this happen?

ALL THE IDEAS EMAILED TO US WILL BE PRESENTED AT OUR 2011 BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING.

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Complex Cycles of Holidays and Traditions (Parshat Emor)

This week’s Parsha is Emor: “Speak”. The first part of the Parsha speaks of the many laws pertaining to the Kohenim (Priest) and the Kohen Gadol (High Priest). The second part of Emor talks about the “Appointed holy days” AKA: Our holidays.

It seems that complex laws and customs are a theme in Judaism. In this particular Parsha we learn the times of the year, what sacrifices go with what holiday, what time of day, when to work, when not to work, when to eat and when to fast. All and all it is very detailed and– Let’s face it– Odd.

As I said before, complexities seem to be a reoccurring theme. We wear strange, round hats, wash our hands with weird, two handled cups and have strings hanging out from under our shirts. We are a nation “Set Apart”.

The bottom line question is: Why?

Our laws and customs are the glue that binds us together. They keep us unified even in our dispersion. Whereas many cultures have been swallowed up—Assimilated by their surroundings. Our “odd Traditions” have kept us, the Jewish people, unified and “Set Apart”. No matter where you go, all over the world, wherever the Jewish People are we are joined together. Although we may speak different languages, we might dress differently and for all intents and purposes BE different at first glance, we all share the “Yiddish Neshama”: The Jewish Soul. It is our traditions, those funny little things we do, that sustain and keep our unified soul alive and thriving.

So next time you are getting your Tefillen all tied up in knots or falling asleep at the Passover Seder, instead of thinking of them as complex and confusing, take a simpler look at it: By continuing the traditions of our forefathers we are immortalizing our people and keeping our faith— Our heritage, alive from Generation to Generation.

This week’s d’var written by Ian Cauthen.

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