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Tammuz: Lesson of Reuben

July 12, 2011 by Patrick Beaulier

Tammuz began at sundown on July 2, 2011 and ends sundown on July 31, 2011.

Reuben (רְאוּבֵן) is the first born of Jacob and Leah is the tribe associated with the month of Tammuz (תָּמוּז).  His name, Reuben is directly related to the sense of sight, which is considered to be the sense of the month of Tammuz.   When Reuben was born, Leah exclaimed, “Because the LORD hath looked (רָאָה) upon my affliction; for now my husband will love me.” (Gen 29:32)

Reuben has three very stand-out memorable moments in the Torah.  Possibly more, but three that jump right to mind for me.  First, is the the scene with mandrakes in Gen 30 where Rachel begs Leah to give her the mandrakes (דוּדָאִים) Reuben has harvested, with this Leah “buys” another night with Jacob and conceives Issachar.  The second is Reuben’s role in the story of Joseph, where in Genesis 37 he suggests the brothers shouldn’t kill Joseph — just throw him into a pit and say he died.  Finally, Rebuen seems to have had an affair with Bilhah, one of his father’s wives.  Needless to say this doesn’t go over so well with Jacob.

The question of Reuben is “what do you see.”  When you look, do you see?  I think Reuben, who was the oldest, but is not then or historically the leader of the tribes had a failure of vision.  It got me thinking about the concept of “perceptual blindness.”  I had just heard a story about a police officer who ran right past someone being beaten and claimed he didn’t see it.

When you look, do you truly see?  Do you understand what biases you have that filter your perceptions?  Do you know what’s distracting you and causing you to miss things you don’t realize?  So many of our relationships are based on what we perceive, so when we miss subtle — or unsubtle — clues to what is really happening our relationships can change and it seems shocking.  I think this is really the story of Reuben returning to the pit and finding Joseph gone (Gen 37:20-30).  He only saw what he wanted to when he suggested, “let’s throw him in the pit.”

As the summer heats up, be sure you don’t let the heat cloud your vision.

The Rosh Chodesh calendar is a project of Ketzirah at PeelAPom. 

Filed Under: Community Member Blogs, Judaism & Belief Tagged With: convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darshan yeshiva, ketzirah, kohenet, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, peelapom, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, reuben, rosh chodesh, tammuz

Kosher Reuben

March 24, 2011 by newkosher

The first time I had a kosher reuben was in Asheville, NC. A hippie haven that has a considerable Jewish population (despite being in North Carolina), veggie and vegan alternatives abound. This version has three key parts: the meat substitute, the vegan cheese and the vegan variation on Russian dressing. You can make this as a sandwich, or layer together in a baking dish for a German Jewish casserole.

 

4 Slices Tempeh

2 Slices Vegan Swiss/White Cheese (Or Daiya Cheese Shreds)

3 Slices Rye Bread

4 TBSP. Sauerkraut

Spray Oil

2 Large Sandwich Toothpicks

 

For Russian Dressing

 

1 TBSP Vegan Mayo

1 TBSP Ketchup

1/2 TBSP Minced Bread and Butter Pickles (Or Relish)

1 Pinch Paprika, Onion Powder, Salt and Pepper

 

Mix together in a small bowl.

 

Fry tempeh according to directions. While tempeh is still hot, assemble one piece of bread with a slice of cheese, two pieces of fried tempeh and two TBSP sauerkraut. Add the middle piece of bread. Layer with remaining cheese, tempeh, sauerkraut and top with last piece of bread. Hold together with toothpicks.

 

Spray pan with a light amount of oil. Grill for a minute and a half, then carefully turn over and grill the other side. Serve with a side of Russian dressing. You can also layer the sandwich with dressing before grilling.

Patrick Aleph

Filed Under: NewKosher (Recipes) Tagged With: convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darshan yeshiva, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, reuben, Russian Dressing, Rye Bread, Sandwich, Sauerkraut, Tempeh, vegan

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