Community
Conjoining MLK & Inauguration Day: Re-birthing King, Re-birthing America, Jan. 19-20, 2009
Addressing global militarism & world empire | Environmental Justice | Interreligious Relations | Justice and Race | Seasons of American Sacred Time(Rabbi Arthur Waskow for The Tent of Abraham, Hagar, & Sarah)
On Tuesday, January 20, 2009, a new President will be inaugurated and begin to work with a new Congress. The day before, Monday January 19, is Martin Luther King's Birthday.
The Olive Branch Interfaith Peace Partnership and The Tent of Abraham, Hagar, and Sarah have undertaken to initiate an effort to make this extraordinary confluence of dates into a moment of transformation.
We propose that on January 19-20, religious and ethical communities and congregations around the country take part in public actions intended to point America toward fulfilling Dr. King’s vision.
A Call for Religious Dialogue -- Madrid
Interreligious RelationsCustodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Abdullah Bin Abdul Al-Aziz Al Saud of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
At the inauguration ceremony of the World Conference on Dialogue in Madrid-- Spain.
13/7/1429 (Since the Hegira); 16/7/2008 (of the common era)
In the name of God, most merciful, most compassionate
Praise be to God Almighty, who revealed in his holy book: "O mankind! We have created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other\ Verily the most honored of you in the sight of Allah is (he who is) the most righteous of you."
Meeting in Madrid with Muslims -- & many others!
Interreligious RelationsA Report by Rabbi Arthur Waskow and Rabbi Phyllis Berman *
July 18, 2009
The Madrid Global Interfaith Dialogue:
Dear Friends,
The two of us took part in a three-day Global Interfaith Conference initiated by the King of Saudi Arabia and sponsored by the World Muslim League.
Far beyond the frou-frou of shaking hands with two kings in a Spanish royal palace – Abdullah of Arabia and Juan Carlos of Spain, who acted as host -- the gathering is itself an important breakthrough in this work, a clarification of how far there is yet to go, and a signal that even within the conference itself, the organizers were willing to begin correcting some shortcomings when the participants pointed them out.
Toward a Jubilee Economy & Ecology in the Modern World
32. BEHAR | Earth | Environmental Justice | Freeing Our Time | Globalization and Economic Justice | Spirituality of JusticeBy Rabbi Arthur Waskow
[This essay is a chapter in Rabbi Waskow's book Godwrestling -- Round 2 (Jewish Lights, 1996). The book is available as a free gift from The Shalom Center, personally inscribed by Rabbi Waskow as you choose, if you use the Donate Now button on the right to make a tax-deductible contribution of $180 or more.
[At the end of this essay you will find citations on teachings from the Hebrew Bible & related materials toward a Jubilee Economics and Ecologics.]::
One lesson that we have discerned from studying the story of the Flood [see a previous chapter from Godwrestling -- Round 2] is that it is profoundly necessary for us to affirm and celebrate the cycles of life if we wish to preserve the cycles of life. Are those cycles now in danger? And if so, how can we affirm them?
The Spirituality of the Future by Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi
Addressing global militarism & world empire | Earth | The Nature of Torah | What is Jewish Renewal?Toward a New and Kerygmatic Credo
Zalman M. Schachter Shalomi
Chair of World Wisdom;
The Naropa Institute
Boulder CO.
This essay is a plea for research into the spirituality of the future and invitation for collaboration to bring this about.
Much of my perspective is based on my devotion to the Ribbono shel Olam, the divine Life-Spirit of Gaia. I come from a deeply spiritual Jewish formation in which the values of Tikkun Olam (Healing the planet) and the biblical command of Bal Tash’hit (not to destroy any natural resources) are an essential and constant feature.
In some ways I am on one foot, one of the last Mohicans of pre-holocaust Jewish mysticism and on the other foot I stand on concern with our future. Not only the future of our Jewish people and the continuity of its tradition and lineage but with the global future, our survival as humans on their way to the Great and divinizing metamorphosis.
YOM HASHOAH: MOURNERS' KADDISH IN TIME OF WAR AND VIOLENCE
Darfur | Interreligious Relations | War, Peace, & the Jewish Community | Festival Spiral | Death and MourningMay 1, 2008 is Yom HaShoah (the Day of Remembrance of the Nazi Holocaust), observed one day earlier in the Jewish calendar than usual, because of not wanting to observe it on Friday as Shabbat is coming into the world.
It seems especially fitting to use as the Mourners Kaddish for today a rendition in Aramaic, Hebrew, and English of the MOURNERS' KADDISH IN TIME OF WAR AND VIOLENCE that we at The Shalom Center have developed.(See three paragraphs below). Though it is of course a Jewish prayer, we offer the interpretive English translation below, in the hope it may be spiritually helpful for many people of many other traditions as well.
PURIM, GOOD FRIDAY, & 40 YEARS ABIRTHING: FROM DISASTER TO DELIGHT
Interreligious Relations | Purim | What is Jewish Renewal?By Rabbi Arthur Waskow
Today (March 21, 2008) is a strange day in the dance of sun, moon, and earth that make up the Christian and Jewish calendars.
For Christians, it is Good Friday -- the remembrance of how the Roman Empire tortured to death a great and troublesome Rabbi, and the foreshadowing of how just three days later the Rabbi was reborn into life, and there began the process by which he came to be understood as God's Own Self.
For Jews, it is Purim -- a festival of pun and paradox, in which the central text is a parody of history, telling the story of how a courageous woman and her uncle chose civil disobedience to save their people from a genocide - and won. How a pompous, stupid king is bamboozled by an ambitious, arrogant , and genocidal Prime Minister -- one might almost say, Vice-President. How everything is turned topsy-turvy, so that the gallows where a Jewish leader was to be hanged becomes the death-place of their tormentor. How God never appears in this story that might seem miraculous.
Jeremiahs Old & New: Wright & "wrong"
25. TZAV | Interreligious Relations | Spirituality of Justice | The Nature of Torah | What is Jewish Renewal?By Rabbi Arthur Waskow
When you live in a country that for a week has been transfixed by the furious denunciations of America by Pastor Jeremiah Wright and furious denunciations of Pastor Jeremiah by much of America --
-- it is startling to read the original Jeremiah -- especially when his own furious denunciations of his own country are emblazoned for the special sacred Prophetic reading the same week.
(In Jewish tradition, on each Shabbat is read a portion of the Torah [the "Five Books of Moses"] and a Prophetic passage chosen long ago by the rabbis to underline or sometimes confront the message of the Torah portion.)
Obama, Romney, Bigotry, & Slander
Interreligious Relations | What Is Anti-Semitism?By Rabbi Arthur Waskow,
Director of The Shalom Center
The Shalom Center by law may not, and doesn't, choose between candidates in an election. But there is no legal, ethical, or moral bar to our denouncing the use of religious slurs and slanders when they are used against any candidate. Or more than one, as is the case right now in American politics.
Indeed, we are morally REQUIRED to condemn such slanders. And so are all of us. To say it NOW, before slander casts its vote against decency and ALL America loses the Presidential election.
During the present Presidential campaign, slurs against the religious beliefs of at least two candidates -- Barack Obama and Mitt Romney -- became widespread.
Rumors & Slanders about Obama
Interreligious Relations | What Is Anti-Semitism?DO WE HAVE CLEAN HANDS?
By Dan Shallman
** The Obama slurs and the 'empathy deficit' **
Los Angeles Jewish Journal
February 1, 2008
Last Sunday, to mark the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., Senator
Barack Obama delivered a courageous sermon at King's Ebenezer Baptist
Church in Atlanta.
Notably, after recalling our country's dismal treatment of
African-Americans throughout much of our history, Obama challenged his own
community to acknowledge the intolerance and anti-Semitism in its midst.
In so doing, he has challenged all of us -- Jews included -- to look deep
inside our own hearts and minds to break down the barriers that divide


