Live @ Drisha: Chanuka

Informações:

Sinopsis

These podcasts were recorded live at Drisha in classes on the topic of Chanuka.Visit our website for more information: www.drisha.org

Episodios

  • Devora Steinmetz on Darkness Envelops Me

    17/01/2017 Duración: 01h07min

    The Talmud tells about the origins of Chanuka in a way that closely parallels a talmudic legend about Adam’s first encounter with darkness. As Chanuka begins, we will study these talmudic texts to illuminate our own encounter with the darkness and with the holiday of Chanuka.

  • David Silber on Chanuak and Sukkot

    17/01/2017 Duración: 01h01min

    We will conduct a detailed analysis of the significance of the commonalities the festivals of Chanuka and Sukkot.

  • Malka Simkovich on What Did Chanuka Stand For in Ancient Times?

    17/01/2017 Duración: 01h15min

    We will explore the earliest sources that retold the dramatic story of Chanuka, and will consider how ancient retellings of Chanuka changed over time – and why.

  • Malka Simkovich on The Jews of Diaspora in the Hasmonean Period

    17/01/2017 Duración: 02h07min

    When the Hasmoneans ruled Judea in the second and first centuries BCE, hundreds of thousands of pious Jews were comfortably settled in Egypt – with no plans to return to their homeland. We will discuss what these Jews practiced, how they related to the land of Israel and the Jerusalem Temple, and what it meant to assimilate into the Greco-Roman world and still identify as a Jew.

  • Aaron Koller on Maccabees and Martyrdom

    17/01/2017 Duración: 02h01min

    Dying for a cause is considered by many the most noble form of death, and dying for one’s faith has a long and complicated history. The first Jewish martyrdom stories are from the books of Maccabees, and we will look at how this idea is used in that context, and then how it evolved and developed over the following centuries, in early Christianity and into rabbinic Judaism.

  • David Silber on Purim and Chanuka: Text and Temple

    17/01/2017 Duración: 02h01min

    The observance of Purim centers around the Megillah, which becomes part of the canon. Chanuka, by contrast, focuses on the lighting of the candles, a Temple ritual. We will discuss the implications of each.

  • David Silber on Purim and Chanuka: Megillah and Hallel

    17/01/2017 Duración: 02h11min

    A central observance of Chanuka is the recitation of Hallel on all eight days; on Purim Hallel is not recited. We will study the significance of this distinction.

  • Miriam Gedwiser on “It is forbidden to light with an old candle” – Chanuka and the Oral Torah

    17/01/2017 Duración: 01h44min

    What does it mean for Chanuka to be the only major holiday invented in the post-biblical era? Through hassidic sources, we will explore Chanuka’s message regarding novelty and creativity in our Torah and in our lives.

  • Menachem Leibtag on Guiding Lights: Illuminating the Distinctions of the Chanukia and the Menorah

    03/12/2015 Duración: 01h08min

    Does the ‘chanukia’ simply model the Menorah of the Mishkan -with an extra candle? Our session will begin by comparing the ‘Menorah’ to the other vessels of the Mishkan, in an attempt to ​better understand what it symbolizes. Afterward, we will turn to the prophet Chagai and the book of Macabees to appreciate why the Menorah became the national symbol of the Second Temple period – which will shed light on our Rabbinic tradition of lighting a ‘chanukia’ on Chanuka.