Minutes of the First Meeting of the Friends of Jewish History last night!

Minutes of the Friends of Jewish History Meeting (10/13/16)

1) We’ll try to post videos of the Monday night lectures by Tuesday Afternoon

2) We hope to run live q&a sessions on Thursdays at 7PM EST

3) Printing some Jewish History @ J bookmarks/fridge magnets for Friends and attendees

4) Looking to hire an Intern in Jewish History to help with the setup of the room, greeting attendees, perhaps some follow-up online.

5) Experimenting with the idea of webcasting the lectures themselves.

6) First lecture is sponsored, looking for sponsors for the other lectures.

Looking forward to the start of the semester on October 31!

https://www.crowdrise.com/friends-of-jewish-history/fundraiser/avenuej

“Who Was Vladimir Jabotinsky?” Sponsored by Norman and Bridgette Robinson!

“Who Was Vladimir Jabotinsky?” is sponsored by Norman and Bridgette Robinson in memory of Leona Robinson of blessed memory. In the words of her son, she was “an avid reader who loved history” who would have enjoyed this lecture.

Thank to the Robinsons for becoming the first members of the Friends of Jewish History! Their generosity will help fund a student internship in Jewish History at the mighty Avenue J campus.

Would you like to sponsor a lecture this semester in memory of a loved one or in honor of a family member, friend or colleague? Please visit the Crowdrise website below for details.

https://www.crowdrise.com/friends-of-jewish-histo…/…/avenuej

Paid Internship in Jewish History

Paid Jewish Internship in Jewish History for qualified Avenue J student! Hard work, long hours, meager compensation. Chance at everlasting fame and glory, promoting the study of Jewish history. Must be organized, diligent, and personable. Will train. Contact me directly at abramson@touro.edu.

First Meeting of the Friends of Jewish History!

First meeting of the Friends of Jewish History! New Friends welcome! Agenda: exciting plans for the Fall 2016 lectures.

Thursday, October 13, 7:00-7:30 pm EST.
Web login:
https://zoom.us/j/7186385458?pwd=v4EFhXcDlhAJZNeQOp%2FfXA%3D%3D
Password: geshikhte

Telephone call-in:
Dial: +1 408 638 0968 (US Toll) or +1 646 558 8656 (US Toll)
Meeting ID: 718 638 5458
International numbers available: https://zoom.us/zoomconference?m=30Usrg3JHXCdvXk7rk3huvZeSoE2JRQ9

Join the Friends of Jewish History

Hello fans of Jewish History!

We have some very exciting plans developing for the Fall 2016 lecture series. I’m thinking about organizing a live webcast, live Q&A sessions, and a few other really cool things. We are thinking about how we can bring the lectures to a new level of technical quality, and that’s where you come in–as a potential member of the FRIENDS OF JEWISH HISTORY!

We are completely committed to providing these lectures free of charge to a live audience in Brooklyn, and then to the global audience through the Internet. The stats are really impressive, I think–about 10,000 followers on various social media, with 1,200 watching daily on YouTube alone! Thank you.

We are also totally committed to raising funds to support undergraduate students with the Jewish History @ Avenue J Scholarship Fund, which raised over $2,000 last semester without really trying.

Still, we really want to improve the technical quality of the lectures, so I’ve started the Friends of Jewish History.

Would you like to join with me to take this Jewish History project to the next level? Here’s a few suggestions:

  1. Like, share, and comment on the lectures! Free, meaningful, and much appreciated.
  2. If you’re near Brooklyn or one of the cities I occasionally lecture in, please attend a lecture and say hello! (see https://jewishhistorylectures.org/upcoming-public-lectures/ for the current schedule).
  3. Consider donating to the Jewish History @ Avenue J Scholarship Fund (https://www.crowdrise.com/avenuejawesomestudentscholarshipfund/fundraiser/avenuej). Funds donated to this charitable cause go directly to fund scholarships for my undergraduate students in Jewish history.
  4. Consider joining the Friends of Jewish History by sponsoring an upcoming Jewish History lecture. Unlike the Scholarship Fund, which goes directly to supporting students, donations to the Friends of Jewish History fund go to improving the quality of the lectures themselves.(Note to current undergraduate students: I appreciate your enthusiasm, but please don’t use this option. The lecture series is designed to support you, not the other way around.)

We’ve got a whole pile of ideas to improve the technical quality of the lectures with better lighting, cameras and audio, and I would really love to have someone professionally edit the videos. I’d also like to use some of the funds to hire more students to help with the filming, setting up the auditorium space, and things like that.

Sponsoring a lecture is $250, for which we will happily provide you with the following privileges and benefits:

  1. Membership in the Friends of Jewish History.
  2. Free gifts (like maybe fridge magnets with dates of lectures) whenever we make them.
  3. Thank-you message at the beginning of the lecture you sponsored, mentioned live and in the opening credits of the video. Honor a loved one!
  4. Special invitations to live webcasts and Q&A sessions.
  5. Other cool things we haven’t thought of yet.

How does that sound? Nice? Okay, maybe you’d like to choose a lecture to sponsor? Here’s what we are planning for Fall 2016:

  1. October 31: Who Was Vladimir Jabotinsky?
  2. November 7: Who Was Rabbi Avraham Isaac Kook?
  3. November 21: Who Was Emma Goldman?
  4. November 28: Who Was Franz Kafka?
  5. December 5: Who Was Janusz Korczak?
  6. December 12: Who Was the Chazon Ish?
  7. December 19: Who Was Elie Wiesel?

Okay, I guess that’s that. We have some really exciting plans–did you notice the live webcasts and Q&A sessions?–but we’ll need some resources to put these ideas into effect. Please consider supporting us!

You might also want to forward this post, or just this link: https://www.crowdrise.com/friends-of-jewish-history/fundraiser/avenuej

Thanks very much, and looking forward to seeing you at the lectures starting October 31!

HMA

 

Take 5 With Dean Abramson

abramson-headshot-new

Hey, here’s a nice article that Elisheva Schlam put on the Touro College website. They even splurged for a new headshot (above).  I like it, but it makes me look about ten years older than the last one we took, about a decade ago.  View the article in its original context, or read below.

1. Can you tell me about your background and education?

Growing up in a small town in Ontario, Canada, we were the only Jewish family. But my parents thought a Jewish education was very important, so at great personal sacrifice, they sent me to Yeshiva Eitz Chaim. Their dedication continues to be an inspiration.

I went on to study philosophy at the University of Toronto and Hebrew University. And what did I do after graduation? I became a professional ski instructor. When I met my wife—who was also a ski instructor—I realized I had to go back to school and get serious about my career. This time I studied history (at the time, I thought historians made more money than philosophers because they all wore suits and ties). I earned my Ph.D. in history from the University of Toronto. My dissertation was on the Jews of Ukraine. I continued my education with various post-doctoral and research fellowships at Cornell, Harvard, and Oxford Universities. Before joining Touro, I was a tenured Associate Professor of History and University Scholar of Judaica at Florida Atlantic University of Boca Raton.

2. Was there a seminal moment you can point to where you knew academia was the career you wanted to pursue? What do you like most about working at a college?

Yes. Everything changed when one of my professors gave me the typewriter upon which he wrote his most famous books (students, a typewriter is kind of like a machine that does Microsoft Word  with no “delete” key). Working with enthusiastic, intelligent young people in the world of ideas is pretty much a dream occupation. I can’t imagine anything better. The administrative aspect of the Dean’s office is also thrilling because it allows me to build.

3. What accomplishments are you most proud of at Touro? What’s next for LAS?

I am pleased to see an increase in enrollment and increased student participation in the career fair. We have developed a Flatbush Honors program for students who have demonstrated academic excellence. Our Honors students are looking to make a contribution to the world and leave their mark on it. An adult education program for the community was also successfully introduced this year.

4. What advice do you give students?

If it’s about choosing a major for a future career, I usually caution students to balance two factors: remuneration and fun. Having a high-paying job that you hate is a terrible fate, while finding a career you love can be debilitating if it doesn’t pay the rent.  Students have to strike a fine balance between money and job satisfaction.

5. What do you do in your spare time? What are your passions?

What is “spare time?” Before moving to New York I trained in Mixed Martial Arts, earning a high brown belt in Hisardut, which is a style of Israeli Krav Maga. I’m very interested in online education, and have a YouTube channelthat features Jewish history lectures (right now it has almost 6,000 subscribers, and the lectures are viewed by more than 1,200 people every day). My current research interests are in the Holocaust writings of the Piaseczno Rebbe, and I hope to have a monograph on that subject completed by the end of the year.

 

Haunting Images by Rebecca Odessa now On Kabbalah of Forgiveness Website

I am grateful to Rebecca Odessa, an exceptionally talented artist, who recently created thirteen startling and powerful illustrations of the Thirteen Levels of Mercy as described in Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s Date Palm of Devorah.  I am so pleased that my translation and commentary, entitled The Kabbalah of Forgivenesshelped her clarify her vision and translate it into these thought-provoking pieces.

Rebecca recently published these works under the title “The Kabbalah of Forgiveness: An Artistic Journey.” Thank you to The Wisdom Daily for allowing them to be reproduced on my website, where they now grace each page of the Thirteen Levels, alongside the Hebrew original, my English translation and a short video describing the contents of Date Palm of Devorah. A lengthier commentary and practical applications is in The Kabbalah of Forgiveness, available in both print form and as an ebook.

Thank you Rebecca and The Wisdom Daily! Your work has added another dimension to the spiritual legacy of Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s classic Date Palm of Devorah.

Rebecca Odessa on the Kabbalah of Forgiveness

Okay, if you enjoyed my translation and commentary of Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s Tomer Devorah, you have got to check out Rebecca Odessa’s amazing 13-part series cataloging the Thirteen Levels of Mercy! Truly phenomenal.  
http://thewisdomdaily.com/kabbalah-forgiveness-artistic-journey/

What are you reading this Rosh Hashanah?

Maybe this you’ll like?

Version 2

Maimonides on Teshuvah: The Ways of Repentance

Click here for the first chapter and some cool videos on the book.

Here’s another book that’s super-appropriate for the High Holidays.  Excellent personal reading, and if someone is really angry with you, makes a great gift! (I have given it to several of my family members. Repeatedly.)

kof-cover-dma_fotor

The Kabbalah of Forgiveness: The Thirteen Levels of Mercy in Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s Date Palm of Devorah (Tomer Devorah)

Click here for the eBook

Click here for a bunch of cool things, including videos for each of the 13 Levels

Hope you enjoy these books, and may you have a New Year full of blessings!

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