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Freedom journeys book cover 

TO ORDER, CLICK HERE: Freedom Journeys: The Tale of Exodus and Wilderness across Millenia
  by Rabbi Arthur Waskow and Rabbi Phyllis Berman.

All those people in our headline, plus more —  Rev. Bob Edgar, head of Common Cause; Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of Tikkun; Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi; Rev. Michael Kinnamon, head of the National Council of Churches;  Laleh Bakhtiar,  first woman translator of the Qur’an; and many more who have seen advance galleys of Freedom Journeys — now published in March 2011 by Jewish Lights Publishing of Woodstock VT — say it is terrific! Now you can explore for yourself these creative ideas both about how to read anew and reinterpret the ancient text, and how to apply its profound lessons in our own world crisis.

  • Below is advance praise by an amazing array of leaders in many different communities. One example: “It was the Exodus story that undergirded the civil rights movement; but as Arthur Waskow and Phyllis Berman demonstrate in this fascinating book, even Martin Luther King didn’t plumb the entire story, which we need now more than ever.”  —Bill McKibben, author, Eaarth; founder, 350.org

 We invite you to order a copy from The Shalom Center’s  Shouk Shalom

by clicking here

or  — if you make a tax-deductible donation of $180 or more —

we will send you a copy personally inscribed to you by Rabbis Berman and Waskow   Read more »

Netanyahu, Obama, & the Addictions of Pharaoh

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 3/25/2010

Why choose right now to urge putting half the present US military aid to Israel in escrow, to be paid out starting after the Israeli government ends the blockade of civilian goods from entering Gaza , and to be paid for resettling settlers in decent homes and neighborhoods inside Israel proper?

The proposal also calls for strong insistence by the US for a full peace treaty between Israel and Arab states, guaranteeing Israel’s security.

(See the proposal in the “Bold Action” essay on our Home Page.)   Read more »

This week’s newspapers pose an enormous question: Can American democracy survive unregulated corporate money poured into elections? This week’s Torah points toward an answer.

Last Sunday, Part 1 of my essay on “The Meaning of the 21st Century: Domination or Community?” sketched how the war in Afghanistan, our dysfunctional health un-care system, the disemployment crisis, and the stalemate over climate all were evidence that one necessary aspect of our lives — Control — has run amok, turning into Domination and leaving the other necessary life-aspect — loving-kindness, interbeing — choking to death.

Now we have just received a stunning kick in the teeth to Community and a great victory for Domination — in the decision of the Supreme Court that corporations can pour as much money as they like into supporting the election of candidates for public office.

This enormously increases the power of our modern Pharaohs – the top-down pyramidal Global-Gobble corporations that have barely been under public control before, and now will be able to control the public in unprecedented ways.

This is not just an American issue. Big Oil and Big Coal corporations have made it extremely hard to deal with the dangers of global scorching. Now the powers of Big Coal and Big Oil have been multiplied. The web of life -– our most important community of all, in which the interplay of control-over and connectivity-with is crucial to the continuity of life — is thus endangered by increasing the power of corporations to control the climate of our planet.

The snows of the Himalayas are melting under the pressure of global scorching, and with them will disappear the future drinking water of a billion Indians and Pakistanis. Can we save them? No. For Exxon Mobil says, “No problem,” and now will be able to drown in its money any US candidate who says the burning of fossil fuels must be checked.

So the Supreme Court of the United States has just condemned a billion people to slow death by parching drought.

In last week’s Torah we read how Pharaoh let all the waters of his kingdom become undrinkable in order to pursue his despotic course against his people. Now, like Pharaoh, in stubborn arrogance, the Court has transformed itself from an instrument of Justice into a make-believe and lethal “God.” An idol.

In this week’s Torah reading, when God sends Moses to face Pharaoh, God says, “Bo el Pharaoh.” Most English translations say, “Go to Pharaoh.” But “Bo” means “come,” not “go.”

Come to Pharaoh!”

How could God be saying “Come!” unless God was already there? — already within Pharaoh!

Come toward Me.”   Read more »

[When I first began working on this essay, the word “earthquake” had not yet been swallowed up by the catastrophe in Haiti, and I could use the word to mean the combination of religious, political, sexual, ecological, and economic changes — often labeled Modernity — that have upended the kinds of societies that had shaped our world for the last two thousand years.   Read more »

"Avatar," Exodus, & Kabbalah

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 3/10/2010

The film AVATAR weaves together what we usually call the spiritual and the political. Indeed, whether its director realized it consciously or not, AVATAR echoes two major strands of religious wisdom that began in Jewish thought but have had deep influence on cultures far beyond the boundaries of Jewish peoplehood. The two strands of ancient wisdom are “archetypal” — that is, they appear over and over again in human thought because they arise in human experience and yearning — with or without conscious transmission of the stories.   Read more »

Freedom Seder --expanded 2d edition (1970)

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 2/23/2010

The original Freedom Seder was published in 1969 by Ramparts magazine, thanks to the editorial creativity of Warren Hinckle and Robert Scheer, and in a tiny pocket-size booklet by a tiny independent publishing house — the Micah Press — out of contributions from the Waskow household and other members of Jews for Urban Justice in Washington DC.   Read more »

PESACH: REBIRTHING THE EARTH, THE PEOPLE, & FREEDOM

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 2/23/2010

[This is a thoroughly revised version of Chapter 9 of my book Seasons of Our Joy, originally published in 1982 and most recently published in 1990 by Beacon Press.
[In the years since, the book has often been called a classic. Readers — both Jews and others — tell me its approach to the history, the spiritual meaning, and the actual practice of the festivals remains very helpful to them.
[Shalom Center members and subscribers can order the book from Beacon at a 10% discount with free shipping. For information on how to do this, see the very end of this post.
[The revised chapter follows. I welcome comments and suggestions, either directly to me at Awaskow@shalomctr.org or in the comments section at its end here on our Website. – Shalom, AW]]


PESACH: REBIRTHING THE EARTH, THE PEOPLE, & FREEDOM

The month of spring — the first month, says the Torah: time to begin. As the flowers rise up against winter, so the Israelites rise up against Pharaoh. The peoplehood of Israel is born — and we celebrate the freedom of new births and new beginnings. The feverish hilarity of early spring, of Purim, becomes a more directed, more devoted vigor.

ORIGINS

Many scholars believe that Pesach is a fusion of two early festivals — one of shepherds, one of farmers — that welcomed spring in two quite different ways. As the month of lambing begins in the flock, the shepherds may have celebrated the flock’s fertility by sacrificing a sheep, smearing its blood on the doorposts of their tents, dancing a skipping “Pesach” (“skip-over, pass-over”) dance around their campfires that imitated the skipping, stumbling steps of newborn lambs. (Pause for a moment to absorb the extraordinary imaginal and ethical leap of the Pesach story in saying that as the shepherds imitated stumbling lambs, God imitated stumbling shepherds — or lambs. For God protected a newborn freedom for runaway slaves by making sure that Death would skip over, pass over, “pesach,” their homes.)

As for the farmers — in preparation for the harvest of spring barley and wheat, they may have cleared out from their homes and storehouses all the chametz, the sour dough, the starter dough they used to make the bread rise. They were not only starting over for the year’s new crop, but starting over in human history by eating the most ancient bread of all, the flat unleavened bread that was the beginning of the farmer’s food.   Read more »

Dear fellow-seekers for peace and healing of the earth,

[Bottom line for this letter: I urge that multireligious groups together see the new film Avatar this month; learn with me by teleconference seminar on Thursday evening January 21 the connections between this film and the meaning of the festival of Tu B’Shvat that celebrates the ReBirthDay of the Tree of Life; and then gather January 29 to eat together the sacred meal of Tu B’Shvat. Why? See the unfolding below. — AW]
   Read more »

George Bush, the Burning Bush, Pharaoh, & Seeds of Change

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 10/30/2005

by Rabbi Arthur Waskow

Perhaps the greatest archetypal tale in all of human culture about addiction to top-down, unaccountable power is the story of Pharaoh in the Book of Exodus.

Now, today, we are seeing this tale lived out before our own eyes. The present government of the United States has become so addicted to its own power, so swept away by its own arrogance, that it is playing out the tale of Pharaoh.

And the US government is not alone: the present government of Iran is talking like Pharaoh; Al Qaeda acts like a mini-Pharaoh.

Pharaoh begins by hardening his own heart to the plight of the poor and powerless, and after a series of disasters (the “plagues”) brought on by his own arrogance, his addiction takes over.   Read more »

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