Thursday, July 8, 2010

Ten Reasons Why Lubavitch is Not a Cult, by Shoshanna Silcove

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                  While some have accused Lubavitch of being a cult, it does not meet the criteria.

  • 1. People are free to leave or stop participating. No one is forced to stay in the Lubavitcher movement.

  • 2. Difference of opinion is allowed and even encouraged. Lubavitch welcomes and encompasses a vastly broad range of individuals from all types of backgrounds.

  • 3.Lubavitch does not teach some weird, half-baked philosophy, on the contrary, it is a theology that is rooted in ancient Jewish tradition.

  • 4. While cults isolate and separate themselves from society, Lubavitch does the opposite and engages with the society around it. Chabad Houses are often trailblazers in their communities, often making significant contributions.

  • 5. Lubavitch does not make sharp distinctions between themselves and other Jews. In fact, the Lubavitcher theology teaches that all Jews are equally beloved by G-d. Lubavitch values each and every Jew regardless of their Jewish affiliation or lack of it.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

My New Radio Show Starts Monday July 12

We finally have a Jewish radio station here in Melbourne, Australia.

LION FM 96.1

My Radio Show Starts Monday, July 12, Noon

The Melbourne Jewish Women's Show, with your host Shoshanna Silcove



Please listen and post your feedback here on The Repenting Jewess

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Mezuzah in Zhmerynka 2 - Roving Rabbis



I am having Chassidisha nachas. This is my son Shmuli helping a woman in Ukraine do the mitzvah of mezuzah.

Soul Sisters Jewish Style, by Shoshanna Silcove

Sociologically speaking in general terms, the life cycles of women who are born into traditional Orthodox society vary greatly from those women who became newly observant as adults. Women who are frum from birth were hardly touched by the feminist trends and changing mores of our modern world, as they are socialized in a clearly defined traditional female role reminiscent of an earlier era.

The newly observant women can be coming from almost any socioeconomic background and, she could have had any of a myriad number of life experiences. Most likely, if she is of university age or older by the time she entered the fold, she had had a semblance of independence that most frum from birth women could only imagine. Not that this is necessarily good or bad, as I am not making any value judgments—only observations.

I have known newly observant women who were quite accomplished in careers, in the arts or sciences, and who were well travelled. Many of them moved in educated and sophisticated circles and were exposed to the world of culture that most frum from birth women have no connection with. There are also many ordinary women who become newly observant, humbler types who cannot boast of anything more than a mediocre existence before becoming frum. Yet, whatever end of the social or educational scale a newly observant women was on before, for the most part it is safe to say that she was heavily influenced, in one way or another, by the modern post-feminist world she came from.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

My Rant on Igros Voodoo, by Shoshanna Silcove

The Igros-voodoo practice would never have been tolerated while the Rebbe was still in this physical world. The Rebbe's secretariat (closest aides) were completely committed to ensuring that the Rebbe’s words were never misinterpreted. They knew that with each communication (written or verbal) of the Rebbe, that they had to check every nuance and detail, every single word, and every single punctuation, to be certain it would mean exactly what the Rebbe wanted it to mean. The Rebbe was known to get extremely angry when anyone tried to ‘put words into his mouth’. To do so, even inadvertently, would be considered the ultimate chutzpah. If this was so while the Rebbe was here in this physical world, how much more so now when the Rebbe is not here to defend himself against those who portend to speak for him?

Those people who walk around claiming to have clear and specific instructions from the Rebbe post-Gimel Tamuz (the Jewish date the Rebbe passed away in 1994) are sorely misguided. They do not understand how the Rebbe functioned. For forty years the Rebbe stood for hours in all kinds of harsh conditions, day in and day out at the Ohel (the gravesite of the previous Rebbe in Queens , NY, now of the Rebbe too)answering a neverending stream of petitioners. Yet he treated each and every letter as if they were the only one. And when the Rebbe answered a person, he connected with that person’s neshoma at that point in time. He looked into each individual’s soul and saw its roots. He brought down blessings and even performed miracles specifically for each separate soul. The Rebbe never once suggested or even hinted that the Igros were interchangeable. This was so even when, as it explains in the introduction of the Igros (book of letters) entitled, ‘The Letter and the Spirit”, the Rebbe becamse utterly overburdened and pressed for time that he had to develop a supernatural method of reading a letter and answering a letter simultaneously. This was so even though the Rebbe was obsessed with the difficulties of his time management situation, he never once directed us to to go to his Igros instead of going directly to him. In fact, remarkably, as his huge work load increased the Rebbe made himself even more accessible to each and every one of us! How much easier it would have made the Rebbe’s life if he had told us to go find out answers in his Igros and just leave him alone. Why didn’t he?