University of Arizona

Holocaust Vigil Today

Today for 24 hours from 10 A.M to 10 A.M will be the annual Holocaust Vigil sponsored by Hillel. For the entire period of time there will be several dozen people taking turns to read the names of victims of the holocaust.
There will also be many programs and events, including talks by Holocaust survivors and Holocaust related films.
The Holocaust vigil will be taking place on the UA mall.

Discovery Program “Puts a Maybe” in Student’s Minds

A presentation to assert the divine origins of the Bible using a “scientific” methodology drew an audience of 40 students February 20th. The Discovery Seminar is a program sponsored by ultra-Orthodox outreach group Aish HaTorah.
“There is one word Discovery wants to put in your mind, and that word is maybe,” said presenter Rabbi Eliyahu Bergstein at the evenst sponsored by Jewish Arizonans on Campus.
According to his Bergstein, God’s promises in the Torah consistently came true — everything from a triple harvest in the sixth year of planting in order for the land to be fallow in the seventh year, to the seemingly-contradictory promises of great influence and much persecution for the Jewish people. “22 percent of Nobel prizes have been awarded to Jewish people,” Bergstein said, declaring “we’re out of proportion.”
Bergstein also discussed more mystical ideas the theory that Megillat Esther seems to predict the eventual hanging of 10 Nazis at Nuremberg.
His presentation was peppered with jokes and discussion with the crowd. Afterwards, amid much applause, the audience went to the Hillel building for free pizza and to talk about what they had just seen and heard.
Student reaction was generally positive. “He has a lot of good points about things you don’t normally think about,” said sophomore Carolyn Basalla.
“It gets you thinking,” said junior Lisa Edelson, who was seeing the presentation for the the third time, and declared “It definitely puts a maybe in my mind.”

Cafe Ivrit Offers Extra Credit, Extra Practice

Every Monday at four and five in the afternoon, in the Oy Vey Cafe in Hillel, Racheli Marom sits down with several students and they chat in Hebrew over coffee.
It’s a chance for students taking Hebrew through the Judaic Studies Department to earn extra-credit, while practicing their Hebrew with a bona fide Israeli.

Quickie Shabbat: For Jews on the Go

For those Jewish students who like Friday night services but don’t like it when they take an hour, there is the Quickie Shabbat.
Currently run by Jewish Campus Service Corps Fellow Jake Wilkenfeld-Mongillo, Quickie Shabbats at UA Hillel began last academic year, when they were run by the previous JCSC.
The special services are held once a month on Friday evenings when Hillel is not holding its bi-weekly services, and run about 15 minutes. The Quickie Shabbats involve candle-lighting, kiddus, and challah blessings with a couple of songs thrown in. They are open to students of all denominations, and students are encouraged to bring friends.
“It’s just a little bit of Shabbat ritual,” Wilkenfeld-Mongillo told CampusJ, adding “it’s nice to have during the weeks when Hillel isn’t having services.” He said that while attendance so far this year has varied from two to 15 students — compared to the 60 or so for the various denominational services combined when regular services are held — he is hopeful that more will start attending as it gains. Depending on the crowd, the Quickie Shabbat attendees sometimes have dinner together near campus afterward.
The next Quickie Shabbat is February 16 at 6:00 p.m.

Biger Talks Borders and Boundaries

“The Boundaries of Israel” will be the topic of discussion when Dr. Gideon Biger, political science professor and historical geographer at Tel Aviv University, comes to speak at the Tucson Jewish Community Center on January 29th.
Biger will discuss the various “boundaries” of Israel — political, social, and cultural — from ancient to modern times. He will also explain his theories on how the current crisis may be resolved.
Then, on Jan. 30, he will speak again at the Marshall Building on campus to give “The Boundaries of the Middle East: Process and Problems,” which will further explore the conflict and his thoughts on a solution.
Biger has had experience both in the academic and political world, serving as boundaries expert during the negotiations between Israel and Syria in 2000.
The Jan. 29 lecture will be 7:30 p.m at the Tucson JCC. The Jan. 30 lecture is at 12:00 p.m in the Marshall Building, room 490, on campus.

Why Date Jewish? The Beatles Were Wrong.

Dating fellow members of the tribe was the topic last night, as author Doron Kornbluth spoke at the Chabad House. Kornbluth wrote the book, Why Marry Jewish? Surprising Reasons for Jews to Marry Jews.
Around 30 students showed up to hear his lecture discussing the facts and figures behind the well-known concern over interfaith marriage that many Jews have.
Chabad Rabbi Yossi Winner introduced Kornbluth, who spoke for an hour and a half. Kornbluth opened by telling the audience that 55 percent of weddings are intermarriages.
His essential argument for marrying Jewish was that “The Beatles were wrong; you need more than love.”
Kornbluth stated that having the same religion as your spouse, no matter what your religion might be. “is better for marriages.” He said that the average marriage only lasts 4-6 years but that the more two people have in common, especially religion, the better the chances their marriage will last.
He also said that marrying Jewish is important for one’s children, and to keep a family Jewish. He declared that kids who grow up in mixed families are often confused and uncertain about their own religion and are unlikely to keep Judaism as part of their life as they age. Kornbluth said that 92 percent of kids from homes with only one parent who is Jewish will not marry a Jew. They need an “unambiguous Jewish identity,” he said.
Reasons for not dating Jews, even before one expects to marry, whether it be for experience or simply unconcern about the future, don’t measure up under scrutiny, Kornbluth claimed. He said that what you do now will affect what you do in the future, and that with 1.5 million single Jews in the United States in at least 15 major metropolitan areas, there is no reason not to date Jewish.
The audience held a wide variety of opinions on the ideas Kornbluth expressed but all approached by CampusJ agreed when asked that he had very compelling arguments.

Barbecued FYSH

Over 50 students recently gathered for an evening barbecue run by FYSH (First Year Students at Hillel) and sponsored by University of Arizona Hillel.
Freshmen and older students came to the Hillel building on campus to enjoy free food and good company. FYSH leadership provided hot dogs and soda.
Jake Wilkenfeld-Mongillo, the Jewish Campus Service Corps Fellow at UA, said he was “psyched but skeptical” before the event because he was unsure how many new people would show up. However he said that “it’s awesome to see new faces” and said he was happy with the large turnout.
Laura Chinitz, one of the leaders of FYSH, said they have many more exciting events coming up, including Valentine’s bowling on February 13.
For more info about UA Hillel check out its Web site.

Eric Schwartz

I’m your newest beat reporter at the University of Arizona. I’m a junior in the journalism department and am working on a minor in Judaic studies. Needless to say, this is the perfect spot for me. I’ll be covering everything from Shabbat services at Chabad, to bowling with Hillel, to keggers with the varied thousands of Jewish students at school. If you want to know more, or ask me a question you can email me at eschwartz -at- campusj.com.

Steven Emerson on Radical Islam

“Your city, in the 1980s, gave birth to Al-Qaida in America,” terrorism expert Steven Emerson stated before an audience of nearly 500 at the Tucson Jewish Community Center Monday. The statement referred to the Tucson connection found in FBI agent Kenneth Williams’ “Phoenix memo,” warning of the existence of a group of radical Muslims in Arizona, some of whom were attending flight school in the state. According to Williams, terror suspects had lived in Tucson even before the establishment of Al-Qaida and had helped create the organization.
Emerson’s visit to Tucson was marked by controversy, and attendees were greeted by a group of demonstrators bearing large sign with the words “SCAPEGOATING HURTS US ALL.” Regarding the protesters, Emerson said, “My attempts to expose the threat of radical Islam is now the subject of a protest outside [and] these protestors would be better served if they would spend their energy opposing terrorism.” His remark drew a wave of applause from the audience.
Critics have argued that Emerson’s writings, which include the bestseller Jihad in America: The Terrorists Living Among Us, have helped foment a climate of Islamophobia in the United States. Well aware of these criticisms, he acknowledged the existence of “Jewish, Christian, and Islamic terrorists.” However, he continued, “in recent years, the preponderance of terrorist attacks have been carried out by Muslim extremists.” He argued that “while not all Muslims are terrorists, the radical Muslim Brotherhood has taken control of the established Muslim community in recent years.”
Emerson also charged that the Council on American-Islamic Relations, along with other mainstream Islamic organizations, “has a modus operandi which is to allege hate crimes” which are mostly “exaggerated, misrepresented, or fabricated” in order to create allegations of a “war on Islam.” He went on to denounce CAIR’s “fatwa against Muslim extremism and terrorism” as a media campaign aimed at diverting attention from what he said is the organization’s indirect support of radicalism.
According to Emerson, this indirect support comes in the form of “cultural jihad,” and the portrayal of organizations such as Hamas as organizations of “resistance” rather than “terrorism.” He referred to the gathering of demonstrators outside as examples of the phenomenon, for their “support, implicit or explicit, of terror attacks as part of resistance against the West.”
Following Emerson’s presentation, Near Eastern Studies professor and Muslim convert Scott Lucas gave a 5-minute rebuttal. “My first point,” he said, “is that alliances change.” Just as the U.S. once supported the Taliban and the Hussein regime, Lucas argued, the majority of Muslims who lent support to radical Islam in the 1990s have since changed their minds due to repression on the part of radical governments. He went on to say that “the vast majority of American Muslims believe that the killing of civilians is wrong,” whether in the form of terrorist attacks on Americans and Israelis or in the form of Muslim civilians killed in military operations. “Here is my modest suggestion,” he said, concluding “Muslims need to learn more about Judaism and Jewish culture, and I hope this series will accomplish just that.”

LGBT Response to Ruling Mixed

Among Tucson’s Jewish LGBT community, reaction to the Conservative movement’s decisions on gay and lesbian inclusion last week has been mixed. While most agree that the decision to move toward greater inclusion constitutes a step in the right direction, some express frustration with the movement’s passage of two responsa that condemn homosexuality and suggest reparative therapy.
Jenny Schultz, the new coordinator of the LGBT Jewish Inclusion Project, told CampusJ:

I think this recent decision will have a strong impact on young people. There are many who have been eager to study as rabbis and now they have the opportunity to study within the Conservative movement, to lead congregations openly and with out shame or secrecy. Young people will be able to have commitment ceremonies and feel comfortable connecting all the aspects of their lives.

The LGBT Jewish Inclusion Project already enjoys a partnership with two local Conservative congregations, Anshei Israel and Bet Shalom. The organization’s Traveling Gay Chavura visits different congregations in the area each month, strengthening the relationship between the Jewish LGBT community and the larger Jewish community.
Ben Cook, Hillel’s 2006-2007 Grinspoon Fellow, told CampusJ that while the progressive elements comprise “a small step in the right direction,” he is disappointed by the regressive elements:

The Conservative movement constantly misses opportunities to take strong, cogent stances on today’s issues. These rulings, and the decade of squabbling and avoiding the issues it took to reach these decisions, is a perfect example of how the movement’s Committee on Jewish Law and Standards lacks the spine to take Conservative Judaism down a well defined path. I can tell you that if this is as far as the Conservative movement is willing to take equal rights for homosexuals, that when I get married (someday, b’ezrat ha’shem) it will be in a Reconstructionist synagogue, not a Conservative one.




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