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Modern Artists in Every Century
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Boris Schatz And The Bezalel School Of Art | The Jewish Press - JewishPress com | Saul Jay Singer | 6 Av 5781 – July 14, 2021
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Jessica Steinberg covers the Sabra scene from south to north and back to the center.
Israel Museum curator Sharon Weiser-Ferguson with items from the Jewish Art and Life wing, some donated by his parents in memory of Yadin Tanenbaum, who fell in the Yom Kippur War (Jessica Steinberg/Times of Israel)
A newly displayed collection of “Israeliana,” made-in-Israel souvenirs and household objects, is now part of the Israel Museum’s Jewish Art and Life wing, donated in memory of Yadin Tanenbaum, who fell in battle in the Sinai during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
Together, the memorabilia and Tanenbaum’s story tell part of the history of the State of Israel.
Musée d Israël : Des bibelots rappellent la genèse du pays naissant
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But first, I want to put these prizes in context, beginning with a word about
shabbat, shmita’s temporal Jewish sibling. The world needs shabbat right now. We need boundaries. We need rest. We need time when we switch off electronics. We need at least one day that we don’t buy stuff. We need at least one day that we spend with family and friends. After a boundary-less year of covid, our need for some kind of structured shabbat has never been greater.
And so, then, to shmita. The word means something like “letting go.” It’s part of the Torah. You could argue that it’s a somewhat obscure part of the Torah. In Israel, every seven years, there’s an ongoing public argument about the price of vegetables – because of shmita. And roughly every seven years, most orthodox shuls, and in recent years a growing number of non-orthodox shuls, have had someone speak or teach about shmita. It’s a fine topic for a sermon one day.