Text Archives | Adamah https://adamah.org/resource-tag/text/ People. Planet. Purpose. Mon, 04 Mar 2024 17:48:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://adamah.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/favicon.png Text Archives | Adamah https://adamah.org/resource-tag/text/ 32 32 Let’s Eat! Why Do We Eat Together? https://adamah.org/resource/lets-eat-why-do-we-eat-together/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 20:44:28 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/lets-eat-why-do-we-eat-together/ ...

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Shmita Resource Library https://adamah.org/resource/shmita-resource-library/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 23:27:14 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/shmita-resource-library/ [tabs] [tab title=”Shmita Curricula & Educational Materials”] A Tale of Two Covenants (NeoHasid.org): Explore the connection between the covenant of Shmita and the covenant of the Rainbow, given to humanity when...

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[tab title=”Shmita Curricula & Educational Materials”]

  • A Tale of Two Covenants (NeoHasid.org): Explore the connection between the covenant of Shmita and the covenant of the Rainbow, given to humanity when Noah and his family left the ark, after the flood waters receded. Both covenants frame sacred relationships between humans, animals, and earth.
  • Envisioning Sabbatical Culture: A Shmita Manifesto (7Seeds): Essays, poetry, and art collected in this exploration of Shmita, weaving together Jewish spirituality and Permaculture Design. This booklet offers a narrative of awakening and reclamation; a blueprint for a more sacred, resilient, and holistic culture.
  • Genesis, the Shmita Covenant, and the Land Ethic (Neohasid.org): An exploration of early biblical texts, such as the creation story, the fall from Eden, and the flood as a way to understand the deeper meaning and eternal covenant of the Shmita tradition.
  • Judaism and Sustainability (Jewish Farm School): Foundational teachings of Judaism for the ethics and values of sustainability, as rooted in the creation story, the building of the Mishkan, and the paradigm of Shmita.
  • Let The Land Rest: Teachings from the Sabbatical Year (Canfei Nesharim & Jewcology): A collection of sources from the Torah about the core aspects of Shmita, in relation to land and rest. This link is a portal to a sourcesheet, an article and a video.
  • Move Our Money, Protect Our Planet (The Shalom Center): A call to action and resource guide to support individuals and communities moving their money away from economic institutions- banks and businesses- that do  not support the Shmita values of local, mutually-supportive, and ecologically-healthy economies.
  • Shmita and Shabbat (Jewish Agency for Israel): An overview of the Shabbat/Shmita paradigm, with Biblical texts, as well as Rabbinic voices, such as Samson Raphael Hirsch, Arthur Waskow, Jeremy Benstein, and Rav Kook.
  • Shmita Foods Seder‘ (Shmita Project): The focus on this experiential and educational ritual/meal is on the foods of the Shmita Year. What was harvested during this year? What were the main foods that were eaten? How can we use the harvests and diets of the Shmita Year to inform a sustainable, ecological agricultural practice on all years? Main topics are perennial foods, wild foods, and preserved foods. Creatively use this seder in connection with the ‘seders’ of Tu B’Shvat & Rosh Hashana, or at any time of year.
  • Shmita Rising: 100+ Ways To Renew Sabbatical Culture (7Seeds): An overview os action ideas for community resiliency, local food systems, and alternative economies based on Shmita values and principles. These ideas are based in social permaculture principles.
  • Shmita Sourcebook (Shmita Project): An overview of sources and study questions tracking Shmita through biblical, rabbinic, and historic texts, as well as imagining the creative implications of working with the Shmita tradition today. [/tab]

[tab title=”Essays & Articles”]

  • Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, “Shabbat as A Sanctuary in Time” An excerpt from Rabbi Heschel’s beautiful, timeless poetic exploration of the gift of Shabbat.
  • Rabbi Arthur Waskow, “Toward a Jubilee Economy & Ecology in the Modern World” This is a chapter from Rabbi Waskow’s book, Godwrestling: Round 2, published by Jewish Lights in 1986.
  • Rabbi Avraham Arieh Trugman, “The Sabbatical Year: From The Practical To The Mystical” This essay offers an in-depth mystical reading of the Shmita Cycle from within the spiritual Torah perspective (exerpt from Rabbi Trugman’s book on the weekly Torah readings, Orchard of Delights)
  • Charlene Seidle, “Shmita: A Paradigm For Funding” Published by E-Jewish Philanthropy, this article offers seven points for funders to consider in creating philanthropic models inspired by Shmita values.
  • Daniel Taub, “Scratching the Seventh Year Itch” A personal reflection on the values of the Sabbatical concept from the Israeli ambassador to the UK.
  • Rabbi Dani Passow, “Shabbat, Shmita and Rest” This article offers a glimpse into the sacred practice of rest and how integral this is to a holistic relationship with Torah.
  • Rabbi David Seidenberg, “Shmita: The Purpose of Sinai” This essay explores the possibility that perhaps the whole purpose of the Covenant at Sinai was to create a society that observed Shmita, and that Shmita creates the possibility to bring the world back into an Edenic harmony.
  • Rabbi David Seidenberg, “Jubilee, Human Rights and Ecology” This essay, first printed in Tikkun magazine in 2008, explores how the Jubilee and our connection to land, in particular, can help to reframe our human role in the ecology of life and our relationship to earth.
  • Rabbi Ebn Leader & Margie Klein, “The Land Shall Rest: Exploring Shmita Outside of the Diaspora” This essay explores the idea of holiness in space according to the Torah, and how we might bridge the holiness of Israel- and the laws applying to its soils- to whichever land we might live on.
  • Rabbi Fred Dobb, “Rosh Hashana Shmita Sermon” This sermon was offered on Rosh Hashana 5774, the start of the 6th year of the Shmita Cycle, and one year before Shmita 5775.
  • Rabbi Jeremy Benstein, “Stop The Machine! The Sabbatical Year Principle” This short article is a glimpse into a chapter about Shmita Rabbi Benstein has written in his book, The Way into Judaism and the Environment (Jewish Lights Publishing, 2006)
  • Rabbi Jeremy Benstein, “Re-Pacing and (Self) Renewal” This essay is an exploration of the idea and concept of ‘sustainability’, deepening this worldview by linking it with cycles of time, cycles of renewal, and Shmita.
  • Rabbi Micha Odenhiemer, “Indebted Countries and the Sabbatical Year” This essay offers a foundation of Jewish economic values, grounded in the Shmita vision, and explored global debt issues through these perspectives.
  • Rabbi Micha Odenheimer, “Judaism’s Next Great Gift To Human Kind” This essay calls attention to the potency and profound need of Shmita, and challenges us to begin exploring this vision however we can, as an offering to the world.
  • Nati Passow, “Shmita as a Foundation for Jewish Ecological Education” This essay was written by Nati Passow, Director of Jewish Farm School, for CAJE (Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education) in 2008.
  • Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin, “The Narrative of Shmita” If we are going to be able to share the depth of Shmita and its values, what is the core message we begin with? Perhaps at its heart, Shmita is about the deep satisfaction of ‘enoughness’.
  • Yigal Deutscher, “Embracing the Shmita Cycle” This is an article written for Tikkun magazine, visioning Shmita as a holistic cultural blueprint for creating resilient communities.

For articles directly about Shmita in Israel, please visit our Israel Today page. [/tab]

[tab title=”Audio & Video”]

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Shabbat Ha’aretz https://adamah.org/resource/shabbat-haaretz/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 23:16:54 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/shabbat-haaretz/ We are proud to share The Sabbath of the Land, a translation of Rav Kook’s Shabbat HaAretz! Hazon published the first edition on the eve of the shmita year of...

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Purchase Shabbat HaAretz

We are proud to share The Sabbath of the Land, a translation of Rav Kook’s Shabbat HaAretz! Hazon published the first edition on the eve of the shmita year of 5775, in 2014–15. Since its first publication there has been a growing interest in, and awareness of, the profundity and relevance of shmita as a concept. As Nigel Savage, former Hazon CEO, notes in the foreword, “So shemitta is coming to life in new and fresh ways. And yet we have indeed barely scratched it. This is why it is important to read Rav Kook – to think anew about how great is the ideal, how great the challenge, and how very far we are from bringing any serious version of it to fruition.”

Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook was the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of the land of Israel in the 20th century. His essay, Shabbat HaAretz, written in 1909, is lyrical and mystical, a meditation on the big themes that underlie religious environmentalism. This compendium includes Rav Kook’s philosophical introduction to shmita (in Hebrew and English) and selections from his halakhic writings on shmita (in Hebrew and English), with English an introduction and summary essay by Rabbi Yedidya J. Sinclair, and foreword by Nigel Savage.

The work makes Shabbat HaAretz accessible to English-speaking readers. It presents an original, annotated translation of the entire introduction and includes selections from Rav Kook’s halakhic work, rendered in fluent, readable English. These are illuminated by contextualizing essays on Rav Kook’s life and thought, the historical background to Shabbat HaAretz, and the book’s enduring power relate to issues of land use, social justice, and climate-change activism in the twenty-first century.
Rabbi Yedidya Sinclair is an Oxford and Harvard-educated economist, writer, and rabbi, inspired by bringing Jewish teachings to life in new ways. He worked for five years as Vice President at Energiya Global, an Israeli solar energy company bringing renewable power to Africa, before that in a startup designing eco-cities. Energized by Israeli hi-tech ventures solving huge global problems.

The Sabbath of the Land is published in partnership with Koren and Hazon. Hazon first published this English translation as Rav Kook’s Introduction to Shabbat Ha’Aretz in 2014 with the support of Hazon’s founder Nigel Savage.

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Shmita Sourcebook https://adamah.org/resource/shmita-sourcebook/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 23:07:22 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/shmita-sourcebook/ Written and compiled by former Shmita Project Manager Yigal Deutscher, with the support of Anna Hanau and Nigel Savage, The Shmita Sourcebook is designed to encourage participants to think critically about...

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Written and compiled by former Shmita Project Manager Yigal Deutscher, with the support of Anna Hanau and Nigel Savage, The Shmita Sourcebook is designed to encourage participants to think critically about the Shmita Cycle – its values, challenges, and opportunities – and how this tradition might be applied in a modern context to support building healthier and more sustainable Jewish communities today.The Shmita Sourcebook is a 120-page sourcebook that draws on a range of texts from within Jewish tradition and time, tracing the development and evolution of Shmita from biblical, historical, rabbinic, and contemporary perspectives.

The Shmita Sourcebook is designed to be accessible to people with little Jewish background, as well as rigorous and challenging for someone with more extensive Jewish learning. Our intention for the sourcebook is to offer an educational background so we can collectively be exploring the possibilities of Shmita together. We do hope this will serve in establishing a shared, common ground. From this place, we can continue the work, expanding upon our own curiosities and understanding of Shmita, and creatively apply the values of this tradition to our own lives in all the diverse ways that are possible. We hope you enjoy the sourcebook, and it finds good use in your hands, and in your community.

purchase a print copy of the shmita sourcebook

download a PDF of the shmita sourcebook

The Shmita Sourcebook can be used in a myriad of ways, across all types of educational settings:

  • Shabbat dinner
  • Adult education classes & seminars
  • Weekend retreats & conferences
  • Gathering of friends and family

Contents of the Shmita Sourcebook by Chapter – click chapter titles below for summaries

Biblical Foundations: Shmita in the Torah
Recalling Ancient Memory: Shmita in Early Israel & Temple Periods
Codifying the Sabbatical (Part 1): Sabbatical Food Systems
Codifying the Sabbatical (Part 2): Sabbatical Economic Systems
Rabbinic Voices & Visioning of Shmita: From Exile to Return
Back to the Land: Shmita in Israel, From Early Pioneers to Modern Times
Reclaiming the Sabbatical Tradition: Exploring Shmita Today
An Incentive for Shmita Today? Agricultural & Economic Perspectives

Appendix A: Shmita Foods: Perennial & Wild Harvests
Appendix B: Shmita Economics: G’machs & Interest Free Loans
Appendix C: Applied Shmita: For Communities & Organizations

Quotations from biblical sources are from “Five Books of Moses” translation by Everett Fox © 1995 by Schocken Books
Quotations from Maimonides are from ”Mishneh Torah” translation by Eliyahu Touger © 2005 by Moznaim Publishing

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Setting the Table https://adamah.org/resource/setting-the-table/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 22:34:06 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/setting-the-table/ A Cooking Class for Young Families Starting a family commences a period of change. Expectant parents very quickly transition from thinking for themselves to providing for a new life, and...

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A Cooking Class for Young Families Download Setting the Table Purchase a hard copy

Starting a family commences a period of change. Expectant parents very quickly transition from thinking for themselves to providing for a new life, and the preparation and anticipation can be overwhelming. Especially when thinking about how we want to feed our new families.

Setting the Table is designed to help couples think through these challenges with a Jewish lens. Participants learn essential tips and cooking techniques that will help them prepare meals for their growing families, highlighting seasonal and local ingredients. Following the cooking portion of the evening, participants gather around the table to enjoy the fruit of their labor and to learn from and grapple with ancient and contemporary texts focused on the experience of a family dinner table. The discussions lead the participants to think about how they wanted to frame their family’s experience around the table.

Setting the Table bridged the gap between sacred preparation and material details, just as food seems to do in Jewish tradition. For our family, it was an opportunity to think about how we would bring intention to our families’ eating habits, even just for the two of us until our son takes to dining at the table.

Rachel G., Brooklyn, NY

Setting the Table can be run as a one-time program, as a series of programs, or given directly to new parents as a helpful resource. In addition to yummy, simple recipes, this resource includes a Leader’s Guide for educators with sample programs for holidays like Passover and Shabbat, and also for everyday eating. It also features ancient and contemporary Jewish texts with guiding thought questions. [myspacer]

  • The Recipes section features dozens of family-friendly recipes designed with new parents in mind.
  • The Thought Texts section incorporates modern and ancient Jewish texts that focus on the experience of a family dinner table.
  • Tips for Kids in the Kitchen offers a variety of fun ideas to increase children’s participation in the kitchen and in Jewish ritual for an early start on a healthy lifelong relationship to food and Jewish tradition.

UJA-Federation of New York has provided generous support for the creation and implementation of Setting the Table.

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Food for Thought https://adamah.org/resource/food-for-thought/ Wed, 02 Oct 2019 21:54:35 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/food-for-thought/ Sourcebook on Jews, Food & Contemporary Life Food for Thought is designed to encourage participants to think critically about the food that they eat and the ways their food choices affect...

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Sourcebook on Jews, Food & Contemporary Life
Food for Thought is designed to encourage participants to think critically about the food that they eat and the ways their food choices affect the health of their community and the planet.

Food for Thought is is a 130-page sourcebook that draws on a range of texts from within and beyond Jewish traditions to explore a range of topics relating to Jews and food. It includes traditional Jewish texts, in Hebrew and English, and a range of contemporary Jewish and non-Jewish texts.  It is designed to be accessible to people with little Jewish background as well as rigorous and challenging for someone with more extensive Jewish learning.

Written by Nigel Savage and Anna Hanau

Food For Thought includes:

  • A blend of traditional and non-traditional Jewish and secular texts to raise questions around food, eating and Jewish tradition in an innovative and provocative way
  • Study questions that help the reader engage with the texts and discussion questions prompt participants to bring the texts back to their own lives and experience.
  • An appendix includes guidelines on cultivating a learning community; including leading chevruta-style learning and running sharing circles that encourages reflection and builds community
  • A resource section of movies and books

Food For Thought can be used in a myriad of ways, across all types of educational settings. Use your copy at:

  • Shabbat dinner
  • Adult education classes
  • Weekend retreats
  • Gathering of friends and family

Chapter 1: Learning Torah
Chapter 2: Gratitude, Mindfulness & Blessing Our Food
Chapter 3: Kashrut
Chapter 4: Bread & Civilization
Chapter 5: Eating Together
Chapter 6: Health, Bodies & Nourishment
Chapter 7: Food & Place – Download!
Chapter 8: Food & Ethics: The Implications of our Food Choices

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Throwing Stones or Throwing Flowers: Exploring Our Relationship with the Public Domain https://adamah.org/resource/throwing-stones-or-throwing-flowers-exploring-our-relationship-with-the-public-domain/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:28 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/throwing-stones-or-throwing-flowers-exploring-our-relationship-with-the-public-domain/ ...

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Bringing The Stones’ into the 21st Century https://adamah.org/resource/bringing-the-stones-into-the-21st-century/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:23 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/bringing-the-stones-into-the-21st-century/ ...

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Gratitude: God, Heschel, and Neruda https://adamah.org/resource/gratitude-god-heschel-and-neruda/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:23 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/gratitude-god-heschel-and-neruda/ ...

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Stone Wall https://adamah.org/resource/stone-wall/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:18 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/stone-wall/ ...

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Saving Creation One Hoshanah at a Time: An alternative Hoshanah Rabbah Ritual https://adamah.org/resource/saving-creation-one-hoshanah-at-a-time-an-alternative-hoshanah-rabbah-ritual/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:14 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/saving-creation-one-hoshanah-at-a-time-an-alternative-hoshanah-rabbah-ritual/ ...

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Understanding Pollinators https://adamah.org/resource/understanding-pollinators/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 22:20:13 +0000 https://adamah.local/resource/understanding-pollinators/ Understanding pollinators is an hour-long educational program that teaches about the importance of pollinators in our habitat. This program uses honeybees as a ‘gateway pollinator’ to teach not only the...

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Understanding pollinators is an hour-long educational program that teaches about the importance of pollinators in our habitat. This program uses honeybees as a ‘gateway pollinator’ to teach not only the wonder of honeybees but also that their story is part of a much larger ecological phenomenon.

Curriculum

Appendix A

Appendix B

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