Daf Yomi:
The Wisdom of Talmud Study
Winter/Spring 2024-2025

Daf Yomi: The Wisdom of Talmud Study

Program: Hebrew College Tamid
Instructor: Layah Lipsker (Read Bio)
Dates: Monday and Thursday, Winter/Spring 2024-2025: 12/ 9, 12/12, 12/16, 12/19, 1/6, 1/9, 1/13, 1/16, 1/23, 1/27, 1/30, 2/3, 2/6, 2/10, 2/13 & 2/20
Time: 9-9:45 a.m. EST
Course fee: $400, financial aid is available
Location: Zoom
Hosted by: Hebrew College
Registration:  Click here

Talmud study is not simply the study of Jewish law, and that’s why it is so fascinating to Jews of all affiliations. The rabbis often use the legalities as a language for articulating foundational Jewish wisdom. The stories and debates of the Talmud have become the language of Jewish thought. A page of Talmud can often help us tap into ancient Jewish language for our own spiritual growth and add to our toolbox of Jewish thought.

For additional information or questions, contact the Hebrew College Tamid Team

 

 

Me’ah Classic -Year Two Modern: Tuesday Evenings
In Person at Hebrew College -Spring 2025

Year Two Modern: Tuesday Evenings -In Person at Hebrew College

Program: Hebrew College Me’ah Classic
Instructor: Dr. Jordan Katz  (Read Bio)
Dates: 11 Tuesdays, Spring 2025: 1/14, 1/21, 1/28, 2/4, 2/11, 2/18, 2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18 & 3/25
Time: 7 -9 p.m. EST
Course fee: $490 for the Spring Modern semester only, financial aid is available
Location: In Person at Hebrew College
Hosted by: Hebrew College
Registration:  Click here

The Me’ah Classic Year 2 Program begins with Medieval in the Fall and continues with Modern in the Spring.  Your tuition covers the Spring semester.

Winter/Spring: Modern

Beginning with the 17th century Age of Enlightenment, modernity posed a significant challenge to traditional Jewish culture, community, and identity, creating new social and economic opportunities but also threatening traditional Jewish values and society. As in each of the previous eras, modern Jews remained preoccupied with sacred texts, suggesting that however great the impact of rupture and discontinuity, their passion for reading and re-reading classical Jewish texts became the creative wellspring for modern Jewish thought.

You’ll delve into some of these modern primary texts representing differing ideological viewpoints — works of Jewish philosophers such as Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig, and Zionist thinkers such as Ahad Ha’am and Micha Josef Berdyczewski — that mirror the issues faced by Jews of that era.

And you’ll wrestle with the subtle points of comparison and contrast between Jewish modernity and the civilization we’ve inherited. Texts will examine the emancipation of European Jewry; the rise of Hasidism; the Jewish cultural revolution of Eastern Europe; and the birth of Modern Zionism.

We encourage students to take Year One before registering for Year Two. If, however, starting with Year Two would work better for your schedule, please contact Terri Swartz Russell, Program Director at the Hebrew College Tamid Team

Me’ah Classic -Year Two Modern: Thursday Evenings Online via Zoom – Spring 2025

Year Two Modern: Thursday Evenings Online via Zoom

Program: Hebrew College Me’ah Classic
Instructor: Dr. Jacob Meskin (Read Bio)
Dates: 11 Thursdays, Spring 2025: 1/30, 2/6, 2/13, 2/20, 2/27, 3/6, 3/20, 3/27, 4/3, 4/10 & 4/24
Time: 7:15 -9:15 p.m. EST
Course fee: $490 for the Spring Modern semester only, financial aid is available
Location: Online via Zoom
Hosted by: Hebrew College
Registration: Click here

The Me’ah Classic Year 2 Program begins with Medieval in the Fall and continues with Modern in the Spring.  Your tuition covers the Spring semester.

Winter/Spring: Modern

Beginning with the 17th century Age of Enlightenment, modernity posed a significant challenge to traditional Jewish culture, community, and identity, creating new social and economic opportunities but also threatening traditional Jewish values and society. As in each of the previous eras, modern Jews remained preoccupied with sacred texts, suggesting that however great the impact of rupture and discontinuity, their passion for reading and re-reading classical Jewish texts became the creative wellspring for modern Jewish thought.

You’ll delve into some of these modern primary texts representing differing ideological viewpoints — works of Jewish philosophers such as Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig, and Zionist thinkers such as Ahad Ha’am and Micha Josef Berdyczewski — that mirror the issues faced by Jews of that era.

And you’ll wrestle with the subtle points of comparison and contrast between Jewish modernity and the civilization we’ve inherited. Texts will examine the emancipation of European Jewry; the rise of Hasidism; the Jewish cultural revolution of Eastern Europe; and the birth of Modern Zionism.

We encourage students to take Year One before registering for Year Two. If, however, starting with Year Two would work better for your schedule, please contact Terri Swartz Russell, Program Director at the Hebrew College Tamid Team

Me’ah Classic -Year One Rabbinics: Tuesday Evenings Online via Zoom – Spring 2025

Year One Rabbinics: Tuesday Evenings Online via Zoom

Program: Hebrew College Me’ah Classic
Instructor: Rabbi Shayna Rhodes (Spring)  (Read Bios)
Dates: 11 Tuesdays, Spring 2025: 1/21, 1/28, 2/4, 2/11, 2/18, 2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18, 3/25 & 4/1
Time: 7-9 p.m. ET
Course Fee: $490 for the Spring Bible semester only, financial aid is available
Location: Online via Zoom
Hosted by: Hebrew College
Registration: Click here

The Me’ah Classic Year 1 Program begins with Bible in the Fall and continues with Rabbinics in the Spring.  Your tuition covers the Spring semester.

Winter/Spring: Rabbinics

The Rabbinic Period — the millennium from the Second Temple to the completion of the Babylonian Talmud (500 BCE to 600 CE) — refers to a time when new Jewish leaders, sages and rabbis emerged and developed rich texts of their own. Some of those texts took the form of extensive commentary about the earlier world of biblical Israel. During this seminal period, rabbinic scholars created a legal system which led to a Jewish belief system that has informed and ordered Jewish community, culture, and behavior for the past millennia.

What is the relationship between God and human beings?
How do we understand Jewish history and Jewish ethics?
What is the role of ritual, holy days and life-cycle events?

Readings illustrate the development of the rabbinic mindset and talmudic beliefs. As with the Hebrew Bible sequence, you’ll first cover selected historical, textual, and conceptual areas, then examine core concepts in conjunction with Bible study to illustrate how beliefs and practices evolved over time.

For additional information and questions, contact the Hebrew College Tamid Team

Jews, Torah, and “Judaism”

Jews, Torah, and “Judaism”

Program: Hebrew College Tamid
Instructor: Rabbi Jeffrey Amshalem (Read Bio)
Dates:  8 Mondays, Fall 2024: 9/23, 10/7, 10/21, 11/4, 11/18, 12/2, 12/16 & 1/6
Time: 7:15-8:45 p.m. EST
Course fee: $280, financial aid is available
Location: Zoom
Hosted by: Hebrew College and Co-Sponsored by Temple Sinai in Brookline
Registration:  Click here

In this course we’ll study recent archaeological and historical research about the interrelated origins of the Jewish people, the Torah, and what would come to be known as “Judaism,” and discuss their ramifications for our own identities and practices as 21st century Jews. The goals are for the learners to understand current theories about the development of the Jewish people as a self-identified nation and the narratives and laws — which would become the Tanakh — used to develop, maintain, and shape this identity. The class will include scholarly sources, in light of which we will study classical Jewish texts with an investigator’s eye to see how they align with the new scholarship.

For additional information and questions, contact the Hebrew College Tamid Team

 

Introduction to Hebrew Decoding & Prayer

Introduction to Hebrew Decoding & Prayer

Program: Hebrew College Tamid
Instructor: Kim Bodemer (Read Bio)
Dates: 10 Thursdays, Winter 2024: 2/13, 2/20, 2/27, 3/6, 3/20, 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17 & 4/24
Time: 8-9:00 p.m. EST
Course fee: $300, financial aid is available
Location: Zoom
Hosted by: Hebrew College
Registration:  Click here

Course Description:
Introduction to Hebrew Decoding and Prayer is an introductory course designed for anyone interested in learning to read Hebrew, or to brush up on Hebrew reading skills. Students will learn the Hebrew alphabet (letters and vowels) and strategies to decode Hebrew words. In addition, we will explore the concept of root letters and how words that contain the same roots have related meanings. Using our newly acquired Hebrew reading skills, we will practice reading portions of prayers that are part of the Shabbat and daily liturgy. This is not a conversational Hebrew course.

Students should purchase the book: Aleph Isn’t Tough: An Introduction to Hebrew for Adults Book 1.

For additional information and questions, contact the Hebrew College Tamid Team