Faith — Here & Now: An Interreligious Exploration (Part 2)

Faith — Here & Now: An Interreligious Exploration
A Three-Part Series

What does the word “faith” mean in this liminal moment between quarantine and a return to public life?  How have we held and expressed our faith commitments—religious and secular—over the course of the pandemic? What roles do doubt and questioning play as we sort through the collage of emotion that we carry with us daily?

Please join us for the second offering in this three-part opportunity for an interreligious exploration of notions of faith through text study and discussion with leaders from Boston’s Jewish, Christian, and Muslim communities.

Each session will open with a brief video presentation from the photographic exhibit “Faith in Isolation Expressed,” curated by Brenda Bancel, and close with a musical selection and silent meditation.

>> View the flyer

This free program is a collaboration of the Miller Center of for Learning & Leadership and the Arts Committee of Hebrew College.


Dates & Times

Wednesday, May 19 — 1-2 PM
Tuesday, May 25 — 1-2 PM

Register for one or both sessions here.

Registration for this free series is required. Participants will receive the Zoom link one day prior to each session.


Moderator

Or RoseRabbi Or Rose Rabbi Or Rose is the founding director of the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership of Hebrew College. Rabbi Rose is the author or editor of various scholarly and popular works, including Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi: Essential Teachings (Orbis Books).


Featured Teachers

Imam - Tufts
Imam Abdul-Malik Merchant (May 19)
Tufts University

Rev. StendallReverend John Stendahl (May 25)
Lutheran Church of the Newtons

 

Faith — Here & Now: An Interreligious Exploration

Faith — Here & Now: An Interreligious Exploration
A Three-Part Series

What does the word “faith” mean in this liminal moment between quarantine and a return to public life?  How have we held and expressed our faith commitments—religious and secular—over the course of the pandemic? What roles do doubt and questioning play as we sort through the collage of emotion that we carry with us daily?

Please join us for a unique opportunity for an interreligious exploration of notions of faith through text study and discussion with leaders from Boston’s Jewish, Christian, and Muslim communities.

Each session will open with a brief video presentation from the photographic exhibit “Faith in Isolation Expressed,” curated by Brenda Bancel, and close with a musical selection and silent meditation.

>> View the flyer

This free program is a collaboration of the Miller Center of for Learning & Leadership and the Arts Committee of Hebrew College.


Dates & Times

Tuesday, May 11 — 1-2 PM  [EVENT PASSED]
Wednesday, May 19 — 1-2 PM  [EVENT PASSED]
Tuesday, May 25 — 1-2 PM

Register for any or all of the sessions here.

Registration for this free series is required. Participants will receive the Zoom link one day prior to each session.


Moderator

Or RoseRabbi Or Rose is the founding director of the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership of Hebrew College. Rabbi Rose is the author or editor of various scholarly and popular works, including Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi: Essential Teachings (Orbis Books).


Featured Teachers

Rabbi Marcia PlumbRabbi Marcia Plumb (May 11)
Congregation Mishkan Tefila

 

Imam - Tufts
Imam Abdul-Malik Merchant (May 19)
Tufts University

Rev. StendallReverend John Stendahl (May 25)
Lutheran Church of the Newtons

 

The Queer Jewish Arts Festival

The Queer Jewish Arts Festival, is a new series of programs celebrating LGBTQIA+ stories and experiences through film, theater, music, and dance. This festival will highlight local and national queer Jewish artists who are making art with Jewish content and examine intersectional identity and creative expression. The festival will take place June 1-13th.


monica-gomeryFeaturied session with Rabbi Mónica Gomery `17

Shaping Worlds with Words: Two Emerging Queer Jewish Writers in Conversation
Tuesday, June 8, 2021 at 7:30 pm

A mystery-novelist-community-organizer and a poet-rabbi walk into a bar… Join Rachel Sharona Lewis and Rabbi Mónica Gomery `17 (right) for a conversation about writing at the intersection of Judaism and queerness. The authors will reflect together on the creative process, their latest projects, and the shared themes that run between their work. What stories feel important to tell, as we write new paths toward the world we dream of? Lewis and Gomery will read from their recent books, and explore this and other questions.

Rabbi Mónica Gomery is a rabbi and poet, living on Lenni Lenape land in Philadelphia. raised by her Venezuelan Jewish family in Boston and Caracas, Her work explores queerness, diaspora, ancestry, theology, and cultivating courageous hearts. She is the author of Here is the Night and the Night on the Road, and the chapbook Of Darkness and TumblingLearn more about Mónica on the Hebrew College podcast Speaking Torah episode “Stop Making Sense.”

Rachel Sharona Lewis is an (accidental) mystery novelist based in Watertown, MA. She recently published her first novel, The Rabbi Who Prayed With Fire, inspired by Harry Kemelman’s best-selling Rabbi Small mystery series. By day, she organizes faith communities in the Boston area around local social justice efforts. In her free time, she enjoys reading fiction and non-fiction alike, watching women’s basketball and playing the trombone in her community brass band.


Sponsors

JCC of Baltimore, Hebrew College & co-sponsors

Hebrew College Spring Prozdor Alumni Reunion

Prozdor students throwback

Reconnect with your Prozdor classmates and other alumni at our virtual Hebrew College Spring Prozdor Reunion on April 27th from 7:30-8:30 p.m. EST. Join us for this special evening of learning with Prozdor teachers Mr. Norm Finkelstein,  Mr. Matthew Lowe, and Rabbi Laura Bellows`18.

This event is open to all Prozdor grads — please share with your former classmates! We also encourage you to update your information so we can stay in touch as Hebrew College gets ready to celebrate our Centennial in 2022.


Breakout Sessions (You may choose one)

Inside the Golden Gate: When the Holocaust Came to America
with Mr. Norm Finkelstein, Prozdor alum and current faculty member

In 1944, at the height of World War II, 982 European refugees found a temporary haven in Oswego, New York. They had spent frightening years one step ahead of Nazi pursuers and death. They spoke nineteen languages, and, while most of the refugees were Jewish, some were Catholic, Greek Orthodox, and Protestant Christians. From the time they arrived at the Fort Ontario Emergency Refugee Shelter they began re-creating their lives. In the history of World War II and the Holocaust, this “token” save by President Franklin D. Roosevelt was too little and too late for millions. But for those few who reached Oswego it was life changing.


Life is Unpleasant – Wisdom from our Sages
Matthew Lowe, Prozdor faculty 2007-2017

When even the Rabbis say it would be easier if we hadn’t been created (Eruvin 13b), how do we live with that? A lesson with Matthew Lowe, who is now a therapist in NYC if you can believe it (you can).


How to Stay Hydrated While Crossing the Sea: What one Midrash Can Teach Us About Responding to Climate Change Today
Rabbi Laura Bellows, Director of Prozdor and Teen Learning

It was 1730 in the Ottomon Empire when Rabbi Yaakov Culi started printing the Me’am Lo’ez, intended as a user-friendly Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) commentary on the Tanakh for his rapidly assimilating community. In it he tells of no less than 50 miracles (including access for all to safe drinking water!) that helped the Children of Israel cross the Red Sea. Using the Me’am Lo’ez’s midrash at the sea as our source text, we will explore what wisdom it may offer for building a just, accessible, and climate resilient society today.

Faith in Isolation Expressed Art Exhibit

Kiddush cup and screen photo

Inaugural Hebrew College Arts Initiative

“This idea of seasons within faith, was one I thought of often. In Genesis 8:22 it reads, ‘For as long as Earth lasts, planting and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never stop.'”
— Brenda Bancel, curator of  “Faith in Isolation Expressed” 

Over the past challenging year, many of us found ourselves looking for strength and faith when separated from our communities. In Hebrew College’s inaugural Arts Initiative project “Faith in Isolation Expressed,” photographer and curator Brenda Bancel has created a photo installation looking at how we found that faith despite our challenges. “At one point I began looking through the Internet for photos of faith and how people were digging deep into theirs in order to be comforted,” she said. “People were getting creative in order to engage in their faith. It was so moving to see believers unite together in this period of separation.”

>> Read more about Bancel and the inspiration for the exhibit

supported by cjp logoHebrew College is grateful that our Arts Initiative is supported by Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Boston’s (CJP) Arts and Culture initiative.


Exhibit dates + in person touring schedule

Title: The Faith in Isolation Expressed

Dates: April 12 to June 14, 2021

Location: Hebrew College Cutler Atrium

Reservations: To tour the gallery in person, please email Tanya McCann at tmccann@hebrewcollege.edu to sign up for a 30-minute visit with masks and distance. Four people per group. 

Hours: Open for public viewing Mondays through Fridays by appointment, using COVID-safe protocols. The show may be viewed on the following days and times:

  • Mondays: 8:30 am – 3:00 pm
  • Tuesdays: 8:30 am – 3:00 pm
  • Wednesdays: 8:30 am – 2:00 pm
  • Thursdays: 8:30 am – 2:00 pm
  • Fridays: 8:30 am – 12:30 pm

Brenda BancelAbout the Curator: Brenda Bencel

Brenda Bancel is the President of the Champions of Love Foundation and owner of Brenda Bancel Photography LLC. She spent ten years in the advertising industry working with clients such as Apple in Los Angeles and IBM in New York, Paris and London before realizing that she wanted to focus on non-profit work.   She was President of the TAKE 5 Foundation for ten years where she gave photography lessons to kids in underserved communities. She is a 2011 graduate of the New England School of Photography where she received honors in documentary.  She also recently studied for two years at the Harvard Divinity School as a special student. Brenda is interested in the cross section of where creativity and compassion intersect.


Faith in Isolation: A Multifaith Panel Discussion

In response to Brenda Bancel’s “Faith in Isolation Expressed” exhibit, religious leaders from the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions will explore the ways in which they and their communities have expressed their spiritual commitments during the pandemic. This will include discussion of prayer, meditation, study, and acts of service and advocacy. Panelists include: Rabbi Or Rose, founding director of the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership of Hebrew College; Dr. Celene Ibrahim, author of Women and Gender in the Qur’an and editor of One Nation, Indivisible: Seeking Liberty and Justice from the Pulpit to the Streets; and Shively T. J. Smith, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of New Testament at Boston University School of Theology.

>> Learn more


Curator’s Statement

One of the things that I can’t live without in my life is faith.

It’s like breathing for me.

But when Covid seeped into the world, fear and uncertainty sank in; governments, news channels, organizations all scrambled to try to understand this deadly virus.

Fear, is mentioned a lot in my faith, The phrase, “Fear not, “ is mentioned over 70 times in the bible.  Yet, here I was, afraid.  I needed my spiritual nourishment.  The world was in quarantine, all  of us collectively trying to figure out how to be safe to ourselves and to others.

This time was an incredibly challenging season for myself and my family.

This idea of seasons within faith, was one I thought of often. In Genesis 8:22 it reads, “For as long as Earth lasts, planting and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never stop.”

This moment for me felt like a very long, cold, dark winter.

As a photographer, I felt zero inspiration to capture this moment in time. I only wanted to see the other side of this pandemic and still do.  But at one point I began looking through the Internet for photos of faith and how people were digging deep into theirs in order to be comforted.  I saw photos of people finding ways to celebrate the high holidays, perform sacraments, conduct prayers and even do baptisms by squirt guns.  People were getting creative in order to engage in their faith.  It was so moving to see believers unite together in this period of separation.

There were also photos of extreme sadness. The solitude of death, the inability to be together to celebrate a life lost felt unbearable. These were moments where only being together could bring serenity and comfort.

But globally, across all religions, the beauty of the believers in their quest and thirst for spiritual practice brought hope into my days.

As I was also looking to nature to comfort me, I was reading about the amazing life of the sequoia trees. Their life felt like an analogy of faith.

The sequoia is the oldest and one of the largest tree species in the world.  It never stops growing in its lifetime. They can live 3000 years and be 300 feet tall.  To put this in perspective, it’s the size of a twenty-six floor building. They can be 30 feet in diameter.  So the tree, is just an amazing force and presence.

Yet in order for the tree to reproduce, the pine cones must be set on fire so they open and the seed is released.
So for the sequoia to bear life, it must suffer.

The sequoias greatest risk of dying is not fire however, as its bark protects the tree, but its greatest risk of dying is that their roots are too shallow, far too shallow for their height and weight.

So in order to live, they grow near each other, and they pull on each others roots for support.

They pull on each others roots so they don’t fall down.

For me it perfectly sums up this moment, this season. We all pulled each other up in order to make sure we didn’t fall. It showed that even the strong are vulnerable, and that sometimes the suffering can lead to a beautiful harvest. Let’s talk about what the harvest will be. Let’s find the beauty in the harvest.


Selections from the Exhibit

Growing in Spirit: Exploring Interreligious Education at the High School and Undergraduate Levels

 

Join the Journal of Interreligious Studies and the Association for Interreligious/Interfaith Studies for a spring symposium on interreligious education—classroom-based and co-curricular—at the high school and undergraduate levels. Hear from practitioners, scholars, and students who will share best practices, pandemic-related insights, and ongoing questions and challenges. The symposium will include small group discussion (breakout rooms) to allow for more intimate conversation.

Register here to receive the Zoom dial in details via email:

 

Special thanks to the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations whose support made this  event possible.

Arthur Vining Davis Foundations logo

 

 

 

 

Organizers:

Logo: Journal of Interreligious StudiesAssociation for Interreligious/Interfaith Studies