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Please join us for seven weeks of interdisciplinary learning featuring a study of classic and contemporary texts on images of the Land of Israel. Dr. Barry Chazan will lead our study with Dr.'s Ben Hollander, Fred Krome, Stanley Nash, James Rudin and Ezra Spicehander. Join our “guests” for a conversation about diverse relationships to Israel over time and over place. Engage in a dynamic and informal chat about where we have been, where we are now, and the direction we might take in forming close ties and meaningful connections to our complex and sacred homeland. The Sefirah Study is an email correspondence course. The scholars' prepared course materials will be emailed to you as Adobe Acrobat documents for study. Barry Chazan will introduce and conclude the Sefirah study as well as weaving together the weekly units (see schedule below). The Sefirah Study follows a Monday/Thursday schedule (holidays permitting): each week on Monday, we begin our study of a new text or set of text, and on Thursday, the scholar of the week will provide his/her thoughts on the text(s). Comments and questions will be emailed in digest form to the group as they arrive. (For courses with live or recorded presentations, please see our Mini-Courses or Mahaloqet L'Shem Shamayim Programs.)
As a participant, you will receive an introduction from Dr. Barry Chazan prior to Passover which will introduce the program's themes. Then the course itself begins on April 25. For each of the seven weeks, you will receive a weekly text study and a weekly text study conclusion. The text study introduces a text and the approach or discipline of the week's scholar: it includes background exposition, the text, and study questions. For Thursday, the text study conclusion provides some of the scholar's own insights into the material for your review after you have studied "Monday's" material. We encourage you to study with a chevruta or small group of colleagues. Throughout the course, you will have a chance to interact with your colleagues and our special presenters via the email discussion. This is a chance to explore the material in greater depth and ask any questions you might have. Click to add this course to your cart!
Dr. Frederic J. Krome received his Ph.D. from the University of Cincinnati 1992. He is the Academic Associate of the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, the Managing Editor of The American Jewish Archives Journal, and the Associate Director of The Marcus Center Fellowship Program. Dr. Krome is also an Adjunct Professor of History & Judaic Studies at the University of Cincinnati. His articles have been published in The Historian, The Journal of Contemporary History, Modern Judaism, and Jewish Culture and History. A regular Book Reviewer for Choice Magazine and Library Journal, he was named Library Journal’s Book Reviewer of the Year for Non-Fiction in 2002.
Rabbi Rudin has served congregations in Kansas City, Missouri and Champaign, Illinois. He was also a United States Air Force Chaplain in Japan and Korea. In 1964 he participated in an interreligious, inter racial voting rights drive in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. In 1997 the Polish Council of Christians and Jews presented Rabbi Rudin with its “Person of Reconciliation Award” at a ceremony in Warsaw. Rabbi Rudin is the author or editor of seven books, “Twenty Years of Catholic-Jewish Relations,” “Evangelicals and Jews in Conversation,” “A Time to Speak: The Evangelical-Jewish Encounter,” “Evangelicals and Jews in an Age of Pluralism,” “Prison or Paradise: The New Religious Cults,” “Why Me? Why Anyone?” and “Israel for Christians: Understanding Modern Israel.” He is a recognized expert on religious cults.
He coauthored with Dr. Jakob Petuchowski Perakim Beyahaduth (Chapters in Judaism). 1963. He co-edited The Hebrew Poem Itself, with Stanley Burnshaw and T. Carmi (Holt, Reinhart and Winston, 1965). Harvard University Press, 1989, published a revised edition of this work and The Wayne State University Press published a new and updated edition of The Modern Hebrew Poem Itself in 2003. He edited an anthology of the modern Hebrew short story for Bantam. Among other publications in Hebrew are a book about Joshua Heschel Schorr (1970) and a study on the Jews in Iran (1967). In 2000 he co-authored with Prof. David Patterson, Random Harvest, a translation of the major short stories of Hayyim Nahman Bialik. Dr. Spicehandler served as Divisional Editor of Modern Hebrew Literature of the Encyclopedia Judaica where he wrote the comprehensive article of Modern Hebrew Literature.
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