Matan, Jerusalem, 30 Rashbag Street |
Dr. Yael Ziegler, on the stage and Malka Bina, founder of Matan greeting the students |
By the time Yael Ziegler began her lecture every seat was taken, and women sat on the stairs. |
Yael Liebowitz, somehow I didn't catch her smiling |
Like many others who had crowded into the Matan auditorium, I choose my courses by teachers. We sign up religiously for the two Yaels, regardless of the course titles. And to be perfectly honest, we haven't been disappointed yet. Both gave spellbinding, gevaldik, spectacular opening lectures.
Yael Liebowitz's student body has been growing every year. |
These are the Matan courses I'm taking this year. I've already officially signed up and paid.
Creation, Un-creation and Re-creation Bresishit 1-11 by Dr. Yael ZieglerThere are other excellent teachers and courses on other days and in branches of Matan all over the country. Yael Liebowitz is giving the same course in a few other branches, if you're interested and can't get to Jerusalem on Wednesdays.
Making Sense of Biblical Dichotomies and Simultaneous Truths by Yael Leibowitz
I hope you can join us studying in Matan, highly recommended.
5 comments:
"Shayla is an online Halakhic resource in English directed and run by graduates of Hilkhata. Shayla answers a growing need of Jewish women, including students, for an accessible go-to address for them to ask Halakhic questions and seek guidance."
Does Matan believe in "poseqoth halakha?" Or is this just for Family Purity laws?
Does Matan believe in encouraging women to fulfill their obligatory mitzvoth, before concerning themselves with optional mitzvoth (eg. Torah study, even more so Oral Torah study)?
Is their focus that Torah study will assist women in fulfilling obligatory mitzvoth?
What is Matan's understanding of the term "rabbanit?" Wife of a rabbi? Or a title independent from ones husband or marital status?
Rabbanit is wife of a rabbi, and your other questions should be asked of them, not me. I'm just a Tanach student.
As far as I know, there are limited halachik specialties. But Talmud isn't my Judaic genre.
Yalkut Meam Loez, commentary on
Devarim [Deuteronomy], chapter 1, verse 8:
[volume 15, page 69 of English translation]:
G*D thus said to the Israelites:
“I am giving you these lands as a gift,
but only on the condition that you
keep My Torah and commandments.
If you want these lands to be yours as an
inheritance, so that no one can take it
away from you, [then] rectify your deeds and
these lands will never be taken away from you.”
Yes, Batya. I already know what a rabbanit is. I was asking what they think it means.\
I was hoping that someone associated with this group would know the answer to these questions, and that those answer would influence your decision to remain, or not remain associated with them.
Please email me a contact person of whom I may ask these questions.
Thank you.
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