The Immersive Experience of Torah
Extrajudicial Execution
Texts: Extrajudicial Execution
"Ish Asher Ruach Elohim" Qualities of a Spirit Guide
Up Against The Wall
Texts: Up Against The Wall
Failure of Vision
Texts: Failure of Vision
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger X
Batya Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger IX
Dr. Julian Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger VIII
Dr. Julian Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger VII
Batya Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger VI
Miriam Gettinger shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Batya Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Tsiona Adler(nee Ungar-Sargon) gives the memory of the Rebbetzin. Batya Ungar-Sargon gives a memory of Willi Ungar, her grandfather and Dr. Julian Ungar-Sargon's father. Rabbi Perkel teaches two Netziv's from this week's parsha.
Hesped for Dad
This hesped was given on March 9, 2023 at the burial of my father, Wilhelm Ungar, may his memory be a blessing.
Miriam Gettinger shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger II
Batya Ungar-Sargon shares Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
Netziv On The Parsha In Memory Of Rebbetzin Rocheil Gettinger I
Batya Ungar-Sargon shares four Netziv commentaries on the parsha. These sessions are held on Zoom every week in memory of our mother in-law whose dedication to the Netziv (her great great grandfather), was legendary. It is estimated she studied the Ha'amek Davar some 78 times throughout her life, devoting every Tuesday to its study. May her memory be a blessing to her family and klal Yisroel.
The Matronisa
At 32,000 feet one is allowed to let the mind wander, At 32,000 feet certain thoughts are permitted, no?
Lord, can you allow me certain thoughts at this altitude?
will you permit me thoughts unacceptable and inappropriate at ground level?
Up here I am close to the heavens, can we agree?
up here the blue sky seems more pure (and eternal)
up here the burden of my own mortality is lifted momentarily, up here I feel the license to say things not allowed down below, thoughts that would be misinterpreted “down there”.
So permit me some heretical thoughts, maybe?
for up here, I fear less the inner Kritik!
up here my flight attendant,
has been inexplicably liberal in the administration of bloody Mary’s.
Let me then express
what I would never dare down there,
let me invite you
to feelings not revealed,
let me in
on what you know already
since you are so intuitive from that which has hitherto been congealed.
The transgressive includes you my dear, beyond the professionalism and propriety, the learned intellectual discussions
over Pinot Noir and Netziv!
the heart has no boundaries (you know, of course)
and the heart will have its way no matter what the consequence. For the Divine operates under atmospheric conditions
and today surprisingly the sky is blue
the heavens have an azure clarity,
which means the real truth is present and obvious
which means down below we are in trouble.
So forgive me a while,
under the Mariological influence,
of a deadly combination of sky blue and the redness of this inflammatory concoction, and reminiscences of the black Madonna of Częstochowa,
(at least the Vodka in the Bloody Mary survived!)
allowing the inner Kritik ( wife? Mother? for whom I mourn thrice daily?)
a moments reprieve.
Up here at 32,000 feet,
where all barriers to expression maybe removed for a while,
I can say the following
and not pay the price down below.
I love you my dear
and through you I love Her,
though the very transgression
beyond the rule book
beyond the Halachic
beyond the appropriate.
For She makes demands
on me,
and I have little idea how to handle Her
despite my age
and struggles.
She still thinks/demands satisfaction as/is possible.
Strung between Wife, Mother and Schechina (the RAMAK was correct) between every woman I have loved and the law
here I am today, this moment
my tears and my heart in unison
the head games are out of the picture up here (thank goodness or Godness) the reality of life, love and death so clear,
and the knowing heart fills my being,
with no higher criticism (Biblical or Psychological!)
to account to.
I am writing at 32,000 feet, a dizzying height even without Vodka! But my fingers are merely gliding over the keyboard
a demoness has possessed them for a few,
The words flow like the red liquor
The censor is off duty, we have fooled it at 32,000 feet And outside... the eternal blueness,
but inside.... the bloody Mary lingers a little longer imbibed in the incarnation of Mary/Schechina/You
I am at peace if only for a few.
Noah The Survivor
We trace three episodes in the midrashic life of Noah, his father’s hope for him (Rashi: inventor of the plow), his wounding by the lion (either inside or on exiting the ark) and subsequent impotence, and his planting of the vineyard (with Satan) and inebriation.
How do these connect and how do they inform him and us as to the dark side of technology as a solution to the cursed ground?
References:
Bereishis, Torah Tavlin: Spice or Antidote?
We explore the challenge of describing a prelapsarian Edenic world without the yetzer hara…Using language of a post-lapsarian post-Eitz Hadaas self-consciousness
The Talmud (Kiddushin 30)suggests that torah is a Tavlin for the Yetzer hara….how do we translate this word?
And how does the translation affect the way we articulate the impact of the yetser hara?