Ta Shma

Hadar Institute
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Feb 5, 2025 • 9min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Beshallah: Ghosts in the Haggadah

The Exodus from Egypt is, in one way of telling it, a ghost story.This is not the usual genre we assign to the tale.  We describe it as a story of liberation.  The emotions we associate with it are a mixture of triumph, joy, and awe.  But stories are created, in part, by where we choose to begin and end them, and the Exodus is a story with many beginnings.
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Feb 3, 2025 • 45min

R. Aviva Richman: Defining Da'at: A Jewish Perspective on Artificial Intelligence

Rabbi Aviva Richman, a scholar focused on Jewish thought and ethics, tackles the profound intersections of artificial intelligence and human identity. She dissects the Hebrew term 'da'at' to explore human mental awareness and agency. The discussion ranges from the inherent limitations of AI in understanding context to viewing AI through ethical Jewish models. Richman emphasizes the need for trust and communal responsibility, urging listeners to consider the philosophical implications of using AI as an intermediary in human interactions.
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Jan 29, 2025 • 7min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Bo: Telling God’s Story

Whose story do we tell on the Seder night?The answer, at first, seems obvious: the story we tell is our own, the story of our deliverance from slavery to freedom. It is the core story of our people. It is the grand drama of Jewish history in which we are still enmeshed today.But this week’s parashah offers another interpretation, one in which it is God, not (only) ourselves, at the center of the story. 
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Jan 27, 2025 • 36min

R. Shai Held: Psalm for Tuesday

The psalms attached liturgically to each day of the week are often mumbled over quickly, without much attention to their meaning. In this series, we'll engage in careful literary-theological readings of these psalms, looking at how various midrashim interpret the psalms, and bring new meaning to this part of our daily prayers. Key themes explored will include the idea that God creates the world by subduing the chaotic forces that threaten life; the notion that a concern for justice is what makes a god "qualified" to be one; and the question of what kind of character those who seek to live in God's presence must have. Recorded in Fall 2023. Source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/HeldShirimTuesday2023.pdf
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Jan 22, 2025 • 8min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Va'Era: Remembering Who We Are

After Pharaoh's first refusal, after the Jewish people's burden increases because of his words, Moshe can't imagine redemption.
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Jan 20, 2025 • 7min

R. Micha'el Rosenberg on MLK Day: A Mighty Stream

One of the most memorable and impactful lines of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech” is his invocation of the prophet Amos (5:24): “…No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.”  Dr. King introduces the words of the prophet to close a section with the repeated refrain “We cannot be satisfied.”  Each repetition of the phrase describes a different oppression that Black Americans face, reaching its climax with Dr. King’s charge that protest against injustice cannot rest until justice and righteousness are as prevalent and unambiguous as the mighty waters.
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Jan 15, 2025 • 7min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Shemot: Choosing Hope

Women’s wombs lie at the heart of the Exodus.
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Jan 13, 2025 • 42min

R. Miriam-Simma Walfish and R. Deborah Sacks Mintz: Nigun Hannah

The narrative of Hannah in Tanakh paints the picture of a yearning journey through prayer as dynamic expression - one of varied posture, volume, intensity, and presence. Rabbis Miriam-Simma and Deobrah Sacks Mintz explore rabbinic sources, punctuated by learning and singing together a newly composed Nigun Hannah, to dig into the prayers of our own hearts. Recorded at Hadar's Manger Winter Learning Seminar, 2023. Source Sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/MWLS2023WalfishSacksMintzNigunHannah.pdf
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Jan 8, 2025 • 10min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Vayehi: “Am I My Brother’s Keeper?”

It is easy to forget that the end of Bereishit is a surprise ending.So used to the fact that all twelve sons and their descendants are included in the Jewish nation, we forget that that wasn’t always necessarily part of the plan, that the inclusion of all children is something new and unexpected.
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Jan 8, 2025 • 9min

R. Tali Adler on Parashat Vayigash: Learning to Re-Read Our Dreams

As he approaches the man that he thinks is the viceroy, entrapped in the massive lie that Yosef has arranged, Yehudah begins to tell the truth.It has been a long road to this moment.  For so long, the brothers have been committed to a lie, the vision of their family as they wished it was, in which their father loved all of them, in which there was no favorite—most beloved wife and her favorite, most beloved sons—the family they tried desperately to create the day they sold Yosef, and that, as they saw Ya’akov cry for years over Rahel’s beloved son and refuse to be comforted, they must have understood they would never have.

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