What Israel restored to the Jewish people episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 29, 2023 · 14 MIN

What Israel restored to the Jewish people

from Martini Judaism · host Religion News Service

So, this really happened. Some years ago, my young cousin was on a United Synagogue Youth trip to Israel. While she was there, the group went north to tour the grottoes at Rosh HaNikra. Alas, while taking photographs, she dropped her camera into the water. She called her mother, heartbroken, and they both concluded the camera was irretrievably lost. A month after her return to the States, my young cousin got a package. It contained her camera. What had happened? Apparently, there were Israel Defense Forces soldiers on maneuvers, off the Mediterranean Coast — not far from Rosh HaNikra. A skin diver found the camera, sitting at the bottom of the sea. He opened the camera; took out the card; saw photographs of kids wearing USY Minneapolis T-shirts; contacted USY in Minneapolis; asked if anyone who had been on an Israel trip had lost a camera; located her — and that was how my cousin got her camera back. Perhaps this would have happened anywhere. But, to me, it is the sort of thing that makes you say: "Rak b'Yisrael. Only in Israel." Why? The mitzvah is called hashavat aveidah — returning lost objects. It is a Jewish obsession. There is an entire section of the Talmud that covers this subject. There, we read that in the ancient Temple, there was a chamber to which people would bring stuff they had found, and people would search there for what they had lost. A midrash says every tribe of Israel had a particular job to do. The tribe of Dan had the job of tagging along after all the other tribes to find lost objects they might have dropped along the way. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel, let us ask ourselves: What had the Jewish people lost? And, what did the state of Israel help them find again? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

So, this really happened. Some years ago, my young cousin was on a United Synagogue Youth trip to Israel. While she was there, the group went north to tour the grottoes at Rosh HaNikra. Alas, while taking photographs, she dropped her camera into the water. She called her mother, heartbroken, and they both concluded the camera was irretrievably lost. A month after her return to the States, my young cousin got a package. It contained her camera. What had happened? Apparently, there were Israel Defense Forces soldiers on maneuvers, off the Mediterranean Coast — not far from Rosh HaNikra. A skin diver found the camera, sitting at the bottom of the sea. He opened the camera; took out the card; saw photographs of kids wearing USY Minneapolis T-shirts; contacted USY in Minneapolis; asked if anyone who had been on an Israel trip had lost a camera; located her — and that was how my cousin got her camera back. Perhaps this would have happened anywhere. But, to me, it is the sort of thing that makes you say: "Rak b'Yisrael. Only in Israel." Why? The mitzvah is called hashavat aveidah — returning lost objects. It is a Jewish obsession. There is an entire section of the Talmud that covers this subject. There, we read that in the ancient Temple, there was a chamber to which people would bring stuff they had found, and people would search there for what they had lost. A midrash says every tribe of Israel had a particular job to do. The tribe of Dan had the job of tagging along after all the other tribes to find lost objects they might have dropped along the way. As we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel, let us ask ourselves: What had the Jewish people lost? And, what did the state of Israel help them find again? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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What Israel restored to the Jewish people

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What Does Judaism Say About...? Nachum Amsel What does Judaism Say About...? is a podcast where we explore different values, ethical issues, or dilemmas relevant to the 21st century, and examine the normative Jewish viewpoint on each issue. Every week, a fascinating value and topic will be analyzed from the traditional Jewish perspective. MJ Next Drake Dunaway & David Cook Messianic Judaism Next, or MJ Next, is a podcast founded to ignite candid and long-overdue conversations confronting current issues within Messianic Judaism, bringing it closer to a traditional, sustainable, and grown-up religion.We take the legitimacy of Torah and Messiah as givens well past re-litigation. Instead, we call for a Messianic Jewish Revolution that starts from the template of Judaism – complete with its collective wisdom, tradition, scholarship, lifecycles, and rabbinic pedigree – accepting Yeshua as the Messiah and the legitimacy of the New Covenant writings sans the filter of Christian dogma.We will tackle wide-ranging contemporary topics through uncompromising honesty and humor, serving up a crass, unorthodox style in service of an Orthodox Messianic Judaism.You can find us at https://www.mjnext.fm.We welcome and encourage your feedback. If you have topic suggestions, send us an email ([email protected]). Ani Judaism International (Formerly Lapid Judaism International) Christopher Fredrickson The North American Rebbe for Ani Judaism International discusses topics related to the Torah and the Messiah Yeshua from a Hasidic point of view, Contemporary Jewish Thoughts from Beth Adam Rabbi Robbert Barr Old Judaism to Bold Judaism

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This episode was published on April 29, 2023.

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So, this really happened. Some years ago, my young cousin was on a United Synagogue Youth trip to Israel. While she was there, the group went north to tour the grottoes at Rosh HaNikra. Alas, while taking photographs, she dropped her camera into the...

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