smalljewishgirl:

i’d encourage people to donate to HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, if able. they support refugees and immigrants all over the world. 

the pittsburgh shooter allegedly posted on social media, claiming that HIAS are bringing in ‘hostile invaders’ that ‘kill our people’, before carrying out the shooting. 

he will not silence us. now, more than ever, we stand with immigrants and refugees, and live our jewish values publicly and bravely.

jewishclarkkent:

to all of the jewish people that may be reading this, i hope you and your families are safe today. i hope that you are able to grieve with your community and hold one to each other and hold each other up. 

i am thinking of you all. i am thinking of our communities and our people. 

אנחנו נתגבר ונשרוד גם את זה.

Hi! This is probably a stupid question, but are Jewish people allowed to have pet pigs? I really want to own a small farm some day and have a bunch of animals around for companionship.

jewish-education:

Thank you for the citation @dafyomilimerick

jewish-education:

***Anon’s context involves having a farm so I’m assuming they’ll have the right space/zoning/time/etc. to care for a pig. Pigs are intense to care for and none are as small as you think. Never take on pets you aren’t able to adequately care for.***

Ooh! This is a fun question!

Short answer: Answers vary. Ask your rabbi.

Long answer:

I’ve heard from a Reform rabbi that it’s okay for a Jewish person to take part in raising pigs so long as they themself won’t eat the pig (i.e. be the 4H leader for kid raising a 4H-pig). (Not exactly the same as keeping a pet pig, but if you read the opinion below you can see that keeping a pet pig would likely be more acceptable than helping raise one for meat.)

But I’ve also read lots of Hassidic and righter-wing Orthodox opinions that say NO. Here’s one from Chabad. The others have been in books I’ve borrowed, but were similar arguments with sometimes more extreme conclusions (i.e. a Jew shouldn’t visit pigs at a petting zoo). 

I personally think that some of these more extreme opinions (i.e. I know of someone who takes pigs out of coloring books before giving them to their kids) have to do more with cultural aversion than religious obligation. But there are some grounds for some kinds of prohibitions.

I haven’t seen any opinions in the middle. If halachic acceptability is important to you, you should talk to your rabbi.

Not a stupid question at all.  From a traditional point of view, it’s forbidden to raise  pigs (Shulchan Aruch, Choshen Mishpat 409:2)  This is specific to that animal, and does not apply to non-kosher animals in general.  (For example, raising dogs and cats is fine)

My question for a rabbi (or someone on here who is comfy with Aramaic – although different folks might have different answers?) would be if keeping as a pet is definitely within the word being translated as “raising” or whether that term may be exclusive to livestock.

@philosophersmuse

The tragic tale of Superman’s Jewish creators, told in graphic novel form

jewish-privilege:

When Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel created the Superman character in the early 1930s, they were still living at their parents’ homes.

Of course, the character and his story — the arrival from another planet, his dual identities as mild-mannered reporter and flying, bulletproof crime fighter  — would go on to change the comics industry in several ways and pave the way for the super-heroization of our popular culture.

But Siegel and Shuster originally just wanted to make a little income to support themselves and their families, who had both immigrated from Eastern Europe not long before. They had bonded and began collaborating in high school in Cleveland, and although they were ambitious, they could not have conceived of how influential and popular the character would become. Sadly, they signed over the rights to the Man of Steel early on, dooming themselves to careers full of frustration and misfortune.

The story of these two Jewish comic book legends — Shuster the quiet, reserved artist, and Siegel the earnest, competitive writer — is dramatic and heartbreaking in its own right, and it’s now chronicled in a graphic novel titled “The Joe Shuster Story: The Artist Behind Superman,” written by Julian Voloj and exquisitely illustrated by Thomas Campi. (Voloj, who is Jewish, is also the author of the graphic novel “Ghetto Brother: Warrior to Peacemaker,” a Jewish and Puerto Rican gang leader in the Bronx.) (…)

JTA: So Jerry and Joe are both nerdy outsiders, and that’s how they meet at school. But was their shared Jewish immigrant background also a big part of their coming together? As in, they weren’t just nerds, they also weren’t as assimilated as the other kids?

Julian Voloj: They definitely shared a very similar identity, both born to Eastern European Jewish immigrants — Jerry in Cleveland, Joe in Toronto — but their identity was also the identity of Glenville, the neighborhood they grew up in.

In the 1920s and ’30s, the Cleveland neighborhood was like New York’s Bronx during that time. All their neighbors were Jewish, they were surrounded by dozens of synagogues, kosher groceries, etc. If you look at their high school yearbook, nearly every student seems to have a Jewish name. Even if they were from more assimilated backgrounds, they grew up in a very Jewish environment, so without a doubt, Superman has Jewish roots.

JTA: Jewish identity in America before and after World War II is a recurring theme in the story, but it also feels like 99 percent of the characters in the book are Jewish (from the businessmen to other artists like Stan Lee and so on). Could you give an idea of how Jewish the comic book industry was throughout those early decades and why that might have been?

Julian Voloj: It’s a history with many parallels to the beginning of the American film industry. Jews were discriminated against on the job market. If you were a writer or illustrator, not many jobs were available if you could be identified as Jewish. Some Jews changed their name and hid their identity in order to seek employment. Jewish artists such as Jakob Kurtzberg or Stanley Lieber became Jack Kirby and Stan Lee [respectively], even if they often claimed that their name change had nothing to do with them trying to hide their Jewish background.

When, thanks to Superman, comics became a lucrative industry, job recruitment in this new market happened by word-of-mouth. Friends and family were hired. That’s why, for instance, many comic book pioneers came from even the same high school, such as DeWitt Clinton in the Bronx, where pioneers such as Will Eisner, Stan Lee or Bill Finger, to name but a few, had been students.

Given that also the publishers were Jewish … I think Siegel and Shuster didn’t imagine that they would, as fellow Jews, screw them over. Here, by the way, is an interesting parallel to the garment industry, where factory owners exploited workers even though both came from the same shtetl backgrounds.

(…) It was fascinating to read about Joe’s problems in his own words. Most of the documents were from the late 1960s, during a time when [he was under] the threat of eviction, had doctor bills piling up, etc. — while at the same time preparations were made for a multimillion-dollar Superman movie.

It also became apparent how Jewish he was. For instance, he wrote about the tzedakah he gave during the good years and how ashamed he felt that now he needed help from the Jewish community to pay his own bills.

(…) Many pioneers experienced similar fates. Batman co-creator Bill Finger [who was Jewish], subject of a future graphic novel project I’m currently working on with the Israeli artist Erez Zadok, is another tragic story that only recently had a posthumous happy ending thanks to the efforts of comic historian Marc Tyler Nobleman.

And unfortunately, these stories are not necessarily stories of the past. Earlier this year I read about Bill Messner-Loebs who once worked for DC Comics and was even credited in the “Wonder Woman” movie, but now was homeless in Detroit.

JTA: People have called Superman, who is sent away from his home planet just before it is destroyed, as the ultimate immigrant character. Was this definitely part of Siegel’s thought process in creating him? And can Superman more specifically be compared to a Jewish refugee fleeing a burning Europe?

Superman’s Jewish identity is a recurrent theme. I once read that his origin story is an allegory to the Kindertransport, but this is, of course, a post-Holocaust analysis.

Both their parents escaped poverty and pogroms in Eastern Europe, so this could have influenced the story, which some see as a kind of modernized Moses tale.

I’m neutral when it comes to these interpretations. Superman’s origin story, which we see developing throughout the graphic novel, had many roots for sure, as did the plot. The double identity came from Zorro.

What made Superman a success was that Siegel and Shuster understood the zeitgeist, took elements from contemporary pop culture and created something totally new, something that even today, 80 years after its debut, remains a global success.

[Read Gabe Friedman’s full piece at JTA.]

The tragic tale of Superman’s Jewish creators, told in graphic novel form

would gator be kosher

westsemiteblues:

afronaut:

westsemiteblues:

laughlikesomethingbroken:

westsemiteblues:

animatedamerican:

janothar:

rizaoftheowls:

janothar:

wombatking:

janothar:

…no.  And pretty clearly?

If it’s a land animal, it doesn’t have hooves or chew its cud, so not kosher.

If it’s a fish it lacks fins, so not kosher.

And I’m pretty sure we can rule out it being a bird.

Dinosaurs is where it gets interesting, on that last point. 

For some, but not most.  I mean, “bird” in this context really means “creature that flies” and includes bats.

My understanding is that the classification system is really more about where the critter lives, than any fundamental biology.

…are you suggesting that bats are kosher?

I don’t think they are, but I know more about whether fictional creatures are kosher or not than about bats.  But I know that bats get classified with things that fly and whales with things that swim.

I think I’m more able to say “This thing isn’t kosher” than that something is, also.

Bats are specifically mentioned in the Torah as a “bird” (which is to say, a “flying creature”) that is not kosher.  It’s on the list of prohibited ones.

It is at least theoretically possible that a flying dinosaur would resemble a kosher bird sufficiently to be declared kosher, the way the turkey was, but not terribly likely.  Land-dwelling dinosaurs, having no split hooves and not being cud-chewers, would not be kosher.  I don’t know if it is known whether any sea-dwelling dinosaurs had fins and scales; if they did, they would be kosher.

It does help to remember that with Torah, you are dealing with a classification system that operates from different starting principles than modern scientific classification. As janothar points out, primary habitat or mode of transportation is considered more important than details like warm-bloodedness, or giving birth to live young. Each ‘section’ of creatures, air, land and sea, has specific features it needs to meet to be kosher, ie, in the case of land animals, cloven hooves and chewing cud. This excludes pigs, but it ALSO excludes alligators, which are just another type of land animal that doesn’t meet the requirements.

I apologize to Cajun Jews for this inconvenience.

ok but are they land animals or are they sea animals is the question

yes they’re traife either way but it’s the principle of the thing, don’t you see

I suspect that if it CAN get out of the water and walk around, it counts as a land animal, but I’m not sure. 

Ibn Ezra’s commentary on Exodus (in a section on whether in his opinion the second plague is a plague of crocodiles or of frogs) describes the crocodile as a fish (dag) found in Egypt that comes out of the river and snatches people, so there is precedent for thinking of alligators as fish/sea-creatures.

Ah, thank you.

what about dragons?

yidquotes:

The blue-eyed rabbi in our village at Samotschin used to talk to me as though I were a grown person, even when I was just a boy. We must believe in God, he told me, because if we don’t we will have to believe in man, and then we will only be disappointed.

Anna Funder