|
Broader context: The Orthodox world, and its myriad factions, is grappling with how to deal with queer people in its synagogues and schools. Yeshiva University is embroiled in a legal battle because it refuses to recognize its LGBTQ+ student club. And many allies of gay Orthodox Jews say this type of shunning has led to a mental health crisis and even suicide.
A path forward: My colleague, Laura E. Adkins, and I spoke Wednesday with Rabbi Jonathan Leener, who leads a Modern Orthodox congregation in Brooklyn, about how he is embracing queer people and working to convince his colleagues to do the same. Rabbis, he said, “should be a voice for the most vulnerable members of a community.”
Tune in: Watch our conversation with Rabbi Leener in the video above, or subscribe to That Jewish News Show wherever you get podcasts. |
ALSO IN THE FORWARD |
(Denberg) |
Meet the Jewish Tony nominees: The annual awards take place on Sunday, and cap a big year for Jews on Broadway. Lea Michele starred as Fanny Brice in Funny Girl, and Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond dramatized the lynching of Leo Frank in Parade. Leopoldstadt, a multi-generational story of a family in the years before and after the Holocaust, received multiple nominations, including for Best Play. Dennis Eisenberg, an illustrator whose professional moniker is DenBerg, whipped up drawings of many of the nominees. See his illustrations ➤
Opinion | Why did two LA lawyers tank their careers with antisemitic emails? Our columnist Rob Eshman writes that the “good news” about the prominent attorneys who resigned this week after being exposed for badmouthing Jews is that they “were equal opportunity bigots” – also mocking Blacks, gay people and women. Rob argues that the lawyers epitomize an entitled high class who “see the pie as finite, and think they deserve seven slices.” Read his essay ➤ |
Tucker Carlson at a 2018 event in Los Angeles. (Getty) |
Plus…
|
WHAT ELSE YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY |
Judy Clarke, left, passes protesters during the 2015 trial of the Boston Marathon bombing suspect. (Getty) |
Quotable ➤ “I’m convinced that all of us, without hope, wouldn’t have lasted a day.” – Ivor Perl, a 91 year old survivor of Auschwitz whose parents and seven siblings were murdered in the Holocaust, in an interview with The Guardian.
What else we’re reading ➤ Why these six Americans moved away from organized religion … 65% of Jewish Americans said they would be comfortable learning a friend is transgender … Why is The Simpsons obsessed with this weird Nazi movie? |
ON THE CALENDAR |
On this day in history (1949): The FBI issued a report naming Hollywood figures as members of the Communist Party. What became known as the Red Scare heavily impacted Jewish screenwriters, including six of the first 10 witnesses interrogated by the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Tens of thousands are expected to attend Tel Aviv’s 25th annual Pride Parade this afternoon.
It’s National Best Friends Day. Did you know that some of President Abraham Lincoln’s best friends were Jewish? |
VIDEO OF THE DAY |
Netflix is turning All the Light We Cannot See, the Pulitzer Prize-winning 2014 novel by Anthony Doerr, into a four-part series. It stars Mark Ruffalo as a dad who flees Nazi-occupied Paris with his blind daughter, who strikes up an unlikely friendship with a teenager working in Hitler’s regime. It debuts in the fall; watch the trailer above.
— Thanks to Jaclyn De Bonis, Tani Levitt, Jake Wasserman and Talya Zax for contributing to today’s newsletter. You can reach the “Forwarding” team at editorial@forward.com. |
The post In Pride month, some Orthodox boycott Torah website for being ‘gender-sensitive’ appeared first on The Forward.
The post In Pride month, some Orthodox boycott Torah website for being ‘gender-sensitive’ first appeared on The News And Times – thenewsandtimes.com.