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Brant Rosen psalm 79
can you pour out your love
upon the ones you do not know,
the ones who mutter their strange
and fearful prayers, who
refuse to call upon god
by your comfortable, familiar names?can you tear open your robe and
let your compassion bleed out,
swaddling and comforting
those you have been taught to fear
with an indignation that burns
like a devouring fire?are you ready to mourn
the dead of another family
whose blood is your blood,
the one who looks like a stranger
but is, in truth,
your own flesh and kin?https://archive.reconstructingjudaism.org/article/psalm-79-pour-out-your-love
Posted on: 2017/08/15 - 5:12pm
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Amidah for Peace, Justice, and Immigration
This alternative Amidah was used during mincha prayers by members of the Reconstructionist Rabbinic Association outside of an Immigration Processing Center in order to call attention to the plight of immigrants and underscore the importance of the Jewish obligation to welcome the stranger. It is meant to be done as a call and response.
Avot
God of our ancestors. God of immigrants. God of refugees. We are border crossers.
We tie our fate with You who cannot be contained by customs offices. You who requires no passporthttps://archive.reconstructingjudaism.org/article/amidah-peace-justice-and-immigration
Posted on: 2017/08/15 - 5:16pm
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Launch Grant 2017 Shelly Barnathan
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Ritualwell’s ADVOT Creates Poetic Community
This article was originally published in the Jewish Exponent by Sasha Rogelberg.
Before Ritualwell was a website containing more than 2,200 liturgy and rituals crowdsourced by Jews, it was an idea of where to put dozens of scraps of paper in the drawers of offices in the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and Kolot: Center for Jewish Women’s and Gender Studies in Wyncote.
https://archive.reconstructingjudaism.org/news/ritualwells-advot-creates-poetic-community
Posted on: 2021/10/28 - 4:53pm
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The Reconstructionist Movement Comes Together in New Hinei Mah Tov Video
As part of our recent convention, B’yachad: Reconstructing Judaism Together, we shared this video of a new setting for Hinei Mah Tov by RRC student Solomon Hoffman. It features over 150 Reconstructionists representing 40 of our communities from across North America and beyond. The participants reflect the spectrum of our movement—lay leaders, Rabbis, Cantors, students, teachers, children, elders, musicians, singers, dancers, artists—all sharing in this collective project.
Posted on: 2022/04/07 - 9:44am