211 results for author: Susan Levine


Earth Etude for Elul 16: Harmony of Colors

by Rabbi Robin Damsky The fingertips of Hurricane Isaías brush the skylights of my sunroom and drench the woods around my house. Tomorrow the guts are expected to touch down a few hours from here. I expect we’ll see just his shoulder, nonetheless yielding flash floods, downing power lines and trees, with potential tornado winds. The house is well protected. I feel safe... Yet I don’t feel safe in general. The world is reeling from an insidious disease completely preventable. As the icebergs in the polar caps melt, exposing bacteria frozen for hundreds of millennia, as species of plants and animals disappear at an alarming rate, ...

Earth Etude for Elul 15: Reverse Tashlich

by Karen L. Grossman Growing up near Pennsylvania woods and traveling to many beautiful national parks in this country and worldwide, I learned to appreciate nature. After my career as a helping professional, I delved deeper into fostering my love of environmental beauty and caring for people through a local park group and a watershed association. With recent experiences, I’ve come to understand that just as there are natural connections among animals, trees and plants, a watershed connects communities from suburban to urban, wealthy to impoverished. I’ve seen how working with a watershed association can help create the essential ...

Earth Etude for Elul 14: Finding My Authentic Self

by Thea Iberall I’m sure everyone’s going to write one of these. How hard life has become under a syndemic at the confluence of a fatal pandemic and a raging climate crisis, all of which has exposed centuries-long racial injustices and social disparities. Over 700,000 deaths have occurred due to Covid-19. The climate crisis is causing 150,000 deaths a year. Over 120,000 square kilometers of tropical rainforests are being lost every year. Wildlife populations have dropped by 60%. A majority of victims of police harm are people of color. One in every three black boys in America can expect to go to jail. The daily news reports leave me unable to ...

Earth Etude for Elul 13–Next Time You Are Thirsty

by Rayna Carner ~ Plastic bottles between you and me Drinken once and then thrown into the sea Not directly- first they’re thrown in the trash They travel to the landfill among other ash Precipitation ensues, carrying empty bottles away They float into oceans, breaking into micro-pieces for eternal stay Marine life mistakes bright plastic for treat Pollution-ridden homes, they decide to eat Now, those plastic bottles that our oceans are so rich in Will move from small fish to medium to seafood in our kitchen ~ So that water or soda or caffeinated tea?  That you thought you got rid of but really threw in ...

Earth Etude for Elul 12: Our Rabbis Teach

by Judith Black Our rabbis teach us that: What we feel is our business What we say can help or hurt But it is what we do that marks our lives on this earth. Let us live lightly on this mother planet Let us treat all living beings with dignity Let us create nations that honor all their citizens' needs. Judith Black is an internationally know storyteller and a climate activist.  http://www.storiesalive.com

Earth Etude for Elul 11: Planting Hope

by Rabbi Judy Kummer Hope is planting a tree, knowing that we will be feeding the worms under the tree’s ground before the tree yields fruit….Hope sees the rays of light in the depth of the dark night.Hope is an active act of faith, refusing to surrender. —Omid Safi Early in the lockdown — that odd, isolating and scary time filled with unknowns and fears about survival, filled with daily tallies of diagnoses and deaths, filled with terrifying questions about one’s own survival and the survival of everyone one holds dear — I found myself making ...

Earth Etude for Elul 10: The Dream

by Nyanna Susan Tobin The past few years, I have been inspired by Rabbi Katy to write my Elul reflections. This year I find that I am looking backward rather than forward into my future. As I age, memories seem more in focus than the daily details. I remember as a young woman, I wanted to be a forest ranger. I wanted to care for and protect trees with a passion. My parents and teachers advised me that girls could not be forest rangers. An older relative named Bud told me that Jews could not be forest rangers. My struggles with chemistry led me to believe that I was not smart enough to learn the science of trees. Case closed for fifty years....

Earth Etude for Elul 9: Fear God, Love Earth

by Andy Oram The terrifying spread of COVID-19 has also led to a spike in gun sales in the United States, causing an estimated increase of anywhere from 70 percent to 501 percent in different areas. Less notice has been given to bicycle sales, but demand here has also accelerated somewhere between 121 and 700 percent.  A bicycle is an optimistic approach to the pandemic. Perhaps buyers recognize that public transportation is risky and either don't own a car or don't want to burden the streets with one. They may have more leisure time for touring, or may be trying to replace a physical work-out after the closure of their gym. Bicycles show ...

Earth Etude for Elul 8: Counting the Months: A Reflection on Rosh Hodesh Elul

by Emily Nadel The skies these nights are dark & bright the moon collecting herself the stars are Expansive. Elul. [Elul.] Elul:     the month of return. Elul:     when the goldenrod covers the fields and tall, thin purple flowers line the roads and highways.             A couple maples have shown some color — not many, and among all the green the color is calling to those who are listening. Elul:     A call to see the turning trees. To feel the cooling air, the shorter days. Elul,     and ...

Earth Etude for Elul 7: Tiers of Love

by Rabbi Suri Krieger Watch and listen to this meaningful etude performed by Rabbi Suri and her daughter Ariel… Ordained from the pluralistic Academy for Jewish Religion, Suri studied with Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi in the early days of Jewish Renewal. Adjunct professor at Sacred Heart University for 8 years, Suri is currently Spiritual leader of B'nai Or: Jewish Renewal of Greater Boston.

Earth Etude for Elul 6: As Above, So Below

by Deb Nam-Krane What is the difference between dry, grey soil that’s one step up from clay, not too far removed from dirt, and dark, rich soil that you could grow almost anything in? The answer, of course, is biodiversity. As above, so below, as they say. The more diverse the plants above ground, the richer the microbial life and the amazing mycorrhizal network (think “plant internet”) that nutrients travel through. Strong networks and vibrant micro-organisms in turn lead to stronger individual plants that are able to, almost miraculously, fight off the pests so many of us dump poisons on, with diminishing returns. (I promise you, this ...

Earth Etudes for Elul 5, Aleinu to Jews: Have Faith in the Future

by Mirele B. Goldsmith As we strive to heal the earth and reverse the damage caused by climate change, I find hope in recognizing that we are part of the greatest movement in human history.  This movement crosses all borders and includes people of every nationality, race, and religion. Forced to confront a global challenge, we have come together. During the COVID 19 pandemic, I’ve been praying more than ever before, and I have been inspired by the words of the Aleinu.  In the words of Rav Tiferet Berenbaum, Aleinu is a “pep rally” to get us motivated to go out into the world and do God’s will.  Originally ...

Earth Etude for Elul 4 – Coming Home

by Rabbi Shoshana Meira Friedman 1.Tekia! (One long blast) My toddler cuddles in my lap, shy in the backyard of new friends. “Look Abraham!” I say. “Look, who is this tree?” He peeks out and his face breaks into a smile.“Ah-buh-VI-tay!”  “And who is this, with the sharp needles?” “Spooce!” he says. Shyness forgotten under the branches of old friends,  Abraham squirms off my lap and explores the sandbox. 2. T’ru’ah! (Three wailing blasts) When I commit myself fully to the personhood all around me - the agency and the uniqueness of trees, especially - a pervasive ...

Earth Etude for Elul 3: This Elul

by Judith Felsen, Ph.D. This Elul I will meet You in our fields   of shattered dreams desires not sustained supplications unrequited Earth in hovering between   pending diagnosis, treatment,  and precarious recovery Our state and fate, of You I bring our ailments    sown in self and soil   to be plowed   to wisdom’s strengths through ceasing, owning, pausing, clearing, tilling, working in Tikkun Olam with You © J.Felsen, Ph.D. 7/29/20 Judith Felsen, Ph.D. is a N.Y.S. Licensed Clinical Psychologist who resides in Bartlett, N.H. at the ...

Earth Etude for Elul 2: Reflections on The Challenges of Living with Fear and Hope

by Maxine Lyons I find new signs of hope and gratitude for the changes that I feel are beginning to surface despite the anxieties and sadness I feel for the families who have lost loved ones to COVID-19, and for the heightened consciousness of racism. We are living through a time when many forces are coming together with the potential to change our daily lives, setting in motion systemic reforms to our institutions that could dismantle systemic racism. I feel fearful that social upheaval or outright rebellion could de-stabilize us as a country or alternatively, could re-set the direction for substantive, positive changes. Here are a few themes ...

Especially this Mother’s Day, remember Mother Earth.

~Mother’s Day will be different this year for many of us because of the impact of the coronavirus, being in quarantine and social distancing; however, we can still be mindful of how our actions can help prevent climate change even if we are having virtual Mother’s Day dinners and celebrations. Reduce: Reduce your energy needs. Winter is finally over and it’s warmer inside and out. Open your windows and let the fresh air in. If it is really hot, set your thermostat no higher than 78°F (26°C) when you are home and higher when you are away (information from the U.S. Department of Energy). A programmable thermostat can make this ...

L’Shanah Tova and a thank you to our Earth Etudes for Elul Contributors

Elul is the month before Rosh Hashanah, a time when we review our lives and think about how we will live the coming year. Many of these earth etudes actually connect our earth with the spirit of Judaism–Tikkun Olam, repairing the world. We would like to thank Rabbi Katy Z. Allen for bringing together these awe-inspiring contributors, whose essays, poems and thoughts help us understand the meaning of our lives and how we can repair our world. And our Earth Etudes can be helpful throughout the year. So you can read them here: Earth Etude for Elul 1: Rabbi Katy Allen-- Of Happenstance and Wondering ...READ MORE Earth Etude for Elul ...

Earth Etude for Elul 29 –Waking up to the Climate Crisis

by Rabbi David Jaffe ~ My guess is that many readers of the Elul Etudes are fully awakened to the climate crisis and read these blogs with the hope of gaining perspective and spiritual resilience to keep facing the crisis without panicking and burning out. This blog post is for a difference audience – those, like me, who intellectually understand the crisis but don’t feel the urgency.  Despite reading articles and watching videos about the famines, flooding and other impacts of rising temperatures on people in the Global South and here in parts of the United States, including the predictions about war and migration, something doesn’t break ...

Earth Etude for Elul 28 — Swimming in Circles in Life

by Rabbi Judy Kummer ~ Every August I participate in a 1-mile breast cancer fundraising swim at a pond on Cape Cod. I have done this swim every year since 2007, training each summer day to swim further and faster.  I especially delight in swimming outdoors. Sometimes my practice swims are in daytime, sometimes at “golden hour” as the sun is setting,  and sometimes at dusk, when I can watch the moon rising, cycling inexorably through its phases towards the High Holidays.  What a feast for the senses:  I find myself savoring the sunlight spangling the pond where I swim or the glorious sunset colors spreading out ...

Earth Etude for Elul 27 — A Vegetarian Journey

by Susan Levine ~ When I think about Elul, I think about things I have done over my lifetime and the most important thing I’ve tried to do is to become a vegetarian. But let me start at the beginning: Both my parents grew up in kosher homes and when they got married, they had a kosher home. But it wasn’t kosher enough for my father’s mother who would visit my parents but wouldn’t touch the food. My mom didn’t see the point of being kosher if her mother-in-law still wouldn’t eat in her home. Instead she went full treif. As a child I pretty much ate what I wanted and really didn’t know what it meant to be kosher. I remember ...