That moment you realize how reliant you are on your meds...
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@drumandmirror-blog
That moment you realize how reliant you are on your meds...
A guy I don’t know just sent me an unsolicited photo of his armpit. I genuinely don’t know what to do in this situation.
How would a Jewish t-rex light shabbat candles?
I need to know this will keep me up all night lol
Also, how would they cover their eyes when lighting the candles?
A Jewish t-rex would have so many problems I don’t even know where to begin
To name a few: tefillin, tallit, shema, shemoneh esrei (this one is one their legs), mikveh (I can’t imagine they’re great swimmers), bedikas chametz (reaching into those small spaces). The list goes on.
Poor Jewish t-rexes
I actually had yeaka do an AU Mangoverse cartoon about this. Mezuzah fail!
(character is a Jewish dragon in canon, not a dinosaur, but I wanted to have some fun with the T-rex tiny arms thing.)
HOW DO THEY HANDLE CIRCUMCISION
@drumandmirror
Jewish women’s headcoverings from the different regions of Morocco.
If you think that feminism is the reason why you can’t get a date, then YOU are the reason why you can’t get a date.
“So are you orthodox or conservative or…?”
“Well, I’m sephardi!”
“Oh… Okay… But are you like an orthodox sephardi or like a reform sephardi or…?”
“I’d say I’m the kind of Sephardi that’s about to shove a boot up your ass”
Seriously fuck ashkenormativity.
I didn’t grow up with a big Jewish culture and what little Jewish culture I did have was Ashkenazi… Can you explain this post? Do Sephardic Jews not have different levels of observance? Can you not be considered Reform and Sephardic? I don’t want to be ignorant on these issues.
Basically, a lot of Sephardim do use reform/conservative/orthodox as a barometer, but that’s mostly in America, and mostly due to the fact that we are by far the minority among American Jews. American Ashkenazim of different splits won’t talk to each, so in order for to get taken seriously in discussions, we had to take on such titles, and it’s been incredibly damaging to our subcultural heritage.
These branches all evolved out of disputes in the Ashkenazic community following the Enlightenment in Europe. Some Jews thought that with modernity, reason makes religious belief obsolete, why forcibly separate from a society that we can mostly assimilate in to, ect. That was the start of reform. Then, some Jews recoiled in response, saying if anything modernity allows us to practice in the open and get access to education and work without sacrificing our faith and identity, God gave us these commandments at Sinai, ect, thus the start of the Orthodox movement. A bit later, a group from reform got uncomfortable with how far the movement was going, that increasingly the ‘changes’ seemed to be just ways to jab at the orthodox and not be based in anything, so they created their own community, the conservatives, saying we can keep the spirit of tradition without throwing away our connections to the outside world. From there over time other groups split off from within those groups, ect.
This didn’t ever happen for Sephardim. It just didn’t. Sephardim have always historically been much more flexible. We operate at the communal level. The synagogue has a certain way of doing things, and you hold yourself atleast at the level while there, but outside of the public eye, it’s between you and God. We assume you know your comfort level, you have your reasons, and all that is asked in return is that you none of the individuals try to force the communities hand.
That is, until a few decades ago when we were forced to “adopt” Ashkenazic labels in order to be taken seriously.
Sephardic divides have almost always been regional, small cultural tints based on whether we happened to be from the Netherlands or from Egypt, from Iraq to Portugal. When we got scattered out of Spain, we had the first divide, east and west. West Sephardim mostly went to Spanish colonies, the Netherlands, Portugal, or eventually England. East Sephardim were welcomed into the Ottoman Empire and settled across MENA, usually in separate places from Mizrachim (and some will also recognize a separated category west of Libya, Migrabim).
When these divides were artificially forced on us, it really broke our communities. I’m not being tongue in cheek. Some synagogues now incredibly judgmental, when we never were before.
Another factor is ashkenazim view this stuff all tied up linearly. Someone who is loose with Shabbat is blind to be loose with kashrut is bound to not daven is bound to not light candle ect, as if it’s a sliding scale where the orthodox are the most observant on everything, conservatives are medium, and reform barely. Sephardim historically were much more of a quilt. A Sephardic man might not care at all about Shabbat, but will hold stricter kashrut than orthodox do. He might not keep kosher, but he davens and learns with more spirit than anyone in his generation. That’s how we rolled for 1000s of years. Now, At least in America, we are fighting a two front battle and we are loosing, and the price is our culture and our identity. We are fighting to not be assimilated into American culture and loose tradition, and Arthur same time were fighting to not be assimilated into Ashkenazi culture either.
Rabbi Marc D Angel, who has his problematic views but are beside the point here, wrote down a saying in a essay about this exact topic, which states “a Sephardic man who marries an Ashkenazic woman, he will work with her to create balance in traditions when raising their children, even though he does not have to. They will create an atmosphere of Jewish learning that neither one could fulfill on there own, because their household will be a unique synthesis. An Ashkenazic man who marries a Sephardic woman? Not only will their children be ignorant of their mothers heritage, but the man will force her to forget too, as if he was a Christian and she was a forced convert. He will stamp out the soul of her ancestors because he thinks his superior, and then he will tell the other men he got lucky and found a wife with such dark skin and exotic hair.”
It’s rather blunt.
Now, I am not hating on ashkenazim. I’m Morley protesting the imposement and subsequent cultural destruction.
Honestly reading this it sounds way more in line with how Judaism functions then the whole division of denomination.
I mean I am Ashkenazi and grew up in primarily Ashkenazi community, but like the Sephardi way of doing it as described here makes way more sense to me and just sounds far more in line with Judaism.
Well, historically, it is. The Ashkenazi divisions as we know them are younger in the world than the mormon Christians. Orthodoxy was founded in the 1850s. Reform is older, dating back to 1820s. Conservative Judaism dates to 1886. Reconstructionist Judaism is much younger, from 1954.
You’ll note, reform was the first ‘movement’, and is the oldest tradition of modern Ashkenazic branches. You’ll never hear the orthodox admit it though.
Watch: Terry Crews has some brilliant points about feminism — including an apt parallel to Civil Rights.
Thank you for hitting all those nail Terry
You can tell he’s really been doing self-reflection in addition to research from how he frames his answer.
Terry is my manspo, truly Like…my man has been doing work.
Terry and the Rock are two men who have really talked about their personals struggles and growth. I’m here for it.
Nothing more attractive than a person who tells the truth, acknowledges their mistakes and grows from them.
Jewish kemiot (amulets) from the Middle East and North Africa, on view during the exhibit “Angels & Demons: Jewish Magic Through the Ages” (full view for individual descriptions)
source (via Pinterest)
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So, as you all know, I’ve been doing research on the revival of Shamanism in Urban Mongolia. Now I am working on a book. This is on top of a full time job that I have, so it’s a lot of additional time and expense. If you are interested, please consider becoming a patron on this project! Thanks!
Hi! Could you tell me a little about the Mongolian language / living in Mongolia from your point of view? I'd love to hear your perspective.
Hi! Sure, I’d love to.
Mongolian language is, in my opinion, pretty easy to learn. The verbs have tenses but no conjugations for person and no irregulars, so once you learn the endings, you can basically use any verb. The pronunciation is hard for a lot of people because there are a lot of guttural sounds, but it’s not too difficult to learn. I think it’s an expressive and fun language with lots of great words. My favorite word is “danda” which means “always” but only for things that are annoying! (for example “My sixth graders are always late to class”).
Living in Mongolia. It’s challenging, but I love it. It’s a country in the midst of massive change and development...and also economic crisis. It’s very complex. I often say to people, Mongolia is the sort of place you come to with a reason. It’s not like you just decide to teach ESL in Mongolia like you might in Japan or Korea. If you come to Mongolia without a purpose, you are very likely to find it extremely challenging and not like it, which is what I’ve seen with a lot of foreigners here. But if you come to Mongolia with a reason, flexibility, and an a sense of adventure and willing to roll with the punches, the rewards are immeasurable. Basically Mongolia’s first impression is pretty rough, but once you get past that, it’s an amazing country.
How I broke my 6th Graders Today
Student: "Miss, my little brother in your 4th grader class says you speak seven languages. Is that true?"
Me: "Yes.”
Student: "He says you speak Mongolian. Is that true?"
Me: "Yes."
Student: "Can you say something"
Me: *explains, in Mongolian, that although I speak Mongolian, being that this is an English school, I am supposed to teach classes in English, so I have to speak English, sorry*
Collective Students: "Wow! Amazing!!!" *cheering*
One student slowly raises hand: "Miss, does that mean that you can...understand us when we speak Mongolian?"
Me: *Slowly leans over desk and puts on an evil grin. Single nod*
All students: *Terrified screaming*
so i might be stepping out of line making this post but i feel it needs to be made so yolo i guess.
i know a lot of millenials have a sort of knee-jerk negative reaction towards abrahamic religions (really mostly christianity and judaism) and i understand. really, i get it. my dad is a pastor, and he used his religon to abuse, demean, and control me at every opportunity. he regularly tells my sisters that he’s “so sad im going to hell” and other sundry passive aggressive nonsense, so trust me i get it. i understand how a certain religion can be triggering to someone.
but there is a very important point here, and i really hope you understand this.
you cannot let it make you prejudiced, and, let me be clear here, im talking specifically about antisemitism.
i know exactly whats going on in your head, because for a long time it was what was going on in my head. you hear the word “judaism” and you have flashbacks to sunday school and the old testament and all the times you sat in a church and felt personally attacked, and you associate that with judaism and jewish people because most of the things that upset you were in the old testament.
you can have your triggers, but you can’t let those triggers become an excuse to further marginalize a minority thats already attacked from literally every position of power there is. every major religion has leaders who are antisemitic, every country has a history of marginalizing jewish people, every person on the planet grows up in an inherently antisemitic world and has to unlearn that sort of toxic mindset.
and maybe this post should have been made by a jewish person, or somebody with more education on the subject than me but i think its really important that people don’t let their personal experiences with organized religion turn them into the kind of prejudiced person that hurt them in the first place.
as a romni i have a shared tragedy with jewish people, so i feel like it was easier for me to step back and be like “woah, your thought process here is super toxic and you need to stop” but i feel like a lot of white christian-raised people don’t really have that touchstone and need somebody to be like “wake up, what you are doing is wrong”
I can remove this if you want but I feel a strong need to reblog
as a jew, i’m gonna add to this.
first of all. we don’t have a lot of allies speaking for us genuinely, instead of because of some sort of twisted “jesus was jewish” or “i can secretly defend my faith or politics using jews as pawns” so when y’all do it means a lot. we don’t see it much, so don’t feel bad for making this post.
second of all, the part that you didn’t know, through no real fault of your own, is that the version you learn in sunday school or from non-jewish sources? that isn’t even remotely how jews understand that source.
jews have a totally different relationship with our holy text than christians do. every jewish person is expected to know the “old testament” cover to cover then to freely access and participate in millennia of commentary and debate on it. the core book of jewish law is just a book of debates and discussions, many of which don’t even come with firm answers. and whenever it’s printed, it’s printed with centuries worth of commentary in the margins.
if you have and issue with or felt personally attacked by any part of the “old testament” i can guarantee that there are pages and pages of jewish commentary about that from the point of view you were looking for and several dozen you haven’t even considered. jews have never stopped questioning and arguing about this thing.
so when non-jews make the assumption that our religion is some sort of backwards or primitive thing based on a text they don’t care for, they are doing jews a double disservice.
i guarantee you some 1st century BCE judaen made the point that not eating shrimp because a book says to is kinda silly far more eloquently than you did, pal. heck. there’s a rabbi in the talmud who just straight up becomes a heretic.
judaism has been around and has been evolving as a culture and a religion longer than christianity has existed. it’s one of the oldest living traditions on the planet and its still growing and evolving.
Another very important point to make is that the Jewish Tanakh (Torah, Prophets, and Writings) is an original document written in ancient Hebrew and Aramaic. Christian bibles are translations of this and often the translations were manipulated to match the teachings of the Church (this is why there are so many different versions of the Christian Bible). The text we are reading as Jews is not the same text you are reading. There is no guarantee that anything you read in your Christian “Old Testament” is in the Tanakh or has been translated the way Judaism translates it. Making assumptions about Judaism based on the Christian New Testament is thus false for 2 reasons: First, because you aren’t reading the same text and second, because Jews have thousands of years of rabbinic commentary on our text that changes how we interpret it and that is missing completely from Christianity as a whole.
Kol Nidrei
The prayer which starts the Yom Kippur service
Yemenite melody:
Moroccan Melody:
Ashkenazi Melody:
Reminder: Triggers Don’t Need to Seem Logical
So we see a lot of TWs for violence, etc. And this is great and useful for a lot of people. But it is important to remember that a lot of triggers don’t seem logical and we can’t make trigger warnings against them.
Triggers can be a smell, a sound, anything. One of my triggers for ages has been the word “Passport” being said loudly. That one can throw me into a full blown panic and flashback. The scent of a certain type of woodsmoke (not arson, stove smoke) can cause me flashbacks. And for many, many people their triggers are as seemingly random.
Common triggers may be a language, a song, a scent, any of these things. So if you see a friend have a PTSD panic attack/melt down/flashback for seemingly no reason, they might not be able to explain exactly what caused it (or at least during the time) but recognize that it may be one of these less obvious triggers.
And if you are a person with these less obvious triggers, your triggers are valid and make up a significant percentage (if not the majority) of PTSD triggers. They are just harder to explain.
@ my jewish followers
Reminder that you don’t have to fast this Yom Kippur if you will not be okay afterwards. Hashem doesn’t want you to do anything that will cause you harm or lead you to relapse, and fast days are only required for those who are physically able to complete them. You don’t have to put yourself in danger for this, I promise that g-d will understand.
It’s that time of year again!! Everyone please stay safe and take care of yourselves! I love you! God Loves you! L’shanah Tovah and have an easy fast for those of you who will be fasting this year.
I want everyone to stay safe this Yom Kippur. HaShem loves you and wants you to be healthy. Stay safe! 💛 -Mod Galia
Dear Tim Burton
Dear #TimBurton,
Up Yours. I just went with a friend to see Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, and we’d been excited for weeks (it only just came out in Mongolia). I even rushed to finish reading it before the Mongolia release.
Mr. Burton, the protagonist in MSHfPC is #Jewish. His grandfather is a#Jew. It’s a story about Jews and the monsters who chase us. A huge part of the book is questioning whether Grandfather’s “monsters” were supernatural monsters, or the real monsters of Nazis hunting Jews, the Monsters that murdered his entire family. Did he go to the children’s home because he was a peculiar or because of the dangerous peculiarity of being a Jew in Europe in WWII?
Yet in your film, the word “Jew” was spoken exactly zero times. You wiped away the characters’ identities. And don’t you DARE claim that it was an unintentional omission, because you proved that it wasn’t. See, in the book, Grandfather Abe often calls Jake “Yakov,” the Jewish form of Jacob. Yet in the movie, you changed that into a Polish nickname. So you can’t claim this was an omission when you and your team took the time to re-write even his nickname to make it not Jewish.
So Up Yours for your white-bread characters and white-bread movies. Up Yours for making the only POC character in the entire film the bad guy. And finally, Up Yours for taking away, yet again, the chance for us to see one of our own, a Jewish Protagonist promised in the novel, on screen.