The Rosh Hashana link feast

This week is flying by and Rosh Hashana is almost upon us.  If you have been as busy as we have this past week at the Jewish Women's Archive, the holiday comes as a welcome respite.  I have rounded up a "menu" of High Holiday links, some silly and some serious, to help ease us into the holiday season.  Enjoy!

Starters

  • Find everything you ever wanted to know about Rosh Hashana here in the "Guide for the Perplexed." [Tablet]
  • Learn about the Mahzor, the holiday prayer book used for Rosh Hashana. [Center for Judaic Studies]
  • Step into a Rosh Hashana celebration, circa 1919! [New York Times]

Stories

 

  • Holy Rollin', an illustrated retrospective on the High Holidays by Vanessa Davis. [Tablet]
  • Rosh Hashana is a favorite "food holiday," but Lisa Himmel's story reminds us that the holidays present a unique challenge for Jews with eating disorders. [JWeekly]
  • Mayim Bialik muses on what she learned from leading High Holiday services at UCLA. [Tablet]

Shofars

 

 

  • Why does the sound of the shofar send a chill down our spines? Jeremiah Lockwood has some answers in this video. [MyJewishLearning]
  • Gabriel Sanders and expert shofar-blower Ira Rezak discuss the shofar's ritual significance and get down to the difficult business of getting a shofar to sound the way it should in this podcast. [Tablet]
  • Having trouble finding your own ram's horn this year?  There's an app for that!  No, seriously. There is a shofar app for your iPhone. [RustyBrick]

 

Sins

  • Marjorie Ingall on raising kids to apologize and forgive. [Tablet]
  • Having trouble finding the words to say you're sorry?  No problem, just use the Apologenerator 5000. [HiddenMelodies]
  • Want to make a public apology?  Call Tablet, and they will post an audio clip of your apology on their site, for example: today's sorry. [Tablet]
  • Wondering which type of bread to use for Taschlish (the traditional of going to the ocean or a stream or river to pray and throw bread crumbs into the water, symbolically casting off our sins)?  Women's Lens recommends pretzels for twisted sins, multi-grain for complex sins, ricecakes for tasteless sins, stoned wheat for substance abuse... you get the idea. [Women's Lens]

Security

  • Rabbi or Rambo?  Rabbi Gary Moskowitz believes shul members should take security into their own hands for the High Holidays this year. [The Forward]

Something Sweet

For those of us feeling the spiritual weight (repentence, resolutions, apologies) or logistical weight (travel/meal prep/family) of the High Holidays, this deliciously absurd, dubbed, Muppets video should give you a little lift.  Shana Tova!

1 Comment
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

I continue to find the content of the link round ups refreshing and thoughtful. I check in every few days, and wander thru the links, the blogs, and the postings.

I just listened to the 9/11 Rabbi's chant - of the words spoken by those who perished, captured in cell phone messages. I am frozen by it. I would never have found it, made aware of it, or experienced it but for your efforts.

Thank you, for helping me see more of this world.

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Berkenwald, Leah. "The Rosh Hashana link feast." 16 September 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on November 28, 2024) <https://jwa.org/blog/roshhashana>.