Ta Shma
Hadar Institute
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Ta Shma brings you recent lectures, classes, and programs from the Hadar Institute, allowing you to listen in on the beit midrash. Hosted by Rabbi Avi Killip, the podcast offers Jewish learning content for listeners on the go, at home, or wherever they are.
Епізоди
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat BeHa'alotkha: Mitzvot as a Communal Project 03.06.2026 10хвParashat BeHa’alotkha returns us to the story of Pesah—this time, in the second year after the Exodus from Egypt—and underscores the ways in which observing God’s mitzvot is a fundamentally communal project.
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R. Aviva Richman: A Torah of Sexual Ethics: Part 2 01.06.2026 45хвWhat do we do when our leaders—or our most sacred texts—repeatedly disappoint us? We live in a world that continues to struggle with how to live out a sexual ethics of mutual dignity. In this series, R. Aviva Richman confronts moments of disappointment related to sexual ethics in Talmud and explores how to inherit this part of Torah in ways that invite honesty and growth. Recorded In Winter 2026. Source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/WinterL...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Naso: Divine Communication 27.05.2026 9хвOur parashah describes one aspect of the unique relationship between the Holy Blessed One, and Moshe. The final verse of the parashah describes how the Holy One and Moshe would communicate in the mishkan (tabernacle).
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R. Elazar Symon on Shavuot: Many Hearts, One Torah 20.05.2026 8хвAccording to Rashi, the defining feature of the people of Israel at the moment of receiving the Torah is complete unity.
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R. Aviva Richman: A Torah of Sexual Ethics: Part 1 18.05.2026 43хвWhat do we do when our leaders—or our most sacred texts—repeatedly disappoint us? We live in a world that continues to struggle with how to live out a sexual ethics of mutual dignity. In this series, R. Aviva Richman confronts moments of disappointment related to sexual ethics in Talmud and explores how to inherit this part of Torah in ways that invite honesty and growth. Recorded In Winter 2026. Source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/WinterL...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Bemidbar: Fire, Water, Wilderness: Living With the Torah 13.05.2026 10хв“God spoke to Moshe in the wilderness of Sinai, in the Tent of Meeting, on the first day of the second month, in the second year after their departure from the land of Egypt, saying” (Numbers 1:1). This verse opens the Book of Bemidbar and initiates God’s speech to the Israelites during these years of routine wandering.
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Faith and Doubt in Our Final Hours: A Conversation Between Dr. Lydia Dugdale and R. Shai Held 11.05.2026 56хвFor many of us, confronting death raises urgent questions of faith, doubt, and the meaning and purpose of our lives. Yet we live in a culture that avoids talking about death, let alone the existential challenges it raises. Physician and ethicist Lydia Dugdale, author of The Lost Art of Dying, joins Rabbi Shai Held to draw on ancient and contemporary wisdom about mortality and meaning. Recorded in Fall 2025. This conversation is part of the Faith WithHeld series, generously sponsored by the Sc...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat BeHar-BeHukkotai: A Reality Without Fear 06.05.2026 7хвThe Book of Leviticus, and Parashat BeHukkotai that brings it to a close, makes a clear and recurring claim: reality is not an act of fate, but the outcome of human choice and behavior.
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R. Elazar Symon on the Omer: Counting Old and New 04.05.2026 6хвAccording to a midrashic tradition, the counting of the Omer (that may have seemed to be nothing but a calendrical counting of the days from Pesah to Shavuot) expresses the anticipation of the Israelites for the giving of the Torah. The biblical commandment, however, appears in an agricultural context.
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Emor: Where Do Sinners Come From? 29.04.2026 12хвIn Parashat Emor, we encounter the story of the blasphemer. This blasphemer undermines, degrades, and treats with levity the very foundation of the religious system—the root of faith and the bedrock of the world. Yet various midrashim, in their characteristic fashion, are not satisfied with a dry, factual account.
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Faith WithHeld: A Conversation Between Sarah Wildman and R. Shai Held 27.04.2026 1годWhen the unthinkable happens, what remains of faith? Journalist Sarah Wildman, who lost her young daughter, joins Rabbi Shai Held in a searching conversation about grief, love, and the struggle to go on. They will probe how mourning collides with meaning-making, and how faith might fracture, endure, or be remade in the wake of devastating loss. Recorded in Fall 2025. This conversation is part of the Faith WithHeld series, generously sponsored by the Schiller family. Want the full Q&...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Aharei Mot-Kedoshim: “Will You Hear My Voice, My Distant One?” 22.04.2026 11хвDrawing close is no simple matter. At times, it can be difficult—even dangerous. And yet, to come near is also wondrous: it can nurture, enrich, and expand life. The possibility of a misstep is always near—but so too are countless opportunities. The line between one kind of closeness and another is often fine. It depends on sensitivity, harmony, the insistence on not including elements foreign to the relationship, and attentiveness to the nature of the invitation...
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R. Elazar Symon on Yom HaZikaron/Yom Ha'Atzma’ut: Unless God Builds the House 20.04.2026 7хвDedicated in loving memory of my nephew, Yishai Elyakim Urbach, who fell in Gaza one year ago, a few weeks after setting out to build his own home. Tehillim 127:1 "Unless God builds the house, those who build it labor in vain." Human beings cannot truly build alone. What we build by ourselves, the psalmist suggests, cannot ultimately endure. And yet one of the most beloved songs sung in Israel on Yom Ha’Atzma’ut insists: “I built a house in the Land of Israel.” Human initiat...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Tazria-Metzora: Giving Birth to Hope 16.04.2026 12хвChapter 12 of the Book of Vayikra deals with the sacrifice of the woman who has given birth.
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R. Elazar Symon on Yom HaShoah: After the Silence: Rebuilding from the Holy of Holies 13.04.2026 7хвWhen we think of the Holocaust, we can only be silent. We are incapacitated emotionally, morally, theologically. At times it seems that the countless museums and memorials, the ceremonies and journeys, the songs and the prayers, are but a desperate attempt to break free from the paralysis that grips us in its shadow. The Torah, too, knows such a moment when children are consumed by fire, and their surviving family is left with nothing but silence.
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Shemini: Can Death Be Explained? 10.04.2026 13хвThe opening scene of Parashat Shemini is both brief and dramatic. It depicts the final day of the dedication of the mishkan (tabernacle)—the very day on which Nadav and Avihu die.
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How to Read a Talmudic Story: Book Talk 30.03.2026 47хвThe stories transmitted in the Talmud and midrash present contemporary readers with a rich and delightful entry point into the Rabbinic worldview and mindset, offering moral insights and memorable lessons. At the book launch for How to Read a Talmudic Story, Dr. Jeffrey L. Rubenstein and R. Aviva Richman explore how these narratives illuminate rabbinic values, struggles, and creativity. Together, they consider not only how to read these stories, but what they continue to teach us today. ...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Tzav: On Offerings, Wholeness, and Peace 25.03.2026 10хвMidrash Vayikra Rabbah offers an extensive homily on the shelamim (peace or well-being offering) based on the linguistic affinity between the Hebrew words shelamim, sheleimut (wholeness), and shalom (peace). By examining both the technical details of how the offering was brought and the linguistic potential inherent in its name, the midrash transforms a discussion of ancient ritual into an exploration of the very nature of peace.
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R. Shai Held: Why Doesn't God Redeem Us Again?: Living With and Without Exodus 23.03.2026 51хвThe exodus is nothing less than the "orienting event" of Jewish life. But Exodus memory also has another, much more painful side: amidst suffering and devastation, Jews remember the exodus and wonder why, if God redeemed us then, God does not do so now. In this lecture, R. Shai explores the double-edge of memory: exploring how it can sustain us in hope and how, sometimes, it can deepen our despair. This lecture was delivered in memory of Jerome L. Stern z"l in March 2026. Source sheet: https:...
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R. Avital Hochstein on Vayikra: From Chance to Calling 18.03.2026 9хвThe Book of Leviticus, Vayikra, begins: “God called (ויקרא) to Moshe and spoke to him from the Tent of Meeting, saying” (Leviticus 1:1). Why does God begin with a call? What is the essence and context of this kind of summoning?
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