Tekiah: The Kol Shalom Journal

Tikkun Leil Shavuot Study Session

Posted on May 21, 2021

How Earth Day Aligns with Jewish Values

Posted on April 22, 2021

Leib Kaminsky My burgeoning love of the environment began during a 1978 Muppets’ television special. It featured Buffalo Springfield singing “For What It’s Worth,” parodying the original song using Muppet animals. The song’s refrain: “Everybody stop! Hey! What’s that sound? Everybody look what’s going down” brought a connection of my values (the love of wildlife) Continue Reading »

The Jewish Identity Institute: Finding Strength in Otherness

Posted on April 22, 2021

In this article Rabbi Steinlauf shares his reflections on the Jewish Identity Institute that he initiated and developed. The Jewish Identity Institute just completed its first year with three cohort groups. Please take a moment to read this article and learn more about the Jewish Identity Institute. ____________________ At first, it could have been just Continue Reading »

A Culture of Division

Posted on January 6, 2021

All of us at Kol Shalom are saddened and sickened by the violence that has unfolded in Our Nation’s Capital. At a time when there are so many people suffering in a pandemic, this should be a moment of national unity and healing. Instead, a culture of division has led to this historic attack on Continue Reading »

Finding Healing in this Post-Election Time

Posted on November 18, 2020

The Shabbat after the election, Joe Biden was proclaimed to be the winner, and there was a collective moment of relief and joy for so many in my congregation. I simply couldn’t contain my joy, and neither could most of us at the end of our Zoom services that morning.  Around the country, countless people Continue Reading »

Shofar on the Roof

Posted on August 23, 2020

We want to give a special thank you to our wonderful members Shofar blowers – Darón & Char Freedberg Photography – Lewis Schrager Video recording – Sari Kaye  

Keeping Them Down: How the US Prison System Entrenches White Supremacy and Damages Us All

Posted on July 13, 2020

With only five percent of the world’s population, the United States has 25 percent of its prisoners. In per capita terms, our nation incarcerated eight to ten times as many people as other western democracies. The burden falls overwhelmingly on minorities. In this talk, Alan Elsner will examine the roots of this dysfunctional system, the Continue Reading »

Four Questions We Should Ask Presidential Candidates

Posted on June 28, 2020

By analyzing the leadership skills of seven recent US presidents, KS member Michael Eric Siegel seeks to de-mystify the elements and dynamics of effective presidential leadership and help citizens assess presidential candidates. Siegel shows that presidential leadership is exercised by real, flawed human beings, and not by superheroes or philosopher-kings beyond the reach of scrutiny Continue Reading »

From a Black Tevya to an Asian Willy Loman: When Modern Jewish Theater calls us to Confront American Racism and Bigotry

Posted on June 17, 2020

Watch Theater J’s incomparable Artistic Director Adam Immerwahr in conversation with Rabbi Gil Steinlauf for a discussion on the intersection of Theater, Jewish Identity, and American racism and bigotry.  In this session, we will address issues like: What is Jewish Theater, and how can it play a role in calling us to moral leadership in Continue Reading »

Spiritual Audacity in Our Time: A Jewish Text Study on Responding to American Racism

Posted on June 15, 2020

An in-depth exploration of classical Jewish texts and sources that can help us make sense of American racism and how best to respond as Jews in our time. With Rabbi Gil Steinlauf