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Named after the location of Temple Israel of Boston, the Riverway Project is a bold, exciting initiative that connects adults in their 20’s and 30’s to each other, to Judaism and to Temple Israel of Boston. 


 

Through our study and ritual experiences, the Riverway Project creates opportunities for reflection and learning.  Our goal is for participants to feel comfortable and connected as they explore their Jewish selves.

We celebrate our rich diversity as a community.  Our participants are individuals and couples and families, multi-racial families, gay and straight, Jews by birth and by choice, non-Jewish partners and spouses. 

Our tradition is a braided river, comprised of so many separate streams.  Each of us is a tributary - representing a unique religious experience, a single current in the flowing waters of Judaism. 

It is said in the Talmud that every river follows its own course.  The Riverway Project strives to bring together disparate streams into a continuous flow of Jewish experience.
 

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Jewminations

RUMINATIONS + A RABBI'S IDEAS ON JEWISH LIFE = THIS BLOG. WELCOME!

Friday, February 10, 2012

Komen, the Ten and the Tenor Upstairs

There’s a story told of an elderly gentleman, a retired music teacher, who lived in a boarding house. His health was not good, he was confined to a wheelchair. Each morning a neighbor of his, a student, would stop by his room and ask, “What’s the good news?” The old man would pick up his tuning fork, tap it on the side of his wheelchair, and say, “That’s middle C! It was middle C yesterday; it will be middle C tomorrow; it will be middle C a thousand years from now. I can hear the tenor upstairs—he sings flat! The piano across the hall, it’s out of tune, but, my friend, this tuning fork will always be middle C!”

In our tradition, we have a middle C, and it’s called Torah. In fact, the Torah itself has a middle C, and we read it this week in Parashat Yitro. What we often call, “the Ten Commandments.” There are hundreds of Commandments in the Torah- 613, according to our tradition- but these are “the Ten.” Middle C.

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