Tag: October 7th

  • Episode 22: Future Judaism on Campus with Rabbi Daniel Levine

    Episode 22: Future Judaism on Campus with Rabbi Daniel Levine

    The Jewish futurism Lab
    The Jewish futurism Lab
    Episode 22: Future Judaism on Campus with Rabbi Daniel Levine
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    In this episode, Rabbi Daniel Levine, Hillel rabbi, podcast host, and Jewish history professor at UC Irvine, joins us for a wide ranging conversation about the future of Jewish life on campus and beyond. We talk about how October 7 has reshaped the emotional and spiritual landscape for students, the tensions he feels between pastoral care and intellectual honesty, and how his roles as rabbi, educator, and dad pull him in different directions.

    We move into the classroom to revisit moments when a student’s question permanently shifted how he understands Judaism and Jewish history. From there, we step into his home life to explore what his kids have taught him about God, practice, and the limits of inherited ideology. Along the way, we dig into the evolution of ritual, from Judah Halevi to Kabbalat Shabbat to modern siddur changes, and ask what it means to innovate responsibly in a community where many American Jews arrive with low Jewish literacy.

    We also touch on Ashkenazi and Sephardi experiences, denominational fluidity, and whether Jews can move beyond a Christian framing of “religion” toward a richer, more indigenous sense of peoplehood and diaspora culture. If you care about Jewish students, campus debates, or how to pass down a thick, living Judaism to the next generation, this conversation will give you a lot to think about.

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  • Episode 18 – Here I Am: The Hineni Project, Bar Shechter z”l, and Painting Through Grief

    Episode 18 – Here I Am: The Hineni Project, Bar Shechter z”l, and Painting Through Grief

    The Jewish futurism Lab
    The Jewish futurism Lab
    Episode 18 – Here I Am: The Hineni Project, Bar Shechter z”l, and Painting Through Grief
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    In this episode of The Jewish futurism Lab, I share how the Hineni Project carried me from the shock of October 7 into a deeply personal relationship with one family in Israel: the family of Bar Shechter z”l, a young father and psy‑trance DJ murdered at the Nova music festival. Hineni means “Here I am” in Hebrew, a word that speaks to radical presence and spiritual readiness, and it became the frame for how I showed up as an artist, friend, and witness.

    I talk about growing up in the Israeli‑diaspora in‑between space, meeting Bar through his music and his loved ones, painting his portrait in my studio, and how that canvas grew into a dream of a community mural on a wall in his hometown of Katzir. Along the way we explore Jewish grief, memory, and what it means to say “Hineni, here I am” again and again through art, even when nothing can fix the loss.