The People of Chelm Want to Know....

Continuing The Column Devoted To Questions About Jewish History

Below are the questions from the year 2022. Click here to return to the People of Chelm page.
 

 

 

December 2022

We all love Hanukkah and the winter Holiday Season, especially the younger ones among us. And this year, the eight days of Hanukkah even include Christmas day.  Quite beyond the gift giving custom that has evolved, the Hanukkah festival celebrates the recapture and rededication of the Jerusalem Temple by the Maccabees over two thousand years ago. There is also the inspiring tradition of the candles lit in the recaptured Temple miraculously burning for eight days. Why then is Hanukkah a “minor” holiday? Is it because 1) the Maccabee kings were not descendants of King David, 2) this triumph over the tyrant King Antiochus is not mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, 3) the Jewish rebel victory was short-lived, or 4) the Talmud never discusses this celebration?

Answer
 

 

November 2022

In the past few weeks, the Nobel Prizes were once again announced in each of the Prize’s six categories. One of our congregants, Sue Abrams, shared some delightful statistics about these most prestigious of all science-oriented awards. As recently as 2017, Nobel Prizes have been awarded to 902 individuals, of whom 203 or 22.5% were Jewish. This is quite a feat since Jews comprise less than one-half of one percent of the world’s population. Thus, the percentage of Jewish Nobel laureates is about 112.5 times or 11,250% above average. Sadly, we have no Nobel Laureates among our Beth Elohim congregation. However, our co-President Jaymi Formaggio’s husband Joe worked for Art McDonald, who received a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2015 for discovering that neutrinos - those tiny little subatomic particles - actually have mass.

The rest of us non-Laureates can try some educated guesses to match the Jewish laureates listed in the first column below with the category of their Nobel Prize listed in the second column.    

NOBEL LAUREATE

NOBEL PRIZE CATEGORY

Henry Kissinger

Physiology or Medicine

Andrea Ghez 

Physics

Robert Horvitz

Literature

Arthur Ashkin

Economics

Bob Dylan

Peace

Ben Bernanke

Chemistry

Answer

 

 

October 2022

Early this October we celebrate Yom Kippur, the holiest day in Judaism. Yom Kippur brings more Jews to the synagogue than any other day of year. But unlike a Bat/Bar  Mitzvah ceremony or a Friday evening Shabbat celebration, there are several services that are performed on this most special of days. The services in the lefthand column are all performed in Yom Kippur. Can you match each service with its definition in the righthand column? Also, which of these services are associated ONLY with Yom Kippur?

A. Yizkor

1. Morning prayer service

B. Ma’ariv

2. Opening prayer service

C. Mincha

3. Memorial service

D. Ne’ilah

4. Closing prayer service

E. Shacharit

5. Evening prayer service

F. Kol Nidre

6. Afternoon prayer service

Answer
 

 

September 2022

At the end of this month, the High Holidays will be here once again, presenting us with a special time for reassessment, reflection, and judging our behavior and the direction of our lives. The scholars who assembled the Babylonian Talmud gave these issues much thought. They can help us think about what is important in our lives, not only for annual new year introspections but also for just about any occasion where we want to reflect on how we are conducting our lives. In one tractate, they even provided (yet another!) four questions that each of us is to be asked when we go before the heavenly court for judgment. Please arrange these questions below in their original order in the Talmud, an order which provides some idea of the relative importance the sages assigned to each. The four questions are:

1) Did you set aside regular time for Torah study?
2) Did you look forward to the world’s redemption?
3) Did you conduct your affairs honestly?
4) Did you work at having children?

Answer

 

 

July 2022

As Rabbinic Judaism was taking shape in the first century of the Common Era, there was a constant debate between the school of Rabbi Hillel and that of Rabbi Shammai. Our traditions are derived more from the thinking of Hillel, who is famed for his response to the challenge of reciting the code of Jewish laws while standing on one foot. How did he manage this challenge?  

Answer