Reading 'Epistle to Yemen' in Moscow
Description
Journal article
Abstract
In early 1989, I spent seven extraordinary weeks teaching at the inaugural mini-semester of
the Steinsaltz yeshiva in Moscow, the first such institution to be granted government
recognition since the Communist revolution. The students consisted largely of refuseniks
who had risked careers and livelihoods to commit themselves to Jewish learning and
observance. In addition to the study of Talmud, Bible and more, there was a slot twice a week
for Jewish Thought. I decided that the text I would teach would be Maimonides’ Epistle to
Yemen, a work directed to a beleaguered Jewish community pressured to abandon its faith. It
was as if Maimonides had composed the work for the students in that yeshiva. The greatest
challenge in teaching the Epistle to Yemen in that environment was to read the words without
shedding tears....¶This project, which one Moscow resident told me had transformed Jewish life in Moscow
in a few weeks, would have served in almost all instances as a crowning achievement for
even the most impressive of Jewish leaders. The fact that it has largely disappeared into the
recesses of Rabbi Steinsaltz’s remarkable resume is testimony to a record of stunning
achievement
Permanent Link(s)
https://www.academia.edu/44329501/David_Berger_Reading_Epistle_to_Yemen_in_Moscow_TraditionOnline_Forum_in_Memory_of_Rabbi_Adin_Steinsaltz_22_September_2020_https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12202/9220
Citation
Berger, D. (2020, September 22). Reading 'Epistle to Yemen' in Moscow. TraditionOnline [=Forum in Memory of Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz].
*This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise.
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