Jews w/ Tattoos

Jews W. Tattoos - Rabbi Iggy

32 min · 15 de dic de 2019
Portada del episodio Jews W. Tattoos - Rabbi Iggy

Descripción

Our first, and I suspect, not our last interview with a tattooed rabbi. Rabbi Iggy is a friend from my days at Camp Ramah. Like all of us, Iggy has evolved in different ways in his life. The one consistent is that he's a good person. Today we find his as the founder and director of the T'shuvah Center in New York City (https://www.tshuvahcenter.com/), offering recovery and support to those suffering from the disease of addiction. In our conversation Rabbi Iggy teaches us what it means to transcend what we, and other people, might think about us through living a life of juxtaposition and awe. And what couldn't be more of a juxtaposition than a rabbi who bears the Torah on his skin.

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5 episodios

episode Jews w/ Tattoos: Episode #5 - Sam Ogren - Finding a Family At Home and Abroad artwork

Jews w/ Tattoos: Episode #5 - Sam Ogren - Finding a Family At Home and Abroad

One of my best episodes to date! Not only because this was an in-person conversation, but also because the sound quality is the best so far :) Sam is a Warrior-Brother of mine from the Mankind project, which we discuss a little bit. And yet this episode is chock full of interesting conversation points: From Jewish identity, personal growth, family, to anti-semitism, white-privilege and hoping people see you as a Jew. This is a conversation you don't want to miss! Here is a link to the image from Knockaround Guys that we reference. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0211465/mediaviewer/rm2161424896 These is the quote from Rabbi Heschel and Rev King that I reference in the episode: I solemnly pledge to uphold the fair name of Jews. Not only because we need their friendship, and surely we do, but mainly because bigotry in any for is an affront to us all. (Rev Martin Luther King Jr.) One hundred years ago, the emancipation was proclaimed. It is time for the white man to strive for self-emancipation, to set himself free of bigotry. (Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel)

7 de dic de 201941 min