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Celebrating the Unique Living Legacy of
Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis
One of the Greatest Innovative Jewish Leaders of Our Generation
In his forty years at Valley Beth Shalom, Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis has established
a unique living legacy of scholarship, creativity, ethical action, and spiritual
expression. Through his initiatives and innovations in Jewish communal life, worship,
Jewish ethics, ecumenical dialogue, and Jewish learning, Rabbi Schulweis has enriched
the lives of Jews and non-Jews around the world. His work has shaped modern Judaism.
In order to preserve and extend this legacy,
Valley Beth Shalom has created the Harold M. Schulweis Institute, a Center
for Jewish Learning.
The mission of the HMS Institute is to share with generations to come, Rabbi Schulweis'
vision of Jewish life and Jewish learning developed at Valley Beth Shalom. The Institute
will function, first, as a "Schulweis Heritage Library", collecting, preserving
and disseminating Rabbi Schulweis' writings and oratory and those of contemporary
rabbinic scholars and teachers who follow in the outstanding excellence of his philosophy
and teachings; second, the Institute will offer new programs including Jewish scholarship,
public dialogues, and leadership in social humanitarian actions where Jewish values
demand participation; third, the Institute will promote programs which enrich Jewish
life and the life of the synagogue with visual arts, performing arts, music, and
literature.
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Conscience: The Duty to Obey and the Duty to Disobey
A Profound and Stirring Call to Action in Our Troubled World — from One of America’s
Great Religious Leaders
“Conscience may be understood as the hidden inner compass that guides our lives
and must be searched for and recovered repeatedly. At no time more than our own
is this need to retrieve the shards of broken conscience more urgent.” (from the
Introduction)
This clarion call to rethink our moral and political behavior examines the idea
of conscience and the role conscience plays in our relationships to government,
law, ethics, religion, human nature and God—and to each other. From Abraham to Abu
Ghraib, from the dissenting prophets to Darfur, Rabbi Harold Schulweis probes history,
the Bible and the works of contemporary thinkers for ideas about both critical disobedience
and uncritical obedience. He illuminates the potential for evil and the potential
for good that rests within us as individuals and as a society. By questioning religion’s
capacity—and will—to break from mindless conformity, Rabbi Schulweis challenges
us to counter our current suppressive culture of obedience with the culture of moral
compassion, and to fulfill religion’s obligation to make room for and carry out
courageous moral dissent.
“Remarkable…. Eloquently makes the case that faith can never be passive; it must
assault our conscience and push us to do right.”
—Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie, president, Union for Reform Judaism
“Clearly reveals a new depth of understanding of the gift of partnership in creation
afforded by God to His beloved children through the exercise of moral consciousness
and ‘fear of God.’”
—Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Armenian Church Western Diocese
“Learned and thoughtful … demonstrates that conscience constitutes the vital core
of Judaism, challenging us in our complacency and inspiring us to transform morality
into deeds.”
—Professor Susannah Heschel, author, Abraham Geiger and the Jewish Jesus
“Calls on us to recognize that sometimes the promptings of our conscience are more
authentically the voice of God than the words of our tradition.”
—Rabbi Harold Kushner, author, When Bad Things Happen to Good People
Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis, one of the most respected spiritual leaders and teachers
of his generation, has been a rabbi at Valley Beth Shalom in Encino, California,
for close to forty years. He is the founding chairman of the Jewish Foundation for
the Righteous, an organization that identifies and offers grants to those non-Jews
who risked their lives to save Jews threatened by the agents of Nazi savagery. He
is also the founder Jewish World Watch, which aims to raise moral consciousness
within the Jewish community. Synagogues and other religious institutions are now
supporting this effort across the country. Rabbi Schulweis is the author of many
books, including: Approaches to the Philosophy of Religion, For Those Who Can’t
Believe, Finding Each Other in Judaism, In God’s Mirror, and two books of original
religious poetry and meditation—From Birth to Immortality and Passages in Poetry.
His Evil and the Morality of God is regarded as a classic.
Conscience: The Duty to Obey and the Duty to Disobey
By Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis
6 x 9, 160 pp, Hardcover
ISBN-13: 978-1-58023-375-0, ISBN-10: 1-58023-375-9
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Preserving the Legacy: The Library
The first project of the Institute is this site: a comprehensive effort of collecting,
cataloging and making available Rabbi Schulweis' material legacy: his books and
articles, transcripts, poetry, and digitized copies of previously unpublished sermons,
lectures and teachings, selected letters, essays, and monographs. The Library combines
a large physical collection of books, documents, and original writings with an on-line
virtual library which makes Rabbi Schulweis' scholarly legacy available worldwide.
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Click
here to listen to a discussion between Rabbis Schulweis and Feinstein
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Rabbi Schulweis has led public discussion of the central issues of Jewish life.
The Scholars Series will continue his vision. The inaugural event in this series
was the extraordinary “Conversation of the Learned,” convened from March 30 to April
1, 2005, in honor of Rabbi Schulweis’ eightieth birthday, and was attended by several
thousand people over the three day sessions. Recordings from this event are available
as CD and cassette tape albums and online from the Institute Online Library on this
site.
Under Rabbi Schulweis, VBS has demonstrated care and concern for those who are discriminated
against, or are too disadvantaged to advocate for themselves. Rabbi Schulweis has
extended these concerns for social welfare and interfaith ecumenism to address major
global social and moral issues Most recently, he has organized Jewish World Watch
as a project to help alleviate the hardship of victims of racial violence in Africa.
Global Outreach Programs created by the Institute will ensure that such activities
continue.
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Rabbi Schulweis is deeply committed to the place of the arts in Jewish life, and
most particularly, in the life of the synagogue. The Creative Arts program will
encourage artists in all disciplines to share their gifts with the synagogue community.
Composers, musicians, poets, dancers, dramatists, painters, and sculptors will be
enlisted to deepen and share their vision with the synagogue and to enter into dialogues
with its members.
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