

Ta Shma
Hadar Institute
Bringing you recent lectures, classes, and programs from the Hadar Institute, Ta Shma is where you get to listen in on the beit midrash. Come and listen on the go, at home, or wherever you are. Hosted by Rabbi Avi Killip of the Hadar Institute.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jan 15, 2024 • 6min
R. Avi Strausberg on MLK Day: They Should Have Learned
In Letter from Birmingham Jail, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses his critics and writes, “Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will.” To be a real ally and advocate for change requires more than just good intentions and lukewarm support; it demands deep understanding and personal accountability. I worry that I might be just the kind of person with shallow understanding and good will about which Dr. King wrote.

Jan 11, 2024 • 29min
Learning From Our Children: A Spiritual Perspective from on the Ground in Israel #7
R. Avi Killip rejoins R. Avital Hochstein and R. Elazar Symon to talk about our relationships with our children. What are we trying to inculcate in them? And what do we hope that they can remind us about?

Jan 10, 2024 • 10min
R. David Kasher on Parashat Va'Era: Divine Disclosure
Many theories have been offered to explain the Torah’s use of multiple names for God. Medieval kabbalists understood the names to be expressing different aspects in the manifold nature of the Divine. Early modern biblical scholars took the same phenomenon as evidence of the composite nature of the Torah. In Parashat Va’Era, the Torah itself addresses the issue, and suggests that the critical question may not be what God’s name is, but who’s asking.

Jan 8, 2024 • 53min
R. Tali Adler: Challenging the Establishment
In the last of this series from Spring 2023, Rav Tali returns to R. Yehudah ha-Nasi and his interactions with another friend/antagonist: Bar Kappara. In what ways does Bar Kappara try to teach Rabbi the Torah he thinks he needs to hear? How can someone without power teach someone who has power? Download the source sheet here: https://mechonhadar.s3.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/Adler2023TorahBelong3.pdf

Jan 3, 2024 • 11min
R. David Kasher on Parashat Shemot: Callbacks to Creation
From the moment we begin the Book of Exodus, we are already being called back into Genesis. The very first words of Parashat Shemot are: taken directly from Parashat VaYigash, during Ya’akov’s actual journey down to Egypt, where the Torah gives us a list of all the members of his household. The Ramban, in his masterful fashion, manages to quickly give both a philosophical and a literary explanation for the repetition of the verse. As a matter of reading strategy, then, he explains that the Torah uses the callback as a device to emphasize the interconnectedness of these two books. Genesis and Exodus are thus connected not only through an ongoing storyline, but also through a set of interlocking word parallels.

Jan 1, 2024 • 49min
R. Tali Adler: Inside / Outside
Part 2 this series from Spring 2023 centers the character of Rabbi, also known as R. Yehudah ha-Nasi, the leader of his generation. Rabbi is concerned lest the Torah get beyond his control and be misunderstood. His student and friend, R. Hiyya, on the other hand, thinks the Torah should be heard far and wide. What happens when these two rabbis come into conflict? Where does the Torah belong? Download the source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/Adler2023TorahBelong2.pdf

Dec 28, 2023 • 10min
R. David Kasher on Parashat Vayehi: Echoes of Redemption
One of the Torah’s signature literary techniques is the use of textual echoes: the repetition of roots, words, or phrases that call us back to an earlier moment in the text. The echo establishes an associative link between the earlier passage and the latter, and encourages us to consider comparisons between two different sections of the Torah. In Parashat Vayehi we are given the epitome of all echoing phrases, one that became a symbol for the power of echoing itself.

Dec 25, 2023 • 55min
R. Tali Adler: When Your Torah Doesn't Belong
In this first lecture in a series of 3 taught in Spring 2023 (Who Does Torah Belong To?), Rav Tali Adler explores the character of R. Elazar ben Arakh and why his colleagues couldn't understand what he taught. What can we do if we feel like the world is not ready for what we have to teach?Download the source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/Adler2023TorahBelong1.pdf

Dec 22, 2023 • 9min
R. Avi Strausberg on the 10th of Tevet: The Imperative of Hope
Asarah b’Tevet (the 10th of the month of Tevet), marks the beginning of the end of the First Temple. It marks the beginning of a 30-month period in which the Jews in Jerusalem found themselves pressed on all sides, overcome by the army of the Babylonian empire, with little hope in sight. What was it like for them to be at the beginning of this period of great uncertainty? Did they hold on to hope and, if so, what was the nature of that hope? Or, from the beginning, could they only think about the end, fearing their own destruction at the hands of the Babylonians?

Dec 19, 2023 • 12min
R. David Kasher on Parashat Vayigash: The Story of Hushim ben Dan
My mother tongue was no tongue at all, but a pair of hands. My parents were both deaf, so my first language was American Sign Language. I didn’t think much about it at the time; when you’re a kid, your parents are just your parents and your life is just your life. It is only in retrospect that I have come to appreciate how profoundly the experience of growing up in a Deaf family, and spending my early years signing as well as speaking, has shaped my relationship to language in general. So when I came upon a deaf character in the Torah, of course I took notice. To be more precise: the character is in the Torah, but his deafness we learn from a wild story in the Talmud. How the Talmud arrived at that connection is a wild story of its own.