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- From: faigin@aero.org (Daniel P. Faigin)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.jewish,news.answers,soc.answers
- Subject: soc.culture.jewish FAQ: Introduction to the FAQ and s.c.j (1/10)
- Supersedes: <faq.1_778356422@solarium.aero.org>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 30 Sep 1994 18:07:08 GMT
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- Message-ID: <faq.1_780948425@solarium.aero.org>
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- Summary: Provides information about the FAQ set and about s.c.j in general
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu soc.culture.jewish:76049 news.answers:26529 soc.answers:1740
-
- Archive-name: judaism/FAQ/01-FAQ-intro
- Posting-Frequency: Monthly
-
- Frequently Asked Questions on Soc.Culture.Jewish
- Part 1: Introduction to the FAQ and Soc.Culture.Jewish
- [Last Change: $Date: 1994/08/31 18:07:04 $ $Revision: 1.19 $]
- [Last Post: Wed Aug 31 11:07:06 1994]
-
-
- This posting is an attempt to answer questions that are continually asked on
- soc.culture.jewish. It was written by cooperating laypeople from the various
- Judaic movements. You SHOULD NOT make any assumption as to accuracy and/or
- authoritativeness of the answers provided herein. In all cases, it is always
- best to consult a competent authority -- your local rabbi is a good place to
- start.
-
- The deceased sages described within are of blessed memory, (assume a Z"L or
- ZT"L after their names) and the sages alive today should live to see long and
- good days (assume SHLITA). May Hashem grant complete recovery to the ill.
- Individual honorifics are omitted.
-
- The FAQ was produced by a committee and is a cooperative work. The
- contributors never standardized on a {Hebrew,Aramaic,Yiddish,Ladino}-->English
- transliteration scheme. As a result, the same original word might appear with
- a variety of spellings. This is complicated by the fact that there are
- regional variations in the pronunciation of Hebrew. In some places, the
- common spelling variations are mentioned; in others --- not. We hope that
- this is not too confusing.
-
- This list should be used in conjunction with the Soc.Culture.Jewish reading
- lists that are posted separately. Similar questions can be found in the books
- referenced in those lists.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: Copyright Notice
-
- The soc.culture.jewish FAQ and reading lists are not to be reproduced for
- commercial use unless the party reproducing the FAQ agrees to the following:
-
- 1) They will contact the FAQ maintainer to obtain the latest version for
- their collection.
- 2) They will provide the FAQ maintainer with information on what collection
- the copy of the FAQ is in, and how that collection may be obtained.
- 3) They will agree, in writing, that the FAQ will be included in the
- collection without modification, and that acknowledgements of
- contributors to the FAQ remain in the FAQ.
- 4) They will agree, in writing, that the collection including the FAQ will be
- distributed on either a non-profit basis, or have some percentage of
- profit donated to Tzedakah (Charity)
-
- To support this, this FAQ is Compilation Copyright (c) 1993,1994 by Daniel P.
- Faigin (the FAQ maintainer) on behalf of soc.culture.jewish.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: Organization
-
- The following is a summary list of all the questions asked in the FAQ. This
- portion of the FAQ contains answers to those questions in Section 1. For
- other questions, the appropriate part in which the answer can be found is
- indicated.
-
- [Part 1/10]
- Section 1. Network and Soc.Culture.Jewish Information
- 1.1. Why is this group called soc.culture.jewish?
- 1.2. I just found S.C.J. What is this network?
- 1.3. What topics are appropriate for S.C.J?
- 1.4. What topics are *not* appropriate for S.C.J?
- 1.5. When should I post to talk.politics.mideast?
- 1.6. Is it appropriate to discuss Israel in soc.culture.jewish?
- 1.7. How should I respond to inappropriate articles?
- 1.8. But I don't get T.P.M? Now what?
- 1.9. A. Random Jew posted X to a.b.c; I disagree. What should I do?
- 1.10. Can non-Jews post to S.C.J?
- 1.11. May I post this great Jewish essay I just read?
- 1.12. (Hebrew Usage) I have a question nogaiah hilchos...
- 1.13. Do S.C.J readers want to make it into a moderated group?
- 1.14. How do I keep up with the volume? Should I try a KILL file?
- 1.15. I've just found (insert name here) ...
- 1.16. What are the Do's and Don'ts?
-
- [Part 2/10]
- Section 2. Who We Are
- 2.1. Who reads soc.culture.jewish?
- 2.2. What are the major Jewish movements?
- 2.3. What are OCR (O-C-R) wars? Why all the flames?
- 2.4. What is Conservative Judaism?
- 2.5. What is Orthodox Judaism?
- 2.6. What is Reform Judaism?
- 2.7. What about other movements?
- 2.8. What are some of the Orthodox sub-groups?
- 2.9. Why shouldn't I say "ultra-Orthodox" or "reformed"?
- 2.10. What is Chassidism and how does it differ from other Orthodox...
- 2.11. What is Chabad and Chabad-Lubavitch?
- 2.12. How does a Chassid differ from Misnagid?
- 2.13. What is a "Torah Jew?"
- 2.14. Is it true that Jews are all (fill-in-the-blank)?
- 2.15. How many Jews are there today in the U.S.A.?
-
- [Part 3/10]
- Section 3. Torah
- 3.1. What are the books of the Jewish Bible?
- 3.2. Why, in the Tanakh, does G-d have so many Names?
- 3.3. What is the Talmud?
- 3.4. Who wrote the Torah?
- Section 4. Halachic Authority
- 4.1. What is "Halacha"? How is it determined?
- 4.2. In Orthodox Judaism, what are the levels of halacha?
- 4.3. In Orthodox Judaism, what are the different rabbinic eras?
- 4.4. How can differing halachic rulings all be considered valid?
- 4.5. How does the Conservative movement deal with Halachic questions?
- 4.6. How do Ortho/Ortho disagreements differ from Ortho/Reform?
- 4.7. Who is RAMBAM that is mentioned & what are his 13 principles
- 4.8. Who was Rashi?
- 4.9. Who was the Ramban?
- 4.10. What is Kabbalah and how can I learn about it?
- 4.11. Who is allowed to study Kabbalah?
-
- [Part 4/10]
- Section 5. Jewish Holidays
- 5.1 What are the different holidays
- 5.2. What are the dates of the upcoming Jewish holidays?
- 5.3. How can I get a Jewish calendar
- 5.4. Why do some people take off one day, and others two?
- 5.5. Why does the Jewish day start at sundown?
- Section 6. Jewish Dietary Law and Kashrut
- 6.1. What is Kosher? Doesn't a rabbi just bless the food
- 6.2. Do I need to have a kosher kitchen and kosher home to keep kosher?
- 6.3. Why do different groups wait different times?
- 6.4. Why are there different customs on Pesach (i.e., Kitniyos)?
- 6.5. I'm a vegetarian health-food proponent. Is kosher food healthier?
- 6.6. Is vegetarianism kosher?
- Section 7. Sabbath and Holiday Observance
- 7.1. What is the Jewish Sabbath and why is it on Saturday?
- 7.2. Why do my Orthodox Jewish friends leave work early on Fridays
- and before Jewish holidays?
- Section 8. Woman and Marriage
- 8.1. What role do women play in Judaism?
- 8.2. What is the Conservative view of the role of women in Judaism?
- 8.3. What is the Reform view of the role of women in Judaism?
- 8.4. What is the Orthodox view of the role of women in Judaism?
- 8.5. I've heard the Orthodox men are grateful for not being women...
- 8.6. What about polygamy?
- 8.7. What does clean/unclean refer to?
-
- [Part 5/10]
- Section 9. Jewish Worship
- 9.1. How does a rabbi differ from a priest?
- 9.2. Do you need a rabbi for a wedding?
- 9.3. Do you need a rabbi for a divorce?
- 9.4. How do Jews pray?
- 9.5. Is there a distinctly Jewish form of meditation?
- 9.6. Does Judaism have a strong tradition of religious art and music?
- Section 10. Conversion, Intermarriage, and "Who is a Jew?"
- 10.1. Does Halacha (Jewish law) permit intermarriage?
- 10.2. I'm a Jew who married a gentile. Am I still Jewish?
- 10.3. I'm a Jew who left Judaism. Can I return?
- 10.4. Apart from Halacha, why do Jews oppose intermarriage?
- 10.5. Is objection to intermarriage a form of bigotry?
- 10.6. But I still want to intermarry? Do you know of a Rabbi that performs
- intermarriages?
- 10.7. How does one convert?
- 10.8. What does the word "Jew" mean?
- 10.9. Who is a Jew?
- Section 11. Miscellaneous Practice Questions
- 11.1. Why do some Jewish women cover their hair?
- 11.2. Why do many Jewish men wear head coverings?
- 11.3. Why do some people write "G-d" with a hyphen instead of an `o'?
- 11.4. Why do some Jews write "J-s-s" and "Xianity?"
- 11.5. What is a Tallis? Tzit-tzit(those fringes)? Why do Jews wear them?
- 11.6. What are those black boxes and leather straps Jewish men wear?
- 11.7. Why do many Jewish men sport beards?
- 11.8. What's this I've heard about a hole in a sheet?
- 11.9. Why do some Jews wear black coats, fur hats, etc.?
- 11.10. Does Judaism permit slavery?
- 11.11. What does "eye for an eye" mean?
- 11.12. What is Shaatnez?
- 11.13. What is circumcision?
- 11.14. Why are Jewish boys circumcised?
- 11.15. Who performs the circumcision?
- 11.16. When is the circumcision done?
- 11.17. But doesn't it hurt?
- 11.18. But shouldn't the child make its own decision?
- 11.19. But circumcision is only required for boys. What about girls?
- 11.20. What about adults who are not circumcised?
- 11.21. What other forms of body modification are allowed? Tatoos? Earrings
- 11.22. Is it true that someone with tatoos cannot be buried in a Jewish
- cemetary?
- 11.23. I've heard about a custom of putting stones on the grave. Do you know
- where this custom originated?
-
- [Part 6/10]
- Section 12. Jewish Thought
- 12.1. What is the Jewish concept of G-d?
- 12.2. Can one doubt G-d's existence and still be a good Jew?
- 12.3. How does traditional Judaism relate to modern science?
- 12.4. Does modern science contradict liberal readings of the Torah?
- 12.5. Can one be Orthodox and a scientist too?
- 12.6. What does "chosen people" mean?
- 12.7. What is the Jewish concept of the Messiah?
- 12.8. What happens when a person dies?
- 12.9. What was the job of a prophet?
- 12.10. Are there prophets today?
- 12.11. Who were the prophets? How many?
- 12.12. What is the Jewish view on the question of "free will."
- 12.13. What about angels, demons, miracles, and the supernatural?
- 12.14. What do Jews hope/expect of the future?
- 12.15. How can Jews reject (insert true belief here)?
- 12.16. Isn't it good enough to be a good person?
- 12.17. How does Judaism differ from (insert -ism here)?
- 12.18. Where can a Gentile learn about Judaism?
- 12.19. What does Judaism say about non-Jews?
-
- [Part 7/10]
- Section 13. Jews as a Nation
- 13.1. What are the different racial and cultural groups of Jews?
- 13.2. What are the differences between Sephardim and Ashkenazim?
- 13.3. Where did the Beita Yisrael (Falashas) come from?
- 13.4. Who were the Khazars? Are Ashkenazi Jews descended from the
- Khazars?
- 13.5. Who are Crypto-Jews (also known as "marranos")?
- 13.6. Sephardi/Ashkenazi vs. O/C/R?
-
- [Part 8/10]
- Section 14. Jews and Israel
- 14.1. Who is an Israeli? Who may enter Israel under its Law of Return?
- 14.2. What is Zion?
- 14.3. What is Zionism?
- 14.4. Are all Jews Zionists?
- 14.5. Do Diaspora Jews (Jews outside Israel) support Zionism?
- 14.6. I've heard there are Orthodox Jews who are against Israel?
- 14.7. Did Zionism end with the establishment of Israel?
- 14.8. Are antisemitism and anti-Zionism the same thing?
- 14.9. Is Zionism racist?
- 14.10. What are the roots of Arab opposition to Zionism?
- 14.11. Can't you criticize Israel without being antisemitic?
- 14.12. Why is opposition to Israel often seen as being antisemitic?
- 14.13. Why is Jerusalem so important to Jews?
- 14.14. I want to move to Israel. Can I become a citizen?
- 14.15. What is the Wailing Wall and why is it so important?
- 14.16. Questions on aliyah, military service for olim and more
-
- [Part 9/10]
- Section 15. Churban Europa (The Holocaust)
- 15.1. Why do Jews seem to treat the Holocaust as their tragedy alone?
- 15.2. Where can I get information on the Holocaust?
- 15.3. How do I get tickets to see the United States Holocaust Memorial
- Museum?
- Section 16. Antisemitism
- 16.1. Why is antisemitism used to mean anti-Jewish?
- 16.2. Is there any truth to the myth of the Jewish American Princess?
- Section 17. Countering Missionaries
- 17.1. What about (sic) "Jews for Jesus" or (sic) "Messianic Jews"?
- 17.2. Is belief in Jesus-as-God compatible with any Jewish movements?
- 17.3. What do missionary groups believe?
- 17.4. What sort of deceptive terminology do missionaries use?
- 17.5. How can these missionaries be countered?
- 17.6. Who is financing "Jews for Jesus" and similar groups?
-
- [Part 10/10]
- Section 18. Miscellaneous
- 18.1. I want to become more observant. Where do I start?
- 18.2. Why is "shabbat" spelled sometimes shabbath, shabbath, shabbos,
- 18.3. What are some common Hebrew and Yiddish phrases I see on S.C.J?
- 18.4. What do all those abbreviations like Z"L mean?
- 18.5. Is "shvartze" offensive? Is "goyim" offensive?
- 18.6. What does "shiksa" and "shaygetz" mean?
- 18.7. Can you provide me with a list of kosher restaurants in <xxx>?
- 18.8. I am going to be in <>, where can I eat, stay for Shabbat.
- 18.9. What do bagels, lox, ... have to do with being a Jew?
- 18.10. What does Warren Burstein's signature mean?
- 18.11. What does the funny pattern in Rob Levene's signature mean?
- 18.12. Who was the sixth Marx brother?
- 18.13. Why do Hebrew clocks run clockwise, not counter-clockwise?
- 18.14. How do I show my love for the Jewish people?
- 18.15. What is the origin of the word "kike"?
- Section 19. References and Getting Connected
- 19.1. I'd like to learn more? Do you have any books to recommend?
- 19.2. What are the different hechsher symbols?
- 19.3. What are the Jewish-oriented mailing lists?
- 19.4. Are there any moderated mailing lists?
- 19.5. Are there any Jewish-oriented gophers or WWW servers?
- 19.6. How do I get access to S.C.J?
- 19.7. Is S.C.J available via a Listserv or other e-mail means?
- 19.8. What divrei Torah are posted to Usenet?
- 19.9. Where can I find collected divrei Torah?
- 19.10. What software is available for Hebrew applications?
- 19.11. Are there conversion programs for the Jewish and other calendars?
-
- All portions of the FAQ are organized as digests, and should be
- undigestifyable by software such as Gnus or rn. Please report any
- difficulties.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: Archival and Credits
-
- Anonymous FTP:
-
- All portions of the FAQ and of the reading lists are archived on
- israel.nysernet.org [192.77.173.2] and on rtfm.mit.edu, and are available
- for anonymous FTP. The locations of parts of the FAQ on israel.nysernet.org
- are as follows:
-
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/01-FAQ-intro
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/02-Who-We-Are
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/03-Torah-Halacha
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/04-Observance
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/05-Worship
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/06-Jewish-Thought
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/07-Jews-As-Nation
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/08-Israel
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/09-Antisemitism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/10-Miscellaneous
-
- The locations of the parts of the reading lists on israel.nysernet.org are
- as follows:
-
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/general
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/traditional
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/chasidism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/reform
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/conservative
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/reconstructionist
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/humanistic
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/zionism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/antisemitism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/intermarriage
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/periodicals
-
- If you are accessing the archives on rtfm.mit.edu, the pathname is
- pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism, instead of israel/lists/scj-faq.
-
- Mail:
- The files may also be obtained via Email by sending a message to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following line in the body of the message:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/judaism/(portionname)
-
- Where (portionname) is replaced by the appropriate subdirectory and
- filenames; for example, to get the first part of the reading list, one would
- say:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/judaism/reading-lists/general
-
- WWW/Mosaic:
- The FAQ and reading lists are available by following the following pointer:
-
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/bngusenet/soc/culture/jewish/top.html
-
- Credits: The Frequently Asked Questions were developed by a committee
- consisting of Mike Allen, Jerry Altzman, Rabbi Charles Arian, Jacob Baltuch
- (Past Chair), Joseph Berry, Warren Burstein, Stewart Clamen, Daniel Faigin,
- Avi Feldblum, Itzhak "Jeff" Finger, Gedaliah Friedenberg, Yechezkal
- Gutfreund, Art Kamlet, Alan Lustiger, Hillel Markowitz, Len Moskowitz, Colin
- Naturman, Aliza Panitz, Eliot Shimoff, Mark Steinberger, Steven Weintraub,
- Matthew Wiener, and headed by Robert Levene. The organization and
- structuring of the lists for posting purposes was done by D. Faigin, who is
- currently maintaining the lists. Other contributors include Ken Arromdee,
- Josh Backon, Micha Berger, Eli Birnbaum, Todd J. Dicker, Sean Engelson,
- Yosef Kazen, Arnaldo Mandel, Seth Ness, Michael Sidlofsky, Frank Smith, Andy
- Tannenbaum, and Art Werschulz. Comments and corrections are welcome. You
- may address comments either to the maintainer (faigin@aero.org) or to the
- SCJ FAQ committee (scj-faq-list@columbia.edu). Note that the goal is to
- present a balanced view of Judaism; where a response is applicable to a
- particular movement only, this will be noted. Unless otherwise noted or
- implied by the text, all responses reflect the traditional viewpoint.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.1. Why is this group called soc.culture.jewish? Wouldn't
- soc.religion.jewish be more appropriate?
-
- The name "soc.culture.jewish" (S.C.J) is a net.historical relic. In the
- early years of Usenet, the newsgroup was named net.religion.jewish. When the
- Great Renaming was looming (see _The New Hacker's Dictionary_), there was a
- common belief that renaming it talk.religion.jewish would be detrimental to
- the group's success. So the net's collective Yiddishe kopfe did an end run
- around this, by proposing that the group be moved into the soc.culture.*
- hierarchy. And here we are.
-
- While Jews have argued forever about whether Judaism is more of a "culture" or
- a "religion" or a something else, the choice of name for this newsgroup is not
- proof of anything. So if you start arguing "but this group is
- soc.CULTURE.jewish, so...," please, as a well known character in a 1970's US
- television comedy series says: "just stifle."
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.2. I just found S.C.J. What is this network?
-
- S.C.J is part of Usenet, and is gatewayed to other networks, such as Fidonet
- and Keshernet. Read the posts in news.announce.newusers for details. They're
- available via anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu in
- pub/usenet/news.announce.newusers.
-
- % ftp rtfm.mit.edu
- Enter userid: anonymous
- Enter password: myname@mysite.edu
- ftp> cd pub/usenet/news.announce.newusers
- ftp> mget Emily*
- (respond 'y')
- ftp> mget Answers*
- (respond 'y')
- ftp> mget A_Primer*
- (respond 'y')
- ftp> quit
- %
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.3. What topics are appropriate for S.C.J?
-
- Soc.culture.jewish is for discussions concerning Judaism and the surrounding
- culture (Yiddishkeit, Hebrew, Jewish motherhood, etc.). This includes
- discussions regarding the various recognized movements within Judaism, debates
- over halacha, Torah interpretations, etc.
-
- "Divrey Torah" - long or short sermons relating to Judaism and Torah, are
- especially welcome.
-
- Survey questions are also appropriate, such as "How does your community
- organize its free loan societies and scholarships for poor Jews who want a
- Jewish education?"
-
- Discussions about aliyah and Zionism are appropriate, but only if they remain
- in a Jewish context. If you want to talk about the more political or secular
- aspects of these subjects, it is more appropriate to use soc.culture.israel.
-
- Factual discussions of the holocaust (shoah) are allowed in S.C.J; however,
- those wishing to discuss that issue might want to explore instead the
- newsgroup soc.culture.jewish.holocaust. S.C.J.H is a moderated newsgroup that
- serves as a storagehouse for all kinds of information from various sources on
- the Holocaust in Europe that occurred between 1942-1945 (along with the events
- leading up to it that happened in the early 30's). The newsgroup includes
- Holocaust materials from both personal testimonies of survivors and their
- families and "hard" facts from historians and observers. It is moderated to
- prevent any anti-Semitic or race-baiting comments from Neo-Nazis or
- self-proclaimed "academic" Holocaust deniers or revisionists, and is not be a
- forum for discussing whether or not the Shoah happened; instead, S.C.J.H is a
- place for intelligent and factual discussion of the Shoah. For those Usenet
- readers who wish to debate the existence of the Holocaust, they are encouraged
- to read the groups alt.revisionists and soc.history, along with the group
- alt.skinheads.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.4. What topics are *not* appropriate for S.C.J?
-
- Middle East politics, especially international issues concerning Israel,
- belong in talk.politics.mideast (T.P.M), not S.C.J. You certainly should not
- crosspost between S.C.J and T.P.M. Discussions of internal Israeli politics
- belong in soc.culture.israel (S.C.I). Again, they should not be crossposted to
- S.C.J. Pick whichever one is appropriate.
-
- Discussions of Israeli Culture are inappropriate for S.C.J; rather, they
- belong in s.c.i. Crossposting between S.C.I and S.C.J is appropriate ONLY for
- articles dealing with Jewish, as opposed to secular Israeli, issues. If the
- group il.talk exists, it is also appropriate for discussions of Israeli
- culture, but note that its distribution is limited to Israel and sites
- receiving the il distribution (for example, nysernet.org).
-
- Material that is available from a listserv is inappropriate to post to s.c.j
- (that is, the entire newsgroup shouldn't receive the list). However, a SINGLE
- weekly message listing the lists available is reasonable. The FAQ Committee is
- current incorporating this information into the reading list portion of the
- FAQ. One sample from a new list is allowed.
-
- Readers of S.C.J are committed to their religion; it is inappropriate to
- "witness" or preach. Discussions of so-called "Messianic Judaism[sic]," and
- the Christian missionary organization calling itself "Jews for Jesus," and
- similar topics belong in alt.messianic or the appropriate talk.religion.*
- group; don't crosspost them to S.C.J.
-
- Revisionist teachings (i.e., those teachings that attempt to deny that the
- holocaust ever happened) are inappropriate for S.C.J. They belong in
- alt.revisionism. For more information on how to cope with those holding
- revisionist beliefs, the interested reader is referred to [Lip93] (Lipstadt,
- Deborah. _Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory_.) in
- the Antisemitism portion of the reading list.
-
- Lastly, try to avoid personal attacks. Don't write "Lashon Hara", derogatory
- information about people or groups. (If slanderous and *false*, it's called
- "Motzei Shem Ra") It is also forbidden to embarrass others in public. (Rare
- exceptions exist, so read a book such as R' Pliskin's _Guard your Tongue_ for
- details.)
-
- As Josh Backon reminded us:
-
- The Bible states (Leviticus 19:17): "You shall surely rebuke your neighbor
- and not bear sin because of him". The Talmud comments that you may reprove
- your neighbor as long as you do not insult him but if you embarrass him by
- making him blush or turn pale from shame or fury then you have incurred
- guilt because of him (Sifra, Kedoshim 4:8; Talmud Arachin 16b). The Talmud
- (Shevuot 36a) mentions a general prohibition against insulting a fellow man.
- Pirke Avot (3:11) states that he who causes embarrassment to a fellow man
- has no share in the world-to-come. The Talmud (Bava Metzia 58b) compared
- the slanderer to a shedder of blood, and the Rambam (Hilchot Chovel Umazzik
- 3:7) characterized all slanderers as wicked and stupid. The later scholars
- instituted disciplinary floggings for cases of slander (Choshen Mishpat
- 420:41).
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.5. When should I post to talk.politics.mideast?
- Soc.culture.Arabic?
-
- T.P.M was created specifically for discussions of the politics of the
- interaction of middle eastern countries. The Arab-Israeli conflict, the
- Turkish-Armenian conflict, and similar battles are appropriate topics for the
- list, at least until separate groups are created for those subtopics. A post
- about the PLO or terrorism probably belongs in T.P.M.
-
- Internal Arab politics generally belong on soc.culture.Arabic. Internal
- Israeli politics should be discussed in soc.culture.israel.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.6. Is it appropriate to discuss Israel in soc.culture.jewish?
-
- Only if it is in the context of Jewish religion or Jewish culture. General
- discussions about Israel, and discussions of Israeli politics belong in
- soc.culture.israel. Discussions about the religious basis for Zionism and
- religious legislation in Israel are OK for S.C.J.
-
- Note that there is a lot of information available about Israel, in particular,
- the subjects of Aliyah and Zionism, from JERUSALEM-ONE. This information is
- avialable via gopher:
- gopher://jerusalem1.datasrv.co.il/
-
- But interaction with other countries is really a matter for
- talk.politics.mideast.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.7. How should I respond to inappropriate articles? Somebody posted
- an inappropriate article to S.C.J or T.P.M.
-
- Respond once where the person directed followups, or where the article was
- posted. Set the Followup-To: header line to the appropriate group, and start
- your article with a note that you are re-setting followups to the appropriate
- group, and will not continue discussion in the inappropriate group.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.8. But I don't get T.P.M? Now what?
-
- You don't get T.P.M? Ask yourself, why not? Whoever owns your machine has
- made a strategic decision about the costs of getting S.C.J and T.P.M. You
- have no right to overrule that decision. You can discuss it with your site
- management, but please, leave S.C.J out of it. T.P.M was created a spinoff
- from S.C.J, just to get rid of the endless Mideast discussions.
-
- If you still feel this strongly, then get an account on a machine that has
- T.P.M access. Alternately, you can subscribe via Listserv to receive T.P.M by
- mail (note that this will put a heavy mail load on your machine). To receive
- T.P.M by mail, send a message to listserv@israel.nysernet.org, saying:
-
- subscribe tpm "John Doe"
-
- Substitute your name for "John Doe"
-
- Do not specify a Subject: line in the message, and do not include any
- other lines (e.g. do not include your signature). Specify your real
- name, not your computer address. Don't say "please" or "thank you" as
- this will only confuse the computer. Also, do not put any punctuation marks in
- your message.
-
- Since T.P.M sends out a lot of messages (over 100 a day sometimes), you might
- prefer to receive digests. Digests go out when 1000 lines of messages have
- accumlated, or at least once a day. To change your subscription so that you
- receive digests, send a message to listserv@israel.nysernet.org, saying
-
- set tpm mail digest
-
- You can put the SUBSCRIBE and SET commands in the same message, as long as
- each is on a separate line.
-
- Note that internal Israeli politics, or discussions about the IDF, are not
- considered "Mideast politics".
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.9. A. Random Jew posted X to a.b.c; I disagree. What should I do?
-
- Although the poster may be Jewish, that is not a valid reason to include S.C.J
- in your list of followup newsgroups. If you are disputing what the poster
- said, it is always best to (after pausing to reflect) respond via private
- Email. If you feel the answer has wide public interest, you should followup
- the response in the groups to which the article was originally posted.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.10. Can non-Jews post to S.C.J?
-
- All Usenet readers have equal right to post to S.C.J.. However, as with all
- newsgroups, you should note that the collective readership has a general
- consensus on what types of posting are acceptable. In the case of S.C.J.,
- this consensus reflects the fact that most of the readers are Jewish. Also,
- don't post general questions which can be answered in this FAQ or in a
- library. If your motivation is simply to get an answer to a question, you can
- send e-mail to a few regular posters.
-
- If you choose to ask your question of the S.C.J readership, you may be placed
- under suspicion of being a missionary, especially if you "innocently" ask
- something like "Someone please explain to me why Jews stubbornly refuse to
- accept my faith, when it's written right in your Bible..."
-
- We've seen it all a thousand times before, and unsolicited declarations of
- belief in <your religion> in S.C.J convey the message "<your religion> supports
- harassing Jews." You're welcome to observe, participate, and learn about
- Judaism. Proselytizing is inappropriate.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.11. May I post this great Jewish essay I just read?
-
- Yes, if you obtain permission from the publisher. They are often glad to give
- permission to republish articles occasionally, provided that you include
- subscription information. Point out to them that several S.C.J readers have
- subscribed to journals after seeing articles republished electronically. All
- it usually takes is a phone call or letter.
-
- If you only wish to discuss the essayist's ideas, just post a summary and a
- pointer to the article for interested readers.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.12. I have a question nogaiah hilchos maaser...
-
- QUESTION: I have a question nogaiah hilchos maaser kesafim b'zman hazeh... Eem
- yeish lee meah or fewer shekalim and some are hefker ...
-
- ANSWER: Please! The primary language for Usenet is English. Translate your
- Hebrew and Aramaic when you post in order to maximize the understanding of
- what you write. Include a glossary for the lesser known terms. Some common
- ones are part of this FAQ (see Section 17 in Part 10).
-
- Usenet is a bad place to ask technical questions of Jewish law. Instead, ask
- a qualified rabbi. If you know of none, then post a request for rabbinic
- advice - many have access to electronic mail, and many readers can find a
- rabbi near you.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.13. Do S.C.J readers want to make it into a moderated group?
-
- Some do, but most hope that this very list will reduce the need for spending
- bandwidth re-answering common questions. There has been recent discussion
- about using a form of automoderation to eliminate crosspostings, and nothing
- else. We'll see what happens.
-
- This question gets put before the readership of S.C.J about every three years.
- So far the overwhelming response has been to leave S.C.J unmoderated. There
- do exist moderated mailing lists for those who wish.
-
- Many on S.C.J feel that part of its appeal and taam (flavor/tang/spice) comes
- from the freewheeling unmoderated approach which brings together posters from
- all parts of the spectrum.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.14. How do I keep up with the volume? Should I try a KILL file?
-
- QUESTION: Whew, there's a lot of volume on S.C.J. I can hardly keep up. How
- can I eliminate cross-posted articles, or articles by annoying netflamer J.
- Random Luser, or any article with "legitimate" in its Subject?
-
- ANSWER: You need to use a "kill file." It's an algorithm which scans articles
- and eliminates those meeting criteria you specify. If you read news with "rn"
- or one of its offsprint, you need to create a file
- News/soc/culture/jewish/KILL consisting of lines such as:
-
- /talk.politics/h:j [skip all articles cross-posted to talk.politics.*]
- /J. Random Luser/h:j [skip all articles written by J. Random Luser]
- /egitimate/j [skip all articles with "egitimate" in Subject]
-
- If you use rn, trn, or any of its varients, you can find a useful explanation
- of how to make a kill file in the Killfile FAQ. This is available on
- rtfm.mit.edu or ftp.uu.net. The URL is:
-
- ftp://ftp.uu.net/usenet/news.answers/killfile.faq
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/usenet/news.answers/killfile.faq
-
- This can be retrieved by sending Email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
- following line in the body of the message:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/killfile.faq
-
- Other newsreaders implement this feature differently. For example, the
- maintainer of this FAQ uses the "gnus" package from within Gnu Emacs. His
- kill file looks like:
-
- (gnus-kill "Xref" "talk\\.politics")
- (gnus-kill "Author" "joe_user@site\\.com")
- (gnus-kill "Subject" "\\blegitimate\\b")
- (gnus-expunge "x")
-
- If you use Gnus, you can find out more information on the killfile facility by
- typing M-x info within gnus.
-
- If you use the newsreader nn, James Kahn wrote that you can just type K (that
- is, a capital K), and nn will then prompt you for various things, such as
- whether to kill by name or by subject, etc.
-
- If you use a different newsreading program, you may be out of luck. In that
- case, your best bet is to ask someone at your local site how to create
- killfiles, or read the manual about your newsreading program. You might
- consider writing a perl script to preprocess your news for you.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.15. I've just found (insert name here) ...
-
- QUESTION: I've just found Jesus/ LaRouche/ Muhammad/ Marx/ Moon/ L.RonHubbard/
- Cthulhu and I'd like you to find him, too. Here's an essay written by someone
- raised in a Jewish home who converted to my faith...
-
- ANSWER: Proselytizing on S.C.J is highly rude and unwelcome, and will greatly
- diminish the respect S.C.J readers have for you and your group. Although we
- could direct you to some other group in which to post, you should be aware
- that proselytizing over the network is, in general, not well accepted. You
- would just as likely be rebuffed in another group as well.
-
- That said, if you want to explore your religion more (and it isn't Judaism),
- there are plenty of groups that are more appropriate. Please consult your
- list of newsgroups.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 1.16. What are the Do's and Don'ts?
-
- Here's a summary.
-
- o Learn about Usenet before you post.
- o Follow S.C.J and read news.announce.newusers.
- o Use the appropriate newsgroups: Israeli politics belongs on
- "soc.culture.israel" or "talk.politics.mideast"; Holocaust denyers belong on
- "alt.revisionism"; Messianics belong on "alt.messianic"; Middle east
- politics belongs on "talk.politics.mideast"; discussions about Turkey and
- Armenia belong on "soc.culture.turkish".
- o Know your audience and make your posts understandable.
- o Trim quoted material whenever possible, and try to ensure there is content
- in your posting (except, perhaps, during the month of Adar)
- o Direct specific halachic questions to rabbis, but you can discuss the
- general concept on S.C.J.
- o Do post divrey Torah [short sermons on Jewish topics].
- o Don't challenge the validity of Judaism or assert the superiority of other
- religions and prophets thereof.
- o Don't write "lashon hara" [true slander] or "motzei sheim ra" [false
- slander].
- o Don't start posting until you've finished reading this FAQ.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- --
- Please mail additions or corrections to me at faigin@aero.org.
-
-
- End of S.C.J FAQ Part 1 (FAQ Intro and S.C.J Intro) Digest
- **************************
- -------
- --
- [W]: The Aerospace Corp. M1/055 * POB 92957 * LA, CA 90009-2957 * 310/336-8228
- [Email]:faigin@aero.org, faigin@acm.org [Vmail]:310/336-5454 Box#68228
- Seen on the net:
- "Earthquakes aren't fascinating when they are under your house"
-