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New Program For Modern Orthodox Women

Posted by on Aug 18, 2011 in Shuls |

August 18, 2011

Dear Community Members,

As the summer comes to a close and we prepare to begin the new year of 5772/2011-2012, we would like to inform you of an exciting new program that will be coming to our community. A joint committee of volunteers, represented by members of Beth Jacob  Congregation, B’nai David Judea, Young Israel of Century City, and YULA Girls School
has been working under our auspices to bring a Yoetzet Halacha to work in our community on a part-time basis.

For those who may not be familiar with this position, Nishmat, an Orthodox Jewish institution of higher Torah learning for women, based in Jerusalem, established the Keren Ariel Women’s Halachic Institute in1997 to train Yoatzot Halacha, or Women Halachic Consultants. Women preparing to become Yoatzot Halacha are chosen for their
extensive Torah scholarship, leadership ability, and deep religious commitment, and devote two years (over 1000 hours) to intensive Talmudic and Halachic study with rabbinic authorities in Taharat Hamishpachah-laws of Niddah, Mikvah and family purity. They receive training from medical and health professionals who are experts
in modern medicine and psychology, including gynecology, infertility, women’s health, family dynamics and sexuality.

Following comprehensive examinations administered by a panel of distinguished Roshei Kollel and Poskim, graduates are certified by a panel of Orthodox Rabbis to be a  resource for women with questions regarding Taharat Hamishpachah. Graduates of
this program have been working with great success in communities across Israel and in the United States to assist women who are more comfortable discussing very personal issues with another woman. As female Halachic advisors, the Yoatzot consult with  Orthodox Rabbinic authorities when approached with questions which demand a posek’s discretion. For more information on Nishmat’s program, visit http://www.yoatzot.org/
[http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=gheemacab&et=1107187309528&s=2315&e=001ExNbBtkUAIKFaAJbK03UAhjCPU0TR1NSPZwMj6ilbYCb-OXfnaawHU6OLvId1z3bCsmiaZxKtYEEYGGqK1Y1t5xHdfjWjWFyCbKgiQ_dQBeHQ-RrvXU5cA==].

With that background, we are very excited to announce that Shoshana Samuels, a recent graduate of Nishmat’s program and a certified Yoetzet Halacha, will be making regular visits to our Los Angeles community throughout the upcoming year. She will present to small groups of women at the homes of our Shul members on topics related, but  not limited, to general understandings of Taharat Hamishpacha, women’s health, marital intimacy, symbolism of mikvah, family planning, peri-menopause and menopause, and will also be available for individual one on one consultations.

Each of these individual events will be announced through our Shul bulletins and  will be open to members of all of our Kehilot. Between visits, Shoshana will be  reachable for consultation via phone and e-mail and will encourage women to reach out to her with questions related to her knowledge base. Shoshana will be living
 and teaching in Teaneck, New Jersey and will serve in the official role as a Yoetzet Halacha at Congregation Rinat Yisrael. She is not only extremely intelligent, but also outgoing, friendly and very approachable. She looks forward to putting her years of study into practice as a Yoetzet Halacha in the Los Angeles community.

In the coming weeks, we will send out further details for the first Yoetzet Halacha weekend program, scheduled to take place September 16-18th. We encourage you to attend one or more of the sessions as an opportunity to meet Shoshana, and become more familiar with what a Yoetzet Halacha has to offer the members of our community.

This one-year pilot program is being funded by private donations through the American Friends of Nishmat, and additional sponsorship opportunities are available upon request. Please feel free to contact Alison Anziska at amsa140@hotmail.com[mailto:amsa140@hotmail.com]
for more information.

We look forward to continued growth together as a community, and extend to all of you our sincerest wishes for a happy and healthy New Year.

Rabbi Kalman Topp, Beth Jacob Congregation

Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky, B’nai David Judea

Rabbi Elazar Muskin, Young Israel of Century City

Rabbi Avraham Lieberman, YULA Girls School

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Modern Orthodox Rabbis In Los Angeles Seek To Certify Business Ethics

Posted by on Feb 24, 2009 in Abuse, Agriprocessors, beth jacob, Bnai David, Ethics, modern orthodox, Orthodox Union, yicc |

My first thoughts when I heard about this plan.

I hope the execution of this plan is more effective than some of the spelling in this new letter: “PLEASE NOTE THAT ALL INFORMATION SHARED WITH THE PEULAT SACHIROR ANY OF ITS REPRSENTATIVES WILL BE HELD IN THE STRCTEST OF CONFIDENCE. THE CERTIFRICATION AGREEMENT WILL RFLECT THIS IN WRITING.”

Here’s the letter going out to Jewish business owners in Pico-Robertson in particular and then to the wider city:

Dear Business Owner:

We are writing to invite to join us in an inspiring new project that we have undertaken for the benefit of our community.

As you know, Judaism has a rich tradition and volumes of treatises on business ethics, particularly in the area of ethical labor standards and practices. In an effort to raise awareness of this area of Jewish law and ethics, we have recently formed an organization that will offer local establishments the opportunity to promote and publicize their compliance with labor standards and practices. We are calling this organization Peulat Sachir: The Ethical Labor Initiative .

Peulat Sachir is offering – at no charge – a Covenant Document, to be signed by you and a representative of Peulat Sachir that will hang in your window and will favorably promote your business as being in compliance with proper labor practices. In addition, all “covenanted” businesses, restaurants and markets will be publicized free of charge in the printed bulletins of Beth Jacob Cong., Bnai David – Judea Cong., Kehillat Yavneh, and Young Israel of Century City, who will also take your participation into favorable account whenever choosing vendors for synagogue events. On the enclosed page you will find all of the details as to how you can qualify for the Covenant Document. Peulat Sachir’s ultimate goals are to elevate the level of communal awareness concerning the importance of labor law, and to raise the standards of labor law compliance throughout the Jewish community, focusing initially on the Pico Blvd. strip. We are hoping that you will be excited about being among the pioneers who will work with us to launch this groundbreaking project.

The areas that Peulat Sachir will certify are:

1.

1. Minimum Wage – The current minimum wage for employees in the state of California is $8 an hour.

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2. Overtime – Non-exempt employees must be compensated at one-and-a-half times their regular rate of pay for any hours worked over 8 in one day or 40 in one week. Non-exempt employees must be compensated at double their regular rate of pay for any hours worked over 12 in one day.

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3. Meal and Rest Breaks – Employers must provide a 30-minute off-duty lunch break on or before the fifth hour of each employee’s shift. A second 30-minute off-duty meal period must be provided on before the tenth hour of each employee’s shift. In addition, employers must provide a paid 10-minute rest break for every four hours worked by an employee.

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4. Workers’ Compensation Insurance – Employers must carry appropriate workers’ compensation insurance.

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5. Leave Policies – Employers with over 50 employees must give employees who have been with the company for over one year required leaves for caring for a newborn child, caring for a seriously ill family member or for recuperating from a serious health condition in accordance with the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and California Family Rights Act. FMLA also requires that the employee return at a level of pay equal to what he/she was making before taking leave.

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6. Discrimination/Harassment Policies: Employers must have policies to discourage and deal with illegal discrimination (e.g., based on age, sex, gender, race, etc.) and harassment. Employers must make employees aware of a mechanism within the company to complain about discrimination and harassment.

PLEASE NOTE THAT ALL INFORMATION SHARED WITH THE PEULAT SACHIROR ANY OF ITS REPRSENTATIVES WILL BE HELD IN THE STRCTEST OF CONFIDENCE. THE CERTIFRICATION AGREEMENT WILL RFLECT THIS IN WRITING.

Businesses interested in receiving a Peulat Sachir Covenant Document should contact Peulat Sachirat info@peulatsachir.com about applying. (A member of the Peulat Sachir board may also follow up on this letter with a phone call, inviting your participation.)

We would like to emphasize that Peulat Sachir’s goal is not to hurt businesses which may be in non-compliance with federal or state labor laws, but to encourage the patronage of those with proper labor practices. We hope that by increasing awareness of these issues within our community, we and the rest of the world will be able to look at our local businesses as examples of how to treat employees fairly and legally.

Sincerely,

# of lay leaders from among the group

[Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky

Rabbi Daniel Korobkin

Rabbi Elazar Muskin

Rabbi Steven Weil]

HERE’S THE COVENANT:

The Worker’s Wage: Our Community’s Labor Ethics Covenant

Whereas:

The Torah commands us to pay our workers promptly and accurately, and asks us to recognize that their lives are in our hands (Devarim 24:15).

The Halacha requires us, as members of a larger society, to observe all of the civil “laws of the land” (dina d’malchuta) (Choshen Mishpat, 369:11).

Our patrons are entitled to know that the employees working in the establishments they patronize are being treated fairly and in accordance with halacha.

Therefore, {Name of business}, represented by the undersigned, hereby affirms that it is in compliance with all local, state, and federal laws enacted to ensure that we treat our employees appropriately, as is consistent with our spiritual commitments toward them.

These laws include the following:

*

Payment of Minimum Wage
*

Payment of Overtime Wages
*

Provision of Meal and Rest Periods
*

Granting of Family and Personal Leave
*

Maintenance of Worker’s Compensation Insurance
*

Institution and Upholding of Anti-Discrimination/Anti-Harassment/Anti-Retaliation Policies

We further commit to comply with all laws relating to mandatory training, including attending, and having our employees attend, educational seminars reviewing our respective rights and responsibilities to each other. These seminars will be conducted by the volunteers of Peulat Sachir, our partners in this community covenant, or by other qualified advisors.

This covenant is subject to renewal on an annual basis and may be revoked at any time by Peulat Sachir, in its sole discretion. We further hereby agree to welcome the volunteers of Peulat Sachir to inspect a random sampling of our relevant business records on a semi-annual basis, and to interview our employees to confirm our compliance herewith.

Signed this _______ day of ________, 57__, corresponding to the ________ day of ___________, 20__.

Signed: Business owner

Signed: Representative of Peulat Sachir

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Don’t Expect Pico-Robertson Business To Rush Out To Get New ‘Ethics’ Certification

Posted by on Oct 18, 2008 in Ethics |

Kosher businesses in Pico-Robertson already have four regular inspectors they have to deal with. I doubt any of them are rushing to sign up for this new program by the community’s Modern Orthodox rabbis.

The minimum wage already puts entry level jobs at a steep price to employers. Eight dollars an hour for a dishwasher? Many of these employees can’t survive on just 40 hours a week. That’s only $320 a week before taxes. They need to work 80 hours a week. But employers can’t afford to pay them overtime rates.

Numerous employers in Pico-Robertson have been fined by the state for not properly paying overtime. Lawyers will show an employer how best to get around these laws legally.

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Taking On The Charedim In Israel

Posted by on Jul 10, 2008 in Charedi, Israel |

Gary Rosenblatt writes:

Rabbi Benjamin (Benny) Lau does not look the part of a revolutionary.

At 47, his youthful appearance, warm smile and engaging personality have helped him become a popular Orthodox rabbinic figure in Jerusalem, where he has revitalized the Ramban community synagogue in Katamon and heads the beit midrash program at Beit Morasha, a communal and educational leadership institute for observant men and women.

He also lectures at Bar-Ilan University (where he received a Ph.D.) and teaches at both a boys’ and girls’ yeshiva high school in Jerusalem.

The rabbi is soft-spoken, but his message of late — in sermons, lectures, newspaper columns and interviews — is blunt and compelling, offering up sharp criticism of the Chief Rabbinate and its role in the deteriorating relationship between religion and state in Israel.

Rabbi Lau, himself the nephew of former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, is leading a campaign among like-minded, more tolerant Orthodox rabbis to wrest control of the Chief Rabbinate from the influence of a group of elderly ultra-Orthodox, anti-Zionist haredi religious leaders whose dictates often are followed by the two state-appointed chief rabbis.

Rabbi Lau says he and his colleagues, primarily from the rabbinic group, Tzohar (Hebrew for window), seek to restore a sense of compassion toward all Israeli Jews, no matter their level of observance.

“We can’t accept it,” Rabbi Lau says of the haredi style, which demands the strictest levels of adherence to Jewish law. “We are the Zionists and we should be the ones with the power. It’s not normal for the state to be the captive of the haredim,” who don’t acknowledge the authority of the state.

He says he would prefer that more senior rabbis in his camp take the lead in this campaign, “but I look around and see that the responsibility is on our shoulders, and it cannot wait. We are very close to the end of the relationship” between religion and the state, he says, as Israelis become increasingly disenfranchised with the Judaism they see practiced and adjudicated by the Chief Rabbinate.

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