Rosh Hashanah 2022 Message: New Year, New You!
Rabbi Dr Akiva Tatz delivered a Rosh Hashanah message ahead of the upcoming Jewish New Year titled “New Year, New You” for Ohr Somayach.
Rabbi Dr Akiva Tatz delivered a Rosh Hashanah message ahead of the upcoming Jewish New Year titled “New Year, New You” for Ohr Somayach.
Join Rabbi Dr Akiva Tatz for a Live Stream with Jnetwork on the topic of Faith In Dark Times. When: Wed 27 July Time: 7PM UK/ 9PM Israel Zoom: 8868714064
Is one allowed to receive an organ transplant from a non kosher animal? If one receives an ovarian transplant, who’s children are they? If one transplants a head or a brain, who are you?! If a person didn’t have a heartbeat and comes back to life after CPR, did you save a life or revive
Rabbi Dr Akiva Tatz · Rabbi Tatz lecture to London Hatzola on Palliative Care in Jewish Law
Rabbi Dr Akiva Tatz will be speaking at CHEMED’s upcoming 4th Annual Conference on Medicine and Ethics
Video: Audio: Also available on: Apple Google Podcasts Spotify Backtracks
Shiur given via zoom exclusively for email subscribers, 21 April 2021.
28-Apr-20
Presents a comprehensive view of free will in Judaism.
Akiva Tatz and a searching Buddhist Jew, David Gottlieb, explore fundamentals of faith and philosophy bringing to light depth and subtlety in answer to David’s probing questions about ancient and modern Judaism.
Shows how the deeper ideas and patterns of Torah thought can illuminate everyday experience. Life in general and its ordeals in particular are brought into focus in the light of these patterns.
Explores and explains deep and fundamental concepts in Judaism, demonstrating how those ideas and principles can, and should, guide life decisions and growth to real maturity.
A detailed approach to dangerous disease and therapy in Jewish Law.
Traces some of the Torah themes that express the duality of this world: the physical, outer layer, and its inner root and demonstrates their parallels.
Traces the paths of young people as they transition from secular backgrounds into the world of Torah, detailing the issues and ideas that moved them.
Traces the process of change from the era of revelation, and the dawning of the age of the Oral Law. Includes a fold-out chart of Jewish history.
Presents a comprehensive view of free will in Judaism. Features all the primary sources on this subject printed out in full.
Why is the mindset (and indeed the obligation) of Shabbbat rest, while that of the festivals is joy? What is the relationship between these widely different modes of being and what do they tell us about life?