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Scholar in Residence Program - "Morality and Security - Reconciling Democratic Principles with Political Realities."
March 20, 2010 - 7:30pm

Or Hadah's 2010 Ben and Joan Dickstein Scholar in Residence, Rabbi David Forman, will be speaking Saturday evening on "Morality and Security - Reconciling Democratic Principles with Political Realities." The program is preceded by dinner (RSVP only) - more information and RSVP form available at the bottom of this page. The program itself is free of charge and open to the public; oneg to follow.
Rabbi Forman is a founding member of Rabbis for Human Rights. Please note Rabbi Forman's other presentations throughout the weekend:
- March 19 at 8:00 PM - "Israeli Rabbis for Human Rights: The Application of Jewish Values to a Jewish State."
- March 20 at 9:00 AM - "Israel, Zion, Jerusalem in Jewish Texts."
- March 21 at 9:00 AM - "Personal Reflections on Aliyah and Why I am Still a Zionist."
A native of Boston, Massachusetts, Rabbi David J. Forman moved to Israel over thirty-five years ago. As the former director of the Israel office in Jerusalem of the Union for Reform Judaism, he has been instrumental in building programs that bridge the Israel-Diaspora divide. Rabbi Forman has been active in human rights and peace movements in Israel. He was the founding chairperson of the Jerusalem Council for Soviet Jewry (1973), chairperson of Interns for Peace (1984-1986) and founding chairperson of Israeli Rabbis for Human Rights (1988-1992), on whose behalf he accepted the prestigious Knesset Peace Prize (1993). He served as a deputy commander in the Israeli artillery corps, receiving a medal for distinguished service. Writing regularly for both the Israeli Hebrew and English press on social, political and religious issues (he is a columnist for the Jerusalem Post), he has lectured internationally on Human Rights and Social Justice (Sweden, Norway, Senegal, Great Britain, Jordan, Canada, Ukraine, Russia, Bylerussia, Greece, Japan, United States), including as the keynote speaker at the Nobel Institute in Oslo. A frequent scholar-in-residence, he has authored four books: Over My Dead Body – Some Grave Questions for God (2005), Fifty Ways to be Jewish (2002), Jewish Schizophrenia in the Land of Israel (2000) and Israel – On Broadway: Diaspora Jewry – Off-Broadway (1998). He is married with four children and seven grandchildren, all who live in Israel.
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| SIR 2010 flyer | 193.73 KB |
| SIR Reservations.pdf | 35.47 KB |
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