This comes via my friend Big Josh aka The Coach.
He is such a gregarious soul, dare I call him a social butterfly?
xoxo to Big Josh, and I can't agree more with this song, part of the film that launched Donna Summer's career!
As I played field hockey in high school (though about 10 years after this film, and therefore no red tube socks), I naturally love the opening sequence with the girls getting on the bus and their field hockey sticks in hand.
Thank you, Barry Bernstein and Rob Cohen, writer and producer respectively, for this beacon of light!
(there is a YouTube video link below: If you are not seeing the image, click through to the website itself and it will appear. Sometimes in the email digest you won't see it)
Showing posts with label cohen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cohen. Show all posts
Friday, January 20, 2012
Saturday, December 11, 2010
A Tiny Island in Tunisia in North Africa
The island named Djerba off the coast of Tunisia is home to one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world. Its synagogue., the oldest in North Africa, houses the oldest sefer Torah. On the earth. That exists anywhere.
Every year Jews pilgimmage there during the holiday of Lag Ba'Omer. We just learned about this place that seems worlds apart from our cozy lives here in the U.S., and yet we are so connected.
And the population there?
Most of the Jews there are cohanim, descendants of the highest priestly tribe. The ones who give you the famous "live long and prosper" blessing that Spock made famous on Star Trek (remember, Leonard Nimoy, too, is a cohane). A whole community where literally all its Jews are cohanim? Whoa.....talk about holy stuff. Our question is, when it comes time for duchening, who is sitting in the shul to receive the priestly blessing?
What is the big deal you might ask?
We recently met someone who's father's family came from this town. The father was raised in Tzfat, one of more than ten children in his family. For anyone who knows about the town of Tzfat, this is the epicenter of the development of kabbalah. Many of our great mystics learned there, and many are still drawn to the town's deep spiritual roots.
Deep stuff. Deep, deep stuff.
Every year Jews pilgimmage there during the holiday of Lag Ba'Omer. We just learned about this place that seems worlds apart from our cozy lives here in the U.S., and yet we are so connected.
And the population there?
Most of the Jews there are cohanim, descendants of the highest priestly tribe. The ones who give you the famous "live long and prosper" blessing that Spock made famous on Star Trek (remember, Leonard Nimoy, too, is a cohane). A whole community where literally all its Jews are cohanim? Whoa.....talk about holy stuff. Our question is, when it comes time for duchening, who is sitting in the shul to receive the priestly blessing?
What is the big deal you might ask?
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from travelblog.org |
We recently met someone who's father's family came from this town. The father was raised in Tzfat, one of more than ten children in his family. For anyone who knows about the town of Tzfat, this is the epicenter of the development of kabbalah. Many of our great mystics learned there, and many are still drawn to the town's deep spiritual roots.
Deep stuff. Deep, deep stuff.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Aaronson is also a Cohen
Riding the Katz and Cohen wave, let's talk about the last name Aaronson (interestingly, this week's Torah portion T'zaveh, discusses at length the priestlihood). By obvious definition, it means "son of Aaron." Let's go back historically and look at the original Aaron. He was the brother of Moses, who led the Children of Israel from Egypt out of slavery (remember the Passover story where frogs were here, frogs were there, frogs were jumping everywhere?). Aaron was selected as the first High Priest (in Hebrew, kohen gadol). It would make sense, then, that the descendents of Aaron are also from the priestly lineage and are cohanim as well.
There are, indeed, Aronsons and Aaronsons who are not Jewish, and come from Norweigan backgrounds.
We don't know if composer Jack Aaronson is Jewish, but it sure looks like his gigs down in the West Village in NYC are lots of fun.
If belting out current Broadway tunes is your thing, then pop in on a Tuesday night and let us know how it goes!
Marie's Crisis Cafe
59 Grove Street
New York, NY
212-243-9323
There are, indeed, Aronsons and Aaronsons who are not Jewish, and come from Norweigan backgrounds.
We don't know if composer Jack Aaronson is Jewish, but it sure looks like his gigs down in the West Village in NYC are lots of fun.
If belting out current Broadway tunes is your thing, then pop in on a Tuesday night and let us know how it goes!
Marie's Crisis Cafe
59 Grove Street
New York, NY
212-243-9323
Monday, February 22, 2010
Katz = Cohen...Live Long and Prosper
We have decided to return to our roots and reinstate the Whole Phamily as a blog about Jewish names. Names that you've heard. Names that you haven't. Ashkenazic names. Sephardic names. We will focus on one Jewish name per blog post, and perhaps bring up a person, business, work of art, or all of the above that bears this name.
To say that Katz is a vintage Jewish last name is an understatement. If you're from New York, or simply a deli maven, you know Katz's Deli. Many folks say that their pastrami is the real deal.
Katz's Deli, NYC
We were blown away when, many years ago, we learned that Katz is a priestly name. Saying Katz is just like saying Cohen, but in German. Do you recall Spock's Vulcan Salute in Star Trek?
Ask a random male Katz today, and he will tell you that the traditional blessing he says in synagogue (be it once in a while or every week) that was passed down by his father is eerily reminscent of the Vulcan Salute.
Leonard Nimoy as Spock giving the Vulcan Salute
Shlomo Katz, Israel-based musician
Another Katz of note is Shlomo Katz, a musician bringing on down some of the most beautiful Jewish-infused (hint: Torah) music out there today.
We heard him perform tonight at an intimate evening of music and story. We bless him that his music should spread far and wide among alle yidden!
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Ezra Jack Keats
As children, we were practically reared on Ezra Jack Keats' classic picture books The Snowy Day and Whistle for Willie. Through these stories we were introduced to the sweet African American boy named Peter, and got a glimpse of urban life that was different than that of ours in the suburbs. We always thought that these tales were written by an African American man, but as it turns out, this is not the case.
Did you know that Ezra Jack Keats was born Jewish, in Brooklyn, to parents who immigrated around the turn of the century and his given name was Jacob (Jack) Ezra Katz?
We owe so much to Keats for presenting the "black kid as hero" to thousands of American children. So many children welcomed Peter into their own homes, and in doing so, the African American child has become part of many other "phamilies" different than his own.
As we know, the name Katz is often a derivative of the name Cohen, and a very common Jewish name at that. The Kohen Gadol or, as a surname, Cohen, was the high priest who lived during the Temple Era and was a descendent of biblical Aaron, Moses' brother. In terms of tribal legacy, today's descendents of the Kohen Gadol have an elevated status among their fellow Jews, and are bestowed with the priestly blessing during communal prayers. As Keats most likely was passed down this tradition from his father, we feel an ever deeper sense of honor for the author.
Check out the Ezra Jack Keats foundation to learn more about this celebrated, award-winning American author and artist.
Did you know that Ezra Jack Keats was born Jewish, in Brooklyn, to parents who immigrated around the turn of the century and his given name was Jacob (Jack) Ezra Katz?
We owe so much to Keats for presenting the "black kid as hero" to thousands of American children. So many children welcomed Peter into their own homes, and in doing so, the African American child has become part of many other "phamilies" different than his own.
As we know, the name Katz is often a derivative of the name Cohen, and a very common Jewish name at that. The Kohen Gadol or, as a surname, Cohen, was the high priest who lived during the Temple Era and was a descendent of biblical Aaron, Moses' brother. In terms of tribal legacy, today's descendents of the Kohen Gadol have an elevated status among their fellow Jews, and are bestowed with the priestly blessing during communal prayers. As Keats most likely was passed down this tradition from his father, we feel an ever deeper sense of honor for the author.
Check out the Ezra Jack Keats foundation to learn more about this celebrated, award-winning American author and artist.
Sunday, December 6, 2009
The Whole Phamily is a network of Jewish names. Jews have only had surnames for a few hundred years. First names, on the other hand, have been around for time immemorial. It was always "child, son/daughter _of_". Like, "Isaac, son of Abraham and Sarah." On headstones, the deceased is usually commemorated by their first name, child of their parent's first name. Getting called up to the Torah is done similarly. Like it or not, our names actually do connect us to the past, present, and future. All together, they make up one greater family. The ganse mishpucha* as it were.
Is your last name Gold, Goldberg, Goldstein? Silver, Silverberg, Silverstein, Silverman? What about Field, Feldman, Feldstein? Or, Cohen, Cohane, Coen, Katz? Perhaps you have known a Fisher, Fishman, or Fish.
Do the names Shapiro, Shufro, Shafran sound familiar? Have you had a friend named Bernstein or any of the various Rosen Rosens (a tilt of the head to Fletch)?
These are all some of the very obvious Jewish names, but there are so many more. Naturally many of the original Jewish names that families took on in their homelands before arriving in North America were changed. Blobstein went to Blaine. Eisenberg became Eis. Altman became Alan.
The Whole Phamily's proprietary database will allow you to enter in your own family name and see what we have about it. Or perhaps you already know that Mullens was originally Mulinsky. Write it up and tell us that story.
Why should you care about your name, anyway?
And, what does it matter that it is a Jewish name?
Isn't your name a good name?
Don't you use it every day?
*ganse mishpucha: Yiddish phrase for "whole family"
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