Episodes

  • R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Tetzaveh: “Who Stays Your Hand?”: On Interdependence
    Feb 25 2026

    Being in a relationship is both an opportunity and a challenge. Relationships with others have the potential to be life-expanding, but to achieve this they must be built with delicacy and intention of mind and heart. The Torah portions of Terumah, Tetzaveh, and VaYakhel-Pekudei present various opportunities for encounter and connection—with others in general, and the connection between the Holy blessed One and humanity in particular.


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    10 mins
  • Searching for the Heart of Tanakh: R. Shai Held and R. David Kasher
    Feb 23 2026

    Traditional Jewish exegesis and modern academic scholarship often speak in different languages—one theological and reverential, the other historical and critical. In this public conversation, Rabbi Shai Held and Rabbi David Kasher reflect on how these frameworks shape our reading of the Bible, how they challenge one another, and how thoughtful engagement with both can lead to a richer, more responsible understanding of sacred scriptures. Recorded at the Tanakh Intensive 2026.


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    48 mins
  • R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Terumah: The Blueprint of Intimacy
    Feb 18 2026

    Parashat Terumah opens with a divine request. God asks the Children of Israel for a contribution to achieve a specific goal: “And let them make Me a sanctuary that I may dwell among them” (Exodus 25:8). The entire parashah, along with its layers of midrash, serves as a blueprint for how God seeks to be together with us—and how we can be together with others, even in an encounter that might otherwise seem impossible.


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    9 mins
  • R. Shai Held: Loving the Stranger-Sojourner (Ger)
    Feb 17 2026

    In addition to loving God and loving our neighbor, the Torah also commands us to love the stranger-sojourner (ger). This lecture delves into this surprising biblical mandate to love the stranger-sojourner and seeks to understand its relationship to more foundational ideas in Jewish theology, ethics, and spirituality. R. Shai considers questions like: Why does the God of the Torah love strangers-sojourners? How does a truly Torah-based society respond to its most vulnerable members? What is the relationship in our lives between our own memories of suffering and vulnerability and the ways we engage with others? Recorded in January 2026.

    Source sheet: https://mechonhadar.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/mh_torah_source_sheets/HeldLovingTheStranger2026.pdf

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    52 mins
  • R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Mishpatim: Who Rests on Shabbat?
    Feb 11 2026

    Parashat Mishpatim shines a spotlight on human beings and their responsibility for the rest of others on Shabbat.


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    8 mins
  • R. Ethan Tucker: Reading the Torah Like a Love Letter
    Feb 9 2026

    Do you love midrash? Hate it? In this class, Rabbi Ethan Tucker delves into this unique rabbinic genre to try and understand its essence: Reading the Torah like a love letter, poring over every phrase, while also allowing our deepest values and concerns to come to the fore. Out of this alchemy, midrash is born and the traditional canon is never the same. Recorded at Hadar's Tanakh Intensive 2026.


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    46 mins
  • R. Avital Hochstein on Parashat Yitro: An Intimate Meeting
    Feb 4 2026

    The Torah describes a moving encounter between Yitro and Moshe, in which Moshe shares his journey and experiences. A close reading of the details reveals that the Torah offers us a model for meaningful human connection—a way of meeting another person with openness, allowing space both to show and to be seen, to listen deeply and to receive with empathy.


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    12 mins
  • R. Elazar Symon on Tu Bishvat: Celebrating a Birthday for a Tree
    Feb 2 2026

    Tu Bishvat is often called the “birthday of the trees.” There is also a reactionary trend to reject this framework of “birthday” and go back to its original, technical and halakhic purpose, which is found in the Mishnah.


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    8 mins