Applying Jewish values to help heal our imperiled planet
Richard Schwartz, author of "Who Stole My Religion?" |
In the five decades since Richard Schwartz first became a religious Jew, he has watched the mainstream Jewish community shift more and more to the Right, often abandoning the very values that originally attracted him to Orthodox Judaism. In this soul-searching book, Schwartz examines the ways in which he believes his religion has been “stolen” by partisan politics, and offers practical suggestions for how to get Judaism back on track as a faith based on peace and compassion. Tackling such diverse issues as U.S. politics, Israeli peace issues, the misuse of the Holocaust, antisemitism, U.S. foreign policy, Islamophobia, socialism, vegetarianism, and the environmentalism, Schwartz goes where many Jews fear to go — and challenges us to re-think current issues in the light of positive Jewish values. (With photos, notes, action ideas, resource lists, and annotated bibliography. Also includes appendix materials with Rabbi Yonassan Gershom.)
The background photo (#ISS028-E-020072 from the NASA files) was taken aboard the International Space Station on July 31, 2011, when the sun was just below the horizon. When observed from space, the palette of gaseous layers of our atmosphere reminds us of the fragility and tenuousness of the thin cocoon that shelters life on Earth from the cold harsh vacuum of outer space. Without this precious envelope of air, life on Earth could not exist.
A thin crescent of the new moon appears to hang above the Earth, although in reality it is more than 238,855 miles away. On the Jewish calendar, the important holiday of Rosh Hashanah, which begins the High Holy Days season of repentance, always begins on a New Moon. Perhaps the message of this photo is to encourage us to think about how we are treating our planet’s fragile atmosphere, and to change our polluting ways before it is too late.
Where to order:
Who Stole My Religion? is available in both print and ebook versions on Lulu.com. Order the print copy with this button:
A FREE download of the PDF ebook version is available to readers of this blog (see link on the sidebar). However, if you can afford it, you are encouraged to buy a download on Lulu.com for $5, to help offset Richard Schwartz's production costs in self-publishing this book. In addition to getting your book super-fast, the PDF version has the advantage of seeing the photos in color:
Will there be ebook versions for Kindle, iPad and Nook?
Not unless those programs are vastly improved for handling academic works. Epub, the program used on iPad and Nook, completely reflows the text -- which means it does not respect page numbers, indented paragraphs for long quotes, footnotes, and other academic formats. Every time the reader changes the font size, the pages are all renumbered. Kindle does the same thing, plus the feedback on it's handling of footnotes is horrendous! The fact is, these new e-reader formats are mostly suitable for novels and non-fiction works with plain prose text, but just can't handle the more complex layout of an academic work. Until such time as the program developers solve these problems, the format best suited to Who Stole My Religion? is PDF, which preserves the original layout and can be read on your desktop or laptop computer.
Who Stole My Religion? is available in both print and ebook versions on Lulu.com. Order the print copy with this button:
A FREE download of the PDF ebook version is available to readers of this blog (see link on the sidebar). However, if you can afford it, you are encouraged to buy a download on Lulu.com for $5, to help offset Richard Schwartz's production costs in self-publishing this book. In addition to getting your book super-fast, the PDF version has the advantage of seeing the photos in color:
Will there be ebook versions for Kindle, iPad and Nook?
Not unless those programs are vastly improved for handling academic works. Epub, the program used on iPad and Nook, completely reflows the text -- which means it does not respect page numbers, indented paragraphs for long quotes, footnotes, and other academic formats. Every time the reader changes the font size, the pages are all renumbered. Kindle does the same thing, plus the feedback on it's handling of footnotes is horrendous! The fact is, these new e-reader formats are mostly suitable for novels and non-fiction works with plain prose text, but just can't handle the more complex layout of an academic work. Until such time as the program developers solve these problems, the format best suited to Who Stole My Religion? is PDF, which preserves the original layout and can be read on your desktop or laptop computer.