Last Month in DiEM25: July 2020 – DiEM25

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This month:

Several DiEM25 National Collectives, including in France, Belgium, Germany, and Luxembourg, have worked towards a European Rent Action, preparing a set of EU-wide demands Free low-income Europeans from rent burden during COVID-19. The EU campaign includes a letter to the EU Parliament as well as national actions and demands. Coordinated demonstrations on the rent issue and its relevance during the COVID-19 crisis are expected to take place in September. Join the first wave of demonstrations!

Happening:

We celebrated the election of Moemo to the Croatian Parliament, the Left party that DiEM25 supported in the elections. They are committed to radical change in the political and economic system!

DiEM25 NC Greece, DiEM25 PNC Turkey and DiEM25 NC Germany released a joint statement on the Greek-Turkey tensions in the Aegean Sea.

DiEM25 condemned Aleksandar Vuis violent takedown of Serbian protesters.

Celebrated Julian Assanges birthday, and held the opening of the We Are Millions exhibition in Leipzig, which sheds light on the Julian Assange Case.

Highlighted the #GreekFiles that expose the weaponisation of the ECB against European democracy.

DiEM25s newly formed Turkish PNC launched the first issue of their monthly review on Turkeys social, economic, and cultural state of affairs.

The Progressive International (PI) emitted an urgent call to respond to the escalating assault on the democratic institutions of Ecuador. Read more about the unfolding situation in their statement.

This month we:

Received applications for the Coordinating Collective of DiEM25! We will be conducting interviews of candidates this month. If you would like to endorse candidates that you know and appreciate, you can do so in our members area!

Launched our citizen engagement campaign that sets out to build national programmes in collaboration with Europeans for DiEM25! Throughout July and August, DiEMers are asked to submit the questions they believe anyone should be able to answer in order to be politically relevant in their city, region and country. They will be the foundation for the questionnaire we will use to go out as of September and inspire citizens to engage with our project.

MeRA25s new statutes (which will act as the blueprint for all EW statutes) were voted through by DiEM25 members. The party is now taking the first steps to establish the governance structure outlined in the new statutes, starting with the creation of its first Central Committee!

Continued to hold transparent live-recorded CC meetings open to the public on YouTube.

Our movement will engage in the implementation of the results of the Prague Assembly (member proposals for actions and campaign, and the CC vision) based on the results of AMVs.

We will continue developing our citizen engagement campaign in line with our working plan. Get involved by submitting a response to this questionnaire!

Our National Collectives continue to work on a Rent Action campaign! If you wish to get involved, you can reach out to our volunteer coordinator johannes.fehr@diem25.org.

If you wish to send a point to be included in the next newsletter, or want to help to draft it, please contact us at axelle.van.wynsberghe@diem25.org.

Do you want to be informed of DiEM25's actions? Sign up here

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Last Month in DiEM25: July 2020 - DiEM25

Cryptocurrency Mining Software Market Incredible Possibilities, Growth Analysis and Forecast To 2025 – The Daily Chronicle

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Cryptocurrency Mining Software Market Incredible Possibilities, Growth Analysis and Forecast To 2025 - The Daily Chronicle

What Paxful has learned over five years in the cryptocurrency space – htxt.africa

This year marks Paxfuls fifth year in operation and its taking some time to reflect on its journey thus far.

Thats not to say the firm has anything to regret, quite the opposite.

Paxful now boasts 4.5 million registered wallets and recently reached a trading volume of $4.6 billion. On top of that, each year has seen one million new users signing up to the platform with an additional two million expected to join Paxful by years end.

On its journey, the firm has learned a few lessons and one of those lessons is that while there might be a few big players in the cryptocurrency sector, there is still room for newcomers.

We welcome seeing more players enter the space, as it raises awareness and educates the public on the crypto-economy and P2P finance. It contributes to the growth of economic opportunity and financial inclusivity for people around the world as more individuals are using bitcoin in their everyday lives, says co-founder and chief executive officer at Paxful, Ray Youssef.

So with opportunity seemingly available, what can Paxful share with others looking to get into the space.

It should be obvious that the safety of users should be paramount but above and beyond implementing safety measures, its about constantly investing in new safety measures, keeping up with compliance and managing risk.

Over and above that, many users are still very confused by cryptocurrency and incidents such as Silk Road and Dread Pirate Roberts, and robberies of cryptocurrency exchanges dont help the cause.

Its for this reason we see firms like Paxful and Luno embarking on education campaigns to inform users about what cryptocurrency is and why its rather safe.

Cryptocurrency is popular all over the world, but Paxful says that in emerging markets there is a growing appetite for financial tools.

Bitcoin continues to change the way people manage their finances. Our customers in Latin America, Africa and Southeast Asia are getting around the limitations of their financial systems by realizing the full potential of the Bitcoin-economy, using it for both personal finance needs and entrepreneurial ventures including paying bills, purchasing goods and services, and building businesses, says Youssef.

But beyond just appetite from users, there is growing demand for professionals versed in blockchain.

Mindful of this, Paxful highlights how important investing in the next generation of talent is. We saw this last week with the announcement of several free webinars that the public can attend to learn about cryptocurrency, and blockchain.

In addition to nurturing talent, Youssef also says that partnerships in this industry are vital.

We are witnessing more industry collaborations that successfully play to each others strengths, adding value, increasing functionality and unlocking more trading options for customers. We are always excited to partner with businesses who share our passion and vision of economic freedom, a world where everyone has equal access to finance, no matter who they are, or where they are from, the co-founder says.

Partnerships of note include Paxful and OKEx, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the world.

Locally, weve also seen partnerships between Luno and several firms which have made the platform more accessible or even earn interest on cryptocurrency holdings.

Its clear that rather than going at it alone, sometimes, especially when it comes to managing digital currency, a trusted partner may be a better avenue to pursue.

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What Paxful has learned over five years in the cryptocurrency space - htxt.africa

First Amendment Protections in K-12 Schools Not "Restricted to Only Core Political Speech" – Reason

So holds the First Circuit in yesterday's decision in Norris v. Cape Elizabeth School Dist., and I think that's exactly the right reading of the Supreme Court precedents (and consistent with other circuits' decisions).

The particular speech in that case was an anonymous "sticky note on a mirror in a Cape Elizabeth High School girls' bathroom that stated 'THERE'S A RAPIST IN OUR SCHOOL AND YOU KNOW WHO IT IS.'" One might argue that this is core political speech, because it's an implicit accusation that the school isn't doing anything about this, but the court's decision makes it unnecessary to draw the political/nonpolitical line. "Because we conclude that Tinker is not limited to political speech, we need not decide if A.M.'s sticky note, understood in the context of her prior activities related to sexual assault activism including her statements to the Cape Elizabeth H.S. school board, was objectively viewed as political."

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First Amendment Protections in K-12 Schools Not "Restricted to Only Core Political Speech" - Reason

US Department of Education Reaffirms Commitment to Protecting the Religious Liberty of Students and Religious Organizations – U.S. Department of…

WASHINGTON U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos announced today guidance to protect the religious liberty of individuals and institutions participating in Department of Education programs. This action is part of ongoing efforts by the Department to advance religious liberty protections and delivers on President Donald J. Trumps Executive Order 13798, Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty.

This Administration will continue to protect the religious liberty and First Amendment rights of every student, teacher and educational institution across the country, said Secretary DeVos. Too many misinterpret the separation of church and state as an invitation for government to separate people from their faith. In reality, the First Amendment doesnt exist to protect us from religion. It exists to protect religion from government. Todays guidance reaffirms our commitment to protecting our first liberty and ensuring that discriminatory restrictions on access to federal grant funding are no longer tolerated.

This guidance follows recent Supreme Court victories for religious liberty, as Espinozav. Montana Department of Revenueand Trinity Lutheran v. Comercurtailed religious discrimination and thus strengthened protections for religious organizations.

The guidance was drafted pursuant to a directive from the Office of Management and Budget requiring each agency to publish policies detailing how they will administer federal grants in compliance with Executive Order 13798, as well as the Attorney Generals Oct. 6, 2017, Memorandum on Religious Liberty, and the Office of Management and Budgets Jan. 16, 2020, Memorandum.

Notably, the guidance announces a new process by which individuals and organizations can inform the Department of a burden or potential burden on their religious exercise under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) to adequately protect their religious liberties while participating in Department programs.

The new guidance also, consistent with First Amendment principles and Department regulations, does the following:

Full text of the guidance can be found here.

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US Department of Education Reaffirms Commitment to Protecting the Religious Liberty of Students and Religious Organizations - U.S. Department of...

Weighting the scales – Idaho State Journal

Appellate court decisions result in winners and losers in any specific case, but the issues involved often are worked through murky gray areas. Consider for example the July 30 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Little v. Reclaim Idaho.

The background is fairly well known in Idaho. The group Reclaim Idaho has been trying to promote an Invest in Idaho tax and schools initiative for the November election ballot. When the pandemic hit and Gov. Brad Littles stay-home order was issued, its petition-gathering which in the normal process has to be done face to face was blocked, which meant a part of Idahos election process also was blocked.

That point, essentially an argument over voting civil rights, went to federal court. Idaho U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill ordered that the state either simply place the proposed initiative on the ballot or allow the group to collect the signatures electronically. The state appealed, and the case with startling speed went to the U.S. Supreme Court. On a 4-2 decision, the court sided with the state, ordering a stay of the Winmill decision.

Story continues below video

The Supreme Court, as often happens, didnt go to the center of the issue the voters-rights matter and it did not specifically reverse the Winmill decision, though it may have felt that way. But whats there is worth considering.

First, the majority decision (written by Chief Justice John Roberts) pointed out that, oddly enough, different federal courts have established different guidelines for what states can and cant do in initiative procedures (one reason the high court might have granted certiorari permission to bring this case to it). It said, the States depend on clear and administrable guidelines from the courts. Yet the Circuits diverge in fundamental respects when presented with challenges to the sort of state laws at issue here. According to the Sixth and Ninth Circuits, the First Amendment requires scrutiny of the interests of the State whenever a neutral, procedural regulation inhibits a persons ability to place an initiative on the ballot. ... Other Circuits, by contrast, have held that regulations that may make the initiative process more challenging do not implicate the First Amendment so long as the State does not restrict political discussion or petition circulation.

The Supreme Court didnt really land on this turf in its Idaho decision, but the majority did focus on the right of the state more than the right of the initiative proponent: The District Court did not accord sufficient weight to the States discretionary judgments about how to prioritize limited state resources across the election system as a whole.

Thats not an unreasonable point, but it leaves a massive gap in how to review something like this. In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor zeroed in on balancing harms to stay applicant against harms to respondent in other words, balancing the interests of the state and the initiative backers, rather than simply disregarding the interests of the backers. She acknowledged that allowing the electronic signature would be a burden on the state and counties and it would be but she argued it should be considered in context.

Putting a still finer point on it, The stay granted today puts a halt to their signature-collection efforts, meaning that even if respondents ultimately prevail on appeal, it will be extremely difficult, if not impossible, for them to collect enough qualifying signatures by any reasonable deadline for the November ballot. In other words, the delay occasioned by this Courts stay likely dooms to mootness respondents First Amendment claims before any appellate court has had the chance to consider their merits (and, indeed, before this Court has had the chance to consider any potential petition for certiorari).

So in balancing the rights of a state government against those of its voters, the Supreme Courts majority seems to be putting its thumb on the state side of the scale. That may be worth giving some careful thought when you look, as historically we long have, to the nations highest court as a protector of the rights of the American people.

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Weighting the scales - Idaho State Journal

Police Violence in Portland Protests – The New York Times

To the Editor:

Violence Is Not an Answer, by Chuck Lovell (Op-Ed, Aug. 4), is an insult to the thousands of Portlanders who have been indiscriminately gassed, beaten and shot with crowd-control weapons by the Portland, Ore., police night after night, simply for protesting racist police violence.

Mr. Lovell, the chief of the Police Bureau in Portland, claims that as police officers, our duty is to uphold the rights of anyone to assemble peacefully and engage in free speech. But the police in Portland are making a mockery of the First Amendment by using excessive force, violence and intimidation to suppress free speech in the Black Lives Matter movement.

The A.C.L.U. of Oregon had to sue federal agents and police in Portland for violently attacking journalists and legal observers, as well as medics tending to the very community members whom the police harmed.

Chief Lovell is right that violence is not the answer. That includes police violence. If the police dont want us to take their resources (defund the police), then the Portland police and Mayor Ted Wheeler need to use our communitys resources to heed their own advice, take accountability for their abuses, respect the Constitution and ensure that Black Lives Matter in Portland.

Kelly SimonPortland, Ore.The writer is interim legal director of the A.C.L.U. of Oregon.

To the Editor:

Re The Ghost of Margaret Sanger (column, July 26):

Planned Parenthood has long denounced Margaret Sangers eugenicist beliefs, recognizing the need to engage in anti-racist work as a 104-year-old institution. Covid-19 leaves no confusion about the effects of systemic racism. Yet Ross Douthat conflates the disparate impact of public policy on Black communities with the fundamental right of Black women to control our own bodies. Birthrates do not equal power, unless youre a white supremacist.

Black women know reproductive control began at the auction block, when our ancestors forced reproduction was the engine that drove the American economy. Whether were attacked for having children and needing support, or for having an abortion, were damned if we do and damned if we dont.

Mr. Douthat insinuates that his argument may produce intersectional dilemmas no doctrine can resolve. Our experiences are intersectional, but theres no dilemma: Our bodies are our own, and we wont apologize for it.

Alexis McGill JohnsonNew YorkThe writer is president and chief executive of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

Betraying U.S. Forces: A Republican Habit

To the Editor:

Re Trump Says He and Putin Didnt Talk About Bounties (news article, July 30):

President Trump has betrayed American forces by giving Vladimir Putin a free pass on his reported bounty payments to Taliban-linked militants for American lives. Mr. Trumps acquiescence, if motivated by his personal goals, such as Russian electoral interference on his behalf, is treasonous, but not unique. Leaders of the modern Republican Party have repeatedly sought electoral advantage by disregarding the lives of American soldiers and government officials.

In 1968 Richard Nixons team sabotaged talks that might have ended the Vietnam War, because the Democrats would have gotten credit and might have cost Nixon a close election. Similarly, Ronald Reagans campaign and leading Republicans worked to thwart a deal for the release of American hostages in Iran in order to avoid an October surprise that would have helped President Jimmy Carters re-election bid.

Why have G.O.P. leaders shown themselves willing to betray American troops and public servants for partisan gain? The answer seems to lie in a worldview that rejects the principle of a loyal opposition and, quite conceivably, democracy itself. Can they be held to account?

Daniel LieberfeldPittsburghThe writer is a retired professor of history and politics at Duquesne University.

To the Editor:

Re The Limits of Broadband (editorial, July 19), about how many Americans sheltering from Covid-19 are discovering the limitations of the countrys cobbled-together broadband service:

Your editorial correctly declared that high-speed internet connections are a civil rights issue and that service is often unavailable or too expensive in rural communities and low-income neighborhoods.

As the president of Midtel, an upstate New York telecommunications company that serves underserved rural areas, I can say from experience that smart government policies are a key to bridging the digital divide.

New Yorks current policies send mixed messages, discouraging the infrastructure investments necessary to make full connectivity a reality today and into the future.

My company has received more than $15.5 million in state grants to replace our copper network with fiber, enabling us to bring customers fast, reliable and affordable high-speed service. But the state is taxing fiber in the Department of Transportation right-of-way, a space traditional utilities get to use free. This added tax, which we legally cannot pass on to our customers, makes already expensive projects cost-prohibitive.

If New York is indeed serious about closing the digital divide and enabling all New Yorkers to prosper in the new normal, it must enable the industry to make the goal of broadband for all a reality while paving the way for next-generation connectivity.

Jim BeckerMiddleburgh, N.Y.

To the Editor:

I appreciate your Aug. 7 Weekend Arts article 6 Things to Do This Weekend.

I do have a question, though: Remind me what a weekend is?

Marc ChafetzWashington

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Police Violence in Portland Protests - The New York Times

BMW, Red Hat, and Malong Share Insights on AI and Machine Learning During Transform 2020 – ENGINEERING.com

BMW, Red Hat, and Malong Share Insights on AI and Machine Learning During Transform 2020Denrie Caila Perez posted on August 07, 2020 | Executives from BMW, Red Hat and Malong discuss how AI is transforming manufacturing and retail.

(From left to right) Maribel Lopez of Lopez Research, Jered Floyd of Red Hat, Jimmy Nassif of BMW Group, and Matt Scott of Malong Technologies.

The VentureBeat 2020 conference welcomed the likes of BMW Groups Jimmy Nassif, Red Hats Jered Floyd, and Malong CEO Matt Scott, who shared their insights on challenges with AI in their respective industries. Nassif, who deals primarily with robotics, and Floyd, who works in retail, both agreed that edge computing and the Internet of Things (IoT) has become powerful in accelerating production while introducing new capabilities in operations. According to Nassif, BMWs car sales have already doubled over the past decade, with 2.5 million in 2019. With over 4,500 suppliers dealing 203,000 unique parts, logistics problems are bound to occur. In addition to that, approximately 99 percent of orders are unique, which means there are over 100 end-customer options.

Thanks to platforms such as NVIDIAs Isaac, Jetson AXG Xavier, and DGX, BMW was able to come up with five navigation and manipulation robots that transport and manage parts around its warehouses. Two of the robots have already been deployed to four facilities in Germany. Using computer vision techniques, the robots are able to successfully identify parts, as well as people and potential obstacles. According to BMW, the algorithms are also constantly being optimized using NVIDIAs Omniverse simulator, which BMW engineers can access anytime from any of their global facilities.

In contrast, Malong uses machine learning in a totally different playing fieldself-checkout stations in retail locations. Overhead cameras are able to feed images of products as they pass the scanning bed to algorithms capable of detecting mis-scans. This includes mishaps such as occluded barcodes, products left in shopping carts, dissimilar products, and even ticket switching, which is when a products barcode is literally switched with that of a cheaper product.

These algorithms also run on NVIDIA hardware and are trained with minimal supervision, allowing them to learn and identify products using various video feeds on their own. According to Scott, edge computing is particularly significant in this area due to the necessity of storing closed-circuit footage via the cloud. Not only that, but it enables easier scalability to thousands of stores in the long term.

Making an AI system scalable is very different from making it run, he explained. Thats sometimes a mirage that happens when people are starting to play with these technologies.

Floyd also stressed how significant open platforms are when playing with AI and edge computing technology. With open source, everyone can bring their best technologies forward. Everyone can come with the technologies they want to integrate and be able to immediately plug them into this enormous ecosystem of AI components and rapidly connect them to applications, he said.

Malong has been working with Open Data Hub, a platform that allows for end-to-end AI and is designed for engineers to conceptualize AI solutions without needing complicated and costly machine learning workflows. In fact, its the very foundation of Red Hats data science software development stack.

All three companies are looking forward to more innovation in applications and new technologies.

Visit VentureBeats website for more information on Transform 2020. You can also watch the Transform 2020 sessions on demand here.

For more news and stories, check out how a machine learning system detects manufacturing defects using photos here.

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BMW, Red Hat, and Malong Share Insights on AI and Machine Learning During Transform 2020 - ENGINEERING.com

DST Secretary highlights the importance of industry participation in Quantum Technology & Science in India – IBG NEWS

By PIB Delhi

Department of Science and Technology (DST) Secretary Professor Ashutosh Sharma highlighted the importance of bringing Industry on board in Quantum Technology and Science in India at the India Quantum Technology Conclave (IQTC2020), a webinar on Quest towards Indias Quantum Supremacy organized byThe Associated Chambers of Commerce of India(ASSOCHAM) recently.

The future is all about quantum and Industry 4.0, which involves convergence of cyber and digital spheres encompassing communication, computing, decision making and acting on it, needs to participate in it, he pointed out.

Further elaborating on DSTs initiatives in the field of Quantum Technology, Prof. Ashutosh Sharma said, Three years ago DST started a new division called Frontier Technology which has rolled out a mission on Cyber-Physical Systems. This mission has set up about 21 hubs and 4 research parks across India, which are going to form the base for the architecture and processes of Quantum Technology Mission and will empower the Industry.

These 21 hubs are holistic entities, starting from basic R&D in each hub, human resource generation, and training at different levels to translation of the knowledge with incubators attached with every hub. Thus this model completes the whole knowledge chain from knowledge generation to knowledge to consumption, he added.

For Quantum Technology (QT), a more ambitious mission called National Mission on Quantum Technology worth Rs 8,000 Crore has been launched by the Government if India. DST has mapped all the people and groups in India working in the field of QT and brought them on-board to write a Detailed Project Report, Professor Sharma mentioned.

Both these missions of DST are self-sufficient in terms of generating knowledge, translation of knowledge in terms of prototype design, and this ecosystem is part of Atmanirbhar Bharat in terms of science, technology, and innovation in India, he added.

The conclave focused on preparedness on Quantum computing and Technology adaptation in India where the attendees discussed the future strategies & roadmap in the development of quantum technologies in India.

Dignitaries like Shri Deepak Sood, Secretary-General, ASSOCHAM, Dr. Shesha Shayee Raghunathan, Senior IBM Quantum Ambassador, Dr. Rohini Srivathsa, National Technology Officer, Microsoft India, Asst. Prof. Manas Mukherjee, Principal Investigator, Centre for Quantum Technologies, National University of Singapore Dr Lovneesh Chanana, Chairman, ASSOCHAM National Council on IT/ITes & e-Commerce, Shri Aditya Chaudhuri, MD, Accenture, Dr Hemant Darbari, Director General, CDAC, Dr. Philip Makotyn, Quantum Marketing Manager, Honeywell Quantum Solutions, USA were among the key participants of the conclave which saw the presence of eminent personalities from the public sector as well as the private sector, industry and academia from India and abroad. The India Quantum Technology Conclave looked at relevant solutions at a time when the whole world is hit with COVID, and technology is the way forward.

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DST Secretary highlights the importance of industry participation in Quantum Technology & Science in India - IBG NEWS

Adin Steinsaltz, acclaimed scholar who made the Talmud more accessible, dies at 83 – Forward

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz

(JTA) Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinzaltz, the acclaimed scholar whose landmark translation of the Talmud enabled a vast readership to access one of Judaisms most canonical texts, has died.

Steinsaltz died Friday at 83 in Jerusalem.

Steinsaltzs monumental translation of the 63 volumes of the Babylonian Talmud made the arcane rabbinic debates and folkloric tales easier to comprehend, unlocking the wonders of Talmud study for those lacking a high-level Jewish education. The project took 45 years to complete.

Steinsaltz not only rendered the forbidding Aramaic text into modern Hebrew, but integrated his own commentary into the sparse language of the original, filling in gaps in the text that had previously required deep familiarity with the internal mechanics of talmudic discourse to decipher.

A new English version of the Steinsaltz Talmud by the Koren publishing house, and a free version of the translation available on the website Sefaria, further expanded Steinsaltzs reach.

The Talmud was never meant to be an elitist book, said Arthur Kurzweil, the author of two books about Steinsaltz and a board member of the Aleph Society, which raises funds to support the rabbis work. It was meant to be for everybody. So Rabbi Steinsaltz spent 45 years trying and succeeding to make that happen.

Described as a once-in-a-millennium scholar, Steinsaltz was renowned for his prodigious intellect and tireless work ethic. He was reputed to put in 17-hour workdays.

Authoring a comprehensive commentary on the Talmud alone put him in a category alongside Rashi, the medieval French scholar whose commentary on the Bible and the Talmud, composed 1,000 years ago, is considered the most authoritative. But Steinsaltz also wrote another 60 books on topics ranging from Jewish ethics to theology to prayer to mysticism. He also helped establish educational institutions in Israel and the former Soviet Union.

Born to secular parents in Jerusalem in 1937, Steinsaltz embraced Jewish practice as a teenager. Though his father was an irreligious socialist, he sent his son to study Talmud with a tutor at the age of 10. Steinsaltzs intellectual gifts were evident early, when he became the youngest school principal in Israel at 23.

In 1965, Steinsaltz founded the Israel Institute for Talmudic Publications, the same year he began his Talmud translation. His work was driven by a desire to educate large numbers of Jews about their heritage. Let my people know, was his favorite slogan.

The Talmud is the central pillar of Jewish knowledge, important for the overall understanding of what is Jewish, Steinsaltz told JTA in 2010 on the occasion of the completion of the translation. But it is a book that Jews cannot understand. This is a dangerous situation, like a collective amnesia. I tried to make pathways through which people will be able to enter the Talmud without encountering impassable barriers. Its something that will always be a challenge, but I tried to make it at least possible.

The completion of the translation was accompanied by a global day of Jewish learning connecting 360 Jewish communities in 48 countries. The event has since become an annual affair.

Steinsaltzs work was long deemed controversial. His Talmud departed from longstanding conventions, introducing punctuation and paragraph breaks, altering the pagination and placing his own commentary in the space around the main text that had previously been the domain of Rashi.

Rabbi Elazar Shach, a leading haredi Orthodox rabbi in Israel, called Steinsaltz a heretic and forbade his followers from reading his works, apparently out of concern for some passages in two works on the Bible that Steinsaltz subsequently agreed to modify. Shach insisted that all of Steinsaltzs work was heretical, however, another eminent 20th-century authority, Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, approved of the Steinsaltz Talmud. In 1998, Jacob Neusner, a Conservative rabbi and noted scholar of Judaism, published a 250-page book entitled How Adin Steinsaltz Misrepresents the Talmud.

Steinsaltz was also criticized for accepting the leadership of a modern-day Sanhedrin, a recreation of the ancient rabbinic body. Steinsaltz resigned the post in 2008 out of concern for potential breaches of Jewish law.

But none of that slowed Steinsaltzs embrace as an unparalleled scholar of Judaism, both in the Jewish world and beyond. He was awarded the Israel Prize, Israels highest cultural honor, in 1998, along with the inaugural Israeli Presidential Award of Distinction, the French Order of Arts and Literature, and a 2012 National Jewish Book Award. He was invited to deliver the prestigious Terry Lectures at Yale University and was a scholar in residence at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington. In 2016, he was invited to a private audience with the pope.

Among his best-known works beyond the Talmud translation is The Thirteen Petalled Rose, an introduction to Jewish mysticism first published in 1980. A follower of the Chabad Hasidic movement, Steinsaltz also authored several books on Tanya, one of the groups core texts. In 2018, he published a translation and commentary on the Five Books of Moses.

Despite his massive intellectual achievements, Steinsaltz often appears slightly disheveled in public and had a playful streak. Kurzweil recalled an appearance at a Long Island yeshiva at which Steinsaltz encouraged the students to do everything they could to make their teachers lives miserable, and even suggested a source book where they could find difficult questions sure to flummox them.

Hes a troublemaker and hes got a gleam in his eye at all times, said Kurzweil, who served as Steinsaltzs driver during his visits to New York. Hes up to mischief sometimes. He likes to question everything.

Long plagued by ill health, Steinsaltz suffered a stroke in 2016 that left him unable to speak.

Jewish learning is created by the Jews and is also creating the Jews, Steinsaltz said in 2010. When you learn, you learn about yourself. So learning one page of the Talmud is equivalent to two or three sessions with a psychoanalyst. Thats why people are interested Jewish learning is a mirror into our soul.

The post Adin Steinsaltz, acclaimed scholar who made the Talmud more accessible, dies at 83 appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Adin Steinsaltz, acclaimed scholar who made the Talmud more accessible, dies at 83

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Adin Steinsaltz, acclaimed scholar who made the Talmud more accessible, dies at 83 - Forward