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Welcome to the Judaism community on Codidact!

Will you help us build our community of learners? Drop into our study hall, ask questions, help others with answers to their questions, share a d'var torah if you're so inclined, invite your friends, and join us in building this community together. Not an ask-the-rabbi service, just people at all levels learning together.

Comments on Are questions purely about Jews and Jewish History in-scope?

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Are questions purely about Jews and Jewish History in-scope?

+4
−0

On Mi Yodeya, questions about Jews or their history that aren't clearly about Judaism are considered out of scope. Should that be the case here, or should questions about Jews and their history be ipso facto on-topic?

Questions to consider, assuming that close reasons unrelated to scope (too broad, opinion-based, etc.) are not applicable:

  1. What was life like for Jews in [region] during [time period/historical event]?

  2. How did Jews respond to [major historical event]? Or: What were the major differences in how [Jewish group A] and [Jewish group B] responded to [historical event]?

  3. History questions about events which impacted Judaism without making direct reference to Jews themselves (ex. "What motivated the Khmelnitzky Massacres?")

  4. Questions about important figures within Judaism (ex. "Who was the first Chassidishe Rebbe to settle in America?" "Does anyone have a source for the claim that the Satmar Rav, R' Yoel Teitelbaum, said to VP Hubert Humphrey, 'Sell weapons to Israel!'")

  5. Questions about individuals who happen to be Jewish (Isaac Asimov, Sandy Koufax, Albert Einstein, Benjamin Disraeli).

  6. Questions about famous individuals (whether Jewish or not) in respect to their views toward Judaism (ex. questions about Einstein's letters on the existence of a Creator, about Koufax not playing on Yom Kippur, or on Roosevelt's policies regarding Jewish immigration during the Holocaust).

  7. Questions about institutions which incorporate Judaism into their mission (ex. Touro College or Yeshiva University).

  8. Questions about Jewish music ("Who wrote [song] by [Jewish artist]?" "Why are so many Jewish songs written in harmonic minor?")

  9. Questions about Jewish food ("What is it with the lox and bagels?" "Why do Jews eat Chinese food on Christmas?" "Does anyone have a way to make p'tcha edible?")

  10. Questions which may come up as a result of Jewish practices but not directly involved in them ("How can I ease eye strain caused by learning Gemara all day?" "How do you get kiddush stains out of white tablecloths?" "What's the best way to make ashes for Tisha B'av?" "How can I help [person] with [genetic disorder common among Ashkenazim]?"

(Please edit more if you see fit.)

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General comments (2 comments)
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+5
−1

I'm honestly not sure what I'd prefer in this area, but I'd like to try out specifying an extension of the "Judaism is core" standard proposed by Monica Cellio to a yet broader scope, and see what people think.


Questions about people should be in scope if their Judaism, their status as a notable Jewish figure, or their membership in the Jewish people is core to the question:

  • "Who was the first Chassidishe Rebbe to settle in America?" would be on-topic, since it's singling out a class of people who are notable Jewish figures.

  • "Does anyone have a source for the claim that the Satmar Rav, R' Yoel Teitelbaum, said to VP Hubert Humphrey, 'Sell weapons to Israel!'") -- yes, if we assume that his saying it would be significant because of his position (and not because, hypothetically, he was a friend of a friend of the VP and got an introduction that way).

  • Questions about individuals who happen to be Jewish (Isaac Asimov, Sandy Koufax, Albert Einstein, Benjamin Disraeli -- no, unless the question is about their experiences as Jews, such as "Did Isaac Asimov ever write about the Jewish community he grew up in?"

  • Questions about Einstein's letters on the existence of a Creator -- no, unless the question is about points raised in those letters about Jewish texts or theology.

  • Questions about Koufax not playing on Yom Kippur, including how that decision affected his career. -- yes

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General comments (2 comments)
General comments
AA ‭ wrote over 4 years ago

If both of you are using a "Judaism is core" standard, and have different results, then seemingly "Judaism is core" is not very precise a standard.

Isaac Moses‭ wrote over 4 years ago

@AA This post explicitly widens the standard to "Judaism, status as a notable Jewish figure, or membership in the Jewish people is core" and applies that standard. I'm not ready to claim that this is optimal or the right degree of precision, but I think it's clearly distinct from "Judaism is core." I'll add a few words to clarify further.