Header: Experience Your Neighbor's Faith
Join Us Tonight to Learn About the Ethical Kosher Seal
May 11, 2011
Greetings! 

We each make daily decisions about the food we consume.  In addition to asking whether it is nutritious or delicious, many of us today are interested in how it was grown and prepared.  Tonight, Ari Hart will share his journey beyond simply asking "Is it Kosher?" to founding an Ethical Kosher Seal that considers the food industry workers' rights. Come hear the story of his personal journey, engage in activities around what you would consider requirements for an Ethical Seal, experience Jewish food blessing rituals, and sample Ethical Kosher snacks!

Then this Sunday, come join the Dialogue Project, Co-Chairs Marcia Kannry and Samir Selmanovic, and many other local leaders and teachers for the 9th Annual City Wide Interfaith Teach-In on Approaching the Anniversary of 9/11. Details below. RSVP today!

As we revel in the springtime beauty of May, we at Faith House are also looking forward to how we will partner with other organizations to observe the 10th Anniversary of 9/11 and then continue our interfaith work, as important today as ever.  The Faith House Kitchen Table will be discussing our fall programming on Wednesday, May 18th.  Email Faigy if you would like to be part of that discussion.

See below for information about our May 25 Living Room on Hinduism, vegetarianism and consciousness as part of food preparation - plus how to submit your own story and recipe for our Faith House cookbook, and more.
LIVING ROOM
The Ethical Kosher Seal:
An Evening with Ari Hart of Uri L'Tzedek

Tav HaYosher

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

   

6 pm Doors, 7 pm Program

 

Intersections, 274 5th Ave

Btwn 29th and 30th Sts

 

With Ari Hart,
Co-Founder of Uri L'Tzedek

 

Join us for an evening with text studies, eating rituals, and a rousing discussion of food ethics as it relates to food certification. In this Living Room, Ari Hart, a co-founder of Uri L'Tzedek, will delve into the inspiration behind Uri L'Tzedek's formation in 2007. This journey begins with the charges against kosher agriprocessors in Postville, Iowa, eventually leading to a particular organizational focus on food justice.

 

The abuse and exploitation of workers in fields, kitchens, and slaughterhouses across North America where kosher food is prepared alarmed Ari and his colleagues. These injustices needed to be addressed by the Jewish community as consumers of kosher food. Thus, in May 2009, Uri L'Tzedek launched the Tav HaYosher, an ethical seal for kosher restaurants that ensures workers' rights. As of March 2011, over seventy-five kosher eating establishments throughout North America have been awarded the Tav HaYosher, securing the rights of close to a thousand workers.

 

Uri L'Tzedek is an Orthodox social justice organization guided by Torah values and dedicated to combating suffering and oppression. Through community-based education, leadership development, and action, Uri L'Tzedek creates discourse, inspires leaders, and empowers the Jewish community towards creating a more just world. In the last three years, Uri L'Tzedek has directly reached over 15,000 individuals in the 175 programs that it has sponsored or co-sponsored nationwide. This number includes programming at over thirty universities, impacting an estimated third of all American Orthodox university students.

 

See a full list of food establishments certified by the Tav HaYosher. 

 

Find this event on Facebook and MeetUp. RSVP on EventBrite 

SPECIAL EVENT
The 9th Annual City Wide Interfaith Teach-In on Approaching the Anniversary of 9/11   

The Dialogue Project
Join an open conversation among New Yorkers brought to you by The Dialogue Project, co-sponsored by Faith House, and co-chaired by our very own Samir Selmanovic!

 

Sunday, May 15, 2011, 1:30pm-4:00pm  

 

199 Chambers at West Street-BMCC Richard Harris Terrace (A,C,E,1,2,3 to Chambers or 4,5 to Brooklyn Bridge)  

 

RSVP to KYLE@thedialogueproject.org or 718-768-2175

*$10 suggested contribution

 

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Haroon Moghul and Joshua Stanton with the Peace of Heart Choir

 

Explore with a teacher of a different faith or ethnicity:  

* Community Trauma & Healing * Transforming & Resolving Conflict * Stereotypes * Concepts of the Stranger and Other in our texts and cultures

 

Teachers and Leaders: Imam Shamsi Ali, Rev. Haifa Bint Kadi, Chloe Breyer, Raymond Brock, Lisa Bellan-Boyer, Prof. Brigitte Kahl, T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki, Marcia Kannry, Maryum Khwaja, Sally MacNichol, Rabbi Simkha Weintraub, Rabbi Serge Lippe, Imam Khalil Abdur Rashid, Syed Sayeed, Rori Picker Neiss, Rev. Peter Sabune, Geoffrey Shugen Arnold Sensei.

 

Co-sponsors: Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Arab American Association of New York, Bay Ridge Jewish Center, Brooklyn For Peace, Brooklyn Heights Synagogue, Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture, Buddhist Council of NY, CAIR New York, Community Church, Congregation Kolot Chayeinu/Voices of Our Lives, CONNECT Faith, Grace Church, Faith House Manhattan, The House of Peace Inc., The Interfaith Center of New York, The Iqra Mosque, The Islamic Center of New York, JStreet NYC, Muslim Consultative Network, Park 51 Community Center, Park Slope Jewish Center, Pax Christi Metro New York, Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims, Progressive Muslims Meet Up New York, Rabbis for Human Rights, NA., Religious Freedom USA, Romemu, Union Theological Seminary-Interfaith Caucus, and The Zen Center of New York City.

 

The Dialogue Project promotes encounters among new immigrants, and long time residents of diverse faiths and ethnicities, and with Palestinian, Israeli, Jewish and Muslim New Yorkers. We create face to face engagement where difficult subjects are explored and our personal narratives are shared. We learn how to listen actively and reflect each other?s story.


See this event on our community calendar on MeetUp.

  

LIVING ROOM

Cooking with Consciousness:
A Hindu Perspective on a Vegetarian Diet    

 

Pandit

Wednesday,  May 25, 2011

   

6 pm Doors, 7 pm Program

 

Intersections, 274 5th Ave

Btwn 29th and 30th Sts


With Gadadhara Pandit Dasa

Hindu Monk & Chaplain at Columbia University and NYU

 

"Vegetarian food leaves a deep impression on our nature. If the whole world adopts vegetarianism, it can change the destiny of humankind." ~ Albert Einstein

 

When Pandit started as Hindu Chaplain at Columbia eight years ago, he helped launch a Bhakti Yoga club and teach a vegetarian cooking class. In a relatively short time, regular attendance at the weekly cooking classes grew to over 100 students per session. As students became fans of the vegetarian feasts, their curiosity about the traditions and philosophy of India also increased.

 

Faith House invites you all to an evening of meditation, chanting, teaching, conversation and of course cooking and eating with Pandit.  Learn about the connections between the Hindu tradition, vegetarianism, and mindfulness.  Plus you'll learn to cook a dish or two and then have a chance to try them!

 

Gadadhara Pandit Dasa was born in Kanpur, India in 1972, grew up in L.A. and abroad, and moved to New York City in 1995. Desiring further progress in his spiritual life, Pandit spent six months in Mumbai, India receiving monastic training, after which he decided to continue his commitment to monastic life at the ISKCON Bhaktivedanta Ashram in New York, where he has been residing since. He became a disciple of the Vaisnava tradition in 2001, a monotheistic tradition with its roots in ancient India, and received his brahminical (priestly) initiation, in 2002.

 

In 2001, Pandit began his campus ministry efforts in colleges in the New York area, including Queens College, SUNY Albany, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and most recently Columbia University where he now focuses most of his efforts. As a chaplain with the United Campus Ministry at Columbia, he provides representation for the Hindu community and participates in interfaith dialogues on campus. In October 2008, he became New York University's Hindu Chaplain.

 

In the Fall of 2003, Pandit taught an accredited course on the Bhagavad Gita at SUNY Albany. At the same time, he was accepted as a "visiting scholar" at the Center for the Study of Science and Religion (CSSR) at Columbia University.

 

RSVPs welcome at Facebook or Meetup 

In Faith,

Bowie Snodgrass, Executive Director   
Samir Selmanovic Founder & President of the Board
Faigy Abdelhak, Community Development Administrator  
WHAT'S HAPPENING?
LIVING ROOM
The Ethical Kosher Seal: An Evening with Ari Hart of Uri L'Tzedek
SPECIAL EVENT
The 9th Annual City Wide Interfaith Teach-In on Approaching the Anniversary of 9/11
LIVING ROOM
Cooking with Consciousness:
A Hindu Perspective on a Vegetarian Diet
Want to help plan our Fall programs? Join the Kitchen Table!
OPEN FOR SUBMISSIONS! Faith and Food: The Cookbook
VIDEO of Enter the Conversation with Karen Armstrong
Now in Paperback!
It's Really All About God
FIND US ONLINE

Join Our Mailing List

Want to Volunteer? Join the Kitchen Table!

Chair print from a St. Lydia's postcard.
The Kitchen Table is a dedicated group of volunteers who meet on the third Wednesday of each month to discuss the development and future of Faith House.

The next Kitchen Table will be on May 18 at 7pm, and we will be discussing our Fall programming. If you are interesting in coming, please email Faigy and she will reply with the address.

Chair print by Rachel Pollak for St. Lydia's

Faith and Food:
The Cookbook!

cookbook 

Here at Faith House, we have an exciting new offering in the works and would love for YOU to be a part of it!  Read more or...

Submit your recipes today by using this easy online form!

VIDEO of Enter the Conversation with Karen Armstrong  

Dialogue Project
Did you miss the "Special Event: Enter the Conversation with Karen Armstrong" last week at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine? Well, you're in luck! Our videographer, Sean McGinn, graciously captured this riveting conversation between the Very Rev. Dr. James A. Kowalski and Karen, which is posted on the Charter for Compassion YouTube channel. The discussion centers on religion and ethics in the modern world, and why we must place compassion at the heart of public discourse on religion and morality.

Now in Paperback!

Paperback All About God
And a Kindle Edition!

With a new sub-title... How Islam, Atheism, and Judaism Made Me a Better Christian

"Samir Selmanovic is asking the right questions at the right time, and refusing the consolations of certainty at a time when strident orthodoxies-atheist as well as religious-are perilously dividing us." 
- Karen Armstrong

It's Really All About God by Samir Selmanovic

We are an experiential inter-religious community who comes together to deepen our personal and communal journeys, share ritual life and devotional space, and foster a commitment to justice and healing the world.