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Shomer Shalom Network for Jewish Nonviolence


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Contact:

Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, rabbilynn@earthlink.net or (845) 786-5674

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Shomer Shalom is an organization of Jews who follow a path of nonviolence based on Jewish principles of religious engagement. Some of us repeat a daily intention of Jewish nonviolence.

Shomer is a Hebrew word meaning stewardship. Traditionally, the word shomer is used in several key expressions: Shomer Shabbat: keeping the Sabbath; Shomer Kashrut: keeping kosher; Shomer lashon, guarding our tongue from hurtful speech; and more recently Shomer Adamah: keeper of the environment. 

Shomer Shalom entails a daily choice not to cause intentional harm and committing oneself to active nonviolence, a transformative pathway of social and spiritual action. 

Individually, members of Shomer Shalom are committed to living a nonviolent Jewish life and are encouraged to participate in nonviolence organizations as Jews and to participate in Jewish organizations as practitioners of nonviolence.

Collectively, Shomer Shalom offers retreats and programs dedicated to nurturing the nonviolent faith of its members.  It produces and distributes educational and liturgical materials rooted in Jewish nonviolent traditions.

Shomer Shalom is committed to cultivating an intergenerational, multi-cultural and interfaith global community of peace, justice, loving kindness, and solidarity.

Blog

Greetings from Jerusalem. The following article was published today by the Palestine News Network based on an interview done with ...

Posted by Lynn Gottlieb 7 weeks 6 days ago

by Lynn Gottlieb

Jewish history overflows with tales of sorrow. Are we to endure yet another loss, but this time perpetrated by our own foolish hands? Those who think that  bombing Iran serves a...

Posted by Leila Zand 18 weeks 2 days ago

The Community of Living Traditions at Stony Point Center is currently seeking Muslim Interfaith Fellows for residency in our community. We are dedicated to building multifaith community grounded in nonviolence and are currently in our third year...

Posted by Lynn Gottlieb 19 weeks 5 days ago

For the Jewish community, it is the celebration of the fall harvest. For the Palestinian community in Israel, it is the season of the olive harvest. Below you will find reports of violence around Nablus, where I worked during the month of ...

Posted by Lynn Gottlieb 31 weeks 5 days ago

Getting between Palestine and Israel is challenging, even for someone who possesses an American passport. To visit Jerusalem from Beit Sahour where we are staying, our small artist delegation takes a cab to the Separation Wall for 20 shekels...

Posted by Lynn Gottlieb 32 weeks 3 days ago