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  <mediatype>Audio</mediatype>
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  <uploader>awaskow@shalomctr.org</uploader>
  <licenseurl>http://www.copyright.gov/</licenseurl>
  <copyrightYear>2007</copyrightYear>
  <audio_type>Spoken Word(interviews, reading, etc)</audio_type>
  <title>Isaiah and the Leopard in the Liturgy</title>
  <postedby>Rabbi Arthur Waskow</postedby>
  <adder>awaskow@shalomctr.org</adder>
  <copyrightHolder>Rabbi Arthur Waskow and the Shalom Center</copyrightHolder>
  <date_created>2007</date_created>
  <other_copyright_holders>false</other_copyright_holders>
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  <creator>Rabbi Arthur Waskow</creator>
  <description>On Yom Kippur, for centuries Jews have read a passage from Isaiah in which God asks, "What is the fast that I desire?" and answers, "To feed the hungry, clothe the naked, house the homeless, and break off the handcuffs of those in prison."  Today, what does it mean for us to hear Isaiah speaking -- walking into the midst of a crowd that is observing Yom Kippur in conventional ways and demanding that the people break throug the conventional liturgy to its deeper meaning?</description>
  <subject>Yom Kippur</subject>
  <subject> Jews</subject>
  <subject> Judaism</subject>
  <subject> fasting</subject>
  <subject> social justice</subject>
  <collection>ourmedia</collection>
  <publicdate>2007-10-03 20:31:34</publicdate>
  <identifier>RabbiArthurWaskowIsaiahandtheLeopardintheLiturgy</identifier>
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