Kasher vs Kasher Moshe Kasher & David Kasher
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- Religion & Spirituality
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Two brothers, a rabbi and a comedian, try to figure out how to do Judaism during a pandemic. See if you can figure out who’s who. Hosted by Moshe & David Kasher.
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Introducing The Jewish Bizarre Podcast
We're excited to introduce The Jewish Bizarre, a new podcast series from Reboot Studios, the producers of Kasher vs Kasher. Dig into bloody murders, rioting mothers, anarchist parties and pseudoscience - everything you never learned in Hebrew school and that your Rabbi still doesn’t want you to know.
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Losing Track of Time
Quarantine time is weird: What day is it? How long have we been inside? How long will this last? This week we discuss how the various cycles of Jewish Time can be anchoring forces for those of us who are feeling adrift.
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Hermits
Now that we are all hermits in our own way, the Kashers examine the history of Jewish hermits and loners. They ask why Judaism generally rejects this sort of asceticism and what we can gain from spending some time alone.
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Cleanliness is Next to Godliness
The Kasher Boys trace the concept of Jewish Hygiene from the Book of Leviticus on through the Black Plague, and wonder what those ancient priests would have thought of our current attempts to avoid contamination.
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Passover Episode
Two brothers, a rabbi and a comedian, try to figure out how to do Judaism during a pandemic. See if you can figure out who’s who.
Customer Reviews
More plz!?
I love this podcast so much I’m so sad there are only four eps!
Where is the next one?!
I enjoyed this podcast so much even though I am not Jewish. It was very interesting! Love Moshe!
Brilliant.
I love the reverence, virtue and teachings of Rabbi David Kasher combined with the musings of his at times inappropriate, but quick-witted honest comedian brother, Moshe Kasher. They are like the yetzer ha-tov (good inclination) and the yetzer ha-ra (evil inclination) in dialogue. They have such different personalities, but are naturally in tune with and complement each other in conversation. Moshe’s questions and insights are spot-on and David (whom I have studied with in person) is in his element as an accomplished Jewish educator. Their recollection of shared memories on each episode as siblings only deepen the entertainment.