|
Mark Jacobs
Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life
Adler, Esther. Trees in the Bible. Pamphlet.
New York: Jewish National Fund, Dept. of Education,
1990.
Allen, E. L. The Hebrew View of Nature.
The Journal of Jewish Studies 2, no. 1 (1951):
100104.
Alon, Azaria. The Nature and History of the Land
of the Bible. Jerusalem: Steimatsky Agency and the
Jerusalem Publishing House, 1978.
Alpert, Rebecca T., and Arthur Waskow. Toward
an Ethical Kashrut. Reconstructionist 52,
no. 5 (1987): 913.
Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Narrative.
New York: Basic Books, 1981.
Anderson, Bernard W. Human Dominion Over Nature.
In Biblical Studies in Contemporary Thought,
ed. Miriam Ward, 2745. Burlington, Vt.: The Institute,
1975.
Anglemyer, Mary, and Eleanor R. Seagraves. The Natural
Environment: An Annotated Bibliography on Attitudes
and Values. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution
Press, 1984.
________. A Search for Environmental Ethics: An Initial
Bibliography. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution
Press, 1980.
Aronson, Robin. Animal Life in Light of Jewish
and Christian Traditions. The Melton Journal
24 (spring 1991): 8.
Artson, Bradley S. Each After Their Own Kind:
A Jewish Celebration of Biodiversity. Tikkun
12, no. 5 (September-October 1997): 4345.
________. Its a Mitzvah! Step-by-Step to Jewish
Living. West Orange, N.J.: Behrman House; New York:
Rabbinical Assembly, 1995.
________. Our Covenant with Stones: A Jewish Ecology
of Earth. Conservative Judaism 44, no.
1 (1991): 2535.
Attar, Alain. "Environmental Issues in Judaism." The Jewish Educator 2.3(Summer 1999): 12-16.
Bal Tashchit. Encyclopedia Talmudica
III, 33537. Jerusalem: Talmudic Encyclopedia Institute,
1969.
Bak, Benjamin. The Sabbatical Year in Modern
Israel. Tradition 1, no. 2 (1959): 19399.
Belkin, Samuel. Man as Temporary Tenant.
In Judaism and Human Rights, ed. Milton R. Konvitz,
25158. New York: Norton, 1972.
Bemporad, Jack, et al. Focus on Judaism, Science,
and Technology. New York: Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, 1970.
Benstein, Jeremy. The Way Into Judaism and the Environment. Woodstock, VT: Jewish Lights, 2006.
Bentley, Philip. Rabbinic Sources on Environmental
Issues. Justice and Peace Committee of the Central
Conference of American Rabbis.
________. Rabbinic Response. Central Conference
of American Rabbis (CCAR) Annual Report, 9397.
Berkovits, Eliezer. Not in Heaven: The Nature and
Function of Halakha. New York: Ktav, 1983.
Berman, Louis A. Vegetarianism and the Jewish Tradition.
New York: Ktav, 1982.
Berman, Phyllis, and Arthur Waskow. Tales of Tikkun:
New Jewish Stories to Heal the Wounded World. Northvale,
N.J.: Jason Aronson Inc, 1996.
Berman, Saul J. Torah and Environmental Ethics.
Leylah Magazine 24.
Bernstein, Ellen. The Splendor of Creation: A Biblical Ecology. Cleveland, OH: Pilgrim, 2005.
________. ed.
Ecology and the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature and the Sacred Meet. Woodstock, VT: Jewish LIghts, 1998.
________. A Jewish Response to Earth Day. Emanuel Spack Memorial Lecture, Kansas City, 3 April 1990.
________. A Meditation for Simhat Torah. Genesis 2 vol. 20, no. 2 (autumn 1989): 3639.
________. The Trees Birthday: A Celebration of Nature: A Tu BShvat Haggadah. Mt. Airy, Pa.: Turtle River Press, 1987.
Bernstein, Ellen, and Dan Fink. Blessings and
Praise. In This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature,
Environment, ed. Roger S. Gottlieb, 45168.
New York: Routledge, 1996.
________. Bal Tashchit. In This Sacred
Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment, ed. Roger
S. Gottlieb, 45168. New York: Routledge, 1996.
________. Let The Earth Teach You Torah. Philadelphia,
Pa.: Shomrei Adamah, 1992.
Bernstein, Jeremy. One, Walking and Studying:
Nature vs. Torah. Judaism 44, no. 2 (spring
1995): 14668.
Beversluis, Joel D., Project ed. A Source Book for
Earths Community of Religions. rev. ed. Grand
Rapids, Mich.: CoNexus Press, 1995; New York: Global
Education Associates, 1995.
Biers-Ariel, Matt, Deborah Newbrun, and Michael Fox Smart, eds. Spirit in Nature: Teaching Judaism and Ecology on the Trail. Springfield, NJ: Behrman House, 2000.
Bleich, J. David. Vegetarianism and Judaism.
In Contemporary Halakhic Problems, vol. 3, 23750.
New York: Ktav, 1989 [Also appears in Tradition
23, no. l (1987): 8290].
________. Judaism and Animal Experimentation.
Tradition 22, no. l (1986): 136. [Also
in Animal Sacrifices: Religious Perspectives on the
Use of Animals in Science, ed. Tom Regan, 61114.
Philadelphia, Pa.: Temple University Press, 1986.]
________. Population Control. In Judaism
and Healing: Halakhic Perspectives, 5154.
New York: Ktav, 1981.
Blidstein, Gerald J. Man and Nature in the Sabbatical
Year. Tradition 8, no. 4 (1972): 4855.
________. Nature in Psalms. Judaism
13 (winter 1964): 2936.
Bloch, Abraham P. Respect for Nature. In
A Book of Jewish Ethical Concepts, 26770.
New York: Ktav, 1984.
Bnai Brith Youth Organization. Project
E. A. R. T. H. (Everyone has A Responsibility
To Our Home). Bnai Brith Youth Organization.
Bonder, Nilton. The Kabbalah of Money: Insights
on Livelihood, Business, and All Forms of Economic Behavior.
Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc., 1996.
Branover, Herman. Towards Environmental Consciousness.
BOr HaTorah (1997): 1115.
Brasch, R. The Unknown Sanctuary: The Story of Judaism,
its Teachings, Philosophy, and Symbols. Sydney:
Angus and Robertson, 1969.
Bratton, Susan P. "The Natural Aryan and the Unnatural Jew: Environmental Racism in Weimar and Nazi Film." Ph.D. diss., University of Texas, Dallas, 1997.
Braude, William G. A Midrash on the Growth of
Population. Tradition 13 (1972): 11626.
Brooks, David B. Israel and the Environment:
Signs of Progress. Reconstructionist 55,
no. 4 (1990): 1719.
Bulka, Reuven P. "A Blessing with an Ecological Mandate." Ecumenism 134(1999): 4-7.
Bush, Lawrence. "Religious Metaphors and the Environment." Jewish Currents 59(2005): 26-27.
________. "Jewish Values and Environmental Awareness: The Progressive Use of (Uh-Oh) Religious Metaphor." Jewish Currents 59.5(2005): 20-22.
________.
Judaism and Our Ecological Crisis.
Genesis 2 vol. 19, no. 3 (1988): 56.
Bush, Lawrence, and Howard Cohen. "Environmental Activism and Jewish Spirituality." Reconstruction Today 9.2(Winter 2001/2002): 11-17.
Bush, Lawrence, and Jeffrey Dekro. Jews, Money, and Social Responsibility: Developing a Torah of Money for Contemporary Life. Philadelphia, Pa.: The Shefa Fund, 1993.
Carmell, Aryeh. Judaism and the Quality of the
Environment. In Challenge: Torah Views on Science
and its Problems, eds. Aryeh Carmell and Cyril Domb,
50025. New York: Feldheim, 1976.
CCAR Journal. "Symposium on Judaism and the Environment." (Winter 2001): 3-71.
Clark, Bill. The Trees in the Forest: How Restoration
and Conservation Reclaimed a Desolate Land. Israel
Science (February-March 1989): 914.
Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL).
Caring for the Cycle of Life: Creating Environmentally
Sound Life-Cycle Celebrations. New York: Coalition
on the Environment and Jewish Life, 1999.
________. COEJL Guide to Speakers on Judaism and Ecology.
New York: Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life,
1999.
________. Operation Noah: Texts and Commentaries on
Biological Diversity and Human Responsibility. New
York: Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life,
1996.
________. Operation Noah: A Jewish Program and Action
Guide to Defending Gods Endangered Creatures and
Habitats. New York: Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life, 1996.
________. To Till and To Tend: A Guide to Jewish Environmental
Study and Action. New York: Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life, 1994.
Cohen, Abraham. Everymans Talmud. London:
J. M. Dent and Sons, 1932.
Cohen, Alfred S. Vegetarianism from a Jewish
Perspective. In Halacha and Contemporary Society,
ed. Alfred S. Cohen, 292317. New York: Ktav, 1984.
________. Zero Population Growth and the Torah.
Jewish Life (October 1972): 27.
Cohen, Jeremy. On Classical Judaism and Environmental
Crisis. Tikkun 5, no. 2 (1990): 7477.
________. Be Fertile and Increase, Fill the
Earth and Master It: The Ancient and Medieval
Career of a Biblical Text. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell
University Press, 1989.
________. The Jew and the Modern Environment: A
Case of Conflicting Values. New York: Jewish Theological
Seminary, 1970.
Cohen, Micahel. "In the Land of Green Zionism." Reconstructionism Today 10.2(2002-2003): 22.
Cohen, Noah J. Tsaar Baale Hayim: The
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Its Bases, Development
and Legislation in Hebrew Literature. New York:
Feldheim Publishers, 1976.
Cone, Molly. Listen to the Trees: Jews and the Earth.
New York: UAHC Press, 1995.
Conservative Judaism 44, no. 1 (1991).
De-Shalit, Vvner. From the Political to the Objective:
The Dialectics of Zionism and the Environment.
Environmental Politics 4, no. 1 (1995): 7087.
Diamond, Eliezer. How Much is Too Much? Conventional
Versus Personal Definitions of Pollution in Rabbinic
Sources. Paper presented at the Judaism and The
Natural World Conference part of the World Religion
and Ecology Conference Series. Harvard University Center
for the Study of World Religions, February 2224,
1998.
Diamond, Irene. "Toward a Cosmology of Continual Creation: From Ecofeminism to Feminine Ecology and Umbilical Ties." Cross Currents 54.2(2004): 7-16.
Dobb, Fred. "The World as Sacred Space." Reconstructionist 69.1(2004): 34-42.
________. "Branching Out: The Growth of Jewish Environmental Literature." Reconstructionist 64.2(2000): 79-85.
Dresner, Samuel. The Jewish Dietary Laws. New
York: Rabbinical Assembly, 1982.
Dresner, Samuel, and Byron L. Sherwin. To Take Care of
Gods World: Judaism and Ecology. In Judaism:
The Way of Sanctification, 13144. New York:
United Synagogue of America, 1978.
Ecology in Judaism. Encyclopedia JudaicaCD-ROM
Edition. Shaker Heights, Ohio: Judaica Multimedia International,
1997.
Edelman, Lily, ed. Jewish Heritage Reader Bnai
Brith Book. New York: Taplinger Publishing
Co., Inc., 1965.
Ehrenfeld, David, and Philip J. Bentley. Judaism
and the Practice of Stewardship. Judaism
34, no. 3 (1985): 30111.
Ehrenfeld, David, and Joan G. Ehrenfeld. Some
Thoughts on Nature and Judaism. Environmental
Ethics 7 (spring 1985): 9395.
Eisen, Arnold M. Galut: Modern Jewish Reflection
on Homelessness and Homecoming. Bloomington, Ind.:
Indiana University Press, 1986.
Eisenberg, Evan. The Ecology of Eden. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1998.
Elkington, John, and Julia Hailes. The Green Consumer
Guide. London: Victor Gollancz, Ltd., 1988.
Elon, Ari, Naomi Hyman, and Arthur Waskow, eds. Trees, Earth, and Torah: A Tu B'Shvat Anthology. Philadelphia, PA: Jewisch Publication Society, 1999.
Eppstein, Lori. "The Redwoods and the Jews: A Story of Religion and the Environment." Jewish Monthly 114.3(Jan/Feb 2000): 18-23.
Epstein, I. The Jewish Way of Life. London:
Edward Goldstone, 1946.
Eretz Yisroel: Settlement. Encyclopedia
Talmudica, vol. 3, 4953. Jerusalem: Talmudic
Encyclopedia Institute, 1969.
Evenari, Michael, Leslie Shanan, and Naphtali Tadmor.
The Negev: The Challenge of a Desert. Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971.
Farb, Peter, and Harry McNaught. The Land, Wildlife,
and Peoples of the Bible. New York: Harper and Row,
1967.
Feliks, Yehuda. Nature and Man in the Bible: Chapters
in Biblical Ecology. New York: The Soncino Press,
1981.
Fisher, Adam D. To Deal Thy Bread to the Hungry.
New York: Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1975.
Flores, Albert, and Denise Taber. Annotated Bibliography
on Professional Ethics of Scientists: New Ethical and
Social Issues Posed by Recent Advances in Science and
Technology (19701980). Research in Philosophy
and Technology 5 (1982): 31016.
Fox, Marvin, ed. Modern Jewish Ethics. Columbus,
Ohio: Ohio State University Press, 1975.
Freudenstein, Eric G. Technology Assessment and
the Jewish Tradition. Conservative Judaism
27, no. 3 (1973): 4452.
________. Ecology and the Jewish Tradition.
In Judaism and Human Rights, ed. Milton R. Konvitz.
New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1972.
________. Ecology and the Jewish Tradition.
Judaism 19 (1970): 40614.
Freundel, Barry. The Earth is the Lords.
Jewish Action (summer 1990): 2226.
Friedman, Naomi, and De Fischler Herman, eds. The
Green Shalom Guide: A How-to Manual for Greening Local
Jewish Synagogues, Schools and Offices. Washington
Area Shomrei Adamah, 1995.
Gaster, T. H. Festivals of the Jewish New Year.
New York: William Loane Associates, 1953.
Gelernter, David. In Rats We Trust. The
Washington Post 17 November 1996.
Gendler, Everett. Woodchucks in the Garden, Beavers
in the Stream and Messiah Nowhere in Sight. The
Melton Journal 25 (spring 1992): 1617.
________. Our Environment: Jewish Study and Action.
Compass 13, no. 1 (1990): 11.
________. The Earths Covenant. Reconstructionist
(November-December 1989): 2831.
________. On the Judaism of Nature. In The
New Jews, eds. James A. Sleeper and Alan L. Mintz,
23343. New York: Random House, 1971.
Gerstenfeld, Manfred. "Jewish Environmental Studies: A New Field." Jewish Political Studies Review 13(Spring 2001): 3-62.
________.
Judaism, Environmentalism,
and the Environment: Mapping and Analysis. Jerusalem:
The Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies and Rubin
Mass, Ltd., 1998.
________. Neo-Paganism In The Public Square and
Its Relevance to Judaism. Jerusalem Letter/Viewpoints,
no. 392 (15 October 1998).
________. A Jewish Perspective on Modern Environmentalism.
Jerusalem Letter/Viewpoints, no. 367 (1 October
1997).
Gerstenfeld, Manfred, and Avraham Wyler. "The Ultra-Orthodox Community and Environmental Issues." Jerusalem Letter/Viewpoints 415(October 1999): 1-7.
Gershfield, Edward. My Zaida, the Ecologist.
Shma 23 (February 1993): 4950.
Gewirtz, Leonard B. The Authentic Jew and His Judaism.
New York: Bloch Publishing Co., 1961.
Gilbert, Martin. Jewish History Atlas. London:
Weindenfeld and Nicolson, 1969.
Gillis, Michael. Jewish Critique: Ecologism.
Leylah Magazine (1992): 68.
Gillman, Niel. Liturgical Transformation of Creation.
Paper presented at the Judaism and The Natural World
Conference part of the World Religion and Ecology Conference
Series. Harvard University Center for the Study of World
Religions, February 2224, 1998.
Gitlin, Lisa. "A Growing Passion: Jewish Women Discover Gardening." Jewish Woman 5.2(Summer 2002): 16-21.
Gluck, Shmuel. "Destruction of Fruit-Bearing Trees." Journal of Halacha and Contemporary Society 38(Fall 1999): 86-99.
Golan, Patricia. Blue and White and Green: No
Longer a Marginal Issue. Israel Scene (January-February
1990): 59.
Goldberg, Avraham Hillel. Akirat Etz Pri.
Noam 13 (1972): 20321.
Goldfarb, Myra Yellin. Of Birds and Barbed Wire.
Moment 13, no. 2 (1988): 3035.
Goldman, Morris. Mans Place in Nature.
Tradition 10, no. 1 (l968): 10015.
Goodman, Lenn E. Respect for Nature in the Jewish
Tradition. Paper presented at the Judaism and
The Natural World Conference part of the World Religion
and Ecology Conference Series. Harvard University Center
for the Study of World Religions, February 2224,
1998.
Gordis, Robert. Job and Ecology (and the Significance
of Job 40:15). Hebrew Annual Review 9 (1985):
189202.
________. A Basis for Morals: Ethics in a Technological
Age. Judaism 25, no. 1 (l976): 2043.
________. Judaism and the Spoilation of Nature.
Congress Bi-Weekly (2 April 1971): 912.
Gotfryd, Arych. Global Ecology. BOr
Ha Torah 10 (1997): 79.
Gottlieb, Roger S., ed. This Sacred Earth: Religion,
Nature, Environment. New York: Routledge, 1996.
Grams, Ileana. The Holiness of Creation in Judaism.
Creation Spirituality (May-June 1992): 3133.
Green, Arthur. "A Kabbalah for the Environmental Age." Tikkun 14.5(1999): 33-40.
________.
Vegetarianism: A Kashrut for Our
Age. In This Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature,
Environment, ed. Roger S. Gottlieb, 301302.
New York: Routledge, 1996.
________. See My Face, Speak My Name. Northvale,
N.J.: Jason Aronson, 1992.
Green, Harold P. Human Values in a Technological
Society. Dimensions of American Judaism
5 (winter 1971): 1923.
Greenberg, Irving. Journey to Liberation: Sukkot.
Tikkun 3, no. 5 (1988): 3437.
Gross, Aaron. "Continuity and Change in Reform Views of Kashrut 1883-2002: From the Treifah Banquet to Eco-Kashrut." CCAR Journal (Winter 2004): 6-28.
Grossman, Karl. How Green Are the Jews?
The Jewish Monthly (January 1991): 713.
Hadassah and Shomrei Adamah. Judaism and Ecology.
New York: Hadassah, 1993.
Hareuveni, Nogah. Desert and Shepherd in Our Biblical
Heritage. Kiryat Ono, Israel: Neot Kedumim, 1991.
________. The Emblem of the State of Israel. Kiryat
Ono, Israel: Neot Kedumim, 1988.
________. Tree and Shrub in Our Biblical Heritage.
Kiryat Ono, Israel: Neot Kedumim, 1984.
________. Nature in Our Biblical Heritage. Kiryat
Ono, Israel: Neot Kedumim, 1980.
________. Ecology in the Bible. Kiryat Ono, Israel:
Neot Kedumim, 1974.
Harris, Monford. Ecology: A Covenental Approach.
CCAR Journal 23 (1976): 101108.
Helfand, Jonathan I. The Earth is the Lords:
Judaism and Environmental Ethics. In Religion
and Environmental Crisis, ed. Eugene C. Hargrove,
3852. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press,
1986.
________. Consider the Work of G-d:
Jewish Sources for Conservation Ethics. In Liturgical
Foundations of Social Policy in the Catholic and Jewish
Traditions, eds. Daniel F. Polish and Eugene J.
Fisher, 13448. Notre Dame, Ind.: University of
Notre Dame Press, 1983.
________. Ecology and the Jewish Tradition: A Postscript.
Judaism 20 (summer 1971): 33035.
Heschel, Abraham Joshua. God in Search of Man: A
Philosophy of Judaism. New York: Octagon Books,
1976.
________. God in Search of Man. New York: Farrar,
Straus, and Giroux, 1955.
________. The Sabbath. New York: Farrar, Strauss
and Giroux, 1951.
Hirsch, Richard G. The Way of the Upright: A Jewish
View of Economic Justice. New York: Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, 1973.
Hirsch, Samson Raphael. Do Not Destroy!
in Judaism and Human Rights, ed. Milton R. Konvitz.
New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1972.
Hoenig, Sidney B. The Sport of Hunting: A Humane
Game? Tradition 11, no. 3 (1970): 1321.
Hornstein. The Farm Crisis: Jewish Community
Response. Shmate: A Journal of Progressive
Jewish Thought 16 (fall 1986): 2225.
Ish-Shalom, Benjamin. The Concept of Nature in
the Thought of Rav Kook. Paper presented at the
Judaism and The Natural World Conference part of the
World Religion and Ecology Conference Series. Harvard
University Center for the Study of World Religions,
February 2224, 1998.
Issacs, Ronald H. The Jewish Sourcebook on the Environment
and Ecology. Northvale, N.J.: Jason Aronson Inc.,
1998.
Jacksott, Adam. Returning to Eden: Judaism and
Ecology. Leylah Magazine (1992):
56.
Jacobs, Louis. Jewish Personal and Social Ethics.
West Orange, N.J.: Behrman House, 1990.
Jegen, Mary Evelyn, and Brunno Manno, eds. The Earth
is the Lords: Essays on Stewardship. New York:
Paulist Press, 1978.
Jewish National Fund On Campus. To Everything There
is a Time and a Season. New York: Jewish National
Fund.
Jobling, David. And Have Dominion . . .
The Interpretation of Genesis 1, 28 in Philo Judaeus.
Journal for the Study of Judaism 8, no. l (1977):
5082.
________. And Have Dominion . . . The
Interpretation of Old Testament Texts Concerning Mans
Rule Over the Creation (Gen 1:26, 28, 9:12, Ps
8:79) from 200 BC to the Time of the Council of
Nicea. Th.D. Dissertation. New York: Union Theological
Seminary, 1972.
Kalechofsky, Roberta, ed. Rabbis and Vegetarianism:
An Evolving Tradition. Marblehead, Mass.: Micah
Publications, Inc., 1995.
________. Judaism and Animal Rights. Marblehead,
Mass.: Micah Publications, 1992.
________. Judaism and Vegetarianism: In the Camp
of Kibroth-Hattaavah. Reconstructionist
52, no. 5 (1987): 1417.
Kaplan, Edward K. Reverence and Responsibility:
Abraham Joshua Heschel on Nature and the Self.
Paper presented at the Judaism and The Natural World
Conference part of the World Religion and Ecology Conference
Series. Harvard University Center for the Study of World
Religions, February 2224, 1998.
Katz, Eric. Natures Healing Power, the
Holocaust, and the Environmental Crisis. Judaism
46, no. 1 (1997): 7989.
________. Judaism and the Ecological Crisis.
In Worldviews and Ecology, eds. Mary Evelyn Tucker
and John A. Grim, 5570. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis,
1994.
________. Are We the Worlds Keepers? Toward
An Ecological Ethic for Our Home Planet. The
Melton Journal 24 (spring 1991): 3.
________. Environmental Ethics: A Select Annotated
Bibliography, 19831987. Research in Philosophy
and Technology 9 (1989): 25185.
Kay, Jeanne. Human Dominion over Nature in the
Hebrew Bible. Annals of the Association of
American Geographers 79, no. 2 (1989): 21432.
________. Concepts of Nature in the Hebrew Bible.
Environmental Ethics 10 (1988): 30927.
________. Comments on the Unnatural Jew.
Environmental Ethics 7 (1985): 18991.
Kellner, Menachem. Jewish Ethics. In A
Companion to Ethics, ed. Peter Singer, 8290.
Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell Reference, 1993.
Kelmach, Burt. The Bible as a Key to Modern Ecology
in Israel. Leylah Magazine (1990):
811.
Kirsch, William. The Jew and the Land. Madison,
Wis.: American Association for Agricultural Legislation,
University of Wisconsin, 1920.
Kirschen, Yaakov. Trees, The Green Testament.
New York: Vital Media Enterprises, 1993.
Klagsbrun, Francine, ed. Voices of Wisdom: Jewish
Ideals and Ethics for Everyday Living. New York:
Pantheon/Random House, 1980.
Klein, Isaac. A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice.
New York: The Jewish Theological Seminary of America,
1979.
________. Science and Some Ethical Issues.
In Responsa and Halakhic Studies, 15975.
New York: Ktav, 1975.
Kress, Jeffrey S. "An Ecological Approach to Understanding Jewish Identity Development in Adolescence." Ph.D. diss., Rutgers University, 1998.
Kushner, Lawrence. The SELF of the Universe.
The Melton Journal 25 (spring 1992): 811.
Lamm, Norman. Nature. In The Good Society,
ed. Norman Lamm, 21322. New York: Viking Press,
1974.
________. Al Ha-Aretz Hatovah. Hadoar
(5 June 1970): 48687.
________. Mans Position in the Universe:
A Comparative Study of the Views of Saadia Gaon and
Maimonedes. The Jewish Quarterly 55, no.
3 (1965): 20834.
Leibowitz, Nehama. Studies in Bereshit, 4th
ed., 7478. Jerusalem: World Zionist Organization,
1981.
Lerner, Carol. A Biblical Garden. New York:
Morrow, 1982.
Lerner, Michael. ed. "Prophetic Visions: The New Millennium." A Special Issue of Tikkun 15.1(2000): 21-85.
________.
Critical, Support for Earth
Day: An Editorial. Tikkun 5, no. 2 (1990):
4850.
Levenson, Jon D. Creation and the Persistence of
Evil. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.
Levi, Leo. Torah and the Protection of the Environment.
In Torah and Science: Their Interplay in the World
Scheme, 6072. New York: Feldheim, 1987.
Levi, Yehudah. The Problem of Ecology Living
at the Expense of Future Generations. BOr
Ha Torah 10 (1997): 3138.
Levine, Aaron. Free Enterprise and Jewish Law: Aspects
of Jewish Business Ethics. New York: Ktav: Yeshiva
University Press, 1980.
Marchant, Dovid. Understanding Shmittoh. Spring
Valley, N.Y.: Phillip Feldheim, 1986.
Mariniv, Uri, and Eitan Harel, eds. The Environment
in Israel. 2d ed. Jerusalem: National Council for
Research and Development [and] Israel Academy of Sciences
and Humanities, Israel National Committee on Biosphere
and Environment, 1972.
McKenzie, John L. God and Nature in the Old Testament.
Catholic Biblical Quarterly 14, nos. 12
(1952): 1839, 12445.
Mitcham, Carl, and Jim Grote. Current Bibliography
in the Philosophy of Technology: 19751976.
Research in Philosophy and Technology 4 (1981):
1207.
________. Current Bibliography in the Philosophy
of Technology: 19731974. Research in
Philosophy and Technology 1 (1978): 31390.
Mitcham, Carl, and Robert Mackey. Bibliography of
the Philosophy of Technology. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1973.
Munro, David A., and Martin W. Holdgate, eds. Caring
for the Earth. Gland, Switzerland: World Wide Fund
for Nature, World Conservation Union, and United Nations
Environment Program, 1991.
Muraskin, Bennet. "Judaism and the Environment." Jewish Currents 59(2005): 42.
Murray, Robert. The Bible on Gods World
and Our Place in It. Christian Jewish Relations
22, no. 2 (1989): 5059.
Newman, Louis E. Covenant and Contract: A Framework
for the Analysis of Jewish Ethics. The Journal
of Law and Religion 9, no. 1 (1991): 89112.
________. Woodchoppers and Respirators: The Problem
of Interpretation in Contemporary Ethics. Modern
Judaism 10, no. 1 (February 1990): 1742.
________. Law, Virtue and Supererogation in the
Halakha: The Problem of Lifnim Mishurat Hadin
Reconsidered. Journal of Jewish Studies
40, no. 1 (spring 1989): 6188.
Newson, Carol A. The Moral Sense of Nature: Ethics
in the Light of Gods Speech to Job. The
Princeton Seminary Bulletin 15, no. 1 (1994): 927.
Novak, David. Technology and its Ultimate Threat:
A Jewish Meditation. Research in Philosophy
and Technology 10 (1990): 4370.
Orr, Josef, and Yossi Spanier. Traditional Jewish
Attitudes Toward Plant and Animal Conservation.
Israel Land and Nature 14, no. 3 (1989): l3236.
Pearl, Chaim, and Reuben Brooks. A Guide to Jewish
Knowledge. London: Jewish Chronicle Publications,
1958.
Pederson, Johannes. Israel: Its Life and Culture.
Atlanta, Ga: Scholars Press, 1991.
Pelcovitz, Ralph. Ecology and Jewish Theology.
Jewish Life 37, no. 6 (1970): 2332.
Polak, Joseph. Torah and the Megabombs.
Judaism 32, no. 3 (1983): 302308.
Pollard, Nigel. The Israelites and their Environment.
The Ecologist 14, no. 3 (1984): 12533.
Pressman, Daniel. The Earth is the Lords.
Rosh Hashanah Sermon. 1 October 1989. Beth David, Saratoga,
Calif.
Prosnit, James. Guardians of Gods World.
The Amicus Journal (winter 1990): 5456.
Rabinovitch, Nachum L. Halachah and Technology.
Proceedings of the Associations of Orthodox Jewish
Scientists 2 (1969): 12949.
Rabinowitz, Louis I. Torah and Flora. New York:
Sanhedrin Press, 1977.
Radkowsky, Alvin. Judaism and the Technological
Dilemma. Proceedings of the Associations of
Orthodox Jewish Scientists 2 (1969): 6878.
________. The Relationship Between Science and
Judaism. Proceedings of the Associations of
Orthodox Jewish Scientists 2 (1969): 15173.
Rakover, Nahum. Dine Israel 4 (1973): 625.
Ravitzky, Aviezer. The Shemittah Year: A Collection
of Sources and Articles. Translated by Mordell Klein.
Jerusalem: World Zionist Organization, 1979.
Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. Shabbat
Hagadol. Washington, D.C.: Religious Action Center
of Reform Judaism.
________. Tu BShvat Haggada. Washington,
D.C.: Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.
Robinson, H. Wheeler. God and Nature. In
Inspiration and Revelation in the Old Testament,
148. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1946.
Rockefeller, Steven C., and John C. Elder, eds. Spirit
and Nature. Boston: Beacon Press, 1992.
Rogerson, J. W. The Old Testament View of Nature.
In Instruction and Interpretation: Studies in Hebrew
Language, Palestinian Archaeology, and Biblical Exegesis,
et al. H. A. Brongers, 6784. Leiden: E. J. Brill,
1977.
Romain, Jonathan. A. Faith and Practice: A Guide
to Reform Judaism Today. London: The Reform Synagogues
of Great Britain, 1991.
Rose, Aubrey, ed. Judaism and Ecology. New York:
Cassell Publishers, Ltd., 1992.
Roskos, Nicole. "Falling Nature: An Ecofeminist Anthology of Fall Narratives." Ph.D. diss., Drew University, 2003.
Roth, Cecil, ed. The Standard Jewish Encyclopedia.
London: W. H. Allen, 1966.
________. A Short History of the Jewish People.
London: East and West Library, The Horovitz Publishing
Co., Ltd., 1959.
Sacks, Jonathan. Tradition in an Untraditional Age.
London: Vallentine Mitchell and Co., Ltd., 1990.
Samuels, Shimon. "Anti-Semitism and Jewish Defense at the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development." Post-Holocaust and Anti-Semitism 6(March 2003): 1-6.
Sasso, Sandy Eisenberg. A Prayer for the Earth:
The Story of Naamah, Noahs Wife. Woodstock,
Vt.: Jewish Lights Publishing, 1996.
Schaffer, Arthur. The Agricultural and Ecological
Symbolism of the Four Species of Sukkot. Tradition
20, no. 2 (1982): 12840.
Schochet, Elijah Judah. Animal Life in the Jewish
Tradition: Attitudes and Relationships. New York:
Ktav, 1984.
Schorsch, Ismar. Learning to Live with Less.
In Spirit and Nature, eds. Steven C. Rockefeller
and John C. Elder, 2538. Boston: Beacon Press,
1992.
________. Trees for Life. The Melton Journal
25 (spring 1992): 3.
________. Tending to Our Cosmic Oasis. The
Melton Journal, no. 24 (spring 1991): 3.
Schwartz, Eilon. Judaism and Nature: Theological
and Moral Issues to Consider While Renegotiating a Jewish
Relationship to the Natural World. Judaism
44, no. 4 (1995): 43747.
Schwartz, Richard H. Judaism and Global Survival. New York, NY: Lantern Books, 2002.
________.
Beyond Chopped Liver: Why
Should a Jew Be a Vegetarian? Compass 13,
no. 1 (fall 1990): 13.
________. Judaism and Vegetarianism. 2d ed. Marblehead,
Mass.: Micah Publications Inc., 1988.
________. Judaism and Global Survival. New York:
Atara Publishing Co., 1987.
________. Ecology. In Judaism and Global
Survival, 4052. New York: Vantage Press, 1982.
Schwarzchild, Steven S. The Unnatural Jew.
Environmental Ethics 6 (1984): 34762.
Shadur, Joe. Helping to Safeguard Nature in IsraelFrom
Abroad. Israel Land and Nature 14, no.
1 (1988): 22931.
Shapiro, David. God, World and Man. Tradition
14, no. 3 (1974): 3747.
Sichel, Meik. Air Pollution: Smoke and Odor Damage.
The Jewish Law Annual 5 (1985): 2543.
Singer, David. "God in Nature or the Lord of the Universe? The Encounter of Judaism and Science from Hellenistic Times to the Present." Shofar 22.4(2004): 80-93.
Sokol, Moshe. What are the Ethical Implications
of Jewish Theological Conceptions of the Natural World.
Paper presented at the Judaism and The Natural World
Conference part of the World Religion and Ecology Conference
Series. Harvard University Center for the Study of World
Religions, February 2224, 1998.
Solomon, Norman. Judaism and the Environment.
In Judaism and Ecology. ed. Aubrey Rose, 1953.
London: Cassell Publishers, 1992.
________. Judaism and World Religion. New York:
St. Martins Press, 1991.
________. Judaism and Conservation. Christian-Jewish
Relations 22, no. 2 (1989): 725.
Spero, Shubert. Morality, Halakha, and the Jewish
Tradition. New York: Ktav: Yeshiva University Press,
1983.
Stein, David, ed. A Garden of Choice Fruit: 200
Classic Jewish Quotes on Human Beings and the Environment.
Wyncote: Shomrei Adamah, 1991.
Steinmetz, Devora. Vineyard, Farm and Garden:
The Drunkenness of Noah in the Context of Primeval History.
Journal of Biblical Literature 113, no. 2 (1994):
193207.
Strassfeld, Michael. The Jewish Holidays: A Guide
and Commentary. New York: Harper and Row, 1985.
Strikovsky, Aryeh. "God, Adam and Tree: Tu B'Shvat Reflections." Jewish Spectator 63.3(Winter 1999): 48-49.
________.
God, Man, and Tree.
BOr Ha Torah (1997): 2529.
Swartz, Daniel. Jews, Jewish Texts, and Nature:
A Brief History. In This Sacred Earth: Religion,
Nature, Environment, ed. Roger S. Gottlieb, 87103.
New York: Routledge, 1996.
Swetlitz, Marc. Judaism and Ecology: 19701986
Sourcebook of Readings. Wyncote, Pa.: Shomrei Adamah,
1990.
________. A Jewish Commentary on the Religious
Origins of Technological Civilization. Research
in Philosophy and Technology 6 (1983): 197204.
Tal, Alon. "The Greening of the Jewish National Fund." Tikkun 20.4(2005): 23-26.
Tamari, Meir. Environmental Issues and the Public
Good. In With all Your Possessions: Jewish
Ethics and Economic Life, 278306. New York:
The Free Press, 1987.
Thomashow, Mitchell. Seminal Themes of Contemporary
Environmentalism: Notes Toward a Basic Reader.
The Melton Journal 25 (spring 1992): 15.
Tikkun Magazine 5, no. 2 (1990).
Tillman, William, ed. Environmental Stewardship in the Judeo-Christian Tradition: Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant Wisdom on the Environment. Acton Institute, 2004.
Toperoff, Shlomo Pesach. The Animal Kingdom in Jewish
Thought. Northvale, N.J.: Jason Aronson Inc, 1995.
Toynbee, Arnold. The Genesis of Pollution.
New York Times (16 September 1973): Section 4.
Troster, Lawrence. "Tzedek or Triage: Restoring the Balance of Creation." Conservative Judaism 53.1(2000): 11-19.
________.
Created in the Image of God:
Humanity and Divinity in an Age of Environmentalism.
Conservative Judaism (fall 1991): 1424.
Tudge, Colin. Global Ecology. London: The Natural
History Museum, 1991.
Turk, Samuel A. Thou Shalt Not Destroy.
Jewish Life (October 1972): 1318.
Turkel, Eli. Judaism and the Environment.
Journal of Batacha and Contemporary Society 12
(fall 1991): 4461.
Turpin, Lucy. The Environment in Israel. Jerusalem:
Environmental Protection Service, 1979.
Ungar, Andre. Ecology and Justice. Jewish
Spectator 36, no. 3 (1971): 1315.
Uval, Beth. "Ecology in the Bible." Jewish Biblical Quarterly 28.4(2000): 260-263.
Van Meter, Timothy L. "Teaching and Learning Without Walls: A Strategy for Ecological Religious Education." Ph.D. diss., Emory University, 2003.
Vogel, David. "How Green is Judaism? Exploring Jewish Environmental Ethics." Judaism 50.1(2001): 66-81.
Vorspan, Albert, and David Saperstein. Tough Choices:
Jewish Perspectives on Social Justice. New York:
UAHC Press, 1992.
Vorspan, Albert. The Crisis of Ecology: Judaism
and the Environment. In Jewish Values and Social
Crisis, 36281. New York: Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, 1970.
Wahle, Hedwig. "Human Responsibility for God's Creation in Jewish Teaching and Practice." Journal of Dharma 26.1(2001): 60-86.
Ward, Nahum. Judaism in the Planetary Era.
In Context 19 (1988): 4649.
Waskow, Arthur. "Shout Rather Than Whisper: A Jewish Renewal Perspective on Reform." Judaism 53(Summer/Fall 2004): 193-196.
________. "Wheat in Eden, Computers in Our Day." Cross Currents 50.1-2(2000): 258-263.
________.
ed. Torah of the Earth: Exploring 4,000 Years of Ecology in Jewish Thought (2 vols). Woodstock, VT: Jewish Lights, 2000.
________.
And the Earth is Filled with
the Breath of Life. Cross Currents (fall
1997): 34863.
________. What Is Eco-Kosher? in This
Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature, Environment, ed.
Roger S. Gottlieb, 297300. New York: Routledge,
1996.
________. Down-to-Earth Judaism: Food, Money, Sex,
and the Rest of Life. New York: William Morrow and
Company, Inc., 1995.
________. Torah, Jews, and Earth. Shma
23 (February 1993): 5153.
________. The Greening of Judaism. Moment
17, no. 3 (1992): 4547, 52, 62.
________. Is the Earth a Jewish Issue? Tikkun
7, no. 5 (1992): 3537.
________. Earth Day 1990Questions, Criticism
about Biblical Tradition. Chicago Sentinel
(19 April 1990).
________. From Compassion to Jubilee. Tikkun
5, no. 2 (1990): 7881.
________. Down to Earth Judaism: Food, Sex, and
Money. Tikkun 3, no. 1 (l988): 1924.
________. Toranomics. Menorah: Sparks
of Jewish Renewal (April-May 1983): 13.
________. Seasons of Our Joy: A Modern Guide to the
Jewish Holidays. Boston: Beacon Press, 1982.
Wein, Berel. Nature, Man, and the Jew.
Jewish Life 35 (1968): 3034.
Weinstein, Jacob J. In Wilderness is Salvation.
Reconstructionist 35 (1965): 712.
Weiss, David W. Jewish Values, Science, and Halachah.
Washington, D.C.: Bnai Brith Books, 1987.
________. The Forces of Nature, the Forces of Spirit:
A Perspective on Judaism. Judaism 32, no.
4 (1983): 47787.
Weissman, Bernard. Toward Tikkun Olam.
Midstream (June-July 1992): 3637.
Weiss-Rosmarin, Trude. Relevance and the Jewish
Heritage. The Jewish Spectator 45, no.
2 (1980): 37.
White, Lynn Jr. The Historical Roots of our Ecologic
Crisis. Science 155 (March 1967): 12031207.
White Paper, British Government. This Common Inheritance:
Britains Environmental Strategy. London: Her
Majestys Stationary Office, 1990.
Whitney, Elspeth, and Lynn White. Ecotheology
and History. Environmental Ethics 15 (summer
1993): 15169.
Whole Earth: Access to Tools, Ideas, and Practices.
The Earth in Crisis Religions New Test of
Faith. [special Issue] winter 1997.
Wigoder, Geoffery, ed. Jewish Values. Jerusalem:
Keter Publishing House Jerusalem, Ltd., 1974.
Wolff, Akiva. "Judaism and the Modern Concept of Sustainability." B'Or Ha'Torah 14(2004): 107-112.
Wolfson, Elliot R. Mirror of Nature in Medieval
Mysticism. Paper presented at the Judaism and
The Natural World Conference part of the World Religion
and Ecology Conference Series. Harvard University Center
for the Study of World Religions, February 2224,
1998.
Wood, Karen L. "The Partnering God: A Constructive Christian Theology in Conversation with Liberal American Judaism." Ph.D. diss., Harvard University, 1998.
Wyman, Miriam. Derekh Eretz: A Personal Exploration.
Conservative Judaism (fall 1991): 513.
Wyschogrod, Michael. Judaism and the Sanctification
of Nature. The Melton Journal 24 (spring
1992): 5.
________. The Body of Faith. San Francisco: Harper
and Row, 1983.
Yaffe, Martin D. ed. Judaism and Environmental Ethics: A Reader. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2001.
________.
Judaism and the Environmental
Crisis: A Three-Way Interchange. Lecture given
at the Conference on Environmental Ethics and Emerging
Issues, University of North Texas, 4 April 1998.
Yishuv Ha-aretz. Encyclopedia Talmudit,
ed. Sholomo Josef Zevin, trans. Isidore Epstein and
Harry Freedman, vol. 2: 22526. Jerusalem: Talmudic
Encyclopedia Institute, 1969.
Zimmerman, Michael E., and Steven Vogel. Current
Debate: Nature and Domination. Tikkun 4,
no. 2 (1989): 102105.
Zipperstein, Edward. Waste in Judaic Tradition.
In Essays in Jewish Thought. Private Publication,
1989.
Copyright © 2002 Center
for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity
School.
Reprinted with permission.
|