Metro Other Views from page 18 difficult for a native speaker of mod- ern Hebrew, the Talmud is written in an arcane Aramaic-Hebrew jargon and is notoriously difficult to navigate, daunting for those not trained in its way of dialectical argument. "The language is a barrier for people looking to master the Talmud," Blau said. "By translating it into Hebrew, Rabbi Steinsaltz made the Talmud available to be studied by people sty- mied by that language barrier. That is a massive accomplishment." For Steinsaltz, the Talmud is not a rarefied tome that should remain in the hands of experts, but the founda- tional text of Judaism itself. In addition to his straight trans- lation of the original Talmud text, Steinsaltz added his own commentary, in Hebrew, alongside the text, as his 1 contemporary take on the ancient debates. Steinsaltz spurred criticism in some Orthodox circles for altering conven- tions because he placed his commen- tary in the space traditionally reserved for Rashi, the pre-eminent Talmud commentator; added new notes in place of certain tosafot, or additional commentaries; and changed the tra- ditional layout and pagination in his translation. "That may seem a mere format quibble, but it may have struck some as misguided:' said Rabbi Avi Shafran, spokesman for the haredi Orthodox Agudath Israel of America. David Kraemer, a professor of Talmud at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, doesn't con- sider it a problem. He notes that the Talmud's page format was set only when printing was invented and did not exist in earlier, handwritten manu- scripts. "Any translation is an interpreta- tion:' Kraemer said. "To translate [Talmud] in both the literal and nonliteral sense, you have to add to it, which means making judgments. I don't criticize that at all — that's what all reading is, what all commentary is." Steinsaltz's Hebrew Talmud is not the only modern translation. Soon after he launched his project, a team of Orthodox scholars began work on an English translation. Published by ArtScroll, the Schottenstein Babylonian Talmud is used now by students around the world, and is available in English, Hebrew and French. In the late 1980s, Steinsaltz began publishing his own English editions of the Talmud, working from his Hebrew translation. Steinsaltz's English Talmud is not as widely praised as his Hebrew translation; the ArtScroll English ver- sion is more widely used. ❑ Free Flemenco Concert A free musi- cal lecture and performance will be held at Tessa Congregation Beth Ahm at 2:30 Goldberg p.m. Sunday, Nov. 7, sponsored by the Regina and Walter Litt Family Jewish Music Fund. No reservations are required. The program will feature flamenco guitarist Scott Mateo Davies, vocalist Rachel "La Mala" Milloy, dancer Andrea Plevan, and guest dancer Tessa Goldberg. Every year, the Litt Family Jewish Music Fund presents a free program at Beth Ahm. Donations in support are welcome. Call Beth Ahm, (248) 851-6880. 77111 Annual Balfour celebration ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA - MICHIGAN REGION Founded in 1897 -.. _..._. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2010 • 7:00 P.M. - ONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK, SOUTHFIELD, MI s'- 4 _., IN CONCERT* • OUR 3 CANTORS Daniel Gross Michael Srnolasll 41, HONORARY CHAIRS: JENNIFER & BRIAN HERMELIN, MARCIE & ROBERT ORLEY, LISA & GARY SHIFFMAN HONORING ,6 _,. Opllelia and Leonard Herman WITH THE JUSTICE LOUIS D. BRANDEIS DESSERT AFTERGLOW INDIVIDUAL TICKETS BEGINNING AT $50 AWARD VISIT OUR WEBSITE: WWW.MIZOA.ORG FOR TICKETS, CONTACT ZOA-MICHIGAN REGION Phone 248-282-0088 Email balfour@mizoa.org 1630170 20 November 4 • 2010