
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On today’s page, Zevachim 73, the rabbis teach that an animal unfit for sacrifice does not become nullified when mixed with permitted animals, because each creature is considered significant on its own terms. This theme echoes the message in Alana Newhouse’s powerful essay on industrial farming, “Ugly In, Ugly Out,” reminding us how easily individuality and dignity get erased when we treat living beings as interchangeable. How does our moral clarity sharpen when we refuse to let the unique value of anything—or anyone—get lost in the mix? Listen and find out.
By Tablet Magazine4.8
540540 ratings
On today’s page, Zevachim 73, the rabbis teach that an animal unfit for sacrifice does not become nullified when mixed with permitted animals, because each creature is considered significant on its own terms. This theme echoes the message in Alana Newhouse’s powerful essay on industrial farming, “Ugly In, Ugly Out,” reminding us how easily individuality and dignity get erased when we treat living beings as interchangeable. How does our moral clarity sharpen when we refuse to let the unique value of anything—or anyone—get lost in the mix? Listen and find out.

548 Listeners

1,463 Listeners

34 Listeners

646 Listeners

221 Listeners

158 Listeners

199 Listeners

57 Listeners

442 Listeners

1,201 Listeners

3,183 Listeners

1,074 Listeners

37 Listeners

83 Listeners

305 Listeners

206 Listeners

232 Listeners

38 Listeners

430 Listeners

111 Listeners

15 Listeners

159 Listeners

114 Listeners

356 Listeners

88 Listeners

108 Listeners

16 Listeners

12 Listeners

0 Listeners

11 Listeners

849 Listeners

496 Listeners