
💡 Think:
With OpenAI’s GPT-3 taking the Internet by storm - even if it creates some interesting tweets - it provides us a chance to look back at a classic Tech Tribe #FirstFridaySociety conversation: Can robots be Jewish?
There is a very Jewish origin to the term robot: The golem of Prague, the guardian of Bohemian Jewry created by the Maharal, may have inspired Czech playwright Karel Capek’s R.U.R., the play that gave us the word “robot.”
But can you make a minyan of droids?
In typical rabbinic fashion, the answer to this question is another question: What is it that makes us Jewish?
The Torah begins with the creation of Adam, noting that G-d “blew into his nostrils a soul of life.” It is that innermost “breath” of the Creator that makes us all human. For Jews, that ineffable spark also makes us Jewish.
Rava, the Talmud notes, created a man, a golem, using forces of sanctity. Rava sent his creation before Rabbi Zeira. Rabbi Zeira would speak to him but he did not reply. Rabbi Zeira said to him: “You were created by one of the members of the group, one of the Sages. Return to your dust.”
The golem, the robot, then was able to be destroyed - for despite its facsimile similarity to a human - that divine spark, blown into the nostrils of Adam, was not there.
The robotic body, devoid of any soul, is but a shell—what Maimonides calls in his magnum opus the Mishneh Torah “matter,” or in Hebrew a golem.
While a robot could never be Jewish, there is a Jewish lesson.
In 1975, the Lubavitcher Rebbe taught that just as a computer can apply its processing power to untold uses by applying its source code to whatever new case may arise - by using spiritual machine learning to accomplish something startlingly new ] we Jews have the ability to adapt to changes in the world—robotic or otherwise—by looking to our source code: the Torah.

🏃 DO:
🏠 Judaism is coming home this summer! Each week we’ll be focusing on another mitzvah that shows how we can connect, outside of the party or the shul.
💪 This week: We’re talking Tefillin. We’re exploring how this ancient spiritual technology serve in centering ourselves. Take a picture of you in your Tefillin, tag us and use the hashtag #Connect10n! You can also pick up Tefillin now (for delivery in NYC or by special shipping) in our Tech Tribe store!
🙌 We’re WILD about stickers - which is why we’re offering our latest hologram sticker everyone for any donation you make!

🎧 Listen:
Batracht - a contemplative song in Yiddish beloved by the venerable chasid R’ Peretz Mochkin - about the fleeting nature of wealth and the only lasting legacy we have in being a mentsch.
🎉 Mazel:
Tech Tribe In-House artist (and my sister) Sefira Ross was blessed with a baby boy yesterday! Mazel tov to Sefira, her husband Levi and their daughter Liora on the new bundle of joy!

Art From our Jews in Space Series
📚 Read:
👨🚀How the prolific writer Barry N. Malzberg showed how sci-fi passion was just Judaism in a spacesuit My Science Fiction Rabbi
🎶 The Force is still strong with John Williams
😷For Chabad Couples Just Starting Out, a Pandemic Is No Barrier to Service

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