May

24 2026

Jewish Moral Thought in Conversation with Chinese Civilization

11:00AM - 12:30PM  

online
Event sponsors: Canadian Antisemitism Education Foundation, Doctors Against Racism and Antisemitism, Allied Voices for Israel, Jewish Therapist Collective and Toronto Asian Parents' Association
toronto, ON

Contact ANNETTE POIZNER
Please register for this free event here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_qiuvAnAKSeCj5OJA5AjpYA#/registration
(416) 409-3822
[email protected]
https://www.caef.ca/post/webinar-series-celebrating-asian-and-jewish-heritage-month

How do we stay grounded and truthful when the world feels confusing, polarized, or morally unstable?
How do long-standing traditions help people decide how to live, not just what to think?

This online conversation centers on a Jewish moral voice that has been shaped through sustained, lived engagement with Chinese civilization.

Dr. Vera Schwarcz is a historian who has spent decades teaching and learning within Chinese intellectual and cultural worlds while remaining deeply grounded in Jewish moral tradition. Her work explores how different cultures carry painful history, how silence and speech shape moral life, and how long-term encounter across civilizations can deepen ethical understanding.
She will be joined in conversation by Dr. Elliot Malamet, a prominent figure in the realm of Jewish education and spirituality. He enters this dialogue not as a scholar of China, but as a thoughtful interlocutor responding from within Jewish sources to questions of truth, memory, and responsibility raised by Vera’s work.

Together, they will explore questions that touch everyday life:

How do we recognize truth when certainty is impossible?

How do words shape what we notice, name, or avoid?

How do different cultures carry historical pain without being trapped by it?

When is silence wise, and when is speech a moral obligation?

How can forms of “wordless understanding” create trust across difference?

What helps people walk forward with integrity in difficult times?

This conversation reflects a Jewish engagement with Chinese civilization shaped by long-term encounter, intellectual humility, and moral attentiveness. It does not claim to represent Chinese perspectives in full. Rather, it models a way of listening, reflecting, and speaking that participants can carry into their own families, communities, and professional lives.

Sponsor: Canadian Antisemitism Education Foundation, DARA, AVI, JTC, Toronto Asian Parents' Association

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