B"H

Bibliomancy: Seeing Clearly in Tevet?

Here’s a little bit of deep spiritual practice, disguised as light fun, for Tevet.  This month of Tevet, which began at sundown on December 26th, 2011 and ends at sundown on January 24, 2012, is associated with the concept of seeing.  The letter associated with the month, according to Inner.org, is the Ayin (ע) — the eye.   Over at PeelaPom.com I used this concept to explore the lighting of candles as a practice for the month.  Then I had a flash of inspiration or insanity right before Rosh Chodesh services at OneShul.org — a little divination for the month of seeing!

Now, before you panic, yes — many kinds of divination are … frowned upon in Jewish tradition.  Of course, if it’s the BESHT doing it — it doesn’t count.  But I’m not the BESHT. Several sources, including the Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Supersitiion,  call the Jewish tradition of bibliomancy “Sheilat Sefer” (שאלת ספר).   Sheilat Sefer simply means, “Question a Book.” This makes sense since dream interpretation is often called Sheilat Halom – Question a Dream (שאלת חלום).

Techniques like Sheilat Sefer allow us to tap into our deep intuition, and open ourselves to the wisdom of the Divine. They allow us to move beyond our rational minds to finds ideas, answers, or inspiration. Technically you could use any book for this practice, but traditionally it’s done with either a Chumash (The Five Books of Moses) or The Book of Psalms.  But there’s a host of other amazing Jewish (and not Jewish) texts that can provide a powerful experience.  Personally, as the folks at OneShul found out, I like to use the Encyclopedia of Jewish Symbols by Ellen Frankel.  I think the Perek Shirah, the Song of Nature, is another fabulous Jewish text to use for this practice

Curious?  Want to give Sheilat Sefer a try?  It’s pretty easy.  Just grab a book, and flip randomly to a page. Then either without looking put your finger on something and read, or use whatever your eyes first fall upon.  Don’t cheat — that’s really not the way to go.  Just read and see what thoughts,  feelings, or images  the words bring up for you. This all works a bit better if you clear your mind, maybe state your Kavanah (intention) or question, and even give a little prayer to center yourself.  Be sure to also give a prayer of thanks for the wisdom received — even if you don’t feel like you got much!

Want to learn more?  Check out these articles

——-
Ketzirah is a Kohenet, Celebrant, and Artist. She works with individuals and groups to explore, discover, and create meaningful rituals and ritual artwork to mark moments in life.

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Introducing PunkTorah Radio!

We are excited to announce the launching of PunkTorah Radio, our new radio station through 8tracks.com. You can find us on 8tracks at 8tracks.com/punktorah. Here, every mix we publish on PunkTorah Radio can be accessed, not just the mix you find on the PunkTorah homepage.

Our station will promote music from Jewish artists all over the spectrum: rock, pop, indie, commercial– with or without Jewish subject matter.

This week’s 15-track mix features music from JDub artists Girls in Trouble, DeLeon, CAN!!CAN, Sagol 59, and The Sway Machinery. Other artists/bands include Matisyahu, Mirah, Rilo Kiley, Animal Collective, and more.

Do you make music? Are you in a band? If so, send it our way and we’ll review it to be added to the station. Have any ideas or suggestions of artists or songs for us to include? Let us know! Have questions about the radio or 8tracks.com? Send your mp3s, suggestions and inquiries to ashton@punktorah.org.

PunkTorah Radio is funded by generous donations. Support us by donating at punktorah.org/donations.

 

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PunkTorah Radio: Michael’s Music!


It’s Michael’s turn again! I’m bringing you another selection of Jewish music that you may have heard, may not have heard, and may or may not like! But I hope you enjoy it.

PunkTorah Radio: Michael’s Music!

Track List:

1. Sh’ma Yisrael – Abayudaya Jews of Uganda- Shalom Everybody, Everywhere

2. Modern Day Moses (Elerctro Morocco Remix) – DeScribe-Harmony

3. Am Yisrael Chai - Justin Jude and The Schneiderman Sisters-We Sang That At Camp: Songs Remembered From Jewish Summer Camp

4. Medley 3: Salaam (Od Yavo Shalom Aleinu) – Kirtan Rabbi-Live!

5. Blackberry Manischevitz - Shalom Feivel & Rocky Mountain Jewgrass-Live At Swallow Hill

6. My Mouth Is a House of Prayer - Eprhyme-WAYWORDWONDERWILL

7. Heaven and Earth - Neshama Carlebach and The Green Pastures Baptist Church Choir-Higher and Higher

8. Shalom Aleichem – Melita Doostan & Octopretzel-Shirei Gan Shalom

9. Hava Nagila – The Barry Sisters-To Life! Chanukah And Other Jewish Celebrations

Find us on iTunes

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Jewish Crusties, Unite!

I’m a middle class loser sellout. I have a nice apartment, I shop at the organic farmers market and I have a good job and dork around on my laptop all day.

If I were a real Jew, I’d be a Crustie.

Crusties are a subculture of urban nomads with ties to the gutter punk and hippie movements. The actual term “Crustie” comes from the crust that develops on your newly pierced body, though Crusties are known more for being dirty, smelly, hungry and perpetually homeless. Many have quasi-anarchist political leanings that are anti-capitalist and anti-conformity.

While true Crusties in the 80′s and 90′s sense don’t exist like they used to, homeless Travel Kids who adopt the nomadic lifestyle are in full force. I’ve known a few and they have a pretty interesting perspective on life.

The Jewish People have been crusty Travel Kids for generations. Only now have we truly settled down in the Western World and made a mainstream name for ourselves.

Part of me regrets that. I sometimes wish the Jews were still wandering. I wish we weren’t so settled.

For a long time, Michael and I have been talking about getting a van and traveling around America, helping small Jewish communities have services and Torah study. While we are both married, and he has a kid and is attending school, that aching part of yourself that wants to get rid of the apartment, sell your stuff, and live like a bohemian never goes away.

Shlomo Carlebach had it right: go forth and be blameless, just like our father Abraham. Be a nomad. Go where the people need you. Be a Crustie Travel Kid, for HaShem. They’ll call you a hippie, a loser, a rebel, an anti-social misfit. But G-d smiles and that’s what’s important.

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PunkTorah Radio: White Stripes and Martian Bread

This week we talk about the White Stripes, Jewish movements, and the secret to Martian brachot (blessings). Check it out!

PunkTorah Radio: White Stripes and Martian Bread

Subscribe on iTunes here! And if you love us, please write a review!

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The G-d Project

PunkTorah Receives $50,000 For Digital Media Platform, The G-d Project


Atlanta, GA — March 14, 2011 – PunkTorah, the 501(c)(3) Jewish non-profit dedicated to independent Jewish spirituality, culture, learning and debate has received $50,000 from the Jewish New Media Fund for its ground breaking campaign The G-d Project.

The G-d Project is a social network dedicated to G-d and Judaism inspired by Ted Talks and This American Life. The G-d Project puts G-d back into the Jewish conversation by utilizing three key tools:

Microdocumentaries – Short films showcasing unique Jewish personalities around the USA including the infamous and unknown, rabbis and lay people, scholars and those without formal Jewish education, children and adults, LGBT and straights, Orthodox, Reform, Conservative, secular and everyone in between. These interviews are filmed across America in diverse Jewish communities with the assistance of the local Jewish communal infrastructure. The G-d Project has already begun filming in Atlanta and Chicago.

Social Media Platform – Films are linked together through a Kabbalah-inspired social network tagging system that reveals the common spiritual and social values amongst the participants in The G-d Project. Each video will have a dedicated discussion board generating online chavrutah as well as connection to larger social media streams such as YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, making G-d go viral.

Video Upload Feature - The G-d Project will additionally feature a video upload portal where the greater online Jewish community will be invited to submit their own G-d Project videos, further expanding the interactivity of the dialogue and incorporating the entire Jewish community worldwide.

The G-d Project was inspired by the work that PunkTorah has done with OneShul.org, the world’s only online, independent minyan with interactive, lay led prayer and holiday services. PunkTorah saw the need to create more avenues for diverse, faith based expressions online as well as increasing connectivity for Jews around the world who want to talk about spirituality outside of the synagogue context. The goal is to raise intergenerational spiritual literacy as well as remove the taboo that many Jews feel about discussing issues of faith.

To bring The G-d Project to your city, click here! Or click here to find out how to submit your own video!

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PunkTorah The Movie!

Thank you so much to everyone who contributed to this project! We are now going to be able to develop videos of a much higher quality. The only limits are our imaginations. Thank you for making this happen!

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PunkTorah Radio: Jewish Meditation, A Cookbook, And Kurt Cobain

Hey all! This week we talk about 90′s music, a Jewish meditation CD, a cookbook, and a secret project!

PunkTorah Radio: Jewish Meditation, A Cookbook, And Kurt Cobain

And subscribe here on iTunes!

 

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Jewish and Queer…and holding the Tension

As my title suggests, I’m Jewish and queer. Well, more specifically, I’m a trans-masculine, gender queer, queer community organizer. I’m also a Midwestern, Ashkenazi Jew who was raised in a reform, Zionist household. Without going into everything, it’s fair to say I often haven’t felt comfortable bringing my multi-layered self to these communities. Yet while these communities have been uncomfortable, I’ve also continued to stay at least marginally engaged in these spaces.

Here’s a highlighted example of this tension, circa 2004:

Less than a semester into my new life as a Freshman at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, a queer-friendly college town with only a small, somewhat insular Jewish community, I decided to go home to Milwaukee, WI to spend the high holidays at my home congregation – this was an important part of my annual ritual of connecting with my Jewish identity and community. My parents reserved tickets at our huge Reform congregation in the suburbs. To make sure that we’d get seats near the choir and the bimah, it was my job to rush to the front of the rope-barricaded mass of Jews waiting for the early service to let out.

As I moved to the front of the line, I recognized some of the parents of kids I’d grown up with and Hebrew School teachers who were friends of my parents. But as I turned to meet their eyes and wish them a happy new year, I realized that many of them didn’t recognize me. I had recently cut my hair in a masculine style (it was one of the first things I did after leaving home to go to school). I was also dressed in slacks and a sweater vest with a collared shirt. I was expecting to connect with my community, but instead, I developed a ton of anxiety over the idea that I would have to “out” myself in order to connect with people. Instead, I put my head down and waited for my parents to join me in line.

Of course, when they arrived, my parents had to “catch up” with everyone else in line. The first time my mom turned to an old family friend and re-introduced me as her daughter, I slumped my shoulders in to hide my chest and swept my bangs into my eyes in my embarrassment. This happened repeatedly. To my relief, some recognized me and welcomed me back home with a hug. Others asked me if I was a freshman in high school (since we all knew I looked like a nice, Jewish pre-pubescent boy). I always wondered if they would try to set me up with their nice, Jewish grand-daughters, but my mom was always quick to clarify that I was a girl and that I was in college. The rest of the pre-service schmoozing seemed to revolve around upcoming marriages, those who were having babies, and who was entering into law/medical school – these were expected rights of passage in our community. Although I was en route to getting my bachelor’s degree, I felt like I was masquerading as being part of the community.

I understand that many of us have felt tension between the way we see ourselves, the way we want to live and being validated members of our communities and families. So when our Jewish Organizing Initiative Fellowship class was trained on the concept of holding tension in one of our latest sessions, I had no trouble finding significance in this theoretical discussion that focused on how/why we stay engaged with our somewhat contradictory truths and values. There’s a reason why I continue to seek out spaces that are both familiar and rooted in the things I’ve come to appreciate and love. But until moving across country and building networks, I had neither access to these communities nor the knowledge that they even existed.

Because of this, it’s been really hard to feel included in Jewish spaces (especially those with more rigid gender roles and expectations). Many Jewish communities have been wonderful in reaching out to Jewish gays and lesbians by including more gender neutral language and by officiating same-sex marriages. But where do queer, bisexual, and transgender members or others who may not be interested in marriage or nuclear families fit into these Jewish communities?

Likewise, in GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender) spaces, I continue to advocate for the visibility and inclusion of gender non-conforming voices and perspectives. As important as it is to push for GLBT rights in a broad sense, it’s always been difficult for me to feel included with GLBT communities that continue to understand sex, gender, and sexuality as dichotomies: Am I male/female or gay/straight? What about the options, “none of the above” or “a mixture of the listed identities?” As someone who identifies as gender queer and queer, advocating for the inclusion of dichotomous, GLBT identities in non-GLBT communities has never really cut it for me. So how am I able to work within communities in which I continue to be a minority voice among marginalized identities?

One thing that has really helped me is finding other folks who are visible and are creating more space for others who don’t always have a space. For me, one pivotal person was Katz, a trans and queer spoken word artist, of Athens Boys Choir. I’ve also connected with a network of gender queer advocates who have helped frame discussions of gender variance beyond male/female and broader ideas on queering gender performance/perception/visibility. My friend, Jac, continues to do amazing advocacy through midwest genderqueer. Keshet and Trans Torah have also helped me find adapted queer, Jewish community and practices while also revealing the more subtle queerness within Judaism.

While I’ve found much of what I’ve been looking for in Boston, my goal is to make these resources, ideas, and communities even more readily available and present nationwide. Other Midwestern, Queer, gender-variant Jewish folks shouldn’t have to move across the country to be part of communities where they can bring their whole selves.

Pen Bruskin is a Jewish Organizing Initiative Fellow working at Keshet and living in Jamaica Plain, MA. He is fierce, queer, and gender-fabulous!

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Opening The Gates: An Essay

Opening The Gates: An Essay

(Loosening up about faith, welcoming converts, and letting go of the past)

When one thinks of spreading their faith one probably imagines a ‘Jehovah’s witness’ type, going door to door, harassing poor folks about G-d, salvation and the like. Judaism, once upon a time, had its own tradition of proselytizing. In the Roman Empire, Judaism was well known as a missionary faith and accepted converts from all regions of the Empire until the Roman Emperor Hadrian outlawed the practice around 131 C.E. As Jews, we shouldn’t necessarily feel obligated to spread our faith, but at the same time we shouldn’t shy away from talking about it either. The Torah itself specifically commands us to be open to Converts, with the passage of history and in large part due to the Diaspora, Conversion to Judaism has been, up until modern times, largely not talked about openly amongst the Global Jewish community. Biblically, the first Convert to Judaism – Ruth had herself a relatively easy time coming into the community versus the experiences of prospective converts in contemporary times. With that said, it has to be asked, why is it so hard? Why are Converts often subjected to long periods of study and Reflection often lasting a year or more?

Some Rabbinical opinions cite ‘Sincerity of the Convert’ and ‘integration/acceptance into the community’ as being key reasons for such lengthy periods. Jewish communities everywhere are shrinking, areas of the United States where Jewish communities once thrived are now largely faint specters of what once was a mere five years ago. The remedy to our decline lies in future generations, how we continue our traditions and talk about our faith is key to our survival as a people. Halakah, Jewish Law, contrary to some, was intended as malleable work, open to revision and change as the world evolved. While this is not the case for a number of us, and that’s fine, we must confront and adapt to the changes we see around us, more importantly, As Jews, we should not shy away from talking about faith. The Torah teaches to live so as to be an example to the Nations. Sharing our spiritual and religious life with others is a major part of not only our bonds to our brothers and sisters, but also allows those who may be curious or spiritually a glimpse of the Joy and connections Judaism, and religion in general, can provide.

The world Jewish community still forces the global community to be reminded of the Holocaust, and for good reason, that we ‘never forget’. Yet, if we dwell in the past how can we ever look to the future? While Yom HaShoah by its very existence, causes us all, Jew and non-Jew alike, to be mindful of past evils, it should not force us to live in a bubble, Judaism is not some exclusive country club, it is a vibrant and all-inclusive living spiritual tradition that, together with Christianity and Islam, commands the attention of some several million people. If Judaism is to survive into the 21st century, we as a people must go forward with open hearts, open minds, and, more importantly no fear. The story of the Jews lies in the soil of the fields, from dust we came to dust we return, so lets keep our ears to the ground and our eyes towards Zion.

Bud W. Andrews    2/3/11

Ari Ben-Avraham

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