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OneShul Siddur Ahava Rabbah Now Available

We’re pleased to announce that Ahava Rabbah: The 5772 OneShul Community Siddur is now available online on Barnes and Noble, Amazon and in print at ModernTribe.

The siddur is gender inclusive, LGBT friendly and showcases the many, varied ways that Jews can connect to prayer, both traditional and contemporary. The siddur includes the three daily prayers, prayers for Shabbat and Havdalah, holidays, meditations, poems and more! As a bonus, the prayer book includes a full Haggadah and Birkat Hamazon (blessing after meals). A great beginner siddur for someone interested in Jewish prayer who needs a place to start.

 

The book was written by the volunteers at OneShul.

 

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Directions: An Essay

I glanced over at the gentleman to my right. As he stood, nose inches from the text, caught up in his prayers and oblivious to my gaze, my attention wandered to the cover of his siddur and remained there. Embedded into the cover was a compass.

The elegant poetry of this design choice was immediately apparent and delightful in a way that brightened the rest of my day.

It isn’t often that the tools we use to find out way both physically and spiritually are so nicely juxtaposed. Such a siddur ensures that we are facing Jerusalem literally and figuratively. It expresses the idea that we need tools to ensure we don’t lose our way. It admits to the reality that navigating a particular path can be a challenge. It also suggests that the owner is willing – if not to lead – then to help chart a course.

Very few items combine elements of the physical and of faith like this, and I have deep respect to the person who first thought of it.

Cross posted at EdibleTorah.

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Support the New OneShul Community Siddur

Great news! The new OneShul siddur is ready for print!

This siddur contains new versions of the Shacharit, Mincha and Maariv service for personal and communal use. Kabbalat Shabbat has several sections, including a synagogue and home service for your friends and family, as well as Shabbat morning and Havdalah. Egalitarian, LGBTQ friendly and 100% independent, this siddur is both in English and Hebrew transliteration for people who seek tradition in an open way. As a bonus, the book also contains our Community Birkat Hamazon, Kabbalistic meditations as well as an expanded holiday section!

Pre-orders for the siddur are available until May 20th at 5PM EST.

$5.00 – Advance pdf version (emailed to you)

$18.00 – Advance printed version and .pdf version

+ Add $18.00 per additional copy. All advance orders include free shipping!

Donate via Paypal to receive your copy.

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Indie Rock Is My Siddur

Originally posted on Jewcy.com

It’s pretty cool to have a day job that involves writing and editing a siddur. But to be honest, at the end of the day, I really just looked forward to blasting my stereo on the way home from the office.

I imagine that the siddur is a mix tape of lamentations to G-d. And with that in mind, I tried to craft a playlist that, for me, would be the equivalent of a morning prayer service (Shacharit). Here’s my best shot:

Here Comes Your Man – The Pixies

The perfect song to start off your audio davening, the chorus “here comes your man” is like a blessing before study, leading you with its pop sweetness onto the stronger stuff, like an audio gateway drug.

G-d Only Knows – The Beach Boys

“G-d only knows what I’d be without you” is an amazing line that captures yearning and the essence of the morning blessings.

Heartbeats – The Knife

The daily sacrifice is found in Orthodox siddurim, and a song by a band called The Knife only seems appropriate when dealing with issues of animal slaughter. Plus, I couldn’t think of a good metal transition from The Beach Boys…but I’m open to suggestions.

Lips Like Sugar – Echo and the Bunnymen

A darkwave song that reminds me of Psalm 30, since the psalm is about turning “mourning to dancing” and that’s about as goth as it gets (or maybe it would be more goth if it turned dancing into mourning?)

Breed – Nirvana

And speaking of mourning, Breed by Nirvana is my mourner’s kaddish. You’d think this kaddish would have reference to the dead or something dark (like Echo and the Bunnymen) but remember that Mourner’s Kaddish as a prayer never actually talks about the dead. Nirvana is so iconic (as is this kaddish in the Jewish prayer ritual) that I can’t help but put the two together.

Hellelujah – Jeff Buckley

Jeff Buckley’s cover of Leonard Cohen is the musical equivalent of the Shema.

I Was A Desert - Girls In Trouble

The Amidah, for me, is like a roller coaster. I start off with a slow build with the “Elohei Avraham, Sarai, Yitzak, etc. etc.” then go full steam with the chest striking. That’s what this song is like for me: layer after layer of guitars and percussion adding up to the explosion of “I was a desert until I learned to make the sky rain down on me.”

La Serena - DeLeon

Kaddish is one of those things where the element of group prayer really comes together. Since I like singing this song to myself in the car, it’s close enough to congregational prayer.

Modern Love – David Bowie

I think I would end my audio morning service with an Aleinu from David Bowie, especially since this song says “modern love puts my trust in G-d and Man” and Deuteronomy 4 talks about the idea of G-d being G-d alone…a similar, powerful statement.

And now for the Tehilim, the Psalms that you study after the service. For me, these are the songs that on their own don’t do it for me, but in this combo, really give me that extra boost…like a sonic cup of coffee.

Salvation – The Cranberries

Oh Lord – The Brian Jonestown Massacre

All Women Are Bad – The Cramps

Your Mangled Heart – The Gossip

Love Will Tear Us Apart – Joy Division

That Great Love Sound – The Raveonettes

Samson – Regina Spektor

Never Gonna Give You Up – Rick Astley

Kool Thing – Sonic Youth

The World’s A Mess, It’s In My Kiss – X

Photo stolen from AmericanApparel.com.

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Submit Your Entries to the NEW OneShul Siddur

Every year, the PunkTorah/OneShul community comes together to write the Community Siddur. And we need your help to make the next siddur bigger and better!

Below are just a few ideas to get you started. You can submit the original Orthodox Hebrew prayer (transliterated), your own prayer in any language, a poem, a meditation…whatever your heart moves you to. Don’t be afraid to be original (blessing of the pets? blessing for checking your email?) and feel free to submit as many pieces as you would like. Just email patrick@punktorah.org to sign up. Hurry! People have already started signing up.

Morning Brachot – Gabe M.

Morning Service

  • Meditations Before Prayer
  • Morning Blessings
  • P’sukei d’Zimra (with Psalms)
  • Shema and it’s blessings and related passages
  • Shemoneh Esrei
  • Hallel
  • Torah reading (Mondays, Thursdays, Shabbat and holidays)
  • Aleinu, Ashrei (Psalm 145), and other closing prayers, Psalms and hymns

Additional Service (Musaf)

  • Shemoneh Esrei
  • Aleinu and other closing prayers, Psalms and hymns

Afternoon Mincha Service

  • Ashrei (Psalm 145)
  • Shemoneh Esrei
  • Aleinu

Evening Service (Ma’ariv)

  • Shema and it’s blessings and related passages
  • Shemoneh Esrei
  • Aleinu
  • Bedtime Shema

Kabbalat Shabbat and Maariv Evening Service

  • Shabbat Candle Lighting
  • Psalm 95, 86, 97, 98, 99
  • Lecha Dodi
  • Greeting Mourners
  • Psalm 92
  • Psalm 93
  • Mourners Kaddish
  • Rabbis Kaddish
  • Barchu
  • Maariv Aravim
  • Mi Shebeirach
  • Ahavat Olam
  • Shema
  • Hashkiveinu
  • V’shamru
  • Amidah
  • Yidal
  • Adon Olam

Shabbat Home

  • Shalom Aleichem
  • Kiddush – Patrick Aleph
  • Woman of valor/Man of valor/Person of valor
  • Blessing of children – Shaun Sarvis
  • Mnucha v’simcha
  • Birkat Hamazon – NewKosher.org

Shabbat Morning Service

  • Morning Meditations
  • Psalm 30
  • 1 Chronicles 16:8-38
  • Psalm 19
  • Psalm 33
  • Psalm 34
  • Psalm 91
  • Psalm 98, 121, 122, 123, 124
  • Psalm 135, 136
  • Psalm 92
  • Psalm 93
  • Ashrei and Psalm 145
  • Psalm 146, 147, 148, 149, 150,
  • 1 Chronices 29:10-13
  • Nehemiah  9:6-11
  • Exodus 14:30-1
  • The Song at the Sea (Exodus 15:1-18)
  • Nishmat
  • Sho-chein Ad
  • Yish Tabach
  • Shacharit Shema
  • Shacharit Amida
  • Shacharit Closing
  • Shabbat Musaf
  • Havdalah

Holidays and Simcha

  • Rosh HaShanah
  • Yom Kippur
  • Simchat Torah
  • Hanukkah
  • Tu B’Shevat
  • Purim
  • Passover
  • Counting The Omer
  • Lag B’Omer
  • Shavuot
  • Sukkot
  • Tish B’Av
  • Tu B’Av
  • Kapparot

Additional Brachot

  • Ritual Hand Washing
  • Mikvah
  • Mezuzah
  • Shehecheyanu – Patrick Aleph
  • On hearing good news
  • On hearing bad news
  • For witnessing phenomena
  • Separating challah
  • Immersing utensils in mikvah
  • Travelers prayer -Shaun Sarvis
  • Prayer for rain/nature
  • Consecration of a house
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Who Needs A Siddur Anyways?

A prayerbook is an interesting thing. It begs the question, how well can someone else’s words describe your inner feelings, your deepest needs and desires? Why do we even need a siddur anyways? Isn’t the point of prayer to talk to G-d, or whatever we call that awe-some power that is larger than ourselves?

If we allow ourselves to look at things from a different point of view we can see how we can benefit from a written liturgy.

While we have invited the members of our community to contribute new interpretations of standard liturgical pieces, new understandings of traditional blessings and prayers, we have attempted to maintain a particular sense of order in the creation of the daily service. The reason for this is because the daily services are crafted for a very specific purpose, to create a distinct experience that is a stark reflection of our spiritual journey throughout the day. The services are, in fact, both the map and the territory of a journey into the deepest realms of the spirit.

The order of the service was crafted by the sages to guide us through an experience that reflects the importance of communicating with the Source of Life. Taking us by the hand, the order of service walks with us, laying out a clear pathway to elevate our souls, to describe the madness and miracles we see everyday, and to give us words when our own fail us.

Starting at the beginning, the opening psalms energize us, they prime the pump of spirit, and help to fuel the engines of prayer that we need to journey deeper into the presence of the Holy One. Each successive prayer gives us new insight into our experience and draws us closer to the heights, symbolically ushering us through the sefirot, guiding our minds and hearts. We reach the apex of our journey, our approach to the Throne of Glory in the Shema and the Amida, the Standing Prayer. We have worked our way upwards the highest heights, reflecting on the oneness of the Universe and the relationship of a people and their essence, the liturgy giving us the words to express the inexpressible inside of us. The Aleinu gives us time to reflect and express our gratitude as we slowly descend in a meditative state, slowly backing down the ladder, en-wrapped in the Shekhinah, enmeshed in the ultimate and miraculous Oneness of Reality. Reciting psalms allow us to de-compress and release excessive spiritual energy, and to rest in reflection of the transformative nature of the prayers.

Does this mean we have to pray exactly as the Sages have written? No. We keep the map, but we need to discover the territory ourselves. This is why we have a community siddur. No one person can express what is in another person’s heart, but they can sometimes come close. If you feel drawn to some prayers in this or any other siddur, use them! If you feel that you need to use your own words, use them! I encourage you to write your own! But do not discard the resources from those who have been there before you.

Does this mean that we are always going to have a “magical” prayer experience? No, absolutely not. The order of the service is there to make sure we make the journey; it does the heavy lifting for us. All we have to do is to commit to the going. It is the doing that makes the difference. Judaism is a spiritual practice and not a “creedal” religion; it’s not about what you believe, it’s about what you do. Take a step, keep moving forward. Allow yourself to be changed, and you can change the world.

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OneShul Community Siddur

Hey there chaverim! It’s your friendly neighborhood Alterna-Rebbe here with an exciting announcement. We have just completed writing and editing the first OneShul Community Siddur!

What’s a “community” siddur?

I am so glad you asked!

The community siddur is a prayerbook for our community, by our community. We asked for and received submissions from a large variety of people involved in OneShul and PunkTorah, and we have created the next level in OpenSource Davenning!

Here is a preview of the front and back cover:

The OneShul Community Siddur can be considered the IndieYeshiva Pocket Siddur v 2.0. It includes much that was in the IY Pocket Siddur, plus expanded Assorted Prayers and Blessings, meditations, a new introduction, a complete Holiday Blessings section, and more!

Plus, this version will be published in a 4×6 paperback format, which is much sturdier than the IY Pocket Siddur.

The siddur will be available by October 1, 2010 at ModernTribe.com.

Keep swayin’ and prayin’!

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Service of the Heart?

I’ve neglected going to services lately because I am really not comfortable there. We go in, we pick up a siddur, we sit down, and invariably our daughter either wakes up or jumps down and starts running around. All the old bubbies start to murmur and give us dirty looks and then my wife has to escort the little vilde chaya out the door while I stay and daven alone. This is fine. It is routine and I expect it, though I’m saddened that we have to be separated during what I consider to be a both personally spiritually important time and a good spiritual environment for the kid.

My real disappointment lies in the way we are holding modern, “liberal-type” services.  We all sit in rows in a fancy sanctuary, sing songs and follow along and do the “call and response” type of thing. We listen patiently as the leader drones in that “poetry/sing-songy/disingenuous” kind of high pitched voice. And it struck me that it was all so, for lack of a better word, “church-y”. I hated it. It feels like it is copying the Protestant style of Western church worship, from the music to the atmosphere. Someone at the service even made a comment (jokingly, I think) about being “quiet at church”. I thought to myself, “Shouldn’t this be different than church? Why are we trying to be like that? To fit in? No thanks.” We are different, and that should be a good thing. Jews always have been different. We’re iconoclasts! We break down walls and smash idols! Heck, we’re different from each other! You know that old chestnut, “two Jews, three opinions”!

My first exposure to a Chabad type service was really, interesting. We were on vacation, so we went somewhere we normally wouldn’t have gone. This was very different. Everyone seemed to be mumbling and shuckling and I had no idea where I was in the service. After  fifteen minutes I gave up trying and I just followed along as best I could. The shaliach’s kids came right up to him and he would pick up the little ones in between prayers. It was pretty overwhelming and a disorienting.
The same type of thing happened later when I was at a much smaller minyan and everyone was davening at different speeds. I got flustered and frustrated. I even got mad at the guy next to me for going so fast and not doing it “right”.  After thinking later about why I got angry, what about everyone not praying together made me some upset, I figured it out.

Jacob Siegel, in a fantastic post you should check out, put it like this:

In the middle of this cacophony of prayers,  “I would form my own personal connection with G-d, and you, praying beside me, would do the same, and we would each be vocalizing at different paces, and we would each be inspiring the other to achieve a spiritual awareness that we would then carry throughout the day.” This is incredible to me. It is that independence in the midst of community, what I consider almost the definition of Yiddshkeit, that electrifies my neshama.

I’m not saying one way is right and the other wrong. I am saying that it is a shame if we are changing our nature to conform to an idea of what a progressive, liberal service should look like. Something that IndieYeshiva and PunkTorah are trying to do is to bring these ideas back into the way we “do” Jewish, and have them there for us, to make our Yiddishkeit genuine and real, and by “genuine and real” I don’t mean specifically that there is one right way to do things, but a way that resonates with our past. I’m taking about an Integral Judaism that would transcend and include the past (more on that in another post).

I would like to, if I may, let Mr. Siegel take us out, because any paraphrasing on my part would be just that, and I feel he puts is very eloquently:

‘When we pray, we share our energy. I davven, and you hear me and feel inspired, and I hear you and feel further inspired. Let’s thank our cantors for their efforts in service of us and G-d, and ask them to step down from the bimah and stand beside us, as we now all share together in our cleaving to G-d.”

Yasher Koach.

Michael ארי

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PunkTorah Afternoon Prayer Service

We held our first afternoon prayer service today and it was awesome. Interacting with everyone was great! We would love for everyone to come and participate. ALL ARE WELCOME!

They will be held Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at around 2PM Eastern time. To watch, go here or here! We look forward to seeing you all there!

-Michael and Patrick

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Meet our Newest Project: 3xDaily.org

I would like to introduce you to a new project by PunkTorah: 3xDaily.org

3xDaily is a resource for Jews who want to begin building a practice that includes daily prayers. It there to show those who may be curious one version of how things can work, to ask questions, and to figure out if and how this could fit into theirs lives. The goal is to get people involved in their own spiritual lives, to take them back from those to whom they’ve handed them over, to wrestle with the big questions, to keep asking those questions, and to stand on their own feet.

Why? Because three daily prayers are something that I think the non Orthodox world are missing out on. When I first began reconnecting to my Jewish-ness, first with a number of Reform/Conservative/”Progressive” (and I use the term as loosely as possible), praying three times a day was almost never brought up. It was like “Oh, yeah, Jews used to pray three times a day and some still do…next question.” I look at Islam, where they also pray a number of times a day. If you ask people how may know a little about Islam, they immediately mention that they prayer five times a day. It is an important part of the religion that every Muslim, practicing or not, knows about. Praying three times a day is just as important to Judaism, it is something that we are supposed to do that has been neglected. What this can accomplish is to provide what Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi called a “Shabbat In Time”, a moment to stop, connect with the Creator, and refresh. To pause during the day and give thanks for what we have and to be inspired to work on our shortcomings.
Two of the things that I see holding back non-Orthodox Jews from praying three times a day are time and learning. A regular Shacharis  (morning) service can take an hour or two. We can take this idea of a morning service and bring it to where we are now. What are the necessities? What is it that we really should say? How long could that take? One version that we created takes about fifteen minutes in the morning. Great! If you have two hours to daven through the morning service, also great! Don’t like the version we created? Create your own! Make it meaningful. Otherwise you won’t do it. As for learning, the best way to learn is to do!

Prayer is important because it gives us an opportunity to connect with something bigger than us, and this thing that is bigger than us can mean many things. A Jew who believes in G-d can use the prayers to connect to the Creator. A Jew who may not believe in a literal “god-type” G-d can connect with something larger than themselves in connecting with Jews around the world, participating in tradition, in something that goes back to the time of the temple. Even connecting with those immediately around you in a group or minyan can be important, to form community. Prayer is also important because Jews are not “weekend religious” people. We are Jews all the time. The daily prayers exist to express this at all times. Secluding our “Jewish-ness” to Friday nights or Saturday mornings can limit our identity, or at least for me, not necessarily for everyone.
I think that “taking back” some of these things that are considered “orthodox” are important. These are things that are open to all Jews, and they should be able to participate in something important to our tradition. I would also argue that any Jew who considers themselves Jewish is observant, at least enough so to “observe” that they are Jewish. So in this way we can all participate. And the benefits are described above, we connect with something larger than us, the Creator, nature, community, tradition, and rest for a short period of time, a refuge form the world, if only for a few minutes.

Head over to 3xdaily.org! Take a look around! Try some things out! And let us know what you think!

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