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From Tiberias, With Love is a journey to rediscovering the magic
and mystery, the intimacy and depth of a lost moment in the history
of a remarkably relevant conscious community in the Galilee that
still has much to teach us. In the year 1777, a group of spiritual
seekers from Eastern Europe set sail in search of a promised land,
far away from the internal and external conflicts plaguing those
souls seeking the infinite within this finite world. Some who set
sail identified with the burgeoning Jewish spiritual renewal
movement of hasidism, while others seem to have just come along for
the ride. Weathering challenges both socio-economic and geographic,
this emigrating group sought to establish a center for a burgeoning
hasidic ethos that would radiate to the Diaspora from its renewed
center in the Holy Land in Palestine. Tiberian Hasidism provides a
model of an intensive contemplative life that is particularly
appealing to contemporary spiritual seekers for many reasons,
including: its deep focus on mystical theology; devotional
practice; and the ecstasy of deep friendship rather than allegiance
to an institutionalized religion. This volume focuses on the
teachings of R. Abraham haCohen of Kalisk ripe for excavation,
offering an authentic roadmap to future contemplative pathways ripe
for our age.
The Holy Fire: The Teachings of Rabbi Kalonymus Kalman Shapira, the
Rebbe of the Warsaw Ghetto is a journey into the mind and spirit of
a sublime hasidic master in his moments of joy and tranquillity,
and later, in his time of personal and communal catastrophe. The
reader takes a voyage into the rich and variegated world of
twentieth-century Hasidism in Poland, a world destroyed by the
Holocaust. This is a volume inspired by a deeply sensitive and
poetic individual of faith who is grappling with an unfolding
disaster. While the Holocaust has engendered a voluminous body of
religious and philosophical writings attempting to probe the issues
this unfathomable period raises in all their enormity, virtually
all were written after the war, when a modicum of distance and
reflection is possible. Contemporaneous diaries and chronicles
written as the events were happening concentrate on the descriptive
accounts of the horrors. The Holy Fire, however, engages a
sustained theological reflection and stands alone as an extended
religious response from within the heart of darkness itself while
the catastrophe takes place, and is, for this reason, an
extraordinary document and an astonishing personal achievement.
Malkah Shapiro grew up in Poland, the daughter of a noted Hasidic
master. The Rebbe's Daughter tells her story: a rare glimpse of the
world of the Hasidic Jew in pre-World War I Eastern Europe. This is
a learned text, filled with biblical, talmudic, kabbalistic, and
hasidic allusions and direct quotations, demonstrating that, in
constrast to the stereotype of traditional Jewish girls' education
at the turn of the century, the author was blessed with a thorough
education in Judiac classics. Shapiro's tale, translated and
presented in Rabbi Polen's capable hands, is poetic and sensitive,
providing a rich and inviting history for its readers.
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