Showing posts with label The Gods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Gods. Show all posts

Sunday, October 22, 2023

My Personal Shrine

At the heart of my personal shrine, Hestia, goddess of the hearth, holds everything together. I acquired this image from the back cover of my copy of a 1980s SageWoman Magazine. It represents my long and deep connection with her. When I stand before this image, I feel the comforting embrace of home.

To Hestia’s left, a small statue of Ganesha sits on a platform as a reminder of a significant moment on my spiritual journey and the hope for a second chance. Though I turned away from his call in devotion to my Jewish path, Ganesha, now silent, emanates a gentle benevolence. On Hestia’s right, a janut (a nod to Sofia Samatar’s fantasy tale) that I call Lara embodies the protective power that has shielded my soul through life’s battering waves.

Holy Mother Leah, a figure deeply rooted in Jewish tradition, shares qualities with Esau, my favorite biblical figure. Her portrait reminds me of the importance of forging a meaningful life without relying on the love or approval of others.

The image of Hekate on the right side of my shrine changes often, as I have many images of her. The left side of my shrine contains a pillar-like statue of Artemis, reminiscent of Asherah, and a delicate glass vase, like the one Hekate sometimes holds in one hand. The Artemis statue as well as a large, red-eyed serpent brooch, representing Nehustan, were gifts from my friend, Kesam. Ceramic cats, symbols of affection and grace, playfully explore the space, adding a touch of whimsy to the shrine’s solemnity.

Before the first candle flame flickers before Hestia, I invoke her in modern Greek: Estía, i próti kai i televtaía, theá tis estías. Estía, yemáti evloyíes, theá pou me akoúei. “Hestia the first and last, goddess of the hearth. Hestia full of blessings, goddess who hears me.” 

Next, I light the candles before Ganesha and Lara, reciting words of recognition and gratitude: “Ganesha of the benevolent gaze” and “Lara, protector of my spirit.” Then I light two more candles for “Hekate, teacher of sorcery” and “Artemis-Asherah.”

Next to my shrine, the glossy black stove top is where I kindle Shabbos, yahrzeit, and Hanukkah lights. My kiddush cup stands there during Shabbat and incense burns there during the week. A magnificent hanukkiah, also a gift from Kesam, towers at the back of the stove; it is a reminder of tradition, and its enormous size means it dominates my whole studio apartment.

A smaller shrine rests on my desk, featuring the same image of Hestia. A carved wooden Tree of Life, with subdued colors, shows the traditional attribution of Hebrew letters. A photograph of a reddish-orange ceramic image of Hekate with two torches to guide Persephone from the underworld reminds me of Hekate’s long history. A necklace bearing Thor’s Hammer serves as a testament to the thunderstorms that have brought me messages of significance. The wall is covered with photographs of joyous moments with friends and nature, as well as a replica of an antique Shiviti.
I perform rituals before various trays set against the northern wall of my home. The tray becomes an altar, holding the tools and symbols necessary for ritual and spell-craft. Seated in front of this altar, I transport myself to Hekate’s astral temple where I can take purposeful action to shape my life.

Monday, August 28, 2023

Spell to Remember the Gorgons and Harness Their Power

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
Flash your eyes to reveal hidden dangers.

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
Bare your boar's fangs to ward off harm.

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
Let your steely scales shield me from fear.

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
Turn my fear to stone, guiding my sight.

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
By Hekate's word, my enemies are yours.

Eurayál, Sthéno, and Méðusa,
Daughters of Dread and Terror–
Empower me to fight the battles I must.

Io Heka Gorgo Apotrópai!

Sunday, August 6, 2023

The Song of Nehushtan

Amidst a struggle for political independence, King Hezekiah, the thirteenth ruler after David, sought not only to free Judah from the grip of the Assyrian Empire, but also to secure the religious sovereignty of Israel's God. To cleanse the people from foreign cultic practices, Hezekiah dismantled revered symbols of old, including the high places and the bronze serpent crafted by Moses in the wilderness.

In the Second Book of Kings, we glimpse Hezekiah's devotion to the God of Israel:
"Hezekiah the son of Ahaz king of Judah began to reign. And he did that which was right in the eyes of the LORD. He removed the high places, and broke the pillars, and cut down the Asherah; and he broke in pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made; for unto those days the children of Israel did offer to it; and it was called Nehushtan." – 2 Kings 18
Hezekiah's loyalty to the God of Israel was rewarded with a miraculous plague that decimated the Assyrian army. Yet, I cannot help but wonder what songs the ancient Judeans had sung to Nehushtan, the Fiery Serpent, when seeking healing and protection. What offerings and gifts accompanied their supplications to the fiery serpent?

Although those songs have been lost to time, I have endeavored to compose a piece that may evoke the spirit of those ancient hymns and echo the praises our ancestors once sang. Adorned with archaic language from the 1611 King James Version of the Bible, this hypothetical hymn, inspired by Jason' Miller's presentation of an invocation from the Greek Magical Papyri and by two biblical stories, pays tribute to Nehushtan.

May these words recall our ancestors' devotion and offer a glimpse into a time when Nehushtan held a place of veneration in the hearts of our people. Join me in offering a tribute to this symbol that represents healing throughout the world and recalls the faith of our ancestors.

O Victorious and Majestic One,
Thou who hast been and shall forever be.
“The number of Thine years cannot be searched out,”
From “everlasting to everlasting” is thy majesty.

In the wilderness, Thy radiant presence shone.
When “the Lord was angered, He sent forth serpents” amongst our fathers.
But “Moses wrought a fiery serpent and raised
You upon The Pole.
Our fathers gazed into Thine eyes, “and they lived.”
May we, their children, witness Thy greatness once more, Nehushtan.

In the Land, Thou harkened to our vibrant cries,
We entreated Thee, “remember the battle,” that strife may cease.
—Should God's wrath stir once more,
“Shatter our foes” with Thy fearsome might!

When Thou dost rise, the mighty tremble,
“Thy teeth are terrible round about,”
Thy scales are Thy pride “and cannot be sundered.”
Thine heart, as steadfast as stone, is “firm as nether mil-stone.”
“Upon the earth, who is like unto Thee,” fearless art Thou made.

Thine eyes do flash forth light, like morning's eyelids bright,
“Out of Thy mouth go burning torches, and sparks of fire leap.”
“Out of Thy nostrils goeth smoke, as a seething pot and burning rushes.”
“Thou maketh a path to shine after Thyself.”

Praise and adoration to thee, Nehushtan, our Healer,
“In Thy neck, strength resides, turning sorrow to joy,”
Thou, O Serpent, art always our beacon of hope,
With reverence, we bring gifts unto Thee,
May Thy presence abide with us, now and forevermore.


Quotations are from Job 26:36, Psalm 90:2, Numbers 21:5-9, Job 41:8, Psalm 68:21, Job 41:14, Job 41:19, and Job 41:22 in the 1611 KJV and from the JPS Translation.

Sunday, July 2, 2023

A Prayer to Hyékati

                         Ζηρυνθία
Hyékati Zirinthía, guide me through veils untold,
Show me my path, time’s tapestries unfold.

                         Βριμοῖ
Hyékati Vrímo, shake perception’s core,
Reveal my de
sires and the purpose to explore.

                         Φωσφόρος
Hyékati
Fósfore, kindle fires of art’s creation,
Ignite in me purpose and in
spired dedication.

                         σωτηρία
Hyékati Sotería, wisdom you bestow,
Take me beyond, bound'ries I’ll let go.

                         Ορίζοντα
Hyékati Urízoda, knower of the unknown,
Teacher and friend, grant me wisdom to be sown.

                         πολύτιμος μου
Precious One, stand by me, embrace me tight,
Unveil the world’s secrets in your sacred light.

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Acknowledgement of Hestia



Estía, i próti kai i televtaía!
Theá tis estías!

Estía, yemáti evloyíes!
Theá pou me akoúei.

Hestia,
the first and last!
Goddess of the Hearth!
Hestia, full of blessings!
Goddess who hears me.


Η Εστία, η πρώτη και η τελευταία!
Θεά της Εστίας!
Εστία, γεμάτη ευλογίες!
Θεά που με ακούει.

 

 

Image from the back cover of a 1980s Sagewoman magazine

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Tarot Cards and Sacred Signs

For some tarot readers, certain cards are signs of direct communication from a beloved deity or spiritual guide. Inspired by this, I decided to find which cards Hestia might use to get my attention. Over the course of several days I pulled cards, sometimes finding immediate insight into Hestia's choice, and sometimes being left with questions that I know will be answered in time.

I continued this experiment with other beings: Ganesha, Lara the Protector of my Spirit, Shekhinah-Asherah, HaKadosh Barechu, Sarah Immeinu, Holy Mother Leah, and others.

When I asked Hestia which cards would serve as her sign, the Queen of Wands seemed an obvious and fitting choice for the Goddess of the Hearth. 


Shekhinah-Asherah selected thought-provoking cards. Each card offered glimpses into beginnings, transformations, and endings.

As I sat with the cards that will indicate communication from HaKadosh Barechu, I felt a sense of rightness. It will take time for their significance to dawn on me.

Two pair of cards drawn for Ganesha, made me wonder. Each pair included an image of a difficult situation as well as a picture of joy.
 

Sarah Immeinu's card, The Wheel of Fortune, mirrored the ups and downs of her remarkable life. 

Leah's card intrigued me. The King of Cups was more enigmatic than ever, only leaving me with questions: does it signify her love for Yaakov, her recognition of God's power, or her journey to emotional maturity?

Lara revealed a symbol of authority and true power. That message was very clear, telling me to embrace my own strength and assert my influence in the world.

I had encountered Ulmo and Nienna in The Silmarillion when I was in my early adolescence. Those two have continued to resonate with me throughout the years. 

Nienna is the goddess of lamentation and her card which can symbolize a wedding, where a glass is broken under the chuppah because, as was explained by Rabbi Alan Berg, if we can remember our greatest sorrow at a time of joy, then we will be able to remember our greatest joy in a time of sorrow.


Ulmo, Tolkien's God of the Sea, cared deeply for Elves and Men. His realm extended up through all waterways to lakes and streams, so he could hear their prayers and aid those who called to him.

They say everyone has a spiritual guide. Eager to meet mine, I pulled two cards. They are joyful cards whose significance still eludes me.

Over time, I will continue pull cards to find connections to other divine beings.

Friday, January 29, 2021

Seductiveness of Prayer and Study


I’m currently studying the teachings of the Piaseczno Rebbi, diving into his unbearable wisdom with Rabbi Lauren Tuchman. It's stunning how Judaism can captivate and enchant me. Here is an unrelated but related video showing overflowing simcha and unwavering emuna at the Lubavitcher Rebbe's farbrengen.

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Friday, November 10, 2017

Four Views of the Afterlife

Death is a topic that has always intrigued people. Many hope for or fear an afterlife, others believe it is the end of body, personality, and soul. My friend, Arlan, and I once had a long discussion about this, each of us holding a different perspective. He believes, sensibly I think, that death can only be the end, that no part of him will survive. I agree with him—-on an intellectual level. However, I understand how people are unable to fathom an end.

I told him of my experiences of Rene, my mother, and my father after each of their deaths. I'd always assumed that those experiences said something about me, certainly nothing about the afterlife. Arlan pointed out that those experiences say something about each of those people.

Photo by Rene's sister, Mona
Photo by Rene's sister, Mona

Rene died at a time when I couldn't cope with one more loss. Surprisingly, her spirit seemed to linger with me, filling me with inexplicable laughter whenever I felt overwhelmed by her absence. She stayed with me for nine months, until the night I dreamed of unusual home where a woman was about to give birth. Rene had always been a source of laughter and joy, but this experience revealed her enduring presence in the living world.

At the moment of my mother’s death, I saw her spirit ascend in an instant to a cloud where she held a harp and everything difficult about her had fallen away. My mother spent years hiding from the world; that was the afterlife she would have wanted.

While I had always known that Rene was a bringer of laughter, I had not recognized, at least not consciously, that my father had always been deeply afraid of everything, including death. After he died, I repeatedly saw him wandering alone in a barren landscape: lost, frustrated, afraid, and crying.

And then there was Butterfly (פַּרְפַּר), my beloved cat. My experiences of him after his passing were of an entirely different caliber: I knew they were real. After he passed away, his spirit visited me one night; he was as big as I am and he spooned himself against my back. Although he came to the house many other nights, on those occasions he focused entirely on reassuring his daughter, Nutmeg.

Might my experiences of those people have been shaped by the predominant and sometimes unexplored facets of their personalities? Were the things I saw actually windows into their souls or into my perceptions of them?

Whether my visions were true or not, they do suggest the complexity of human existence. There are so many mysteries that lie beyond our understanding; I’m not inclined to spend much time considering the possibility of an afterlife, but those experiences do prompt me to cherish the connections I have in this life.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Sisterhood of Avalon

How I hate writing personal essays! I keep promising myself that I'll never subject myself to that torture again. Thankfully, these were not as difficult or as painful as previous application essays I've had to write.

http://www.sisterhoodofavalon.org/


 1. What does Avalon mean to you? Why are you drawn to walk the path of Avalon with the SOA? 

Avalon, for me, is the metaphor Jhenah Telyndru presents in her book and that the Sisterhood of Avalon describes on this website: it is a figurative, internal place from which one can gain clarity of vision that can assist one in discerning reality and knowing oneself without the blinders of cultural or personal conditioning. It is a place where one can find empowerment with which to act constructively in the world.

However, to me, Avalon also feels more concrete than a metaphor, myth, or archetype—I’m not yet certain why—and it may be that sense of concreteness attracts me. I am also attracted to the clearly individualized personalities of Avalon’s goddesses. I don't have a sense of complete personalities when I think of the Matriarchs or Shekhinah of Judaism.

Knowing where you are in relation to places (Avalon) and other beings (the Sisterhood) helps you know who you are. In Jewish tradition, god is sometimes called HaMakom, The Place, and Jewish mysticism began as an attempt to rebuild the destroyed Second Temple internally. The sephirot, arranged today in the pattern of a tree, originally represented directions and elements; the neo-pagan tradition of calling the directions is centering and reassuring for me. I hope that rituals and teachings of the Avalonian tradition will help me ground myself and find my place.

While not extremely familiar with Welsh mythology, the goddesses also seem real to me in ways that Asherah and Shekhinah, and even the Matriarchs and Mothers do not. Blodeuwedd, Arianrod, and Avalon's other goddesses are individuals and have lessons to teach. (I also want to know what Afagdu does after Gwydion takes his blessing, after the land is poisoned, and while his mother spends a year chasing Gwydion.)

I need and deeply desire Jewish studies, but I have postponed my participation in Kohenet, the Hebrew Priestess Institute, because no amount of learning will help me serve as a Kohenet unless I first find both community and Avalon Within. Jhenah calls Avalon a liminal place; being trained in that Welsh place will undoubtedly change my Jewish experience in unexpected ways, but I hope someday to step through Avalon’s doorway to Sarah’s tent, Deborah’s palm tree, or the entrance of the mishkan.

I’m not sure I have the stamina for “the difficult path of inner process work” that Avalon requires; in fact, I have serious doubts. However, I know with certainty that *if* I can face the inner darkness, the Sisterhood of Avalon will transform me in the ways that I hope to be transformed.

2. In what ways do you feel you can contribute to a community of women? 

My two greatest skills may be of minimal use in an online community. I am a listener. It’s something I do better than almost anyone else I know. My listening allows people to speak and also helps them discover things within themselves that they might not have been able to express or even recognize before. I’m also pretty good at leading ritual. It’s only necessary to make “space” for people to participate. A little structure gives people a lot of freedom to express themselves ritually, just as Shabbat restrictions can make a lot of space for the divine presence. I am curious to see whether dialogue and connection is possible in an online community.

I’m a professional tarot reader, so perhaps my participation in the divination group will be a way to give. Volunteering seems a natural part of being held by community; I’m not a politician—if a community identifies a need, I take practical steps to get the work done rather than make speeches or draw attention to myself.

It may be that I will give nothing more than shared belief and participation. My sense of Avalon being real and concrete, of the goddesses being meaningful figures in our lives will support others on this path. It might be comparable to the simple act of moving close enough to a community so that you can walk rather than drive on Shabbat; that gives moral support to others who have also chosen to live that way.

I need community to be my best self. Independence and empowerment require a community. Community gives you the opportunity to give of yourself, (no one is really selfish enough to act just for herself) which is satisfying and helps you recognize your own worth; it gives you the opportunity to increase your strengths.

Honestly, I’m most interested in what I will gain from you. I need the Sisterhood of Avalon because I have no idea how to journey the paths described in Jhenah’s book without guidance from women who have already explored them.

3. What does the SOA motto, "Remembering, Reclaiming, and Renewing," mean to you? 

The Sisterhood of Avalon’s motto says that Avalon’s sisters value their tradition enough to excavate, preserve, and transform it. It instructs us to reach into the past to learn how our ancestors or predecessors understood and interacted with both the world and their culture; it encourages us to explore and live those ways ourselves; and, most importantly, it will teach us to weave those thoughts and beliefs into a tapestry that is vital and invigorating today.

Jhenah says Avalon may never have existed, but I think the study of its myths and the culture that supported those myths is like building a temple where women can become priestesses. We do not need to be victim’s of Avalon’s absence; we are her discoverers and, perhaps, her creators.

Jews were expelled from our place of worship in 70 AD; sixty years later, we were nearly exterminated. We took our trauma and confusion and transformed our memories into a portable culture. We preserved the oral tradition of our culture and our memories of Temple ritual. We turned an image of a destroyed Land, Mother Zion, into a new goddess, Shekhinah; we felt abandoned by god, but envisioned a Mother going into exile with us. No one could have imagined Judaism surviving the destruction. Composing a prayer book, writing down our memories of Temple-era practices, radically changing our culture in response to new situations, and developing a mystical tradition is the Jewish example of the Sisterhood’s motto, “Remembering, Reclaiming, and Renewing.”

Personally, I hope to find wholeness in the Avalonian tradition, a place to encounter her priestesses and her goddesses. I hope to walk through that liminal place into Sarah’s tent with a newfound ability not just to *sense* the Shekhinah or recognize her in our songs or texts, but to actually encounter her.

In Judaism, learning is a conversation within one’s community and within the generations, three thousand years of texts. Each conversation renews the old and builds anew. Little can be gleaned from Torah if you study alone. I hope the same can be said for self-discovery within the Sisterhood of Avalon.

Since each of us may explore a slightly different Avalon within, we can weave our unique and shared experiences into a tapestry. Immersing in that tradition will transform our vision. It seems to me that learning the Welsh language must be a huge part of the path, but I will be focusing on Hebrew. Hopefully those sisters who are transforming themselves with language can share some of their insights with those of us who are not.

I hope that learning with the Sisters of Avalon will help me find my inner priestess and build a mishkan, a dwelling place, for the feminine divine presence. Learning with other women and sharing experiences will help each of us remember, reclaim, and renew the ancient place of the priestesses of Avalon.


Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Who Was That Girl?

I was terrified to watch the video. I cringed when I saw myself on the screen—but it wasn’t me. It was some confidant, young woman. Who was she?

I am not sure what she was talking about in her d’var Torah. It sounded vaguely Buddhist, but I don’t think she’d read much about Buddhism back them. And I remember she was so proud that what she said was all her, that she could identify and express what was inside herself.

What she said was smarter than she knew. If I'd watched that video three years later, would it have helped me get through that difficult time?

mizrachi.org

The day after my conversion, a friend called me and asked, “So what happened?”

I surprised myself by saying, “It was like a wedding.” My answer surprised me because I don’t know anything about weddings and I’ve often wondered why people get married.

After that, I began to notice how frequently the analogy of marriage occurs in Jewish thought. God is married to the Torah, the Sabbath is married to the people of Israel, Shechinah is the partner of God, and even we are partners with God in perfecting the world.

There’s one midrash that I particularly like, probably because it’s a little racy.

The rabbis compared Mt. Sinai to a chuppah, the canopy under which a bride and groom are married. When the Israelites worshipped the golden calf at the foot of the mountain where they were about to enter the covenant with God, it was tantamount to a bride committing the act of adultery under the very chuppah where she is to be married.

So when I learned that my Torah portion included the story of the golden calf, I immediately thought of this midrash. However, as I studied the portion, I became confused. Why do the Rabbis compare idolatry and adultery? And what is wrong with worshipping a molten calf? God is everywhere, but since we can’t truly comprehend that, why can’t we have a symbol to help us focus our attention?

Why is it that the idol we made lead us away from God, while the Torah’s stories about God can lead us toward God? How is an idol different from a story? Either one can only approximate what God truly is.

In most of the Torah, God is not immense or perfect or beyond human comprehension, and yet we know that God must be all those things and more. But, if these stories are all right, why was worshipping the golden calf wrong?

Perhaps it is because we made the calf after we had asked Moses to keep God far from us. We chose to worship a molten calf because we didn’t want to experience God.

But after Moses left, we became afraid, we felt abandoned and we wanted something to cling to. We were afraid because it felt as if God was not with us. It felt as if God’s heart had turned away. Despite everything God had done for us, we still did not trust God.

Recollections of the Sea of Reeds and the thunder at Mt. Sinai were not enough for us and in our fear, our hearts turned away from God. We sought something else to cling to but what we chose to cling to would not have helped us deal with the reality of our fear.

When we are experiencing a powerful emotion, such as fear or pain, we immediately look for something to erase the feeling: more television, more hours at the office, socializing, reading, anything to avoid facing the feeling and the cause of that feeling. But if we can’t face our own suffering, how can we face the suffering of other people and take action to alleviate it? The diversions we seek are merely idols, like the golden calf, they cannot wash away our pain or even bring us a little comfort. They cannot substitute for our souls’ marriage with God.

Unlike the golden calf, the stories in the Torah are like a good marriage because we tend to struggle with them. When God instructs us to commit an act we find reprehensible, we try to find out what God was really trying to tell us. When the story is of God, walking like a person, in Gan Eden, we assume it is an analogy for intimacy with God. God is described in anthropomorphic terms partly because that is the easiest way for humans to understand God. The stories use familiar images to describe mystical things. So I can distinguish a difference between stories of God in the Torah and this idol.

The idol was our own creation. It could not have guided us through the wilderness and it could not have taught us how to live well.

The familiar imagery of the Torah, which often describes God as a person, also teaches us how to behave ethically toward other human beings. Relationship is essential to Judaism. And there is one relationship that Judaism seems to especially emphasize. Perhaps it is the hardest one of all: marriage.

The first commandment God pronounces in the Torah is “Be fruitful and multiply.” Tradition has it that marriage is so important that God braided Eve’s hair before her wedding.

Tamar Frankiel wrote, in The Voice of Sarah, “more than in any other tradition, marriage is the essence of Jewish work in the world. Only in the union between man and woman can we touch with our own natures the process that the whole world is about: to come together, to overcome our separation, to be at one.”

Our relationship with God should mirror our relationships with other people. But what are we supposed to do when our souls’ marriage to God turns rocky, when we feel abandoned by God, when our hearts have turned away from God, and when we are certain that God’s heart has turned away from us?

It may be human nature to run from difficult feelings and to seek distractions, but eventually, it sinks in that idols can’t help us. At that point, all we can do is sit with what we are feeling, experience it fully and get familiar, even comfortable, with it. Then suddenly our perception of reality becomes a little bit clearer. But it takes a very long time to reach that point of increased clarity. And during that time, there is nothing to hold on to.

Luckily, we are always being held. I imagine that the thing holding us is an ark, an ark that is made of the Jewish community, the rituals and the theology of Judaism. Judaism is not something we can cling to. It will not erase our pain, it will not make everything better, but it will hold us, as it has held our people for thousands of years. While we are being held we can get to know our pain or sadness or fear, become comfortable with our feelings and begin to see reality. In time, our hearts will turn back to God and God’s heart will turn back to us.

The Torah is saying that the Israelites should have waited quietly, they should have sat with their fear, they should have let themselves be held by their community and by their new religion. Better still, they could have done what Moses does later in this Torah portion, or as Elijah does in this Haftarah portion: wrestle with God, argue with God. The Israelites could have shouted to God to come back.

When our relationship to God seems to wane, we must make an effort to be reunited with God because we are partners in the covenant. The reality may be that God is always near, but that is not our experience. We can feel abandoned by God, just as we might feel abandoned by a person. Sometimes we draw strength from the depth of a relationship, at other times, we feel disconnected from that same relationship.

For three years, Judaism opened a new universe for me. One day I realized that I would not be alive in any meaningful sense unless I made a commitment to become a Jew. My conversion was the best thing that ever happened to me. I changed, the entire world changed. For more than a year, it seemed that God couldn’t shower enough blessings on me, but this past year was very difficult. And during this crisis my connection to Judaism seemed to be fading. It seemed so unfair that a faith that had meant so much to me, a faith I had sworn to uphold always might become meaningless.

I began to look everywhere for comfort, but nothing helped. Then one Sabbath, after Torah study, someone asked me, “Why did you become a Jew?” I said that I’d never been able to answer that question. I also told her that even though Judaism had brought me so much joy, I was losing my connection to it.

She said to me, “So, the honeymoon is over.” Her comment was like a bolt of lightning. It reminded me of the comparison I had made the day after my conversion. And I realized that if the honeymoon is over, there must still be a marriage. The relationship still existed and I could fight to renew it.

So I yelled at God. Later, I regretted the language I used, but the point is I did turn to God. I trusted that God would hear and care and respond.

Elijah’s words to God in this week’s Haftarah portion are “Anaini Adonai, anaini. Answer me, O Lord, answer me. That this people may know that thou, Lord, art God.”

And God responded, for God is also bound by the covenant between us. God has been gracious to us. Each of us stood at the foot of Mt. Sinai; each of us was invited to enter into that marriage with God. So even if the honeymoon is over, the marriage endures. Sometimes, it’s all joy and, other times, it’s all work, but it is our covenant. So today, I renew my commitment to rely on God for the strength to struggle against idols and to enter more fully into a relationship with God.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Talking to Idols

A few days after my conversion, I came across a statue of Ganesha in a bookstore that I frequented. A wave of bliss washed over me, leaving me overwhelmed. I hastily left the store, unsure of what had just happened.

The same blissfull sensation filled me on my next visit to the bookstore. Unaware of any irony, I whispered to the statue of Ganesh, "I can't stay. I just swore to have no other gods." And so, I stayed away from that store for a very long time.

A decade later, still bearing the scars of rejection from two Jewish communities and feeling utterly lost, I found myself once again in that same bookstore, gazing at a different image of Ganesha. "You wanted to talk before," I whispered desperately, "I'm here now. Please, talk to me." He remained silent, projecting no feeling of connection except a sense of his goodwill.

Many more years have passed, and Ganesha's benevolent feelings toward me remain palpable each time I see an image of him. Yet, I've come to realize that he will never speak to me again. He respects my choice. He saw me at my best self then, and he wants me to be my best self, my Jewish self, again.

By my bed, stands a tiny statue of Ganesha with enormous ears. Each night, I look at it, feeling his enduring goodwill, and I promise that I will strive to be my best self.

And if it seems that I talk to idols, so be it.



Friday, February 19, 2016

T'tzaveh - Priestly Vestments

skyehohmann.photoshelter.com

This week's parasha, T'tzaveh, got me thinking about what a Hebrew priestess could wear to embody her sacred role. I envisioned something other than "dignity and adornment;" instead a garment that would constantly remind her of her purpose—to draw near to the divine presence not only in holy spaces but also in caring for the vulnerable, the grieving, and those in need.

In Shinto, the shimenawa is a rope used to demarcate a sacred area. A simple rope could be a fitting symbol for a priestess to wear. A loose belt, reminiscent of tzitzit, could serve as a tangible reminder of her aspiration to seek and connect with the divine.

Interestingly, ancient Egyptian goddesses were sometimes depicted wearing a belt that doubled as the hieroglyph for "rope." Symbolically, the rope could bind us to the sacred, acting as a tether between us and the divine.

On the Kohenet website, Jill Hammer wrote an enlightening article about a lost letter of the Hebrew alphabet, a letter that resembled a rope. She describes the ghayin as a symbol of what we have missed in our inherited spiritual traditions. Its twisted cord-like shape represents the umbilicus, the concealed truths of our maternal lineage, and the vital connection to the sacred that we must rediscover in every time and place.

Many years ago, in my quest to understand the symbolism of serpents as a representation of the goddess, I eventually made the connection: the serpent's resemblance to an umbilical cord. Looking at an image of a fetus connected by an umbilical cord, we can visualize ourselves floating in the vast expanse of space, oblivious to our origin. The cord would serve as a gentle prompt to remember our source. It's worth noting that the conflation of two words ('crafty' and 'naked') occurred because we lost the letter ghayin.

oddstuffmagazine.com

Unlike the ornate vestments of ancient priests described in the text, our cord would not need to be elaborate. This week's parasha mentions pomegranates and bells adorning the hem of the priest's robe, but our role as contemporary kohanot differs from that of ancient kohanim.

While the idea of incorporating a bell is intriguing (drawing inspiration from the ringing of bells or clapping at a Shinto shrine to capture the attention of the shrine's kami, or even the High Priest wearing a bell upon entering the Holy of Holies), I believe that the priestess's belt should not attract the gaze of others. Instead, it should serve as a personal reminder of her sacred duty and connection to the divine.

Women Weaving in the Temple Complex (templeinstitute.org)

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

They Say He Erased Her Memory

Hecht Museum, Israel
King Josiah, the Deuteronomists, and the Prophets saved our people and our goddess.
 
Thanks in part to them, Asherah was not forgotten. She appears in the Bible, the Zohar and other Kabbalistic texts, not to mention the prayer book. She is a weeping mother of Israel, the Sabbath bride, Torah personified, Mother Zion, “His Shekhina,” and a number of other feminine figures in Jewish tradition. As Shekhinah, she went into exile with us and remained with us. The feminine divine survived in our memories, as did our Land.

In exile, our texts helped us remember our connection to the Land.

In the Land there were bamot, high places where we had worshipped our god. At those high places, we had also erected asherot, pillars symbolizing our goddess, "His Asherah."

Opposition to the worship of Asherah grew, particularly in the monarchy. We were supposed to have no king but god, but eventually a monarchy arose and it needed to centralize power and worship. (Read Judges 19 to learn one story that the monarchy created to justify its existence.) It may have been the monarchy’s scribes who wove various traditions into single text, the first four books of Torah, but it was most certainly King Josiah’s scribes who wrote the fifth book, Deuteronomy, as part of his program of religious and political reforms.

These reforms included banning the high places to centralize worship at the Jerusalem Temple. (The northern kingdom with its temples in Beth El and Dan had been destroyed by Josiah’s time.) Nonetheless there were other Jewish temples, and the bamot with their asherot remained places of worship. The prophet Jeremiah reported that men and children continued to gather wood for fire rituals and women continued to “bake cakes for the Queen of Heaven.”

Although King Josiah had the pillar of Asherah removed from the Jerusalem Temple during his reign, an asherah was repeatedly re-installed in and removed from the First Temple during the reigns of different kings. (The seven-branched lamps in both Temples may have been remnants of her worship.)

After the destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple, Jews in the Land (renamed “Palestina” by the Romans after the Bar Kokhba Revolt) began putting to paper the oral traditions that interpreted Torah. The study of Torah and the expansion of the no-longer-only-oral tradition preserved us during 2,000 years of the galut (exile). If our religion had remained tied solely to the Land, we could not have survived for so long as a people.

King Josiah, I believe, can take some credit for our survival. And because his reforms focused on eliminating goddess worship among our people, he (inadvertently) preserved her name and even some of her rituals.

Raphael Patai, William Dever, and other scholars have written about the Hebrew Goddess. Rabbi and Priestess Jill Hammer excavates our texts to learn more about our goddess and our resurect our priestess traditions. But in some cases, we don’t have to dig deeply at all. A song, composed in the Land in the 16th century, contains many images of the Hebrew goddess: she is the Sabbath Bride, the city of Jerusalem, the people of Israel, Mother Zion, god’s spouse, and Queen. Each time I hear a congregation sing L’cha Dodi on Friday night, I see her entering the synagogue, clothed in light.

Many faces of the divine feminine are found in our tradition because she accompanied us in our exile, but Asherah herself remained in the Land, among the bamot. Josiah and the Deuteronomists gave us monotheism and a textual tradition that helped us survive exile. But we’re home now and I long to meet Asherah in her Land.

Monday, January 4, 2016

Being Jewish is Not a Competition

Being Jewish is not a competition, and yet so many Jews behave as if it is. In addition to our most prevalent attitudes about death, this competitiveness is the least appealing aspect of Judaism. In fact, it's ugly and vicious.

Once, at a seder, someone began sharing an insight about the giving of Torah. Someone else interrupted and dismissed him by proclaiming that Shavuot, not Pesach, is about the giving of Torah and so Pesach was not the time to discuss the giving of Torah. While the second person was right about the focus of the holidays, redemption and covenant go hand in hand. A potentially good teaching was silenced because of another man's angst and need to draw attention to himself and his supposedly greater knowledge.

Perhaps childish one-upmanship occurs in every religious group, but knowledge is highly valued among Jews, so trying to appear more knowledgeable is always a temptation. Part of our ability to survive among other nations has been our dedication to remaining "separate" and "distinct." So we focus on who is Jewish, who is more Jewish, who is most Jewish, and then naturally, on who we should exclude.

It results in unnecessary divisiveness. Take two different lessons of Chanukah:
  • let's not dismiss the assimilated Jews, after all we couldn't have defeated the Greeks without them
  • let's not glorify zealots, after all they became the immoral rulers whose thirst for power handed the Land over to Rome and ultimately caused our exile
For some, the first one seems so obvious that only a fool would need to say it. For others, the second would be deeply offensive. But neither is truly the lesson of Chanukah!

We belong to our people and our Land.

To many Orthodox Jews, it is axiomatic that only a person born to a Jewish mother is a Jew. But when you see an adult gleefully telling a young child that he's not Jewish, you have to wonder if that adult has a heart. What benefit does he (or the Jewish people) accrue for making that child cry? Are adults who do that trying to squash their own insecurity?

The angst about "who is a Jew" annuls people's good sense. I knew an observant Jew who worried that she might not be Jewish enough to find a husband because her father was an Orthodox convert—even though her mother had undeniably been a Jew and both parents had raised her as a Jew. Why such insecurity?

Last month, a stranger commented on a photo I posted to Facebook of my chanukiah. "Isn't that lit backwards?" I explained that it had been lit "forwards" and then turned in the window to observe the mitzvah of publicizing the miracle. Many other Jews would have gone on to abuse him for not knowing the laws of Chanukah. It was enough for me to indicate that I wasn't going to be demeaned by him—but why did I need to respond at all?

Because we are a people and each of us wants to belong to our people.

Sometimes it's an Orthodox Jew and sometimes it's a secular Jew, but eventually you'll hear someone go on a tirade about Reform Judaism being inauthentic. Even a man I considered a mensch, and who should have known better, once told me that it was hard to keep himself from giggling when he heard Reform prayers. Reform is a 700 year old tradition of European Jews trying to find a balance between being free citizens of the societies in which they live and retaining their ancestral traditions. Reform Judaism may, in the long course of Jewish history be as ephemeral as the Hellenistic Judaism practiced by Philo of Alexandria, but it is Jewish and its members are Jews.

Meanwhile, every group of Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem believes it is better than all the others.

We are one people. The first time I stood in Ben Gurion, watching the line of "holders of Israeli" passports, my eyes teared up, seeing faces from every part of the world. Despite centuries of separation, we are, ideally, one people.

None of us can be a Jew alone. While each of us prefers our own small group of Jews, it took all of us to defeat the Greeks, all of us to create the modern state of Israel.

Today, I unintentionally triggered someone's Jewish insecurity. When he responded angrily, I was triggered, too, but avoided trying to one-up him with by pointing out that Jews did, in the past, convert people forcibly (see Idumeans and King Herod) because it was beside the point. His frustration was still so great that he posted, "You are obviously not a Jew."

I cried.

I am certain he knew that his statement would hurt me. And I am certain that it made him feel good about himself.

We are one people. And often, we are really nasty to each other.

Sir, may you have a year of blessings. You are my fellow Jew.


Friday, December 25, 2015

Handmaiden of a Northern Goddess

Loom and Thread by Carl Larsson

How do I reconcile worshiping only HaShem and his Shekhinah with my awareness that other gods are real? I don't. Not "all the gods are one god" and the gods of other tribes are worth talking to.

I've been working with just one exercise in a book by Raven Kaldera and Galina Krasskova. Raven maintains an online shrine dedicated to the gods of his Northern Tradition.

An aspiration this morning took me to Raven's shrine to light a candle to a goddess. Who are Frigg's handmaids, I wondered. The word "permission" drew me and I learned the story of the goddess Lofn. Her story was lost to people until Linda Demissy asked the Handmaidens to share it with her.

It's a good story, not just for star crossed lovers, but for anyone seeking "right love." You should read it here.

This is a prayer Linda wrote for those who seek Lofn's counsel.
I am the child in chains, chafing to be free.
I am the woman wounded, by the wrath of my chosen.
I am the kid expecting a beating, cannot run or fight.
I am the boy of bravery, become a bully to feel strong.

I am the wife beaten to death, wondering why as I die.
I am the heart humiliated, who has no hope of help.
I am the one repeatedly raped, what did I do wrong?
I am the son hiding his bruises, so shame will stay secret.

I am the victim of violence, violated in my trust,
Swollen red, silently screaming “walk away!”
Walk away from anger, walk away from hurt.
Walk away when I would shame my ancestors.

I will not lash out, at my love or myself.
I will cry for my hurt, hug my own scars.
Ghosts of my bullies, to your graves be bound,
I release you now, sink to rise nevermore.

By Hela’s grace, may I be reborn.
By Lofn’s cleansing, I reclaim my heart. 
The forbidden love is love of self. Seeking "right love" means recognizing abusers and not confusing them with friends. At the risk of a cliché, you can't love and care for others unless you first love and care for yourself. 

Before I lit a real candle and the virtual candle at Lofn's shrine, I wrote these words:  

Lofn, permit me and aid me.

Spin the yarn. Dress the loom and place my hands upon it. Teach me to reweave my life with strong threads. Warp and weft. Confidence and competence. Shuttle and shot. Friendship and community. Cross and draft. Priestesshood and service.

Help me discard a veil of shame and silence. Guide me to weave a garment for dancing in vineyards. May it be the colors of gratitude, playfulness, and laughter. May its fringes remind me of my path.

I will offer comfort to the hurt and encourage speech in those who have been silenced. I will name the bullies and sing the praises of those who defeat them.

I will remember you, Lofn, and I will bless the divine presence.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

This Is A Forest

I just returned from the Pacific Northwest, after exploring the possibility of living there. Everyone and everything was wonderful; I could picture myself as part of that community. However, the uniformly gray sky and the constant rain depressed me badly.

Returning to the Southwest made me ecstatic! 

Phoenix's 105 degrees made me laugh. During the early afternoon to middle-of-the-night drive home, I never took my eyes from the sky and horizon. That night, I gasped each time in-cloud lightning made a cloud visible in the black sky. And the first thing I did the next day was take a long hike. 

Just so you can understand my perspective...


This is a forest:

These are clouds:



Monday, July 13, 2015

גִיוֹרֶת

Writing this essay was a required part of my aliyah application. At the time, I resisted writing about this experience, let alone revealing so much of myself to strangers. Now, however,  I'd like to share it.

A certificate of conversion

In the summer of 1994, I visited my parents in Arizona. The public library there had a book called The Way of Splendor by Edward Hoffman. It was about the Hasidic movement in Eastern Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries and was my introduction to the history and culture of the Jewish people—I’d barely been aware that history existed.

After reading it, I wanted to experience a Shabbat service and hear L’cha Dodi one Friday evening. It was several weeks before I entered a shul. On erev Yom Kippur, I visited Temple Beth El in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Moments after the service began, I knew that I had found my home. The prayers “resonated” with me, and Rabbi Berg’s sermon included Hasidic tales that were hopeful and life affirming.

The first Friday night following Yom Kippur, after erev Shabbat services, Rabbi Berg invited me to attend Saturday morning Torah study.

Each week, during services we read the weekly parasha, but during Saturday morning Torah study before services, we studied the Torah line-by-line at our own pace, savoring each word, each idea. My first Shabbat, we were reading about the crossing of the Reed Sea. (Thankfully, I did not say, “Hey, there’s a typo in your bible-- it’s supposed to be the Red Sea.”)

Everyone had thoughts they shared, literary to scientific, psychological and agricultural, spiritual and occasionally Talmudic. From “Wow! Isn’t that beautiful imagery” (“and the ground under his feet… was like the very sky for purity”) to an agricultural explanation as to why one generally does not eat first fruits. There were about twenty of us who attended every week. We found gems, even when we struggled through Leviticus.

I did not miss even a dozen Torah studies during the seven years I attended Temple Beth El (three years before and four years after my conversion.) I loved that Rabbi Berg was the kind of leader who facilitated our experience of the text rather than telling us what to think. He was—and I'm sure he still is—a leader who encouraged us to experience Judaism, not one who laid down any rules about what the experience should be.

Nothing I’d heard about the so-called “Judeo-Christian” tradition seemed to apply to this joyful, life-affirming, intelligent, spiritual community. I enjoyed the words of the prayers and rejoiced seeing the Torah being carried around the shul. I appreciated seeing couples who seemed to be in love with each other. (One woman had made her husband a tallis from the chuppah she had woven for their wedding and, each week, during the closing song of the service, he would reach over and wrap her in it, too.) I adored the community and the welcoming attitudes of the people there.

During those first few months, attracted to the community and fascinated by its learning, I was repeatedly delighted to discover that Judaism was beautiful, kind, open, and so many other good things. There is always hope and it’s possible to do more than merely survive. Rabbi Berg said that we break a glass (to commemorate the Temple) at weddings because “If you remember your greatest sorrow at the time of your greatest joy, you will remember your greatest joy during the time of your greatest sorrow.”

Immediately after that first Shabbat, I read The Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel. (Can you imagine encountering the concept of Shabbos for the first time? I was amazed!) And then I read voraciously: everything Rabbi Berg mentioned in Torah study, many of the books in the temple library, anything I could find in the local, used book stores. (I was disappointed that I never connected with his favorite author, Philip Roth. I still don’t… perhaps because I am completely lacking in the culture of Yiddishkeit?)

I went to shul every Friday night and Saturday morning. I was reading and learning every day of the week.

I also learned about volunteering. There were always plenty of volunteer opportunities available through Temple Beth El. One was at an AIDS hospice. At first, I would only work in the garden. Later I worked in the kitchen area. Although, I found the idea frightening, I eventually began spending a little time with the residents.

I began lighting Shabbat candles right away and gradually added other practices. Lighting Chanukah candles for the first time felt familiar, as if I’d done it hundreds of times before.

There were courses offered through the Jewish community. Each spring and fall, you could choose two out of about eight classes that would be held at one of the local synagogues. They covered Shabbat, history, Kabbalah, music, holidays, prophets, and other topics. Scholars like Danny Matt would share their knowledge with us.

Rabbi Berg brought scholars and musicians to the shul. He led retreats north of San Francisco. Temple Beth El was a community of people deeply engaged in Jewish life.

Community and listening to other people were major elements of my conversion: hearing how people had grown up Jewish in different areas, learning about the Holocaust from people who had escaped as children, but had lost family who had been sent to Poland or Spain (one man had been a child refugee in China during the war), learning about growing up in a Jewish neighborhood in the United States, how one woman’s mother had responded to a doctor’s orders to feed her daughter bacon.

I didn’t know enough to ask the questions I should have. Why did Reform Jews say “Gut Shabbos” and call the temple a shul? I didn’t have the awareness to ask more about the Shoah and I still don’t understand one friend’s feelings about seemingly innocent words he said, as a small child, to his parents shortly after Krystallnacht.

There were Pesach dinners with Marion Dolgoff’s family and with the families of Frank and Ingrid Jonas, the afternoon Yom Kippur walk I took with Bobbie Freedman each year, and Rosh HaShanah dinners with Bobbie Freedman and her friends, studying The Book of Jonah from a different perspective each Yom Kippur with Rabbi Berg and others between services, Chanukah with Laine and Joel Schipper, conversations with Evelyn Holzman, women’s gatherings, the sukkah at the shul. (My deep regret, years later, when I realized how I had failed to be supportive of Marion Dolgoff.)

Ingrid and Frank became like family to me. Many times, I cried with gratitude, driving home on Friday nights, because of the joy and love I felt with them. And I was able to express my love. Each year, at seder and Thanksgiving dinner, I saw Frank's children, and they began to feel like family, too.

I went to services and Torah study every week for a long time before I seriously considered conversion. Then, I began meeting with Rabbi Berg to ask questions and learn more about a number of topics.

I had taken basic, prayerbook Hebrew and other classes, attended Shabbat and holiday services, and been invited to people’s homes for holidays. Rabbi Berg had me memorize certain passages, for example: Shema/V’ahavta, Kaddish, Ma’ariv Aravim, and Kiddush.

He discussed holidays with me: the significance of Purim and how to approach Yom Kippur. I didn’t truly understand Purim until just a few years ago. Sometimes I think that I am still converting to Judaism. Obviously, there will always be more information to learn, but understanding deepens over time, too.

I had read several books about the Jewish holidays before Rabbi Berg and I began formal study. The Jewish Way by Irving Greenberg (his perspective and Rabbi Berg’s are a little different) and Keeping Passover by Ira Steingroot are still references for me. Rabbi Berg recommended a number of books to help me increase my understanding of the High Holy Days, including Shmuel Yosef Agnon’s Days of Awe.

He wanted me to be familiar with the philosophy and origins of the Reform movement, but also wanted me to be aware of some traditional practices and he recommended the experience of keeping kosher. (Among many other books, I read How to Run a Traditional Jewish Household by Blu Greenberg, Kashrut by Samuel Dresner, Total Immersion by Rivkah Slonim, and The Rise of Reform Judaism by Gunther Plaut.)

In community and Torah study, I had felt the presence of god, but was unable to describe that experience in words. When I mentioned this, Rabbi Berg said words aren’t always necessary; we each have a private image of god, just as we each have a private image of revelation at Sinai.

Rabbi Berg emphasized the importance of people-hood and, having felt the support and love of the community, I began to understand that, too. We discussed, among many other books, Jews, God, and History by Max Dimant. Over the years, he had recommended historical fiction, like The Last of the Just by Andre Schwarz-Bart, as well as books such as Night by Eli Wiesel, Altneuland by Theodor Herzel, and The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt.

My love of Judaism, my appreciation of Torah and community, gave me a new perspective on life in general, and also on my own life. They gave me confidence and hope. Since god gave us Torah, each of us has value.

My childhood had not prepared me for adulthood or the outside world: we had moved about every six months, my mother was unwell, my father was angry. (Later I realized that what looked like rage, was in fact, constant fear.) They didn’t like me to leave the house or have friends, but they didn’t interact with me except when they were angry, at me or at each other. I had trouble speaking, and I was terrified of people. Social skills eluded me; I didn’t even understand them.

My time at Temple Beth El changed me. Like me, the people there enjoyed books and ideas—they weren't bad things!—but I had never met people who listened respectfully to each other (they listened even to me, even when I had nothing really worth saying) and they truly communicated: shared ideas and explored ideas together.

I was welcomed immediately. In many dreams that I had then, Rabbi Berg and his wife, Bonnie, appeared as my parents. On some level, I had found a new family and was experiencing childhood again. I had found a community and, against all probability, they loved me.

I became able to speak and eventually to articulate (sometimes) my thoughts. Several friends, who became b’not mitzvah as adults, insisted I must have the experience. So in 2000, three years after my conversion, I did. I gave a d’var Torah that had no objective value, but what mattered to me was that it really expressed my thoughts and feelings about Ki Tisa and about being Jewish. Being able to understand and express myself for the first time felt like a miraculous gift. It was possible because I was surrounded by the love and support of my community.

One of the most important things I learned from the community and especially from Rabbi Berg cannot be boiled down to something that fits on a syllabus: how to approach death and mourning.

Rabbi Berg's example of serious attention and compassion toward mourners, and the culture he facilitated of attending every funeral and shiva had an impact on me (and my expectations) that I didn't fully recognize then. Many people from the Torah study group and many from the general congregation went to every funeral and every shiva. We cooked. We spent time with the mourners. Rabbi Berg ensured there was a minyan at the home every day.

At first, I cooked to calm my own feelings about death and I spent shivas in the mourners’ kitchens, helping. Gradually, I began interacting with friends and distant relatives of the deceased; to those most affected, I said little beyond “Sorry for your loss.” But I watched how mourners behaved and how people I admired responded to them; I learned things that I remembered later.

Perhaps, of Rabbi Berg's many gifts as a rabbi, his greatest is caring for the bereaved and for their departed, of knowing its importance. I admired his wife because her brain and heart worked together and I guess that’s what Rabbi Berg was able to do, too.

Once, I went with everyone else to attend a funeral that Rabbi Berg led for a man who had not been a member of Temple Beth El. Earlier that day, I had happened to be in the front office briefly while he met the man’s family in his office. I heard him encourage the family's recollections and, even in the brief moment I was there, I recognized the seriousness he gave their words and unspoken feelings. Later, he gave a eulogy that the family clearly found meaningful. I am grateful that I “had” to go to that funeral. The memory reminds me of how I learned the importance of comforting the bereaved; it reminds me of being surrounded by people with love and caring in their hearts, in their minds, and on their lips.

Of all the wonderful things about Judaism, I think that particular mitzvah is one of the most important and I continue to try to learn how to do that with something of the enormous care and attention that I saw Rabbi Berg offer.

There is a book called Jewish Views of the Afterlife by Simcha Paull Raphael. It describes a great number of Jewish beliefs about the afterlife, but it was people who taught me what was important in our response to death: supporting the people who are facing it.

Bill Fein was a Torah study regular who had studied for his conversion with Rabbi Berg. His father had been Jewish, but his mother had raised him in a fundamentalist church in the South; he had wanted to leave and become Jewish since he was very young. His enthusiasm for Judaism had always filled me with joy. (He expressed his enthusiasm in many ways, down to a rodeo-style belt buckle engraved with a Magen David.) Bill Fein was proud to call himself a convert.

Bill was hit by a car while walking to shul during a visit to Scotland. We were all thinking of him and waiting for news of him while his wife flew to Scotland. He died there, far away from his community, but I think if he could have chosen a manner of death, dying on the way to shul would have been okay with him.

Although he and I had not been close, his passing affected me profoundly. We all missed his presence in our community. Conversations people had about his life made me realize how deep my feelings about Judaism were. Evelyn Holzman said that he died happy with his life, his marriage, his child, his work, and happy with being Jewish; a moment later, I realized that I wouldn’t really be alive in any meaningful way unless I made the commitment to become Jewish.

After I told Rabbi Berg that I was ready to begin formal study, he said that he had been a proponent of my conversion for a long time. My formal conversion took place in September 1997. The beit din included people who had become my friends. There was an indescribable moment in the mikvah, and when I emerged from the water, I was a Jew.

At Rosh Hashanah services, a few days after my conversion, someone thanked me for converting. I was dumbfounded. I had converted for me. I have done nothing for the Jewish people except want to belong.

Once I believed that being Jewish meant preserving Torah, but now I think that being Jewish is seeing the world differently than other people do. It’s about actions you take because you share Jewish values. It means caring about the continued existence of the Jewish people. It’s about contributing to and being revitalized by community. And, for me, it’s about going home, to Israel.

Meyerbeer's Hallelujah