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Judaism

If only our synagogues were more like spas

Rabbi Laibl Wolf talks about his kabbalistically-inspired ideas of holistic Judaism

June 21, 2012 13:02
Rabbi Laibl Wolf

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

4 min read

When Rabbi Laibl Wolf was younger, he used to drop into an ashram from time to time. Not that he ever thought of giving up davening for yoga: he simply wanted to know why so many young Jews had fled the suburban Judaism of their childhood to seek spiritual gratification elsewhere.

He was convinced there was a way to reach them if only he could find the right approach. The result was a unique career as a peripatetic teacher and writer who marries the psychological insights of Jewish mystical teachings to the contemporary literature of personal growth and well-being — a kind of Chasidic Deepak Chopra, if you like.

His first book, Practical Kabbalah, published in 1999, offered a course of meditation designed to achieve greater emotional harmony. His new publication, Kavana Mindfulness, is a set of self-help CDs which similarly draw on kabbalistic and Chasidic ideas as a way to retrain the mind. “I teach that you can change anything about yourself,” he said. “You are not a slave to your genes or your formative childhood experiences.”

He was born in 1947 in Poland to parents who survived the Holocaust. When he was two, they moved to Melbourne: his father was a Radomsker Chasid, but as there were no Radomsker Chasidim in Australia, the family instead moved into the orbit of Lubavitch. Rabbi Wolf enrolled in yeshivah but also gained a law degree and a master’s in psychology.