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Meditation for the Jewish Mind

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July 11, 2018 13:17
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ByRuSilove Lanesman, RuSilove Lanesman

2 min read

Judaism is a religion that becomes a way of life, a tangible routine. So often, the stresses of the week get in the way; preparing food becomes a hassle; guests become a burden. We have forgotten the meditation that lies in the practice of Shabbat and how this feeling allows us to continue for the next six days of mitzvot.

Each week we go through a cycle of serving each other through a series of man-to-man encounters and each week we also get the opportunity to counterbalance that with a ritual that is a raw encounter with ourselves.

I am a child of the 1990s, an architect surrounded by the prophecies of gluten-free eating and religion as a “lifestyle”. My opinion has been formed by a journey from my father’s knee in synagogue to being a qualified yoga teacher, intermittently abandoning my religion altogether in search of “something greater”.

As a 23-year-old, one autumn I found myself in Dharamsala, the home of the Dalai Lama —but instead of being in a yoga studio I was in a synagogue for first-night Rosh Hashanah. The synagogue was more packed than any yoga class I had been to. We were all returning to the spirituality we were lucky enough to be born into without even knowing it.