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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

One Shabbat can be life-transforming

Any experience of keeping Shabbat can have a transformative effect, argues Rabbi Yoni Birnbaum, ahead of Shabbat UK

October 19, 2017 12:54
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3 min read

Next week, thousands of Jews around the country will celebrate Shabbat UK, the British version of the annual global initiative designed to encourage greater awareness and observance of Shabbat. Shabbat UK has seen remarkable success over the past few years, tapping into a deeply entrenched love for one of the most traditional of all Jewish experiences.

But a recurring challenge faced by this particular initiative is the question of whether encouraging people to keep Shabbat once a year actually has any long-term benefit. Is the whole thing simply a religious gimmick, just another part of the contemporary “experience”culture? Does the effect last beyond the day itself?

Fascinatingly, there are substantial scientific grounds to argue that it does. In his bestselling book, The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business, Charles Duhigg describes the science behind habit formation, and explores the possibility of changing deeply ingrained habits.

Central to this, he says, is the importance of “keystone habits”, which he defines as those that can have a transformative effect because of their correlation with other good habits.