Jewish Meditation for Everyone Institute for Jewish Spirituality
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- Religion & Spirituality
Pause in the midst of your busy day to renew your body, heart, mind and spirit with a Jewishly-framed mindfulness meditation from the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. In each episode, hosted by Rabbi Marc Margolius, an expert Jewish meditation instructor guides you through a brief teaching and meditation for relaxing your body, reconnecting with your authentic self, and connecting you with deep Jewish wisdom. Opening and closing music: “Baby Bird Niggun,” by Aly Halpert, used with permission.
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Cultivating Compassion on Yom HaShoah
This episode features a teaching and meditation by Rabba Mira Neshama Weil which she offered on Yom HaShoah vehaGevurah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. It includes the traditional prayer for the deceased, El Malei Rachamim – God, full of Compassion. In the meditation, Rabba Mira invites us into the challenging spiritual practice of cultivating compassion for those with whom we may disagree, based on the teaching in the weekly Torah portion to avoid hating others in our heart, and instead loving others as ourselves. In these especially contentious days, it is a difficult but essential practice for keeping our hearts open and maintaining our humanity in the face of enmity.
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Sitting at the Front Lines, with Love and Strength
This episode of our podcast features a teaching and meditation by Rabbi Sara Brandes of The Awakened Body. It's a meditation for the second week of the Omer, the period between Passover and Shavuot. In this second week of the Omer, the spiritual theme is Gevurah -- Might or Strength. In these especially fraught times Rabbi Brandes invites us to situate ourselves at the "front lines" of conflict, and to notice our ability to hold both loving kindness and strength, to integrate softness and flexibility with power and resolve. It's an especially powerful practice for our time.
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A Case of Mistaken Identity
This episode of our podcast features a teaching and meditation by Rabbi Sam Feinsmith of the IJS Core Faculty. It's the last in a series of four meditations on the theme of "From Constriction to Expanse," a series intended to help us prepare inwardly for Passover. Rabbi Feinsmith reminds us that we are usually suffering from a case of mistaken identity. We erroneously understand our constructed self-identity, generated by our ego, as our true self. But the ingrained narrowness of our ego, which seeks to protect, cherish, and justify itself, inflicts suffering on ourselves and the world -- just like Pharaoh in the Exodus narrative. Whereas our deepest, truest self emerges from that which is timeless, ever-present, and infinitely spacious. On Pesach, we move from the constriction of the false self, and move towards the expansive freedom of our essential, true self -- which emerges, and is never separate from, Timeless Presence.
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Know Thyself
This episode of our podcast features a teaching and meditation by Rabbi Sam Feinsmith of the IJS Core Faculty. It's the first in a series of four meditations on the theme of "From Constriction to Expanse," a series intended to help us prepare inwardly for Passover. The Jewish mystical tradition teaches that beyond the tyranny and constriction of the ego lies our true nature: a spiritual core or essence that is innately compassionate, wise, connected, and spacious. In Hasidic teachings in particular, the journey of discovering or recognizing this inner essence is understood as a kind of internal Exodus that transports us from servitude to freedom. In this meditation, Rabbi Feinsmith draws on Hasidic wisdom to remind us that we can experience freedom in any moment, simply by noticing that we are not synonymous with or bound by our thoughts and feelings. We can taste freedom simply by remembering our essence as human beings created in the Divine Image.
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Breaking Open, Birthing Liberation
This episode of our podcast features a teaching and meditation by Rabba Dr. Mira Neshama Weil, of Neshimah in Israel. She notes that just like the experience of childbirth, all new beginnings and liberation often require of us blood, sweat, tears, and brokenness. She asks: What might be born out of the heartbreak so many of us feel these days? What destructive patterns are being shattered right now? What might break open within ourselves that might give birth to new possibilities? In this meditation, Rabba Weil asks us to sit with this powerful question, as we move towards Passover, the season of rebirth and liberation: "If something could break open within me, what would it be?"
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Seeing the World Anew
This episode of our podcast features a teaching and meditation by Rabbi Daniel Raphael Silverstein of Applied Jewish Spirituality. It's a teaching he offered just as Rosh Hodesh Nisan, the new month of Nisan, was arriving in Israel. The appearance of the first sliver of the New Moon of Nisan — the first month of the year for the Jewish people — is an especially auspicious moment of renewal. Rabbi Silverstein invites each of us to grow in awareness of the freshness, the newness of each breath, of each moment of our lives, and to see them as brimming with possibility. In these fraught times, it is a practice that can help us nurture our capacity for hope, and our ability to chart a new course in the days, weeks, and months ahead. We hope you find it meaningful and helpful.