The body is an integral part of our spiritual practice. Over the course of our lives, emotions and memories enter our body as feelings and sensations. Tefillah involves many powerful dynamics that we can explore through the physicality of the body: holding on and letting go, brokenness and wholeness, and activity both communal and individual. The Movement Minyan uses the dynamics of tefillah to explore what the body can teach us about returning to self, to others and to God.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
1. Alone and Together
Moving the Minyan to the Desert
Adina and I discussed the exciting opportunities for challenging the Movement Minyan to explore new horizons by facilitating two sessions at the Burning Man festival. When designing these sessions, we couldn't know who we were designing them for, but could assume they would bring a wider range of familiarity with Judaism than our regular "venue", Hebrew College. Through sharing and reflecting on some of our experiences in workshops there, and of the space and energy of the festival, generally, some themes that could be particularly engaging to explore with people on "the playa" emerged. We noticed that some of the themes we'd already explored (of "togetherness" or unity and alone-ness or separation) resonated most deeply in this discussion, so decided that it would be powerful to revisit two sessions we had already done and think about how to make them deliciously immediate and accessible experiences in a context radically different from Hebrew College.
Principle #10: Immediacy
We decided two of the richest sessions to harvest material from and prepare for the desert were the
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