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Essential reading for people interested in the Jewish healing, spirituality and spiritual direction movements, this groundbreaking volume explores the Jewish tradition for comfort in times of illness and Judaism's perspectives on the inevitable suffering with which we live. Pushing the boundaries of Jewish knowledge, scholars, teachers, artists and activists examine the aspects of our mortality and the important distinctions between curing and healing. Topics discussed include: the importance of the individual; health and healing among the mystics; hope and the Hebrew Bible; from disability to enablement; overcoming stigma; Jewish bioethics; and more. Drawing from literature, personal experience, and the foundational texts of Judaism, these celebrated thinkers show us that healing is an idea that can both soften us so that we are open to inspiration as well as toughen us??????like good scar tissue??????in order to live with the consequences of being human.
Acknowledgments v
Introduction: The Intersection of Judaism and Health
Healing and Curing
William Cutter
A Physician's Reflection on the Jewish Healing Movement
Howard Silverman
1. The Importance of the Individual in Jewish Thought and Writing
Choose Life: American Jews and the Quest for Healing
Arnold Eisen
Literature and the Tragic Vision
William Cutter
2. Health and Healing among the Mystics
Mystical Sources of the Healing Movement
Arthur Green
Wisdom, Balance, Healing: Reflections on Mind and Body in an Early Hasidic Text
Eitan P. Fishbane
3. Hope and the Hebrew Bible
Reading the Bible as a Healing Text
Tamara Eskenazi
"Call Me Bitterness": Individual Responses to Despair
Adriane Leveen
4. From Disability to Enablement
Judaism and the Disabled: The Need for a Copernican Revolution
Elliot Dorff
Misheberach and the ADA: A Response to Elliot Dorff
Tamara M. Green
5. Overcoming Stigma
Spoiled Identity and the Search for Holiness: Stigma, Death, and the Jewish Community
David I. Shulman
Those Who Turn Away Their Faces: Tzaraat and Stigma
Rachel Adler
The New Man, Illness, and Healing
Albert J. Winn
6. Jewish Bioethics in Story and Law
An Expanded Approach to Jewish Bioethics: A Liberal/Aggadic Approach
Peter Knobel
The Narrative and the Normative: The Value of Stories for Jewish Ethics
Louis E. Newman
Conclusion: Looking Back, Moving Forward
The History of Invention: Doctors, Medicine, and Jewish Culture
David B. Ruderman
Notes
Essential reading for people interested in the Jewish healing, spirituality and spiritual direction movements, this groundbreaking volume explores the Jewish tradition for comfort in times of illness and Judaism's perspectives on the inevitable suffering with which we live. Pushing the boundaries of Jewish knowledge, scholars, teachers, artists and activists examine the aspects of our mortality and the important distinctions between curing and healing. Topics discussed include: the importance of the individual; health and healing among the mystics; hope and the Hebrew Bible; from disability to enablement; overcoming stigma; Jewish bioethics; and more. Drawing from literature, personal experience, and the foundational texts of Judaism, these celebrated thinkers show us that healing is an idea that can both soften us so that we are open to inspiration as well as toughen us??????like good scar tissue??????in order to live with the consequences of being human.
Acknowledgments v
Introduction: The Intersection of Judaism and Health
Healing and Curing
William Cutter
A Physician's Reflection on the Jewish Healing Movement
Howard Silverman
1. The Importance of the Individual in Jewish Thought and Writing
Choose Life: American Jews and the Quest for Healing
Arnold Eisen
Literature and the Tragic Vision
William Cutter
2. Health and Healing among the Mystics
Mystical Sources of the Healing Movement
Arthur Green
Wisdom, Balance, Healing: Reflections on Mind and Body in an Early Hasidic Text
Eitan P. Fishbane
3. Hope and the Hebrew Bible
Reading the Bible as a Healing Text
Tamara Eskenazi
"Call Me Bitterness": Individual Responses to Despair
Adriane Leveen
4. From Disability to Enablement
Judaism and the Disabled: The Need for a Copernican Revolution
Elliot Dorff
Misheberach and the ADA: A Response to Elliot Dorff
Tamara M. Green
5. Overcoming Stigma
Spoiled Identity and the Search for Holiness: Stigma, Death, and the Jewish Community
David I. Shulman
Those Who Turn Away Their Faces: Tzaraat and Stigma
Rachel Adler
The New Man, Illness, and Healing
Albert J. Winn
6. Jewish Bioethics in Story and Law
An Expanded Approach to Jewish Bioethics: A Liberal/Aggadic Approach
Peter Knobel
The Narrative and the Normative: The Value of Stories for Jewish Ethics
Louis E. Newman
Conclusion: Looking Back, Moving Forward
The History of Invention: Doctors, Medicine, and Jewish Culture
David B. Ruderman
Notes
Acknowledgments v
Introduction: The Intersection of Judaism and Health
Healing and Curing
William Cutter
A Physician's Reflection on the Jewish Healing Movement
Howard Silverman
1. The Importance of the Individual in Jewish Thought and
Writing
Choose Life: American Jews and the Quest for Healing
Arnold Eisen
Literature and the Tragic Vision
William Cutter
2. Health and Healing among the Mystics
Mystical Sources of the Healing Movement
Arthur Green
Wisdom, Balance, Healing: Reflections on Mind and Body in an Early
Hasidic Text
Eitan P. Fishbane
3. Hope and the Hebrew Bible
Reading the Bible as a Healing Text
Tamara Eskenazi
"Call Me Bitterness": Individual Responses to Despair
Adriane Leveen
4. From Disability to Enablement
Judaism and the Disabled: The Need for a Copernican Revolution
Elliot Dorff
Misheberach and the ADA: A Response to Elliot Dorff
Tamara M. Green
5. Overcoming Stigma
Spoiled Identity and the Search for Holiness: Stigma, Death, and
the Jewish Community
David I. Shulman
Those Who Turn Away Their Faces: Tzaraat and Stigma
Rachel Adler
The New Man, Illness, and Healing
Albert J. Winn
6. Jewish Bioethics in Story and Law
An Expanded Approach to Jewish Bioethics: A Liberal/Aggadic
Approach
Peter Knobel
The Narrative and the Normative: The Value of Stories for Jewish
Ethics
Louis E. Newman
Conclusion: Looking Back, Moving Forward
The History of Invention: Doctors, Medicine, and Jewish Culture
David B. Ruderman
Notes
Rabbi William Cutter, PhD, is author of Midrash and Medicine:
Healing Body and Soul in the Jewish Interpretive Tradition, and is
editor of Healing and the Jewish Imagination: Spiritual
Perspectives on Judaism and Health. He has published widely on
health and healing. He is former director of the Kalsman Institute
on Judaism and professor of modern Hebrew literature and the
Steinberg Professor of Human Relations at Hebrew Union
College–Jewish Institute of Religion.
Rachel Adler, PhD, is professor of Modern Jewish Thought and
Feminist Studies
at Hebrew Union College Los Angeles. She is the author of
Engendering Judaism:
An Inclusive Theology and Ethics and many articles on feminist
approaches to
Jewish theology and Halacha.
Arnold Eisen, PhD, is the Daniel E. Koshland Professor of Jewish
Culture and
Religion at Stanford University and chancellor-elect of the Jewish
Theological
Seminary of America. He is the author of numerous books and
articles in the area
of modern Jewish thought and practice and has long worked with
synagogues and
federations around the country in the effort to revitalize Jewish
communities and
find new meaning for Jewish texts and observances. Currently he is
at work on a
book entitled Rethinking Zionism. Eisen is married to Adriane
Leveen, another
contributor to this volume, and is the father of Shulie (twenty)
and Nathaniel
(seventeen).
Tamara Eskenazi, PhD, is professor of Bible at Hebrew Union
College–Jewish
Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. She is a reknowned popular
lecturer and publishes
her scholarly work in numerous journals and periodicals. She is
currently
working on a women's commentary to the Torah and has conducted some
of her
most important research on the Books of Ezra and Nehemiah.
Eitan Fishbane, PhD, a frequent scholar-in-residence and guest
speaker at congregations across North America, is assistant
professor of Jewish thought at The Jewish Theological Seminary;
author of As Light Before Dawn: The Inner World of a Medieval
Kabbalist (Stanford University Press); and co-editor of Jewish
Mysticism and the Spiritual Life: Classical Texts, Contemporary
Reflections (Jewish Lights).
Eitan Fishbane is available to speak on the following topics:
Shabbat
Prayer
Spirituality
God and Theology
Mysticism
Ethics
Torah
Arthur Green, PhD, is recognized as one of the world's preeminent
authorities on Jewish thought and spirituality. He is the Irving
Brudnick professor of philosophy and religion at Hebrew College and
rector of the Rabbinical School, which he founded in 2004.
Professor emeritus at Brandeis University, he also taught at the
University of Pennsylvania and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical
College, where he served as dean and president.
Dr. Green is author of several books including Ehyeh: A Kabbalah
for Tomorrow; Seek My Face: A Jewish Mystical Theology; Your Word
Is Fire: The Hasidic Masters on Contemplative Prayer; and Tormented
Master: The Life and Spiritual Quest of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav
(all Jewish Lights). He is also author of Radical Judaism (Yale
University Press) and co-editor of Speaking Torah: Spiritual
Teachings from around the Maggid's Table. He is long associated
with the Havurah movement and a neo-Hasidic approach to
Judaism.
Tamara M. Green, PhD, was a founding member of the Jewish Healing
Center
and has written extensively about "being sick and being Jewish." In
her secular
life, she is professor of Classics and chair of the Department of
Classical and
Oriental Studies at Hunter College.
Rabbi Peter Knobel, PhD, is rabbi of Temple Beth Emet—the Free
Synagogue in
Evanston, Illinois, and holds a PhD in Bible from Yale University.
He has chaired
numerous major commissions of the Reform Movement and is prominent
as both
a rabbinic leader and a scholar. He is especially interested in
applying Jewish ethical
principles to the life of the Jewish community. Most recently he
chaired the
liturgy committee of the Reform Movement as it produced its newest
Siddur,
Mishkan Tefillah.
Adriane Leveen, MSW, PhD, has taught at Hebrew Union
College–Jewish
Institute of Religion in Los Angeles, and at Stanford University as
a senior lecturer
in the Hebrew Bible in the Department of Religious Studies. She
will soon be
teaching at HUC-JIR in New York. Dr. Leveen has published in
Prooftexts, and
the Journal for the Study of the Old Testament and is a contributor
to a forthcoming
volume, Women's Torah Commentary, sponsored by Women of Reform
Judaism. Dr. Leveen’s book Memory and Tradition in the Book of
Numbers will
be published by Cambridge University Press.
Dr. Louis E. Newman is the John M. and Elizabeth W. Musser
Professor of Religious Studies at Carleton College in Northfield,
Minnesota. He is author of Past Imperatives: Studies in the History
and Theory of Jewish Ethics; An Introduction to Jewish Ethics; and
the LifeLights™ pastoral care booklet Doing Teshuvah: Undoing
Mistakes, Repairing Relationships and Finding Inner Peace (Jewish
Lights). Dr. Newman is available for scholar-in-residence weekends
and repentance workshops.
Dr. Louis Newman is available to speak on the following topics:
Repentance: It's Easier Than You Think, It's Harder Than You
Imagine
Curses and Stumbling-blocks: How to Relate to the Vulnerable among
Us
Judaism and Politics: Is Torah Liberal or Conservative?
Whistle-blowing: Am I My Brother's (and Sister's) Keeper?
The Narrative and the Normative: The Value of Stories for Jewish
Ethics
Rabbi David B. Ruderman, PhD, is the Joseph Meyerhoff Professor of
Modern
Jewish History and Ella Darivoff Director of the Center for
Advanced Judaic
Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He has taught at the
University of
Maryland (1974–1983) and Yale University (1983–1994). He is the
author of
many books and articles, and recently won the Koret Award for the
best book in
Jewish History in 2001, Jewish Enlightenment in an English Key. He
is the immediate
past president of the American Academy for Jewish Research. In
2001, the
National Foundation for Jewish Culture honored him with its
lifetime achievement
award for his work in Jewish history.
David I. Schulman, JD, is a pioneer in the field of HIV law and
policy and in the Jewish health and healing movement. In 1981 he
was one of the founders of the Jewish Hospice Commission of Los
Angeles. In 1986 he became the world's first government AIDS
discrimination attorney. In the late 1980s he served on Reform
Judaism’s national AIDS Committee. He is an advisor to the Kalsman
Institute on Judaism and Health, and is the supervising attorney of
the AIDS/HIV Discrimination Unit in the Los Angeles City Attorney’s
Office. B.A., Stanford 1973, J.D., U.C.L.A. School of Law 1978.
Dr. Howard Silverman, MD, MS, is a clinical professor of family and
community medicine at the University of Arizona College of
Medicine–Phoenix and a clinical professor of biomedical informatics
at Arizona State University, and formerly served as the education
director of the Program in Integrative Medicine at the University
of Arizona College of Medicine. With five years experience in
designing distance education programs for physicians and medical
students, he is the Initiative's project leader. Through Temple
Chai of Scottsdale, Arizona’s Shalom Center, Dr. Silverman
developed two programs for Jewish health care professionals to help
them integrate their clinical and spiritual lives. The program
resulted in increased Jewish communal participation, increased job
satisfaction, and reduced feelings of burnout by participants.
Albert J. Winn's (MA) photographs are in the permanent collections
of the Library of Congress, the Jewish Museum, the Museum of Fine
Arts (Houston), and the International Center of Photography, and he
has shown nationally and internationally. He has received
fellowships from the NEA/WestAF and the Memorial Foundation for
Jewish Culture and his work has been published in the Jewish
Quarterly Review, Zeek, ZYZZYVA, and on FreshYarn.com. He lives in
Los Angeles.
Rabbi Elliott N. Dorff, PhD, is the author of many important books,
including The Way Into Tikkun Olam (Repairing the World), a
finalist for the National Jewish Book Award, and The Jewish
Approach to Repairing the World (Tikkun Olam): A Brief Introduction
for Christians. An active voice in contemporary interfaith
dialogue, he is Rector and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at
the American Jewish University (formerly the University of
Judaism), and chair of the Academy of Judaic, Christian and Muslim
Studies.
Rabbi Elliot N. Dorff, PhD, is available to speak on the following
topics:
• Jewish Medical Ethics
• Conservative Judaism
• Jewish and American Law
• Finding God in Prayer
• A Jewish Approach to Poverty
"[This] stellar community of seekers and teachers explores both
text and context, giving voice to a range of healing insights and
approaches, deeply Jewish and yet wonderfully diverse."
—Rabbi Simkha Y. Weintraub, LCSW, rabbinic director, National
Center for Jewish Healing, Jewish Board of Family and Children's
Services; editor, Healing of Soul, Healing of Body: Spiritual
Leaders Unfold the Strength & Solace in Psalms
“What a gift! The depth and originality of these articles
invite—indeed, challenge—readers to reframe their spiritual
perspective and questions. To read this book is to expand one’s own
religious imagination.”
—Linda Thal, EdD, codirector, Yedidya Center for Jewish Spiritual
Direction
“A cohesive work that functions both as academic source material
for the professional as well as resource material for the
interested layperson. When we feel as though our internal world is
crumbling, this book has the potential to help us find our
grounding.”
—Debbie Friedman, singer and songwriter
“A remarkable collection by some of the best minds of our
generation. Provocative, thoughtful, deeply infused with critical
and personal reflections, reveals a maturity of thought and
religious insight that is highly readable and often moving for the
layperson, professional, scholar, rabbi and all who work with
patients and others in need of healing.”
—Rabbi Lewis M. Barth, PhD, professor of midrash and related
literature and immediate past dean, Hebrew Union College–Jewish
Institute of Religion
“Humane, personal and richly intellectual … for those of us who are
searching for Jewish wisdom about healing when we are not sure of
cure, about hope when we know our lives are all too finite.”
—Rabbi Rachel Cowan, executive director, Institute for Jewish
Spirituality
"[This] stellar community of seekers and teachers explores both text and context, giving voice to a range of healing insights and approaches, deeply Jewish and yet wonderfully diverse." -Rabbi Simkha Y. Weintraub, LCSW, rabbinic director, National Center for Jewish Healing, Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services; editor, Healing of Soul, Healing of Body: Spiritual Leaders Unfold the Strength & Solace in Psalms "What a gift! The depth and originality of these articles invite-indeed, challenge-readers to reframe their spiritual perspective and questions. To read this book is to expand one's own religious imagination." -Linda Thal, EdD, codirector, Yedidya Center for Jewish Spiritual Direction "A cohesive work that functions both as academic source material for the professional as well as resource material for the interested layperson. When we feel as though our internal world is crumbling, this book has the potential to help us find our grounding." -Debbie Friedman, singer and songwriter "A remarkable collection by some of the best minds of our generation. Provocative, thoughtful, deeply infused with critical and personal reflections, reveals a maturity of thought and religious insight that is highly readable and often moving for the layperson, professional, scholar, rabbi and all who work with patients and others in need of healing." -Rabbi Lewis M. Barth, PhD, professor of midrash and related literature and immediate past dean, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion "Humane, personal and richly intellectual ... for those of us who are searching for Jewish wisdom about healing when we are not sure of cure, about hope when we know our lives are all too finite." -Rabbi Rachel Cowan, executive director, Institute for Jewish Spirituality
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