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Nathalie Martinek PhD's avatar

What a great reminder of the beauty and quirks of Judaism beyond politics and polarity. The first point reminded me of my brief study of the Zohar with the wife of one of its translators (in Melbourne, Australia). Reading a few of the passages in Aramaic it became clear in that moment that these words are tools to invoke forces that took me on an inner journey beyond words. Our teacher looked like she was in bliss as she read out the passages, possessing secret knowledge we were yet to attain. Psychedelic indeed. It took hours to unpack a few sentences and I would leave each session trying to remember what we'd discussed on my drive home. As a family with a heritage of kabbalists and soferim, the Zohar awakened dormant knowledge and affected me like no other text I've ever encountered. I'm hopeful that all the current rhetoric about Jews, Zionism etc will get boring enough that people will be open to learn the more interesting, if not trippy aspects of its mystical roots.

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Caleb's avatar

As a geometry, trigonometry, and calculus teacher, I study “different types of angles in their intricate hierarchies.” I never knew this had anything to do with the Jewish faith! No wonder we are overrepresented among excellent mathematicians!

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