Co-Director and Rabbi
OU-JLIC
To learn the language of intention is to translate mystical Kabbalistic practices into practical, inner-life guidance for your own spiritual experience.
Access ResourceAssociate Rabbi
B'nai Jeshurun
To view the siddur as a home for the soul is to use "sticky notes of cleaving" to notice your inner experience and grow through gentle awareness.
Access ResourceMadrich Ruchani
JCDS, Boston's Jewish Community Day School
To play with "Praying Cards" is to build a personal, spiritual, and emotional connection to the most essential words in the siddur.
Access ResourceRosh Tefillah and Artist-in-Residence
Hebrew College
To listen deeply to the words of prayer is to "enter the word" through embodied engagement, making the liturgy a formative spiritual discipline.
Access ResourceFreelance educator and hazzan; editor of Sidduré Or
To embrace Girsa deYankuta is to prioritize multivocal listening and group chanting to restore depth and lived continuity to prayer traditions.
Access ResourceChildren and Family Educator
Chochmat HaLev Synagogue
To use the practice of Hitnakdut is to engage in spiritual preparation that transforms prayer leadership into a shared practice of grounded presence.
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