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Description

This is ’’Pathways of Teshuvah, Part 1 - Identifying the Separation: Judaism's land-return.’’  This recording is part 1 of 3-part discussion with breakthrough academic, Dr. Pesach Chananiah, and youth mentor / gardener / war veteran, Mr. Marcus Kar, on reconnecting to Nature for sacred communion and emotional wellbeing. In this segment, host Chris Searles shares a synopsis of Dr.  Chananiah’s primary points on the impacts of the Exiles on Judaism’s disconnection from Nature, and Mr. Kar relates his own experience, seeking to be a vessel for positive change.

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PROGRAM

0:00  Welcome & Intro  

2:30 Part I: Identifying the Separation from Nature: Judaism’s land-return

   2:50 Temples were metaphors for homelands 

   3:30 Exiles were environmentally-harsh (from the Fertile Crescent to the barren desert)


4:25 Dr. Chananiah 

   4:50 Professional disclaimers, backstory, search for identity, field work

   7:15 Teshuvah: ’’to return’’


8:45 Mr. Kar 

   9:35 Self-acceptance, identity, feelings 

   11:30 Being a vessel, not an expert, for positive change


12:10 The Separation from Nature

   12:30 Benstein quote 

   13:00 Rev. Korngold quote  


13:00 Dr. Chananiah: quick chronologies of the Exile

   13:15 the Temple   

   15:00 from Rites to Teachings

   16:15 Laws > Connection (to the lands,  other life, and Earth) 

   17:30 Rabbi Nachman’s hitbodedut


19:00 The Divine IN Nature? 

20:00 Dr. Chananiah: on “Diveykut“ and hugging, wrapping & “cleaving“ to the Divine  

   21:00 Nomads’ literal connections: 

   e.g. Abraham goes to the teacher tree

   e.g. Moses and the Burning Bush

 
23:00 Could I, a modern person, also experience Divinity in the wilderness?  


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#Teshuvah

#hitbodedut

#diveykut

#lechlecha