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Judaism

How kosher sutras can change the way we pray

Combining Torah and yoga can stretch our ideas about Jewish prayer

July 21, 2013 11:06
Olivia Marcus was batmitzvah at the Wohl Synagogue, JFS, Kenton (Photo: Hayley Samuelson)

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

Several years into becoming shomer Shabbat, Sabbath observant, I found Jewish practice to be profound but frustrating. I had been learning a basic yoga practice and it began unsettling my now-comfortable understanding of the Jewish milieu.

The basic problem was that although Judaism is deep and far-ranging, there seemed an obvious gap in practice. Our spiritual experience was all centred around the head rather than the heart, and there was no obvious way to pray with your body, short of a little walking back and forth (three steps only), knee-bending, bowing and doing the occasional circle-shuffle around the bimah.

Yoga is a powerful approach to balancing body and soul. Deriving from the Sanksrit word yog, meaning “to yoke/connect/join”, it is about bringing harmony between our physicality and spirit, a kind of active version of the Hebrew word for oneness, echad. Seen as a form of echad-in-action, the physical language of yoga can fill in what appears missing in Jewish practice.

Except it is not missing. I began searching for clues within Torah teachings, as my yeshivah rabbis had taught me the importance of unearthing good source material to back up any argument. A complete system seemed hidden in broad daylight: references to physical meditation were littered throughout the liturgy.

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