Monday, November 25, 2013

Notes from the First Annual Jewish Intentional Communities Conference


Pearlstone Center
Reisterstown, MD 
November 14-17, 2013

Some already have land and are looking for like-minded folks to help build a community on it.  Some coordinate short-term intentional living programs for Jewish youth.  Some dream of settling down in a multi-family home, or a Jewish cohousing moshav in the U.S.  Some lived on communal farms in the ‘60s and ‘70s, and are here to pass on their wisdom and plan for their retirement.  Some Israelis, whose travel was sponsored by the Jewish Agency for Israel, are here to explain the inner workings of their urban kibbutz or desert moshav, so we Americans can get inspired and follow their lead.

Everyone I met at the First Annual Jewish Intentional Communities Conference at the Pearlstone Center in Reisterstown, MD was looking to connect.  They were not here just to connect for a weekend, but to critique American society’s tendency toward individuality and isolation, and to build a culture that better fosters lasting relationships and sharing of resources, allows children to grow up close with their neighbors, and promotes ecological and social sustainability. Further, they are looking to do this in a Jewish way, which means something different for each person.  

The most inspiring session I attended was the panel of four individuals’ life journeys through intentional communities.  Shoshana Shamberg told her coming of age story of becoming religiously observance, living at Emunah Farm in the early ‘70s, going down to The Farm in Tennessee, which helped to legitimize homebirth and midwifery in the U.S., to give birth as a young, single mom.  Joel Kachinsky spoke about having nothing to lose and his belief in the imminent collapse of the economic order as crucial drivers for founding The Farm in Summerton, TN in 1972.  Rachael Cohen, year-round resident and staff at Isabella Freedman Retreat Center in Connecticut, described feeling isolated growing up in suburbia, her ongoing search for like-minded folks to establish a rural Jewish community for young families, and her Facebook discussion forum, New Jewish Communities.  James Grant-Rosenhead traveled from his urban Kibbutz Mishol to share his story of growing up in the Habonim Dror socialist Zionist youth movement in England, making aliyah, and establishing what is now the largest urban kibbutz in Israel.

The most energizing sessions conveyed individuals’ personal stories of creating successful communities or explained the nuts and bolts of governance structures that work for communal living.  Examples of perhaps lesser-known successful models were cohousing, a collaborative, urban/suburban collection of private residences with extensive common facilities, and commitment to active participation, with 136 communities already established in the U.S.; the School of Living’s community land trust model, where a non-profit organization holds a piece of land as a trust and leases use of the land to different intentional communities; the Israeli urban kibbutz, where residents live in the same building, capital is held in common, and the kibbutz is mission-driven, with its location and non-profit organization oriented around running social justice initiatives in the community.

I don’t doubt that a few beautiful communities will ultimately come together as a result of this initiative, co-sponsored by the Pearlstone Center, Hazon, and the Isabella Freedman Retreat Center. But what will sustain these communities in the long-term?  What about Joel Kachinsky’s mantra that we can only build new communities with total commitment driven by personal necessity?  It seems to me that, here in the U.S., there are too many temptations of stability, wealth, and career-climbing, and pieces of alternative lifestyles are too easily available.  A recent conversation at the Mountains beyond Minyans session at the annual Dorot Fellows in Israel Alumni retreat earlier this month helped me recognize the phenomenon.  A participant there criticized the group for being too complacent.  To paraphrase, he said, “There will never be a good time. It will never be easy.  You might have to de-prioritize your career.  For this to happen, you have to make it happen.  No one is going to do it for you.”  That’s spot on.  For my single, career-focused friends, the thought of moving out of the city is impossible.  What will the commute be like?  Where will they find a mate?  That’s just the point.  Creating an intentional community will never happen unless you move it to the top of your list, de-prioritize everything else, and just do it. 

Then there was the elephant in the room.  Israel.  We already have land staked out for Jewish intentional community, with umpteen communities of every stripe, supported by the state, already thriving there.  While I do believe it’s important to build strong Jewish communities all over the world, I can’t myself imagine doing so outside of Israel.  I was raised to assimilate as an American, the thought being that whatever helped my refugee grandparents thrive would ostensibly help me to thrive here as well.  Although I have developed my Jewish identity thoroughly, I’m still uncomfortable wearing it publicly. As an American, I want to feel that I am woven cleanly into the whole fabric of our diverse society.  I cringe when I perceive that others see me as an insular, self-ghettoized Jew.  In Israel, living in a small moshav or collective is not strange. There, I could live within a small, Jewish community and still be fully part of the fabric of the greater society.  This is what I’m saying: 1. Building a network of Jewish intentional communities in North America says something strong about the American Jewish community’s relationship to Israel.  2. Conditions in Israel are much riper for building small, resilient, Jewish intentional communities, and there’s something about attempting the zionist project in America that doesn’t sit right with me.

I heard other critiques as well.  I heard skepticism about participants taking action.  I heard concern that these new endeavors would attract the loneliest and poorest among us.  I heard a lack of knowledge of communities that had continued successfully for more than one or two generations.  In my mind, I kept returning to the story of my friend’s parents.  When they got pregnant in the early ‘80s, they bought a house in North Philadelphia with two other couples and raised their kids together for a bunch of years.  That’s the kind of intentional community that seems easy to execute and will fulfill the need of the moment.  I can easily imagine doing that wherever I happen to live when I get pregnant.  Simple, economical, no cultural shift necessary. 

All told, I haven’t felt this energized since I was part of the climate organizing movement in high school; what divine elixir!  So many of my peers are looking to build meaning by living at a slower pace, knowing their neighbors, and restoring places of urban or ecological decay.  Many of us reject the institution of marriage or of the nuclear family or of suburban living, and we need our communities to function as extended family.  Many of us have taken on greater religious observance in the quest to achieve these deep-rooted needs, and need likeminded friends with whom to eat, pray, and raise children.

Does this add up to a movement?  I don’t know and I don’t think it matters.  It is already happening one small community at a time.  It’s happening faster when there’s funding from the big Jewish institutions.  It’s happening better when the community has a specific mission.  But some trends never change.  If you build it, they will come.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Do the meditation!

Lately I've been finding myself in the unlikely position of meditation teacher.  Although I'm only just getting back into my meditation practice now that I need it more than ever, I have done a good amount of exploring over the years, and some might benefit from this experience.  These are some meditation resources that I would recommend for friends in the NY area, all at cross-section of Insight Meditation (Vipassana, from a Buddhist tradition) and Judaism.

In high school I discovered Allan Ginsberg's Do the Meditation (1984).  (This video is 2 min. 36 sec. long.)  I recommend watching it -- to remind you that while meditation may seem serious, it's a technique that teaches us to see things for what they are, which may bring insight into the importance of silliness!


Then I started reading.  You may have come upon Rav Aryeh Kaplan's Jewish Meditation: A Practical Guide or techniques associated with the mystics of kabbalah and the Zohar.  Like tradition says, I would agree that these techniques are not for beginners.  In general, a meditation practice should be begun with the instruction and guidance of an experienced teacher.  Like any spiritual practice, you will probably want to understand the lineage of your teacher, and how his/her teaching fits into the spectrum of traditions and how it developed.  You may notice that many highly acclaimed meditation teachers are Jewish.  It's something to think about.  Here's the well-known meditation teacher Sylvia Boorstein on the question, "How can a Jew do mindfulness meditation?"

Then I found Rabbi Alan Lew's z''l books -- One God Clapping, Be Still and Get Going: A Jewish Meditation Practice for Real Life, This is Real and You Are Completely Unprepared.  These are excellent, not necessarily for sit-through reads, but to read excepts for slow absorption.  I had the privilege to attend a course he taught at the San Francisco JCC, and I met a few rough characters there, who had struggled with drug addiction.  Rabbi Lew was teaching something that was helping to transform lives.

There is, of course, Rebbe Nachman's tradition of hitbodedut, going out to quiet nature for self-reflection and talking to Gd.  Rabbi James Jacobson-Maisels is very learned in chasidic texts as well as the Vipassana mindfulness tradition, and he weaves them together beautifully.  You can find his blog here, or his initiatives, the Awakened Heart Project or Or HaLev Center for Jewish Spirituality and Meditation.  I love listening to his podcasts while I'm cooking for Shabbat -- when I can't follow a text-heavy class, but I have a moment when I want some inspiration.

In New York, there is a daily meditation space at the Upper West Side JCC called Makom.  In Brooklyn there is the Jewish Meditation Center of Brooklyn, although I haven't made it to either one yet myself.  These institutions both go to lengths to avoid being associated with a particular color, brand, or movement of Jewish tradition.  There is also something special about this openness, and also about this simplicity.  Different stripes of Jews coming together to sit in silence.  It does seem innovative for such a noisy tribe!


I've told some of you about my first silent 10-day retreat, which I did through the Spirit Rock Insight Meditation Center.  You may want to check out their website, where they have Meditation 101 Instructions.

A related meditation practice is called metta, or lovingkindness meditation.  This is not simply focusing on the abstract concept of lovingkindness but is usually a 45-minute guided instruction working towards forgiveness and directing loving energy to people you've known as well as strangers.  This can help some people make powerful progress towards forgiveness.  You can find metta podcasts on the Spirit Rock website, or you may try this site. (Gil Fronsdal is an excellent teacher; I'm not familiar with the others.)

These are some of the best resources I've found, but there's no substitute for sitting in a room with others seeking quiet and a teacher to guide the way.




Saturday, January 5, 2013

Living large by traveling light

To my dear friend about to embark on a Costa Rica adventure.  Pura vida, mi amor!

Clothing: you know what to bring! but make sure as much as possible is synthetic, especially socks, for quick-drying, and of course, a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses!

Miscellaneous
Siddur (or whatever that one book will be)
Grip gloves & socks for yoga
Disposable camera
Music listening device
Knife tool (preferably with wine screw, screwdriver, and tweezers)
Hand sanitizer
Sunblock
First aid kit: Iodine tablets, disinfectant towelettes, pain killer, gauze, Ace bandage, band-aids, medical tape, antibiotic ointment, matches, condoms, melatonin or valerian for bus rides
Emergency antibiotics (I highly doubt you'll need these, but if you can get an MD to write you a prescription, it can be helpful in case you get bad food poisoning and you're alone)
Journal
Pens
Phone card

Personal Finance 
Passport
Photocopies of passport, credit cards, etc.
Credit/debit card
List of important IDs and numbers
Cash
Traveler's Checks
Traveler's Insurance

Things I have learned to do along the way:

1. Wrap my valuables in dirty underwear.

2. When traveling as a passenger in a vehicle and I feel unsafe, visualize the vehicle glowing with white, protective light.

3. Always appear to know where I'm going even when I don't i.e. walk confidently.

4. Trust my instincts, about people, places, and things.

           With all your life experience and preparation, you will thrive in the sunshine! 
                                 Enjoy gorgeous places, organisms, and flavors!