Thursday, November 20, 2008

WISDOM sponsors Rabbi Brad Hirschfield at the Jewish Center's Book Fair

WISDOM was one of the co-sponsors of the Sunday evening, November 16th ,2009 Jewish Community Center Book Fair presentation by interfaith activist Rabbi Brad Hirschfield, author of You Don't Have to Be Wrong for Me to Be Right. WISDOM held a Pre-Glow in the former Milk and Honey Restaurant and about 40 WISDOM interfaith supporters nibbled on Middle Eastern appetizers, veggies, fruit and brownies while chatting amongst themselves.

Following the Pre-Glow Imam Salie made some very passionate remarks about reaching out to include other religions to increase respect and understanding, and then introduced Rabbi Brad Hirschfield. The Rabbi spoke for an hour to a mesmerized crowd of people about how he has reached across boundaries, not to dilute those boundaries or differences, but to love that particularity and the full human experience. He stressed how we all need to heal polarizations, and to turn faith from generating hatred to being part of the solution. He remarked that what's so crucial is not the things we say to each other, but the things that we don't say.

What a wonderful and inspirational interfaith evening!! Please see some of the photos below that were taken that evening!!

Gail Katz
WISDOM President
















Tuesday, November 11, 2008

WISDOM learns about three Eastern Faiths

On Sunday, November 9th, WISDOM held an educational day about three Eastern faith traditions - Hinduism, Sikhism and Jainism. We began our day at the Bharatiya Temple in Troy with Padma Kuppa instructing us about the basics of Hinduism as we sat in the beautiful and holy prayer hall. Padma was surrounded by some of the youth of the temple who helped her explain the tenets of the Hindu faith. The WISDOM participants dined on an Indian vegetarian lunch with the members of the Temple, and listened to the priest, Brahmasri V. Janaki Rama Sastry, give a lecture on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Murthi Pratishta. We then journeyed to Plymouth Township to the Sikh Gurdwara Sahib. Raman Singh and Supreet Singh gave us a personal view of the Sikh holy book, the Guru Granth Sahib and a tour of the temple. The powerpoint was very clear and informative, and we all felt so welcome and comfortable in the Gurdwara. We were treated to Samosas and other goodies before we continued on our way. We ended our day at the Jain Temple in Farmington Hills. We thank both Bhavna and her husband for being such gracious hosts, accompanying us to view the 24 tirthankaras, answering our myriad of questions, and showing us a very informative powerpoint about Jainism. The Jain vow of "Ahimsa," non-violence, gave us all pause for reflection on our daily lives and the state of the world. Thank you Padma, Raman, Supreet and Bhavna for all of your hard work, time and energy. My thanks also go to the programming committee for their support of this wonderful day. For all of you who made this journey with us, I thank you for taking time out of your busy weekend to learn about three Eastern faiths which have a great presence in Metro Detroit, to widen your worldviews, and to help make our community a place of greater respect and understanding. Please take a few moments to view some of the pictures that were taken at this terrific WISDOM event.

Gail Katz WISDOM President












































































Monday, October 13, 2008

Jewish Holiday of Succot

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

I would like to share with you an explanation of Succot, written by Todd Mendel, president of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Metro Detroit.

At sundown tonight,Monday, October 13th, the Jewish holiday of Succot begins. This is a holiday that Jews observe not only for its rituals and spirituality, but also for its social justice message that links the Jewish community to the world at large. A main feature of the holiday is to build a Succah. This is the structure that Jews lived in several thousand years ago while they wandered the desert for 40 years. During that time period, the Jews left slavery in Egypt (celebrated by the holiday of Passover), received the Torah at Mount Sinai (celebrated by the holiday of Shavous) and then entered the land of Israel. The structures that you may see around town or in someone’s backyard are these Succahs. Jews eat most meals in the Succah for the duration of the eight day holiday. Some Jews even sleep in them. The rules and regulations for building a Succah are quite extensive and have ensured for millennia that these temporary structures are very much like the original structures. Even today, they continue to serve the same spiritual purpose as they always have by bringing Jewish families and the community together to spend time with and appreciate each other. Special prayers are said in the synagogue during the holiday, and it is also required to shake a Lulav and Esrog. A Lulav is the spine of a palm branch, with some smaller myrtle and willow tree branches attached to it with a holder. An Esrog is a fantastic smelling citrus fruit that is somewhat similar to a lemon. The Hebrew bible specifically mentions that these items are to be used during Succot, and numerous reasons have been asserted over thousands of years as to why these items were specifically chosen.

There is one more special observance on the day following the last day of Succot. It is called Simchat Torah. On that day, there is great celebration in the Jewish Community. Each week during the year, a difference chapter of the five books of Moses is read and studied in the synagogue. They are read in order, starting with “In the beginning, God created…” and the last one is just after Moses dies and the Jews are to go into the land of Israel – the Promised Land. On Simchat Torah, when the chapters are all finished, the Jewish community around the world starts reading the Torah over and goes back to the beginning for another year of reading and studying these texts. This is one more set of traditions and holidays that has maintained the cohesiveness of the Jewish people and that has helped us survive throughout the ages.

The holiday of Succot also leads us to focus on the importance of shelter and housing, our mandate to welcome others into our homes, the environment and the exigencies of nature. It is a reminder that the Jewish people’s pursuit of social justice is never complete. Metro Detroit’s Jewish community is profoundly committed to fulfilling that responsibility. Our social service agencies, such as Jewish Family Service and JVS, provide many lifesaving and life-enhancing services for those in need in both the Jewish and Non-Jewish communities. Requests for service from those agencies have increased dramatically in recent months due to worsening economic conditions, and the agencies’ response has been nothing short of heroic. The Jewish Community Relations Council is working in coalition with other ethnic communities to preserve and grow the flow of federal funds supporting those and other agencies’ service.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Interfaith Thanksgiving Celebration

The 22nd Annual Interfaith Thanksgiving Celebration
From Every Tribe, Race and Nation:
We, the People

AN INTERFAITH CELEBRATION

Sponsored by the major faith and cultural communities of Metro-Detroit

Wednesday,
November 26, 2008
7:30 PM

Westminster Presbyterian
17567 Hubbell St.
Detroit, MI 48107

Featuring:

• The MOSAIC Youth Theater

• Prayers, readings and
meditations representing 8
different faith traditions

• .Hindu Dance

• Music by Gesu Parish, Roman Catholic choir

A free will offering will be gathered for the work of the MOSAIC Youth Theater.

For more information, call: Westminister Presbyterian, Phone 313-341-2697

Directions to the the Church
From the Lodge Freeway North or South
take the 7 Mile Rd. exit. Turn
WEST onto 7 Mile Rd. Drive to the first stoplight, which is Hubbell Street.
TURN LEFT (south) onto Hubbell. Travel 5 blocks and look for Westminster
Church on your right. Park in the north or west parking lots.

From the Southfield Freeway North
take the Southfield Freeway to the
McNichols Rd. exit. TURN RIGHT (east) and travel 5 stoplights (including the
6 Mile-Southfield freeway intersection). TURN LEFT (north) onto Hubbell
Street, drive past the church and TURN LEFT into the church parking lot.

From the Southfield Freeway South
take the 7 Mile Rd. exit. TURN LEFT
across the freeway onto 7 Mile Rd. Travel to Hubbell Street. TURN RIGHT
(south), and travel 5 blocks until you see the church on the right.

Address: 17567 Hubbell Street at West Outer Drive.
Phone: 313.341.2697 Ext: 200

Saturday, September 27, 2008

November 9th WISDOM hosts journeys to three Eastern Religions

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

WISDOM is proud to announce our next Educational Day about three Eastern Faiths – Sikhism, Hinduism, and Jainism called “Sacred Spaces/Eastern Faiths”on Sunday, November 9th from 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM (lunch included) for a $25.00 charge.

We are very excited about this wonderful day of learning. Please mark your calendars, register, and let’s all come together as women of many faith traditions to increase respect and understanding in Metro Detroit!! A maximum of 75 people for this event, so register early.

Gail Katz
WISDOM President

Sacred Spaces/Eastern Faiths
Join WISDOM
Sunday, November 9th from 11:00AM – 6:00 PM
Learn about the faiths of our neighbors!!

Tour a Hindu Temple, Sikh Gurdwara & a Jain Temple

Bharatiya Temple of Metropolitan Detroit in Troy
Gurdwara Sahib - Hidden Falls in Plymouth
Jain Society of Greater Detroit in Farmington Hills

Get Answers to Basic Questions


What does the house of worship look like?
Who is the founder of the faith?
What are the scriptures?
What are some core beliefs?
What are the life rituals and customs of the faith?

Increase Your Knowledge

A basic history of the faith community in the world & in America.
A question and answer session along with a tour of the premises.
An opportunity to be part of a prayer service/religious event
Take-home materials for further reference.

Directions from House of Worship to House of Worship
November 9th, 2008 WISDOM Event


Driving Directions Link:

<http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&saddr=Bharatiya+Temple,+Troy,+MI&daddr=Gurdwara+Sahib,+Plymouth+Twp.+MI+to:Jain+Temple,+Farmington+Hills,+MI&hl=en&geocode=&mra=ls&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=41.224889,93.164063&ie=UTF8&z=11>

Start address: Bharatiya Temple 6850 N Adams Rd Troy, MI 48098 End address: Jain Temple 29250 W 12 Mile Rd Farmington Hills, MI 48334

Start at: Bharatiya Temple 6850 N Adams Rd Troy, MI 48098

1. Head south on N Adams Rd toward Repton Ln - 0.9 mi

2. Turn right at E Square Lake Rd - 0.1 mi

3. Turn right to merge onto I-75 S toward Detroit - 12.7 mi

4. Take exit 61 to merge onto I-696 W toward Lansing - 16.4 mi

5. Take the exit toward I-275 S/I-96 E - 0.8 mi

6. Keep left at the fork, follow signs for Toledo/I-96 E/Detroit and merge onto I-275 S/I-96 E - 6.6 mi

7. Take the exit on the left onto I-96 E toward Detroit - 1.5 mi

8. Take exit 173 toward Levan Rd/Newburgh Rd - 0.3 mi

9. Merge onto Schoolcraft Rd - 52 ft

10. Slight left toward Schoolcraft Rd - 371 ft

11. Turn left at Schoolcraft Rd - 0.5 mi

12. Continue straight to stay on Schoolcraft Rd - 1.0 mi Arrive at: Gurdwara Sahib 40600 Schoolcraft Rd Plymouth, MI 48170

13. Head northwest on Schoolcraft Rd toward N Haggerty Rd - 0.1 mi

14. Turn right at N Haggerty Rd - 1.9 mi

15. Turn right at 6 Mile Rd - 0.5 mi

16. Take the ramp onto I-275 N/I-96 W - 4.1 mi

17. Take exit 165 to merge onto I-696 E toward Port Huron - 4.8 mi

18. Take exit 5 for Orchard Lake Rd - 0.4 mi

19. Turn left at Orchard Lake Rd (signs for Orchard Lake) - 0.3 mi

20. Turn right at W 12 Mile Rd - 1.2 mi Arrive at: Jain Temple 29250 W 12 Mile Rd Farmington Hills, MI 48334




SACRED SPACES/EASTERN FAITHS
WISDOM EVENT


REGISTRATION FORM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9TH
11:00 AM – 6:00 PM

Cost $25.00 to cover lunch and expenses
­­
Name: ________________________________________________­­­_

Address: ______________________________________________­­_

City: ___________________________________________________

State, Zip: _______________________________________________

Telephone: Home __________________________________________

Work __________________________________________________

Cell ___________________________________________________

E-mail Address: __________________________________________

Faith Tradition __________________________________________

Please complete the form and send with your $25.00 check by November 5th to:


WISDOM P.O. Box 525 Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48303

Questions? Call Gail Katz, WISDOM President
248-978-6664
Or e-mail gailkatz@comcast.net



Sacred Spaces/Eastern Faiths
Tour a Hindu Temple, Sikh Gurdwara & a Jain Temple
with WISDOM on Sunday, November 9th 11:00 AM – 6:00 PM

Outline of The Tours


The first House of Worship (HOW) is the Bharatiya Temple of Metro-Detroit:
6850 N Adams Road, Troy, MI 48098 (Enter from South Blvd because of the construction)


We will start our tour here at 11 a.m., and leave to the next HOW after a light vegetarian lunch.

The second House of Worship is the Gurdwara Sahib - Hidden Falls:
40600 Schoolcraft Rd, Plymouth Township, MI 48170


We will start our tour here at 2:30 p.m. and leave to the next HOW after this segment.

The third House of Worship is the Jain Society of Greater Detroit:
29278 W. 12 Mile Road, Farmington Hills, MI 48334


We will start our tour here at 4:30 and expect to conclude the day by 6 p.m.



What to Wear & What to Do
People are usually dressed modestly, and will have showered before coming. Please dress appropriately so that you can comfortably and with decency sit on the carpeted floor in the Prayer Hall. Those who are unable to sit on the floor will be provided folding chairs in the Prayer Hall at the Hindu Temple.

All visitors entering the Prayer Halls will have to remove their shoes and place them in the shoe racks provided. At the Gurdwara, you will be asked to cover your head. Scarves will be provided or you can bring you own.

Strictly No Smoking is allowed on the premises. Visitors cannot enter the HOW while under the influence of Alcohol or Drugs.

What to Expect
Answers to basic questions – who is the founder, what are the scriptures, life rituals and customs of the faith, central figures, a basic history of the faith community both in the world and in the American context – will be provided. There will be a question and answer session along with a tour of the premises. Participants may have the opportunity to observe or participate in a prayer service or another religious event. Take-home materials will be provided for further reference.






November 16th WISDOM sponsors speaker at the Jewish Community Center Book Fair

Dear WISDOM Sisters:



This is a reminder of the upcoming WISDOM sponsored Jewish Community Center’s Book Fair event featuring interfaith activist Rabbi Brad Hirschfield on November 16th at 8:15 PM. Rabbi Hirschfield’s book is entitled You Don’t Have to Be Wrong, for Me to Be Right. Rabbi Hirschfield will be introduced by Imam Achmat Salie from the Muslim Unity Center in Bloomfield Hills. The address of the Jewish Community Center is 6600 W. Maple Road West Bloomfield 48322. The Jewish Community Center is located at the intersection of Maple and Drake Roads. The phone number at the JCC is 248-661-1000. This event is free and open to the public.



Along with WISDOM, the other co-sponsors of this event are Pathways to Peace Foundation, the American Jewish Committee, and the Michigan Roundtable for Diversity and Inclusion. Rabbi Hirschfield seeks to build bridges among people of different faiths – and those with no faith at all. He is devoted to teaching inclusiveness, celebrating diversity, and delivering a message of acceptance. His book provides a pragmatic path to peace, understanding, and hope that appeals to the common wisdom of all religions. Rabbi Hirschfield addresses:



- the ways faith has many faces

- how justice can coexist with forgiveness and mercy

- how unity does not necessitate uniformity

- the ways we can learn to disagree without disconnecting.



At last year’s book fair WISDOM sponsored the three authors of The Faith Club. We hope that this year’s interfaith presentation at the Jewish Community Center’s Book Fair will be as well attended by our interfaith community!! (Last year’s event attracted over 600 people!!) Please mark your calendar for a wonderful, stimulating interfaith evening.



Gail Katz

WISDOM President



Rabbi Brad Hirschfield
Author of:
You Don’t Have to Be Wrong for Me to Be Right
“A wise and important story, engagingly told. I hope everyone, from the most
piously committed to the most militantly atheist, reads it and absorbs its
lessons.” – Rabbi Harold S. Kushner
“Brad Hirschfield brings a unique understanding – forged in years of theological
study and personal interreligious dialogues – of where so many great faiths have
gone wrong…” – Joseph Telushkin
Orthodox Rabbi, and former activist in the West Bank, Rabbi Hirschfield has
a bright outlook on life and diversity. He shares his personal experiences
and applies them to Jewish text, and the knowledge he communicates is
appropriate for those of all religions. You Don’t Have to be Wrong for Me to
be Right ultimately provides a realistic approach to peace, harmony and
acceptance.
Rabbi Hirschfield was listed in Newsweek as one
of America’s Top 50 Rabbis. Currently, he is
President of The National Jewish Center for
Learning and Leadership (CLAL).
Sunday, November 16, 2008 ● 8:15 p.m.
Free of charge
Co-sponsored By:
Pathways to Peace Foundation, American Jewish Committee, WISDOM, Muslim Unity Center, and SAFE For All Seasons

Friday, September 19, 2008

Stories of Forgiveness and Upcoming Jewish Holidays

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

I am forwarding a request to you from a Free Press Journalist by the name of Cassandra Spratling. She is working on an article about the power of forgiveness tied to a new garden of forgiveness being opened at the Dominican Center for Religious Development in Detroit.
In addition to that garden, she will be writing about a couple creating a park in Highland Park so kids have a safe place to play—part of their forgiveness of a man who killed their 2-year-old son in a hit and run.
She is looking for other examples of expressions of forgiveness or personal stories that demonstrate the power of forgiveness.

Since the garden is in Detroit and the playground will be in Highland Park, she especially needs to find people or examples in Oakland or Macomb county. If you can help Cassandra with her article for the Free Press, please reply to me at wisdom@interfaithwisdom.org with your contact information and I will forward it on to her. Thanks!!

While we are talking about forgiveness, I would like to mention that the Jewish holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are fast approaching. Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement is centered around forgiveness. I would like to wish our Jewish Sisters a Happy and Healthy New Year (the Jewish New Year!!). Please read on for more information.

Gail Katz
WISDOM President


Rosh Hashanah, the first Jewish holiday of the year, begins at sundown on Monday, September 29th and ends at sundown on Wednesday, October 1st. Rosh Hashanah literally means “head of the year” and is New Year’s Day for the Jewish people. Rosh Hashanah commemorates the day when God created Adam and Eve. At this time God judges everyone and weighs their good deeds, or mitzvot, next to their sins. Thus, Rosh Hashanah is also called the Day of Judgment. If you have a superabundance of good deeds, you will immediately be inscribed in God’s Book of Life and Blessing. If you have way too many sins, and you are wicked, you will be inscribed in the Book for Death and Misfortune. Most people, however, are not in either of these extremes. So God gives people an extra ten days to improve their lives by committing to the Ten Commandments, and by asking their fellow human beings for forgiveness for hurtful words that may have been said, or hurtful acts that may have been committed during the year. Jews are supposed to be mindful of making peace and reconciliation.These ten days of repentance end on Yom Kippur, which begins at sundown on Wednesday, October 8th and ends at sundown on Thursday, October 9th. This repentance must be accompanied by a commitment to change. Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement, the day when God’s written decree for each Jewish person for the coming year is about to be sealed. This day is supposed to be spent fasting, in prayer and meditation, in confession of sin, and in reconciliation with God and with his/her fellow man and woman.

Yom Kippur is the conclusion of the 10 days of repentance that began with Rosh Hashanah, and the time when God will inscribe you in the Book of Life and Blessing (or not, as the case may be). But it also has a story from the Bible (Torah) connected with it that gives it special meaning. When the Jews were brought out of Egypt, they made a golden calf and worshipped it. This was a horrible sin against God. Moses begged God for 40 days and 40 nights until he could obtain His forgiveness. The day that God forgave the Jews for this major sin (the 10th of Tishrei on the Jewish calendar) was selected as the Day of Atonement for future generations. This is became the day of Yom Kippur for future generations.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Visiting Sacred Places Exhibit at the DIA

Wisdom women and friends gathered at the Detroit Institute of Arts Sunday afternoon to view and discuss the photographic exhibit, “Sacred Places,” by Kenro Izu. The 23 women assembled first visited the exhibit with guide, Paula Drewek, to highlight special features of Izu’s photography: his 300 lb. camera and reliance on platinum-palladium processing of negatives; his focus on ancient stone monuments amidst natural settings, the presence of sacred geometry, and the dense atmosphere of spirituality which his photographs captured were among features discussed. Group members were able to interact with one another during the viewing based upon a series of study questions prepared in advance. Many of the sites Izu chose to photograph were in remote locations suggesting a pilgrimage of sorts to journey there. Sites at Angkor Wat,Cambodia, Borobudur, Java, Stonehenge, and Easter Island received the bulk of attention before the group adjourned to the auditorium to hear Mr. Izu speak on his history as a photographer and his choice of sites and techniques to photograph. This was most enlightening as well as enjoyable. Mr. Izu has a marvelous sense of humor and familiarized the full house with his latest photographs in Bhutan and her people. Following his presentation, the group met in Prentice court to discuss responses to his work and our own experience of sacred places. Trish Harris, who had planned the event, lead the discussion which educed a great variety of comments and experiences. We concluded that “sacredness” is both a characteristic of certain places as well as the framework of understanding which observers bring to the site. Discussants included women from Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Unity and Baha’i traditions, offering great diversity of sacred places and their connotations. To cap the afternoon, members of the group met at the Traffic Jam for an early dinner and socializing.

Please continue on to the next blog entry to view upcoming interfaith initiatives in Metro Detroit!!

Upcoming Interfaith Events

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

There are so many interfaith events coming up this fall. Please make a note of the following:

1) The One Peace event celebrating United Nations International Day of Peace this Sunday, September 21, 2008 at Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center from 1:00 -5:00 PM

2) On Saturday morning, September 27th from 9 AM until 1PM, the Western Campus of Wayne County Community College (located just north of the Haggerty Road/Interstate 94 intersection, at 9555 Haggerty Road in Belleville) will hold and sponsor its Second Annual Conference on Religion and Politics. This year it will be addressing Peacemaking and the Rev. Dan Buttry (author of Interfaith Heroes) will be the keynote speaker with additional presentations from Raman Singh (Sikh), Lisa Klopfer (Friends), and Ted Amsden (Baha’i). For further information please e-mail Bob Bruttell at
rabruttell@aol.com or call (734) 699-7008.

3) On September 30th, Tuesday, from 8:30 AM – 3:00 PM “Quickening the Art Spirit” with Rev. Dr. Mary Ellen Ashcroft, St. Francis Retreat Center in Dewitt, MI $35.00 fee. Register at
www.stfrancis.ws

4) The Thursday, October 16th General Board meeting of WISDOM will include a very special happening at the NorthMinster Presbyterian Church in Troy (3633 West Big Beaver Road – just East of Coolidge on the North side of Big Beaver – 248-644-5920). WISDOM would like to invite the public to join us as we hear Pastor Charlotte Sommers discuss the building of the Troy Interfaith Labyrinth and what the Labyrinth symbolizes, we walk the Interfaith Labyrinth, and we discuss our personal reactions to the Labyrinth during a “bring your own bag lunch” interfaith lunchtime. Please join us on October 16th as we walk a spiritual path built to aid in meditation. E-mail Gail Katz at
wisdom@interfaithwisdom.org to let her know you plan to attend the Labyrinth Walk and brown bag lunch.

5) Thursday, November 6th from 1:00 PM – 2:30 PM at Macomb Community College Center Campus Library (CENTER CAMPUS 44575 Garfield Road, Clinton Township, MI 48038-1139) MACOMB MULTICULTURAL INTERNATIONAL INITIATIVES presents “Detroit’s Religious Diversity - Dilemma or Opportunity”.

Never in their wildest dream did they think a coffee date, less than 2 years ago, would result in the establishment of a vibrant non-profit which is making a difference in Detroit. They have gone from a group of 4 women, a Catholic, a Jew, a Muslim, and a Protestant to a highly active organization with Board of Director’s, community events, and web presence. Come and learn about WISDOM (Women’s Interfaith Solutions for Dialogue and Outreach in Metro-Detroit) its evolution, the successes, challenges, and lessons learned. The co-founders and several Board members will be in attendance.
WISDOM founding members: Gail Katz, Shahina Begg, and Trish Harris will present
For more information email
MMII@Macomb.edu or for directions go to http://www.macomb.edu/About+Macomb/Maps+and+Locations/Center+Campus.htm


6) WISDOM is planning an Educational Temple Tour on Sunday November 9th. The cost will be $25.00 per person, and the flyer and registration forms will be sent out sometime soon. We hope you will form carpools with other interested folks to go to the following holy places to learn about three Eastern religions – Hinduism, Sikhism, and Jainism. The tentative agenda is as follows:

11:00 AM – 1:30 PM Hindu Bharatiya Temple on Adams Road in Troy (includes a vegetarian lunch)

2:30 – 4:00 PM Sikh Gurdwara Sahib on Schoolcraft Road in Plymouth

4:30 – 6:00 PM Jain Temple on 12 Mile Road in Farmington Hills

7) Monday and Tuesday, November 10th and 11th, New Directions-New Connections Conference, “Unity Within the Family of Abraham” for those who work with youth in our faith communities. Featuring Reuniting the Children of Abraham on Monday Nov. 10th from 5 to 9 PM. Marriott Centerpoint, located at 3600 Centerpoint Pkwy, Pontiac. To register go to
www.cyodetroit.org.

8) Sunday, November 16th at 8:15 PM, “You Don’t Have to be Wrong for Me to Be Right” , Rabbi Brad Hirschfield, Interfaith Activist, at the Jewish Book Fair at the Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple Rd., West Bloomfield 48322. More information at (248) 432-5467

9) Wednesday, November 26th 7 PM at the Westminster Church of Detroit at 17567 Hubbell St. at W. Outer Drive, the 22nd Annual Interfaith Thanksgiving Service.

10) Sunday, January 25th, at 4:00 PM the Tenth Annual World Sabbath of Religious Reconciliation at Christ Church Cranbrook in Bloomfield Hills, MI.

Friday, August 29, 2008

October 16th Labyrinth event for WISDOM

The Thursday, October 16th General Board meeting of WISDOM will include a very special happening at the NorthMinster Presbyterian Church in Troy (3633 West Big Beaver Road – just East of Coolidge on the North side of Big Beaver – 248-644-5920).


Starting at Noon on October 16th Thursday, WISDOM would like to invite the public to join us as we hear Pastor Charlotte Sommers discuss the building of the Interfaith Labyrinth and what the Labyrinth symbolizes, we walk the Interfaith Labyrinth, and we discuss our personal reactions to the Labyringth during a “bring your own bag lunch” interfaith lunchtime. Please read the article below about the Troy Interfaith Labyrinth and mark your calendars to join us on October 16th as we walk a spiritual path built to aid in meditation. What can we get out of walking a labyrinth? “The labyrinth can be used for many goals. It is a tool. If a person enters seeking to quiet their mind and relax, they will find calm. If a person enters seeking insight into their life, then they will find out about themselves. There are a number of techniques that are effective. One is to enter recalling your life. At each turn look for either a decision or event that changed your life. Watch as the path brings you nearer the goal and then back out. Another technique is to start with a song, prayer or meditation. Give thanks for a blessing each time you turn to your left and release an event that pains you on each turn to the right. It has been said that the labyrinth came into the western religions in a response to the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem. At that time, it became impossible for most people to travel to Jerusalem for the pilgrimage holidays. The labyrinth was substituted for the pilgrimage. As churches grew in Europe, a labyrinth was often included in either the floor or the garden.” (This information came from
www.BodyMindSpiritGuide.com).

Please e-mail us at
wisdom@interfaithwisdom.org to let us know if you would like to join us at the Labyrinth at noon on October 16th. There is no charge – just bring a “brown bag lunch” for yourself. WISDOM will provide drinks and coffee, so we would like to know how many folks plan to join us. The Labyrinth and lunch should conclude no later than 1:30 PM.

Here is an article that appeared in the Detroit News about the Troy Labyrinth.

Church's labyrinth a route to reflection
Troy Interfaith Group builds gift with donations
Catherine Jun / The Detroit News
TROY -- To most, the newly landscaped ground in front of Northminster Presbyterian Church might look like nothing more than a brick-laden courtyard.
But a careful look at the pavement reveals a meandering pattern, one that if followed will lead visitors on a slow, meditative walk to the courtyard's center -- and possibly to a more peaceful state of mind.
It's a labyrinth, fashioned after those found on the grounds of cathedrals in medieval Europe, once used for repentance or as a substitute for a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
The one in front of the church on Big Beaver is nondenominational, drawing people seeking a moment of quiet reflection.
It was laid last month by several religious groups that wanted to offer something to people of all beliefs.
"We see it as a symbol of our peace among our diversity," said the Rev. Charlotte Sommers, pastor at the church and member of the Troy Interfaith Group, which spearheaded the project.
The group built the labyrinth with donations, about $47,000, mostly from individuals and area houses of worship.
For those involved in the project, it is a concrete reminder of the growing interfaith network in the city, formed several years ago to hold its own prayer event when a Hindu was denied participation in the long-held National Day of Prayer event in front of City Hall.
"We never expected to go beyond an initial event," said the Rev. Rich Peacock of Troy First United Methodist Church, who convenes the group's monthly meetings.
Eventually, "the interest and the need to understand each other and the need to witness that we can work together mushroomed," he said in a recent interview.
About 100 people from about nine faiths turned out for the dedication this month, said Sommers.
Among them was Reema Butt, an Ahmadiyya Muslim, one of the several growing area faith communities.
"It is very inviting," she said.
Butt has since returned to walk the colored bricks. And as she walks, she recites in her head the first chapter of the Koran, a supplication that asks for help in seeking the right path.
"I just think about the words and prayer," she said.

August 24th Eco-Friendly WISDOM Event


Here is a message from Judy Satterthwaite, WISDOM Program Chairperson:

On August 24th, we had a beautiful, sunny day at Addison Oaks County Park where 18 members of our WISDOM family and friends met to do our part for the environment. Each brought their own picnic lunch and many people graciously shared extra dishes, so we all had an opportunity to sample foods from other cultures. Our location, Lakeview Pavilion, was built to give visitors a wonderful view of the lake, but it had become so overgrown that the lake was hardly visible. Kathleen Dougherty, Natural Resources Educator for the Parks, explained how this happened. The plants, Autumn Olive, Oriental Bittersweet and Buckthorn, were normally planted as ornamental shrubs in private yards…but birds have eaten the berries and deposited the seeds in places where they have grown into massive tree-like bushes that choke out our native plants and trees. Our job was to cut these bushes as low to the ground as possible so that Kathleen and her assistant Kim, could follow and coat the cuts with a systemic herbicide that would kill the roots. Some people forged into the woods and begin cutting through the jungle of intertwined brush while others dragged the cut branches to a large pile. We had a great time…all worked in teams, taking turns cutting, dragging, and resting! All ages…from 9 to 72…worked well together and had fun doing it. When we left after 2 ½ hours of productive work, there was a beautiful view of the lake including a family of five swans swimming in a majestic line across the water. We playfully named them the “Salka Swans” because there were also five members in Gigi Salka's family hard at work. When we left at three o’clock, we had only opened a small clearing but all felt the satisfaction of a job well done!

What a wonderful interfaith coming together of WISDOM families and friends to make a difference in our environment. Please see all of our great photos of the event below!!



































Monday, August 25, 2008

WISDOM Educational Event and this week's Jain Festival

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

Below is a description from the Pluralism Project website (http://www.pluralism.org) about the Jain festival Paryushan which begins on Wednesday, August 27th this week. If you are interested in learning more about the Jain religion and other religions from India, WISDOM is planning an Educational Day on Sunday November 9th. The cost will be $25.00 per person, and the flyer and registration forms will be sent out sometime around the middle of September. We hope you will form carpools with other interested folks to go to the following holy places to learn about three Eastern religions – Hinduism, Sikhism, and Jainism. The tentative agenda is as follows:

11:00 AM – 1:30 PM Hindu Bharatiya Temple on Adams Road in Troy (includes a vegetarian lunch)

2:30 – 4:00 PM Sikh Gurdwara Sahib on Schoolcraft Road in Plymouth

4:30 – 6:00 PM Jain Temple on 12 Mile Road in Farmington Hills

I hope to see you at this wonderful educational opportunity!! Mark your calendars.wis

Gail Katz
WISDOM President


Paryushan is the most important Jain religious observance of the year. For both Shvetambars, who observe the festival over a period of eight days, and Digambars, for whom Paryushan Parva lasts ten days, this is a time of intensive study, reflection, and purification. It takes place in the middle of the four-month rainy season in India, a time when the monks and nuns cease moving about from place to place and stay with a community. Paryushan means, literally, "abiding" or "coming together." The monks and nuns who have to maintain fixed residence during the rainy season abide with the laity and are available to them for instruction and guidance. It is also a time when the laity take on various temporary vows of study and fasting, a spiritual intensity similar to temporary monasticism. In this respect, it bears comparison with periods of rigorous religious practice in other traditions, such as the Christian observance of Lent. Paryushan concludes with a time of confession and forgiveness for the transgressions of the previous year.

In the United States, Jains often combine the two observances, with the eight days of the Shvetambar tradition followed by the ten of the Digambar tradition. It is customary for religious leaders, such as Gurudev Chitrabhanu, to stay at one of the Jain centers in order to be available to the laity during the period of Paryushan. Arrangements are made with such leaders well in advance to assure members of their presence. There are not enough to cover all the centers, however. Some centers may host visiting renunciants from India who have not yet undertaken all the vows of full mendicancy and can therefore travel in vehicles and live in America, with all the compromises to the monastic life that this entails. Other centers may have the presence of samans or samanis, monks and nuns in a new order created especially to attend to Jain communities outside India.

Even if there are no religious leaders in residence, the laity meet every evening during Paryushan, shifting their focus of life to the soul for these days. The most important part of Paryushan is daily meditation and prayer, which provides an opportunity for looking within and looking toward the teachings of the Tirthankaras for guidance. Beginning on the fourth day of Paryushan, it is customary for Murtipujak Shvetambars to read from the Kalpa Sutra, a scripture which recounts the life of Mahavira--the fourteen dreams of his mother before his birth, followed by the story of his birth, his life, and his liberation. It also recounts the lives of other Tirthankaras and the rules of Paryushan. In India, the book of scripture would be carried ceremonially through the streets, water sprinkled in its path along the way, purifying the entire town.

Jains often take time off from work during this period and eat a much simpler diet. They add to their normal vegetarian restrictions by avoiding such foods as potatoes, onions, and garlic--the eating of which entail killing the plant instead of just taking its fruit. Many Jains also fast during Paryushan, some for the entire period. At the end of Paryushan, those who have fasted for the eight or ten days break their fast with a special meal during which they do not touch food, but are fed by friends and loved ones in honor of their achievement.

For Shvetambars, the final day of Paryushan is Samvastsari Pratikraman, the "Annual Confession." The act of confessing any infringement of the five great vows to one's teacher is part of the life of a devout Jain throughout the year. But on this day it becomes the focus of the entire community. The ritual of asking forgiveness from the teacher is widened in scope to include family and friends and, finally, all living beings. The culmination of confession is receiving forgiveness from all living beings and also granting forgiveness to all beings.

This ritual of forgiveness is sometimes called the rite of "universal friendship." Most Jain centers in the U.S. now conduct at least part of the ritual of forgiveness in English for the benefit of the youth. The St. Louis and San Diego Jain communities, for instance, have published English-language "Pratikraman" booklets. The spirit of the day is contained in this verse, recited by heart:

“I grant forgiveness to all living beings, May all living beings grant me forgiveness; My friendship is with all living beings, My enmity is totally non-existent. Let there be peace, harmony, and prosperity for all.”

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Hinduism and Upcoming Hindu Holidays

Dear WISDOM Sisters:

There are several Hindu holidays on the horizon, and Padma Kuppa, our esteemed Hindu WISDOM board member, has graciously taken the time to educate all of us about Hinduism, and the three Hindu holidays coming up in August and early September. Thank you, Padma!! Please take the time to learn about our sisters’ religion!!

Gail Katz
WISDOM President

Hinduism

It is difficult to define Hinduism, better known as Sanatana Dharma,
since it is not a particular creed or ideaology but a way of life. It
also has no founder. There are varying schools of thought and
philosophy, but there are three spiritual truths which all human
beings have to deal with:

God (Brahman)

Individual Soul (Atman)

Creation (Jagat)

The Hindu philosophy of Vedanta, or monism, proposes that everything
in this world is God. According to this philosophy, God is the ocean,
and an individual soul is a wave of this ocean, having a temporary
identity of its own, but a part of the ocean. According to the
alternative philosophy dvaita, or dualism, God and man are separate;
man is like a clay pot filled with water that comes from the same
ocean that God is. The essential life-giving principle or
consciousness of everyone is the same.

The Hindu scriptures include the Vedas, teachings developed by sages
and seers over many centuries, the Upanishads, the Puranas (of which
the Ramayana and Mahabharata are very popular) and the Bhagavad Gita.
They are all written in the ancient language of Sanskrit. The Puranas
contain examples and stories to illustrate the concepts found in Vedas
in much simpler language. The Ramayana and Mahabharata are the
historical narrations of Rama and Krishna, which serve as a guide for
the common man to live a moral life. Hindus believe that the universe
undergoes endless cycles of creation, preservation and dissolution,
and the trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Siva represent or govern these
three (creation, preservation, dissolution) respectively. Rama and
Krishna are avatars or forms of Vishnu, the preserver, and the
philosophy of the Vedas and other scriptures is presented with
analogies and parables in a way easy for a common man to understand.

India, where the majority of the one billion Hindus worldwide live, is
a country of many languages and ethnicities. Hence many religious
works, including literature and hymns or bhajans have been written
over the centuries in many commonly spoken Indian languages which
include Hindustani or Hindi, Gujarathi, Tamil and Telugu.

Holy Festivals of Hinduism: Insights into the Annual Celebrations
Hindus Enjoy the World Over -
August/September 2008 Edition
________________________________

When it comes to Hindu festivals, Nepal rules - they celebrate 19 a
year on their official calendar, three of them exclusively for women!

India, by contrast, sets aside just two Hindu days a year on its
national calendar - Navaratri and Diwali. Many others are on the
religious calendar, which is lunisolar and similar to the Jewish
calendar in that we sometimes have an extra month. There are also
regional calendars in different parts of India, and holidays differ by
ethnic and geographic area. In America, the US Congress officially
recognized Diwali as a annual holiday for American Hindus, in 2007.
But whatever official calendars say, Hindus miss no opportunity to set
mundane matters aside and join with friends, neighbors and strangers
alike in invocation of the One Supreme God and the many Gods, in honor
of the Guru or in celebration of the passing of the seasons. While
anthropologists generally assign mere social significance in the
cycles of festivals, the devout Hindu knows these are times of
profound mystical connection to the inner worlds, times when God and
the Gods touch our world, revitalize our very souls, lighten our
karmas and bless our families. The following are India-wide or
rather, worldwide, festivals which are celebrated at this time of year.

Aug. 16, 2008: Raksha Bandhan

On the full moon of Karkata, or Cancer (Sravana July/August), sisters
tie a rakhi around the wrist of their brothers, who in return give a
present of clothing, cash or jewelry and become obligated for the
safety of the sister. The rakhi can also be given to anyone chosen as
an "adopted brother," even outside the Hindu community. It signifies
that she is praying for his welfare and that he is determined to give
protection to her. Originally the rakhi was a handspun cotton thread
dyed yellow with turmeric, but now many colors and materials are used.
Three knots are made in the thread to signify protection in thought,
word and deed. This day is also celebrated as Narali Purnima, "coconut
full moon," when coconuts are offered to Varuna, God of the Sea, by
throwing them into the ocean. It is also called Avani Avittam, or
Jandhyala Purnima, the ceremony of changing of the sacred thread among
the brahmins. This tradition dates back to Vedic times when the year's
studies were commenced on this day. Here in America, one can buy a
rakhi at the local Indian store, make one or even order one online!
Additionally, the temple priests will perform the rites for people who
wish to change their sacred thread (aka yajurveda upakarma) - .
________________________________

Aug. 23, 2008: Krishna Janmashtami

Lord Krishna, eighth incarnation of Vishnu, was born on the eighth
lunar day (ashtami) of the dark half of Karkata, or Cancer (Sravana
July/August). Devotees fast the preceding day until midnight, the time
that Krishna was born to Vasudeva and Devaki in the Mathura kingdom's
prison 5,000 years ago. At midnight, amidst grand ceremony, the temple
priest places the image of the newborn Krishna in a swinging crib.
Among the traditional observances, pots of sweets, curd and butter are
hung near homes, on trees and street poles in recollection of
Krishna's love for these things. Teenage boys dressed as cowherds form
human pyramids to reach and break the pots. The following day is again
one of festivity, including puja, storytelling and the Ras Leela, a
folk theater depicting major events of Krishna's life. "Dark as a rain
cloud," reads one account of His birth, "He made the prison glow with
the splendor of His crown, His jewelry and His yellow silk robes. He
was the Lord God incarnate." American Hindus celebrate in different
ways depending on the "ethnic leanings" of their local temple - the
Bharatiya Temple in Troy usually has a cultural program after the
religious and celebratory rituals. This year, there will be aa Raas
Garba - a more social or folk dance that can be performed by all who
wish to participate, often using sticks or dandiyas, going about in a
circular pattern. A link to the activities can be found here:
http://www.bharatiya-temple.org/home/events/KrishnaJanmashtami.shtml.

________________________________

Sept. 3, 2008: Ganesha Chaturthi

The fourth lunar day of the bright half of Simha, or Leo (Bhadra
August/September), is celebrated around the world as the birthday of
Ganesha, the elephant-headed God of Wisdom and Lord of Obstacles. As
with other festivals, the homes and temples are elaborately decorated
for the day. The special activity is the making of clay images of
Ganesha, reverently formed and decorated. Some are huge works of art
created by craftsmen, others are tiny icons painted and decorated by
children. At the end of the day, or seven or ten days later, these
images are ceremoniously immersed in the ocean or a nearby stream or
lake, signifying the creation of Ganesha from the Earth and His return
and dissolution in the ocean of universal consciousness. So intense
has been His presence at this time that even grown men weep at His
auspicious departure. His worship on this day removes obstacles and
ensures smooth progress in all ventures through the year. As Ganesha
is common to all Hindu sects and schools of belief and practice, this
festival is serving both inside and outside of India as a day to
celebrate Hindu unity. As it falls on a working day, the Bharatiya
Temple, like many American temples, has an event which involves
children performing the a simplified version of the ritual or puja, on
the following Sunday (Sept. 7). Many Hindu families will perform the
ritual in their homes, often making special food items such as
'modaka" which are considered Ganesha's favorite. The puja is one that
celebrates nature and may involve the use of fruit, vegetables and
other plant materials (leaves, grass, etc.) depending on the region of
India that one comes from.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

WISDOM Eco-Friendly event on August 24th

WISDOM INVITES YOU TO:


An Eco-friendly Interfaith Event

Join us Sunday, August 24th, 11:30-4:00
Lakeview Pavilion
Addison Oaks County Park
1480 W. Romeo Road, Leonard, Michigan

RAIN or SHINE
Let us . . .
Learn together from Natural Resources Educator, Kathleen Dougherty

Work together on Habitat Restoration Projects –

Play together as friends and families
. . . Games, swimming and a family picnic

· Bring your own picnic lunch and favorite outdoor games.
· Volleyball net, horseshoe pit and barbeque grill on site.
· Water bottles provided by WISDOM
· Bring long sleeve shirts and pants, gloves, insect repellant and sun screen!

Your cost is the Park Entrance Fee of $7 per car
($1 discount coupon can be printed from
www.Oakgov.com)
And a $5.00 check made out to WISDOM
Questions? Please call Judy Satterthwaite (248) 651-8918

Please send registration form and your $5.00 check by August 18 to: WISDOM, P.O. Box 525, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48303

Name: __________________________, phone #_________________
How many in your family? Adults___ Kids_____ ages of kids _______


Directions to Addison Oaks County Park

Take I-75 North and get off at exit 77 to M-59 East. Go 5.8 Miles and take exit #46 and make a left (North) on M-150 which becomes Rochester Road. Continue for about 12 miles until you come to Romeo Road. Make a left on W. Romeo Road and go 1.7 miles until you arrive at Addison Oaks - 1480 W. Romeo Road which will be on your right.


SACRED PLACES at the DIA on September 14th

DEAR WISDOM SISTERS!!

NOW AT THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS
THERE IS AN EXHIBITION OF BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPHS
ENTITLED “SACRED PLACES” BY KENRO IZU!!


ON SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2008 STARTING AT 1:00 pm
WISDOM WOULD LIKE TO USE THE OCCASION OF THIS EXHIBIT
TO HOLD BOTH A CELEBRATION AND EXPLORATION
OF PLACES THAT ARE SACRED TO US!!



WE WILL FIRST PARTICIPATE IN A TOUR OF THE IZU EXHIBIT. THIS EXHIBIT HIGHLIGHTS IMAGES OF RELIGIOUS SITES AND MONUMENTS IN ASIA, THE PACIFIC ISLANDS, THE MIDDLE EAST AND EUROPE. IZU’S IMAGES CONVEY THE SPIRITUAL ESSENCE OF THESE PLACES THAT HAVE RESONATED OVER MILLENNIA WITH PEOPLE OF MANY FAITHS.

THE DIA EXHIBIT TOUR WILL BE FOLLOWED BY OUR OWN “SHOW AND TELL” DISCUSSION, ALLOWING INDIVIDUALS TO SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS AND PHOTOS OF PLACES THAT ARE EITHER SACRED PERSONALLY, OR SACRED TO A FAITH TRADITION. (PLEASE BRING PHOTOS, BUT NOTE THAT
THEY SHOULD BE NO LARGER THAN 8 X 10 – DIA RULE!!.)

AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE DISCUSSION OF OUR “SACRED PLACES,” WE HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO CONTINUE TO EXPLORE OTHER DIA EXHIBITS AND THEN JOIN TOGETHER IN AN OPTIONAL MEAL AT THE TRAFFIC JAM AND SNUG RESTAURANT AT 511 W. CANFIELD, TO CONTINUE OUR DIALOGUE AND GET TO KNOW ONE ANOTHER BETTER.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE KENRO IZU EXHIBIT, PLEASE GO TO
WWW.DIA.ORG AND CLICK ON “KENRO IZU: SACRED PLACES EXHIBITION.”

LOCATION: THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS - 5200 WOODWARD AVENUE IN DETROIT. THE MAIN NUMBER IS (313) 833-7900. THE WEEKEND HOTLINE NUMBER IS (313) 833-7530.

MEETING LOCATION: WE WILL ENTER THE DIA THROUGH THE GROUP & EVENT ENTRANCE ON JOHN R. WE WILL ASSEMBLE AND CONDUCT REGISTRATION IN THE PRENTIS COURT.

TIME: REGISTRATIOIN WILL TAKE PLACE BETWEEN 1:00 AND 1:15 PM. PLEASE SEE ATTACHED FLYER FOR THE DETAILED AGENDA FOR THE DAY! PLEASE ARRIVE IN PRENTIS COURT FOR REGISTRATION BY 1:00 pm. YOUR PROMPTNESS WILL BE APPRECIATED BY ALL, SINCE WE CANNOT BEGIN THE TOUR UNTIL ALL THE PARTICIPANTS ARE CHECKED IN.

PARKING:

- VALET PARKING IS AVAILABLE AT THE FARNSWORTH STREET

ENTRANCE
- SECURED SELF-PARKING IS AVAILABLE DIRECTLY BEHIND THE

MUSEUM ON JOHN R STREET
- SELF-PARKING IS AVAILABLE IN THE UNDERGROUND PARKING

GARAGE ON THE CORNER OF WOODWARD AND FARNSWORTH

COST: MUSEUM ENTRY, TOUR AND DISCUSSION $15.00. OPTIONAL DINNER AT THE TRAFFIC JAM IS AT YOUR OWN EXPENSE.

CONTACTS: EVENT CHAIRPERSON – TRISH HARRIS (248) 335-0964

MAIL $15.00 CHECKS TO WISDOM, P.O. BOX 525, BLOOMFIELD HILLS, 48303 BY SEPTEMBER 8, 2008

PLEASE SEE INFORMATION BELOW FOR DETAILED AGENDA AND REGISTRATION

FORM!!






SACRED PLACES

COME JOIN WISDOM AT THE DIA
AS WE EXPLORE WHAT MAKES A PLACE SACRED

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2008


1:00 – 1:15 PM REGISTRATION CHECK –IN (USE GROUP
& EVENTS ENTRANCE ON JOHN R AND MEET IN
PRENTIS COURT)

1:15 – 2:30 PM TOUR OF THE KENRO IZU EXHIBIT “SACRED
PLACES” AT THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS

2:30 – 3:30 PM “SHOW AND TELL” GROUP SHARING OF
THOUGHTS AND PHOTOS OF PLACES THAT
ARE SACRED TO US AND OUR FAITH
TRADITIONS (KRESGE COURT)

3:30 – 5:00 PM OPTIONAL TOUR OF OTHER EXHIBITS AT
THE DIA

5:00 PM OPTIONAL MEAL TOGETHER AT THE TRAFFIC
JAM AND SNUG (511 W. CANFIELD) FOR THOSE
NOT FASTING DUE TO RAMADAN

REGISTRATION FORM

NAME: __________________________________________________

ADDRESS: ________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

TELEPHONE: ---------------------------------------------------------------(HOME)


-----------------------------------------------------------------(CELL)

EMAIL: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FAITH TRADITION: -----------------------------------------------------------------------


I PLAN TO PARTICIPATE IN:

. DIA EXHIBIT ONLY _________
. DIA EXHIBIT AND ‘SHOW AND TELL’ DISCUSSION ______
. TOUR OF OTHER DIA EXHIBITS FROM 3:30 – 5:00 pm ____
. DINNER AT THE TRAFFIC JAM AND SNUG _______



PLEASE SEND A CHECK FOR $15.00
BY SEPTEMBER 8TH MADE OUT TO WISDOM

AND MAIL TO:

WISDOM, P.O. BOX 525, BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MI 48303


QUESTIONS? CALL TRISH HARRIS AT (248) 335-0964

Friday, July 11, 2008

If You Think Life's Messy, A Wise Rabbi Says That's Great!!

From David Crumm's Read The Spirit Column (ReadtheSpirit.com) on July 10, 2008.

On Thursdays, we often feature guest writers. These are among the most popular stories we publish here at ReadTheSpirit. And, today, we're welcoming back Gail Katz, whose earlier guest story is still popular among our readers. This time, we invited Gail to share a review of a book by Rabbi Irwin Kula. It's on a theme that's very close to our hearts: Finding spiritual meaning in the often chaotic twists and turns of daily life.

Here is Gail's reflection on Rabbi Kula's book: "Yearnings: Embracing the Messiness of Life” is a book in which all of us -- people of many faith traditions -- can find fresh insights into what we share: Being human.

I heard Rabbi Irwin Kula give a talk about his book this summer. It's a book that I enjoy, so I was pleased to learn more about him. He is an eighth-generation rabbi, nationally known speaker and teacher -- and the president of the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership (CLAL). He is a regular on the TV and radio talk show circuit and host of the public television broadcast called, “The Wisdom of Our Yearnings.” His book is an exploration of our day-to-day living, an uncovering of the spirituality that can be found in all of our desires and longings, leading us to appreciate more deeply our varied pathways toward God. Kula organizes his book around our major yearnings, such as desires for truth, meaning, love, happiness and transcendence. What I find most appealing is the way he writes about human nature -- and the intense human desire for certainty. In his chapter, “God Will Be What God Will Be,” Kula describes the God that everyone would like to evoke: a God “who tells them exactly what they want to hear -– whether God is our intuition, that soft, still voice within that we feel holds some magical truth, or the guy in the heavens who affirms our perception of the world.” What we don’t accept so easily is that God is more often challenging and life changing -– that God is the voice urging us to question every truth.

The word “prayer,” the rabbi teaches, comes from the same Latin root as the word precarious. The certainty we yearn for is, at best, precarious. Kula’s central insight for all of us is that the precariousness of life is bound up in our own sense of ourselves, and “when we hold our identities lightly, knowing that they are temporary constructions, humble absolutes, the crises and crossroads in our lives tend to be less shattering.” What great advice for handling the day-to-day challenges to our sense of our selves!! Kula continues to refer to these challenges as the “sacred messiness of life.” It is the search for meaning –- the sorting though all of the messes -– that can transform us and give rise to wisdom.

I was most impressed with Kula’s use of the Yeshiva as an illustration of the need to accept uncertainly in our lives. In a Yeshiva, Jewish students wrestle with the meaning of the sacred texts -– the Torah, the Mishnah and the Talmud. In some settings, hundreds of students sit across from each other for 10-12 hours a day, discussing and analyzing, voices rising and falling with great emotion and vitality in debate. One point of view rarely prevails over the others. With this illustration, Kula is trying to teach us: Winning is not the point. Disagreement is the gift that alerts us to “something wonderful waiting to be uncovered.” Kula’s point here is that we all need to re-assess how we deal with conflict and stress in our lives. Rather than dividing us, arguments should be about finding connection with each other. We need to look at the entire weaving, not just our own thread in the tapestry.

Another fascinating discussion in Kula’s book has to do with the enactment of rituals. I love the way Kula extends an interfaith perspective about rituals, explaining to his readers that all rituals can become rote and boring, and the act of seeing and participating in another group’s rituals can enliven our own spirituality. Kula describes rituals as “Songs of grace and dances of death: they can foment aggression and inspire love; calm the mind and stir things up; enchant the ordinary or transform it.” Rituals across the religious spectrum –- the Jewish practice of blowing the shofar on the New Year, the Catholic Eucharist, the Islamic Henna marriage ritual, the Buddhist mandala, or the masked dance of the Hopi -- all invite us to enter an “alternative universe.”

Kula also unlocks the beauty of the Sabbath -– something that Jewish and non-Jewish readers may find particularly helpful. And, he writes that, when we return from the Sabbath into the new workweek -- “we do not enter the workweek alone, that all of our creative work is in the end collaborative.” In practicing the Sabbath, in recalibrating and rebalancing, we are “learning how to be better doers and do being better.” These are words that should give all of us pause!!

As a Jew, I enjoyed Kula’s book because of the many insights that he brought to my personal connection with Judaism. And, I reveled in Kula’s book because he helps us to embrace our differences. As Jews, we are commanded to “repair the world.” The rabbi reminds us that “repairing the world is not about gathering the sparks, but about dignifying each one.” What is life-affirming, says Kula, is the “ever-expanding uniqueness of our selves and the uniqueness of others.” Through all the messiness of our lives, we need to celebrate rather than fear the “anarchy, mystery, and multiplicity of the spark-filled cosmos.”

CARE TO READ MORE?
READ GAIL'S OWN STORY: Gail Katz has shared her voice a number of times through ReadTheSpirit -- but the signature story that readers still return to read is her memoir: "My Interfaith Journey." If you haven't read her story, we think you may enjoy it -- and may want to share it with others.

EXPLORE RABBI KULA'S WORK AT CLAL: The Jewish group has a number of landing pages on the Web, but probably the most useful is the portal called "eCLAL," an online magazine.

You can Email ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm directly. Or, visit us on Facebook, where the best meeting place at the moment is our new OurValues Facebook group.