"The
gullibility of the average citizen,
his willingness to accept what is told
him if it is said loudly enough and
with sufficient force is well-known.
Mass psychology and mob determination
have been exploited down the age....
But this negative receptivity can be
easily turned to good ends as
bad."
("The Spiritual Hierarchy",
Lucis Trust, 1982, p.8)
In the previous segments, we
examined the philosophies underpinning
the New Age or "Age of
Aquarius", an age which not
everyone is qualified to enter. We saw
the open hostility expressed by New
Age thinkers toward Jews and
especially Judaism. We noted the high
caliber of people who embrace the NA
concepts of "unity in
diversity" and "the evil of
separatism", focusing on the role
played by the United Nations and
related groups. Given the admittedly
low potential of Jews as a
"race" to enter the New Age,
they must be viewed as unworthy of
indoctrination efforts.
Wrong. In fact, missionary efforts
among the Jews are springing up so
quickly that this survey is certain to
be out of date within months of
writing. [So the reader should
consider this section - already far
longer than any other in the series -
as only a sample of the more prominent
groups and personalities.]
1. Efforts Among Secular Jews
Missionary efforts among secular Jews
are concentrated mainly in appeals to
world harmony and cooperation as
taking priority over any narrow group
interests, playing on the Jewish sense
of responsibility to humanity.
Beginning by touching on the innermost
nerve of the secular Jewish community
- persecution in general, and the
Holocaust in particular - the
"Tibetan Master", Alice
Bailey's spirit guide, reassures them
that their suffering is being taken
into account by the entire Hierarchy:
"The fate of the Jews in the
world war is a terrible tale of
cruelty, torture and wholesale murder,
and the treatment of the Jews down the
ages is one of the blackest chapters
in human history. For it there is no
excuse or condonation, and
right-thinking people everywhere are
aware of this and are eagerly
demanding that these persecutions end.
The spiritual forces of the world and
the spiritual leaders of humanity
(both those working on the outer plane
[human] and those guiding from the
inner side of the veil [disembodied
spirits]) are seeking a
solution." ("Problems of
Humanity" IV, p.102) Many Jews,
in great relief, read no farther and
eagerly give their support to the Age
of Aquarius.
But the very next sentence throws the
burden on the victims: "The
solution, however, will be found only
when the Jews themselves seek to find
the way out." Out of what? The
"world problem" which they
themselves have caused. [See more
details on how the Jews caused their
persecution, and even the Holocaust,
and what is expected of them.] The
promise is then made that if the Jews
will be more forthcoming,
"shoulder their own
responsibilities" and work on
"right human relations"
(p.104-105), antisemitism will
disappear. If they will renounce their
dogma of distinct peoplehood, and join
the "brotherhood of man" [as
if they can't do both], they will be
fully accepted. [Besides being an
unfair guilt trip, you would think
this could be easily dismissed by
liberal Jews, many of whom are already
in the forefront of human rights
causes. Yet too many have accepted the
NA idea that Jews have to atone for
their existence by denying any
uniqueness - even a claim to unique
depths of suffering.]
1a. Post-Identity Hopes:Many are the
gullible secular Jews (with Israelis
in the forefront) who have
"shouldered their own
responsibilities" of dismantling
their heritage, under the assumption
that they will earn for themselves a
place in the New Age. From archaeology
to 20th-century history, Jewish
scholars are scrambling to undo the
"dogmas" of Zionism and bury
the historical evidence of Jewish
rights to the Land of Israel, hoping
to redeem themselves in the eyes of
the New Humanity. Israeli politics,
education, legal system and public
image are all being overhauled in the
attempt to exorcise the demons of
"distinct peoplehood". Great
energy is invested in marginalizing
orthodox Judaism, in the assumption
that our religion is the only obstacle
to "right human relations".
Behind all these is the conviction
that membership in the NA
"brotherhood of man" will be
our reward, if we will just make
ourselves less us and more
everyone-else. [These self-hating Jews
have managed to ignore the NA
celebration of "diversity"
with regard to every other tribe on
earth, including those with closed
religious systems and separatist
customs even more exclusive than
Judaism. They never ask why only the
Jews are offensive by being
"separate".] The major point
missed by these converts to the NA
faith is that after erasing Jewish
identity markers, Jews will have only
passed from one of Bailey's
unacceptable categories to another:
from that of the separatist
"problem child of humanity"
to that of the spiritually improved
but racially tainted. As we study the
NA views on the Jews, we see that
"right human relations"
between the Jews and humanity goes
beyond erasing borders, or even
collective invisibility. It requires
the Jews to accept that there is no
relational place for their race in
this stage of human evolution. The
"brotherhood of man" will
open up to Jews only in future
lives... perhaps.
1b. NA Religion Disguised as
Philosophy or Science: These varieties
of secular repackaging are not
necessarily targeting Jews, but due to
the disproportionately high numbers of
intellectual Jews who have embraced
them, they are worth mentioning. [For
brevity I will not go into detail
here, but I have documentation for
each entry.] The NA beliefs they have
in common are: the existence of a
collective ancient wisdom, accessible
from within the human mind and
enhanced by input from "higher
intelligences"; the unlimited
potential of humanity, to be tapped by
creating one's own reality; and the
obstacle which orthodox Judaism and
related "fundamentalist"
religions pose to individual and
social progress.
One example is the revival of
classical Greek/Roman philosophy. This
is best exemplified by "New
Acropolis", a global forum now in
40 countries, which combines Theosophy
and Fascism. [Full documentation would
require another article, but below are
a few details. For excellent source
material on New Acropolis and other NA
cults, see the website by Dutch
historian Dr. Herman de Tollenaere]
Another example is Jungian psychology:
Carl Jung was devoted to his spirit
guide "Philemon", to occult
practices and to racist Ayranism. (See
Harvard professor Richard Noll's
books, "The Jung Cult" and
"The Aryan Christ: The Secret
Life of Carl Jung", the sources
for details which follow.) An
excellent analysis of Jung's
indebtedness to Theosophy and other
mystery religions, based on Noll's
research, is offered by Janet Biehl at
"The Social Ecology
Project". Researcher D. Sklar
("The Nazis and the Occult")
outlines Jung's experiences as a child
in a spiritist family, which convinced
him that he was chosen by God to be a
prophet of the Age of Aquarius.
Pivotal life events continued to
revolve around spiritist and occultic
involvement; Jungian psychologist
Morton Kelsey states that Jung viewed
witchcraft and shamanism as beneficial
exercises (as does Kelsey himself). A
key turning point was Jung's
self-induced psychotic breakdown in
December 1913, in which he was
"transformed" into the
Mitraic lion-headed god,
"Aion". This experience
directly led to his key concepts of
"archetypes", the
"collective subconscious"
mind and the irrelevance of reality in
the face of perceived reality [ideas
long taught in Hinduism and occult
circles]. His quotes concerning his
brand of psychoanalysis show that he
wanted to duplicate his 1913
experience in others. [We might say
that his efforts to lose his mental
stability were so successful that he
dedicated the rest of his career to
helping others lose theirs....] Jung's
stated goals are
"self-deification" and the
corresponding "death" of
one's "personal being",
which as Noll points out are the
components of a gnostic initiation
experience. But perhaps one of the
biggest shocks for Jewish Jungian fans
will be the discovery that Jung's
ideal psychotherapy system was one in
which "German psychology"
would be kept carefully separate from
any taint of "Jewish
psychology" [see the Nazism
section for details].
And then there is NA religion parading
as "science" in
neo-Darwinism and evolutionism. One of
the leading thinkers in this field,
Dr. Michael Ruse, has proposed that
the myth of evolution as
"science" be laid to rest,
pointing out that it is actually a
"secular religion" due to
its reliance on
"metaphysical" assumptions.
[Regarding this last item, which might
tempt creationists to celebrate, I
have good news and bad news. Yes, this
can level the playing field in the
fight to get equal time for
creationism in public education, and
lay to rest the unfair
science-religion dichotomy which has
censored Biblical models. There are a
growing number of scientists who are
ready to ditch Darwin as science. But
monotheists will face a worse
situation when evolutionism undergoes
the "paradigm shift" which
physicist-psychologist Peter Russell
(a Bailey disciple and Findhorn
member) insists must transform all
sciences: from a system that has
"no place for God" and comes
up with too few answers, to a
spiritual system where "God"
is "within human
consciousness" and factual
answers are not necessary. (See
"Science and Spirituality",
"World Goodwill Newsletter",
No.2, 1997. WG is a branch of Lucis
Trust, publisher of Bailey's works.)
Biblical creationism will then be
challenged by a synthesis of
evolution-creation in which all the
current flaws of standard evolution
are plugged with NA teaching: the
missing links will be solved by
visitations from alien
"creators" who triggered
"quantum leaps" in human
evolution; life's irreducible
complexity will be acknowledged with
references to forces and deities no
less impressive than the G-d of the
Bible; and any remaining
inconsistencies can be ignored and
explained (as Russell says) as
"maya" - the illusion of
material reality. Under those
circumstances, we can expect the
current reluctance among scientists to
allow creationism into the schools
will give away - not in defeat but in
the confidence that whatever creation
science has to say will no longer
threaten them. They will expect the
children to be so indoctrinated that
Biblical models will not impress
them.]
2. Spiritual "Salads" -
Judaism Laced with Paganism
For those who cannot be so easily
divorced from Judaism, there is an
attempt to wean observant and
traditional Jews away from the Torah
by promoting very Jewish concepts side
by side with very un-Jewish ones. They
are finding acceptance, or at least
benefitting from benevolent neglect,
in the orthodox community. A prominent
Kabbalist revered by thousands in
Israel, Rabbi Kadouri, performs
divination by reading palms after they
rest for a moment on a Torah. [My
next-door neighbor was thrilled to
relate this experience to me last
year.] The followers of the late
Shlomo Carlebach hold a weekly kumsitz
in the cemetery, tying blue strings to
his grave to "absorb his
aura" and be worn as bracelets.
("Life in the Cemetery",
"Jerusalem Post", Sep.19,
1997) Jewish community centers,
established to foster Jewish identity,
are offering classes in both Torah and
yoga, the latter not even bothering
about Jewish trappings. Posters can be
seen around Jerusalem advertising
Torah combined with Tai Chi. The
"Elat Chayyim Jewish Spiritual
Retreat Center" has a Tai Chi
Reiki Master ["Chi" is a
Chinese Buddhist term for the
underlying force of the universe which
can be harnessed by thought power] and
a resident yoga instructor, whose
training was not in Judaism but in
Eastern paganism. [I can assert
without reservation that yoga is
idolatrous, having practiced it myself
for 11 years before discovering Torah
Judaism. While some insist that hatha
yoga is only physical exercise, I
confirmed with several teachers that
the physical postures themselves are
viewed as acts of worship to the deity
for which they are named (the
"cobra", the
"lion", the "sun
dance", etc.). This fact is
omitted when introducing yoga to
Westerners, but like other esoteric
doctrines it is gradually revealed as
the disciple advances. Moreover,
worship is understood to take place
even if the lower-level practitioner
is unaware of what he is doing. This
is also the attitude behind the vague
NA prayer, the "Great
Invocation".]
The number of practices forbidden by
Torah which are cloaked in Torah garb
are bewildering, and rarely are any of
them challenged by the Torah
community. [It can be argued that such
people do not represent normative
orthodox Judaism; however, by openly
promoting such ideas in the orthodox
community without being disowned, they
are successfully undermining the
authority of Torah in its own
community - an essential part of the
New Age Plan.] Some of these practices
which date back centuries are even
hotly defended by the groups with the
strictest standards of Torah
observance, such as praying to dead
tzaddikim (sages considered especially
connected to G-d during their lives)
for healing, spouses, ability to
conceive, hidden wisdom and other
favors. [Jews who support this
practice, yet who are revolted at the
idea of others relating to Jesus in
the same manner because "it's
idolatrous to pray to a human
being" or because "we Jews
don't need a mediator between us and
G-d", have a problem not only
with their Torah observance but with
basic credibility.]
2a. One bestselling "salad"
is worth listing separately: the
Buddhism-Judaism mix. Promoted under
the brand name "Jewish
Renewal", it has swelled to an
international movement in its own
right and will be examined later. It
has the dubious honor of fooling the
greatest number of loyal Jews, who do
not object because Buddhists do not
bow before an idol (at least not while
the West is watching). Buddhism is
also considered non-threatening to
Jews because of its image of peaceable
tolerance for all faiths. [This image
has afforded the Dalai Lama a warm
welcome in Israel; however, it clashes
with past Buddhist affinities for
Nazism, and Bailey expected Buddhism
to revert to militancy at the proper
stage of the Plan.] As a result,
"lectures [in Israel] by visiting
Buddhist teachers are invariably
packed." ("The New
Believers", "The Jerusalem
Report", Apr. 2, 1998)
A brief investigation of the Buddhist
faith will show that the lack of
statues is not a rejection of
idolatry, as in Judaism, but rather an
acceptance of the Divinity in
everything, as both Pantheism and NA
affirm. Using an idol would
unnecessarily limit the Buddhist's
concept of god. More accurately, the
fullest expression of the Divinity in
Buddhism is nothingness, the Great
Void. The ultimate goal in Buddhism is
to become "enlightened" (the
literal meaning of "Buddha")
concerning the meaninglessness of
physical existence, to aspire to
godhood (achieved through progressive
disconnection with the physical, and
negation of the individual) and union
with "Nirvana", the Divine
Negation of existence. All of this is
totally in tandem with NA doctrine and
practice. [Compare this with the
"loss of self" in NA
teaching to achieve higher
enlightenment; Tibetan Buddhism is the
source. Note also the radical
standards of "simplicity"
and renunciation of worldly luxuries
urged upon Buddhist and NA disciples,
compared with the opulent lifestyles
of their leaders. A Jewish admirer of
the Dalai Lama, who was a guest at the
latter's residence, describes it as a
"palace"... albeit a
"fairly modest palace" by
American standards. See the Katz diary
below for source.] The same article in
"The Jerusalem Report" notes
repeatedly that Jews enamoured with
Buddhism often incorporate Sufi
(Islamic mystical) techniques as well
on the path to self-as-god, including
Islamic trance music and Moslem
prayers. [Sufism is yet another form
of the "ancient occult
wisdom", with a goal to undermine
and eliminate monotheistic Islam.] And
as we will see below, Jews who step
into Buddhism are prone to adopt
blatantly idol-centered faiths as
well.
3. Jewish Renewal - The Spiritual
Salad-Bar Movement
In terms of spiritual salads, Jewish
Renewal offers a five-star buffet.
This movement is a direct extension of
the Jewish-Buddhist mix described
above. It is so widespread and
popular, and comes in so many
packages, it deserves a detailed
examination.
The "father" of Jewish
Renewal (hereafter JR) is the
grandfatherly Reb Zalman
Schachter-Shalomi, a prolific PhD
author, counseling psychologist and
Lubavitcher rabbi. He still dresses in
the Hassidic tradition and verbally
identifies with Judaism, but it isn't
long before he reveals where his heart
is. In an interview with
"Thinking Allowed" host Dr.
Jeffrey Mishlove [who also interviewed
NA leader Barbara Marx Hubbard that
year - see number (2a) in the section
on Transformation], Schachter-Shalomi
is introduced as a wide-ranging Jewish
scholar: professor emeritus at Temple
University (psychology of religion,
mysticism), founder of P'nai Or (later
renamed Aleph Alliance, outlined
below), director of the
"Spiritual Eldering
Project". Schachter-Shalomi
himself mentions various synagogue
posts and a stint at the University of
Manitoba. But soon he is speaking of
Sufi legends and describing the
"Ancient of Days" [a Tenach
term for G-d] as "a thing... an
archetype" that "is needed
by our mother, the Earth".
Similarly, in an interview promoting
his 1997 book, "Paradigm
Shift", [the title itself being a
favorite NA code] Schachter-Shalomi
first speaks of creating the
"Havurah movement" and
"The Jewish Catalog"; he
defines Jewish Renewal as "based
on Kabbalah, Hasidism and other forms
of Jewish mysticism." He mentions
his appreciation for his Habad
training. Reviewers of his book
applaud his "love of Torah"
(Dr. Moshe Waldoks) and his
"contribution to the revival of
Jewish spirituality" (Dr. Arthur
Green). But then he urges us to
"let go of the old paradigms
rather than cling to obsolete ways of
thinking." These obsolete ways
are to be replaced by "newly
emerging ways of looking at
reality" which are not derived
from Torah but from "the coming
to an end of one era and the dawning
of a new one"; this is what
shapes his "recontextualization
of Judaism".
Like the leaders of "CLAL"
[see below], Reb Zalman justifies his
"paradigm shift" by pointing
to the changes Judaism underwent after
the Temple's destruction, and like
CLAL he makes the claim that "all
of our practices and belief had to be
reframed" at that time. [We will
test this claim later.] But he goes
farther: Judaism also passed through
"paradigm shifts" with
Abraham, Moses, Auschwitz,
Hiroshima... and "the moon
walk". [If you are wondering how
you missed the shattering trauma that
hit Judaism after the Apollo moon
landing, you are not alone. Even the
recovery of the Western Wall in 1967,
as momentous as it was, didn't cause
"all our practices and
beliefs" to be
"reframed".... However, be
aware that man's brief hip-hop on the
moon is high on the NA list of
milestone events in human evolution.
So is the first use of nuclear weapons
at Hiroshima, mentioned as a
"shift point" by the JR
leader but largely passed over by
orthodox Jewish commentators.] From
here, the Jewish Renewal rebbe heads
straight for his goal to
"delaminate our faith-treasures
from earlier maps [of reality]"
and paste them onto "new
maps" which meet "the
demands of our era".
(Interestingly, the Reb's claim to
formulating a
"recontextualization" which
"renews" Judaism is
ridiculed by modern followers of the
messianic pretender Sabbatai Zevi, who
accuse JR of plagiarizing their
300-year-old heretical traditions.)
Where does the Reb look for his
"new maps"? To a renewed
study of Torah? Nope, to
"feminism, human potential
[another NA code phrase], ecology and
Whole Earth thinking [also NA
code]." A "new map" is
also needed for the concept of Tshuvah
(repentance): "one connects first
the higher centers of one's
being", [which in NA is the first
stage of "antahkarana", or
Rainbow bridge-building] then connects
"with God", [the second
stage of "antahkarana"]. It
is only after this that "one
implements what one needs from the
tradition to round out one's
life." [But as we have seen, once
the Rainbow bridge is completed, one
needs nothing from "outmoded
Judaism" - on the contrary, one
recognizes the need for its
destruction.] He admits that
fellow-Jews do not accept his
"modify[ing] a long standing and
Divinely revealed tradition". But
as if to make sure enlightened readers
appreciate his skill as a change
agent, Reb Zalman describes how his
disciples have
"mainstreamed" his teachings
into regular orthodox synagogues
"without explicitly attributing
the source", and have
successfully "blended into the
acceptable scene". As an example
[and perhaps as yet another coded
signal] he mentions the "rainbow
colored tallit" he personally
designed. [Watch below for how many
leaders in various organizations turn
out to be Reb Zalman disciples, and
you will see his boast is not an idle
one.]
Schachter-Shalomi's personal view
of "Divinely revealed
tradition" mirrors that of other
Jewish groups discussed in this
section. Similar to CLAL's
ever-changing Torah, he proclaims that
Divine revelation is still unfolding,
well beyond Torah boundaries. And like
the Kabbalah Centre, he doesn't
hesitate to teach Kabbalah to students
who have no grounding in basic Torah -
he too is confident that if Jewish
Renewal students "follow the
inclination of their own inner
core", this will compensate for
the lack of Torah. Reb Zalman even
castigates the old school of Kabbalah,
"esoteric teachers [who] demanded
that the seekers relinquish and deny
their sacred encounters outside of the
tradition [that is, required them to
turn from idolatry] and begin basic
[Torah] observances." [Schachter
consistently uses
"tradition" or
"traditional Torah" where
orthodox rabbis would say simply
"Torah".] In harmony with
this attitude, one of
Schachter-Shalomi's main
responsibilities is chairing the
"World Wisdom Department" at
the Naropa Institute, a private
college where Buddhist meditation is
required daily and "each class or
degree program integrates varying
degrees of Buddhist philosophies and
traditions". Naropa's Fall 1997
course schedule listed Reb Zalman's
"Core Texts of Jewish
Mysticism", alongside studies of
Aztec death celebration (student is
instructed to bring an offering of
flowers, bread and fruit), Yoruban
ancestor-worship, Druid shamanism,
Sufi trance music, Taoist religion,
the "Shambhala Tradition" of
meditation (taught by Naropa's
founder), Kundalini Yoga, and about a
dozen Tibetan Buddhist courses.
Other JR-related groups are springing
up too fast to document. Here is a
short-list of the older centers:
3a. Aleph Alliance for Jewish Renewal:
This organization, centered in
Philadelphia, is under the direct
leadership of Zalman
Schachter-Shalomi. Prominent members
of Aleph regularly appear in the
forefront of the other groups listed
in this section, especially Elat
Chayyim. Conversely, the latter is
promoted with equal fervor on the
Aleph website. The 3-fold vision of
Aleph Alliance explicitly calls for
"Jewish spirituality" and
never mentions any spiritual path
outside of Judaism. Quite the
contrary, the FAQ asserts: "It is
an important part of Aleph's mission
to make the 'hidden' treasures of
Judaism known and accessible" to
all those "spiritually sensitive
Jews [who] have sought spiritual
expression in other faith
traditions." However, a brief
survey of the Elat Chayyim faculty
[see below] and Schachter-Shalomi's
own spiritual journey [see also the
summary above] will show that the
"treasures" they themselves
have studied and now offer are from
many other faiths besides Judaism,
principly from Buddhism. [Thus,
instead of attracting Jewish seekers
to authentic Judaism, they give added
encouragement to look elsewhere for
the "treasures", just as
they have. Reb Zalman's allegiance to
the Naropa Institute, whose
"learning philosophy is rooted in
Buddhist tradition", is alone
enough to discredit historical Judaism
as self-sufficient.] Aleph, like
Schacter-Shalomi, clearly accepts the
"universality of spiritual
truths" and is proud of its
"synthesis of these wide-ranging
experiences", not to reaffirm
Judaism but to create a
"unique" teaching.
[Actually, "universality" is
used advisedly. The Aleph FAQ notes
one exception to their acceptance of
all spiritual paths: an entire heading
is inexplicably devoted to their
"position" on the miniscule
sect of "Messianic Judaism",
where the tone switches momentarily
from free-spirited liberality to a
rather prim disapproval of groups
"which actively target Jews for
recruitment" and which use
"deceptive practices" to
present Christian teaching in a Jewish
context. A rather curious stand for a
movement whose leader proudly
"integrated" his Catholic
studies into a "unique"
teaching being sold as Jewish, and
whose recommended list is topped by a
"Jewish" Center teaching
Eastern pagan practices.]
3b. Arthur Waskow: One of the most
active Aleph leaders is this rabbi who
heads what could be called the Green
JR contingent. Waskow shifts the
mission of the Jewish people as
"light to the nations" from
spiritual revelation of the only G-d,
to saving and healing the
Earth-as-God. His manifesto is
embodied in his article, "And the
Earth is Filled with the Breath of
Life". Waskow's
"re-invention" of Judaism
goes beyond the usual JR revisionism,
in that it works retroactively back to
the very origins of Torah. The ancient
Temple offerings were not in obedience
to the G-d of the Covenant, but in
honor of a pantheistic Divinity:
"The earth, the rain, the sun,
the seed, and our work -- together,
adam and adamah, the earth and human
earthlings, grew this food. It came
from the Unity of Life; so we give
back some of it to that great
Unity." The purpose of the Jewish
people is indistinguishable from the
purpose of humanity in general, which
is to attain union with the universe:
"For the universe to continue on
this journey toward self-awareness,
there needs to be a species capable of
self-awareness - made up of
individuals who can reflect upon their
own selves, and also able as a species
to reflect upon itself and to see
itself as part of the Unity of the
universe - on which it is also capable
of reflecting. That is what it means
to live in the Image of God."
Throughout the article, Waskow's
choice of pronouns for G-d is
"It". [Compare all these
elements with Bailey and the
"Hierarchy" on the solution
to "the Jewish problem".
Waskow has apparently tried to address
every Jewish "fault" named
in NA literature.] Key NA concepts are
used freely, such as "leaps"
in cosmic and human evolution (using
the imagery of a spiral), the idea
that "earth is Spirit" and
the equivalence of Jewish
"renewal" with
"transformation". The
"idols" to be avoided by
Jews are not foreign gods adored by
the nations, but "mere carved-out
pieces of the Whole, things of partial
value that we elevate to
ultimates," anything short of the
impersonal "great Unity".
Prayer is directed to the
"mystery of allness in the
world" - not to the G-d described
by Abraham as "the most high God,
Maker of heaven and earth." The
covenantal signs of the Jewish people
like the Sabbath and kosher dietary
laws are reassigned as ways to
"heal the planet".
Of special relevance is Waskow's
liberal [mis]use of a central pillar
of Judaism - the Shema - in order to
retrofit Torah to Earth-worship:
"For example, look at the second
paragraph of the Sh'ma, the one that
says, 'And if you act on Torah then
the rain will fall, the rivers will
run, and the earth will be fruitful
and you will live well. And if you
don't act on Torah, if you reject it,
if you cut yourself off from this
great harmony of earth, then the great
harmony will cease to be harmony and
will cut itself off from you... and
you will perish from all this good
adamah that you grew up with.'"
(emphasis mine) [All Jews who know the
Shema will recognize a certain
artistic license being exercised here,
despite its appearance as a direct
quote. But Waskow goes beyond
paraphrase to outright misquoting.
Compare his caricature with the real
Shema as translated in the Hertz
Siddur (with my emphasis to highlight
the removal of G-d): "If you
listen diligently to My commandments
which I command you this day, to love
the L-rd your God, and to serve Him
with all your heart and with all your
soul, I will give the rain of your
land in its season.... Take heed to
yourselves, lest your heart be
deceived, and you turn aside, and
serve other gods and worship them; and
the anger of the L-rd be kindled
against you, and He shut up the
heavens, that there be no rain... and
you perish quickly from off the good
land which the L-rd gives you."
(Deuteronomy 11:13-17) Such misquoting
by an educated Jew like Waskow can
only be deliberate. It is an attempt
to hide the fact that Torah condemns
Jewish "Renewal". The
question then is: If Torah must be
mutilated to lend support to this
system, why doesn't JR just leave
Torah behind - as they actually have
among themselves? For whose benefit is
this pretense of a Torah framework?]
If the "re-invention" of the
Shema is not enough, consider the
Torah account of Cain murdering Abel.
Waskow's "renewal" process
"transforms" it into an
example of G-d as the failing Parent,
whose love is so limited He "can
respond fully to just one
brother." Waskow invites us to
"share Cain's initial anger at
his 'parent's' favoritism" which
so provoked poor Cain that he could
not express it verbally; "only
his face flushed with anger gave a
hint - and in the story, God had no
more clue to what that meant than did
the teachers and parents of Littleton
[site of a horrifying student-led
massacre]." On a par with the
worst parenting of today, G-d cannot
listen to His offspring: "God
asks Cain the right questions but does
not wait for an answer. And God does
not notice when there is no answer. He
responds only with a sermon." But
there is hope: "The Bible teaches
that even God, or especially God, can
learn from mistakes." ("Cain
at Littleton", "Moment
Magazine", Oct-Nov. 1999) [Before
dismissing Waskow as a frum fruitcake
with only marginal influence, consider
that he is named by the UN as one of
40 "Wisdom Keepers" of the
world - quite a distinction in a
global forum crawling with mystics of
all religions.]
3c. Elat Chayyim Jewish Spiritual
Retreat Center: As mentioned briefly
already, Elat Chayyim's teaching staff
includes masters in Eastern religions.
Besides the yoga and Tai Chi masters,
there is a leadership trainer who
describes herself as a "faithful
Jew and a passionate Buddhist",
an astrologer, a "Jewish
shaman", a Jungian
psychotherapist, a Zen Master and a
veteran sadhu (Hindu hermit). One yoga
teacher works mainly with children.
[Those who think that these children
are not being indoctrinated, and that
yoga can be practiced without pagan
worship, need to do a little homework.
See my comments above.] Another
teacher authored a book about the
"myths of Genesis". At least
17 of the 69 Elat teachers are
dedicated to promoting pagan religion,
New Age, or some other system which
clearly rejects Torah boundaries,
making the "Retreat Center"
definitely "Spiritual" but
hardly "Jewish". The main
attraction is Reb Schachter-Shalomi
himself, whose profile explains that
his "belief in the universality
of spiritual truth led him to study
with Sufi Masters, Buddhist teachers,
Native American elders, Catholic monks
and humanistic" teachers. His
position at the Naropa Institute is
proudly included in his qualifications
to teach at this "Jewish retreat
center".
Besides Schachter-Shalomi's direct
teaching, his influence is felt at
Elat Chayyim through the fact that
nearly half the teaching staff (31 of
69) are networked with him in some way
- having been personally mentored by
him and/or serving on his
"Aleph" staff. Another
notable entry is Rabbi Arthur Waskow,
considered by many to be
Schacter-Shalomi's equal in JR - here
we are told of his title of
"Wisdom Keeper" at the UN.
[Since the UN is clearly promoting New
Age "Wisdom", this title
does not bode well for Jewish fans of
Waskow... or even for Waskow himself,
if he should come to realize what this
"Wisdom" advocates for all
Jews.] The spiritual reach of Elat
Chayyim extends to Israel through
seminars conducted there by at least
10 of these teachers; three of them
are actually based in Israel. Last,
but certainly not least,
"orthodox" teachers Yitz and
Blu Greenberg are both happy members
of the Elat Chayyim teaching staff
[see below for the significance of
this fact].
3d. Rasheit Institute for Jewish
Spirituality: Rabbi Rami Shapiro (yet
another teacher at the Elat Chayyim
Center) takes yogic practices and TM
philosophies into Jewish prayer,
claiming he has discovered this common
ground in Kabbalistic meditation. But
the parallel becomes contrived when,
for example, he teaches his disciples
that "Kavvanah is focused
attention whereby 'a person empties
the mind of all thought and sees the
self within the greater presence of
the Divine.' (Maimonides)"
Whether or not such a quote from
Rambam exists is an open question,
since Shapiro gives no proper
reference by which to check it. [But
he completely clashes with the
mainstream Jewish concept of kavanah,
described as the elimination of all
exterraneous thought and the awareness
of standing before the presence of G-d
(Rabbi Hayim Halevy Donin, "To
Pray As a Jew", p.19, emphasis
mine.) Notice how radical a change is
effected by editing the two lone words
which I emphasized here. The subtle
alteration would go undetected by Jews
with a thin background in Judaism.]
Shapiro also has no scruples about
mistranslating key Hebrew phrases to
insert NA notions; examples are
"Ribbon shel Olam" [sic],
normally meaning "Master" or
"Lord" of the Universe, is
changed here to an impersonal
"Source of the Universe";
gerushin becomes not withdrawing from
earthly distractions but the
"practice of repeating a sacred
phrase [mantra]"; and dvekut,
literally meaning "clinging"
to G-d and the commandments, is
equated with the central NA goal of
"God-consciousness",
recognizing the "Godliness"
of the sand and air. For recommended
reading on the discipline of musar
(ethical conduct), Shapiro's first
title is "Krishnamurti's
Journal", guidance from a Hindu
who became a NA channel for Maitreya.
(See "MINYAN", Soul Craft
Directory) In his "Brief
Introduction to Jewish
Meditation" (same site), Shapiro
calls the Amidah prayer a form of
rabbinic "yoga", citing
unspecified "rabbis" who
taught that the custom of bowing was
not to honor G-d but "loosened
the spine and opened the body to the
flow of divine energy" (a clear
reference to the Hindu kundalini
doctrine). The Hassidic teaching of
avodah be-bittul is defined as
"self-annihilation - a Jew is no
longer a Jew", or even a human
being. [Since I am not sure what
Hassidism teaches about this, I hope
some authority will contact me to
either verify or refute Shapiro's
claim.]
3e. "Metivta Center for
Contemplative Judaism": Located
in Beverly Hills, California, most of
the Metivta seminars are conducted by
Rabbi Jonathan Omer-Man, a member of
the JR dialog delegation visiting the
leader of Tibetan Buddhism, the Dalai
Lama. At the 1990 meeting in
Dharamsala, Omer-Man expressed
interest in the Buddhist
"meditational practice known as
'deity-yoga', wherein the practitioner
visualizes an aspect of divinity and
then proceeds to identify with the
mind-created deity." (from the
diary of delegate Nathan Katz,
published by the Jerusalem Center for
Public Affairs, Mar. 1, 1991) Not
surprisingly, Metivta offers a curious
selection of books for
"contemplative Judaism": not
only Kabbalah and "Jewish
meditation", but a
"Shambhala Guide" to Jewish
mysticism. [The concept of Shambala is
anything but Jewish.] We can see the
networking effect, as the names Rami
Shapiro (see above), Melinda Ribner
(author of "New Age
Judaism") and David Zeller (head
of "Yakar", an Israeli
Jewish Renewal center) are recommended
by Metivta - all of whom also happen
to teach at Elat Chayyim (see above).
3f. "Tikkun Magazine":
Recent contributors to
"Tikkun" include many
featured in this section, for example
Rami Shapiro, Arthur Waskow and Blu
Greenberg. The Editor, Michael Lerner,
was ordained as a rabbi by
Schachter-Shalomi, but even before
that he was a JR enthusiast who
authored "Jewish Renewal: A Path
to Healing and Transformation"
[By equating this Jewish movement with
the most popular NA buzzwords
available, Lerner was not only
acknowledging the nature of JR but
code-signaling his personal credo as
well.] In this book, Lerner follows
Waskow's initiative in
"renewing" Torah
retroactively by observing that
Abraham's supreme act of faith in the
Akedah [offering up his son to G-d]
was actually a delusion.
In their editorial statement on
"Spirituality",
"Tikkun" reassures readers
that they embrace the pure NA concept
of "a recognition of the ultimate
Unity of All Being" and a
"world [that] is filled with a
conscious spiritual energy". On
the other hand, many established
religions "have little to offer
in the way of spirituality"
except for the "renewal
movements... and TIKKUN tries to
support them all." Lerner's
"synagogue" in San Francisco
is dedicated to "build this kind
of spirituality within the framework
of traditional Jewish religious
practice." However, his
"community is not specifically a
Jewish community... it supports all
religous and all spiritual communities
which identify with Emancipatory
Sprituality as described in
"Spirit Matters"." This
refers to Lerner's book, released in
June 2000; his vision of
"emancipation" includes
repudiating the "reactionary
spirituality that is given to veiling
women and circumcising men."
(quoted in the Kirkus Review of the
book, found on Amazon) [Since
circumcising men is the primary
"traditional Jewish religious
practice", the earlier
reassurance is less than
reassuring....]
In an excerpt of "Spirit
Matters" posted on the
"Tikkun" website, we are
told: "The inner change that we
need most to make is to recognize
ourselves as part of the Unity of all
Being, manifesting the goodness and
love of the universe." This is
accomplished by meditation and prayer;
useful resources to get us there are
suggested, none of them from
mainstream Judaism. As for the Jewish
G-d (unmistakably identified by the
Tetragrammaton), we are instructed to
relate to Him as "the omnipresent
possibility of possibility" or
"the Force of Healing and
Transformation." Again, learning
resources are offered: among them
"Awakening the Buddha
Within" and other Buddhist/Hindu
publications, but not a single Jewish
title. In fact, the only Jewish models
cited in this 5-page sample as worth
incorporating into
"Tikkun's" brand of
"spirituality" are
philanthropy (honored with a single
reference) and hospitality (the only
value which Lerner attaches to his
Shabbat experiences).
Compare this approach with Lerner's
"Founding Editorial
Statement" in the Fall 1986
issue, and we can see how far
"Tikkun" has drifted from
its initial commitment: "The
pressure to be 'universalist' and to
reject a particularistic identity 'in
order to be taken seriously' is the
major way that Jews were oppressed in
the United States.... America offered
a seductive deal: 'give up those
elements in your identity that make
you stand out and be different and we
will let you fit into the society...'
It is no longer clear why we should
accept this offer." Editor Lerner
promises here that for those Jews who
are "uncomfortable in the
presence of another Jew who is 'too
Jewish'... Tikkun's Jewish articles
will be a source of
embarrassment." [Apparently the
value of Jewish particularism could
not compete with the subsequent
"seductive deal" of
prominence in NA circles. Now
"Tikkun" is an embarrassment
to the same Jews Lerner once pledged
to represent.]
4. Kabbalah as a NA Tool
The mystical side of orthodox Judaism
is too complex for a complete analysis
here. Suffice to say that Jewish
Kabbalah has become a salad of gems
mixed with impurities. This is the
assessment of both the Torah and NA.
From a Torah standpoint, what real
insight there is to be found in
Kabbalah is invariably based firmly on
Tenach passages. They stand in
contrast to questionable ideas which
clash with basic Torah; these are not
found in Tenach but are found in pagan
religions. From the NA viewpoint,
Jewish Kabbalah gets similarly mixed
reviews, but for the opposite reason:
its only value is found in teachings
which are not Torah-based but are NA
beliefs: reincarnation; soliciting
help from angels, demons and departed
human spirits; light and darkness,
good and evil, uniting in balance to
make "God"; self-induced
trances resulting in visions or astral
(out-of-body) travels; and harnessing
of supernatural powers by pronouncing
sacred names. [It is noteworthy that
none of these can be supported by a
clear (pashat or darash) Torah
passage, while some are expressly
forbidden; yet these are the
best-known elements of Kabbalah among
Jews today. The fact that these are
accepted by so many otherwise
knowledgeable Torah-keeping Jews, in
spite of their dubious links to Torah,
only weakens Jewish resistance to NA
missionaries introducing other
doctrines progressively farther from
Torah.]
4a. There is an attitude among
Kabbalists that a mekubal (Kabbalistic
master) has spiritually advanced
beyond the need to obey the above
prohibitions in Torah, which are meant
for the "average" Jew. [I
confirmed this in dialog with an
Israeli student from a family with a
long line of respected mekubalim.]
With the perceived freedom to explore
the occult world, it is no wonder that
anti-Torah concepts became integrated
into Kabbalah. Helena Blavatsky had no
difficulty locating quotes from Jews
in the Kabbalistic tradition to show
that they also admire Lucifer, aka
Satan. For example, she repeats the
"glowing" praises of
"Kabalist" Eliphas Levi:
"It (Satan) is that Angel who was
proud enough to believe himself God;
brave enough to buy his independence
at the price of eternal suffering and
torture; beautiful enough to have
adored himself in full divine light;
strong enough to still reign in
darkness amidst agony, and to have
made himself a throne out of this
inextinguishable pyre."
(Blavatsky quoting from Eliphas Levi,
"Historie de la Magie, p.16-17,
"The Secret Doctrine" II,
p.506)
The same admiration for this
"Dragon of Wisdom" was
celebrated in the destructive heresies
of Sabbetai Zevi and the Frankists,
which are thriving today in the form
of the "Donmeh" whose
well-educated members effortlessly
connect nihilism (the benefits of
destruction), Luciferian elements
("the Holy Serpent" and
"The Treatise on the
Dragons") and Gnostic teaching
with Sabbatean and Lurianic Kabbalah.
The blend harmonizes nicely with
Blavatsky's teachings, particularly
about the Serpent as God ("Secret
Doctrine", p.215.) As a curious
side note, "Donmeh" leader
Yakov Leib haKohain insists that
Jewish Renewal springs directly from
Sabbatean practice, and scoffs at JR
leaders for "inventing a wheel
for which there is already a 300 year
old patent, while loudly
congratulating themselves for their
brilliant discoveries."
("Jewish Renewal, Hermetic
Cabala, and Sabbatai Zevi", on
the Donmeh website)
4b. The Kabbalistic doctrine of
reincarnation is possibly the single
most useful inroad into Judaism for
NA. Consider the recent assertion by
Rabbi Ovadia Yosef (a former Chief
Rabbi of Israel and a haredi leader
with a huge Israeli following) that
the six million Jewish Holocaust
victims were reincarnated sinners sent
into the Nazi death machine to pay for
their past-life sins ("Jerusalem
Post", Aug.11, 2000). [The
resemblance to Bailey's own
pronouncement is either the
coincidence of the year or impressive
evidence of NA infiltration into
orthodox thought. It is interesting
that several response articles in the
"Post", emphasized the lack
of Torah, Mishnaic or Talmudic
foundation for the doctrine of
reincarnation. I confirmed this in
dialog with several Kabbalist
students, who remained strangely
undisturbed by this lack of support.]
However, "Post" columnist
Amotz Asa-El's denial that
reincarnation ever entered mainstream
Judaism is clearly wishful thinking,
considering the stature of the rabbi
which prompted his commentary. And
contrary to claims that only Sephardic
(oriental) Judaism is prone to
accepting Eastern influences, Chabad
of California publishes a well-written
and attractive magazine circulated
worldwide among nonreligious Jews, and
features articles which credit
Kabbalah with the Hindu doctrine that
"in future incarnations, we can
fall to the vegetational life of trees
or even the inanimate life of
stones." ("Does a Stone Have
a Soul?", by Laibl Wolf,
"Farbringen", Spring 1999)
4c. Why NA Loves Kabbalah: NA
spokesmen applaud Jewish teachers for
recently releasing Kabbalah from the
restricted access imposed on it by
past generations of Jewish sages, for
making its teachings available to all
(Jewish and non-Jewish alike), and
especially for encouraging free
exploration without rabbinic
supervision. Even orthodox Jewish
teachers of Kabbalah are hailed by NA
as partners who are furthering the
Plan. Whether they are deliberate or
unwitting partners, it is anticipated
that the results will be the same.
Why? Because the freedom surrounding
Kabbalah today has created an
unguarded passageway between NA and
Judaism, discarding the last shreds of
orthodox Jewish discipline and Torah
framework, and allowing the
introduction of "new" guides
who do not need Jewish community
approval. Kabbalistic teachers can now
include outright NA disciples,
identifiable by their lack of concern
for a Jewish frame of reference; the
spiritism (contact with disembodied
spirits) in Kabbalah is sufficient for
achieving their goal of getting as
many people as possible, as quickly as
possible, into the spirit realm where
the "Ascended Masters of the
Hierarchy" await. The ultimate NA
goal is to gain full control of
Kabbalah in the Jewish community,
taking it through successive
"transformations" until it
is finally severed from all links with
the Torah, thus "recovering"
its "purity". The many Jews
who are captivated by Kabbalah [and
who, like my above-mentioned friends,
are not bothered by the absence of
Torah links] will be led away from
Torah with ease.
While in the past most Jews hotly
contested the idea that Kabbalah had
any kinship with New Age, some Jews
are now promoting the idea that Jewish
Kabbalah really does affirm NA
teaching [which would imply either a
gross ignorance of NA teaching and/or
Kabbalah, or a knowledge of their
commonality which escapes the average
Jew]. This view is reflected in a book
published in April 2000 by a Jewish
company; its author actually proposes
that Judaism take the credit for
today's NA teaching: "Many people
will be surprised to find that Judaism
is fundamentally aligned with what we
think of as the New Age. Many of the
things we associate with the New Age
are not new but are part of
Kaballah." (cover text, "New
Age Judaism", published by Simcha
Press). The only kind of
"Judaism" which could
"fundamentally" agree with
NA is the Renewal kind, and
predictably, both author and publisher
turn up elsewhere in Schachter's
Jewish Renewal orbit.
[This would be a good place to
demonstrate how a concerned researcher
can use the network effect to uncover
hidden NA foundations. This book with
its full title, "New Age Judaism
- Ancient Wisdom for the Modern
World", has a seemingly positive
goal: to show that Judaism already
possesses what New Age religion
offers, therefore Jews need not leave
Judaism. However, the first thing we
note is that it was written by Jewish
Renewal teacher Melinda Ribler.
Although her mentor, the late Rabbi
Shlomo Carlebach, recommends her as
someone "who never forgets there
is one God", and although she
claims the endorsement of unnamed
"prominent Orthodox rabbis",
Ribler is on the faculty of the very
unorthodox Elat Chayyim Center, whose
curriculum clearly rejects any
"one God" idea - except in
the sense that He/It is everything. We
also find Ribler's book promoted by
the similarly eclectic Metivta Center.
Moving one step behind this scene, we
discover is that "Simcha
Press", the Jewish-sounding
publisher of Ribler's book whose
official specialty is "Jewish
spirituality", is actually a
brand-new (June 2000) subsidiary of
"Health Communications,
Inc." Taking one more step
backstage, we identify HCI as a
"a full-service medical education
and communications company...
publishers of "The International
Journal of Drugs, Devices and
Diagnostic Research"". This
seems strange after Simcha describes
them as "publishing books in the
realm of personal growth", a NA
code signal. We probe further. Upon
entering the HCI on-line bookstore,
among the links we notice a tiny word:
"Spiritual". Clicking there,
we see the books offered by HCI
include titles like "The Tao of
the Ride" and "Wings of
Soul: Releasing Your Spiritual
Identity"; featured are
personalities like the Luciferian
Barbara Marx Hubbard, billed as one of
"the most brilliant
thinkers" of today, and Hindu
author Kauthilya, "the Aristotle
and Machiavelli of India".
Sampling one HCI book, "Golden
Eggs: Spiritual Wisdom for Birthing
Our Lives", we find ourselves
coming full circle, with the authors
urging us to follow Carl Jung, Barbara
Marx Hubbard and other teachers of
"personal and global
transformation"; by the end of
Chapter One, the book has become
nothing more than a hymn of praise to
the gnostic goddess Sophia. Our
possible conclusions: (a) The author
of "New Age Judaism", its
publisher, the mother company and its
market have all failed to notice that
Ribler's orientation and book
diametrically oppose the other
"wisdom books" being
promoted here. (b) Ribler, a
well-meaning but naive Jewish writer
is being used to lend legitimacy to
HCI's new Jewish division. She is also
being used by Metivta, Elat Chayyim
and Jewish Renewal in general, while
she herself is totally unaware that
she is spiritually out of step with
all her colleagues. (c) Ribler, Simcha
Press, HCI and I are all assuming this
book to be totally in harmony with NA
idolatry. The only people fooled by
the "Jewish" title, the
"Jewish" publisher and the
"orthodox" endorsements are
the unsuspecting Jewish browsers at
the Jerusalem International Book Fair
where Simcha Press has a table.]
4d. The Kabbalah Centre and Rabbi
Philip ("Shraga") Berg: As
the most controversial promotor of
Jewish Kabbalistic teaching, yet
possibly the most successful, the
Kabbalah Centre (KC) deserves a
detailed report. The Centre has been
strongly denounced as a dangerous cult
by the Task Force on Cults and
Missionaries (See "The Truth
about the Kabbalah Centre"
published by the LA branch). The
orthodox community of Toronto, where
KC headquarters are located, declared
a harem on Berg (divorced him from
community involvement). Unethical
conduct and fraud, manipulation and
violent intimidation, cultlike
exploitation, hard-sell tactics and
profit margins of up to 500% are
included in the charges from different
branches of the Task Force on Cults
and Missionaries, Jews for Judaism and
other community cult-fighters.
According to the Los Angeles Task
Force on Cults, some of his quotes
from the Talmud and the Zohar are also
fictitious. So is his "Yeshivah
Kol Yehuda in the U.S." which he
claims to head (reportedly an attempt
to pose as a branch of a respected
Jerusalem yeshivah by the same name).
The KC was banned in South Africa by
the Chief Rabbi and Rabbinical
Association; but Canadian Rabbi
Emanuel Schochet, who was instrumental
in bringing this about, found himself
being sued by the KC in Canada for
libel as a result. Other rabbinical
councils (possibly intimidated by R.
Schochet's ordeal) have contented
themselves with simply posting public
warnings about Berg. Leading
Kabbalists in Israel such as Rabbi
Ovadia Yosef have reportedly joined in
denouncing his conduct and teachings.
As a sort of response to all the
above, the KC official website
[featuring high-class graphics but
poorly edited text], lists as one of
the FAQs the question of why there is
so much rabbinic opposition to them.
Their answer is revealing: Every
pioneer bringing "positive and
profound change" to human
"civilization" has met with
resistance; "the
establishment" simply doesn't
appreciate them. [This hints that
their mission is not to affirm Jewish
tradition but to challenge and
"transform" it, for which
they are willing to suffer
persecution.] Yet in spite of rabbinic
opposition, Berg has managed to amass
a small fortune - in 1989 he
registered a net worth of $9.6
million, with net gains of $6.1
million and gross profits of $2.5
million from sales of the 24-volume
"Zohar" ...at the New York
Centre alone. New branches are
springing up every year. Besides
Toronto, the KC now has branches in
the U.S. (NYC - Queens and Manhattan,
Chicago, LA, Las Vegas, San Diego, San
Fernando Valley, Philadelphia, North
Miami, Boca Raton) and in Mexico City,
Paris, Sao Paulo (Brazil), London,
Santiago (Chile) and Buenos Aires
(Argentina). Not to mention four
branches in Israel (Tel Aviv, Haifa,
Tiberias, Jerusalem).
But our main interest in this report
is KC's teaching about Kabbalah
itself, which strongly follows NA
thought. According to the KC website,
their brochures [I have one in Hebrew]
and their salespeople [I have met two
at my door], studying Kabbalah brings
life-changing benefits on all levels:
cures for any illness, domestic
harmony, wealth, career success,
relief from emotional problems,
spiritual enlightenment, answers to
all life's questions, supernatural
powers, divination of the future,
elimination of war and hatred.
Actually, Kabbalah is just another
spiritual path which unlocks one's
limitless human potential: "It is
important to understand that the
spiritiual [sic] knowledge of our
universe is already known within our
souls. The act of learning Kabbalah is
merely the instrument that stirs and
awakens this knowledge from within
us." Not only that, but the KC is
not even about Kabbalah really:
"Unfortunately, division and
separation does cause severe damage.
Once again, the sole purpose of The
Kabbalah Center is to remove these
negative and destructive barriers and
to look for ways to unite." (from
the website FAQ, emphasis mine) This
single-minded determination to end
"separation" [commanded by
G-d for the Jews but forbidden in the
NA] comes from, of all places,
Kabbalah itself: "Kabbalah
teaches us that unity can only occur
through diversity."
To benefit from the KC's "unity
in diversity" [a clear code
phrase used by NAers everywhere],
participants need not accept Judaism.
Torah and the mitzvot are optional and
need not enter the equation at all.
Berg's students, Jews and non-Jews
alike, may come from any spiritual
background, absorb whatever they find
useful at his Centre (for a hefty
fee), and continue on the spiritual
path of their choice. In every city
where KC has offices, the
"Zohar" is sold door-to-door
by Berg disciples, without regard for
whether the buyer is a Jew or non-Jew,
monotheist or pagan (In Israel, the
sales efforts range far beyond the
immediate vicinity of their offices).
Berg admits that most students (and
some teachers) cannot even read
Hebrew, but no matter. Not only is
basic Torah study not required, or
identification with Judaism, but one
doesn't even need to read and
understand the "Zohar"
itself - just staring blankly at it by
day and putting it under your pillow
at night will bring you spiritual
fulfillment. This is Berg's
interpretation of "open study of
Kabbalah," and he cites
Kabbalists such as Rabbi Abraham
Azulay for support. He could have also
cited Kabbalists Sabbatai Zevi and
Jakob Frank, as the Task Force article
observes.
And what is Berg's personal commitment
to orthodox Judaism, which he says he
embraces? "Judaism is not
concerned with conforming to a strict
religious way of life [involving]
certain ritual tasks. On the contrary,
the goal is to connect to metaphysical
forces through which we can fulfill
our Desire to Receive.... To say that
a particular deed or action is
'halachically incorrect' is not to say
that one is doing wrong, is not an
observant Jew or is not fitting into
the mainstream of Judaism. We are
merely making the observation that the
particular action in question is not
properly connecting with the energy
pattern available to it."
("The Kabbalah Connection",
p.43,44) Thus the object of Berg's
"Jewish" worship moves from
G-d to the familiar NA
"forces", and
"Jewish" conduct becomes an
issue of energy alignment rather than
obedience to Divine commands. As for
the Torah, its purpose is to
"completely fulfill all our
needs" - and the
"Zohar" is its magic charm.
Berg dismisses out of hand the Torah
references to G-d rewarding those who
do good and punishing those who do
evil: "We are taught from
childhood [this idea]. Never believe
it." ("The Wheels of the
Soul", p.46) [Compare this with
Bailey's call to rid the world of this
and other "primitive" ideas,
as well as the call by NA educators to
shed our poisonous childhood
teachings.] Freed from the Torah
prohibitions against divination and
communing with the dead, Berg is
accustomed to using astrology and
seances as often as Torah and
"Zohar" to
"counsel" his disciples.
5. Undermining Orthodox Judaism
From Within
In contrast to the above mutants of
Judaism which are self-proclaimed
breakers and re-makers of Torah, this
segment deals with leaders and groups
who claim (and are believed by many)
to be working for change within the
parameters of Torah. While Jewish
Renewal rabbis will identify
themselves as
"post-denominational" or
"flexidox", this group will
unflinchingly say "orthodox
Jew". It takes patient probing to
peel off the public image and the
"kosher" teachings,
revealing where their inner loyalties
lie.
[Separating the Baby from the
Bathwater: Under these conditions,
misjudgments are easy in either
direction: to mistake fifth columns
for pillars of the community - or the
opposite. The key is to make a
distinction between legitimate protest
and covert sabotage. It's entirely
proper to say that Judaism can benefit
from changes in ways permitted by
Jewish law, and to point out the many
options which are not being utilized.
It's also right and necessary to
criticize areas of Judaism which have
deviated from Torah, with the intent
of bringing Jewish practice more in
line with both the letter and spirit
of the commandments. But it's quite
another thing to say that Judaism can
benefit by "freeing itself"
from the Torah.]
[Some orthodox factions view any
criticism of today's orthodox Judaism
as subversive - any demand for change
is a sinister plot, and any exposure
of corrupt leadership is a betrayal.
This attitude ignores both the message
of the entire Tenach (which obligates
small and great to the same standards
of righteousness) and the historical
development of Judaism itself (which
has periodically changed to reflect
new situations and disagreements among
the sages). In fact, I submit that it
is this orthodox refusal to clean
house which has alienated so many Jews
from the Torah community, and has
allowed NA to become so overpopulated
with Jewish disciples. Leaders who
deny real sins in the orthodox world
think they are protecting the
reputation of Torah Judaism, but they
are actually harming it. Not only are
they failing to deal with malpractice
of Torah which is to blame for those
sins, but pretending that the
community's Torah-keeping is above
reproach gives credibility to the NA
claim that it is Torah itself which is
to blame for those sins. They are
driving honest, disillusioned Jews
into the arms of the NA infiltrators
named below, for example in dealing
with the "orthodox feminist
movement". Perhaps some of the NA
infiltrators themselves have embraced
NA transformation in reaction to the
see-no-evil attitude of orthodox
leadership. If so, they are Jews who
can perhaps be brought to repentance,
but only after orthodox Judaism
repents and stops excusing its own
Torah-breakers.]
Following are some influential leaders
and organizations identifying with
orthodox Judaism, who are actually
working for the "liberation"
of Judaism from the confines of the
Torah. [The real tip-off is when the
supposedly "kosher" names
keep turning up in organizations
diametrically opposed to what orthodox
Judaism stands for. Another tip-off is
the recurrence of well-known NA
phrases repeated by ostensibly
orthodox Jews. This throwing about of
phrases is a recognized method of
"networking" and
"code-signaling" among NA
"change agents" who are
trying to avoid public detection while
communicating with one another. If the
collusion is energetic and the pool of
NA leaders is relatively small - the
situation we have in the Jewish
community - it produces what I call
the network effect: the same handful
of names and phrases keep turning up
in an unexpected variety of places and
contexts, signaling a covert
connection. Earlier, I showed how the
network effect can be used to spot NA
missionaries in the Jewish community.
The effect is even stronger in the
smaller orthodox community.]
5a. Rabbi Irving ("Yitz")
and Blu Greenberg: No other
"change agents" can match
the credibility and influence attained
in the orthodox community by this
husband-wife team. Between them are so
many credentials, chairmanships,
speaking tours and books that an
entire section could be devoted to
them. [We'll have to settle for a
small sample.]
The main thing worthy of the reader's
attention is the strategy employed by
both Greenbergs. When speaking in the
orthodox world, they themselves stick
to statements which are sometimes
daring but always kept within
boundaries acceptable to orthodoxy. As
a result, they are viewed as
representing the orthodox community in
many Jewish frameworks, including Bnai
Brith, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum, Hadassah and various
university courses on Judaism. For an
example of Blu's "kosher"
statements, one can pick up one of her
excellent books, "How to Run a
Jewish Household", or read her
statements as President of the Jewish
Orthodox Feminist Alliance. When
speaking to a wider, more receptive
audience, however, they hint at their
agenda but take care to use
terminology which cannot be pinned
down as subversive. In time-honored NA
fashion, they use ambiguous code words
which are interpreted in different
ways by initiated and uninitiated
listeners. Examples are seen in the
context of "dialog" with the
Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama. [This
purposeful ambiguity used by many
"change agents" is
exemplified in the NA universal
prayer, "The Great
Invocation".] Clearer hints of
the Greenbergs' NA sympathies are
found in those leading the
organizations they have founded and
still help to steer - while the
well-groomed and charismatic
personalities are publicly promoting
NA teaching, Blu and Yitz remain
nearly invisible in a background
supportive role.
[Watch for this methodology used by
others, which is tremendously
successful in preserving an image of
respected orthodox leadership. Don't
just analyze their public
pronouncements - check the views of
the editors whose magazines feature
their articles, the philosophies of
the educational facilities inviting
them to lecture, the beneficiaries of
the fundraisers they attend, whose
Boards they serve on. If you find
mutually exclusive identities being
silently supported by the same person,
you can suspect either a NA
infiltrator or someone about to be
humiliated by his/her own naivete.
There are cases where a respected name
in the community is recruited for
simple PR value, and he/she lends
support based on a superficial review
of an enterprise which seems to have
good references. Community leaders,
please take personal responsibility to
check the affiliations and worldviews
of a group before you let them use
your good name. It is no longer enough
to know that some other reputable
leader has endorsed them - for all you
know, your colleague may be totally
relying on the endorsement which
preceded his... and so on... back to
the "change agent" who
benefits from all of you!]
The best evidence of the Greenbergs'
true inner orientation is the ease
with which they team up with overt NA
leaders and organizations: they seem
to see no problem with teaching,
writing and otherwise working for the
success of enterprises totally at
variance with monotheism - not to
mention orthodox Judaism. Only on rare
occasions are they found
"slipping": personally
espousing views that would be
considered heretical by the orthodox
community. Such stray quotes are not
given wide coverage. An example is one
of Blu's comments in the
"Genesis" PBS TV series,
where like Arthur Waskow she
"re-invents" Torah: for her,
the Flood "story is not about the
accountability of human beings."
Rather, "God was a perfectionist.
In desperation, God would rather
destroy His creation than accept it as
less than perfect." (The entire
statement is quoted with approval by
an obscure Episcopalian vicar, but is
not found at the "Genesis"
website where Blu's quotes on that
episode are recorded.) Another example
is her following statement in a BBC
radio interview which was apparently
never transcribed.
5b. The "Orthodox Feminist"
movement: BBC's World Service radio
program, "Focus on Faith"
(Feb. 20, 1997), featured Blu
Greenberg in an interview [this was
the first time I heard of her or her
husband]. She was already known as a
prolific writer, guest speaker and
prominent spokesperson for orthodox
women, but she was identified here
only as "the wife of an orthodox
rabbi" [which was all I knew
about her when writing my original
article, "Masters of the Blinding
Light"]. The topic was an
upcoming International Conference on
Feminism and Orthodoxy, a forum on
"women's equality in the context
of Jewish law." Greenberg was
advocating wider participation in
synagogue prayers, a greater teaching
role and other modest reforms. A
minute later she was heard to say that
because the Torah contains laws that
"foster male domination and
portray a masculine God... it's time
to ask if the Torah is divine after
all." [It's hard to imagine why
someone who doubts this central pillar
of orthodox Judaism would remain in
it, except to enlist support from
those inside to remove the offending
pillar.] As it turned out, Greenberg's
Feminist Conference itself drew more
fire from the mainstream orthodox
community than her anti-Torah
statement on the BBC. [Either that, or
none heard that broadcast except
myself. Unfortunately, I was told by
the BBC's Religious Programming
Department that a transcript was not
available. After a survey of
Greenberg's public statements, I have
concluded that this was a rare
occurrence for her, and was possibly a
comment to the reporter not even meant
for inclusion in the broadcast.]
A sampling of the Jewish press
covering the Feminist Conference
indicates that Jewish leaders who
sensed something was wrong did not dig
deep enough to discover the NA roots.
Controversy remained at the surface,
revolving around the various proposals
tabled for female community leadership
(some halachically prohibited and some
not). Even at that level, rebuttals
from the orthodox leadership were
hasty, contradictory, and appeared to
be less concerned with Jewish women's
needs than with justifying the status
quo, right or wrong. [A condition I
noted earlier - perfect for the agenda
of NA "change agents". I
would suggest that NA missionaries
noted this achilles heel in orthodox
Judaism years ago, and planned how to
exploit the standard defensive
reaction which fears to acknowledge
any shortcomings.] Through articles
bearing titles like "Seeking to
Silence Women" ("The Jewish
Week", Mar. 7, 1997) and
"Ban on Women's Prayer
Groups" ("Daily News
Bulletin", Feb. 5, 1997), the
orthodox feminists were portrayed as a
second-class group challenging an
inflexible power clique which is too
threatened to even implement reforms
permitted by Jewish law. The
Rabbinical Council of Queens made
matters even worse when they issued a
hasty ruling only to change it a few
months later, and then justified the
"mistake" of their earlier
ruling by pleading ignorance
concerning the discontent among
orthodox women: "We looked at
this as a local issue. We never dreamt
it would be an international
cause." ("Queens Rabbis
Affirm Ban", "The Jewish
Week", Mar. 7, 1997)
Closer to the heart of the matter,
haredi (ultra-orthodox) writer Levi
Reisman ("Feminism - A Force That
Will Split Orthodoxy?", "The
Jewish Observer", May 1998, p.37)
astutely recognized the potential
danger in this movement to erase vital
Torah boundaries. Yet he gives
similarly mixed signals by trying to
blacklist feminism across the board:
denying any halachic support for
various proposals to expand female
leadership, while dismissing each
[non-existent] halachic support as
either a minority opinion, or a
temporary endorsement later retracted,
or just irrelevant. But to his credit,
Reisman notes that any orthodox
traditions which tend to
"diminish" women are not in
keeping with true halachah (Jewish
law); he urges, "We need to
communicate this message not only to
our women but to our men as
well." He also agrees with the
feminist charge that minyanim (quorums
for public prayer) are not easily
available to women, and criticizes
women's sections in orthodox
synagogues as "too often cramped,
uncomfortable and totally
isolated". [I add to this my own
discovery that some synagogues in
Israel have no women's section.] He
cites with approval two haredi
synagogues which responded to the
feminist challenge by prompting
finding creative solutions for their
own women. [If enough orthodox leaders
would follow suit, as well as crack
down on abusive husbands and other
Torah-breakers in matters relating to
women, the "orthodox
feminist" cause would lose much
of its appeal for Torah-observant
women.]
Having gotten the message that change
was not forthcoming from the Torah
sages, observant Jewish women came
flocking to Greenberg's call to
initiate change themselves. The first
Feminist Conference expected 300-400
participants and were overwhelmed by
over 1000; a year later, Feb. 1998,
the second Conference planned for 1400
and over 2000 women showed up.
Moreover, the original backing by a
handful of orthodox leaders was
supplemented the second year by
prominent names like Dr. Mandell
Ganchrow (President of the Orthodox
Union kashrut authority), Rabbis
Haskel Lookstein (Cong. Kehilath
Jeshurun), Adam Mintz (Lincoln Square)
and Shlomo Riskin (Efrat, Israel).
Their support seemed only to confirm
Blu Greenberg's comment, "We're
part of the mainstream now."
("Orthodox Feminists Move From
Fringes", "JTA", Feb.
17, 1998) The formation of a new
"Jewish Orthodox Feminist
Alliance" was a direct result,
and response has been strong and
multi-national. So far, rabbinic
leaders in the opposition have failed
to offer an alternative, and in some
cases have further betrayed the trust
placed in them, compounding the
dilemma for women who want to remain
submitted to rabbinic authority. A
case in point is the open letter to
haredi criminal Rabbi Aryeh Deri,
written by influential orthodox writer
Naomi Ragen: "The noted rabbis
who stood beside you at the prison
gates, blessing you and comparing you
to [Biblical] Joseph, undermined any
reason for women to continue honoring
a partriarchy whose male leadership
behaves so disgracefully."
("Hiding Behind the Torah",
"Jerusalem Post", Sep.8,
2000) [How sad that this writer, whose
novels always portray both the
negative and the positive of haredi
life, is so provoked by rabbinic
whitewashing of a convicted
Torah-breaker that she plays right
into feminist hands, actually
supporting the NA agenda to dismantle
orthodox Judaism. How sad that no
response was published to answer her
reasonable challenge. The NA
missionaries win this round by
default.]
In the midst of all the smoke and
noise over whether women have adequate
opportunity within today's Orthodox
Judaism to express their (feminine)
Jewishness, nearly all of the
community is missing the more covert
[and far more destructive]
"orthodox feminist" agenda.
Blu Greenberg only hints at this
larger program, commenting that the
Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance
"plans to network with women from
Judaism's other denominations",
from whom she says "I learn a
tremendous amount."
("Successful Conference Spawns
New Orthodox Feminist Alliance",
Jewish Telegraph Agency, Jul. 3, 1997)
Blu does not elaborate on how she
deals the goals of those other Jewish
feminists which are militantly hostile
to orthodox Judaism. But the
organization founded and still guided
by husband Yitz Greenberg, CLAL,
promotes these anti-Torah goals in
their "Encore" archival
collection. An example is
"Feminism: Giving Birth to a New
Judaism", a 1981 essay published
in the 1990s by CLAL and promoted in
2000 on their website. In it, feminist
Martha Ackelsberg shares a "new
vision" of a "Judaism"
purged from the
"patriarchal" and
"sexist" language of
"traditional Jewish liturgy"
[Since nearly all traditional Jewish
liturgy quotes directly from the
Torah, Prophets or Writings, the
offensive Bible will have to go also.]
The "New Judaism" must
reject "the image of God
expressed in it [this liturgy, and by
extension, Torah] and the relationship
between God and the people of Israel
conveyed through it" as similarly
tainted. Ackelsberg emphasizes that a
sexless translation of Hebrew prayers
will not suffice [certainly not for
those who pray in Hebrew, where gender
is unmistakable...]; it will take
nothing less than "new modes of
religious expression which incorporate
the femaleness of God", and
eventually "a liturgy which can
address a genderless, non-personal
God." [Thus, the efforts of the
Greenbergs combine to promote an
"alliance" in which Orthodox
Jewish women are encouraged to
"network with" and
"learn from" visionaries of
a "new Judaism" that is
neither new nor Judaism. Either Blu
and Yitz are living light-years apart
spiritually and never noticed, or we
have here a masterful smokescreen for
NA infiltration which has fooled
thousands of earnest Torah-observant
women - and a few good rabbis as well.
Even those who have challenged the
orthodox feminist movement have failed
to realize the true nature of the
threat they are confronting.]
Orthodox-Buddhist "dialog":
Assuming that the participants and
rabbinic backers of the Orthodox
Feminist Conferences are aware of the
interfaith dialog which Blu and Yitz
Greenberg are maintaining with Tibetan
Buddhist leaders, they may have
accepted it as the Greenbergs present
it: mutual encouragement of two
peoples dealing with exile. But the
fact that the rest of the dialog team
is solidly in the JR (Jewish Renewal)
camp reveals that the real agenda is
that of Zalman Schachter-Shlomi: to
"renew" Judaism and make it
"relevant" to modern society
by incorporating Buddhism into Jewish
thought. The documentary film,
"The Jew in the Lotus"
(written by Roger Kamenetz, directed
by Laura Chiten, winner of the
Outstanding Personal Vision Award at
the 1998 New England Film Festival),
shows the Greenbergs standing with Reb
Zalman as "Jewish Renewal
icons" (from a review at the San
Francisco Jewish Film Festival, July
7, 1998). Kamenetz also documents
("Partners in Exile", World
Tibet Network News, Dec. 27, 1999)
some of what Yitz Greenberg shared
with the Dalai Lama when the Buddhist
leader asked for the secret of Jewish
survival: "The reinvention of
Judaism by the rabbis [who] changed it
from a temple-based cult to a religion
of memory." This answer sums up
the main rationale of the JR movement
for claiming the right to
"reinvent" Judaism once
again.
[But read that quote again. Whereas JR
is known for discarding orthodoxy,
Greenberg as an ostensibly
"orthodox" rabbi is
presenting a version of rabbinic
history which defies explanation. The
first flaw here is that the rabbinic
prayers are not merely "in
memory" of the Temple cult, but
explicitly look forward to a complete
and literal reinstatement of
Temple-based worship. The second is
that Judaism as a "religion of
memory" was not a rabbinic
"reinvention" but was
mandated as far back as Sinai - or at
the Exodus if we consider the
"memorial" of Passover. More
basic than either of these, the Torah
states continually that it is G-d who
is the secret of Jewish survival - the
only Reason why the Jews outlived
those dark times when we not only
neglected our "religion of
memory", but we made a religion
out of trying to forget! How awful
that instead of the amazing truth, an
inquiring non-Jewish religious leader
received an answer from an
"orthodox rabbi" which
cannot even stand up to the facts of
basic Judaica, let alone explain the
mystery of Jewish longevity. But most
relevant to our examination is the
serious question of Yitz Greenberg's
right to call himself either
"orthodox" or
"rabbi".]
Another account of the same interfaith
meeting presents an interesting
contrast. Nathan Katz, a dialog team
member who kept a journal (briefly
mentioned above) of this 1999
encounter, expresses misgivings which
one would expect from an orthodox Jew
(he identifies himself only as a
"committed Jew"). Among the
things that he challenges is the
delegation's answer to the Dalai
Lama's question about Jewish survival
(offered mainly by Greenberg, quoted
above). Katz: "One idea was being
overlooked, I offered, the belief that
G-d's providence ensured Jewish
survival." He writes that
Schachter-Shalomi did not respond
directly, except to mention a need to
answer "how" the Jews
survived (origin) as well as
"why" they did (purpose).
[This non-answer was apparently to
pacify Katz rather than to enlighten
the Buddhist leader, who never did
hear about G-d's role in Jewish
survival. Nathan writes three days
later: "Listening to the Dalai
Lama talk about us, one gets the
impression that we Jews survived by an
act of will."] Another astute
observation was the dilemma posed by
the Dalai Lama's customary title,
"Your Holiness", which Katz
feels can "imply that he is
divinity, an idea which would
compromise an observant Jew."
Katz, recognized as a "scholar of
South Asian religions including
Tibetan Buddhism", was drawing on
a well-informed background. He notes
that a "discussion" of this
issue took place, but although he
records the Greenbergs' apprehension
over how to keep kashrut (dietary
laws) in such a venue, no worry on
their part is mentioned over possibly
idolatrous titles. Witnessing the
spectacle of orthodox Jewish
intercourse with a foreign religion
brought Katz to muse: "This sort
of dialog must raise issues of avodah
zarah", a term meaning worship
forbidden in the Torah - although Katz
only knows it as "a derogatory
term meaning 'other people's
worship'". Katz knows that this
is "something to be avoided by
observant Jews. Is Tibetan Buddhism
avodah zarah, or is it another name of
G-d?" This was properly a
question for the Greenbergs to grapple
with, but apparently Katz was the only
one troubled by the possibility. In
fact, even Hinduism posed no conflict
for the "observant Jews" in
the group; a Jew turned Hindu guru
completed their minyan (minimum
quorum) for synagogue prayers.
The only real confrontation came over
the great numbers of Jews leaving
Judaism to join Tibetan Buddhism. But
again, the one who spoke up was not
the orthodox rabbi or rebbetzin, but
the academic expert Katz. And,
speaking "on behalf of us
all", his complaint was not that
Jews were being compromised in their
covenant with their own G-d, but that
"we suffer from a brain drain on
a community level." It was the
Dalai Lama who returned the issue to a
spiritual level, where it belonged.
His response began with a
recommendation for Judaism to imitate
Buddhism, but he ended with a
challenge to basic Torah Judaism to
prove itself: "If you have these
spiritual values [as we do], then
there is no reason to fear; if you
have no such values, then there is no
reason to hold on." In other
words, if Judaism is spiritually
satisfying, Jews should feel no need
to tack on pieces of another religion.
If not, then it would be better just
to abandon Judaism for a more
satisfying religion. Then, with keen
insight into the fatal flaw of Jewish
Renewal, he added: "If you cannot
provide spiritual satisfaction to
others and at the same time insist on
holding on to them, then that is
foolishness." If Judaism is not
adequate as itself, all attempts to
"renew" it as a way to keep
Jews at home will fail. Why hold
people to something that has failed
them? Why not let them move on to pure
Buddhism? [According to Bailey's
spirit guide, Buddhism is indeed
scheduled to replace Judaism, and even
become aggressive in supplanting other
religions.]
"CLAL - The National Jewish
Center for Learning and
Leadership": This organization
was founded by Yitz Greenberg in 1974,
ostensibly to reach out to marginal
Jews and bring them into a Jewish
framework. In reality, CLAL is busy
doing the opposite: breaking down the
historical Jewish framework in order
to include the NA spirituality which
the marginal Jews have accepted. The
key question would be: Is CLAL engaged
in naive compromise to appeal to all
tastes, or deliberate efforts to
undermine traditional Judaism? We have
a pointed answer from CLAL, set apart
in its own paragraph for added
emphasis: "Transformation has
always been integral to CLAL's
mission." (CLAL Update, Fall
1997) [Watch as we run into some of
the most popular "blinds",
or code words used in NA. By repeating
terms like "transformation",
"higher wisdom", "new
era" and "new paradigm"
- terms foreign to Jewish thought but
basic to NA teaching - the
"change agents" are
signaling their presence to other
like-minded colleagues. The unitiated,
meanwhile, take the phrases at face
value and translate them based on
their own definitions.] The CLAL
faculty affirms that "the Eternal
Torah means not the 'Never Changing
Torah', but rather the 'Eternal,
Never-Stopping Revelation'... a Higher
Wisdom, an Ultimate Wisdom, is 'out
there,' like the radio waves that fill
the cosmos. We only need to 'tune
in'." (Rabbi Natan Margalit,
"New Paradigms for
Revelation", CLAL Spotlight, July
1998) [Orthodox Jews will to be
shocked to hear that the Torah
entrusted to us at Sinai is in
perpetual flux, and that G-d is
composed of impersonal, unfeeling
waves of energy floating "out in
the cosmos". But New Agers will
nod in agreement.] Yitz Greenberg
handed the reins of CLAL to his
disciple Irwin Kula in 1997, but he
continues his mission of
"mentoring emerging rabbinic
leaders in our CLAL Fellowship
Program." (Update)
The current President of CLAL, Rabbi
Irwin Kula, is proud to acknowledge
Rabbi Greenberg as his mentor. Kula,
described in the 1997 CLAL Update as a
talented speaker who
"dazzled" his audience, is
firmly in support of Jews who are
"redefining Judaism",
because "the 'journey' into the
future has 'different roadmaps' for
different Jews." (interview with
Jewish Telegraph Agency, "Focus
on Issues", Nov. 18, 1997) In a
definitive article called
"Jewishness in a New Era:
Continuity, Discontinuity or
Transformation?", Kula dismisses
community worries about a crisis of
lost Jewish identity; what Jewish
leaders take for assimilation is
merely "normalization of the
Jewish condition". Today's Jews,
he says, have merely switched their
"modes of expression": from
the "institutions and practices
created in another era" to a
shedding of "boundary-maintaining
Jewish behaviors" which no longer
make sense. Not that Jews have
"become like everyone else",
but they are finding "new forms
that are appropriate to their full and
equal participation in a broader human
community." And what are CLAL's
red lines in the "re-imagining of
Jewishness"? There are none - not
from Torah or even from CLAL itself:
"The assumption that any one of
us knows exactly what it is that needs
to be preserved from the past becomes
problematic. A new context inevitably
will demand far-reaching changes in
the very nature of Jewishness."
How far-reaching? As far as creating
"new kinds of Jewish community
that are more attuned to the era in
which we live." In a nutshell,
whatever practice or principle in
Judaism is "too circumscribed for
this new era in Jewish history",
we are free to trash if we want -
actually, the new era "will
demand" it.
Like Yitz Greenberg, for justification
Kula points to the rabbinic
cancellation of animal sacrifices
after the Temple's destruction. He
smoothly draws the parallel: the
forced abandonment of that practice
due to calamity is just like today's
wholesale abandonment of the 4000-year
Jewish framework for its being
"less attuned" to our age.
[More amazing, here is a
"rabbi", trained by another
"orthodox rabbi", who thinks
that Rabbinic Judaism left behind both
the Temple sacrifice and "the
belief in its continued
importance". Can it be that
Greenberg never taught Kula the many
rabbinic prayers which anticipate the
restoration of the Temple sacrifice?
But since Kula insists on this
parallel, let him follow it. We should
now expect CLAL to compose
Tisha-Be'Av-style kinot for this new
and wider abandonment they are
witnessing, so much like the
abandonment of the Temple.] As a
preview of what Kula's ideal of
"Jewishness in a New Era"
might look like, we can consider that
in this 3-page article, there is not a
single occurrence of the words
"Torah",
"covenant",
"commandments", or any
reference to the G-d of Israel in any
form.
Elsewhere, CLAL shows scant respect
for Torah-keeping Jews, as well as an
evasion of their challenges. A
commentary by Andrew Silow-Carroll,
spotlighted by CLAL from among
"the latest thoughts and
reflections by CLAL faculty and
associates", quotes Orthodox
writer David Klinghoffer who asks why
anyone would embrace Jewish religion
if they don't believe it is from a
Divine Source. Rather than grappling
with the question or offering an
alternate religious anchor,
Silow-Carroll simply rejects
Klinghoffer for his "dismissal of
the various ways some 83 percent of
North American Jews live their Jewish
lives," implying that the
question of whether Jewish religion
can survive without a divinely
ordained Torah, or any other objective
"Truth", is unworthy of a
response. Then, as if to deny the
possibility of "Jewish
lives" without Jewish religion (a
reality which Klinghoffer apparently
recognizes), Silow-Carroll claims that
secular Jews practice a religion of
their own. He offers a list of
"seemingly secular
behaviors" which he knows a
Torah-based Jew will call
"substitutes for Judaism"
but which he prefers to call a
"re-invention" of Judaism.
Included in this list of
"religious" activities:
discussing common (Jewish)
acquaintances, eating lox and
pastrami, scanning news reports for
"Jewish" names, and
idolizing the Jewish comedians,
lawyers and professional wrestlers.
Jewish doctors are to be "our
modern priesthood". [One teeny
problem. After discarding traditional
Judaism, he fails to
"re-invent" a way to
identify "Jewish" habits and
heroes, leaving us to fall back on
circular reasoning: they are
"Jewish" if we decide that
they are.] Silow-Carroll sees these
behaviors as a more than adequate
replacement for the Sinai Covenant.
Well, almost... his list of
"secular behaviors" also
includes suspiciously
traditional-sounding activities: Bible
classes, eating matza on Passover,
Shabbat celebrations, wearing kippot,
and even engaging in "Midrash,
creative retelling of classic Jewish
texts" - in short, many of the
same behaviors practiced by
Klinghoffer's narrow-minded community
and so resented by Silow-Carroll.
How influential is CLAL? Most of
CLAL's faculty members are
simultaneously teaching at other
institutions (both overtly NA and
conventionally Jewish), and/or leading
one or more congregations/study
centers, and/or publishing and
lecturing, which greatly amplifies the
scope of this one organization's
influence.
6. New Age Missionaries in Israel
As a stronghold of Jewish identity,
Zionist nationalism and monotheism,
Israelis must be viewed by NA
change-agents as totally hopeless, and
we would assume that our tiny homeland
would be avoided by NA teachers
looking for disciples. On the
contrary. Israel has become something
of a plum pie, where NA cults are
jostling one another for bigger
shares. And it has proven to be easy
pickings, as long as no one mistakes
them for Christian missionaries. While
Christians would be deported for the
tricks these NA zealots use, the
latter enjoy apparent immunity here
and lavish support from abroad. They
have unobstructed access to Israeli
Jews (even among the orthodox and
children) to openly teach various
brands of paganism -- often charging
top price for it. Some of these
neo-pagans will even castigate the
Jews for rejecting Jesus Christ.
Meanwhile, the guardians of Jewish
identity in Israel do nothing.
6a. Our Dangerous Double Standard:
Following are two examples.
A magazine for religious Israeli youth
(Otiot, Aug. 8, 1997) accepted a
full-color, full-page ad for an
animated movie based on famous tales
of a man who did exploits as the
"son of God". Produced in
the U.S., was voice-dubbed in Hebrew
[just for Israeli kids] and was shown
all over Israel. The movie was
advertised and screened for almost the
entire year. If it had featured Jesus
Christ, the country would have erupted
with protests; but the star was
"only" Hercules. [Now stop
and ponder why the god-man revered by
Constantine and the Christians is a
dangerous threat, while the god-man
revered by Antiochus and the
Hellenists is only an amusing fairy
tale. The Maccabeans, who gave their
lives to resist Hellenism, must have
turned in their graves. Score one easy
success for New Age indoctrination,
thanks to our double standard.] We
should note that Hercules is not a
fairy tale in NA thought, but a
sun-deity from the Grail legends
("The Occult and the Third
Reich", Jean & Michel
Angebert,, p.263 note 7) and respected
"ascended master" to whom
one can pray for enlightenment.
Blavatsky not only identified Hercules
as a sun-god, but also as an image of
Satan. ("Doctrine" II,
p.237, note) [After that great movie,
Israeli kids will certainly remember
the name of Hercules with affection as
they grow.]
A group of sweet-faced, modestly
dressed girls filed into a large Tel
Aviv company several years ago. They
went from desk to desk offering books
for sale. Most workers glanced at them
curiously, thinking they were an
orthodox group, and returned to their
work. Some bought books. Only one
worker noticed the Krishna picture
inside the book. He approached some of
the girls and asked where they were
from; they smiled without answering
and glided away from him, continuing
their activity. When he alerted his
nearest colleague, an orthodox Jew who
had just bought a book, she looked at
him blankly. The "Jews for
Krishna" left the building at
their leisure, without being
challenged, and with more funding for
their next missionizing campaign. This
happened the same week that a
mass-mailed Christian tract
"HaShalom" was being
zealously gathered by orthodox
community leaders for burning.
(Source: my husband, the one who
recognized the Krishna photo)
Lesson to be learned? Israel has
become an oasis for NA cults because
of the one-track mentality in dealing
with missionary activity. The word has
gotten around the Aquarian network.
Following are only a few NA
mission-minded groups currently
enjoying freedom in Israel, while
teaching Jews (including children)
doctrines which are idolatrous,
racist, anti-Torah, and/or just plain
fraudulent.
6b. New Acropolis: Haifa and Tel Aviv.
This philosophical society is better
known in Europe and South America than
in North America. A movement founded
in 1957 by Argentinian-born Italian
Blavatsky disciple Jorge Agel Livraga,
it is today headquartered in Brussels
with thriving branches in Spain,
Turkey, Italy, France, Brazil,
Chile... and Israel. [If you click on
the Israel site, be sure to look at
their "pictures of... activities
in Israel", one of which shows
off their new Hebrew book promoting
Helena Blavatsky.] NAer Bernardino del
Boca, considered by some to be the
founder of the New Age movement in
Italy, once called it "one of the
great hopes of the Aquarian Age."
(quote supplied by a European watchdog
group which requests anonymity)
"New Acropolis" presents
itself as an intellectual anti-racist
club at the beginner level, but as
disciples advance the lessons become
more militaristic and mystical, a
blend of Fascist romanticism which was
emulated by the SS of the Third Reich.
In Spain, a flyer authored in the
1970s by the New Acropolis leader in
Turkey is entitled [translated from
Spanish]: "For Madmen Only: The
Virtues of the New Man", followed
by a quote from Adolf Hitler and
comments in defense of his vision for
the New Humanity. According to Dutch
researcher Michiel Louter, New
Acropolis is considered by authorities
in France, Belgium, Italy and Germany
to be a dangerous cult working to
undermine democracy. [More accurately,
New Acropolis wants to return
"democracy" to its original
"purity". Students of Plato
will remember that the classical Greek
concept of a "utopian
Republic" is a democracy ruled by
an elite citizenry, which regularly
weeds out weak or unproductive
members, and honors the practice of
homosexuality, pedophilia, eugenics,
euthanasia and infanticide. The
unrecognized fact is that the values
of "democracy" so sought
after in today's society - compassion
for the weak, an impartial justice
system and the equality of all men
before a Supreme Being - are in
reality derived from the Torah and
were despised by the original
"democrats" as intolerable
weakness.]
According to two former Acropolis
members [names withheld], the supreme
source of their philosophy is
"the Masters of Wisdom", who
they believe were the architects of
the Third Reich; Hitler's failure was
due to his disobedience to "his
Masters". High-ranking members
are taught that the "Manu"
[who Bailey identifies with Sanat
Kumara] will aid them in destroying
undesirable races. [One ex-member
commented that he couldn't make sense
of this kind of talk, but for my
readers who have persevered this far
these references will need no
explanation.] They also report that
special areas of the Acropolis schools
had Nazi literature available, among
them "Mein Kampf" and
"Mythus des 20.
Jahrhunderts" (The Myth of the
Twentieth Century"). Other
required reading for the Inner Circle
is Miguel Serrano's "Adolf
Hitler, el Ultimo Avatar" which
presents Hitler as a sun god. [Compare
this with Savitri Devi's Hindu version
of the same.] Higher-ranking members
are taught the Nazi salute, as
evidenced in the members-only magazine
for the "New Acropolis Security
Forces" [sic].
New Acropolis is not a newcomer to
Israel; the group has been free to
attract Israelis to its ranks for more
than a decade. One former leader
reports that the New Acropolis
International Conference held in Rome
in 1990 included Israelis, all of them
dressed in black shirts and saluting
an imperial Roman eagle, legionnaire
style. Courses are regularly held in
Israel on "The Key to Inner
Wisdom" (all in Hebrew). The
"Eastern Wisdom" category is
Hinduism, Buddhism and Tibetan
Buddhism; "Western Wisdom"
is largely Greek Platonic and Stoic
philosophy. "History"
combines Greek, Roman, Egyptian and
Hindu thought. Only in "Sources
of Wisdom" does one find a brief
pass at Judaism via Kabbalah, in the
company of Greek mythology and New Age
principles.
6c. The Theosophical Society: Tel
Aviv.
That Helena Blavatsky has an Israeli
following is remarkable, not only
because of her antisemitic writings,
but also because of her vast ignorance
of Jewish history: "The name YHVH
was unknown to Moses or any Jew before
David. Neither David nor Solomon
recognized the Law of Moses; they
built temples [sic] along the lines of
Venus worship... The Hebrew Bible
exists no more. There is much
dishonesty surrounding even the
writing of the Septuagint (the
original Tenach, from which all Hebrew
copies are made); yet people persist
in talking of the ancient Hebrew as if
one man alive knows one word of
it!.... Scholars do not carry the
now-known Hebrew letters beyond the
4th century AD." (from a
collection of quotes sent to me by a
NA acquaintance, unreferenced) [Madame
HPB could be forgiven for her
19th-century ignorance, but what
possesses modern Israelis to accept
her as a teacher of wisdom? And what
kind of wisdom did her spirit Guides
display here?]
6d. Association for Jewish Renewal:
Kibbutz Lotan, Sinai (temporarily).
Over the last two years or more, JR
leaders have been fostering a nascent
community of Israelis, with direct
involvement by American JR Rabbi Shefa
Gold and local leader Yoram Getzler.
Devotees include mostly Israeli
seekers just back from India, who
gather for spiritual encounters in the
desert. A band called
"Sheva" plays trance music
from India and Sufi tradition. (See
"The New Believers",
"The Jerusalem Report",
Apr.2, 1998)
Other Jewish Renewal activity is not
official or centralized, but consists
mostly of seminars offered by visiting
JR teachers from the States. [For an
overview of JR beliefs and activities,
see the entry above.] The most obvious
involvement is through the large
number of Elat Chayyim teachers who
conduct seminars in Israel on a
regular basis: Moshe Budmor, Lynn
Gottlieb, Blu and Yitz Greenberg, Eve
Ilsen, Carol Kestler, Leah Novick,
Gershon Winkler. A few Elat Chayyim
faculty are based in Israel: David
Friedman (Tsefat), Mordechai Gafni
(unspecified), Menachem Kallus
(Jerusalem), David Zeller (Jerusalem).
Only Zeller has his own organization,
"Yakar", which he describes
(in a personal letter to me) as
"orthodox renewal, still within
the bounds of halacha with the most
liberal and loving applications".
He matches the Blu Greenberg strategy
in this self-definition as well as his
associations. While he prefers to
identify with Shlomo Carlebach, Zeller
expresses an affinity for
Schachter-Shalomi's teaching.
6e. Waldorf schools/Anthroposophy:
Jerusalem.
There are 600 Waldorf schools in 32
different countries, including Israel.
All are dedicated to teaching the
philosophies of Rudolf Steiner, a
German occultist who joined the
Theosophical Society and then broke
away to form a rival "spiritual
science" which he named
"Anthroposophy". In the
U.S., a supervisory association
monitors all 125 American Waldorf
schools to ensure that they all
"stay true to the teachings of
Steiner." His worldview (received
through channeling) is a blend of
theosophy, gnosticism, holistic
earth-worship, and racism.
Concerning the last, Waldorf schools
include the study of "racial
ethnography", where children
learn from Steiner that the Nordic and
Aryan races are the "best section
of mankind... skillful and
intelligent," while dark-skinned
races have large bodies and small,
underdeveloped souls and "are all
stupid". ("Special Ed?"
"The Daily Northwestern",
Oct.17, 1997) Black Africans
"have the peculiarity to suck off
light and warmth from spaces around
them" which causes their skin to
turn black from the heat. All that
absorbed energy results in the
"fact" that "the negro
has strong urges... as if he is boiled
up from the sun itself..."
(translated for me by German
researcher Robert Jesolowitz from a
1923 Steiner speech in Dornau,
Switzerland) During this course,
children at the Waldorf school in
Evanston, Illinois practice drawing
blond children walking in bright
sunlight; black children ("moon
people") walk in the weak light
of the moon, and black souls are drawn
as babies. ("Special Ed")
Steiner opposed interracial marriage,
since "mixing of blood causes the
force of clear vision to die" in
the higher species of humanity.
(translated from German by Swedish
researcher Fredrik Bendz,
unreferenced)
Waldorf schools are coming under
attack in the U.S., Holland and
Germany for their racist and occultic
orientation, as well as for deception
concerning their religious nature.
(See "Are Waldorf Schools
'Non-Sectarian'?", "Free
Inquiry", Spring 1994) Waldorf
schools are also haunted by more than
a little superstition: modern
technology is so evil that pupils may
not visit science museums, and
computers are an "incarnation of
the evil spirit Ahriman". (David
B. Black, "The Computer and the
Incarnation of Ahriman", p.35)
This evil deity has its origins in
Zoroastrianism, an esoteric religion
dating from the 6th c. BCE which is
enjoying a comeback in NA circles.
[One could make a case for Steiner
adopting more than just Ahriman from
that ancient Persian religion;
Zoroaster was also decidedly hostile
to the G-d of the Torah - see the
Nazism section for details, and for
the common ground between Theosophy
and Nazism.]
Concerning the Jewish people in
particular, Anthroposophists in
Germany quote Steiner in singling out
the Jews as the group most clearly
demonstrating the undesirable
"Gruppenseelenhafte" or
"Group Soul Qualities"
(Steiner disciple Irene Diet in
"Das Goetheanum", Nr.20, May
17, 1998) A broadcast by the German
news program "Report Mainz"
(Feb. 28, 2000) revealed that
antisemitic and racist teachings are
widely promoted in today's Waldorf
schools, to which the President of the
Zentralrat (Central Council of Jews in
Germany), Paul Spiegel, replied:
"I have been receiving [such
reports] for the past one and a half
years," and added that until now
parents were afraid to identify
themselves. The information which left
Spiegel "shocked" is
currently being documented.
("Wortwechsel", Germany's
Swedwestfernsehen, Mar. 19, 2000)
A Waldorf school in Jerusalem also got
some bad press when it briefly came
under attack a few years ago. But
judging from media reports, the only
issue investigated was whether it was
a Christian mission, after which it
was "cleared" to carry on
its activities without interference. A
Waldorf kindergarten in Jerusalem,
"Gan HaShemesh", also
received mixed reviews in a
"Jerusalem Post" article on
parenting (June 16, 1999), mainly for
its "stress on the magical"
and its diet of violent fairy tales,
but no mention was made of the
international controversy raging over
the Waldorf curriculum.
6f. Kibbutz Harduf: near Shfaram.
Another brainchild of Steiner was
"biodynamic farming" (not to
be confused with ecological
techniques), which resembles farming
methods of Findhorn, the famous New
Age mecca in northern Scotland. For
biodynamic farmers, the earth is an
organism which breathes twice a day
and has a spiritually alive soil. To
nurture it, different homeopathic
concoctions are applied to transfer
the "astral forces" of the
ingredients to the crops. Or, if
something more potent is preferred,
Steiner advises old-fashioned
witchcraft: "You catch a fairly
young field mouse and flay it... We
take the skin, when Venus stands in
the sign of Scorpio, and burn the
skin... Now take the ash which results
and sprinkle it out on the
fields." (translated by Bendz)
Israel is one of the few countries
which hosts a community completely run
by Steiner's philosophies. Kibbutz
Harduf, producer of health foods and
host to Steiner seminars, has been a
member of the United Kibbutz Movement
since 1985. Members embrace Steiner's
teachings without reservation, and see
themselves as offering "a better
alternative to the hazara b'teshuva
[return to Torah Judaism]
movement." ("Jerusalem
Post", Aug. 1, 1986) Accordingly,
their vegetarian restaurant does
double-duty, generating income and
serving as a front to "to spread
the word" of Steiner's gospel.
The "Jerusalem Post
Magazine" gave two positive (if
perplexed) critiques of Harduf
("Community of Spirit", Aug.
1, 1986; "In Steiner's
Footsteps", Nov. 19, 1999).
Anthroposophy was presented as a
legitimate alternate Jewish lifestyle,
referring to Steiner's teaching with a
superficial rosiness that gave no real
information.
6g. Scientology: Tel Aviv.
One of Steiner's early occultic
colleagues, L. Ron Hubbard, started
his own cult of "dianetics",
which teaches that all human misery
was caused by the space-tyrant Xenu,
who transported people to Earth 75
million years ago, dropped them into
volcanoes and exploded hydrogen bombs
on them. Hubbard identified himself as
the new Maitreya (competing with
Theosophy's choice at that time,
Krishnamurti), chosen by the
"ascended masters" to bring
mankind the solution. [For a full
treatment, see "Pseudo-Buddhism
in the Form of Scientology",
Dialog Center International, Denmark.]
This spiritual solution (which can set
you back as much as $50,000 a year)
developed into the "Church"
of Scientology, now a
multi-million-dollar global enterprise
known for ruthless exploitation and
intimidation, especially by lawsuit.
The Church's "fair game law"
targets any critics who becomes a
threat as fair game, at which point
every method, legal or otherwise, is
used to destroy them. "Time
Magazine" labeled Scientology
"the cult of greed," and
Cynthia Kisser, former Director of the
Cult Awareness Network (CAN), called
it "the most ruthless, the most
classically terroristic... lucrative
cult the country [U.S.] has ever
seen." Kisser should know; she
experienced their tactics first-hand
when Scientology, through a string of
bogus but financially draining
lawsuits, forced CAN into bankruptcy
in 1996 -- and then in late 1997
bought the organization (rights to the
name, logo, and case files, including
those against Scientology!). All CAN
staff have been replaced with
Scientology church members. (For the
whole story, see the transcript of the
"60 Minutes" production with
Leslie Stahl, Dec.28, 1997) [It is not
known how this affects the CAN office
which is said to be located in Israel.
I have not been able to locate them.]
Reactions outside the U.S. to
Scientology? The Supreme Court of
Victoria, Australia, after hearing
evidence against this group, had
strong words: "Scientology is
evil; its techniques are evil; its
practice is a serious threat to the
community, medically, morally and
socially." (Justice Anderson)
Germany's courts are currently
examining several charges against
Scientology involving human rights
abuse and anti-democratic activities
(and Germany is also suffering from
the church's "fair game law"
- in a well-funded publicity blitz,
Scientology has likened the
government's investigation to Hitler's
persecution of the Jews). Some
societies will never need to react to
Hubbard's mega-church, like black
Africa and China, due to his opinion
that Zulus belong in a
"madhouse," and that
"the trouble with China is, there
are too many Chinks there," and
similar assessments on India, South
Africa, Arabs, American blacks, and
"yellow and brown people" in
general.
What about Israel? Scientology is
alive and well, free to run its
"College of Dianetics" at 12
Shonzino St., Tel Aviv. Scientologists
regularly accost people in Israel's
business district with literature in
several languages, pressuring them to
take their "personality
test," the first step to draw
seekers into the long, expensive
process of "recovering" from
the ancient cosmic disaster.
6h. Transcendental Meditation:
Hararit, central Galilee.
The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, founder of
TM, is a charismatic guru who manages
to convince initiates that he promotes
a non-religious "technique",
despite the fact that the mantras are
names of Hindu deities and the puja
(initiation ceremony) is a hymn to at
least 20 Hindu gods. [See "The
Steps of Initiation into
Transcendental Meditation", a
transcription of the standard puja,
the exact wording of which must be
perfectly memorized by TM teachers.
Then go to to the line, "Teacher
performs puja" and check out the
translation provided to see the list
of deities.] In 1977, U.S. courts
finally caught on and ruled that TM
was a religion, which removed from it
the legal right to be taught in public
schools there. Germany's High Court in
1989 ruled that TM is neither religion
nor science, but a destructive cult.
In India, the Maharishi's huge NOIDA
ashram was plagued by scandal when
workers went on a 3-month strike,
protesting malnutrition, unsanitary
conditions and neglect which resulted
in the deaths of several ashram
children. The TM leader resolved that
unpleasantness by closing the ashram
for "a vacation", firing or
transferring all 200 teachers, and
turning the children loose to find
their way home across India (some of
whom never made it). [See the
testimony of Indian physician Govind
Sharma.]
The Maharishi's "technique"
nevertheless continues to generate
millions of dollars for his
organization, with Israelis being the
largest national group among his
trainees. Journalist Esther Hecht
notes that the Israeli TM disciples,
including educated professional
people, treat their guru much the same
as Habad devotees treat their Rebbe
Shneerson: having his picture in every
room and on every publication, and
invoking his name repeatedly in
everyday conversation. ("Peace of
Mind", "Jerusalem
Post", Jan.23, 1998. Also source
of other details in this paragraph.)
As of 1997, "His Holiness"
had hoped to exit Holland (which was
pressuring him to take his
"dangerous activity"
elsewhere) and relocate personally to
Israel, setting up court at his pilot
TM village of Hararit. To date he has
not done so [perhaps the Interior
Ministry is being stubborn about proof
of Jewishness...] At that time Hararit
had a long-term plan to also absorb
7000 sidhis (advanced meditators) to
effect cosmic changes and help usher
in the "dawn of the Age of
Enlightenment". This plan was
blocked by the Israeli watchdog group,
"Forum Against Cults".
However, the TMers did manage to form
a new kibbutz, "Yahad", and
an Ayurveda (TM-based medical) clinic.
6i. The Kabbalah Centre: Jerusalem,
Haifa, Tel Aviv.
Philip Berg's black-kippahed,
fast-talking salesmen make the rounds
door to door on a regular basis,
trying to sell the Zohar to religious
and secular, Jews and non-Jews,
housewives and teens, promising
instant spiritual profit (and
collecting healthy profits of the more
worldly kind). [See the main entry
above for more details.]
As is clear in this handful of
examples, NA missionaries to the
Israelis are equally comfortable in
Eastern garb, Western business suits,
or kippah and tsitsit. The fact that
they have found easy entry into
Israeli society, in spite of other
countries rejecting them, indicates
either high sophistication on their
part or astonishing naivete on the
part of Israel (or both). [But what
their success really shows is the
persistent spiritual hunger among
Israelis, who are grabbing at every
new spiritual fad that drifts by, one
after another. Why do they fall for
them - manipulative mystical con
games, deceptions that promise
enhanced Jewishness while
systematically destroying every reason
for being Jewish? That which sustained
the Jewish people for thousands of
years, and has seen us through every
attempt to erase us, is still
available. But many Israelis - out of
disappointment, anger, or ignorance -
have given up on Torah and gone on a
restless search for a substitute for
Jewish faith in the Jewish G-d. Yet
the reason they keep switching
"spiritual paths" is that
they will never really be satisfied
with anything less than that for which
they were created. This constitutes
both a challenge and a hope for our
future.]
6j. Israeli Media and Entertainment
None of this takes into account the
daily indoctrination coming through
the myriad "healers" and
channelers offering peace and
enlightenment on the streets of
Israel, who receive mostly positive
publicity in local papers. And we have
yet to mention the
government-sponsored Israeli TV,
especially children's entertainment. A
casual sampling of Israel's
"educational network" will
show a steady diet of heroes who rely
on psychic powers, alien helpers,
personal transformations (symbolized
in physical changes) and even actual
pagan deities. From
"Digimon" to Disney, from
"X-Men" to
"X-Files", in 10-minute
cartoons and full feature movies, in
fantasy plots and real life plots, NA
religion is being aimed at Israeli
children aged 1 to 18. These programs
are usually dubbed in Hebrew, and
appear most often during the hours
when working parents are away from the
home. The same thing can be said for
the movie and home video offerings,
after-school activities, computer
games and bestselling Hebrew books,
and even acquisitions at the public
library. [Imagine the predictable
Israeli reaction if Christian
missionaries were to target Jewish
children using any one of these
methods, and we see how well NA has
done its work - Israeli kids sit in
front of the TV cheering for
spirit-guide heroes, devour library
books full of pagan mythology in
Hebrew, or trot off to yoga classes
where they bow to Indian deities, and
no one notices.]
7. The Goal of Converting the Jews
to NA Thinking
All these tremendous efforts to bring
both secular and traditional Jews,
diaspora and Israeli Jews alike, over
to NA doctrine have but one goal,
judging by NA sources. It is not in
order to "liberate" Jews
from their identity so as to receive
them into the spiritual family of Man
[although that would be bad enough].
As we have seen, the Jews as a group
are flatly considered unsuitable
material for the New Age. The goal of
converting Jews is to make them
voluntarily accept the "cleansing
action" which is to remove them
from this "physical plane of
existence". [See the end result
of "right human relations"
in the "Views on Jews"
section.]
In accordance with Alice Bailey's
analysis on the Holocaust, other NA
spokesmen continue to preach that the
Jews always bring on their own
suffering. In other contexts (such as
Christian denunciation of the
'Christ-killers') this is highly
offensive to any Jew. But after
accepting the twin NA concepts of
reincarnation and some form of
"karma" [such as
"tikkun", a Kabbalistic
doctrine which only differs from
standard karma in teaching that G-d
rather than a cosmic force sends a Jew
into multiple lives to repair mistakes
or cosmic imbalance], it will begin to
sound logical that if Jews are being
repeatedly singled out for suffering
and untimely death, they as a group
must indeed owe some collective karmic
debt. The NAers are confident that
Jews who accept the karmic view of
suffering will also accept the karmic
requirement of passive submission to
whatever befalls themselves and their
loved ones - especially if appropriate
spirits of their
"luminaries" [the ranking
system for advanced practitioners of
Kabbalah, corresponding to the NA
ranking of their "Iluminati"
or "enlightened ones"]
appear to them with promises of a
favorable future life as a reward for
voluntary submission. Such visitations
will be credited by NA teachers to the
activity of Maitreya - his merciful
contribution to help ease the passage
of the Jewish race from this
dimension.
7a. A NA-Manufactured Messiah
For those who cling tightly to
Torah-from-Sinai Judaism, even
"Messiah" is scheduled to
appear, to command them to obey
Maitreya whom he also serves. Leading
occultist Peter LeMesurier, in his
book "The Armaggedon
Script", outlines the
"script" for a simulated
arrival of the Jewish Messiah
(p.231-233) tailored for Jewish
acceptance. He is to arrive in Israel
incognito, and devote himself to
studying everything expected of the
Messiah: Tenach prophecies, Dead Sea
Scrolls, current Jewish expectations,
prophecies from other religions. He
must then harness the science of
earthquake prediction to show up on
the Mount of Olives during an
earthquake. He will proceed to
Jerusalem from the east, accompanied
by a procession in shining white,
enter the tomb of King David, and come
out miraculously dressed in perfumed
royal robes, as David reincarnated.
His ascension to the Temple Mount to
be crowned King of Israel will be a
matter of course, given his popular
support. What about resistance from
suspicious Jews and/or Christians?
"The massed forces of the Old
Age, however, will be unable to check
their headlong onrush. In large
measure they will go on to destroy
each other in a massive, mutual
venting of long pent-up
aggression." (p.237) [This
confident assumption shows awareness
of the NA plan to keep Jews and
Christians mistrustful of each other.
Or perhaps it refers to the ongoing
conflict between Jews and Moslems,
which more accurately displays a
seemingly unstoppable
"aggression"; that rift also
serves the Plan.] Meanwhile, this
messiah will go on to lead the
"youth of the world" in
"spreading the already developing
ideas and values upon which the New
Age is to be founded.... It is for the
soul of man that the New David will
have to fight."
Was LeMesurier's "script",
written in 1982, taken seriously by
anyone? Major publishers in the U.S.
and England snapped the book up, as
well as a British book club which made
it a featured selection. A group of
125 prominent Carl Jung disciples met
the following year to discuss the
plan's feasibility - from a Jungian
viewpoint, acting out the
"messiah myth" might help
release humanity's "collective
unconscious" from its long
fixation on the "apocalypse
idea" which is holding back
spiritual enlightenment. Among the
attendees were Dr. Robert Jay Lifton
of Yale, leading Jungian scholar James
Hillman and Wolfgang Giegerich of the
Jung Institute in Stuttgart. (See
"New Age Journal" Sep. 1983,
cited by attorney Constance Cumbey,
"A Planned Deception", p.11)
This nod to ancient Jewish tradition
is considered a final strategy to wean
the Jews away from the religion of
their forefathers. In view of all the
NA missionary efforts directed at
Jews, the preferred scenario is that
before leaving the scene, the Jews
would first put their G-d to death by
admitting that their faith and its
Object are flawed, outdated,
unsatisfying, incapable of real life
without injections of pantheist
spirituality, or even a total fiction.
As Bailey wrote ("A Treatise on
Cosmic Fire" IID, p.948), the
"Law of Karma" dictates that
the "gigantic thought form",
the G-d which the Jews were
responsible for introducing to the
world, "has to be dissipated by
those [humans] who have created
it." A Jewish effort to terminate
their own G-d would mean a more
complete payment of karma as far as NA
is concerned. As far as the priorities
of the Hierarchy are concerned, it
would mean a final victory in their
"Spiritual War", which is
actually more against the "Dark
Force" behind the Jews than
against the Jews themselves.
But the Hierarchy has expressed fear
of telling their disciples too much
about that "Force", which
gives us a hint that - even after all
the investment and boasting - the
outcome of this War is not really
under their control. |