Jewish Magic, Healing, & Art, Part 1

REGISTRATION IS NOW CLOSED

Cohort Description:
A 6-week online opportunity to join in a community of makers, healers, artists, activists, queers and our friends as we explore ancient and modern magic, healing and art of diasporic Judaism. Patriarchy has obscured many ancient Jewish rites associated with the occult and the magic of the everyday. Practices of the home and those kept by women and nonbinary people have often been forgotten or concealed because of violence, assimilation and white supremacy.

But our practices of resistance and earth reverence live in the altar of the Shabbat table and in the light reflected in our friend’s eyes. They are inscribed in the clay of our doorway mezuzah and our precious hands touching them. They live in the spices we smell during havdalah, the scent taking us back to the earth our ancestors stepped on while harvesting these sacred plants. In this cohort, we will illuminate what has been hidden and celebrate a revived Jewish practice through song, chants, lectures, guided meditations, medicine-making, the crafting of magical objects and, the building of community.

This space affirms that your life is Jewish magic, and the ways we collaborate with the energy of life has potential to heal our world. Magic manifests in many ways including through our art, work with plants, organizing for social change, and the ways we intend for our life to be a ritual.

Some of the ancient Jewish teachings we will explore in this cohort include water rites and mikveh, amulets, mirror magic, Jewish time and the moon, incantation bowls, the Sefer Yetzirah (Jewish mystical text that predates the kabbalah), magical practices working with plants and animals, Jewish astrology, angels and demons. 

We will also learn from amazing guest teachers who are queer Jewish magic practitioners, artists, healers, community organizers and change-makers. These teachers center ritual, magic, and social change within their art practices and will guide us in doing hands-on activities together. In addition to our study of ancient Jewish teachings, we’ll receive inspiration from these contemporary artists, community organizers, and ritualists who are innovating work for the healing of all beings. Together we become the living dream of our ancestors.

This is Part 1 of a three-part series. In Parts 2 & 3, we will cover Jewish Astrology, Plant Magic, Liberation Magic, the Sefer Yetzirah and the Hebrew letters in greater depth. You are welcome to attend either one, two or all three sections.

Cohort size for each part is limited to 25 people. Price of the cohort includes an amazing Ritual Box of magical tools used throughout the series.

Your Teachers and their session descriptions:

Lukaza Branfman-Verissimo (They/them/Lukaza) is an artist, activist, educator, storyteller & curator who lives/works between Ohlone Land [Oakland, CA] and Powhatan Land [Richmond,VA]. They invite the viewer to recall and share their own lived narratives, offering power and weight to the creation of a larger dialogue around the telling of B.I.Q.T.P.O.C. stories. Learn more at: www.lukazabranfmanverissimo.com

Lukaza will be offering time and space to come together and make collectively built rituals. Through writing exercises, every day altar making, mail-art and space to come together, what are the rituals that feed us? What are the rituals that liberate, resist and love? Let's all light a candle together.

Nicki Green is a transdisciplinary artist working primarily in clay. Her sculptures, ritual objects and various flat works explore topics of history preservation, conceptual ornamentation and aesthetics of otherness. Often constructing heavily ornamented painted glaze surfaces and experimental, organic building techniques, Green explores material and object integrity by utilizing transness as a lens with which to look at the world. Find out more at: www.nickigreen.org

Fermentation Magic: How has fermentation been used in a Jewish historic to nourish and how can we reconsider fermentation as an inherently queer, alchemical flexible practice? We'll look at the intersections of mikveh/washing and consider the ways in which fermentation could be integrated into weekly rituals to connect deeper with our bodies, our communities and our histories.

Rebecca Maria Goldschmidt is an artist and cultural worker engaging in place-based art and research projects. Her recent work in textiles, ceramics, video, and print reflects studies of cultural and land-based practices of her Jewish and Filipino ancestors. She received her MFA from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa in Honolulu in 2020 and is pursuing her doctoral studies in Sculpture as a MEXT Scholar at Hiroshima City University in Japan. Learn more at: www.rrrebecca.com

Let's talk about the animate-ness of vessels, from shells to chatsubo, Japanese tea storage jars! Rebecca will share her research from Hiroshima around Philippines ceramic history, ancient Jewish inscribed pots, and the role of jars as animate beings: communicators, wombs, multipliers, and contact points to the ancestral world.

Mazal Masoud Etegi

Mazal Masoud Etedgi (they/them/theirs) is a trans/non-binary artist, arab/mizrahi/amazigh jew, first-gen, spoonie/chronically ill person, herbalist, Drama Therapist, clown, and cultural organizer. Maz utilizes imagination, play, and ritual as tools for liberation, healing and connection. You can find their herbal medicine apothecary at www.bsamimapothecary.com @bsamim.apothecary

In this workshop, Maz will share about plants in the Torah and in SWANA traditional herbal medicine that are supportive for individual and collective protection, as well as connection to the Divine. For the experiential portion of the class, we will co-create an amulet made with cloth, herbs and string. This amulet is known by many names in the Sephardic, Amazigh and North African practices (respectively): bulsika, za’aboula, choukara and tsherot.

Lead Teacher: Rebekah Erev

Rebekah Erev (they/them) is a queer artist, teacher, ritual leader/kohenet, community herbalist, dreamworker, cultural organizer and healer. For over two decades they have practiced and taught a Judaism steeped in the old ways, ancestral and earth reverence and visions of the world to come. They celebrate diaspora with Queer Mikveh Project, a community, advocacy tool and art practice. Learn more here.

Rebekah will be teaching the first, second and last sessions along with teaching a portion of all six sessions. They will teach about mirror magic, healing and magical herbs, the moon, incantation bowls, amulets, the Sefer Yetzirah and the Hebrew letters as portals, Jewish astrology and more. You can expect to do ritual, meditate, have group conversations, create ritual objects and discover many gems of Jewish magic. You will also make meaningful connections to your own life and social justice while working with Rebekah!

Dates:
This cohort takes place on 6 consecutive Sundays 4-6pm PST (with a ten minute break).

November 13th - Introduction to Jewish Magic & Elemental Systems in Judaism
November 20th - Introduction to Plant Magic in Judaism
November 27th -
Altar Making
December 4th - Incantation Bowls
December 11th - Mikveh & Water Rites, Fermentation Magic
December 18th - Mirror Magic & The Moon, Closing

Access Information: 
This online series of live sessions will be hosted on Zoom. ASL interpretation and live closed captioning are available upon request—please fill out this form to share your access needs. You are welcome to join our cohort regardless of your spiritual background; if you have beginner or advanced knowledge of Judaism, interest in converting to Judaism, or are a Jew by Choice. No prior knowledge of Judaism or Hebrew is required for participation in this cohort.

Sessions Include:
- Six live sessions, each 2 hours in length.
- Hands-on practices, rituals, meditations and activities facilitated by Rebekah and guest teachers.
- Access to session recordings until January 1st, 2023.

Cost: 
This series of classes is available on a sliding scale. Payment plans available, please email: rebekah@rebekaherevstudio.com

You can determine your place on the sliding scale below.  You may fit anywhere between the $450-$850 range.  See the green bottle graphic below from Alexis of Worts & Cunning Apothecary about the sliding scale system to assist you in identifying what your payment for this class should be. 

Three full scholarships are available for this series for BIPOC. We encourage you to apply with this simple form.

As an act of Ger (Guest laws and Land Back), a percentage of proceeds from this class will go to supporting the work of Rose Island Farm.

Enrollment fees for this course are non-refundable.

Jewish Magic, Healing & Art Part 1
from $450.00

Ritual Box: 
We’ve created a ritual box to accompany this series and to support you in doing magic with us together! Each box contains the materials we will be using during the class activities throughout Parts 1, 2, and 3. It includes: a ritually engraved mirror, herbs and bottle for making your own anointing oil, a set of small tapers from Narrow Bridge Candles, a bag of clay for making an incantation bowl, fabric and string for making herbal amulets, pickling spices, herbs from Rebekah’s garden and beyond  (cedar, rose, yarrow, dandelion root and more!) original art by Rebekah and Lukaza, evil eye beads and more. 

Box is included with enrollment. This box is only available for students within the United States, and the price includes the cost of shipping. If you are outside of the U.S. and wish to enroll and receive a box, do not enroll here. Instead, please email: rebekah@rebekaherevstudio.com to arrange price adjustment to cover additional shipping costs.

 

Testimonials from Previous Cohort’s:

“Being able to receive a ritual box that had so much of the supplies for this class really helped me be able to be present and not worry about having the right things. I also love that we physically made something with each class. I've never experienced anything like this where the learning was so tactile and experiential yet also virtual. I've learned so much about myself and the possibilities of creating space for myself and community connection for expression of spirit, emotion, and art.”

“This class has felt really nourishing for me in rebuilding a relationship to my identity and ancestors in a way beyond loss. I loved the physical making of objects and medicine as a way of bringing the lessons of this class into my home and life. I love the discussions and stories and reflections each person brings into the space. I’ve never been in such a nourishing Jewish space that felt welcoming of all my political and personal identities.”

“Rebekah Erev shares such a wealth of knowledge and passion. Their commitment to accessibility across disabilities is so clear and important. The class has given me so much. I’m so sad it’s over but I would do anything for more.”

“I loved the variety of focus and learning, with different speakers and activities. … The ritual box gave me a feeling of connection through material objects. … I love that I came away from the group with actual sacred and ritual objects that I made and could use, and/or ideas for the same outside of the group. … I felt that the class learnings and activities sparked artistic connection and inspiration in other areas of my life.”

“I liked how many types of activities we did. As someone with ADHD, I can easily lose focus, but in this class there was so much interesting material presented in so many ways. It was a deeply impactful experience in the growth of my spiritual identity. Our work together brought awareness of so many ideas in Judaism that have been obscured or lost because of patriarchy. Not only did Rebekah as a teacher bring a wealth of knowledge, but they made space for others to share their own. By the end it truly felt like we built a compassionate community of powerful, wise practitioners.”