Actually, what I was after was a meeting with just one remarkable man. I had questions. He had answers. Not answers in the usual way, but he could expound, he could encourage. He could inspire. Influence. I could be bathed in his charisma. Be brought to tears by his wisdom. Stand in awe... Sit at his feet... You know the drill. Just your usual meetings with remarkable men.
I do have a rebbe who inspires in this way. And I heard him speak recently at a week long workshop at the Islamic Center in Oakland, California. Yup, he's that inspiring. You heard me right. The Islamic Center. This is what makes him so inspiring. The rabbi at the Islamic Center. It was also his birthday. He was turning 88.
He was more frail than I had ever seen him. He was aided by a tall Shaikh with an exotic name. There was even a zikhr in my rebbe's honor—an Islamic (Sufi, really) shared invocation of the Divine Name that can bring participants to trance, or tears, from the beauteous repetition of the holy name. For me, it brought me to both. Trance and tears. To be in the presence of this remarkable man. To think that I might not see him ever again. To realize that the zikhr still holds so much power over me. And in the flickering contemplation at the back of my mind (or perhaps my heart) of the long-felt secret desire to convert to Islam, if only for the purifying effect of the zikhr.
But the power of my rebbe was such, that there was no need for conversion. My rebbe himself practices zikhr. He himself is a Shaikh. A Sufi master. He practices something he calls multireligiousity, and advocates it mightily. Why limit yourself when there's so much out there in traditions not your own? I'm pretty ambivalent about such a position. My Native American friends think it's dangerous horseshit. And they're pretty vocal about it.
But the argument is valid. Why should we be limited by the narrowness of our own natal traditions, when others are so (or equally) powerful?
My rebbe's not talking about appreciation-of-the-Other. Not talking about acceptance or tolerance. Or visiting each other's holy places and houses of worship. Not talking about broad-based scholarship. Not talking about fieldwork among. No. He's talking about practice. About becoming. And holding all of it (yours, his, mine), holding all of it in the same thimble. Drinking all of the medicine down. Becoming. Being. Experiencing.
My little rebbe and the tall shaikh are on the same page in this regard. You should have heard the shaikh's yiddishisms! A miracle, indeed.
But that's not quite what I wanted to say here. What has brought me out of my long silence, after the death of my mother. Strange how her death brought me to a virtual paralysis of the fingertips. For almost a year, I have hardly been able to write a word. Strong mojo, that woman. I still don't understand it. I had so much to say, and it was just washed away in the shock of her departure.
No, what brought me back to my keyboard was waking up to a dream this morning. And thinking that it was still happening. That I was still there. It was one of those dreams. Hyper-real. How could it not have happened? It clobbered me. It shook me up. Wagged its finger at me in admonishment. It taught me a lesson. I'll show you, it said. You know. The usual dream stuff.
I needed to see Reb Zalman. I needed to confer with him about something urgent. It had to do with the Biblical Hebrew word את in the first lines of Genesis. It had to do with an important point in the film I'm making. Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi had been too frail and exhausted to meet with the many of us who had wanted individual consultations at the workshop. And I don't blame him. It's the nature of remarkable men that we pull at them, that we want their baraka (or their bracha)... We followers must be an exhausting lot. But he nodded graciously at me, his acknowledgement. A little twinkle in his eye. That in itself was precious, he was that holy in my mind.
But in the dream, I was given access. Here's the time. Here's the place. Here's the room number.
I took the elevator up to the 7th floor, and looked around. The Organization up there was all in the service of the rebbe. I was definitely in the right place, and so I wandered around. Read the literature. Waited. I'd come early, of course, hoping for more time. My questions were just that urgent.
After waiting my fair share, I went up to the Reception because I couldn't find the room.
"You're on the wrong floor," the neo-frummish woman told me. "He's in Room 6.1, which is not on 7."
I had gone to the wrong floor. Written the wrong number. Was in the wrong place. Was going to be late for my coveted and hard-won meeting.
I wasn't worthy, after all.
The elevator didn't stop on the 6th floor. That was a floor that required special access, and I seemed to have lost my privileges. The elevator no longer worked for me, although it would have earlier apparently.
I took the stairs.
The stairway door was miraculously slightly ajar. I was on the 6th floor at last.
And there, as I walked the hallway looking for 6.1—I saw every door somewhat ajar. And in every room sat a holy man or holy woman. Every different color. Bearded and unbearded. Gray haired and dark hair. Turbaned and veiled and uncovered. All. Waiting. Every door was open, every saint or shaikh or rebbe, every lama, every monk. Every insurgent rebel. Every learned practitioner. Every intuitive. Every tzaddik. Waiting there. All I had to do was walk through any door. Or all of them.
All, save 6.1. That one wasn't there at all.
I woke up this morning to a time change. I'm still not quite awake, really. Did time move forward or did it move backward? Or maybe it stopped entirely, and I don't have to teach my class. And what would I teach them, anyway?
There's this door, and there's that door I suppose. And, okay, yes—they're all more or less open. And what's strangest of all—is that my students most definitely walk through mine.
Showing posts with label multireligiosity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multireligiosity. Show all posts
Monday, November 5, 2012
Thursday, August 23, 2012
multireligiosity
Okay. I learned a new word. And I'm not sure what I think about it. In the past I've been downright incensed at the theft of indigenous spiritual practices by white wannabes. True, my outrage is for the most part borrowed. My indigenous friends just about foam at the mouth over this one. Especially when the appropriated song or ritual or practice is used by the wannabe at the wrong time, at the wrong place, and for the wrong purpose.
How can you, they inquire, take my song and abuse it this way? You took our land and our language. You stole our children and shipped them off to Christian boarding schools —and now you want our spirituality? Spiritual theft, indeed. I get it.
Remember the Cherokee elders who heckled Felicitas Goodman one year when we were all in Tempe, "The Creator made you a Presbyterian," they shouted. "Go back to church!"
My indigenous friends make the case for pure systems. Or for trying to keep them as pure as possible given that these 'systems' are by now long ago polluted with otherness, or almost completely wiped out anyway.
I understand the indigenous complaint. I'm sensitive to it. My own people are practically extinct as well. And I'd like to say that I don't beg, borrow, or steal from the traditions of others. Surely I don't practice anyone else's religion. I mean, I barely practice my own. No wonder it's dying out. So there should be nothing to complain about on that front. And I've learned to be super careful about not inviting guest lecturers to speak in my classes if they're folk who are immersed in someone else's tradition, no matter how knowledgeable or devout or sincere they may appear.
But then there's Zalman. Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, my mentor. Reb Zalman, whose teachings helped me reconcile my love for Islamic cultures with holding on to my own unshakeable (nearly extinct) Sephardi identity. I had it all worked out at one point: I mean after all, it's because of the Ottoman Islamic State that my people survived at all. And before that, we thrived in Islamic Spain. It all sounds so rational when you put it like that. I mean, it's not like I wear a hijab (though I think they're pretty elegant), and I certainly don't perform Islamic prayers five times a day. No. I just appreciate Islam. It makes a lot of sense to me.
I hadn't seen Reb Zalman in many, many years, but here he was, giving a symposium for Star King at the Islamic Cultural Center in Oakland. Three days of Zalman!
And the service had everything in it.
Just name a religion, and it's tradition was in there somewhere. No pygmy chants that I recognized, but you get my point.
The word of the day was 'multireligiosity' —and the Star King folk, they practice what they preach. And it was pretty stunning. Each sentence was peppered with the weaving together of traditions. And so were the songs that were sung, and the gestures, and the clothing.
I want to call it syncretism, but it isn't. It's something more personal that that. For it seemed that every person in the hall had a different combination of religious affinities. And the lectures and sermons encouraged more of the same.
And to tell the truth, it was pretty neat to hear the Jewishisms coming out of the mouths of Muslims, and the Islamicisms falling out of the mouths of Jews. It wasn't forced, or enforced—it was merely comfort and familiarity with the Other. Or, no, not that—for Otherness had disappeared from their vocabulary. It was fairly seamless.
Reb Zalman spoke of the virtues of being in-between the strict adherences of the isms. He encouraged all to cultivate the larger tapestry. What kind of religion serves best the healing of the planet? Go and practice that.
It was three days of religious liminality. But it wasn't just about appreciating the Other, it was about practicing the practices of each. The symposium wasn't just merged wordings—there was ritual too. Performativity. And this is something I'm profoundly uncomfortable with. But Zalman encourages participation (and sure, it's part of anthropological methodology as well) (and so, deciding to be a good sport, and put my bloody notebook down and stop taking notes) I found myself in —
zikr
—crying my eyes out, as we chanted and bobbed. The rhythm is exactly the type that moves me, or maybe moves everybody. Look at films of zikr and you'll see just how entrancing it is. And it made me feel instead of making me think. Which is exactly what it's supposed to do. And exactly what Reb Zalman wants me to do. After all, he's a Jewfi.
Two zikrs in three days can bring on an addiction for sure. It's precisely the practice of religious ritual that is so powerful, not the intellectual appreciation of it. I'm still going to chalk it up to participant-observation, this time, at least. But deep down, I'm not so sure. I believe I'm in grave danger of wanting more.
And maybe of going out and finding it.
How can you, they inquire, take my song and abuse it this way? You took our land and our language. You stole our children and shipped them off to Christian boarding schools —and now you want our spirituality? Spiritual theft, indeed. I get it.
Remember the Cherokee elders who heckled Felicitas Goodman one year when we were all in Tempe, "The Creator made you a Presbyterian," they shouted. "Go back to church!"
My indigenous friends make the case for pure systems. Or for trying to keep them as pure as possible given that these 'systems' are by now long ago polluted with otherness, or almost completely wiped out anyway.
I understand the indigenous complaint. I'm sensitive to it. My own people are practically extinct as well. And I'd like to say that I don't beg, borrow, or steal from the traditions of others. Surely I don't practice anyone else's religion. I mean, I barely practice my own. No wonder it's dying out. So there should be nothing to complain about on that front. And I've learned to be super careful about not inviting guest lecturers to speak in my classes if they're folk who are immersed in someone else's tradition, no matter how knowledgeable or devout or sincere they may appear.
But then there's Zalman. Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, my mentor. Reb Zalman, whose teachings helped me reconcile my love for Islamic cultures with holding on to my own unshakeable (nearly extinct) Sephardi identity. I had it all worked out at one point: I mean after all, it's because of the Ottoman Islamic State that my people survived at all. And before that, we thrived in Islamic Spain. It all sounds so rational when you put it like that. I mean, it's not like I wear a hijab (though I think they're pretty elegant), and I certainly don't perform Islamic prayers five times a day. No. I just appreciate Islam. It makes a lot of sense to me.
I hadn't seen Reb Zalman in many, many years, but here he was, giving a symposium for Star King at the Islamic Cultural Center in Oakland. Three days of Zalman!
And the service had everything in it.
Just name a religion, and it's tradition was in there somewhere. No pygmy chants that I recognized, but you get my point.
The word of the day was 'multireligiosity' —and the Star King folk, they practice what they preach. And it was pretty stunning. Each sentence was peppered with the weaving together of traditions. And so were the songs that were sung, and the gestures, and the clothing.
I want to call it syncretism, but it isn't. It's something more personal that that. For it seemed that every person in the hall had a different combination of religious affinities. And the lectures and sermons encouraged more of the same.
And to tell the truth, it was pretty neat to hear the Jewishisms coming out of the mouths of Muslims, and the Islamicisms falling out of the mouths of Jews. It wasn't forced, or enforced—it was merely comfort and familiarity with the Other. Or, no, not that—for Otherness had disappeared from their vocabulary. It was fairly seamless.
Reb Zalman spoke of the virtues of being in-between the strict adherences of the isms. He encouraged all to cultivate the larger tapestry. What kind of religion serves best the healing of the planet? Go and practice that.
It was three days of religious liminality. But it wasn't just about appreciating the Other, it was about practicing the practices of each. The symposium wasn't just merged wordings—there was ritual too. Performativity. And this is something I'm profoundly uncomfortable with. But Zalman encourages participation (and sure, it's part of anthropological methodology as well) (and so, deciding to be a good sport, and put my bloody notebook down and stop taking notes) I found myself in —
zikr
—crying my eyes out, as we chanted and bobbed. The rhythm is exactly the type that moves me, or maybe moves everybody. Look at films of zikr and you'll see just how entrancing it is. And it made me feel instead of making me think. Which is exactly what it's supposed to do. And exactly what Reb Zalman wants me to do. After all, he's a Jewfi.
Two zikrs in three days can bring on an addiction for sure. It's precisely the practice of religious ritual that is so powerful, not the intellectual appreciation of it. I'm still going to chalk it up to participant-observation, this time, at least. But deep down, I'm not so sure. I believe I'm in grave danger of wanting more.
And maybe of going out and finding it.
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