Wednesday, November 18, 2015

The Jewish Ashram project vision (draft grant proposal)

2012 grant proposal republished here to inspire Joshua on his upcoming Bar Mitzvah and motivate other seekers interested in an Inspirational, Abundant and Blissful Jewish path

**************

Title of Project *
 

The Virtual Jewish Ashram (Phase One of The Jewish Ashram) 

Project Description

We believe that Judaism has an image problem. Yes, it's true. There are too many unfavorable beliefs about the Jewish people, Jewish study and Jewish history -- even among Jews about being Jewish. Like the famous joke about the meaning of Jewish holidays: "they tried to kill us, we survived, let's eat." Although entertaining, we would like to challenge these assumptions and ideas by creating a space of Judaism that is (sit down, please) INSPIRATIONAL. (Take a breath) ABUNDANT. (Drink a glass of water) BLISSFUL. 

We are thankful to those who have have opened the gates to this sort of practice. The Jewish Ashram will provide a home for them to more readily and collectively build on what they have done, and bring in other important voices with important teachings about topics such as gratitude, abundance, love, possibility, and other subjects which concern spiritual seekers and fill the pages of spiritual, self help and psychology books. We would like to expose the world to this side of Judaism, the Gan Eden side. We believe that creating a new and dynamic incubator for a Judaism emphasizing these things can effect healing in the world, for Jews, non-Jews, and Judaism.

First, by creating a website where Jewish scholars and rabbis could offer inspirational messages, stories and ideals with our user base. The Jewish people need to meet all the Dalai Lamas from our scriptures. All the sages who taught us how to live fully and abundantly. Many rabbis have access to these learnings, but they are not taught or emphasized in traditional Jewish studies programs or shuls. We are taught about the holidays (yes, yes, we know they tried to kill us). We are taught the 613 commandments (really? 613? why do the Catholics only get 7? Oy, the suffering...). We are taught parables from the torah (stories about slaughter, debauchery, incest, deceit, etc). 

We are not taught the Judaism which will guide us to burst open our hearts and fill our souls with song. This is the Judaism that we aim to teach in our virtual (and in the future, physical) ashram. We envision our ashram as an incubator and reference for inspirational Jewish spiritual creation from simple topics pertaining to daily living to more esoteric explorations regarding lifetime purpose, infinity and the unknown universe, and every subject in between. What if rather than beating us down, Judaism raised us to our highest heights?

We want to expose seekers with the side of Judaism that is masked in the world. The Judaism which elevates our hearts in prayer, meditation, poetry dance, movement and song. The Judaism which whispers to us to live the most fulfilled, loving lives. The Judaism which loses itself in bliss. The Judaism which witnesses peace in every corner of the globe, including in Israel. The Judaism which embodies infinite oneness with the universe. The Judaism which embraces all humans as one. The Judaism which manifests miracles and blessings throughout the world. That is the Judaism we are devout to. That is the Judaism we believe spiritual seekers will devour with greater appetite than their bubby's gefilte fish. That is the Judaism we want to spread in the online and eventually, physical worlds. 
 
In the future, we foresee a center which holds this inspirational Jewish experience and study 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. We envision a place where Judaism is taught to guide seekers in their spiritual development, whatever that means to them. For some, their spiritual progression may be through the realm of creativity. What can Judaism teach us about Creativity? For others, their expression will be through Service. How could Judaism inspire these seekers through the tales and lessons from its texts? For others, spirituality may come in the form of community. And so forth. We envision teaching classes at this center where each student will embody the values of Judaism and will be inspired and transformed to live in their most fulfilled nature. 

The Jewish Ashram aims to be a place where Judaism guides people's lives on every dimension. We hope that in our center, Jewish people learn about dreaming and dancing, praying and praising, loving and losing, giving and gratifying. We hope that this retreat center opens our hearts to Judaism and that Judaism beams its golden light into the souls of its people. A Judaism that moves us from a place of abundance, and is mindful about sending fear based messages that paralyze us. 

Although the project we envision is a physical space, which may require[s] millions of dollars to build, we would like to begin the process of gathering these Jewish teachings and spreading the word through the virtual universe. 

Intended Need * 

We intend to build a Jewish Ashram in California. We envision a retreat center where all Jewish denominations will teach, study and commune. More than anything, we envision a center where new Jewish liturgy and practice are fostered and expressed. The Jewish community too often works in silos. Chabbadnikim do not mingle with Reform Jews who do not mingle with Renewal and humanist Jews. We strive to create a center which is grounded in embodied Jewish spiritual practice: meditation, heart opening, and compassionate wisdom. We aim to bring teachers from every denomination of Judaism to teach retreats at the center. We imagine that every group will form the center in its own way, be it through new prayers, art, wisdom, books, dance, chant, etc. Regardless of what retreat a participant will select, they will have access to all spiritual teachings of Judaism. Once the center is established, we will create cross-denominational retreats that incubate new liturgy, prayers, and Jewish practices. We will share these practices with the global Jewish community through our virtual ashram.

Today, Jewish seekers can be found kneeling before Hindi rishis, yogis and gurus or meditating in Buddhist monasteries on mountaintops across Asia or praying to a myriad of other spiritual Gods, who resonate with their hearts. Many seekers do not have access to the Jewish teachings of the heart and so, seek teachings outside Judaism to fulfill their basic human needs: the expansion of hearts and souls, the seeking of purpose, and communal creation. There are infinite spiritual teachings and revelations in the Jewish texts and we aim to encourage rabbis and Jewish educators to expose seekers to the heart and soul wisdom of Jewish spiritual practice. The teachings exist. The teachers are ready. The students are yearning. We aim to create a space where all facets of spiritual Judaism can be woven into a magical tapestry of shared and blissful spiritual experience.

The Jewish community collects many statistics about issues concerning the longevity of the Jewish people. Issues of intermarriage, conversion, loss of affiliation with Israel, etc. which concern these community leaders and scholars. There is one issue which may not be easily measured, but we believe is the most urgent to consider: the importance of the Jewish neshama (soul). We believe that by teaching the Judaism which fosters the expansion of the soul, our culture will rejoice in jubilant celebration of its traditions, increasing engagement with the culture and decreasing the issues that these concerning statistics present.

+++++++++++++++++ 

WORKING NOTES

Please identify which aspects of the criteria this project meets and why this project is uniquely suited to Reboot *
Have to ask about this....
 

Intended Audience *
Jewish (and non-Jewish) spiritual seekers of all ages Budget


Website development budget - $5000
Security based site because people will be sharing personal information Not sure how much detail they need. Will ask.


Outreach Plan
Social Media through Jewish organizations and the featured rabbis
Social media through non-Jewish spiritual communities (Buddhist, Hindu, Tao, Yoga, Meditation, Dance, Movement, Chant, etc....)
PR and media in Jewish and non-Jewish spiritual papers, journals and online sources Community games - 5 minutes of meditation, photo collage of an attribute or teaching, quotes / poems / songs, etc. new ritual corner


Evaluation Plan
Number of people who are active visitors on the site
Number of visitors who recommend the site to their communities
Feedback regarding impact of site from visitors
Development of preliminary funding plan [Funding raised] for physical ashram (not sure we should include this....) I'll ask.

Monday, November 16, 2015

FOR JOSHUA

FOR JOSHUA:

Hi favorite neph-dude.  I hope things are well and that you're feeling great about and increasingly ready for your big day.  By now you have hopefully navigated through the myriad of adult voices inputting into the substance of your drasch.  I am very much looking forward to hearing what YOU decide to say, and to benefit from whatever wisdom you uncover and share.  I hope my minor and intentionally non substantive input -- of one idea per paragraph, taking your time, remembering to breath, etc. -- proves to be of some help.  I trust you with the substance and remain happy and available if you'd like any help working through it.  But mostly i'm looking forward to what YOU have to say...from YOUR  heart, in YOUR voice!

I want to thank you for agreeing to read something I co-wrote with a friend a few years ago...she actually wrote the first draft after we decided what we wanted to say, which I then edited.  We used the attached version to apply for a grant.  We didn't get the grant and she got married and moved to Israel.  Which is great!  In fact its a great example of a key theme in the grant and something we've discussed from time to time, uncovering and renewing Jewish ways to manifest abundance.  I know that abundance is a teaching you have absorbed online from non-Jewish sources, which is terrific.  I'm hoping that the grant proposal will inspire you to let abundance cross your mind on your Bar Mitzvah day, and perhaps many a day in the future.  

You may recall seeing Reb Zalman a few years ago (shortly after the grant proposal was written) at a church where he received an honorary doctorate degree.  He capped his acceptance drasch that day with this teaching, not frequently voiced in Jewish circles, and sadly emphasized even less:  "Abundance is possible.  Abundance needs to be invited."  Zalman as you know had deep Jewish roots, was one of the founders of Jewish Renewal, a Sufi priest, a friend and spiritual brother of the Dalai Lama, and much more.  I hope your Bar Mitzvah opens you to experiencing and co-creating an expansive, hopeful, happy, alive, love based, blissful and big hearted Judaism, bearing in mind Zalman's gift of pointing us to embrace the joyful challenge of abundance.  To me, that is where spiritual life resides and Tikkun Olam begins.

I love you Joshua Lev Abrams Rubin.  Happy Bar Mitzvah very soon.  And an invitation to abundance, now and always.

Mark

11/16/2015


Josh, here's a link to the attachment.  http://marksrubin.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-jewish-ashram-project-vision-draft.html