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May 23, 2005 By Stephanie Shapiro, Baltimore Sun As she perfected a yoga pose demanding a balance of strength and surrender,
Myriam Klotz "understood in a flash," she says, a parallel principle
developed by spiritual master Baal Shem Tov, founder of Judaism's Hasidic
movement. The principle stresses the importance of remaining both firm
and supple in one's spiritual explorations. Click here to see Rabbi Liz demonstrate Torah Yoga The sense of discovery that motivates a prayerful or intellectual search for the divine also might be manifested in a person's physical life, says Klotz, 41, a teacher at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality, based in Northampton, Mass. Torat haGuf is what she calls a "different expression" of the same impulse.
In each chapter, Bloomfield demonstrates how a Torah concept may be internalized and experienced through the practice of various yoga postures. In "Leaving Egypt," for example, Bloomfield explains that the concept of exodus is a living dynamic within our minds and bodies. Every "place you are tight, constricted or in pain is your own personal Egypt," she says. "You join the exodus from Egypt when you discover areas of tension and release them. Yoga teaches you how to leave Egypt." Others, such as dance therapist and yoga instructor Joyce Wolpert of
Baltimore, have found their own common ground between Judaism and yoga.
Through movement therapy and yoga, Wolpert helps clients get "geared
up to make a prayer in a deeper way," she says. Jewish liturgy brims with images of physical activity, she says. "We
are supposed to use our breath and our body in a full prayer," says
Wolpert, who would like to start a synagogue where movement is the basis
of prayer. Another book, "Aleph-Bet Yoga: Embodying the Hebrew Letters
for Physical and Spiritual Well-Being," combines hatha yoga with
the shapes and meanings of Hebrew letters. Among other lessons, the book
describes how to "weave together the meaning of each Hebrew letter
with the Sanskrit word for the yoga pose and a biblical phrase in meditation,"
according to the Jewish Lights Publishing website. Otiyot Hayyot, or "living
letters," is a tai chi-influenced form of movement that also emulates
Hebrew letters. Invented by Yehudit Goldfarb, Otiyot Hayyot is "the
latest effort to blend the martial arts of the Far East with the spiritual
letters of the Near East," wrote Alana Newhouse in a 2003 issue of
the Forward, the Jewish weekly newspaper published in New York. Just as there are many forms of Judaism and schools of yoga, there are
multiple ways of intertwining the two. "One needn't be monolithic
either in Judaism or in yoga," says Klotz, who directs a certification
program in yoga and Jewish spirituality at a Catskill Mountain retreat
center with Bloomfield and yoga instructor Ida Unger.
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