Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Ynet headline: 'Madonna turned Kabbalah into joke'

I'm not religious, and to me Kabbalah has always been a joke. Judaism is not sorcery, Kaballah is.

This article is trying to promote religious tourism to Sefad, or shine a light on it - I don't know. I'll just inject that there are many artists living and working in Sefad, my wife's uncle included. He was sitting in his studio one day in 2006 and a Hezbollah rocket fell on him. Last time we visited he wanted us to take home to US with us a shrapnel extracted from his studio's wreckage. I politely declined - I prefer not being stopped at airports with explosives residue...

Tourists seek enlightenment (or Madonna) in Israel (article title differs after clicking on it from ynetnews main site)
In this hilltop town above the Sea of Galilee, black-clad Hassidic Jews throng stone alleys where sandal-shod New Agers offer biblical jewelry and organic hummus to tourists seeking enlightenment – or Madonna.

Welcome to Safed – also known as Tzfat – where the tourism boom Israel is enjoying with a lull in violence comes with a spiritual twist, thanks in part to the interest the Queen of Pop takes in Jewish Kabbalah mysticism, which has roots in the town.

The American singer, whose devotion has been emulated by other non-Jewish celebrities and many less exalted folk, made a discreet visit last year, paying respects at the grave of the 16th-century rabbi revered as the founder of modern Kabbalah.

Not everyone sees paparazzi fascination with "the Madonna connection" as a blessing. For some, it clouds the profound religious sentiment among Orthodox Jews for what is one of their four holy cities, where many believe the Messiah will appear.

"Yes, she was here. She went to the cemetery," shrugged Laurie Rappeport, once of Detroit, who runs a visitor center among the many synagogues of Safed's ancient Jewish quarter.

"She herself may be very sincere. But she has turned Kabbalah into a joke, a cult," Rappeport added, while conceding the media fuss had brought many Jews to explore their own faith.

... continued on ynetnews ...

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