Introducing the Jewish-Sufi Group of Safed

 

In the  week before our new groups'first meeting (Wednesday June 5th 2024)  these notes may help to describe  what we are planning to do here in Tzfat—and  why.


TARIQA ELIYAHU

Tariqa Eliyahu is a  global  Jewish-Sufi group for religious Jews who wish to study and develop the  contemplative practices of the Mediaeval Egyptian Pietist Movement that flourished in the 13th to the  15th centuries.  

  The Egyptian Pietists believed that the  ascetic and contemplative practices of the Biblical B’nei Nevi’im  (Schools of the  Prophets) had been lost to Judaism but preserved in Islamic Sufism—and they sought to restore, renew, and develop those practices in Judaism.

 Their aim was to prepare the Movement’s members  to attain a personal and intimate state of   contemplative “nearness to G-d” and thereby hasten the  return of prophecy.

Those perspectives and aims are also those of our Safed Jewish-Sufi Group. We are  not neo-hippies or new-age "sufi-jews". We are Jewish-Sufis of the  School of Abraham ben HaRambam.

 

THE SAFED JEWISH SUFI GROUP

  But the Safed Jewish Sufi Group has its own distinct adab (form and character) because membership is open to anyone who wishes to attend  its meetings.

 Though  its core members are religious Jews, and  though the   texts it uses paraliturgically  are Jewish— the group also welcomes participants  (from  all religions  and none) who respect that core ethos  even if they do not follow it.

 

REGULAR MEETINGS

  The main element of our meetings  is  the practice of  SILENT ZHIKR  (silent congregational contemplation).

As such, they can bypass “guided meditations”, “method-lectures”, and “therapeutic self-improvement sessions”.  Such practices are attractive but they can also  distract from our simple attentiveness to the  Divine  Voice. 

We wish to  make our Group’s   meditational process to be  something experienced privately  in the hearts of the members—an educational process whose direction and form is left entirely up to G-d who is our  true Teacher and Master.  So the envisaged format is simply: sit together in silent contemplation for  between  thirty minutes to an hour....arriving  and leaving  in silence.

In classic Sufic tradition, and in reference to the musical practice of the Bnei Nevi’im—meetings would  begin and end with a very short vocal Zhikr (mantra recitation of a Hebrew word or phrase). At the  start of the  meeting this  might also assist the members to transition from their busy world and interior noise to the calm and receptive  mode of the silent zhikr that follows.

 

OCCASIONAL EVENTS 

Occasionally,  special meetings may be planned  once  the regular gatherings  for silent contemplation have  become  well established—but their nature and format will require much group discussion and agreement AFTER the group has been meeting regularly for  some time.

For the  first few months we would  like  to avoid being distracted by discussing or planning such events, but they might  well include:

SOHBET (discussions, group study, and informative lectures)  arranged as stand alone events  from time  to time at the request of members.

EXTENDED VOCAL ZHIKR  Occasional ad hoc sessions involving more lengthy Sufic choral chanting of Jewish-text mantras—with  or without movement. 

SEMA (Concerts  of spiritually appropriate  music  in Jewish and Sufi modes)..... Private  events for the  group only. Like  everything we do, there would  be zero fees or charges from performers or members.

 

But these are matters for the  long term future.  We just want  to try to get something started and  see how things go.

 

    In the  meantime members have   the  Tariqa Eliyahu  online study and paraliturgy resources to help them understand the details of our Jewish-Sufic history and practice. As that Tariqa’s Administrator I would  also be happy to try to answer membership  queries privately.

 

Why are we doing this?


*Opportunities for Torah study and meditational courses and events  are legion  and readily available in  Tzfat already.   Our function supplements rather than replicates them.

 

*For some  people who are not intellectually or academically inclined, or who are uncomfortable with long verbal synagogue services, it may actually provide a non-liturgical but  much needed way to meet G-d in a community setting.  Being a paraliturgical event with no formal services, it also enables the full egalitarian participation of  both men and  women in one shared practice.

 

*Individual Khalwa (retreat) in solitary hitbodedut at one’s home or at a secluded location is  always  going to be  the ideal Jewish-Sufi practice, as is stressed especially in the  Kifaya of R.Abraham ben HaRambam and the  Murshid of R.David ben Joshua— but reclusive or calm environments are not available to many who live in crowded areas; whose shuls are busy sociable places;  or whose domestic and  business situation does not provide much space or time  in which to develop this  form  of  solitary prayer.  Our meeting environment  and practice might  provide them with this.

 

*Others who are maybe beginning the practice of contemplative  prayer might find  extended retreat or lengthy contemplative silence difficult to manage—and  for  them our practice might offer a gentle introduction to receptive meditative prayer with the  added support and  discipline of  a contemplative community.

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Our weekly regular meetings are held each Wednesday in the  late afternoon— though some  special events  will be  held on Sundays.  If you are visiting Tzfat  and  would  like  to attend, please contact us   using the contact-form on the  sidebar.

   For  the summer months we have  agreed to set the  following simple format for  our weekly Wednesday  meetings:


SOHBET—15 mins

[business, discussion, or brief lesson]  

VOCAL ZHIKR—15mins

[using hebrew biblical and liturgical texts]

SILENT ZHIKR 30—45 mins

[free private prayer/meditation: attentive/receptive  contemplation.]


                              ooo0ooo

We  hope to bring together local contemplatives (and would-be contemplatives) from all streams  of Judaism and of  Israeli society: streams whose members can so often be shockingly antagonistic,dismissive,or intolerant  of  one another.

In these times of denominational,sectarian, racial, and political turmoil in Israel (and  globally) it is  hoped that by keeping shared contemplative silence, all religious, sectarian,  or racial differences may be shelved (however briefly) by the commonly shared  desire  to be personally attentive  to the ‘Voice of  G-d’ within all of us.


Let Light dawn in the  world,in our days,

for we wait and  work for  Your Salvation


May HaShem grant success to the  work of our hands.


 

Nachman Davies

29th May  2024