When
will it come to me?
I shall
walk with innocent integrity of heart, within my house.
Psalm 101: 2
Introduction
Tariqa Eliyahu
is a "new old"  development in
the  history of both Judaism and  Sufism. Some have  said it is not sufficiently Jewish and  others have 
said it  is  not sufficiently Sufic. Some  recognise in its practices an
imaginative  recreation of the  core curriculum of the  prophetic schools, some see it as verging on
heresy.
The practice of
unity in diversity is  not  an easy virtue  to generate or promote in our contemporary
Jewish milieu. Political and sectarian polarisation has increased in
recent  years, particularly in Eretz
Yisrael, and unity has often become squashed by self-righteous bigotry. 
Yet debate "for  the 
sake of  heaven" is a
generative  part of the rabbinic
tradition and  the  various and 
sometimes divergent paths on which a 
Jew may walk and yet still believe 
an essential unity has been preserved are legion.
This  is  also
true in  the various streams  and 
threads of  Jewish Mysticism and Jewish
Contemplative  Practice.
We are renewing
the Judeo-Sufism of  the  mediaeval Egyptian Pietists  but we are also developing it,
and  it is my duty as Founder to
present  the  manner in which I hope that development
should flow. 
The  path of the 
Maarat HaLev may be  termed "The  Path of Simplicity"
and  it is  this path that should unite the
members regardless of their individual theological or denominational
differences and  allegiances.  
This  chapter aims 
to present the Founder's exposition of (i) the way the Tariqa was
created to develop the  core message
and  practices of Kuntres Maarat HaLev;  and (ii) the manner in which Tariqa Eliyahu's
ethos  and practice (adab) as a  new Jewish-Sufi Order can actually generate
unity in diversity.
Most of the Tariqa's members (myself included) are not academics. We are contemplative practitioners focused on a personal and interior journey, so for those salikun who are new to the Tariqa and may need a little background, we will begin by describing something of the historical diversity of major Jewish Mystical schools. We will then try to situate both the Egyptian Pietists and Tariqa Eliyahu within that context to show that we are actually part of a quiet spiritual revolution that is equally Jewish and Sufi.
This will be followed by a presentation of the Derech HaTemimut so that new members may see the manner in which that revolution may be effected by those who "take hand" and join our Tariqa's circle.
oooOooo
The Maaseh
Bereshit and Maaseh Merkabah traditions  are the 
undisputed pioneer theosophical paths of  post-biblical Jewish Mysticism. Their texts
and  the 
Heikalot hymns  have made
their  way into the mystical
writings  of succeeding generations
and  even into the Siddur  and 
Machsor. They were also radically reviewed and enlarged upon  by the 
Rambam who, in many ways, saw the 
former in relation to Aristotelian 
physics and  the  latter in relation to philosophical
metaphysics.
In our day,  these and 
many less studied or practiced forms 
of Jewish theosophy and 
cosmology  are not as popular
as  those of the  later 
versions of Kabbalah.  Those later
versions  spread throughout the  entire Jewish world, largely through the  channel of 
the  Hasidic movement of
Europe  and the  West.  
That Later Kabbalistic School's particular  path (tariq/derech)  was 
expressed  in the writings  and teachings of  R.Yosef Karo (1488-1575), R. Moshe Cordovero
(1522-1570), R.Shlomo Alkabetz (c1505-1584), R.Yitzhak Luria (1534-1572)  and R.Hayim Vital(1542-1620) all of  which make prominent use of  the 
Zoharic texts.  This School, which
we might  term the  "Safed 
Kabbalah" is  perhaps
the  most actively followed  mesorah in contemporary Jewish mysticism,
particularly in its Sefer Zohar-inspired and Lurianic presentations.
The  Lurianic Kabbalah is a revolutionary and  highly original system distinguished by  its complex and minutely detailed theories of sefirot,
partzufim, tzimtzum,  klippot, and  tikkunim. It  is perhaps the most widespread form of  the Safed School's system and  it has left its mark on all subsequent
forms  of Jewish contemplative practice
to this day.
But the  "Safed Kabbalah" is  by no means the  only 
school of   (comparatively modern)
Jewish Mysticism and though its principles and practices, along with the Zoharic
literature, are certainly a great inspiration to many—there are also many Jews
whose religious  and  contemplative practice makes little or  no use of them. 
 Indeed the 
systems  and practices of  the Lurianic mekubalim might almost
be  seen 
as marks of a denomination within
Jewish mystical practice, and  as such
they have acquired almost as much opposition as support. The  same might be said of (for  example) the Breslov, Chabad, and Rambanist
(Maimonidean)  groups in twenty-first
century Judaism.  These are also popular
schools of mysticism in our day, and despite their sometimes  widely different perspectives and  practices, they  all share very similar spiritual goals.  Judaism has never been a
"one-size-fits-all" religion and disagreement for the  sake 
of heaven  is part of  its 
very nature.  It is  not necessary for  all Israel to follow the  same mystical or philosophical  mesorah and the  process of disagreement  between the 
factions  may even  assist some 
people to find their  true places
in the spectrum of choices, or come  to
a  state of peaceful coexistence that
will ultimately further  the nation's
unity.  Unity in diversity is surely the
most noble form of spiritual unity.
Though we
have  the guidance of Chazal and that of our more recent yet  expert Leaders,
Sages, and  Scholars to guide us, each
Jew hears and understands  the  Torah 
in accordance with their own individual capacity and  the nature of their unique soul  with its 
equally   unique vocation.  In the 
realm of contemplation and mystical experience this  is especially true, and  each Jew follows their personal karma (as
it  were) in searching for  the teachers and teaching that can inspire them  most personally and most
directly.  Some Jewish contemplatives
might be  most comfortable devoting
themselves exclusively to one Rebbe's path or one sect's mesorah; some  might prefer a more pick-and-mix cocktail of
spiritual guidance; and some might prefer to travel the  Jewish spiritual path comparatively alone.
In the last half-century it seems to me that certain, previously dormant, schools of Jewish mysticism have grown in significance, partly (i) because of the discoveries made in the Cairo Geniza and other manuscript collections;(ii)due to the ever-expanding body of academic translation and transliteration work that has recently been done on these texts; but also, I believe (iii)because of a Divinely generated and providential outpouring and impetus given to us to inspire us in our own particular era.
In Jewish
theology and philosophy it seems to me that there has been a remarkable
flowering of  Rationalist and  neo-Maimonidean activity that is well
underway as I write, but in  the  field of experiential  Jewish meditation and  contemplation, I believe  that the 
two emergent and principal streams that are currently being intensively
resurrected and renewed are the 
Abulafian stream and  the Jewish-Sufi
stream.  One  of  the
links between these three Movements  or
Schools (NeoMaimonidean, Abulafian, and Judeo-Sufic) is that they all in
their  very different  ways share 
a common factor:  Their final
goal is the  attainment of prophecy—sometimes after much human effort, but ultimately through a deep receptivity that
leads to a profound form of dialogic
relationship with the  Divine.
Each of these schools present a different view of what the term "prophecy" might describe or entail but the goal of all three is always the development of an intimate relationship with G-d.
For R. Abraham ben Ha Rambam, for example, the term "prophecy" was synonymous with wusul: infused enlightenment and intimate encounter with the Divine. He coined the Judeo-Arabic phrase Suluk al Khass (The Special Path) to describe his own vision for an esoteric and pietist path to be followed in addition to The Common Path of mitzva observance and formal liturgy, and its goal is not so much the attainment of prophetic activity of inspired speech or prediction: but of gnosis and intimacy with G-d.
Recently, I was greatly encouraged to see that Ronald C.Keiner
also identifies these  three Schools of
contemporarily active Kabbalah  as
follows:
“The thirteenth century is the decisive one for the development of
Jewish mysticism. During this century, at least three distinct Jewish mystical
schools or movements emerge: (1) the so-called Spanish Kabbalah,
constructed on the Bahir’s revolutionary doctrine of the ten sefirot as
emanations of God, culminating in the Bible commentary known as the Sefer
ha-Zohar (or “Book of Splendor”) written in central Spain in the late
thirteenth century; (2) the so-called prophetic Kabbalah of Abraham
Abulafia, the peripatetic Spaniard who traveled throughout the
Mediterranean basin, including war-ravaged Palestine in 1260; (3) and the
esoteric pietism of Abraham Maimuni, son of Maimonides, and his disciples, in
Ayyubid Egypt.” *(i)
oooOooo
Abraham ben HaRambam was insistent that his liturgical and paraliturgical reforms, together with the Egyptian Pietist's emphasis on solitude and meditational practices, were all restorations of what he considered to be the forgotten ways of the Schools of the Prophets.
One must remember however that he was consistently opposed by the thought-police of those in the Jewish community of Fostat who considered his work to be heretical innovation. Their opposition was vociferous and verged on persecution for largely political reasons. In such an environment he clearly felt an urgent need to justify and defend the Jewish-Sufi position and prove its validity within normative Judaism—and I believe this is the principal reason he underlines the connection with the biblical Bnei haNeviim so frequently. Later Maimuni leaders of the group were under similar pressure and will have felt the same need to defend the movement.
In this  context, it is notable that whenever the  Egyptian Pietists borrowed a concept,
term, or an  entire passage  from the 
Quran or a later Islamic text in their writings, nine  times out of ten they found  a Biblical or Talmudic example to replace or
support it.  Abraham ben HaRambam stands
out as being  particularly brave in
making explicit the  Egyptian Hasidic
movement's debt to Islamic Sufism. 
The  most oft-quoted passages of such defence are  from the 
Kifaya:
"Do not regard as unseemly our comparison of that [the true
dress of the prophets] to the conduct of the Sufis, for the latter imitate the
prophets [of Israel] and walk in their footsteps, not the prophets in theirs." *(ii) 
And
"We see the Sufis of Islam also profess the discipline of
mortification by combatting sleep… Observe then these wonderful traditions and
sigh with regret over how they have been transferred from us and appeared
amongst a nation other than ours whereas they have disappeared in our midst." *(iii)
Detailed  information on the  ethos and practices of  the Schools of  the 
Prophets is minimal and  is  largely confined to the  following : (i) that their  organisation formed communities;(ii) that
they displayed a strong  predilection for
musical stimulation (both instrumental and 
vocal) as a contemplative aid;(iii)that they embraced the practice of
desert dwelling retreat;  (iv) that their
behaviour could  be somewhat wild when they
were in ecstatic mode; (v) that they had their 
preference for  rough,  simple attire, and  the use of a mantle  as an initiatory device; (vi) that they
believed  certain (largely forgotten)
contemplative  practices might  lead to various  levels 
of prophecy;   (vii) that they believed a specific training can be 
given to prepare one  for this
potential Divine influx.
Each one of
those factors was clearly both present and predominant  in the 
Islamic Sufi movement and  each
one  of them (with the possible  exception of number iv) provided a  major inspiration for both Abraham and  for 
all the leaders of  the  movement in the  centuries that followed. And  yet, in the 
absence of detailed evidence of the curriculum of  the 
Schools  of  the 
Prophets, Abraham must surely have 
had to exercise creativity and imagination when composing the  Kifaya for the members of  his 
Tariqa. In his  position it was the  only way to actually make  the connective  link between the  Islamic Sufism he  observed  and  his  vision of what the  Schools of  the  Prophets  had actually practiced.    In one 
of his letters, and speaking about certain forgotten liturgical traditions  he states:
"We can be considered as having revived them after their
death, because trace of them had vanished, moreover, it could  be 
said that we have re-created them".
Maasei Nissim, p. 107 *(iv) 
For our  purposes  here, the significant   part of the 
passage  is  his admission that he  was "recreating" rather than  reinstating these liturgical traditions  of his 
congregation and one  wonders
if  the 
same principle  might  also apply to his renewal of  the ways 
of  the   Schools of 
the  Prophets. 
In reforming
the Carmelite  Order, Teresa of Avila
created detailed systems and  even
rules  of her own  yet attributed them to the legendary early
Carmelites of  the  time of Eliyahu HaNabi.  The 
same  spiritually attributive
process is  demonstrable  in many of the writings of  the 
founders of Islamic Sufi Orders, and 
many would  view Moses de Leon in
the  same light.   This is 
the way of many who form " new-old religious groups" and  it is certainly the  way  I
followed in founding  Tariqa Eliyahu—specifically
as a way to promulgate and  develop
the  specific Path of Kuntres Maarat
HaLev.   To that  highly  significant
removal of  a veil  we will now 
turn.
The Derech HaTemimut
The specific
"Path" of Tariqa Eliyahu Ha Nabi is  derived from the "Simple  Path" of 
Kuntres Maarat Ha Lev.
 The 
Order was founded to renew the Jewish Sufi Pietist movement of the  mediaeval era— but at its deepest level—its purpose was (and  is)  to promote the contemplative ethos  and practices that I presented in that Kuntres
in 2005. Some  of  the Tariqa's members have  joined us because of  a Maimonidean or a  Sufi connection—but the  majority of our members joined after reading Kuntres
Maarat Ha Lev and  were responding to
its  message and  call for contemplative action through a
kind  of "Prophetic" training
in simple attentive meditation.
Of course the Order is very closely bound to the spiritual silsila and mesorah of the later Maimunis and their circle—but you will now appreciate that, in fact, I founded the tariqa because (somewhat late in the day around 2022) I recognised a profound similarity between the path I had described in Kuntres Maarat HaLev and (i)the Islamic Sufi Path;(ii)the path of the Kifaya, the Murshid, the Hawwdiya, and the writings of Abraham HeHasid Ha Dayan. Perhaps the most significant recognition that occurred was to discover that the functional goal of the Maarat HaLev is exactly the same as that of the Egyptian Hasidic movement, namely: preparation for the return of prophecy. Both are focused on devekut and receptive hitbodedut and both aim to develop a system of training that might prepare one for the influx of prophetic inspiration —and for both the Jewish-Sufis and in the Maarat HaLev that does not mean the return of a group of "Prophets" to lead Israel, it means a state of ruah ha kodesh that will be shared by everyone under the sun.(Zechariah 14:9).
In a  very real sense therefore: Tariqa Eliyahu
is  a vehicle for  the promulgation of the Derech HaTemimut
of Kuntres Maarat HaLev.
In the  Cave and 
under Divine tuition alone, it took Elijah the  Prophet some 
time  to see that it is  necessary to quell the  turmoil of over-zealous activity and  simply be 
still before one can "know" G-d. (Psalm 46:10). At the moment of revelation in the  cave, after a lifetime of commendable but  somewhat violent activism and, it seems, an obsessional focus on what  HE had done for  G-d... it was only when he  was shown that he needed to stand still for  a while and  actually let G-d get a  word in edgeways. ( 
We walk an
Elijan path by turning  away from self-promotion,  mystical distractions, and compulsive spiritual or scholarly tourism by making  a "vacated space"
in the soul's  Cave of  the 
Heart, a state  in which one  can begin to listen to the  Divine Voice. 
 Our Tariqa specialises in promoting  this Elijan path. Referring  to I Kings:19:10-12, one  might 
express it like  this:
*Our Tariqa is Elijan in the 
sense that it avoids the EARTHQUAKE of religious conflict caused
by partisan  bigotism or proselytism (to
a particular Jewish sect or stance).
*It is Elijan in the  sense
that it avoids the WIND  of
argument and ratiocination and chatter in its spiritual  courtyards and 
replaces them with silence, a shiviti consciousness, and with individual and communal
hitbodedut/hitbonenut.
*It is Elijan in the  sense
that it avoids the FIRE of  certain "inebriated" forms  of religious or sufic practice and  prefers "sober" and  reflective 
ones.
*It is Elijan because it recognizes the pre-eminence of  the fragile and interior STILL SMALL VOICE
that is the unique form of  tuition that G-d alone
can give. *(v)
oooOooo
As a defining
term, the  religion we call  "Judaism" encompasses many
variations in opinion and interpretation that may sometimes seem contradictory.
Yet its  People are essential  one.  
Similarly,
the  term "Sufism" can be  applied to a wide range  of  both theory and practice. The profound
philosophy and unique theories of Ibn Arabi (1165-1240) are as complex and
creative as those of the  Arizal;
the  halachic strictures of Al Ghazali
(1057-1111) are as tight  as those of
the  Rambam; the illuminationist visions
of Suhrawardi (1154-1191) are as arcane 
and  esoteric  as those of 
the  Zohar; the lyricism of  the 
beautifully crafted aphorisms of Rumi (1207-1273) is also to be  found 
in the early mystical texts and 
hymns of ancient  and  classical Judaism,as well as in the  writings of more recent Hasidim like R.
Nachman of Breslov, the  Berditchever,
and the  Kotzker Rebbe.   
So,one  can readily see that  the 
Jewish and  Sufi traditions  are equally varied and within both there
are  "Paths" that can be complex
or  simple.  
In Christian
practice these variations  produced
the  formation of clerical and  monastic religious  Orders—each designed to focus on a
particular aspect of religious  life and
perform it mehadrin ha mehadrin for 
the  benefit of  the 
whole. So, for example, The 
Jesuits were founded to perfect the 
intellectual approach;the 
Dominicans to focus on polemics and theology, the  Carthusians 
and  Carmelites on the  contemplative.  Each of those Orders attracts people with
personalities, one  might say souls, that
are in synch with the vision of  each
Order's founder. 
Tariqa Eliyahu is inspired by
the  Jewish-Sufi movement of the   later Maimunis and several of the above
mentioned Islamic theorists and authors, but its  particular "flavour" as a new-old  sufic Order is provided by the simple path of
the  Maarat HaLev: A form of  spiritual practice  that is 
not overly intellectual or 
pre-occupied with minutely detailed theology or philosophy, that does
not focus on study or discussion—but which does focus on the privately
experienced relationship of the  soul
with the  Divine,  and with the 
Judeo-Sufic contemplative practices of 
silence, solitude, and  receptive
meditation so dear to both the classical Islamic Sufis  and 
the Jewish Egyptian 
Hasidim.
In 2005, this  is  how
I introduced the "Simple  Path"
 in Kuntres Maarat HaLev itself:
"Our kabbalistic tradition has formulated many beautiful and
complex prayers and meditations composed around the Shem Havayah and around the
permutations of this and other ‘Names’ of G-d. 
They are all above my pay-grade, as it were.    I have similarly  been dazzled and gripped by lines extracted
from the Zohar but almost all  the
classical forms, analyses, and systems of kabbalistic meditation are just too
complex and intellectual for me. They may well be so for you too. If you are
reading this book hoping for some insight into such meditational techniques you
will be disappointed— what I am sharing in this book is extremely simple….. my
instinct tells me there are others out there who may actually need to read
these words. It is a method for those who are fired by what can only be
described as an ache to be connected to G-d and to be of use to Him, but whose
psychological or intellectual inadequacies make the ascent of Mount Carmel or
Mount Horeb necessary by a less travelled side-path.  It is a simple path, but in no sense is it an
easy short cut—and travelling on it can often be boringly uneventful."
Kuntres Maarat HaLev p.9
In a sense my
motivation in searching for  kindred
spirits  who  intuit 
that this  path is  "for them" might  seem to be elitist, but the  serendipitous advantage of  its 
simplicity means that anyone  who
seeks  G-d can walk on it.  It is 
true that it is  presented as an
alternative to the more currently popular mainstream systems  of Jewish Mysticism but one can practice it
simultaneously and  freely alongside one's involvement with the  methods and  cosmology of other Jewish Schools. 
Nevertheless, it
remains  a path which is  very specially appropriate to a certain type
of Jew who (as it  were)  has a 
sufic mindset that seeks  the
humble and uncluttered simplicity of interior and  intimate seclusion with the Beloved alone. Jewish Contemplatives of this kind choose to focus on the development of  their shiviti consciousness  above  all other valuable types of  Jewish practice, and ultimately at its highest
levels above  all else. (Psalm 27:4)
Kuntres Maarat
HaLev's  first  
reference to this "Derech HaTemimut" was further
developed here:
"The esoteric systems and complex  meditation practices of the kabbalists, the
deeply intellectual forms of hitbonenut proposed by the Chabad hasidim,
and the frequently cathartic expressions of 
hitbodedut practiced by Breslover hasidim are beyond the scope of
this little book.   There  are 
several reasons for this. As I have indicated, I am neither a scholar
nor a rabbi. I am  not qualified or
experienced enough  to make deep
analytical comment on these jewels in Judaism’s contemplative crown.  You can find shelves full of books which deal
with these subjects by many gifted authors without too much effort.
But the main reason you will not find them, or theosophy, or
theurgy, or self improvement methods 
discussed here is because I am presenting  a somewhat simpler path—a path for those
whose primary focus is to seek intimacy with G-d, and maybe to become  a selfless channel for His activity in this
world.
This is the aim of anyone who would draw near to G-d hoping to
receive the spirit of ruach hakodesh that approaches prophecy, and I believe
this to be the core tachlit (aim/goal) 
of all prayer in  the Cave of the
Heart."
Kuntres Maarat HaLev p.19
 A particularly  recommended contemplative  practice is then presented as  a simple method of emptying the  soul to make 
space for the influx of inspiration.
"In order to meet G-d in private contemplation,
we really only need to do one simple thing:
We need to make some time  to
be with Him Alone
and give Him our undivided and loving attention.
Contemplative Prayer is giving G-d a chance to speak to us/do
something to us.
It is not about us, it’s about Him.
The method is simply: Stand or sit in His Presence; Make space
inside yourself for Him to act; Then listen with focus to whatever He may have
to say to you, personally and individually. 
That’s it. 
Yes…. That’s all of it."
Kuntres Maarat HaLev p.31 *(vi)
oooOooo
Unity in Diversity
Tariqa Eliyahu has members
from many denominations  and  sects with
distinct and  sometimes conflicting ways: yet they are all  Jewish.
They are Jews who are Breslovers or Chabadniks; Neo-Maimonidean rationalists;
Kabbalistic practitioners; Litvish Jews, Askenazic, Sefardic; and Mizrahi Jews; Jews
whose Jewish Sufi practice involves membership of other Sufi Orders and  those whose bond is  solely with Tariqa Eliyahu; Jews 
who love  the  Zohar and  the mysticism of the  Ari—and 
those who really do not; Jews who have had Islamic or Innayati
initiation and  those who have  not and 
who would  never consider
undergoing such a  practice: So how can
it be  said that  every one of  the  Tariqa
Eliyahu  members follow this same Path
of Simplicity?
Firstly:   These members all share two things:  (i) As aspiring Jewish Sufis (for  whom the 
state of "perplexity" is the 
humble yet enlightened acceptance of one's inability to declare total
certainty) they don’t proselytize for their own denomination or insist their  own views are the  only correct ones; and (2) they are in synch
with the basic Derech HaTemimut of The 
Cave  of the  Heart. 
The  focus there is on practice
not theory: Simple contemplative, silent, 
and  receptive prayer—with no
teacher but G-d—All can subscribe 
to that.
Secondly:
Tariqa members are totally free to follow 
their own chosen paths alongside that of Tariqa Eliyahu. For
this  reason a Neo-Maimonidean
rationalist may spend  their private  meditational time engaged in philosophical reflection
while  still following the  sufic (and 
later Maimuni) tenet that philosophic knowledge only scratches the  surface of a knowledge of  The 
Reality—that "dhawq" and the intuitive gnosis of
"wusul" alone can reach. An Abulafian or Kabbalistic practitioner
may spend  their private meditation time
engaged in complex permutional activity, but 
they can always remember the Sufic and Maimuni tenet that such
intellectual (or even theurgic) systems 
are guides to focus  and not guaranteed
methods to attain enlightenment by our own efforts. Above  all, they know that  our  khalwa experience takes place  silently and 
privately in the hearts of each individual practitioner, and  there die  gedanken sind  frei.
Thirdly: there
are  built-in factors within the   structure of our meetings that ensure
freedom of personal activity, even in a congregational setting. At our
meetings,we do not share our interior experiences or our extra-mural  spiritual preferences with other members
during congregational prayer meetings — that only happens  in one 
to one conversations—and then 
always in total privacy and never with the  group or its 
members at a gathering.  When
congregated in the  zawiyya for  prayer, that prayer should occupy 99.9% of  the 
agenda anyway. We have  a monthly
meeting  where we discuss and  socialise, but at our weekly meetings
there is minimal conversation or none  at
all.  
Our Silent Dhikr
at those meetings is never formalized. There is 
no adherence to any method or particular practice other than the Maarat
HaLev's " attentive 
listening" to the  Divine—in
whatever form the  member might
envisage  that. The  chapter on Dhikr from our  Manual for Novices expresses it  like 
this:
 " This silent  dhikr is an  unguided activity during which members are
free: to engage in acts  of worship and
petition; to practice combinations  of
their  own preferred  yogic or meditational systems; to silently
recite or meditate on texts or Names; to engage in a discussion with their
inner selves; to pray for  others; to
examine  their lives and sort-out their
problems;  and also— to attempt to empty
their minds and   hearts to make room for
G-d.  That last possibility may be  termed the 
Dhikr of Silence."
And  our handout for  visitors 
attending  our meetings expresses
it as follows:  
"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, racial, or political
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."
Like  the  spectrum of 
Light itself—each wavelength  has
its own character—but all is G-d.
oooOooo
Afterword
When I was
preparing  this  chapter for the  Manual for 
Novices I came  across a
beautiful photograph that my New Zealander friend Michael Nixon had just posted
online. His photograph seemed to express what I was thinking in a somewhat synchronous
manner.  In this  chapter I had been trying  to express the  way in which 
a Tariqa member maintains their own choices of denominational allegiance
or mesorah in total freedom whilst simultaneously following the  simple 
path shared by all true salikun (seekers on the  Sufi path) but, I  think his photograph has given me  a way to express it a little  more lyrically.
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Photo: Be'er Ora,Israel (Michael
Nixon.NZ)
In this photograph, there are three paths in the foreground—but as the paths ascend, they eventually seem to become one as they approach a first low summit in the middle-ground. Enclouded in a mysterious haze in the far distance is an even more elevated summit—but we cannot actually see the path that leads there in the photograph.
When (for example) a Beshtian-School Hasid, a Maimonidean rationalist, or a Lurianic-School kabbalist joins Tariqa Eliyahu they are at a point where they choose to unite with the other practitioners because of a shared interest in either Jewish-Sufism or the ethos of the Kuntres Maarat HaLev.
As the journey ascends towards that first lower summit they walk a united path where their previous differences in opinion or mesorah are maintained privately, but transformed.
What then happens in the barzakh of that intermediate summit is something they can only experience in silent receptive prayer/meditation….each one in their own heart…
How they get from that point to that second more veiled summit in the distance is a knowledge and encounter that only G-d himself can grant.
We are unable to see what lies between the first summit and the distant one.
Perhaps the Path has actually disappeared totally.
Perhaps the passage from one summit/state to the other is completely outside time and space.
Perhaps it is a passage that should not be expressed in words because it simply cannot be expressed at all.
oooOooo
ADMONITION
I will conclude with a brief Hegyon HaLev commentary on the psalm verse which heads this chapter. It is also a benevolent literary "Admonition" given after the Maimuni fashion.
"I shall concern myself with the Path of Simplicity. When will it come to me? I shall walk with innocent integrity of heart, within my house."
"I shall concern myself with the Path of Simplicity."
Whatever
mesorah a Tariqa member chooses to follow in addition to that of our
Order: When present  at a  meeting 
in the  Zawiyya and when
voicing opinions in our publications each member should  remember to keep to the  very Simple 
Path of the Maarat HaLev and 
the example  of the later Maimunis and  their Jewish-Sufi Order. Striving to avoid controversy or partisanship—by
keeping things  simple—is the  way  to
generate an atmosphere of peace and 
unity amongst the  members who
come  to the  zawiyya to meet G-d in shared silence,
not to engage in  debates or conflicts.
We should  remember we hope  to generate the "peace of coexistence"  when chanting the  final Oseh Shalom prayer that
concludes our meetings.  
"When will it come
to me?"
The  Sufic masters all share the  view that we can prepare  the  way
for  the 
receipt of ruah ha kodesh and 
(eventual) Universal prophecy but that it comes to each individual only
as G-d's gift, for He is  gracious  to whomsoever 
he  might  choose" (Exodus 33:19). If granted,
this  gift is the  "death before death" of fana.
Many of us  never reach that state in our
earthly life, but our search should  be
insistent  and  ever hopeful. The Derech Ha Temimut
may be simple, but it can be  arduous and
for years we may feel very little
progress has been made. But we should 
remember that G-d alone  knows our
maqam (station) and  hal (state) and  we cannot ever judge ourselves or others.  
"I shall walk with innocent integrity of heart, within my
house."
Though
we meet as a congregation (either in person or in spirit) each one of us  practices Khalwat dar Anjuman
(solitude in the  group) within the  "house" of their own heart. The
meeting is a situation where the entire Tariqa is meeting G-d—united in Him in
shared silence. Whether they are joining the 
meeting geo-physically or "in spirit", each meditating member
is bonded to the group but simultaneously utterly private in their intimate,
attentive, and (hopefully) receptive dialogue with the  Divine. The   congregational Khalwa of Tariqa
Eliyahu is  an everpresent remembrance
and a reenactment of  Sinai.
Nachman Davies
Safed 
October 29th 2005
---------------------
NOTES
*(i) Keiner R.C. "Jewish Mysticism in the Lands of the Ishmaelites" in The Convergence of Judaism and Islam,Religious, Scientific, and Cultural Dimensions. p156. Edited by Michael M. Laskier and Yaacov Lev. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2011
*(ii) Rosenblatt S:,
The High Ways to Perfection of Abraham Maimonides, vol. II, p 320 (Baltimore:
The Johns Hopkins Press, 1938))
*(iii)  Rosenblatt S., vol. II .p 322
*(iv)  see  also Friedman
M.A: “A Controversy for the Sake of Heaven : Studies in the Liturgical
Polemics of Abraham Maimonides and his Contemporaries" Teuda, X (1996)
*(v) see pages 36-47 
of Kuntres Maarat HaLev for a description of this  Voice and 
a commentary on its activity. 
There is  also a commentary on
the  entire scriptural passage referred
to  on our website  here: https://jewishsufis.blogspot.com/2024/07/the-barzakh-of-al-khidr-in-cave-of.html
*(vi) A more
detailed  guide to this  method is found  at Kuntres Maarat Lev pp 48-54)


