Meron: The Ziara of David ben Abraham Maimuni

Mount Meron
I am writing this  short  spontaneous essay on the  eve of Pesach Sheni, at the  start of the  week in which my home city of Safed will be performing various rituals connected to Lag La Omer.[i] 

Most readers  will connect Lag La Omer to the celebration of the  end of a plague in the  days  of Rabbi Akiva, or perhaps to the Hilula of R. Shimon bar Yohai, whose Meron shrine-complex becomes  a major site  of celebratory pilgrimage on that day each year.  But members of Tariqa Eliyahu— our Jewish Sufi Order dedicated to the renewal of  the  Egyptian Hasidic mesorah in our day— might be surprised to learn that both Meron and Pesach Sheni also have  a very special connection to one  of  the movement’s leaders and  authors: Rabbenu David ben Abraham Maimuni.

oooOooo

R. Abraham ben Ha Rambam (1186-1237)  had two sons: David (d.1300)  and Obadyah (1228-1265). David became R. Abraham’s successor  as Nagid (the Leader of all the  Jews in Egypt) and  wrote Commentaries on the  Torah and  Haftarah, and  on Pirkei Avot (in Arabic)—whilst Obadyah devoted all of his time  to a  celibate life of contemplation and retreat. Obadyah is most remembered for  his attendance at the Jewish Sufi retreat centre at Dammuh and  for his spiritual treatise entitled  Al-Maqala al-Hawdiyya (The Treatise of  the Pool).[ii]

 

The  Jewish-Sufi Movement of the  Mediaeval Egyptian Hasidim was certainly both strong and popular for at least three hundred years, but  in its early days it was not supported by everyone in the  Cairo Jewish community.  Many were suspicious of the movement’s adoption of Islamic Sufi contemplative practice and the liturgical reforms of its  Maimuni leaders— even though the group insisted that they were reinstating the lost  Jewish contemplative  practice of  the  biblical prophets, a tradition they were convinced had been severely neglected in Judaism but which had been preserved by the Islamic Sufis.

 Abraham ben HaRambam and his son David were not just leaders  within the Pietist Movement, they were both halachic Judges and Community leaders  of  the  entire Jewish community.    In holding  such  a highly political and powerful position it is only to be  expected that they would have encountered both intense rivalry and opposition from competing individuals  and community factions.  The Maimuni Hasidim therefore prayed their liturgy and  practiced their distinctive contemplative form of khalwah(hitbodedut)  in their  own synagogues and in their own meeting places.  It is  true  that Abraham Maimuni and his  group  wore the  same distinguishing Sufi attire as that worn by the   Muslim Sufis—even when they were in publicbut they kept their Special Path and  its  practices discreetly private.

David ben Abraham Maimuni had to contend with much political opposition and at one point, he was forced to close his own Jewish-Sufi zawwiya and daven in a “mainstream” synagogue according to its standard minhag and  nusach.  Those who opposed him had actually reported him to the  Fostat Muslim authorities in order to suppress both the liturgical reforms initiated by his father Abraham and  the Jewish-Sufi practices that were promoted by David and  Obadyah.

Rabbenu David ben Abraham fled from this persecution to Akko in 1285. He  will surely  have  brought with him companions  from the Jewish-Sufi group from Fostat, and   scholars  have  conjectured that the  liturgical prostration which was practiced by some Jews in that coastal city in those days  was initiated by his visiting exiled group. 

His residence in Akko is, quite possibly, perhaps the principal  channel through which many of the Egyptian Jewish-Sufi contemplative traditions found  their  way into the mystical and  ascetic  practices of the Galil—The contention is  that these practices were  absorbed by Yitzhak ben Shmuel of Akko (12th-13thc) and  by Abraham Abul’Afiya (1240-1291) and  his  disciples, to become prominent features of their own  thought systems—eventually becoming a significant part of the  new and revolutionary contemplative  systems  of the Safed mystics in the  fifteenth and  sixteenth centuries.

While in the Galil, in 1285 or shortly afterwards,  Rabbenu David made a very significant pilgrimage (ziara)  to Meron and  that pilgrimage occurred on Pesach Sheini.   To understand its significance we will now set the  scene of what happened there.

 

The Water Ritual of Meron

In our times the Meron Pilgrimage on Lag La Omer is very much focussed on the  person and  legend of R.Shimon bar Yohai.  That was not always the  case.

 In the mediaeval era in question, the centre of the  ziara and  its festivities  was a actually The cave-tomb  of Hillel and  his Disciples that is found   slightly to the  west of  the  current shrine-complex  of the  Rashbi.  Even more poignantly— the central ritual of this pilgrimage  was not the  lighting of a beacon fire but the appearance of “water”  and  the filling of water containers.

There are several accounts   of this Water Pilgrimage, ranging from the  account of Petachiah of Regensburg (in the 12th century) to the Islamic records of Evliya Çelebi (1611 – 1682)....but they are all in accordance regarding the  central statements  that (i) the major Meron  Jewish Pilgrimage  was held at the  Cave  of Hillel; (ii) that this event and  the  holiday festivities that followed it  were also attended by Muslims (in peaceful conviviality); (iii) that they  involved a water ritual (that was probably originally a Canaanite custom also performed at Meron); and (iv) that  this ceremony was related to intercessions for a Divine  blessing on the local water supply.

As is  so often the  case where such rituals of ancient provenance  are concerned, considerable hagiographical elaboration and  miracle story-telling has obscured  the actual practices and their development over the  centuries.  The  reader is  directed to the ground-breaking essay by Prof. Elchanan Reiner entitled “Meron’s Miracles”[i] for  the full story.  In some versions of the story,  the ceremony produces actual immediate rainfall, in some  a flooding of the  local cisterns, in some  a mysterious outpouring of great quantities of springwater that produces so much water that hundreds were able  to fill their pitchers on the  day itself . (That "day" was sometimes given as Lag LaOmer, sometimes as Pesach Sheni,sometimes (erroneously) as Sukkot.....but most usually:  sometime in this central week of Iyyar)

(Jews and Muslims  celebrating Lag La Omer together 1930's)


Our primary concern, in Tariqa Eliyahu, is the part of  the event’s history that involves R. David  and  our Movement.  The  version of  the story which follows comes from Professor Reiner’s  study:

“Around 1285, Rabbi David Hanagid, grandson of Maimonides, employed the cave’s magical properties against his opponents, who had tried to remove him from the office of nagid(head of the Jewish community in the Mameluke state):

“Rabbi David Hanagid would pray in the cave of Rabbi Hillel and Shammai, and cold water would issue. Then he excommunicated the slanderers. And on that day five hundred slanderers in Egypt died and two months later, their wives and sons were taken from this world”

(Sefer Yuhasin by R.Abraham Zakut).

 The process of what actually occurred in the cave-ritual is described —as a miracle—by Petachiah of Regensburg (active 1175-1190):

“And in the lower Galilee there is a [burial] cave, and inside it is  wide and high. On one side is the cave of Shammai and his disciples, and on the other side, Hillel and his disciples. In the middle of the cave is a sunken stone, a large stone hollow like a cup,with a capacity of some forty seah [7.3 litres] and more. And when a truly righteous person comes there, they see the stone full of beautiful water, and they wash their  hands and pray and ask whatever they will.

 

And the stone is not hollow from below because the water does not come from the ground, but it will appear if the person is truly righteous. A person who is not truly righteous  will not see the water. And if even a thousand jars of water will be drawn from the stone, water will not be lacking. It will be as full as at first, and the water does not issue [from a spring].

(emphases mine)

  

Whatever caused  R.David  to flee from Cairo to Akko, he was recalled by his community there in 1290.  Whether his oppressors changed their opinions is not known and  we can only muse fancifully  that any change of heart by his  enemies  might have  been  influenced by his prayers at Meron. R. David  re-shouldered his role as Nagid, though his  experience of conflict in earlier years   had sapped his vitality, and  thenceforward he  chose  to share  the  role  with his son, Abraham.  R. David  is reputed to be  buried alongside R.Abraham his  father,  at the  kever of the  Rambam in Tiverya.[ii]

 

THE WATER MIRACLE RENEWED

I would  like  to conclude this very brief essay with a personal reflective  comment.

The Maimuni temperament that inspires our Order does not incline  our members to be impressed by talk of miracles and magical mysteries. Who knows what actually happened in the  mind of David HaNagid at Pesach Sheni?  Who knows what really went  on in Meron to inspire  the  miraculous water-appearances that so many mediaeval accounts testify DID happen at the  Cave of Hillel.  My belief is  that G-d Alone  knows!

But David’s brother, R. Obadyah, wrote an entire sefer based on the symbol of a pool of water—He must, surely, have  discussed this pool-symbol many times with his  brother in the  context of their shared  Judeo-Sufic practice. 

Following the  example  of P.Fenton and  T. Block...I would  like  to contrast two related passages.  The  first is  from Al Ghazali (1057-1111), who was one  of  the  three  Islamic Sufi authors most commonly studied by the  Cairene Hasidim, and  the  second is from the  Treatise of  the  Pool written by David’s brother Obadyah:

Al Ghazali writes:

“The  heart is like  a pool, and  the  senses are like  the  five  streams by which water enters the  pool from outside. If you  want limpid water to rise from the  bottom of  the pool, the  way to do it  is  to remove all of  the  water from it...The paths  of all the  streams must be  blocked so that the  water does not  come...So long as the pool is  busy with  water that comes from the  outside, water cannot rise up from within. In the  same  way,then knowledge that comes from within  the heart will not  be gained until the  heart is  emptied of everything  that has come  from the  outside.”[iii]

Obadyah Maimuni writes:

“Imagine  a  certain person who,  possessing a  very old pool,desireth to cleanse the  latter of dirt and  restore it...he must occupy himself with its gradual cleansing until that pool be  completely purified.Only after having ascertained that there remain therein no impurity can THE LIVING WATERS THAT GO FORTH FROM THE  HOUSE OF GOD  flow therein...The  foregoing is  an allegory alluding to the  purification, cleansing and  purging of the  heart, the  correction of its  defects and  failings and its  being emptied of all but the Most High.  He who accomplisheth this will comprehend invaluable notions which were hitherto hidden from him, deriving therefrom that which none else can acquire (even) after much time  and with plenteous knowledge.” [iv]

In the Petachiah version of the  Meron ritual it is emphasised that the  water that fills  the  stone, after the Tzaddik has prayed, appears (i) only to a righteous person; and (ii) does not come  from an underground spring or natural source

Remembering the above quoted  passage in the  Treatise of  the Pool might permit the interpretation that the  “water” of the  Meron miracle was a symbolic rather than a physical effluent—an approximation—a reflection of a contemplative  event that was actually taking place in the  heart of the  one  praying in the cave of Hillel.

It seems  to me  that the water-miracle story might be  a fragmented memory of a sufi-type teaching-tale  that lies  behind the  legend.   With this perspective the  reason the water in the  Cave  of Hillel is only produced and seen by the  true gnostic— and  the  reason it bears no connection to a natural springmight  be  because it signifies a visionary experience rather than a physical one.

The reason the prayer of the visionary is the prelude to the  granting of the tzaddik’s wishes... is because what is being described, or hinted at, is the  visionary’s contemplative contact with The Real.

The  process  therefore represents the gift of prophecy whereby G-d makes the  will of the illuminated-one His Will

But is it “water” that the gnostic sees?

Rabbenu Obadyah echoes Al Ghazali’s warning about distinguishing  illusion from reality.  He stresses the  importance of  developing  discernment in knowing what is  distraction or illusion and  what is True.

So often in the  early stages of our development as contemplatives we think we might  be divinely inspired when in fact we are being deluded by our ego. Similarly, we might experience what seems  to be  ecstasy when in fact it is  little more than hormonal or cerebral excitement.  Experienced contemplatives recognise that these experiences  are like treats or sweets  given to children ....like  the  honeyed alphabet of the cheder.. but soon we learn that we have  to grow up.  

R. Obadyah writes:

“Be however extremely mindful that no residue remain in the pool and beware that no impurity seep into the  water that floweth therein...for  any (impurity) remaining there will be  restored to thee by the  imaginative  faculty when thou sleepest or when thou awakest or at times of solitary devotion (khalwa)...Thou wilt think it an object from without, whereas it is part of the  dregs  left in the pool”.


He continues:

“The  rabbis  have  warned us  against this  (error) in the  account of the four who entered Paradise ‘Rabbi Aqiba said unto thee ‘upon reaching the  marble stoned floor, do not utter ‘Water, water’. [v]

oooOooo

Pesach Sheni is seen  as “a second chance” to celebrate the Pesach redemption. It is, for us, an opportunity to see if we have  really and  truly  left the  pursuing army of Pharaoh behind  us.

Maybe on Pesach Sheni—we are  being invited not to cross the  Sea of Reeds— but  to cross a different stretch of  “water” — and to separate the  dregs that cloud the  pool from the true and  emerging Living Waters.

 

Pesach Sheni and  Lag La Omer  Sameach

 

Nachman Davies

Safed

Erev Pesach Sheni 11th May 2025

 

NOTES

[1] Sefardim refer to the  thirty third day of the Omer count as Lag La Omer.  Ashkenazim prefer Lag b’Omer. At the  time  of writing it falls on Thursday night /Friday (May 15-16)

[ii]   Obadyah b. Abraham b.Moses Maimonides, The Treatise of the Pool (al-Maqâla al-Hawdiyya): translated by Paul Fenton;The Octagon Press;London (1981)

[iii] https://www.academia.edu/110647836/Elchanan_Reiner_Meron_s_Miracles_in_Eretz_The_Book_1985_2005_Tel_Aviv_The_Eretz_Group_2005_261_266

[iv] Dr Rachel Sarfati’s groundbreaking research on the  Florence Scroll has effectively confirmed the burial of R. Abraham ben HaRambam next to the  Rambam in Tverya (see our 2022 essay HERE),  but the burial of R. David ben Abraham at that site is  questioned by many. The epigraphic plaque commemorating  R. David’s burial at the Rambam's kever is considered by Dr Y. Stepansky (and  many others)  to be  “probably a forgery”.   On this see Dr Y. Stepanski: “Fifteenth to Seventeenth-Century CE Hebrew Epitaphs from the Jewish Cemetery at Ẓefat (Safed)..... and....  Hillel M. 2022. Hazon Tavrimon: Forged Documents Produced by the Toledano Brothers of Tiberias. Jerusalem (Hebrew).   

[v] Quoted in Chittick,W. Sufism:  A short introduction p.143; One World Publishers; Oxford (2000)

[vi] The Treatise of the Pool,  P. Fenton p91  (emphases mine)

[vii] The Treatise of the Pool, P.Fenton  p92 (emphases mine)

 

Congregational Meditation in Tariqa Eliyahu


One  of  the  hallmarks  of  Tariqa Eliyahu’s  Path is  its  practice of silent mental prayer as a congregation. 

The  principal  rationale for  this  activity is derived from R. Abraham HeHasid’s commentary on the   three day retreat at Sinai and the specific “preparation and sanctification” that leads to group prophetic experience. (see our essay on this HERE)

 But the  Communal Khalwa-Hitbodedut that we perform weekly in Safed has another, albeit secondary, function—namely the generation of a sense of confraternity and bonding between all members of  the  Tariqa present.

 One can be certain of  the  importance of solitude and  solitary devotion in the Jewish-Sufi path of the  mediaeval Egyptian Hasidim of the  Maimuni circle—it was the penultimate  maqam (station) of their contemplative system—and  yet one  of the outstanding characteristics of their practice is  that it generated a movement, a confraternity of  salikun (seekers)  practicing both solitary contemplation and  yet also seeking to bond as a group with shared  aims and practices.

 

Gershonides  (R. Levi ben Gershon,1288 –1344)  says that the   strength of an  individual soldier is multiplied exponentially when  he   enters  a battle in the company of like-minded soldiers.

Those who aspire to become sufis are engaged in a jihad (battle) with the nafs, the  “lower” self.  That is an ascetic process of purification that was part of  the  Jewish-Sufi  maqamat systems of R. Bahya Ibn Pequda and R.  Abraham ben Ha Rambam. One  of the  differences between their respective  approaches is that the  former was promoting a  private meditative practice, whereas the  latter was also building  a community of contemplatives.   

In Tariqa Eliyahu HaNabi we are similarly engaged in a shared jihad as a spiritual community—and each of us has the power to contribute both support and encouragement by linking up with other members of the Order in prayer, in thought, in person, and online.

 We aim to renew and  develop   the Path of the Egyptian Hasidim— and therefore,while much of our own adab (praxis)is concerned with solitude and solitary devotions: We are also a Jewish-Sufi Order, and this involves shared responsibilities as a confraternal congregation.  

  Those who are not able  to attend the  Safed meetings geo-physically are encouraged to link-up in some mental and spiritual way at the  time  of  the group meeting, or at sometime  on the day it is scheduled to occur.   Members are particularly encouraged to recite (silently and  mentally) the  formal Wird/Litany of the  Tariqa on the  day of the meetings  if they have time. If this  is  not possible, then even a brief thought or  a short prayer  would  be  sufficient  to generate something of  a bond with the  other salikun in the   Tariqa. 

Our Jewish-Sufi mystical tradition insists that the Light that is generated by such activity can, somehow, be transmitted to all worlds.  

In Kuntres Maarat HaLev , I quoted R. Levi Yitzhak of Berditchev on the effectiveness of such spiritual activity  when he  claimed (with an unintended reference to fana and  baqa! ):

“When man nullifies himself completely and attaches his thoughts to Nothingness,  then  a new sustenance flows into all the universes. This is a sustenance  that did not exist previously.”

 The Chassidic Masters, R'Aryeh Kaplan, page 73,

I would  also suggest that Tariqa members might spend  some  time  on Shabbat in intentional (mental and  spiritual) bonding with the other members of  the  Tariqa.  Again, just  a few moments   very briefly but with kavanah.

Personally I make  an intention of this nature in the  Mi Sheberach prayer  during the  formal Shabbat liturgy, mentioning every Tariqa member by name.  In the late Shabbat afternoon, after Minchah and  before Arbit, I also repeat this activity before performing a solitary and  mental Dhikr and Khalwa.

oooOooo

The  halachic requirement for performing formal prayer with a minyan is in accord with the  notion of Gershonides stated above. But in the  Kifaya, Rabbenu Abraham ben Ha Rambam applies the  same principle  to  the  kind  of concentration that is part of congregational Khalwa. He makes a specific point of highlighting the generative power of  this  kind of silent hitbodedut  when it is performed as a group

  We know  that his Jewish-Sufi Hasidic movement saw khalwa (both as reclusive solitary retreat and as silent and concentrated meditation in solitude) to be the  primary  method for  the  attainment/reception of certain  levels  of prophetic intuition and insight—but it might  come  as something of  a surprise to many to read that he also saw the same activity increase in effectiveness when such silent “retreat”is performed in a congregational setting.     R. Abraham writes:


“Whenever the concentration of ten individuals who have joined together for prayer...is combined, it is greater than the concentration of each of the ten praying individually. 

Mysteries are thereby revealed by intuition (asrar yakshufuhu al-dhawq) to one who has followed the Paths of the Pietists and contemplated their diverse states...

There are certain times and certain states that can enable an individual to attain serenity in contemplation (khalwah)  in which his mind is purified in his state of contemplation  far more than it is during formal public prayer.” 

(Rabbi Avraham ben ha-Rambam:  Sefer ha-Maspik le-‘Ovdey Hashem, Kitab Kifayat al-‘ābidīn; (translated N Dana) p188)

 

oooOooo

At the moment: Our tiny nation is under intensive attack—regionally, globally, and even  internally — and I believe that  our spiritual effort  is urgently needed as much as the  military and political one.  Perhaps it is needed even more.

That is another reason why it is important that our Tariqa members should supplement their solitary private khalwa (hitbodedut) and their  recollection of the  Divine (zhikr-hazkarah)  by practising such contemplative silence with other group members  at our weekly meetings wherever possible.

 By doing this, they can generate  a shared   blessing and  peace which can uplift both the  Tariqa members and the entire nation. 

Even if one cannot attend  the Safed Jewish-Sufi  meetings in person, one may share in its beraka by having the  kavanah to be there in spirit.

As an oft-quoted  European Hasid is reputed to have said:

One  is  where one’s  thoughts  are”.



Nachman Davies

Safed

3rd April 2025

 

Music in Tariqa Eliyahu

Both R.Abraham ben Ha Rambam (1186-1237) and R. David ben Joshua Maimuni (1335-1414) saw the great importance of music in their renewal of the prophetic curriculum of the Bnei Nevi'im, and  they expressed their views on this in the  Kifaya and the  Murshid respectively. 

As   Tariqa Eliyahu's founder, I wish to ensure that music and movement never assume greater importance in the Tariqa than Khalwa-Hitbodedut (solitude and silent receptive contemplation) because this is clearly the foundational core-method of both the  Kifaya and of Kuntres Maarat HaLev. 

Nevertheless, music still has an unquestionably important role to play in our Jewish-Sufi Order because we aim to renew both (i) the traditions of the Egyptian Pietists and (ii) of  the biblical prophets they sought to imitate.

Many classical Sufi sources would view both music and movement to be lower forms of  contemplative  activity as they are bound  to the  physical—when  so much of  the Sufic system aims to free the  soul from physical  attachment—but they are  particularly useful starter points  for  beginners on The  Path.

So my conclusion (in the original  Foundation documents) was that we should hold Sama (Sufi Group-Audition of spiritual music)  meetings occasionally ...when the group had sufficient numbers.... to make music and some movement feasable.  

(I posited  minimal congregational movement such as upper-body and head movements or slow group-circle dances....but not  "whirling" as that is  a hallmark of  the  Mevlevi Sufi  "Sema"  tradition and  not ours.)

In other words: Our Tariqa's Sama meetings would be focussed on "listening/audition" and would be special musical events that might  happen once a month or  every few months as special occasions.

oooOooo  

But Providence seems to have  a slightly different  plan in mind.

In the very same  week that I was discussing this with Safed Group:  three visitors from Amirim attended the Safed group meeting.  Coincidentally,it transpired that one of them (Aharon Meir Alon) is studying Turkish music at the nearby MAQAMAT music school, an educational centre and a cultural gem of our city, founded and developed by Musa Quayyes (Moshe Tov Kreps). 

 In conversation with Aharon, I posited the idea that we might search for a small acoustic group....or just a soloist....to play classically sufi or improvised sufic-style music for just a few  minutes before each Wednesday meeting began.

This fortuitous conversation has led to an interesting development as, following a little further discussion with those at the recent meetings, we have  decided to make such a  short "Sama"  musical activity a part of  our regular  meetings every week wherever possible.

So

Here  is the new statement on

MUSIC IN OUR  TARIQA'S  MEETINGS

We will try to make the first five to fifteen minutes  of our meetings a time for solo or small acoustic ensemble musicians to play.

 The music  should  be in a style suitable for  a Jewish-Sufi prayer meeting and should  be  performed without electronic amplification. It should  be  classical or freely improvised and be in a style derived from Sefardic or Mizrahi, Turkish or Persian, or other Sufic traditions  in “Eastern” music.  

This means that the weekly meetings will ideally consist of

* 5 to 15 mins Sama (appropriate Sufi music);

* 15 Minutes Congregational and Vocal Dhikr-Hazkarah (using the Order’s set Wird/Litany);

* 30 minutes (or more) Congregational and Silent Khalwa-Hitbodedut.


The instructions given to anyone offering to play or sing at the start of the meeting will always be:

“Using a classical or improvised Eastern sufi style.......Play for G-d as your audience...... and the Tariqa members will listen in to whatever you play for Him.... and thus may they be brought into an awareness of the Divine Presence themselves.”

As our Safed Group meetings are also open to people “of  all religions and none”: some performers may prefer to use the folowing   performance instruction:

“Using a classical or improvised Eastern sufi style.......Play for the group members from your innermost heart and  with a deep  openness to inspiration....and  may those present find  their own hearts opening to inspiration as they listen to you.”

oooOooo

Last week, Aharon brought some instruments  to the  meeting at the Safed Group’s meeting place at “Zawiyya Al-Nur” in the  Old Arab Quarter of Safed ....and he kindly  played for us before we began the  chanting.

At that meeting, Anna Nisnevitch—a  dedicated member of Tariqa Eliyahu and a founding member of its Safed group— made this short film of Aharon Meir Alon playing the Lavta:   



It was the first time we were blessed to incorporate music into our weekly Dhikr-Hazkarah meetings, and  I am so happy she thought to record this special  moment for us to share  with Tariqa Eliyahu members globally.

Aharon has said he is keen to attend our meetings and  play for us again.... and he is also actively trying to encourage other musicians to join us.  This is  such encouraging progress.

Hearty thanks to both Aharon and Anna for your active contributions!


Nachman Davies

Safed

March 20 2025

 

Purim 2025



 This  short reflection for the  upcoming festival of  Purim is  a reposting  of  a short message  sent  to members of Tariqa Eliyahu in 2023.  

On Prostration during Purim

Since the time of Rabbenu Abraham ibn Abi’l-Rabi’ (one of the early leaders of the Egyptian Pietist Movement and Rabbenu Abraham ben HaRambam’s teacher on the Jewish Sufi Path) , our movement has promoted three kinds of prostration.

(i) The contemplative-meditative prostration known as the “Elijah Posture” or “Prophetic posture” (which we discussed  HERE );

(ii) The liturgical form of "Islamic style" prostration used in their own communal worship (especially in the Amidah but also in the Psukei de Zimra and in other parts of congregational liturgy);

(iii) The spontaneous act of prostration which sometimes arises during both formal liturgy and in private superorogatory devotions.  In the third form of spontaneous prostration, the gesture is usually one of profound self abasement in Awe of the Divine Majesty, anguished repentance, or simply a gesture of submission and silent worship.

These are the forms of prostration that our Jewish-Sufi movement practised for centuries under the  leadership and  example  of  the  Maimuni dynasty..... They are liturgical and paraliturgical forms that  we now intend to renew in our Tariqa.

oooOooo

Several of our members use some, or all, of those forms of prostration on a daily or regular basis.

Some only occasionally.

And some not at all.

It seems to me that some use of the gesture should be practiced by all who regard themselves to be aspiring Jewish-Sufis in the tradition of the Egyptian Pietists, and especially by Tariqa Eliyahu members— who have joined our Sufi Order in a gesture of dedication to the "Suluk al-Khass" “Special Way”.

Even in public worship it is possible to prostrate oneself mentally (while bowing physically in the ‘normal’ manner) during the Amidah

 This is especially relevant in the case of senior and infirm members for whom physical prostration is difficult or impossible. They might hold in mind or visualise that they are actually prostrating themselves whilst bowing normally. In this manner the devotion can also be performed by the hasid when davening in a minyan of Jews not following the Suluk al-Khass without disturbing potentially unsympathetic congregants .

oooOooo

Purim and  Yom Kippur

Tikkunei Zohar 20-21 compares Purim to Yom Kippur (Yom HaKippurim) even though these two festivals might seem to be at opposite poles in relation to solemnity/partying fasting/ feasting.

In the Purim story, Mordechai refuses to prostrate himself before Haman.

At the core of the Atonement ritual the High Priest and all the congregation of Israel prostrate themselves at the mention of the Divine Name.

Might I suggest that Tariqa members ( and  our supporters online)  make this  Purim a time when all our members might make a (physical or spiritual) prostration as part of our Tariqa’s celebration of the Festival. Perhaps (mentally) during congregational worship.....or perhaps as a single act of private devotion at home during meditation, bearing both Mordechai and the Kohen Gadol in mind, and acknowledging no power or deity but the One G-d, before whose Name we bow and bend the knee.

Purim Sameah!!


nachman davies
Safed 2023

Introducing the Safed Jewish-Sufi Group (2025)

TARIQA ELIYAHU HA NABI

The Safed Jewish-Sufi group is a branch of Tariqa Eliyahu Ha Nabi. 

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

In the  mediaeval era, the  Egyptian Pietist Movement’s  leaders included R. Abraham He-Hasid (d.circa 1223), and several members of the  Maimonides dynasty: R.Abraham ben HaRambam(1186–1237), R.David ben Abraham Maimuni (1222- 1300), R.Obadya Maimuni(1228–1265),and  R. David ben Joshua  Maimuni(1335–c.1414).

They  believed that the  ascetic and contemplative practices of the Biblical B’nei ha Nevi’im  (Schools of the  Prophets) had been lost to Judaism but had been preserved in Islamic Sufism—and they sought to restore, renew, and develop those practices in Judaism.  Paramount among those practices was Khalwa/Hitbodedut: expressed in solitary retreat and in  silent contemplation.  Their devoted reinstitution of this  practice  spread throughout  the  Levant region where it later became  a key practice  in the Safed Schools  of mysticism during  the sixteenth and seventeenth  centuries.

 The Maimuni’s  aim was to prepare the Egyptian Hasidic Movement’s members  to attain a personal and intimate state of   marifah/intuitive gnosis and  contemplative “nearness to G-d” that would hasten the  return of prophecy to Israel.

Those same spiritual perspectives and aims are the  core principles of  our own century’s “Tariqa Eliyahu”­— and they are also essential features  of our newly formed group in Safed. You can read  much more  about the history, aims, and practices  of our global Tariqa on our website HERE

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THE SAFED JEWISH SUFI GROUP

  In June 2024, Tariqa Eliyahu inaugurated a local branch in Tzfat (Safed) in Northern Israel.    This group meets weekly in the Old City for an hour of  contemplative prayer (Silent Dhikr/Hazkara) in a  Jewish-Sufi mode.

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

 We do not offer “guided meditations”. We do not teach or learn “meditation”.  We do not offer courses of study on religious or contemplative  matters. We do not present  what we do as a form of “therapy” or “self improvement”.   

Such practices are attractive and  have  their place in one’s spiritual development— but they can also  distract from our simple attentiveness to the  Divine  Voice. And  that receptive attentiveness to the “still small voice” is  the Heart of  our Elijan Tariqa.

  Our weekly regular meetings are currently held each Wednesday afternoon  in the  Artist’s Quarter of  the  Old  City of Tzfat.   We do not make any financial charges or ask for  any donations. Visitors are most welcome.

WHAT HAPPENS AT OUR MEETINGS?

  In classic Sufic tradition, and in reference to the musical practice of the Bnei Nevi’im—meetings  begin with a very short vocal Dhikr unit (mantra recitation).  At the  start of the  meeting this  can assist the members to transition from their busy world and interior noise to the calm and receptive  mode of the Silent Dhikr/Hazkara that follows. For that, we simply sit together as a congregation  in silent contemplation for  about  thirty minutes. Anyone who wishes to leave  before the end  of the  silent dhikr period may do so.

What one does during the  silent dhikr is left completely to the individual. Discretely and  without causing disturbance to the  others, one may sit, kneel, stand,or prostrate at will.

We wish to  make our Group’s   meditational process to be  something that is 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.  

  Though  our core members are religious observant Jews, and  though the   texts we use paraliturgically  are Jewish (Classical Hebrew or Judeo-Arabic)—the Safed group also welcomes participants and guests at our weekly meetings  from  all religions  and none—who respect that core ethos  even if they do not follow it themselves.

As the Safed Group membership expands, and  in deference to the  practice of  the Bnei Nevi'im,  we hope to add a brief live and  acoustic musical element (Sama) before the  meditation  section of our meeting. See our essay on this  HERE.  

SO WHY ARE WE DOING THIS?

*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.  Their specifically  Jewish-Sufi understanding of the  term Hitbodedut-khalwa denotes “concentration”or “focussed meditation” either in physical solitude or internal solitude.  Consequently, part of our Tariqa's mission is to promote  this  form of silent contemplation in both external retreat and in personal practice.

* In addition to such  hitbodedut  (practiced in private  as external and  internal solitude)at our our weekly hitbodedut meetings we engage in 'Congregational Hitbodedut'. In doing this we are following R. Abraham HeHasid’s  principle that hitbodedut  should also be  performed  as a regular contemplative reenactment of the   spiritual retreat that preceded the Revelation at Sinai.

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

*Reclusive or calm environments are not available to many who live in crowded areas; whose shuls are often noisy, chatty, and  highly sociable places. In some  shuls, bustle and  fuss even take place during davening and  this can easily prevent  deep concentration.  For  many Tzfat residents,their  business or domestic commitments often do not provide much space or time  in which to develop this  form  of  solitary prayer.  Our meeting environment  and practice might  provide them with that space and  time.

*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. With this  support they may move  on to periods of physical solitude with more confidence.

*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.

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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.

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
Safed
May 29 2024 (updated April 2025
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