"Kabbalah Today" uses mass media to hasten final redemption
by Matthew Wagner
Ushering in the end of days might seem an ambitious goal for
a tabloid, but the publishers of
Kabbalah Today aim to do just that.
Widespread dissemination of Kabbalah, Judaism's esoteric teaching on the
origins of creation, will get all of humanity over the last spiritual hump
separating it from final redemption, according to members of Bnei Baruch, an
organization headed by ontology professor Michael Laitman.
"Right now we are in a stage in humanity where everyone should make the
final correction," says Chaim Ratz, executive editor of Kabbalah
Today.
"So far more traditional methods managed mankind's basic egoism and
self-centeredness," says Ratz, who grew up on Kfar Blum, a secular kibbutz
in the northern Galilee. "But today we
have reached such extreme levels of egoism that the traditional methods simply
do not work."
According to Ratz, man's most basic drive, the pursuit of pleasure, is also the
source of all of humanity's problems. And Kabbalah is the cure.
"Kabbalah has the power to eradicate egoism and transform an individual
into a more community-wise, altruistic human being," he says.
Ratz says Bnei Baruch's Kabbalah is based on the teachings of Rabbi Yehudah
Ashlag as explicated in The Sulam (the Ladder), an exegesis on The Zohar, Judaism's central mystical text.
However, unlike Ashlag and his son Baruch, who strictly followed Orthodox
Jewish practice, members of Bnei Baruch are not obligated to do so.
"At the center, we keep the halacha," says Ratz. "And Prof.
Laitman says that doing so helps improve the positive impact of Kabbalah's
teachings. But it is not essential. Whatever works for you is legitimate."
Close to 400,000 copies of Kabbalah Today are distributed for free
in English, Russian and Hebrew in Israel and America either once or twice a
month.
The Hebrew edition of Kabbalah Today, called Kabbalah L'Am,
which is published every other week, is distributed at intersections, street
corners and coffee houses, and as an insert in Haaretz .
A few thousand copies of Kabbalah Today in English are
distributed in Israel.
Circulation is about 50,000 in Mexico,
Canada and the US.
Around 65,000 Hebrew editions are put out in Mexico,
Canada and the US, most as an insert in the US edition of Yediot
Aharonot .
Bnei Baruch's approach deviates from traditional Jewish conceptions about the
study of Kabbalah.
According to Rabbi David Batzri, whose father, Yitzhak, heads Yeshivat Hashlom,
a respected Kabbalistic Yeshiva in Jerusalem,
there is a prohibition against the widespread dissemination of Kabbalah.
"Kabbalah contains many secrets that must not be revealed to the
public," says Batzri. "It is for men who have learned the tradition
Jewish texts such as Talmud and the Shulhan Aruch for many years. "Only at
the age of 50 may one begin, except in very rare cases."
Batzri, who says he is unfamiliar with Bnei Baruch, does agree that at the end
of days more and more people will begin learning Kabbalah.
"That is because they will be spiritually prepared to so. But you can't
put the wagon before the horse," he says.
The key is in the Kabbalah
by Ruthie Blum
Rabbi Michael Laitman is not a rabbi in the
conventional sense, though he does have what some might call a very large
pulpit. And thanks to a combination of timing and technology, his following
mushrooms by the moment. There's nothing as powerful as an idea whose time has
come, particularly in the age of the Web and the satellite dish.
In this case, the "idea" is Kabbalah -
Jewish mysticism - a field-of-study-cum-way-of-life that has captured the
hearts and minds of a cross-section of soul-searchers across the globe, among
them gentile Hollywood stars and secular
Jewish Tel Aviv trend-setters.
Laitman, a veteran immigrant to Israel from the former Soviet
Union with a PhD in philosophy, an MS in medical cybernetics and a
professorship in ontology, has become famous at home and abroad for purveying
the teachings of leading Kabbalist Rabbi Baruch Ashlag, son of Rabbi Yehuda
Ashlag, the author of The Sulam Commentary on The Zohar.
Laitman's office at the Bnei Baruch Kabbalah
Education and Research Institute, which he founded and heads, is located in a
dilapidated building in Petah Tikva's industrial zone. It is a tiny room at the
end of a maze of makeshift, run-down study halls and adjoining hi-tech
"recording studios" lined floor to ceiling with video and audio
equipment. These are manned by dozens of volunteers busily uploading,
downloading, taping, transcribing and translating Laitman's lessons and 30
books (10 of which are available in English) into nine languages.
Though Laitman's philosophy - or what he describes
in his writings as a "scientific method" - is not restricted either
to Jews or to any particular stream of religious observance, every man one
encounters at the Bnei Baruch headquarters is wearing a kippa, including
Laitman, whom the students refer to as "The Rav."
Extending a warm handshake and offering a seat
across from him at his desk, The Rav relaxes into an hour-long interview,
talking in fluent, Russian-accented Hebrew with the ease of someone for whom
repeating the same answers to the same questions is part and parcel of his
mission: to bring the study of Kabbalah to as many people as possible, for the
purpose of effecting global "correction" through internal
enlightenment.
His gentle manner and piercing, charismatic gaze at
moments give way to undertones of impatience, as though he is frustrated by his
listener's inability to grasp in an instant the gist of the Kabbalah he has
spent the better part of 30 years poring over and promoting. But it feels like
the impatience of a caring teacher, determined to pull a prized pupil to
greater heights. Herein, perhaps, lies another secret to Laitman's popularity.
What is the Kabbalist view of the situation in Israel, following the war in Lebanon and facing an Iranian
threat?
The Kabbalah doesn't go into such particulars. It
teaches the general law that governs the Jewish People - one we have not really
been obeying. We were chosen to bring the world to perfection - to be a light
unto the nations. Moses offered the Torah to all people, but it was only the
Jews who accepted it. In the meantime, however, we haven't been fulfilling our
role.
According to The Book of Zohar, all the
world's troubles are the result of this. The current situation of the world is
one of serious crisis and uncertainty in all realms. There is terrorism, drug
use, an unraveling of the family and a decline in education.
On the one hand, the people of the world are
becoming increasingly connected to each other because of globalization; on the
other, individuals can't even be connected to their own families or with
themselves because of egoism.
This dichotomy has led to the sorry state we are in.
Here, The Zohar says, is where tikkun [correcting the ills of the world]
must emerge. This concept is not new. It was revealed in ancient Mesopotamia
following the fiasco of the Tower
of Babel - the first
incident of humankind's aim to build and control through pride and egoism. It
was then that the Kabbalah was revealed to Abraham, who sought to correct this
ego-driven state of mankind. He was unsuccessful, and humankind began a process
of development through egoism. This is how we arrived where we are today - at a
dead-end - with a renewed search and necessity for the wisdom of the Kabbalah.
You say that the Jewish People hasn't been
fulfilling its role as a light unto the nations? Do you believe that this is
the cause of anti-Semitism?
Indeed. The world senses unconsciously that we hold
the key to its happiness - that we are responsible for its malaise. There is an
underlying accusation that we're not doing our job of making the world a better
place.
You were not surprised, then, by the war in Lebanon.
Of course not. Every day, our situation grows worse.
And what do we think we can correct through warfare? The missiles continued to
fall on the North, after we went to war. We corrected nothing.
It could be said that "we corrected
nothing" because the Olmert-Peretz government didn't fight the war
properly.
What difference does it make if it is Ehud Olmert or
anybody else in the Prime Minister's Office? We've seen time and again that
politicians contribute nothing to correction.
Look, everything happens for a reason, including
terrorism and war. There is a grand plan for bringing humanity to a completely
different kind of life - a spiritual and peaceful one. If it is not implemented
by means of the Kabbalah, the road to achieving it will be much more painful.
If this "grand plan" hasn't been
implemented until now, what is the basis for your assumption that it will
happen at all?
It has to, because all of nature functions properly,
other than mankind, which is not in the right balance or harmony with itself or
with nature. An analogy is the human body. Every cell in the body is
"egoistical" yet functions altruistically. When cells function
egoistically, they become cancerous. Humanity right now is functioning as a
cancer. We therefore have no choice but to change. Which is where the Kabbalah
comes in.
Why not the Torah?
Same thing.
The Torah and the Kabbalah are the same thing?
Yes, but when we speak of the Torah, we usually mean
the book and the mitzvot [good deeds], not real tikkun [correction] of
the heart.
Is it possible to undergo a "correction of the
heart" without keeping the mitzvot?
It is written that correction has to come to the
entire world. This doesn't mean that Italians or Chinese have to put on tefillin
[phylacteries], for example.
The real purpose of keeping all the mitzvot is to
help us correct our egos - to effect internal change. But merely performing the
acts has the opposite effect: aggrandizing personal pride.
Doesn't this contradict the Torah, that says Na'aseh
Venishma [we perform the mitzvot, and enlightenment follows]?
It isn't as simplistic a concept as it's talked
about. It, too, has to do with internal correction.
What is a mitzva, after all? It is the correction of
a desire.
Can you give an example of the correction of a
desire?
Every desire within us, if aimed to benefit others,
is a mitzva.
What if a desire benefits others, but is
self-satisfying? Is that also a mitzva?
No, that's egoism.
What about phenomena such as Mozart? He would never
have brought his music to the world without the ego of his parents pushing him.
Without them, humanity would not have had the pleasure of that music. In other
words, when we forfeit egoism, don't we forfeit other things in the process?
To forfeit egoism is not to forfeit will. It is to
use the will altruistically, for the good of your fellow man. You don't erase the
will; you channel it differently. That is what distinguishes the Kabbalah from
all the other forms of mysticism. So Mozart can remain Mozart.
How is this different from Buddhism?
Buddhism is about minimizing the ego - through
eating less, drinking less, talking less, etc. - while the Kabbalah is about
channeling the ego correctly, not overcoming it.
On the contrary, in order to achieve inner peace,
one needs his ego. The idea is to achieve harmony between the different
functions of the body and humanity - not to eradicate one of them. The Kabbalah
accepts all the facets of a person, and requires only awareness.
If the goal is tikkun [correction], why is it
called Kabbalah [reception, acceptance]?
Because man's material body is a vessel which needs
correction in order to function wholly.
Explain to the layman how one goes about correcting
the vessel. If we use your cancer analogy, when a person has cancer, he
undergoes chemotherapy. What does one do to cure the illness you're talking
about?
One studies the Kabbalah - to gain an understanding
that all of humanity is a single "kibbutz," and that we have to love
our neighbor as ourselves. One has two choices: either to reach this
understanding through study and awareness, or the hard way, through pain.
But you indicated that pain is what leads to the
search for meaning - the way the Holocaust led to the establishment of the
State of Israel,
perhaps?
What the Holocaust did was give the Jews the
opportunity to abscond to Israel
to begin the process of correction. But we're not doing it. We're not loving
our neighbors as ourselves.
How can someone love his neighbor as himself if he
doesn't love himself?
There is no person who doesn't love himself. There
is no action a person takes that is not for his personal pleasure.
Including those who engage in self-destructive
behavior, such as drug and alcohol abuse?
A person takes drugs for personal pleasure.
How can a person know whether he has made an
internal correction?
He immediately sees and feels it. We live in a
bubble that's called "this world." When we make a correction, we see
a larger sphere.
During the war, there was an item on TV showing a
truly cheerful 105-year-old resident of Kiryat Shmona walking outdoors, amid
the Katyusha fire. He appeared to be enlightened without Kabbalah studies.
That man is an example of someone with a small ego.
Increase it and he'll feel deprived, as though he's got nothing. The more
developed a person's ego, the more deprivation he feels. This leads to
depression.
Are you saying that studying the Kabbalah can cure
depression?
There is no illness or suffering that can't be cured
through spiritual ascension.
Can any individual undergo such ascension?
Yes. And everyone will, according to The Book of
Zohar.
How does a person bring himself to make this kind of
correction?
From repeated and accumulated hard knocks.
What brought you to this quest?
I have always been drawn to the question of why a
person lives - of the meaning of life. I finished my university degree in medical
cybernetics, yet didn't solve the mystery. So I decided to keep looking. My
search ended when I encountered the Kabbalah, a few years after making aliya.
Was the search for the meaning of life connected to
your making aliya?
Certainly. We don't know why we are drawn to move
from one place to another. We don't see the alignment of forces. But they're
there nevertheless. Though we like to think that it is our will that guides us,
it is part of a larger field of will.
How do you view the current Kabbalah fad and stars
like Madonna popularizing it?
It is not at all surprising that such people are
embarking on an internal search, given the state of the world today. It is
basically a positive development.