
David Seidenberg (translation)
Rabbi David Seidenberg, founder of NeoHasid.org, teaches text and music, Jewish thought and spirituality, in their own right and in relation to ecology and the environment. With smikhah (ordination) from the Jewish Theological Seminary and from Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, he has taught at over 100 synagogues, communities, retreats and conferences across North America (and a few in Europe and Israel). Rabbi Seidenberg's teaching empowers learners to become creators of Judaism through deep study and communion with texts and tradition. Areas of specialty include Kabbalah and Ḥasidut, Talmud, davenning, evolution and cosmology, sustainability, Maimonides, Buber, and more. Rabbi Seidenberg has published widely on ecology and Judaism and is the author of Kabbalah and Ecology: God's Image in the More-Than-Human World (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
Conflicts over Sovereignty and Dispossession | Earth, our Collective Home & Life-Support System | 🌐 Earth Day (22 April) | Eikhah (Lamentations) | Rosh haShanah la-Ilanot (Tu biShvat) | Ḳiddush Levanah | Haggadot for the Seder Leil Pesaḥ | Social Justice, Peace, and Liberty | Tishah b'Av Readings | Travel
alienation | anti-predatory | Catholic and Apostolic Church | Concordant translation | dancing | eco-conscious | ecoḥasid | ecumenical prayers | English Translation | Exilic Period | Five Megillot | four worlds | Hebrew translation | Lurianic Kabbalah | Mourning this Broken World | new moon | night | North America | Northampton | Renewal | school of the ARI z"l | תפילת הדרך tefilat haderekh | תחינות teḥinot | the moon | Vatican City | 6th century B.C.E. | 21st century C.E. | 33rd century A.M. | 58th century A.M.
Neohasid·org | Unknown Author(s) | the Masoretic Text | Barukh ben Neriyah | Yirmiyah ben Ḥilkiyah haKohen | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Jorge Mario Bergoglio
תְּפִילַּת ט״וּ בִּשְׁבָט | The Prayer for Tu biShvat from the Seder Pri Ets Hadar, adapted by Rabbi David Seidenberg (neohasid·org)
Contributed by David Seidenberg (translation) | Neohasid·org | ❧
This prayer for Tu biShvat, derived from the prayer included with the seder for Tu biShvat, the Pri Ets Hadar, are based on the Ḳabbalah of the four worlds and the ancient idea that everything physical is an image of the spiritual. . . .