
the Hierophant
A hierophant is a person who invites participants in a sacred exercise into the presence of that which is deemed holy. The title, hierophant, originated in Ancient Greece and combines the words φαίνω (phainein, "to show") and τα ειρα (ta hiera, "the holy"); hierophants served as interpreters of sacred mysteries and arcane principles. For the Open Siddur Project, the Hierophant welcomes new contributors and explains our mission: ensuring creatively inspired work intended for communal use is shared freely for creative reuse and redistribution.
Advocacy | Community News | 📚︎ Compiled Prayer Books (Siddurim, Haggadot, &c.) | Development | Events | Comprehensive (Kol Bo) Siddurim | Meta Topics | ⋯ Miscellanea (Ketubot, Art, Essays on Prayer, &c.) | 🖖︎ Prayers & Praxes | Press & Research Articles | 👂︎ Liturgical Readings, Sources, and Cantillation | Source Texts | Targumim (Translations) | Drafts
antecedents | communications | copyright | design | development status | dictionary | Eastern Sefaradim | English Translation | ephemeral works | event flyers | fonts | Free Speech | inspirations | Internet | Jacob Freedman | Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles | Jewish Week | JPS | JTS | Ladino Translation | licenses | Massachusetts | meta-lists | national museum of american jewish history | North America | Nusaḥ Sefaradi | Ottoman Jewry | pedagogy | Philadelphia | pjff.org | PresenTense | progress | responsa | פרשת תרומה parashat Terumah | sharing | status update | Tablet | תנ״ךְ TaNaKh | תרגום targum | Teutsch | transliteration | typography | Yiddish translation | Yiddishland | 19th century C.E. | 20th century C.E. | 21st century C.E. | 57th century A.M. | 58th century A.M.
📰 “Ten Commandments of Jewish Social Networking” (Jonah Lowenfeld, Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles 2010)
Contributed on: 25 Nov 2010 by the Hierophant | ❧
An interview with Jonah Lowenfeld of the Jewish Journal on the values of sharing Torah learning as practiced by the Open Siddur Project. . . .