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Kabbalah Centre in New York City in 2008. The Kabbalah Centre was founded in the United States in July 1965 initially as a publishing house called "The National Institute for the Research in Kabbalah" by Philip Berg (born Feivel Gruberger) and Rabbi Levi Isaac Krakovsky.
Kabbalah and the Spiritual Quest: The Kabbalah Centre in America, London 2007. Boaz Huss. "The New Age of Kabbalah: Contemporary Kabbalah, the New Age and postmodern spirituality", Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, 6 (2006), pp. 107–125; Jonatan Meir. "The Revealed and the Revealed within the Concealed: On the Opposition to the "Followers" of ...
The New York City Fire Department reported that in mid-December 2023 they had been anonymously informed about a tunnel under the building and had responded to inspect it on December 20, but the tunnel was not detected. [7] The existence of the tunnel was first publicly reported on by local media on December 22. [8]
The Bernard Museum of Judaica, formally the Herbert & Eileen Bernard Museum of Judaica, is part of Temple Emanu-El on Manhattan's Upper East Side.Their museum hosts temporary exhibits on various aspects of Jewish life, faith, and culture.
Toronto, Ontario and New York: Laitman Kabbalah Publishers. Meir, Jonatan. (2007). “The Revealers and the Revealed within the Concealed: On the Opposition to the ‘Followers’ of Rabbi Yehudah Ashlag and the Dissemination of Esoteric Literature.” Kabbalah: Journal for the Study of Jewish Mystical Texts 16: 151–258 (in Hebrew). Myers ...
Jay Milder (born 1934) is an American artist and a figurative expressionist painter of the second generation New York School.. Themes from the Hebrew Bible such as Jacob's Ladder and Noah's Ark, [1] and the esoteric mystical beliefs of the Kabbalah, are recurring themes in Milder's paintings which are presented as archetypal images that recur in the basic karma, make-up and need of human nature.
The Center for Jewish History is a partnership of five Jewish history, scholarship, and art organizations in New York City, namely the American Jewish Historical Society, American Sephardi Federation, Leo Baeck Institute New York, Yeshiva University Museum, and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. Together, housed in one location, the partners ...
The Leo Baeck Institute New York (LBI) is a research institute in New York City dedicated to the study of German-Jewish history and culture, founded in 1955. It is one of three independent research centers founded by a group of German-speaking Jewish émigrés at a conference in Jerusalem in 1955.