Each year, as Tisha B’Av approaches — our day of collective mourning — we carry both ancient sorrow and the ruptures of our own time. Through the poetry of Eicha and the remembrance of generations of suffering, we open to heartbreak both personal and historic. But just before we fully inhabit our grief, we hear Moses in parashat Devarim — beginning a long farewell, speaking across a river he will never cross. His body remains behind, but his voice reaches forward, echoing in the fragile immediacy of human speech to meet our moment…
Read MoreBeyond classroom tools, the Jewish Studio Process fosters a model of leadership grounded in self-awareness, intentionality, and compassion. Fellows engage in trauma-informed practices like intention-setting and non-evaluative witnessing that create space for emotional exploration and spiritual renewal. This model invites educators to lead from a place of presence — what psychologist Richard Schwartz calls the “Self,” a centered space of creativity, care, and calm. It redefines teaching from content delivery to relational engagement: tending to learners, the environment, and something deeper many would call God. As one fellow put it, “The Jewish Studio Process is the most rigorous spiritual practice being offered in Jewish spaces right now.” Another noted, “The witness allows for our differences to be held together,” creating the conditions for pluralism, trust, and collaborative learning.
Read MoreJewish tradition teaches that the words of Torah are not static but instead are vibrating with divine energy. According to the Mishna, “Each and every day a divine voice goes out from Mount Sinai” (Pirkei Avot 6:2). This suggests that the revelation of Torah is ongoing, that the sacred words spoken at Sinai continue to reverberate throughout the world, if only we are attuned to hear them. JSP’s Jewish Studio Process offers a way of cultivating this capacity for listening to that voice from Sinai—a voice that we believe is available to all of us, in every moment.
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