00:00 [Cataloger’s note: Audio difficult to decipher throughout.] [Leah Novick?] talks about the songs she loves. She starts to sing a song; 03:25 A man speaks about Zalman Schachter-Shalomi and other rabbis who were protesting and providing aid to victims from the demolition of Palestinian homes by bulldozers in Israel in 2003; 05:59 [Leah?] begins talking again about her experience in California. She also talks about her family; 07:57 Another woman [still Leah?] talks about anthropomorphism and the Shekinah; 11:00 The same woman reads as passage and repeats this phrase, “the widespread experience of the holiness of all the earth which would make it impossible to pollute, destroy, or explore this plant or others.” She continues to talk about collective awareness of all beings for the beauty and respect of all differences on the plant and relates it back to the Shekinah; 28:50 The audience applauds the woman and a man asks the audience to say “Amen!” He continues to talk to the congregation and reflects on the talk about Shekinah; 35:50 A woman tells a story about Reb Zalman and his brother; 39:12 The man tells a story about a student who wanted to go to medical school to help people; 40:00 The woman relates another story to the medical student story; 43:49 The man tells the group to take a break before they get into smaller groups and talk about Shekinah. He also addresses the people from Israel; 45:45 The woman talks about people gathering to do feminist work and mindfulness work. She continues to talk about people organizing in Israel for the future of its people; 49:15 The man starts to sing a song and the recording cuts out.
note
00:00 [Cataloger’s note: Audio difficult to decipher throughout.] [Leah Novick?] talks about the songs she loves. She starts to sing a song; 03:25 A man speaks about Zalman Schachter-Shalomi and other rabbis who were protesting and providing aid to victims from the demolition of Palestinian homes by bulldozers in Israel in 2003; 05:59 [Leah?] begins talking again about her experience in California. She also talks about her family; 07:57 Another woman [still Leah?] talks about anthropomorphism and the Shekinah; 11:00 The same woman reads as passage and repeats this phrase, “the widespread experience of the holiness of all the earth which would make it impossible to pollute, destroy, or explore this plant or others.” She continues to talk about collective awareness of all beings for the beauty and respect of all differences on the plant and relates it back to the Shekinah; 28:50 The audience applauds the woman and a man asks the audience to say “Amen!” He continues to talk to the congregation and reflects on the talk about Shekinah; 35:50 A woman tells a story about Reb Zalman and his brother; 39:12 The man tells a story about a student who wanted to go to medical school to help people; 40:00 The woman relates another story to the medical student story; 43:49 The man tells the group to take a break before they get into smaller groups and talk about Shekinah. He also addresses the people from Israel; 45:45 The woman talks about people gathering to do feminist work and mindfulness work. She continues to talk about people organizing in Israel for the future of its people; 49:15 The man starts to sing a song and the recording cuts out.
Note
false