48 Friday, February 3, 1978 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS An Eminent Psychiatrist's Observations on the 'Kabala,' Mysticism and Exorcism in Jewish, Western Traditions By DR. PETER MARTIN The Jewish people are often called the People of the Book. When I finished reading "Kabbalah", by Perle Epstein (Doubleday), I realized that this designation is but a de- scription of our people's behavior, not an ex- planation of it. For some Jewish scholars throughout the centuries, intensive Torah study was in the service of an intense, driving inner need. Study of Torah was in the service of their search for God. It expressed a need to know Him intimately. It is called kishupha — yearning for the Divine. At first, God made the Jews His Chown People; Jews have ever since chosen o search for and to reunite with Him. Theil s was a search for devekuth — the state tf cleaving to God. For the mystically oriented, the study of the Torah and the Zohar has been a path to Elohim Hayim — the living God, a state of ecstatic consciousness *achieved by deep concentration. Kabala has been an over-all title for Jewish mystical tradition. It has been charscteristic of Jews to strive for union with the Absolute — yechida. The bible ofJewish mysticsm is the Zohar Book of Splendor. It is a 13th Century Spanish mystic's guide — although it pur- ports to be a series of midrashic expositions by the Second Century mystic, Rabbi Si- - meon bar Yochai. In Judaism, meditation practices leading to a mystical, altered state of consciousness date back to the time of the Second Temple, in the Second Century BCE, and are found in one of the earliest forms ofJewish mysticsm, Merkabalism. Later, in the 13th Century CE, Rabbi Abulafia felt that the normal life of the soul *s kept within limits by our sensory percep- tions and emotions, and since these percep- tions are concerned with the finite, the soul's life is finite. He felt that man needs a higher form of perception which, instead of blocking the soul's deeper origins, opens them up. The purpose of Abulafia's prayer and methodical meditation was to experience a new state of consciousness, described as harmonious movement of pure thought, which has served all relations to the senses. This approach is, of course, not exclusive to Jews. It could be recognized as a Judaized version of the Indian mystic's yoga. This JeWish phenomenol is a universal phenomenon of mankind. A mystic of what- ever belief can be defined as one who desper- atRly wants to know the meaning of life. To. the Jewish mystic, the meaning of life is known. It lies in a reunion with the shek- God's female aspect and imminent nina presence. How to achieve it is the problem. It is a delicate task for a psychoanalyst like myself to review a book on mys- ticsm. If patients who I have seen suffer- ing from hysteria or schizophrenia are used as a frame of reference, the entire " subject of mysticsm be could relegated to the area of magic, false beliefs and mental illness. Even- in kabalistic sects run by great kabalistic. masters, care would be taken in selection • of students and in continuous supervision of students since some could be- come psyChotic and some were reported to have died -in their immersion in the mys- hich have never been comprehensi- layman like myself. minded of the interchange between ern young lawyer in the Broadway Tenth Man" who says to the kabalist, "Really, I have been reading your book, the Book of Zohar. I am sure it has lost much in the translation, but sir, any disciple of this abracadabra is presuming when he calls anyone else a fool ... "A good psychiatrist, even a poor one, could strip your beliefs in 10 minutes. None of these things exsist. You have made them all up because it is unbearable for you to bear the pain of insignificance." To this the kabalist replies, "You have been reading the Book of johar. Dear young man, one does not read the Book of Zohar, leaf thiough its pages, and make marginal notes. "I have entombed myself in this volume for 60 years, raw with vulnerability to its hidden mysteries, and have sensed only a glimpse of its passion. Behind every letter of every word lies a locked image, and behind every image a sparkle of light of the ineffa- ble brilliance of Infinity. "But the concept of the Inexpressible Un- knownis inconceivable to you, for you are a man possessed by the Tangi- ble. If you cannot touch it with your fin- gers, it simply does not exist." However, it is not just skeptical Jewish lawyers who have difficulty in hearing the music of the Kabala. The vast majority of Jews have DR. PETER MARTIN lost the way. The Kabala of today has become secretive and disor- ganized. The last known group of practicing kabalists continues to meet today at the Yeshiva Beth El in Jerusalem. It is closed to even the most interested ob- server. The small congregation con- tinues the practices instituted by its predecessors four centuries ago. The Kabala is a virtually unknown diver- sion of the treasures of Jewish religious ex- perience. Through the centuries those who immersed themselves in kabalistic practices were often considered by their fellow Jews to be madmen or to be false Messiahs. There is an old hasidic parable illustrative of this problem: "A deaf man passed by a home in which a wedding party was going on. He looked in the window and saw all the people there dancing and cavorting, leaping about and laughing. "However, since the man was deaf, and could not hear the music of the fiddlers, he said to himself, `Ah, this must be a madhouse.' It does not follow that because he was deaf the people were lunatics." This book will not teach anyone hoW to hear the music. But through the scholarly research of its author, it will bring light to bear upon some of the secrets of the practice of Jewish mys- ticsm. That its author is a woman is indeed sur- prileir made her research more difficult. Looking for the truth, Perle Epstein spoke with kabalists who refused to even face her. Instead, an interpreter had to stand between them. Her search took her to a synagogue which people, hoping to do good and be good. prohibited women; she sat in a dark room Psychiatric labels need not be attached, with a window. These mystics must not have to them. Understanding of this need can bring com- been far advanced in their training since this is not a description of perfect equilib- fort to their parents. It could even lead to a rium — detachment from worldly pain and re-awakening of the parents' own interest in pleasure, which is a prerequisite before Judaism. This book is not a how-to-do-it-yourself learning the art of hitbodedut — medita- book. It is an historical survey of how tion. Surely they were still far from the saintli- Kabala was practiced and how Kabala is a ness achieved by Rabbi Akiba through his mystical practice fully dependant on, integrated with, Judism as a whole. meditation. The book is in keeping with our times. In order to study Kabala, Jewish tradition states that one must be a male, over 40, There is a widespread renewal of the super- married and have children. This tradition natural, mystical, magical and irrational in helps weed out potentially disturbed appli- contemporary western society. We have seen a rapid shift among young people from cants. Perle Epstein's interest in Jewish the iconclastic social activism of the 1960s mysticsm is inherited from her ancestor, toward an internal, personal quest for peace the great kabalist and founder of and meaning in the 1970s. hasidism, the Baal Shem Tov. He is said The latter quest is seen in the popular- to have brought the Kabala down from ity of non-conventional religiosity, mys- the angels and placed it in the hands of tical experiences and eastern men. philosophies. One manifestation of this Dr. Epstein, a worthy descendant, per- social revolution is our manifest fasci- sisted despite the obstacles placed in her nation with demonology and exorcism. way and has rewarded us with a small gem It is not surprising that psychiatry is be- of a book. If the re-awakening of interest in the Kabala in Israel persists as Dr. Epstein • coming more biological just at a time when predicts and if it develops in America, this our society is becoming more metaphysical. book will have contributed to the ground- In every culture hyper-rationalism has been followed by a revival of supernaturalism. swell. With the rationalism comes too much re- A phenomenon in current America, dis- turbing to Jewish parents, has been the sponsibility for some individuals to bear. sight of Indian gurus surrounded by wor- Psychiatry brought man from outer reality shipful American disciples — 60 percent of into himself and only himself— an increase in responsibility for human action. them Jewish. These 20th Century modern ideas make These parents' anguish is easy to under- stand. Not so easy to understand is when man responsible for our own actions but also they become disturbed when traditional for our own guilts, fears and obsessions. hasidism welcomes their children with open For those who like it this way, it is z. arms and missionary zeal. great. For others, there is a wish to find Discipline of one kind or another is "in" — alternative ways of living — and thus not even keeping kosher and wearing tzitsit. only modify the society, but to modify Such involvements by these children, 'de- the self. spite the anguish of the parents, are not un- Thus, the fantasy of the 1970s has been a Jewish. wish to return to an age of exorcism or to It is Jewish tradition for a proportion experience close encounters of a third and of the young people to enter into a per- fourth kind as part of a larger, super- sonal search for God. They are good naturalistic cosmology. UJA Cautious Over Tricky Sadat By BORIS SMOLAR (Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, JTA) (Copyright 1978, JTA, Inc.) Jews throughout the country—especially in communities where only limited information is pro- vided by local newspapers and radio on the develop- ments in the dramatic im- passe in the Israel-Egyptian talks—are confused. Their euphoria about the pos- sibilities of an understand- ing between Egypt and Is- rael has evaporated; it changed into concern. They turn for information to the United Jewish Ap- peal headquarters con- vinced that UJA national leaders are maintaining telephone contact with au- thorities in Israel and are familiar with the actual situation and what can be expected. The tempo in which the events are moving is, how- ever, such that no authority in Israel can predict what Egyptian President Anwar Sadat may do next in his "blitz game." He is full of tricks. He operates on tactics of "surprises." Even his in- vitation to the Synagogue Council of America—in which all religious de- nominations of American Jewry are represented— is considered by many as nothing but a trick. He at- tempts by such "invita- tions" to reach American Jewry over the head of the Israel government. - His latest "surprise," de- manding that the U.S. pro- vide Egypt with the same modern weapons that Israel has acquired, is provoking the suspicion by many that his sudden retreat from the talks with Israel was merely a "trick" calculated to blackmail Washington for more arms, if the U.S. government wants him to resume the talks. The UJA leadership, g the bridge between the large masses of Ameri- can Jewry and Israel, is naturally watching closely every nuance in the de- velopments around the Egyptian-Israeli stalemate. It shares its information with leaders of the Jewish communities and with UJA activists in cities outside of New York. It does not exclude the possibility that the artifi- cial "Broigez" which Sadat plays now against Israel could change situations even from hour to hour. It therefore advises Jewish inquirers and Jewish lead- ers in communities against being extreme in hope or de- spair. At the same time, UJA. national leaders stress that the responsibility of Jews in this country re- mains the same as it has been during the 30 years of partnership with Is- rael, namely to strengthen the fabric of Israel's society, to help meet its humanitarian needs, and to enable Is- rael to bring and settle Jews from lands of op- pression. UJA leaders, in appl ing the present happenings aroun'. - feel that American Jewry must un- derstand that Israel is still far from achieving peace; that peace will come after a long period of negotiations; and that during these negotiations there will be "ups" and "downs." With this approach, the UJA is embarking now on a policy of brim;- "– sage." to Jev try not prima Israelidignitar professors— through American and Israeli— acquainted with the Arab- Israel issues and able to analyze these issues in a sober and poptlax,yi,.-----