| |
Full Description
Jewish by birth, though from a secular family, Alan Morinis took a deep journey
into Hinduism and Buddhism as a young man. He received a doctorate for his study
of Hindu pilgrimage, learned yoga in India with B. K. S. Iyengar, and attended
his first Buddhist meditation course in the Himalayas in 1974. But in 1997, when
his film career went off track and he reached for some spiritual oxygen, he felt
inspired to explore his Jewish heritage. In his reading he happened upon a
Jewish tradition of spiritual practice called Mussar. Gradually he realized he
had stumbled on an insightful discipline for self-development, complete with
meditative, contemplative, and other well-developed transformative practices
designed to penetrate the deepest roots of the inner life. Eventually
reaching the limits of what he could learn on his own, he decided to seek out a
Mussar teacher. That was not easily achieved, since almost the entire world of
the Mussar tradition had been wiped out in the Holocaust. In time, he did find
an accomplished master who stood in an unbroken line of transmission of the
Mussar tradition, and who lived at the center of a community of Orthodox Jews on
Long Island. This book tells the story of Morinis's journey to meet his teacher
and what he learned from him, and reveals the central teachings and practices
that are the spiritual treasury and legacy of Mussar. Alan Morinis has
written this book because the wisdom and practices that helped him so much have
not penetrated the world beyond the confines of Orthodox Judaism, and may not be
fully appreciated even there at this time. His hope is that Jews and non-Jews
alike will find in Mussar a time-tested path of spiritualpractice that will help
them discover the hidden radiance within.
|
|