(Jewish Group) Jews and the occult: 5 myth-busting insights from a NYC museum exhibit
If you take the Torahs word for it not to mention generations of rabbinical literature astrology, witchcraft, ghost-busting and the like are expressly forbidden in Judaism, and have no place in Jewish practice or culture.
And yet, as the current exhibit at the Dr. Bernard Heller Museum at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion highlights, the occult has always been an integral part of Judaism and continues to be today.
In every civilization theres evidence of belief in superstition, mystical characters that can both protect and harm or rituals that can ward off evil, Jeanie Rosensaft, the museums director, told the New York Jewish Week. Its just a fascinating thing, and we wanted to investigate.
For the exhibit Magical Thinking: Superstitions and Other Persistent Notions, Rosensaft and her curatorial team put out an open call to hundreds of contemporary Jewish artists for artwork exploring Jewish superstitions. The result showcases the work of more than 50 artists in a range of mediums including oils, watercolors, acrylics, collage, paper cuts, multimedia and photographs.
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