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Judaism

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Title: Judaism


1
Judaism Mental IllnessAn Introduction to
Jewish Law Serving a Jewish Client
  • Presentation by Amy Greenbaum,
  • Executive Director Rabbinic Resource,
  • Hillel at Miami University
  • Visiting Faculty, Miami University
  • Department of Comparative Religion

2
Brief Background on Judaism
  • Monotheistic 4,000-year-old religion.
  • Tanach (also called Torah) contains the same
    books as what many Christians call The Old
    Testament (different order)
  • Commentaries on the Tanach began approximately
    100 BCE and continue to this day. The
    commentaries are central to halachah (Jewish law)
    and are considered by many to be continual oral
    revelation from God through humans.
  • Examples include Mishnah, Talmud, Shulkhan Aruch

3
Brief Background on Judaism, continued
  • God is a loving Wellspring of Life
  • Judaism is a way of life.
  • Teshuvah, the process of repentance and turning
    within, recognizes the reality of human nature
    and encourages people to regularly accept faults,
    learn from them and try not to make the same
    mistakes again.
  • Teshuvah can be a model for a system of change.
  • Friedman Yehuda argue We posit that these
    systems psychotherapy teshuvah are distinct,
    yet overlapping, and we focus on three areas
    where these points of convergence are manifest
    locus of authority, use of the transference, and
    establishment of goals.1

4
A Taste of Textual/Jewish Legal Responses to
Mental Health Issues
  • Whenever two people sit together and exchange
    words of Torah, the Divine Presence hovers
    between them. (Pirkei Avot, Ethics of the
    Ancestors, 33)
  • Therapy as a form of Torah study
  • Maimonides (Rabbi Physician) when a doctor
    observes a mental problem, treatment of the
    psychiatric malady must take priority2

5
Sin Guilt in Judaism
  • No original sin in Judaism.
  • Term for sin in Judaism more accurately defined
    as missing the mark.
  • Every person has a neshamah (soul) given by God
    in the image of God. (God in Judaism is beyond
    human, humans do not physically look like God.)
  • Each person born with two aspects to their human
    nature
  • Yetzer tov - good inclination
  • Yetzer hara - evil inclination
  • Both are necessary
  • and behold it was good is a reference to the
    yetzer tov, while behold it was very good is a
    reference to the yetzer hara. But, is the yetzer
    hara to be considered very good? Yes, for
    without the yetzer hara people would not marry,
    build a home, beget children or engage in
    business. (Genesis Rabbah 99)

6
Some Over-Generalizations of the Jewish Patient
  • Some Jews are deeply religious and may wish to
    frame their therapy with Jewish law and values.
  • Many Jews in America today are not religious.
  • Many Jews connect with their Jewish identity on a
    cultural level. Jewish values inform their daily
    decisions.
  • Such cultural connection can include a strong
    sense of social justice / tikkun olam which can
    be important for therapeutic work.
  • How to include Judaism? Therapist may follow the
    lead of the patient, especially if the patient is
    aware that s/he may utilize Jewish values
    culture as part of therapy (pamphlets, books in
    waiting room).

7
Treatment as Tikkun Olam Tikkun Atzmi
  • Tikkun Olam - Repair of the world
  • Tikkun Atzmi - Repair of the self
  • Commandment or mitzvah from God
  • Therapist as facilitator of this process
  • A cautionary word

8
Resources (1 of 2)
  • Book on Basic Judaism
  • Joseph Telushkin, Jewish Literacy the most
    important things to know about the Jewish
    religion, its people, and its history, New
    YorkW. Morrow, 1991.
  • Books on Judaism Mental Health
  • Richard Address, ed., Caring for the Soul Rfuat
    HaNefesh, A Mental Health Resource and Study
    Guide, New York UAHC Press, 2003.
  • William Cutter, ed., Healing and the Jewish
    Imagination Spiritual and Practical Perspectives
    on Judaism and Health, Woodstock, VT Jewish
    Lights Publishing, 2007.

9
Resources (2 of 3)
  • Journals on Judaism Mental Health
  • Journal of Psychology and Judaism, Kluwer
    Academic/Plenum Publishers, ISSN 0700-9801
  • Web Resources
  • Jewish Healing Centers - http//jewishhealing.org/
  • Judaism Substance Abuse - http//jacsweb.org/
  • Resource on Judaism - http//myjewishlearning.com
  • Reform Judaism on mental health issues -
    http//urj.org/jfc/bioethics/mentalhealth/
  • The Kalsman Center on Jewish Healing -
    http//www.huc.edu/kalsman

10
Resources (3 of 3)
  • Articles on Judaism Mental Health
  • Michelle Friedman Rachel Yehuda, Psychotherapy
    and Teshuvah Parallel and Overlapping Systems
    for Change, Torah u-Madda Journal, Vol. 11,
    (2002-3), pp. 238-253.
  • Julie L. Goldberg Karen OBrien, Jewish
    Women's Psychological Well-being the Role of
    Attachment, Separation, and Jewish Identity,
    Psychology of Women Quarterly, Vol. 292 (June
    2005), p. 197-206
  • Theologies of Suffering How Judaism Can Help
    You Cope, Rabbi Rebecca W. Sirbu,
    http//www.huc.edu/kalsman/writings/

11
Sources
  • 1 (slide 3 on Teshuvah) Michelle Friedman
    Rachel Yehuda, Psychotherapy and Teshuvah
    Parallel and Overlapping Systems for Change,
    Torah u-Madda Journal, Vol. 11, 2002-3, 238-253.
  • 2 (slide 4 Maimonides quotation from ) Mental
    Illness The Moral Imperative, Sermon by Rabbi
    Barry H. Block, Temple Beth-El, San Antonio,
    Texas, as found on website http//www.beth-elsa.or
    g/bb102502.htm)
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