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TIKKUN MIDDOT PROJECT Made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation. s.

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Presentation on theme: "TIKKUN MIDDOT PROJECT Made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation. s."— Presentation transcript:

1 TIKKUN MIDDOT PROJECT Made possible through the support of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation. s

2 A three-year study of 28 Jewish communities developing their members’ moral character through mindfulness and tikkun middot practice. Each community must be led by clergy or other leader trained by the Institute in mindfulness practice, who will engage in a personal practice of character development while implementing a parallel process within the community.

3 Can faith communities create sustainable structures positively impacting their members’ lifelong character development?

4 Cultivating mindfulness practice and attention to middot (spiritual/moral qualities) will help community members:  become more aware of and acknowledge negative behavioral patterns  transform challenging situations into opportunities to strengthen their character  respond in such situations with greater clarity, wisdom, and compassion

5 Participants will report an increase in  recognizing situations in which they typically react negatively;  responding to such situations by choosing to practice the middot; and  perceiving their religious community supporting and modeling positive moral character.

6 IJS-trained leader participates as individual in facilitated small group (4-5 participants) process over 10months, utilizing Tikkun Middot curriculum Components:  Monthly 90-minute facilitated va’ad/group session via videoconference  Interim weekly sichat chaverim, text study in chevruta, mentoring sessions by phone  Kabbalot: specific actions  Cheshbon hanefesh journaling

7 Leader collaborates with other professional and lay leaders to design and implement a plan to strategically integrate tikkun middot practice in community in a systemic, sustainable manner. Tikkun middot practice group(s) for those well-positioned to train/teach others in community(staff, lay leaders, chairs, faculty) Highlight middot in communal prayer Weave references to middah into d’rashot and learning Open Board and/or committee meetings with mindfulness practice and middot study Posters for lobby etc. with middah, verse, and meditative phrase Identify, create, disseminate song or niggun of the month relating to middah Monthly email to community describing middah and scenarios in which it might be practiced, and post on community website 

8 Ten-unit “middah of month” curricula featuring text study, heshbon hanefesh (personal reflection), hevruta study, small group process, and exercises  Adult curriculum developed by Rabbi David Jaffe of Boston  Family (parent/child) curriculum developed by Miki Young (Philadelphia)

9  hitlamdut, making what we learn deeply impact our lives  behira, discerning the critical decision point for our actions  anavah, humility  savlanut, patience  hesed, lovingkindness  kavod, respect  shtika, thoughtful speech  bitachon, trust  emunah, trustworthiness  seder, orderliness and integration

10  Applications due by Friday, June 14  Selections announced by end of June  Communities begin promoting Tikkun Middot Project, especially during fall holidays in September 2014  Orientation retreat/conference in New Jersey (location TBA), Sunday-Tuesday, October 27-29  Leadership Tikkun Middot Groups begin November 2013  Communities “kick off” Tikkun Middot Project January 2014, continuing through December 2015

11  Applications due by April 1, 2014  Selections announced by April 20, 2014  Communities begin publicizing and promoting Tikkun Middot Project, spring 2014  Orientation retreat/conference in New Jersey (location TBA), Sunday-Tuesday, late May 2014  Leadership Tikkun Middot Groups begin May 2014  Communities “kick off” Tikkun Middot Project September 2014, continuing through June 2015

12  Collaborative leadership team for planning and implementation  Advance “buy-in” from key community leaders  Past experience with mindfulness and/or tikkun middot practice in community  Systemic: integrates tikkun middot practice into as many areas of communal life and as many demographic categories as possible  Sustainable: creates structural changes in communal life which will continue to engage community in tikkun middot practice beyond the year

13  May NOT be used to defray existing operating expenses or pay for refreshments  May be used to support travel and accommodations at October retreat/conference for additional team members from participating communities  May be used for outside scholars/teachers, training, consultation, resources, additional curriculum development, and materials for implementing project

14  Participating communities required to post resources and materials on community’s wiki webpage  A team from each participating community will share its project’s “best practices” and challenges via webinars  Each participating community must have a team representative on these monthly “best practices” webinars


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