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In The News
A Prayer Group of Their Own
Kol Zimrah and Other Do-It-Yourself Minyans Unite the Independent-Minded
By JAY MICHAELSON
The
FORWARD, NOVEMBER 14, 2003
"People
are tired of the lack of intimacy that's found in a lot of shuls," said
Shir Yaakov Feinstein-Feit. It's a common complaint these days in Jewish
communal circles, but Feinstein-Feit, 25, and his friends did something
about it: They founded their own minyan, or prayer group. That minyan
is Kol Zimrah (Hebrew for "Voice of Song"), its motto is "meaningful
prayer through music," and its astonishingly fast growth on New York's
Upper West Side is changing the way many people think about independent
congregations and what young Jewish professionals are looking for in a
prayer experience. From a cohort of four founders and their friends, Kol
Zimrah now regularly attracts a hundred or more people to its services.
At its next meeting, on November 21 at the Society for the Advancement
of Judaism, it celebrates its one-year anniversary.
"From the beginning, Kol Zimrah has exceeded all expectations,"
said Ben Dreyfus, 24, another of the minyan's founders. "We assumed
in the beginning that it would appeal to a relatively narrow constituency,
since some people would not be comfortable with a service that uses musical
instruments on the Sabbath and others with a service that is entirely
in Hebrew," he said. "Instead, I continue to be amazed at the
diverse backgrounds and perspectives of people who find a common home
in Kol Zimrah."
How does a startup minyan with no institutional affiliation or funding
— "We still buy our own grape juice and cups," Feinstein-Feit
said — pack in a hundred Upper West Siders by word of mouth alone?
And, perhaps more important for the institutional Jewish community, can
its success be duplicated?
First, there is the music, and Kol Zimrah's spiritual, highly idiosyncratic
services; Dreyfus cites as important influences not only the Leader Minyan
in Jerusalem and the National Havurah Institute, but also Debbie Friedman's
Hava Nashira workshop and the jam band Phish. The minyan deliberately
avoids using an "official" siddur, or prayer book, and encourages
attendees to, in Feinstein-Feit's words, "come and sit in silence,
or hum along, or nail every word if that's their particular channel of
connecting."
There are few announcements, and every word that is not silent is sung.
Kol Zimrah (www.kolzimrah.info) is self-consciously part of what some
have called a Jewish spiritual renaissance, with its emphasis on personal
spirituality and connection with the divine. In Dreyfus's words, "rather
than telling people what to think, or creating an experience for them,
we create an environment that enables people to create their own prayer
experiences. Thus, each person in the room might be having a vastly different
individual experience, yet they are joining together in literal and figurative
harmony."
Second, Kol Zimrah has grown up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan,
a unique laboratory for new Jewish ideas in general and independent minyans
in particular. With the critical mass that community provides, many independent
congregations have flourished, including Kehilat Orach Eliezer, a Modern
Orthodox congregation that started 20 years ago and recently instituted
a mixed-gender Torah reading; Kehilat Hadar (started in 2001), a nondenominational
egalitarian community that meets twice a month for traditional services
and weekly for Talmud and Torah study, and Darchei Noam, which crosses
"official" movement lines by juxtaposing separate-sex seating
and extensive women's participation in services.
Congregations such as Kol Zimrah are flourishing — be it despite
or because of their lack of institutional affiliation. To be sure, the
Upper West Side also has dyed-in-the-wool Orthodox, Conservative and Reform
synagogues, but a look around the rooms show that, in terms of reaching
so-called "unaffiliated" Jews, particularly those in their 20s
and 30s, the independents are doing it better. Elie Kaunfer, one of the
founders of Hadar, said that the minyan has remained unaffiliated "because
it serves a broad community, from people who grew up Orthodox (about 20%),
Conservative (60%) or Reform (about 20%). More than half the people at
Hadar consider themselves unaffiliated with any particular denomination."
Relationships between independent minyans and established institutions
vary. For example, Hadar — a shul supported by the Bikkurim incubator
fund co-sponsored by the Jewish Education Service of North America/United
Jewish Communities — holds a beit midrash in the Jewish Community
Center in Manhattan, and runs programming with the Jewish Theological
Seminary, Congregation Ansche Chesed and others. Kol Zimrah's model is
different. It is, in many ways, a "neo-havurah," which, unlike
Hadar, Kehilat Orach Eliezer and others, seems less interested in building
a synagogue infrastructure than constructing an alternative to it. Not
coincidentally, Kol Zimrah enjoys a mutually beneficial relationship with
the Society for the Advancement of Judaism — where the rabbi is
Michael Strassfeld, one of the founders of the original havurah movement,
who 30 years ago helped pioneer the idea of independent, do-it-yourself
congregations for committed, young Jews disenchanted with traditional
synagogue structures and ideologies.
But can Kol Zimrah's success, and that of Hadar and Kehilat Orach Eliezer,
be exported? "One reason things like this don't exist outside of
New York is that there is a certain level of comfort here in defining
and redefining Judaism," Feinstein-Feit said. "I feel like a
lot of New Yorkers should leave New York and share some of their knowledge
and beauty."
Hadar's Kaunfer disagrees. "This is not a New York-only phenomenon,"
he said."Independent minyans can exist in most major urban areas
where people are looking for spirited, independent prayer," he said,
citing a list of new havurot and minyans including the "D.C. Minyan"
in Washington, D.C.; Tiferet in Cambridge, Mass., and groups in Berkeley,
Los Angeles and San Francisco.
The founders of these independent minyans have all learned from one another.
Indeed, most know each other through networks such as the Dorot Fellowship's
alumni organization and have shared ideas and inspiration. D.C. Minyan
founder Jessica Lieberman explicitly took Hadar as a model. Tiferet founder
Evan Hochberg said he and his co-founders "were inspired by Darchei
Noam and by Shira Hadasha in Jerusalem. We wanted to create a safe space
for people to be Orthodox and feminist at the same time."
Less far afield, Park Slope, Brooklyn, is fast becoming the new "in"
New York city neighborhood for committed, innovative Jews, with independent
DIY congregations such as the Park Slope Minyan (started in 2001, and
now attracting 50 people on average) and the Park Slope Montauk Minyan.
In Greenwich Village, the Kol HaKfar (Village Voice) minyan is taking
off as well, regularly drawing 20 to 30 attendees to Friday night services.
As Jill Goldenziel, a Kol HaKfar founder, quipped, "There is young
Jewish life outside the Upper West Side."
Like Kol Zimrah and Hadar, these minyans cross traditional boundaries
of "movements" and ideologies. As Park Slope Minyan founder
Elizabeth Richman said, "We are principally inspired by the music
of an Orthodox rabbi [Shlomo Carlebach], davened by laypeople in an easy-to-recognize
Conservative style out of a Reconstructionist siddur (and the many different
siddurim that participants bring with them) in a space generously made
available by a Reform congregation."
At the same time, all agree that more institutional support could encourage
the New York "laboratory" to experiment more and export its
innovative models around the country. "We figured out a lot on our
own," said Dreyfus of Kol Zimrah, noting that many of the young founders
of independent minyans know one another personally and that advice is
passed on by word of mouth. Kaunfer is even more practical. "Space
is the biggest challenge to these minyanim in New York," he says.
"There aren't too many shuls in New York that could hold the 200
people who come to Hadar each week." Yet with or without institutional
support, havurot like Kol Zimrah are growing. As Feinstein-Feit put it,
"Space and funding is definitely missing, but the courage and creativity
is there."
Jay Michaelson is the chief editor of Zeek:
A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture, and is the director of Nehirim,
a spiritual retreat for gay and lesbian Jews (www.nehirim.org).
Reprinted with permission from www.forward.com
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