[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  The problem here is that Judaism doesn't teach reincarnation. 
  _,_._,___                         
  Empty Bill opines - 
  Here is an interesting counter-point for your consideration. His book is 
especially
  interesting for those who were "there and then".

   
   
  Reincarnation in Judaism 
  By Rabbi Yonassan Gershom
   
  While traveling on the spiritual speaking circuit, I have met many Hindus who 
were surprised to learn that Jews have teachings about reincarnation. This is 
because Hindus have often heard about Jews and Judaism only through Christian 
missionaries, who refer to "Judeo-Christian tradition" as if it were a single 
religion. Although Christianity sprang from Jewish roots (similar to the way 
Buddhism came from Hinduism), Christian theologians have long ago rejected or 
completely reinterpreted many Jewish teachings. For example, the well-known 
saying of Jesus, "You must be born again," was probably about reincarnation, 
and not necessarily a reference to changing one's religion. (Jews do not have 
missionaries.)
   
  The Hebrew word for reincarnation, gilgul, is derived from a verb which means 
"turning in a circle"-just like samsara, the wheel of death and rebirth 
described in Hindu scriptures. Jewish teachings about gilgul are not explained 
in the Bible, but can be found in a collection of mystical writings called 
kabbalah, which means, in the Hebrew language, "that which has been received." 
For many centuries, kabbalah was a secret, esoteric doctrine, passed only by 
word-of-mouth and initiation from teacher to disciple within Jewish circles. 
Today, many of these mystical teachings have been written in books and 
translated into other languages besides the original Hebrew and Aramaic, making 
them more accessible to everyone. 
   
  Not all Jews believe in kabbalah, however. Like Hinduism, Judaism has 
different schools of thought, which do not always agree with each other. Today 
there are four main ideas about the afterlife taught among Jews: 1) genetic 
survival through one's children; 2) resurrection; 3) Heaven and Hell; and 4) 
reincarnation. Among the more Westernized, rationalistic sects of Jews, 
reincarnation is rarely mentioned, but, on the other hand, many traditional 
Orthodox Jews and all Hasidic Jews still believe in it.
   
  Hasidic Jews are followers of the Baal Shem Tov ("the Master of the Good 
Name"), an enlightened spiritual teacher who lived in Eastern Europe during the 
1700s. Each Hasidic community is made up of families of Hasidim-which means 
"pious ones"-who are organized around a rebbe, which is somewhat different from 
a rabbi. While a rabbi is a scholar of sacred texts, similar to a pundit, a 
Hasidic rebbe is more like a guru. 
   
  The leadership of a Hasidic sect is passed from father to son, because the 
Hasidim believe that the soul of a previous rebbe often comes back as his own 
great-grandchild, in order to continue guiding the community. If the rebbe has 
no son or the son is unworthy, then a successor is chosen from another branch 
of the rebbe's family line. In addition, it is believed that ordinary Jews, who 
have not yet become enlightened, will continue to return many times, in order 
to atone for sins in previous lives. 
   
  Kabbalah also teaches that souls will come back much sooner if their earthly 
lives were cut short prematurely. Examples of this can be found in our own 
century. In recent years, I have met many people who believe that they have 
reincarnated from World War II. Since the publication of my book, Beyond the 
Ashes: Cases of Reincarnation from the Holocaust (A.R.E. Press, 1992), I have 
been receiving correspondence from people in the United States and Europe, who 
have past-life memories of dying in the Nazi concentration camps. In some 
cases, they were born into non-Jewish families this time around, but can 
clearly remember details about Jewish life in Eastern Europe that are not 
well-known to the outside world. 
   
  Jewish mysticism, like Hinduism, also teaches that some souls break the cycle 
of birth and death, to become like angels in the spiritual world. Elijah the 
Prophet is one of these, who, like a Jewish version of the immortal Babaji, 
appears to worthy seekers and initiates them into the deeper mysteries of 
kabbalah.
   
  Rabbi Yonassan Gershom is a traveling storyteller/teacher in the tradition
  of the Hasidic Jews. He is the author of two books and numerous articles
  on Jewish mysticism, and teaches at the Institute for Adult Jewish Studies
  in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

       
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