[ha-Safran]: Shekhinah

2005-03-08 Thread Erika Zeitz
Shalom Safranim--

Is there any evidence that any of you know of, of the Shekhinah being the 
name of a Mesopotamian or Canaanite goddess?

I'm looking at Goddesses: A World of Myth and Magic, by Burleigh 
Muten,  (2003), published by Barefoot Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts. 
It's a children's book and I'm annotating it for a class.

I tend to be curmudgeonly and nit-picky when it comes to certain things and 
on page 63, she lists Shekinah (her spelling) as a Mesopotamian/Canaanite 
goddess. I'll quote:
 Shekinah is described in Hebrew lore as the mother of the 
mysterious spirit world. She is the feminine part of all that exists. 
Sometimes Shekinah is described as a door or gateway, a house or sacred 
shrine. Sometimes she is portrayed as the tree of life that feeds all 
beings. Girls and women continue to invoke Shekinah for guidance and 
wisdom, and for her blessing.

1. Is there a source for this information?
2. I'm angry that the author does not list Shekinah as Jewish--what is this 
Hebrew lore--besides Kabbalah?
3. Do we think of Shekhinah as a goddess or the presence of G-d?

What are your thoughts?

Todah rabbah,
Erika Zeitz, MLS Student, Youth Services Specialist  librarian at Ohev 
Sholom in Kansas.





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Re: [ha-Safran]: Shekhinah

2005-03-08 Thread Shmuel Ben-Gad
As to point 2, Hebrew is the older and more inclusive word so I do not
see any reason to object to it unless the lore she cites orginates, as
far as is known, after the exile of the ten northern tribes.

  Shmuel Ben-Gad,
  Gelman Library,
  George Washington University.





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Re: [ha-Safran]: Shekhinah

2005-03-08 Thread Sherry Wasserman
Erika,
There is a new book out:
Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism -- by Howard Schwartz,

I believe that it has a large section devoted to tales about the Shekhinah.
Try looking in it to find out if there are Jewish tales that support the
quote you cited.

Sherry Wasserman
MY EMAIL address is:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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