"As it is Written" is a JSP series taught by Senior Educator, Rachel Brodie. Each session opens with the study of a passage from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and is followed by prompts that ask participants to see their own life experiences and concerns mirrored in the characters and situations they've studied. This is followed by an invitation to write midrashim (creative responses to the challenges, gaps and redundancies of the text). The midrashim take many forms from poems to monologues, from essay or journal type reflections to interviews.
"As it is Written" is a JSP series taught by Senior Educator, Rachel Brodie. Each session opens with the study of a passage from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and is followed by prompts that ask participants to see their own life experiences and concerns mirrored in the characters and situations they've studied. This is followed by an invitation to write midrashim (creative responses to the challenges, gaps and redundancies of the text). The midrashim take many forms from poems to monologues, from essay or journal type reflections to interviews.
"As it is Written" is a JSP series taught by Senior Educator, Rachel Brodie. Each session opens with the study of a passage from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and is followed by prompts that ask participants to see their own life experiences and concerns mirrored in the characters and situations they've studied. This is followed by an invitation to write midrashim (creative responses to the challenges, gaps and redundancies of the text). The midrashim take many forms from poems to monologues, from essay or journal type reflections to interviews.
"As it is Written" is a JSP series taught by Senior Educator, Rachel Brodie. Each session opens with the study of a passage from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and is followed by prompts that ask participants to see their own life experiences and concerns mirrored in the characters and situations they've studied. This is followed by an invitation to write midrashim (creative responses to the challenges, gaps and redundancies of the text). The midrashim take many forms from poems to monologues, from essay or journal type reflections to interviews.