Join a high vibrational community of New York young adults in a warm and welcoming setting for the best High Holidays of your life ✨
"Rosh Hashanah" lit. means: "Head of the Year." Just as your brain directs every limb of your body, the energy and intention of the high holy days can impact your entire year.
What better way to set up your year than with elevated moments of reflection and joy, while connecting with a loving community?
Join us in our warm, relaxed community lounge for an interactive, meaningful experience. We can't wait to welcome you ♡
Daniel Bortz, known as the Millennial Rabbi, has gained a global following through his sharing of Kabbalah, meditation, and Torah wisdom in a way that speaks to this generation. He's been featured on the BBC and Travel + Leisure, and was Holy TV's 2022 Faith Leader of the Year.
Hannah is a certified Experiential Educator from the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, as well as a certified Yoga and Meditation teacher. Hannah facilitates spaces for groups to connect deeper to self, spirituality, and community, leading workshops in Arizona, San Diego, Spain, Bali, Jerusalem, and Tel Aviv.
Eva is a Venezuelan-American interdisciplinary artist whose research-based artistic practice grounded in Jewish tradition, intends to show the great potential that our actions have to bring healing, blessings, and Divine energy into this world. Her art has been juried into 70+ shows in museums and venues and she has pieces in private and corporate collections.
Enjoy a smorgasbord of fruits & fish accompanied by an ancient Hebrew verse that each symbolize the auspicious new year to come.
Walk with us on the Sunday afternoon to the pier for Tashlich (lit. "to cast off"), an ancient Jewish practice of casting off one's sins into the water (Bread, prayers, and fish included free of charge 😉).
“The Divine candle is the human soul {Proverbs 20:27}.”
The women are invited to kick off the holiday in a candle lighting ceremony, a potent, glowing reminder that this day is inherently holy and transcendent, distinct from our daily life.
Another name for Rosh Hashanah is: 'Yom Teruah' - a day of blowing the Shofar {Numbers 29:1 }. As we listen to the simple cry of sound from the ram's horn, we recall the simple, pure connection we have with our Source, as well as the momentous events of Abraham, Joshua, and at Mt. Sinai - all involving a Shofar.