| Get Off Your Tush! Get Outdoors -- Jewishly
January-8-2003
While Judaism stresses the value of learning - by learning Torah and Talmud –
it also encourages us to do, to get out and to experience the world. Thanks to
several adventurous souls, their great ideas, and the programs they’ve created,
it’s never been easier to get out into the world in a Jewish way. 
After Rabbi Mike Comins, as ordained at Jerusalem's
Hebrew Union College, and was preparing to start his doctorate, "I felt like my
soup had been choked off," he said in The
Forward recently. "All this theology was in my head, but it took walking in
the desert, in the Sinai, for me to really feel God in my heart. I realized that
I was closer to God in the wilderness than in words." Like others, Comins
realized that as a Jewish teacher and leader, he could inspire others to
experience this unique sense of Jewish spirituality. Two years ago he founded TorahTrek, a company leading
Jewish groups on hiking and kayaking trips across the mountains of the West.
The idea has gained momentum over the past few years as adventure travel
has increased in popularity, young Jews who grew up in Jewish summer camps crave
to continue that experience, and as individuals and families seek spiritual
experiences to complement their regular observance and engagement with their
community.
Rabbi Jamie Korngold, the "chief spiritual officer" of The Adventure Rabbi,
leads trips around Jewish holidays, and Yael Ukeles, founder of Teva Adventure, will be
leading adventure trips in Alaska this summer in connection with the National
Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) which will combine wilderness training with
kosher food, Shabbat and programs which explore the connection between nature
and Judaism. Kosher Treks, a
new program founded by Yedidya Fraimen, a former director of the Pardes
Institute for Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, organizes Shabbat and Kashrut
observant advanced adventures in exotic locales such as Tanzania's Mount
Kilimanjaro. MosaicOutdoor
Club organizes local outdoor and/or environmental activities for throughout
North America and Israel, including a ski trip in Aspen, CO this month.
Such trips inherently bring groups of people close together, and the
benefits of teamwork and surmounting a challenge together are incredible. By
adding a Jewish element to the experience, these innovative leaders are helping
Jews have peak experiences within a Jewish context. Said Comins in the recent Forward article, "If you ask people where they experience God,
at a synagogue or a national park, the majority will tell you in the mountains
or by a stream. If a person's peak spiritual experience is not connected to
Judaism, there's a terrible disconnect and it does damage to our attempts to
raise the next generation."
Jewish adventures in the great outdoor don’t
require boots and a camping stove, however. Crystal Cruises has just announced that it is now offering
kosher meals on all of its ships starting in 2003. |