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EMBODIED: Séance – Kabbalah – Sukkah

By Daniel S. Horwitz and Marisa Meyerson



The yearly field trip from the Sunday school classroom to the Sukkah in the courtyard of the synagogue was always a treat. We were able to have arts and crafts, snack time, and a fun lesson from the Rabbi all rolled into one, as we made paper chains and decorated the roof, sang hamotzi and noshed on challah, and learned how to shake the lulav and etrog. For most of us, the essence of Sukkot boiled down to this one Sunday morning or Wednesday afternoon activity, and we understood it as a sign that the fall season had arrived and the High Holiday season was nearing its end. As we got older, this version of Sukkot is what stayed with us.


Committed to infusing relevant Judaism into the lives of young adults, The Well embarked on a mission to rekindle a connection with Sukkot, and after a year of planning, EMBODIED: Séance – Kabbalah – Sukkah was born.


The origin story: The Well’s founding director, Rabbi Dan Horwitz, was attending the Kenissa Network conference when he met Jon Adam Ross, the founding artist and managing director of The In[heir]itance Project. An avant-garde theater company, The In[heir]itance Project aims to engage communities in unique artistic expressions by combining their lived experiences with sacred texts. Both named in the 2018 Slingshot Guide, The Well and The In[heir]itance Project share a mission of reaching those previously thought to be unreachable – using innovation and relevant tradition to forge a connection to community. A partnership quickly became clear, and the brainstorming began.


The central aspects of Sukkot are standard Sunday school curriculum: the sukkah, the lulav and etrog. Seldom taught though, is the mystic custom of ushpizin: inviting exalted ancestors into the sukkah. While the ushpizin(Aramaic for “guests”) are traditionally our Biblical heroes, we were prepared to get a bit more creative with just who was invited into our immersive Sukkot theater experience…


After several months of conceptualizing, script writing, and logistical planning, we had a framework for a series of gatherings. We started with a murder-mystery concept that slowly morphed its way into a séance; inviting our guests back from The World To Come to share with them the hospitality they once modeled for us. The In[heir]itance Project team took characters from Jewish history – both biblical and modern – and wove their stories together. Within this abstract and spiritual headspace, it made sense for Esther to interact with Emma Lazarus and Chana Senesh, and for Noah and Jonah to work together to build a sukkah. These weren’t the infantilized characters or stories studied in Hebrew school – these were intentional and relatable (and frankly, deeply flawed). While some of the characters struggled to make sense of Jewish traditions they’d forgotten over the years, others provided solace and advice, and reminded us that our Jewish identities are to be cherished, and that cultivating personal meaning in inherited ritual is prophetically powerful.


Just as the characters in EMBODIED represented the interconnectedness of Jewish wisdom and ritual, our cast and crew did too. Our directors from The In[heir]itance Project came from Minneapolis and New York, while the additional cast members were hired locally in order to showcase local talent. Instead of hiring a handful of random people, our existing network at The Well led us to our first actor, who led us to another, who led us to another.


With support from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation’s Grassroots Events initiative, we held three showings of EMBODIED over three nights, providing scores of young adults in Metro Detroit with a Sukkot experience unlike any they’d had before, giving them something new to think about, to share with others, and to add to their lived experiences of Judaism.


EMBODIED’s immersive nature was intentional, as we wanted to allow audience members to feel involved in the show without the pressure to act alone, or to perform a ritual they didn’t fully understand yet. However, we made sure to create a space in which participants could have direct interaction with the ritual while still in the event venue, and/or later on in their own homes.


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”EMBODIED: Séance – Kabbalah – Sukkah” By Daniel S. Horwitz and Marisa Meyerson, October 21, 2018, EJewish Philanthropy, Copyright 2018 by EJewish Philanthropy.

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