Thursday, Oecemberie. 1982 — THE BULLETIN — £
Dr. Rosen of Safed offers meditatioii
' IBs caily IbIbibsI in yOto'- coUs led lumtojme^
«■ hs ooDMesunie fiat iMWBwiin». yoo vidi a Upe sen:
_ inwdmlinall €3eatie*. Yon kinds of feaotic nirdilaiiony ftom to be loy incoiioos Tnmsondad^
ber d0O|iiied^^d^ Ewiera HiPiiilaliic
ividclsr timtlli Ibe Woild
■w^wwpMfin activities bjEcaoM. fle Ijdiayildier a laUe and ttMe idbned to sndi ~^—
r at i^ry mnm tregy mnply ioVfdviiq^ Idcd aroiidU^
nilh a^ daiis, a Nc«cribelen,AeRd4»eackno^ rilfl^i^ li^iiriMnka edced diat me£ltfiaa fnanl on
^ _^_ ,.............. edged ttat wKadltalion b—ed on
Inndly notiee the Jewish somoes ondd be bdpfid In
itedarianaiofflie assisting people to idu and cdm
I to giRct yon. Dr. theiri-—^ '" *
Chassid of foroign iirflnnart Tins fomfed .brawnbeaid the basis of Dr. Rooen^^ to coonselte and leidKr of
saponin 'meditatioPL^
int^giai part, ,of Jialaiun injpi«nr _ with Ahndiani, baac and
_He aO of whom were sheplienls^ who
his 39 medilatcd in the aednaon aad Iso-» — huge lation of the fieida. Thoe aoGtaiy
_ fntnal finnges) medikations lane —
■tfielislKit-t'lEadsyon V^spealaivw-inmill wiaMly pitMson- voicewidkii eqrilindiof Today^^^^ jutcstiBSiSfy JevnA'Med&ati— ,.
Pe<^|de dwp aa Ont^oif t^iiinMiiy, or some fed Aat tii^ haic been
_____^ of divecled dMBDBL OtteD M
in tii^ BUn- - Ahno|rt cicajr cvcnn^ ilhcqpeataevien jca^ daring the daQr* tte place is fiiOL
or conducts groiq[» woikshops, an based i^pon sonices of the ancient Jewish myitics and more vecmt Chassadic inastcrl The sesaons are nsndly hdd by candie4^^ dncted in Eqglish and sonKtimes with an a<mtant who translates into "BtafciCWi'"',
The l^ipe of meditation is qnite diifapit fiom Eastern-oriented fmns. ft Is not drrii^ird to take yon on a *%^*' or to h^ yon escaipe wofldly problems.
fts aim Is itatiher to hft^ yon oonfk'Ottt and darify {nobiems, put-ting diem Into peispectlve;
The Hdncw tttok toAodtdut agmfies mdatiqg oneadf in Older to mrditalc. ft meains not s6 mnch a physical )iq^aiation as bong able to lemoyc awaicness from the mental die dwai^hts, foidasies dreams >- that district tte attntion and cause stress. The other term, Adftonevntf, icfers to the conlwnpiation of licri{y ideas so totally diat dieir deepest dlmen-sionspciietiateandsnffiw the mind.
Dr. Rosen feds that meditation of dier TM ^pe can be potentmlly dawgeioBci as It inyrfves mantpu-lation of the mind leading to the aatioa of consciousness and
a hypnotic trance state.
One of his stndcaits described her capeiience in Jewidiineditation as:
for mean openqioce to ]etdieli^la...tdpidlbacittlievdL which had kept hidden thi treasure of our heritage firom nqr view.. Another wiOtesTt becomes, in the cndt a pngcr; The cadm^ d^^
titap rise In siaiiiiial and \ ite things ''dciiicd V V^i^'''":
Safed Is ibe peilixt s^^ Jiewlsh Meditation Centre, widi its nqystical atiiioqihcn^ dear mount-aitt an amd cdd synagcc^^ Fnhaps thk ii why khddsdie JMdianm
DR. CHAIM ROSEN Jcwidb mc«tatioa boMi the
to the Easter reliigions and cults that continue t6 lure Jjbws into dangerous by-ways.
Widi die blessing of the Lnba-vitcher Rebbe, Dr. Rosen is pio-
oCRanqg a way to briqg healdi to the bodly, Hglit to the aoid^ an mhanfled appieciation of Judaism to the nrind, and,inatrooMBdwoild,asman,stHl ^^jny caOed **die ^peabiog silenced
Befiisenik Profile
Ye^jgeny 10^^^
Four tunes in die pant three years, Yevgeny Kesdman, 31, an Hrclrical engineer from Lvov in Western Ukraine, has hem n'^ifiw^tl pf iiiiis-sion to emigrate to IsracL Soviet authoritin say he has *%isiiffkieiit kinsliip**with the relatives he wishes to join In Israd, a pveiest which has
lb "
ThetMsMiiilgraM guwenwMnmgnedl
icIiitaSaHM
100'
or
tost to WislBni taodMS to totfioSowtalstoait
THISWBmC WRITE OmCiAU
Tho Kraiiilliiy , Moscow, RSfSXU USSR.
peimils in lecent yearsw The reason lies in Kcseinian% fendly backn ground. When he first sought to. emigiate. Ids fediCT, a retired Soviet Air Fone officer, refused to gni^ him pennissBon to leave die oountiy.
In deqiention, Ycvgniy Kcsd-man and hu wife, YdEaterina, decided to divoioe in order tpadow her, and their daqgliter, Ifaiina, now aged d^ht, to ennigiaie. They now five In Israd. Kesdmanlifetlia> later dianged Ins mind and gave his cottsoitfcff Ins son to (enngiate, bitt Sofviet indioiities havb adaed on KesdmanV diviHoe to ehum that he had not been Inv^ed to Israd by a first-dc^ee rebtive. As a minor, Marina is not classed as such.
JCNSi
]
— isoefli Army and fipom the triuniijiiant ¥ictoiies ovier die AirFlKceindthe of dieFik^iiie as a mil-to be modifibdd dbe wisdom of the
with junior offates' at the finmt in Leth officers in and ctenterei indicale that ^piesliQning pHifwii and; men about a IpntablsrooBtly dnust into to aQoct idhe oomniand to iailae sudi iuisUiack stin there in
at a cnaniBiuid le^
pfcsane
dedfiqg fectois was dK ciqpectation suffer serious street fiipitinjg. die figure of
was said to have dnt die Israeli' laoB iesiHitoes to take
howem; tihqy by Isiadi icscsvists and otheis '■
ofiiBefB have I tflniiiwlicsfiwMn
die)
two Jffalr.Uiiiian iciiigpe camp^ m B&nxVk soi^hein ooliftirts S^ 16 to 18.lBaeilBm tragedy, dieyfiDd, was on a Ui^her p<^itical and nnlitary kvcL Nor are th^ oonoienied about
thdr entiy into West Beinrt: after the wididrawal of die FLO. They said that the Isiadi nwvcw which began hours aAcT LdanonV elect, Bashir Ge ated on SqpL 14, was a normal opeiaiioni.
* Senior offiocxa say thi^ welcome the ddnte diat has been going on in the aimy abaat opeialions. Notiqg that Israd is a democracy, tliqr call siidi ddnie oady natmaL
The f<inoesair oonoenMadiHitnnly about the campaignni Lebanon but also about theatlitnde of die llnitBd States towanllBcad and dhe overall militaiyritnalionintlatMiddteFast > —iHicy—are -atRue that
From Be
pictures of boaDdmigin West Bdmt fael^ied fouu en some Amencan minds tl^ image of a nidilessly aggiessive iaadi milimiy Hiarhinr.
''Dont Ameikans know diat we had to efinrinate die FLO qpnddjr and with minnnnm casoallleair^oae young captain asixdL "IXmt they know that the air foree oadced the terrorists in West BeMT*
WASHINGTON — That even a thin stiand of hope remains for Ronald RcaganV q^uttering Mideast peace ^%iitiatlve* om much to a meeting diat d^^ come off—for a sad and untdated reason, Israeli Prime Miimter Menacbem Begin was unable to go throi^ with his planned visit to the White House.
It was not to have been an ofiEuaal meetii^ between Begin and the President, inany case. But seemingly insoInUe pmnls of conflict would have had to have been discussed and there was little or nothing that the two mni could have said afterwards that nugltt have been helpful at this -point'...'
If Hussein and die PLO are out on a limb, so are the Saudis, whose ittMitigBil leverage counts lieavily._ And so is^ypt^ pr^ident Hosni Mubaxak. Hgj'pt's relations with Israd, fiir from flowering in constructive wajs with the coming into fun foreeof the peace treaty in April, are withering fiut. _______________ ____
Nowit isca^enou^ tostt back in judgmnit <m the Arabs* feckless ways. But that win not alter Jhe realities. The Arabs see themselves vuInerBble to idigious extremism.
They see what befeU IranVshah. And they seeanonrewlved Palestinian grievance as a deadly weapon in the hands of whatever extremist forces threaten their stabifity. ff the Un&ed States is prepared taindtilge
Israeli domestic political impeia-tives, it would seem reasonable to take into account those bearing on the Arabs, as wen.
The question is how. One priority is the removal of an fordgn forces from Lebanon. The ^syptians insist they cannot sitdown to Ganqi David talks until the Isradis have withdrawn. But no less a priority is the setdements issue; before loqg, the Israeli presence win have hardened
beyond the pcnnt when tiiere is anything to negotiate. The trkk win be to avoid sendtqg the wroqg signals untfl the ri^ht Mgffpk can be arranged.
That is why the canodled meetiog between Rc^an and B^in shqold be looked nponassomethingtocele-brate ~ as you mislit cclebialc st^inng Off a cmb and bdng nar-roa^ missed by a bos.
DbcS/H
From Sharon quietly vialls
TEGUCIGALPA — Hondurans were just getting ovct the tig>itning visit of President Ronald Reagan when they found an even more controversial figure in their midst — Israeli Defence Minister Arid Sharon.
Mr. Sharon arrived on Dec. 6 with a high-level entoun^, indnding General Davkl Iviy, head of the Israeli Air Force, and Aharon Bet Alajmi, diiector-geneial of the Defence Ministiy. Unlike Mr. Reagan^ heralded arrival two days before, this visit was unannoonoed.
Honduras has diplomatic, ida-tions with Israel, but not at the ambassador level Tbe visit has amaixsd evtiycme here, paitieohiily
as Mr. Sharonbasbeenseeingandie civilian and militaiy leaders in the country..
Israd already has an agreement with Costa Rica to fa^itbuDd op its internal security, and^ is dear with this latest visit that Israd is playiog an increaria^ty prominent role in Central America as iTjproity for the _C^ltod States adiwi It b pofitkally too delicate for the latter to provide as modi military or intdligaDoe support as the Rfagpn Administration deems necrssaiy.
brad^ most important role so fer has been in Guatemala, where human rights violations have made it imposable for Washington to provide militaiy assistance on the scale it would like.
Dec: 9/12