---
product_id: 66638347
title: "Ecology & the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature & the Sacred Meet"
brand: "ellen bernstein"
price: "VT8650"
currency: VUV
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 4
category: "Books"
url: https://www.desertcart.vu/products/66638347-ecology-and-the-jewish-spirit-where-nature-and-the-sacred
store_origin: VU
region: Vanuatu
---

# Ecology & the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature & the Sacred Meet

**Brand:** ellen bernstein
**Price:** VT8650
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** Ecology & the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature & the Sacred Meet by ellen bernstein
- **How much does it cost?** VT8650 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.vu](https://www.desertcart.vu/products/66638347-ecology-and-the-jewish-spirit-where-nature-and-the-sacred)

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## Description

Ecology & the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature & the Sacred Meet

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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐ Mostly Uneven without Bold Ideas
            
*by E***Y on June 3, 2014*

Ecology and the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature & the Sacred Meet, edited by Ellen Bernstein, is an interesting if somewhat uneven collection of essays about the intersection of Judaism and the modern ecological movement.For readers very familiar with the source texts often used in Jewish ecology there is little new in this book.  You will read the famous Torah injunction not to destroy the fruit trees of your enemies in war, even if the wood is required to win the battle, very many times.By far the more useful portions of this collection are from scholars who take parts of the rabbinical tradition, those books of the Talmud which deal with agriculture and the waste of resources, and expand and transform them for our time.That is the true work of Rabbinical Judaism: the constant reformation of laws, rules and customs to fit the times.When Bernstein presents essays of this sort, this collection provides the reader with some provocative ideas.  When she does not, the collection is uneven and not in the least groundbreaking.
  

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Judaism and nature meet!
            
*by R***M on July 12, 2000*

I received this book as a Wish List gift (thank you, dear reader!) and it arrived the day before a local PBS camera crew came to our hobby farm to film a segment on me as a Hasidic gardener.  The idea of a religious Jew  actually working the land (in Minnesota yet!) was so unusual to a certain  writer in Duluth (himself Jewish), that he felt it merited a TV story!  I suspect that "Ecology and the Jewish Spirit"  will sell very  well for the same reason: most people -- Jewish or not -- simply do not  associate the Jewish religion with ecology.  The idea seems so novel, they  just have to know more... As Ellen Bernstein points out in her  introduction to this excellent anthology, the lack of specific  references  to "environment" and "nature" in traditional Jewish  sources does not mean that Jews have no connection to nature.  "Rather," she writes, "Judaism's ecological message emerges  when we observe what is sacred in Judaism.  How are we to treat what is  holy?  And what is humanity's place amid the holiness?  The Jewish  understanding that the earth belongs to God attests to the fact that the  earth and everything in it is holy, and this concept of holiness, kedushah,  is the beginning of a unique Jewish environmental ethic." (p. 13)  This book explores that ethic through 37 essays by Jews from all kinds of  backgrounds, organized into three sections: Sacred Place, Sacred Time, and  Sacred Community.  The styles are as varied as their authors, ranging from  personal anecdotes about relating to Judaism and nature, to an excellent  explanation of the ethics behind the agricultural laws in the Torah, to a  liturgy for celebrating the Jewish Festival of the Trees (Tu B'Shevat).  Page 205 has a list of the special brochahs (Hebrew blessings) to be said  upon seeing various works of nature.  Did you know that Judasim has a  separate blessing for seeing a rainbow, the ocean, or trees in bloom?  Sadly, these particular brochahs have fallen out of use among urbanized  Jews. Perhaps this book will help revive awareness of them among modern  Jews. Of special interest to me was the essay "Practical Kabbalah:  A Family History" by Charles Fenyesi, whose ancestors came from  Eastern Europe, where his family had owned and worked 30 acres of land. (So  much for the old stereotype of Hasidic Jews being urban.)  He tells how his  ancestors "religiously" gathered organic debris of all kinds, to  "toss into the sort of heap that we moderns call a compost pile."  This would eventually be carted off to their fields and vegetable garden. "Nothing should go to waste!" was their motto -- not out of  stinginess, but from an understanding that everything has a place and  should be treated with respect, not wasted.  Life was a "productive  loop," not a vicious cycle.  This ecological awareness, Fenyesi  explains, came from within the Hasidic-kabbalistic worldview of traditional  Judaism.  His family didn't talk about "ecology" in modern words,  but they lived it as an integral part of daily life in the stetl (Jewish  village).  Religion encompassed all things, including what should be thrown  on the compost pile. Another story I liked, wihch was a bit amusing to  me at first, was Eileen Abrams' account of how she grew a plot of barley in  the tiny yard in front of her Philadelphia rowhouse.  A friend of hers  wanted some barley stalks and heads for a craft project. OK, why not?  Eileen quickly went from land lender to barley steward.  She had never seen  barley grow before (hard for me to imagine, living as I do in the  Midwest!).  She soon became fascinated with the life cycle of this plant  that was used for the Omer sacrifice in the ancient Jerusalem Temple.  My  initial amusement grew into respect as I read how she observed and nurtured  this tiny plot of grain from seed to harvest.  Her reverence for that bit  of barley heightened my own awareness of the local fields of grain that I  take for granted. All in all, this book was such a great read, I stayed  up half the night with it.  It has something for everybody -- I give it ten  stars!
  

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Must Buy E. Bernstein Books
            
*by J***D on March 18, 2008*

I admit I am a huge fan of Ellen's work and buy several copies of anything with her name on it so that I can hand it out to people who come to me wanting to learn more abotu the convergence of Judaism and nature. Ellen has a way of merging text and modernity that makes her writing accessible yet engaging. I use her material on my adventure trips, as a source of inspiration for my own writing God in the Wilderness: Rediscovering the Spirituality of the Great Outdoors with the Adventure Rabbiand, as I said before, as a gift for other who wish to learn more about this burgeoning field.-Rabbi Jamie Korngold, the Adventure Rabbi, author God in the Wilderness: Rediscovering the Spirituality of the Great Outdoors with the Adventure Rabbi
  

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*Last updated: 2026-05-09*