The document discusses Arthur Kurzweil, who performs magic tricks combined with Jewish teachings and philosophy. His show is called 'Searching for God in a Magic Shop' and uses magic to introduce spiritual concepts like 'gam zu l'tovah', which means 'this too is for good'. He explains tricks have Jewish histories and uses magic to start discussions about suffering and Jewish theology.
The document discusses Arthur Kurzweil, who performs magic tricks combined with Jewish teachings and philosophy. His show is called 'Searching for God in a Magic Shop' and uses magic to introduce spiritual concepts like 'gam zu l'tovah', which means 'this too is for good'. He explains tricks have Jewish histories and uses magic to start discussions about suffering and Jewish theology.
The document discusses Arthur Kurzweil, who performs magic tricks combined with Jewish teachings and philosophy. His show is called 'Searching for God in a Magic Shop' and uses magic to introduce spiritual concepts like 'gam zu l'tovah', which means 'this too is for good'. He explains tricks have Jewish histories and uses magic to start discussions about suffering and Jewish theology.
The document discusses Arthur Kurzweil, who performs magic tricks combined with Jewish teachings and philosophy. His show is called 'Searching for God in a Magic Shop' and uses magic to introduce spiritual concepts like 'gam zu l'tovah', which means 'this too is for good'. He explains tricks have Jewish histories and uses magic to start discussions about suffering and Jewish theology.
Jewish Week Wireless. Thursday, May 27, 2004 / 7 Sivan 5764 NY Nat'l Israel Int'l Short Takes (04/16/2004) Print this Article Send this article Tricks And Tractates Introducing an act that shows the magic of Judaism. Steve Lipman - Staff Writer Arthur Kurzweil can tell you the Jewish history of cards. He can tell you a midrash about water being a metaphor for Torah. He can tell you the Jewish source of abracadabra. He can tell you all this while doing a card trick or pouring a pitcher of water into a hat that remains dry. Its all in a nights work. Kurzweil, better known for his nearly 20 years as editor-in-chief of Jason Aronson publishers and his landmark book on Jewish genealogy, has recently turned his lifelong avocation into a part-time vocation. A fan of magic since he was 3, Kurzweil, now 52, has been performing as a magician for the last several years, doing a specialized show that evolved a year ago into a program that combines amusing tricks with a spiritual message. Its a serious magic show a theological lecture with magic in it, says Kurzweil, who belongs to three professional magicians organizations, writes for Genii: The Conjurers Magazine and is an advocate of David Copperfields Project Magic, which uses magic tricks to aid the rehabilitation of people in physical therapy. My show is, in itself, an illusion, he says. Its not a magic show at all. Its a discussion of perhaps the most profound and important ideas in all of Jewish thought. Its name: Searching for God in a Magic Shop. And you wont hear Kurzweil using abracadabra, the standard magicians phrase, in his prestidigitation. I have no use for it, he says The phrase, as mavens know, comes from the Hebrew abraa kdabra (I will create as I spoke), an allusion to Gods powers that most magicians invoke at crucial points. My own phrase is gam zu ltovah, Kurzweil says, Aramaic for this too is for the good. He says it is the motto of his performances and of his life. The Special Offers FREE subscriptions Here's a limited offer that will get you 8 issues of The Jewish Week delivered to your home or office for FREE! Offer good for residents of NY City, Long Island and Westchester only. words are engraved on a silver ring he always wears. Kurzweil explains the phrases literal and symbolic meaning onstage, and relates it to his magic. He tells an audience that everything that God does is for our good, but we cannot see the big picture. Likewise with magic. A magician distracts the crowd with words and actions, drawing its attention from his sleight of hand. The audience doesnt see everything. Thats the human predicament we dont understand everything that is happening in the world because we dont see everything, Kurzweil says. Its a hard topic to discuss why did God make a world with so much suffering. I have studied what our sages say about this for about 25 years now, and I have found that a discussion of these things, in the midst of a magic show, can be quite effective. Kurzweil calls it a soft way of introducing the notion of gam zu ltovah. Accepting the notion is life changing. Gam zu ltovah is judging God favorably, he says. This one phrase has transformed my life. Kurzweil appears under his own name. I dont have a stage name I decided Im going to be myself. Balding, with a thick, mostly gray beard and a black kipa, he performs in black slacks, black shirt, black tie and black jacket. His act is parlor magic, between the close-up magic done for individuals and the stage magic before large audiences. Kurzweil performs a variety of tricks. No fire because of my beard, he says. He gives some Jewish background about magic. For example, according to Jewish tradition, todays playing cards are descended from the ancient 22- card decks of Tarot cards, corresponding to the 22 letters in the Hebrew alphabet, that readers used to indicate likely future events. Kurzweil (www.arthurkurzweil.com) will do about a half dozen shows in the New York area this spring. His next performance is Tuesday, April 20, at the Parker Jewish Institute for Health and Rehabilitation on Long Island. Now a lecturer and a Jewish consultant for Jossey-Bass Publishers and a student of Jerusalems Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, he spices his act with jokes and personal stories, reflections on suffering, some words of kabbalah and some Talmudic insights into magic. Talmud is wary about magic, concerned that naive people might think demons or dark forces are involved. Kurzweil cautions each audience that everything they see is an illusion. Its not really magic, he warns. Its my obligation to let them know that these are just tricks. Everything he does, he does with such flair, says Alison Bermant, an educator at the North Shore Synagogue in Syosset, L.I. A member of the congregations programming committee, she arranged for Kurzweils performance there last fall. The way he weaves Jewish philosophy and the magic tricks was really spellbinding, Bermant says. People were really entranced. The magic made them receptive to the message he was presenting. Part of Kurzweils message is a refutation of Rabbi Harold Kushners best- selling book When Bad Things Happen to Good People. Rabbi Kushner opines that an all-knowing God is not all powerful and essentially is powerless to prevent evil. Which, Kurzweil says, is absolutely contrary to Jewish theology and belief. He misinformed millions of Jews, Kurzweil says. The philosophy of gam zu ltovah, he says during his show, explains that occurrences that appear to be bad turn out in the end to be for the good. Dozens of times people have come up to me and said, Im so glad you said that, he says. They tell him, You dont know how angry that book made me. I would like to make that book disappear, Kurzweil says. He offers another view of Jewish tradition. By the end of the night, he says, everyone knows the phrase gam zu ltovah. n Arthur Kurzweils performance on April 20 at 8 p.m. at the Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care and Rehabilitation, 271-11 76th Ave., New Hyde Park, L.I., is sponsored by the International Brotherhood of Magicians. Reservations are necessary; call (516) 978-6963. Here is a list of other articles in this section Bukharan Jews Resentful Following Murder Claim medias unfair portrayal of slain leader taints community, Jewish groups and local pols are uncaring. From Self-Mate To Soul Mate
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