Wednesday, February 5
7:00 pm - 9:00pm ET
Location: Third Space at Shaarei Tfiloh, Baltimore, Maryland
Cost: $0-$36
Join us for an evening of conversation with Rabbi Adina Allen, author of The Place of All Possibility: Cultivating Creativity Through Ancient Jewish Wisdom, in conversation with Rabbi Jessy Dressin.
Creativity offers us a portal to transformation, spiritual connection, and revelation. It is there for us when we feel stuck, divided, or disconnected. In her highly anticipated first book, Rabbi Adina Allen delivers a paradigm-shifting and powerfully accessible reading of Torah as a contemporary guidebook for creativity and invites us to rethink and transform ourselves, our lives, and the world around us.
Rabbi Adina Allen is a spiritual leader, writer, and educator who grew up in an art studio where she learned firsthand the power of creativity for connecting to self and to the Sacred. She is cofounder and creative director of Jewish Studio Project (JSP), an organization that is seeding a future in which every person is connected to their creativity as a force for healing, liberation and social transformation. Based on the work of her mother, renowned art therapist Pat B. Allen, Adina developed the Jewish Studio Process, a methodology for unlocking creativity, which she has brought to thousands of organizational and community leaders, educators, artists, and clergy across the country.
Praise for The Place of All Possibility:
“Bravo for this renewal of the possibility and purpose of arts and artful living.”
~ Lisa Miller, PhD, Professor of Psychology and Education at Columbia University and bestselling author of The Awakened Brain
“Rabbi Adina Allen invites us to become creators of worlds… [the book introduces] a wonderful method and a remarkable teacher.”
~ Rabbi Shai Held, author of Judaism Is About Love: Recovering the Heart of Jewish Life
“Rabbi Allen encourages readers to ‘peel back layers of what we think we know’ to construct new understandings of their faith and themselves. It’s a unique and invigorating lens on Judaism.”
~ Publisher’s Weekly
“To open this book is to open oneself to hope.”
~ Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld, President of Hebrew College