Author Topic: Gov. Paterson turns to higher power by wearing red string kabbalah bracelet  (Read 7905 times)

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Offline Dan

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Gov. Paterson is counting on a Madonna-blessed higher power to lead him out of the mess in Albany.

The lame-duck governor has begun wearing a red string kabbalah bracelet - just like the Material Girl - in an eyebrow-raising bid to deflect ill will.

"It was explained to the governor that the red string is a symbol of protection [that] wards off problems and tribulations," Paterson spokesman Morgan Hook said.

"His attitude was that he'll take all the help he can get."

Paterson could be forgiven for turning to a little divine protection.

In the past six months he's found himself under investigation, dumped his reelection bid as a result, and wrestled with the Legislature over the state budget.

So he's apparently trying his luck with the trendy talisman favored by followers of the mystical Jewish discipline. But unlike Madonna, Demi Moore and Britney Spears, Paterson is not yet one of the devoted, a spokesman said.

"Kabbalah didn't change his life, just to be clear here," Hook said.

Either way, Paterson may not be getting all the spiritual backup he hopes for - the bracelet is customarily worn on the left wrist, while the governor is seen in photos wearing it on his right.

Paterson's spiritual shift was set in motion this spring when the Catholic-raised pol visited the Queens burial site of a venerated rabbi.

It was at the Union Field Cemetery in Ridgewood, housing the body of Rabbi Jacob Joseph, who died in 1902 and whose tomb has become a sacred site visited by thousands of Jews, that Paterson learned about the little red string.

Kabbalah followers believe that the $26 bracelet wards off the "evil eye" and brings about good fortune.

It appears to be the accessory of choice for high-profile New Yorkers facing controversy.

Yankee slugger Alex Rodriguez sported a red kabbalah string on his left wrist last year when he confessed in a TV interview to using steroids. At the time, A-Rod was linked to Madonna.

Kabbalah teachings date back 4,000 years.

According to the Kabbalah Centre's Web site, its "sages have taught that every human being is born with the potential for greatness. Kabbalah is the means for activating that potential."

The exact date Paterson began wearing the red string isn't clear, but may have been around February when he came under scrutiny for having intervened in a domestic-violence case involving his former top aide, David Johnson.


http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/07/15/2010-07-15_govs_strung_out_wary_of_evil_forces_and_gopers_paterson_gives_kabbalah_charm_a_s.html

Offline mord

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 :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D :::D what a dope,look at our Govt filled with idiots
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
Shot at 2010-01-03

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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what a moron.

Offline Rubystars

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That was a funny part of the article about him wearing it on the wrong wrist.

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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Kabbalah followers believe that the $26 bracelet wards off the "evil eye" and brings about good fortune.


NY dailynews needs to revise this sentence.  It should say "Phony non-kaballah cult-followers" instead of kaballah followers.


No matter what wrist it is worn on, all rabbis agree that the red bracelet is a hoax and no actual kabalist is seen with this nonsense.   Just the non-Jewish and Jewish "translators" of zohar and their money-making schemes.

Offline angryChineseKahanist

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How does he know what color it is?
He's blind.

BTW did anyone tell him he's black?
U+262d=U+5350=U+9774

Offline muman613

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The red string does absolutely nothing for you unless you are observing the Torah... Kabalah is not a shortcut which can be used to bypass the 613 commandments... The only way Kaballah can be understood is with a complete mastery of Chumash, Tanakh, and Talmud... Anyone seen wearing these red-strings can be immediately labeled as an idiot.

You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Sentinel For Truth

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This Kabbalah obsession seems like such strange superstition.  I've never believed in the power of objects to "ward of evil". 

Offline muman613

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This Kabbalah obsession seems like such strange superstition.  I've never believed in the power of objects to "ward of evil". 

That is not what it is supposed to do... The issue in Judaism is called the Ayin Hara, the evil eye... There is a fully rational explanation of what the Ayin Hara is, and I believe that Ayin Hara exists {I witness it every day}.



http://ohr.edu/ask/ask051.htm

What is an "Ayin Hara"?

Contents

Sue Perstishous from Salem, Massachusetts wrote:

    Dear Rabbi,

    After saying "Bli Ayin Hara" recently, I was wondering, "What is an Ayin Hara"?

Dear Sue,

The belief in Ayin Hara is not a superstition but is well founded on references from the earliest Jewish texts. Sarah "gives" Hagar an Ayin Hara, causing her to miscarry her first pregnancy. Yaakov warns his sons not to be seen together so as not to incur Ayin Hara. Another example is King Saul's jealousy of the future King David who is credited with greater military prowess and "gives" him an Ayin Hara.

The Talmud quotes Rabbi Yochanan as saying "I am a descendant of Yosef over whom Ayin Hara had no control." The Talmud also says that fish represent a form of life that is free of the influence of Ayin Hara. According to one opinion of the Talmud, a first-born daughter prevents Ayin Hara from affecting the family.

Ayin Hara also has Halachic ramifications. The Talmud states that it is forbidden to stand in a neighbor's field when the crops are fully grown. Rashi explains that this is forbidden because of Ayin Hara.

Rabbi Eliyahu Dessler in a letter to his father asked "Where is the justice in a system that causes people to suffer for the jealousies of others?" Rabbi Dessler answered that what happens is the following: One person who has what another person lacks is "careless" and lets the other person see what he has. This causes pain to the other person, and his cry goes up to the Heavenly court.

The lesson in all of this is that we must learn to be sensitive to others, and not flaunt what we have. Many people yearn to have what others have, and suffer real pain when they see others casually flaunt those things. True, they shouldn't be jealous, but we cannot expect everyone to be a Tzaddik. Divine justice demands retribution for causing this pain to another person.

You mention that you say "Bli Ayin Hara" (literally "Without the Evil Eye"). In Yiddish it is rendered as "Ken Ayin Hara." We say this as a prayer to Hashem, so that if there are any silent cries going up to the Heavenly court, He will not listen to them, and He will protect us from any harm. There are other Ayin Hara "antidotes" such as tying red strings around one's wrist, and the "Hamsa" ("Five-Fingers"). Be careful not to use any remedy or prevention unless it is commonly used by Jews, since some practices are forms of witchcraft. The best protection is to behave modestly and with a genuine concern for the feelings of others.

Sources:

    * Bereshit 16:5, Rashi.
    * Bereshit 42:5, Rashi.
    * Shmuel 1,18:9.
    * Tractate Berachot - 20a.
    * Tractate Bava Batra - 141a.
    * Tractate Bava Batra - 2b.
    * Rabbi Eliyahu Dessler - Michtav M'Eliyahu, vol. 3, pp.313-314; vol. 4, pp.5-6.


http://www.torah.org/learning/integrity/abovetheeye.html

Above the Eye
By Rabbi Daniel Travis

Yosef is a fruitful branch; a fruitful branch alei ayin – by the well. (Bereshith 49:22)

The words “alei ayin – by the well” – can also be read as “olei ayin – raised above the eye.” Thus the Torah here implies that the “ayin hara” (the adverse effects of being looked upon with evil or harmful intent) would have no effect upon Yosef’s descendents.

Accustomed to modern scientific advancements, it is hard for us to understand how an “evil eye” can cause harm to someone, yet Kabbalistic literature explains that the eye is the most spiritual organ of the body, and as such it has deep metaphysical power. The power of the eye is so awesome that once when Rav was in a cemetery he made the extraordinary statement that ninety-nine percent of its inhabitants were there as a result of ayin hara. Halachah recognizes ayin hara as an actual danger, and therefore it is forbidden to stare enviously at any project a person is involved with.

If someone is afraid of an ayin hara, he should declare, “I am a descendant of Yosef, against whom the ayin hara can wield no power.” Considering that most Jews do not know from which tribe they are descended, how can anyone make this statement honestly? Since Yosef sustained the entire Jewish people for many years in Egypt, he merited to have his name associated with all Jewish people throughout the ages. Therefore it is not sheker for any Jew to make this declaration, even someone who knows that he is not descended from Yosef.

Another precaution to take to avoid an ayin hara is to refrain from praising or showing off any particular quality or item that one possesses. Someone who becomes aware of your good fortune may be jealous or resentful, and this attitude can cause an ayin hara. Because of this very real danger, it is permissible to denigrate something you possess for the sake of avoiding an ayin hara. Although Moshe Rabbeinu’s wife Ziporah was exceedingly beautiful, the Torah refers to her in a most unflattering way, to ward off any potential ayin hara that might otherwise have resulted.

1. Rashi on Bereshith 49:22.

2. Zohar, Vayechi 226:1.

3. Bava Metzia 107b.

4. Shulchan Aruch HaRav, Nizkei Mamon 11. See also Chazon Ish at the beginning of his commentary on Bava Bathra, where he discusses this issue at length.

5. Brachoth 55b.

6. Chidah, Drash l’pi ma’arechet ayin.

7. Rashi on Bamidbar 12:1.



More links about Ayin Hara:

http://www.yutorah.org/lectures/lecture.cfm/741946/Lebor,_Rabbi_David
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline MassuhDGoodName

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Re:  "Anyone seen wearing these red-strings can be immediately labeled as an idiot.
"

Did I say Pee Wee was attempting to put out a fire started when his cigarette lighter went off in his pants pocket?

Forgive me...I got the story wrong.

It wasn't that he was masturbating in a gay porn movie house...

HE WAS FRAMED!

His special red 'Kabala string' that he was wearing on his right wrist got caught in his pants zipper, and Pee Wee was yanking it up and down, up and down, over and over, over and over... trying to get the string uncaught and out of the zipper!

;D

Offline muman613

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A little more about the Ayin Hara:



http://www.artscroll.com/Chapters/lish-004.html

...

Two of the scariest words in the Jewish language are ayin hara, the evil eye. People are afraid of ayin hara. How’s your baby? Fine, pooh, pooh, pooh. The concept of ayin hara, the evil eye, is the great equalizer of the Jewish people. Chasidim are afraid of ayin hara. Misnagdim are afraid of ayin hara. Ashkenazim are afraid of ayin hara, Sephardim are afraid of ayin hara. Religious Jews are afraid of ayin hara. Secular Jews are afraid of ayin hara. Everyone is afraid of ayin hara.

I once heard that a baseball player on the New York Yankees was asked by a sports reporter from the New York Times, “To what do you attribute the improvement in your performance this year?”

So this ballplayer, who is a total Italian gentile, sticks out his arm to show off the roite bendel he’s wearing around his wrist. For anyone who is not familiar with the roite bendel, it is a little red string bracelet which supposedly wards off the ayin hara. “I don’t know for sure,” he says, “but my grandmother from Sicily, she sent me this little red thing, and I wear it all the time, and I’m doing much better.”

Apparently Sicilians worried about ayin hara, too.

I once saw a license plate on a very expensive automobile which read K9HARA. K Nine Hara, or rather, Kain Ayin Hara, which in Yiddish means, let there be no evil eye. I kid you not.

This ayin hara business, by the way, is not superstitious nonsense. According to the Gemara, it is one of the most lethal forces in the world. So how does it work? Can someone looking at me the wrong way affect me? Can someone giving me the evil eye cause injury to me? Even if I’m innocent? Even if I haven’t done anything wrong? Even if I’m minding my own business?

Rav Eliahu Dessler, in his classic Michtav M’Eliahu, suggests that ayin hara cannot affect a person who is guiltless. Ayin hara can only affect a person who arouses envy in other people. In America we are told, “If you have it, flaunt it!” But the Torah begs to differ. If we have it and flaunt it, thereby causing envy in others, we are most definitely doing something wrong. And if we do arouse envy, the consequence is that we become vulnerable to the evil eye.

So what is the antidote? asks Rav Dessler. How can we protect ourselves if we are fortunate enough to have a wonderful home, wonderful children, a wonderful wife, a wonderful salary, a wonderful job? The only way, he explains, is to become a giver to the community rather than a taker. People look kindly on givers. They are inclined to be generous with people who give generously of their time, their money and their energies. But those who hoard it and flaunt it, who are miserly with the gifts Hashem has granted them, are not as pure as the driven snow. People are not inclined to cut them any slack, and thus, they become vulnerable to ayin hara.

So we see clearly that being envious can destroy us and causing others to be envious of us can also destroy us. So what do we do? How do contend with this overwhelming human tendency that ensnared such great people as Kayin, Yosef’s brothers and Shaul Hamelech? What’s the key?

The Gemara (Shabbos 152b) discusses the verse (Mishlei 14:30), “Urekav atzamos kin’ah. Jealousy rots the bones” What does this mean? The Gemara explains, “If a person is jealous in this world, his bones will decompose after he dies. But if he is not jealous in this world, his bones will remain intact after his death.” In effect, one of the punishments for being jealous is post-mortem decomposition.

We know that Hashem punishes midah keneged midah, measure for measure. Therefore, there must be some connection between decomposition of the bones and being jealous. What is that connection?

The connection, I believe, goes to the very root of jealousy. A person who is jealous is fundamentally unhappy with who he is. He would much rather be someone else. He is unhappy with his wife. He is unhappy with his family. He is unhappy with his job. He is unhappy with his position. He wants to be someone else. He rejects who he is, his atzmius, his very essence. Therefore, he loses his atzamos, his bones, to decomposition.

...


PS: I worry about Ayin Hara every day when I drive to work in my 2008 Mustang GT {Bli Ayin Hara}... Everyone looks at me when I drive and has envy for my car... Often people compliment me about the car, but I am sure that there are those who give me the Ayin Hara..
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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This Kabbalah obsession seems like such strange superstition.  I've never believed in the power of objects to "ward of evil". 

That is not what it is supposed to do... The issue in Judaism is called the Ayin Hara, the evil eye... There is a fully rational explanation of what the Ayin Hara is, and I believe that Ayin Hara exists {I witness it every day}.



What does it have to do with red string?   Bullcrap.

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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The red string does absolutely nothing for you unless you are observing the Torah...


If you are observing the Torah, it also does nothing.

Offline muman613

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The red string does absolutely nothing for you unless you are observing the Torah...


If you are observing the Torah, it also does nothing.

Apparently there is a belief that the red-string does ward off the ayin hara...

Here is what Chabads AskMoses Rabbi says about it:



http://www.askmoses.com/en/article/424,1769676/What-are-those-red-strings-I-see-people-wearing-around-their-wrists.html

What are those red strings I see people wearing around their wrists?

The red strings are quite simply superstitions with no basis in Scripture or Jewish Law. There does seem to be a custom of wrapping a red string around the Tomb of Rachel1 , to ward off the “evil eye.” But again, this “tradition” may well have its origins in non-Jewish superstitions. The strings are being presented as protection against the “evil eye” by unscrupulous peddlers who want to make a quick buck from unsuspecting people.

If one wears the red string as a momento of a visit to Rachel's Tomb, that would not be a terrible thing in my opinion.

But what if someone believes in the 'power' of such a string? Does the Torah permit such a belief? It reminds me of a story about the famous quantum physicist Neils Bohr. A friend of his noticed that he had a horseshoe above his front door and asked him, "What? Do you, Niels Bohr the famous scientist, believe in such nonsense?" "No," he replied, "but they say it works even if you don't believe in it." In the case of the red string I would say, "it doesn't work even if you do believe in it."
 
Is it against the Torah? The Torah tells us to remain faithfully wholehearted in our belief in G-d.2 G-d gives us the Commandments that we need to fulfill, and how to fulfill them as laid out in the Code of Jewish Law. We don't need to search high and low for dubious good luck charms.
 
Of course, there are certain segulot prescribed by Kabbalists and saintly rabbis, but the red string is not one of them, as far as I am aware. If you have a specific issue that needs attention, you would be advised to discuss it with a competent rabbi, kabbalist or Torah teacher.

[This shouldn’t be confused with the (white or blue) strings you see hanging near the pockets of men’s pants. They are in fact strings tied to the edges of a four-cornered garment worn by orthodox Jewish men in fulfillment of Biblical commandment in the verse “They shall make fringes upon the corners of their garments.”]3
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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PS: I worry about Ayin Hara every day when I drive to work in my 2008 Mustang GT {Bli Ayin Hara}...

LOL, really?  If so, then why did you mention it here?

Offline muman613

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PS: I worry about Ayin Hara every day when I drive to work in my 2008 Mustang GT {Bli Ayin Hara}...

LOL, really?  If so, then why did you mention it here?

I have mentioned it here before and I needed to mention it in order to explain why I worry about Ayin Hara...
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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The red string does absolutely nothing for you unless you are observing the Torah...


If you are observing the Torah, it also does nothing.

Apparently there is a belief that the red-string does ward off the ayin hara...

Here is what Chabads AskMoses Rabbi says about it:



http://www.askmoses.com/en/article/424,1769676/What-are-those-red-strings-I-see-people-wearing-around-their-wrists.html

What are those red strings I see people wearing around their wrists?

The red strings are quite simply superstitions with no basis in Scripture or Jewish Law.

Wait a second.  I just read this:  "The red strings are quite simply superstitions with no basis in Scripture or Jewish Law. "   And yet you are quoting me a passage which contains this statement as somehow defending a basis for red strings.   I think you have an issue with reading comprehension here.

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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PS: I worry about Ayin Hara every day when I drive to work in my 2008 Mustang GT {Bli Ayin Hara}...

LOL, really?  If so, then why did you mention it here?

I have mentioned it here before and I needed to mention it in order to explain why I worry about Ayin Hara...


You must not have understood the implications of my question.

If that vehicle makes you worry about ayin hara, then mentioning here that you drive it should only make you worry more.  Because now you have to be worried about the whole forum.

If you had said you drove that in the past, I didn't remember because I don't really care about that stuff.  Likewise, this time I hope I won't remember nor care about what car muman drives.

Offline muman613

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The red string does absolutely nothing for you unless you are observing the Torah...


If you are observing the Torah, it also does nothing.

Apparently there is a belief that the red-string does ward off the ayin hara...

Here is what Chabads AskMoses Rabbi says about it:



http://www.askmoses.com/en/article/424,1769676/What-are-those-red-strings-I-see-people-wearing-around-their-wrists.html

What are those red strings I see people wearing around their wrists?

The red strings are quite simply superstitions with no basis in Scripture or Jewish Law.

Wait a second.  I just read this:  "The red strings are quite simply superstitions with no basis in Scripture or Jewish Law. "   And yet you are quoting me a passage which contains this statement as somehow defending a basis for red strings.   I think you have an issue with reading comprehension here.

I did not defend the act of wearing the string. I have said that those who wear it are idiots... But the issue, which I brought up afterwards, points out that there is an issue with Ayin Hara concerning certain segulas... I think you are jumping to conclusions without paying attention to what I am saying.

I replied when someone said that Kabbalah is just superstition and there is no such thing as 'warding off evil'... I then posted some articles which explains the Ayin Hara...

I do not suggest that red-string can ward off Ayin hara... I am simply stating that there is such a concept.
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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PS: I worry about Ayin Hara every day when I drive to work in my 2008 Mustang GT {Bli Ayin Hara}...

LOL, really?  If so, then why did you mention it here?

I have mentioned it here before and I needed to mention it in order to explain why I worry about Ayin Hara...


You must not have understood the implications of my question.

If that vehicle makes you worry about ayin hara, then mentioning here that you drive it should only make you worry more.  Because now you have to be worried about the whole forum.

If you had said you drove that in the past, I didn't remember because I don't really care about that stuff.  Likewise, this time I hope I won't remember nor care about what car muman drives.

Im happy that you will not remember because I certainly don't need an Ayin Hara from KWRBT...

You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline muman613

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This article from Aish com is very enlightening concerning the topic:

http://www.aish.com/sp/k/48965011.html

Is there any substance behind the latest fad: kabbalistic red strings?

There are times when one is forced to address the deliciously ludicrous. When "kabbalistic" red strings, once wound around Rachel's Tomb and then worn to ward off the evil eye, become the latest Hollywood fad -- selling for a staggering $26 a piece! - and dragging Judaism's ancient and holy mystical works onto New York Post's Page Six column, we have most certainly reached one of those times.

A group of Hollywood glitterati have turned contritely to look for the meaning of life in the great tradition of Kabbalah. An astute salesman turned "kabbalist" has taken note of their needs and filtered out the less marketable demands of Kabbalah, and presented a Kabbalah that demands little more than cash from its adherents. The reams of exhortation found in the Zohar and Arizal -- the two most fundamental Kabbalah texts -- against hedonism and lust have somehow been hidden from sight.

Is there anything of substance to this red thread business? Is there really such a thing as an "evil eye"?

    There is absolutely no genuine kabbalistic source for wearing a red thread around one's wrist to ward off the "evil eye."

Firstly, there is absolutely no genuine kabbalistic source for wearing a red thread around one's wrist to ward off the "evil eye." While there exists such a practice amongst some devout Jews, it is not mentioned in any kabbalistic work.

Yes, there is a fleeting mention in the Talmud about the practice of tying a bundle of herbs or gems and wearing them in order to ward off the "evil eye." No special color, nor Rachel, nor even thread are mentioned. Also, the comment is an offhand remark concerning laws of Sabbath observance.

One of the late great scholars, the Debreczyner Rav, mentions it as a practice he saw in his father's home, but his extensive search could not find a written source for the practice.

The good news is that there is a clear and early source that mentions tying a red string to ward off an "evil eye" and that is in the Tosefta, an early Talmudic work (Shabbat, ch. 7-8). The bad news is that it clearly states that tying a red string around oneself is severely prohibited. It is characterized as "Darchei Emori," a worthless, superstitious practice, close to idol-worship.

Although later halachic literature implies that we may possibly not rule in accordance with this Tosefta, this still does not make this a commendable practice, but rather a tolerable one.

THE "EVIL EYE"

Let us try to delve a little into the issue of the "evil eye" and its implication. The "evil eye" is mentioned in the Talmud and has practical ramifications in Jewish law. For instance, one is not permitted to stand and stare at his friend's field that is in full bloom, so as not to plague it with an "evil eye" (Baba Basra 2b). The "evil eye" is best described as a situation where "one conspicuously stands out, and there arouses people's jealousy and discomfort."

How does an "evil eye" wreak damage on someone else's field? The answer is most clearly described by one of the last century's great thinkers, Rabbi Eliyahu E. Dessler: G-d has created the world as an integrated whole of many components. The components are meant to act in harmony with each other. But if one of the elements in the system starts becoming a threat and overstepping its bounds, the system corrects itself and that aggressive unit is checked and contained.

We see examples of this in the ecosystem, where overactive components usually run up against some barriers and/or opponent and are reduced to their natural size. A species that grows beyond a certain point somehow finds a natural enemy that checks its progress. No one species is allowed to dominate and take over.

This is true not only of the purely physical world, but is also true of the human dimension. A person whose fortune stares everyone else in the face is antagonizing the world around him. He is expanding out of his natural boundaries and is, so to speak, infringing on other people's domain. The pain and anguish caused others when they view his success, provokes this "evil eye." It is the term used to describe their anguished look. The jealousy and bitterness that he has engendered will boomerang and take its toll from the one who caused this imbalance and disharmony. The Laws of Metaphysical Nature will right the imbalance, and reduce the person to his proper size and domain. The fall of the provocatively high and mighty is the classical manifestation of this.

A METAPHYSICAL TRUTH

Does this actually happen? This phenomenon belongs to the class of segula-type phenomena. Segula phenomena are a metaphysical effect not easily quantifiable, but present in a general way. To get a sense of this type of reality, let us compare physics to, say, psychology. The laws of physics are applicable to every single event, in precisely quantified parameters. Thus, every mass -- without fail -- attracts every other mass, in exactly the same way.

Psychology, on the other hand, while formulating great truths, cannot define them with the precision and inevitability that physics does. There are exceptions, and every case is slightly different than the others.

The same is true of an "evil eye." It is a metaphysical truth, not a physical one. It works as a general rule, but there are many subtle distinctions and some exceptions. If we look at a lot of examples over an extended period of time, we clearly see a pattern emerging that people who arrogantly flaunt success eventually suffer because of it. We cannot give ironclad rules to govern this phenomenon, and we can give different "natural" explanations for it, but the phenomenon seems to constantly prove itself.

A perfect example of where one can notice the effect of this phenomenon is Hollywood. No society is more oriented at "showing off" -- it is show business after all -- and what society is more dysfunctional? It is a society that has substituted desire for love, wit for wisdom, and appearance for substance, destroying itself in the process. Families, friends and beliefs are ephemeral, begotten in the evening and vaporizing in the morning sun.

REMEDY FOR THE "EVIL EYE"

    There is actually a time-tested remedy, and much cheaper than the quick fixes being pushed by dubious institutions: Live modestly.

Is there a remedy for the "evil eye"? There is actually a time-tested remedy, and much cheaper than the quick fixes being pushed by dubious institutions. Devout Jews have always lived as modestly as possible; refraining from boasting and usually understating their accomplishments. Idle boasting and great fanfare are shunned. And it works like a charm.

The Talmud states that "only hidden events generate blessings." For example, the two different presentations of the Ten Commandments are cited as a lesson. The Talmud points out that since the first time Moses brought down the tablets was done with great fanfare, they had to be destroyed when the Jews worshipped the Golden Calf. The second set of tablets was given quietly and modestly, and they lasted eternally.

This modest behavior has as its source -- the Bible, to which presumably all adherents of Kabbalah subscribe to. The prophet Micah says:

    "For what does G-d, your Lord, demand of you? Only that you love kindness, perform justice, and walk humbly with G-d."

Even when performing charity, justice and "walking with the Lord," it must be done modestly!

My advice to those people sincerely desiring to ward off the "evil eye" would be to return to a modest, inconspicuous lifestyle, ban the press from your life, and stop focusing on yourselves.

But somehow, I don't think that will happen. Pop fashion is a powerful money-making force, one that Hollywood stars are paid to fuel. And thus, we have the ultimate irony. The red thread has become a status symbol… drawing the "evil eye" to its wearers.



PS: I never said that the red-string had any powers... I simply said that Ayin Hara is real...
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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Apparently there is a belief that the red-string does ward off the ayin hara...


I do not suggest that red-string can ward off Ayin hara... I am simply stating that there is such a concept.


So in other words, you are saying that "idiots" believe it wards of ayin hara, but it doesn't really do so?   Your first statement appears to give credence to their "concept," but maybe I misunderstood what you are saying because you phrased it poorly.  Please clarify.

Offline muman613

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Apparently there is a belief that the red-string does ward off the ayin hara...


I do not suggest that red-string can ward off Ayin hara... I am simply stating that there is such a concept.


So in other words, you are saying that "idiots" believe it wards of ayin hara, but it doesn't really do so?   Your first statement appears to give credence to their "concept," but maybe I misunderstood what you are saying because you phrased it poorly.  Please clarify.

Yes my first post was not clear if I was saying that it works or it doesn't. What I believe is that the red-string is a product of the phony Kabbalists who sell it to unknowing Am Haaretzim.

But I do believe in Segulahs, such as the Chamsa... And I do carry a Chamsa on my keychain... As I said before I do believe in the power of the Ayin Hara...

Quote
http://www.jewishmag.com/144mag/superstition_magic/superstition_magic.htm
The symbolic hamsa hand (Arabic) or hamesh hand (Hebrew) is an ancient and still popular an amulet for magical protection from the envious or the evil eye and is also known known to draw positive energy, happiness, riches and health.. The hamsa (semitic root meaning five) includes five digits and symbolizes the Creator’s protective hand and refers to the digits on the hand. An alternative Jewish name for it is the Hand of Miriam, in reference to the sister of Moses and Aaron. Some hamsas contain images of fish, "the water covers the fish of the sea so the eye has no power over them (Berakhot 55b)." Some hamsa artifacts have the colors red and blue, both of which are said to thwart the Evil Eye. The symbol of the hand, and often of priestly hands, appears in kabbalistic manuscripts and amulets, doubling as the letter 'SHIN', the first letter of the divine name 'Shaddai' (one of the names referring to G-d). www.myjewishlearning.com
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline Kahane-Was-Right BT

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But I do believe in Segulahs, such as the Chamsa... And I do carry a Chamsa on my keychain... As I said before I do believe in the power of the Ayin Hara...


I do not do such things.  And I also don't think that an understanding that ayin hara is a bad thing is the same thing as believing in segulas or that one must believe in segulas in order to acknowledge that ayin hara happens. 

Offline muman613

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But I do believe in Segulahs, such as the Chamsa... And I do carry a Chamsa on my keychain... As I said before I do believe in the power of the Ayin Hara...


I do not do such things.

Of course I do not place any power in the Chamsa...

As an article I posted above says, the best way to avoid the evil eye is to be generous with your time and money.

I try to be as giving as I can... It is good to help everyone around you, including family, neighbors, our congregation, and others in the community.
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14