La Cabala _top_ Here
In the narrow, rain-slicked streets of Buenos Aires, just off the Avenida de Mayo, there was a place called La Cabala . It wasn’t a café, though it served thick, syrupy coffee in chipped cups. It wasn’t a library, though every wall was lined with leather-bound books that smelled of dust and secrets. It was, the old-timers whispered, a map —a place where the tangled threads of fate could be read, untangled, or, if you were foolish enough to ask, cut.
It follows the wanderings of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son Rabbi Elazar through the hills of Galilee. As they walk, they encounter a donkey driver, a mysterious old man, or a child, and through their conversations, they reveal hidden layers of reality. La Cabala
In the digital age, "receiving" is hard. Seek out a local Chabad house or a reputable Online Yeshiva. cannot be learned in a weekend workshop; it takes years. In the narrow, rain-slicked streets of Buenos Aires,
The origins of La Cabala are as mythical as they are historical. Tradition holds that the mystical knowledge was given to Adam in the Garden of Eden by the Archangel Raziel after the Fall, intended to help humanity find its way back to the Divine. Historically, however, the roots of Jewish mysticism can be traced back to the Second Temple period (516 BCE – 70 CE), flourishing alongside early Christianity and Gnosticism. It was, the old-timers whispered, a map —a
Kabbalists believe in the profound link between all things in the universe.