Kosher Cannabis: Audiolibro Por Dr. Micah Ben David Naziri arte de portada

Kosher Cannabis:

Jewish Worship and Mysticism with Entheogenic Sacred Herbs

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Kosher Cannabis:

De: Dr. Micah Ben David Naziri
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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For millennia, Judaism has been read through the lenses of law, narrative, and history. But what if Jewish ritual—from the Tabernacle to the Temple, from the prophets to the Chasidic masters—also preserved a sophisticated tradition of sacred pharmacology? What if some of the most iconic biblical substances were not merely symbolic, but entheogenic technologies crafted to clarify perception, induce awe, and sanctify consciousness?

In Kosher Cannabis, Dr. Micah Ben David Naziri uncovers the long-buried intersection of Jewish mysticism, ancient ritual, and psychoactive plant use. Drawing on cutting-edge archaeochemistry (including the cannabis residues found at Tel Arad), philology, halakhic sources, anthropology, and Chasidic literature, Naziri reconstructs an Indigenous Israelite worldview in which oil, incense, manna, and even ergot-tainted grain formed part of a disciplined spiritual technology.

From the debated identity of Qaneh Bosem and the synergistic chemistry encoded in the biblical anointing oil, to the guarded priestly science behind the Temple incense, to the visionary possibilities embedded in the manna narrative, the book traces how the senses themselves—touch, scent, taste, and breath—were transformed into pathways of encounter with the Divine.

Naziri brings the story forward into the Chasidic era, illuminating Rabbi Nachman of Breslov’s enigmatic parables, the mystical ethics surrounding altered states, and the modern halakhic debates over cannabis and psychedelics. The result is a groundbreaking and deeply researched work that challenges inherited assumptions, reframes Jewish spirituality within its Indigenous matrix, and opens new vistas for understanding the ecstatic heart of the tradition.

Bold, meticulously sourced, and spiritually provocative, Kosher Cannabis is essential reading for scholars, seekers, and anyone interested in the ancient roots—and modern renewal—of entheogenic Judaism.

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