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The Neshamah Project

The Neshamah Project

De: Rabbi Ben Newman
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Rabbi Ben is a teacher of esoteric Wisdom, kabbalistic and musical.All rights reserved
Episodios
  • Neshamah Project Podcast Episode 101: The Power That Heals or Harms
    Jan 16 2026
    This week we explore two Hasidic teachings on Parashat Va’era that ask how spiritual power becomes healing rather than harmful. Drawing on the Degel Machaneh Ephraim and the Maor VaShemesh, the episode examines the Torah’s pairing of firmness and compassion, judgment and mercy, showing how the same force can destroy or heal depending on how it is held. Together, these texts offer a bracing vision of spiritual maturity rooted in integration rather than extremes.
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    19 m
  • Neshamah Project Podcast: Episode 100-Names in Motion
    Jan 8 2026
    What if meaning isn’t something we think our way into, but something we do our way into? In this episode of The Neshamah Project, we explore a teaching from Ohr HaMeir on the opening of Shemot, where holy names are not fixed labels but living realities formed through action, movement, and intention. Prayer is not only spoken. It is embodied. Hands, breath, posture, and presence become ways meaning enters the world. We look at burnout as a spiritual form of Mitzrayim—constriction, fragmentation, disconnection—and ask how small, conscious acts can begin an inner Exodus. Drawing on Kabbalah, embodied spirituality, and contemporary insight, this episode offers a gentle but radical invitation: to let the body help the soul remember, and to rediscover human thriving through mindful action. Meaning doesn’t arrive all at once. It moves.
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    19 m
  • Neshamah Project Podcast Episode 99: The Purpose of Descent
    Dec 9 2025
    This week we look at two Hasidic readings of Vayeshev that together map the inner life: Siach Chayyim teaches that the soul’s descent into this world is purposeful, an apprenticeship in humility, growth, and learning to say “Here I am” even when we’re afraid. The Meir of Premyshlan adds that holiness isn’t only found in elevated moments but in the “lower waters” of daily life, where every ordinary act holds a spark waiting to be lifted. Taken together, the texts insist that our wandering, our struggle, and even our most mundane days are part of the soul’s path back to clarity and connection.
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    27 m
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