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The Vision of Eden
Animal Welfare and
Vegetarianism in Jewish Law and Mysticism
NOW AVAILABLE
Read an excerpt here I -
Eden & The Messianic Age Read
an excerpt here II - The Fallen Sparks
375 pp.
List price $30 + $5.00 shipping and handling within
USA. (For additional copies, the price of S+H goes up. Please make inquiry
to books@orot.com)
Send orders to:
Orot, Inc.
PO Box 155
Spring Valley, NY 10977
Make checks payable to "Orot, Inc."
(Within US add $5.00 for additional
copies shipping and handling)
For overseas orders (or further inquiries regarding the books listed above)
please send an email to
books@orot.com .
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The Vision of Eden presents a Jewish view of the
universe, drawing upon both Talmudic and Kabbalistic sources, with a special
focus on the issues of animal welfare and vegetarianism. While sympathetic
to vegetarianism, the author has created a comprehensive anthology that
presents a wide range of material representing multiple points of view.
Much of this material has never before been translated, including copious
selections from the writings of the Chassidic masters and Rav Abraham
Isaac Kook.
Rabbinic approbations:
Every reader of this unique and holy book will benefit extensively from
it. Indeed, this book, The Vision of Eden, makes one feel that he has
been handed a key to open the closed gates of the Garden of Eden that
were shut to us ever since Adam was expelled, and the angels with swords
in hand surrounded it, preventing us even from knocking on its gates,
let alone entering it…
Rabbi Shear-Yashuv Cohen, Chief Rabbi of Haifa
The Torah teaches compassion for every living creature. To study its detail
is to study the essence of God. Rabbi Sears has done extensive and valuable
research into a topic the world depends on for its existence…
Rabbi Yaacov Haber, Monsey, NY
What Jewish Vegetarians Are Saying About
"The Vision of Eden"
"David Sears has written a remarkable book that, while brilliantly
researched within the context of the Jewish religion, is universal in
the themes presented. The Vision of Eden is a book that everyone seeking
a deeper connection to their spiritual identity needs to read."
Rene David Alkalay
Author: Kabbalah in Motion
Executive Director: The Genesis Society
"This is a wonderful book, a necessary book, a just book which will
contribute much to clarifying where Judaism stands on the issue of meat,
vegetarianism, and animal welfare. …Sears seems to know - and to
have gathered together to our great advantage - all the texts that pertain
to tsa'ar ba'alei chaim (the Jewish tradition that states that it is forbidden
to cause pain to an animal except under specific conditions of human need,
and that that pain should be as minimal as possible.)"
Roberta Kalechovsky
General Editor: Micah Publications
Author: Vegetarian Judaism
"Currently most Jews eat meat and other animal products, and relatively
few Jews seem concerned about the cruel mistreatment of animals on factory
farms and in other areas. However, David Sears landmark book, with its
many examples of Jewish teachings about compassion for animals, has the
potential to change all of this…His book goes beyond those of other
Jewish scholars who have written about Jewish teachings on animals because
he combines his extensive knowledge of Judaism with an awareness of how
far realities related to how society treats animals differ from the demands
of Jewish teachings, and he is committed to making others aware of the
need to end these discrepancies."
Richard Schwartz
Author: Judaism and Vegetarianism,
Judaism and Global Survival
President, Jewish Vegetarians of North America
"Sears is lucid, accessible (even to the uninitiated) and thorough.
He seems to have integrated every conceivable Jewish source pertaining
to animal welfare… To his credit, Sears does not omit or misconstrue
sources that are contrary to current religious or political agendas. Nor
does he gloss over the "marked
ambivalence" of the Jewish tradition toward vegetarianism…
[However, he] respectfully encourages the Gedolei Yisrael to resolve the
halachic challenges posed by factory-farm conditions — not only
tza'ar baalei chayim but also "kashrut problems" that result
from "an increase in sickness among animals" and the "inevitably
higher margin of error in mass production" of meat, as well as the
health and ecological harm caused by animal-based diets."
Phineas E. Leahey, The Jewish Press
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