Tashlikh Tashlich
A Few Approaches from Rabbi Goldie Milgram
author of Reclaiming Judaism as a Spiritual
Practice,
Jewish Lights Publishing, 2004. Available at
JewishLights.com.
Tashlikh is the practice of standing before a body of water and tossing some crumbs in which represent the remaining sticky points within your persona that get in the way of your having/creating a good year. This is a gestalt type of experience, where you let go of clinging behaviors, memories and experiences. Good ritual facilitates desired change. The symbolism is like that of the scapegoat, you put into the crumbs what about yourself most needs to change, drop it into the water that the fish will use it for nutrition and that quality will be less likely to disturb you so greatly again. Today folks are more likely to use lint or imaginary castings away, since some environmental groups have found that bread crumbs are not appropriate for the diet of fish.
"Who is a God like You? You forgive sins and overlook miss-steps
For the survivors of Your People;
God does not retain anger forever, for God loves kindness;
God will return and show us mercy, and overcome our missing the mark.
And you will cast into the depths of the sea all their errors;
You will show kindness to Jacob and compassion to Abraham
As you promised to our ancestors.

2. Start people out with a little teaching, something like....
"Tashlich is a Gestalt-like practice which has been a part
of Judaism since at least medieval times. Each of us explores quietly to our selves what
it is that we would most like to transform in the year to come....the hard things,
behaviors and perhaps memories we hope to leave behind or develop some distance from.
Then when you are ready, using a bit of smutz that you find in your pocket - some crumbs
or lint or matter(s) from
your imagination- you toss away the shmutz that has accrued to your soul into the depths
of the river (or lake, or
symbolic body of water or pool)...."
(For years in my pulpit in Hammonton, N.J. we used a big beautiful ceramic basin, the kind
that one would find on a colonial wash stand. I could imagine one of those large oriental
bowls, the kind people use as bases for cocktail tables or as planters.)
3. Rabbi Shefa Gold has a lovely chant for this ritual :
Wash over me, carry my burden to a God who hears,
Wash over me, send me an answer to my prayers. I cast out my worries, I cast out my fears,
I cast out my worries, I cast out my fears."
Click here to see the sheet music for
this song.
After briefing people I like to lead them on a meditation walk while doing this chant,
right up until the body of water, pausing there, continuing the chant and letting people
freely take turns at tossing in their shmutz when they feel ready.
3. Another approach is to purchase water-soluble markers.
Give everyone tiny slips of paper.
Have them write their desired to be dissolved issues/behaviors of the
year onto slips, then have them drop the slips
into the water. (I usually have people also have slips that they keep,
that they write on what they hope to attract to them in terms of opportunities and new
behaviors and feelings....not always though, depends on how much time there is.)
4. Another approach is to have everyone put their "things to leave behind or
transform" slips into a big bowl.
Then the bowl is passed around and everyone takes a random slip.
Everyone then takes a turn reading the slip they drew out loud.
Then you cast away the one you happened to pick up.
It is amazing how clearly human everyone is and how it doesn't feel
alien to read someone else's slip and how important it is to hear everyone's outloud.
(It's important to know that this out loud reading will happen at the outset of the
ritual.)
This can also be done in a Four Worlds Model, with a
slip for intentions on each level.
5. A caution: I made the mistake in Holland last year of not checking out a route from the synagogue to a canal before Tashlich. I asked a local to lead the chanting procession....oops, he wasn't from the neighborhood and we walked around in circles for a while looking for a canal. (Talk about "water, water everywhere"..)
On the other hand, the neighbors in the old ghetto where we were, they were very moved to see the first procession of Jews chanting since before the war....Jews walking down the street in a column was a very different image for Europe, this time we were walking in beauty.
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