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People in Tel Aviv practicing yoga on June 2, 2005. Photo by Moshe Shai/FLASH90.
Observation

April 8, 2020

Podcast: Menachem Wecker Fleshes Out His Ideas on Yoga and Idolatry

By Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic, Menachem Wecker

The author of "Shibboleths and Sun Salutations: Should Religious Jews Practice Yoga?" joins us to defend his ideas.

This Week’s Guest: Menachem Wecker

Yoga represents a $16-billion industry in the U.S., reaching an estimated 36.7 million people in 2016 alone. And the Jewish community enjoys it as much as any other. There are synagogue-sponsored yoga programs and yoga minyanim (quorums); even a right-wing Orthodox educational organization like Aish HaTorah has seen fit to re-post on its website an item titled “How Orthodox Jews Taught Me Yoga.” Last month, in his stimulating Mosaic essay on the subject, Menachem Wecker asked if the very thing that gets people excited about yoga—namely that it is not just physical exercise but spiritual nourishment as well—should force us to think about how it relates to Jewish faith. How much of contemporary yoga, mostly thought of as a product of today’s “wellness culture,” is still seriously connected to its Hindu origins? What about the statues and other visual representations of non-Jewish divinities that adorn so many yoga studios? All of this comes to a head in one more question: Is yoga a form of contemporary idolatry?

Now, in this podcast episode, Wecker joins Mosaic’s editor Jonathan Silver to discuss his ideas and defend his argument.

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