What Is the Significance of World Kabbalah Conventions Today?

Michael Laitman
2 min readSep 1, 2024

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We have reached a state in humanity where we feel as if we are at a dead end. Nature deliberately drives humanity into a corner so that we can find a way out, and people around the world are thinking more and more about how to exit this decline, impasse and crisis.

We who engage in the wisdom of Kabbalah recognize crisis as a moment of a birth to a new state. The word for “crisis” in Hebrew, “Mashber,” means also a “birthing stool” or “birthing place,” a structure used by women during childbirth. That it also means “crisis” refers to the idea that a crisis is a pivotal moment that can lead to the birth of something new or a significant change. This dual meaning emphasizes the concept that a crisis, with its many challenges, is also an opportunity for transformation and renewal.

This is indeed our time. We have gathered at a time when we are about to give birth to an entirely new state of humanity.

We thus need to organize a critical mass of people who will implement, demonstrate and gain the ability to lead everyone. As soon as the positive force dwelling in nature appears in such a group, then humanity will follow suit, like children following an adult. To reach this state, we need to unite with caring and loving attitudes in our connections so that the positive force of nature will start manifesting itself in us.

That is the significance of our World Kabbalah Conventions. We need to think about nature’s unifying tendency that manifests itself in us in order to lead humanity forward and to bring contentment to the whole of nature, which we are all parts of. Those of us who awaken to this methodology are in the middle, fulfilling our role. We need nothing else. We are like an adapter, a connecting link, between humanity and nature, which humanity needs.

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Michael Laitman
Michael Laitman

Written by Michael Laitman

PhD in Philosophy and Kabbalah. MSc in Medical Bio-Cybernetics. Founder and president of Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education & Research Institute.

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