Leadership Skills for Building Spiritual Community
DLTI offers a unique, award-winning learning experience to help those who lead worship and other communal events in a Jewish context to deepen the quality of communal prayer so that it activates the body, touches the heart, engages the mind and nourishes genuine spiritual growth and insight.
Retreat participants become a living and learning fellowship — deeply engaged in the practice and process of communal prayer and ritual.
What We Do
DLTI is a two-year, four-week training program in the Art of Public Prayer, held in a beautiful retreat center setting, currently the wonderful Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Western CT, with Zoom sessions as well.
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Employing the participatory approach of an intensive master class, this program coaches participants in the high art of leadership of public ritual and prayer.
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Throughout each retreat the group joins with core faculty and master-teachers in ongoing davvenen, text study, group discussions and coaching.
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Over 500 participants – ordained clergy, seminary students, and lay leaders together – have joined us from every denomination and representing the full spectrum of liberal Jewish life. DLTI-ers have come from throughout North America, Israel, Australia, South Africa, South America and Europe.
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DLTI is changing how Jewish prayer is lived –– in congregations and havurot, in big sanctuaries and living-rooms throughout the world.
What You Will Learn
This living-learning experience enables participants from all Jewish environments to gain:
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Deep understanding, experience and skill with the evolution, practice and meaning of Jewish prayer.
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Grounding in liturgical sources and the inner structure of services, with special emphasis on Shabbat.
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Advanced skills in the inspiring use of personal presence.
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Practice and experience in creating prayerful environments, working with group energetics, and balancing structure with spontaneity.
Special exercises will hone your skills, as you learn to:
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Use your whole self — voice, body, gesture — and increase your comfort with an expanded range of leadership styles.
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Maximize the effectiveness of your communication and remain centered in the most challenging situations.
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Shape your phrasing to blend kavvanot seamlessly into the flow of t'fillah and share personal stories to add an intimate dimension to your teaching.
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Smoothly segue from the spoken word into song or prayer, or from one prayer to another.
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Choose a melody for the mood you wish to create and use instruments with subtlety and grace.
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Incorporate dance or movement into prayer — in both havurah-style and congregational settings.
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Craft and deliver a truly dynamic d'var Torah; use bibliodrama and other interactive styles of teaching.
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Brush up your traditional skills in special labs for Torah-leynen and nusah ha-t'fillah.
AND MORE!