Shrink-wrapped pack of ten pastoral care guides.
An information and resource guide about pregnancy loss and grieving through the lens of Jewish wisdom to support congregants and community members.
Pregnancy loss is a common but often unspoken experience and can have a deep emotional impact. Jewish tradition can offer support, solace, and a pathway to mourn. This guide provides spiritual and practical advice for mourning a pregnancy within the Jewish tradition. Topics including how to acknowledge the loss, rituals for mourning, finding comfort in Jewish texts, and the journey to spiritual healing.
Written by Aimee Baron, MD, the founder and Executive Director of I Was Supposed to Have a Baby. Dr. Baron was formerly the Director of Innovation and Growth at NechamaComfort, and has also worked as an attending pediatrician at the Newborn Nursery and Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital before taking a leave of absence after her third miscarriage. Aimee lives in the greater New York area with her husband and children.
This 8-page pamphlet is sold in packs of 10 and includes a connection to Jewish texts, resources from both within and outside the Jewish community, and a ritual—such as a blessing or meditation—to offer ongoing support and coping mechanisms. (The 5 x 7” pamphlets are designed to fit existing racks)
Tree of Life is a series of pastoral care pamphlets spanning a wide range of social and emotional topics to offer information, resources, and support to congregants.
People come into a synagogue and other Jewish institutions with a variety of needs. It can be difficult for the clergy and other leaders to be able to address all the demands of their community. These pamphlets give you outreach tools to support congregants who wish to explore what may be stigmatized issues in a comforting, spiritual, and information-based way that can also open a pathway to deeper conversation.
Written by rabbis and/or experts on the subjects, each pamphlet includes a connection to Jewish texts, resources from both within and outside the Jewish community, and a ritual—such as a blessing or meditation—to offer ongoing support and coping mechanisms.
Topics include
Pamphlets are 8 pages long and are sold in packs of 10. In a convenient 5 x 7 inch format , the pamphlets are easy to hold and designed to fit in existing racks.