Everybody Counts!
Week 3: Tiferet/Inner
Beauty & Beauty in Nature
Do not look at the
container, rather what is in it. (Avot 4:27)
Last week our theme for our Omer Project was Tiferet. One way tiferet is translated is
beauty and with
the students we focused on inner beauty and beauty in nature.
As one theme was inner beauty students
were first asked to describe the outside of a geode.
Hard, rough, plain were a few of the most frequent descriptive words – definitely
NOT beautiful. We
then cracked open a geode and there was a "WOW!" moment when
students saw the
crytals inside. As one student
commented, “It’s like when my teacher says,
‘Don’t judge a book by it’s cover.’” Our core text last week was, in fact, another
way of
saying just that. From Pirke Avot we discussed what “Do not look at the container,
rather what is in it.
(Avot 4:27). Another student offered another way to explain our
text: "sometimes food looks yucky, but when you taste it, it's good." After discussing
how we each
have inner qualities students wrote acrostics with their names on scratch art paper. This was another tangible
example of hidden beauty. While working
on these
students were reminded that acrostics appear throughout Jewish prayer and
texts.
The afternoon concluded with
students cutting out images in magazines of beauty in nature.
Check out some photos below.
An unopened geode |
Norah Margie cracks open a geode |
An opened geode
Rabbi Liben teaches a song. |
Our Tiferet Collage |
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