Gershon Winkler is a widely recognized scholar in the fields of Jewish mysticism, theology, law, and lore, and has published fourteen books since 1980. Gershon was born in Sjaeland, Denmark, and educated in Orthodox Jewish communities in the United States and Israel. He has lectured as Scholar-in-Residence at colleges and universities, and for ecumenical and Jewish retreats in North and Central America, Europe, and Israel. Rabbi Winkler considers himself non-denominational and was ordained at Yeshivat Beit Yosef-Novoredok in Jerusalem in 1978 when he was initiated by its dean, the late Kabbalist Rabbi Eli'ezer Benseon. His non-mainstream exploits have won him media recognition, including a front page feature in the Wall Street Journal, a segment on the PBS series Religion and Ethics Newsweekly, and detailed coverage in Israel's Ha'aretz, Chayyim Acherim magazine, and The Jerusalem Post. Gershon has served in rural Jewish communities across West Virginia, as Hillel director for West Virginia State University and itinerant chaplain for Federal Prison Camps in Morgantown and Alderson, and periodically as Visiting Chaplain throughout the Colorado state prison system. In 1997, he founded the Walking Stick Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the recovery and preservation of aboriginal Jewish spirituality.
There's an old Native American saying: 'If it doesn't grow corn, what good is it?' Gershon Winkler grows corn. He celebrates the wind. He is the friend of Spider, Magpie, and Lizard. He lives with storms. With the crash of lightning. With rainbows. In this masterful compendium you will have found an ally that can help you remember, realize, and see. This book has helped me to forge a deeper connection with my own indigenous ways in very much the same way Gershon has done with his. -David Carson, Choctaw Elder and Pipe-Carrier, author of Crossing into Medicine Country, and coauthor of Medicine Cards and 2013 Oracle Winkler's knowledge is a universe away from the glib superficiality of pop mysticism and mass market 'spirituality.' -The Jewish Community Update, Sedona, Arizona Rabbi Gershon Winkler with wit and wisdom leads us to rediscover the more pagan and pantheistic mysteries underlying the ancient Hebrew tradition. He renders user-friendly the more cryptic teachings of lesser-known kabbalistic source texts and oral traditions in order to inspire and inform our lives. I highly recommend this book! -Andrew Weil, MD, author of Spontaneous Healing and Natural Health, Natural Medicine