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Michael Fine

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Koshering Psychedelics: Ayahuasca in the Ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jewish World

June 21, 2026 Jonathan David, Aviva Berkovich‐ohana, Yair Dor‐ziderman et al. preprint

Ayahuasca use among ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jews is adapted to Jewish contexts, with ceremonies modified to fit religious norms. Motivations for use are primarily therapeutic. Acute experiences include Jewish and Jewish mystical visionary content. Longer-term effects include strengthened belief, connection to Judaism, and changes in religious practice. Religious tensions arise from ayahuasca's perceived foreignness, concerns about idolatry, mixed-gender participation, and competing authority structures. Strategies to address these tensions include medicalization, making the set, setting, and experience religiously permissible ("koshering"), and framing ceremonies as liminal spaces. The findings highlight psychedelics' contextual flexibility and diffusion into understudied populations.