Mayyim Hayyim is a mikveh - a ritual bath - and much more. We hope you'll find our website to be full of fascinating information, insights, and surprises. We look forward to hearing from you.
Welcome to Mayyim Hayyim Living Waters Community Mikveh and the Paula Brody & Family Education Center in Newton, MA.  Mayyim Hayyim is a threshold into Jewish life—a place where the spiritually diverse needs of 21st century Jews are met by reclaiming the ancient tradition of immersing in the mikveh.


 
Beyond the Huppah
Creating the Jewish Marriage You Want
March 4 - April 29, 2012
$250.00
The Beyond the Huppah seminar is a guide for engaged and newlywed couples that will provide tools to solidify a strong partnership and explore different ways of creating a Jewish home. (more »)

 
Beneath the Surface
A Program for Bat Mitzvah Girls and their Mothers
March 11 - 25, 2012
$118.00
This three-session Sunday afternoon program is an opportunity for mothers and daughters to explore the transition of becoming bat mitzvah. Moms and girls will learn and share separately and together and will create a personal ritual to mark this unique time in their lives. Past participants described the program as "a peaceful oasis in time to focus on and celebrate our relationship to each other, to Judaism, and to this moment in time." (more »)





Join the Conversation on Mayyim Hayyim's Blog
The blog is updated twice a week with posts by local and national scholars, educators and mikveh goers interested in exploring a new angle on a traditional ritual.  To receive an email each time a new one is published, enter your email address in the "Subscribe" section in the bottom of the right-hand column of our blog and click "Sign Me Up."



by Rabbi Robin Nafshi, Temple Beth Jacob, Nashua, NH
 

"This past June, I was diagnosed with uterine cancer.  While I was only 50 at the time of my diagnosis, it really wasn't a shock.  My father - and his sister - had cancer.  So did his mother and his uncle.  And I have since learned, so did his grandfather, his mother's father.  I have always taken after my father.  Although not consciously, I think I have been "waiting" for a cancer diagnosis for about the past ten years. 

... One day, just after my surgery, I received a package in the mail from a colleague and classmate who had served for a number of years as a rabbi in the Boston area.   In the package was a copy of Blessings for the Journey: A Jewish Healing Guide for Women with Cancer, published by Mayyim Hayyim..." (click to read more)