Jewish Monster and Magic Trading Cards, Wayward Children Podcasts, and More!

Hi everyone!

I know that it’s been ages since I’ve posted here, but I’ve been super busy with some other great Jewish monster hunting projects. I’m hoping to get back to the blog, but in the meantime I thought I’d share some of these projects.

First, Jewish Monster and Magic Trading Cards!

Working with Madness Heart Press / Aggadah Try It, I’ve been busy developing a set of Jewish Magic and Monster Trading Cards that showcases the wildness and richness of Jewish lore. The cards feature a beautiful combination of my original graphics, collage art, and photographs as well as vintage illustrations and public domain images. 

10 Jewish monster and magic trading cards.

Between the two decks, there are 108 individual cards that tell the stories of angels and shedim (demons); giants and sea monsters; rabbinic grimoires and amulets; Jewish women’s home magic rituals and ingredients; and a long list of amazing characters including Yosef Sheyda (Joe the Demon), demon friend to the Rabbis of the Talmud; the immortal Seraḥ Bat Asher, adopted granddaughter our Jacob the Patriarch who helped Moses free the Hebrews; Joseph Della Reina, a devout rabbi who was corrupted by Lilith and Samael; and Ornais, a gender-fluid vampiric demon. They draw on Torah, Talmud and post Talmudic Jewish commentary, the Jewish apocrypha, medieval traveler’s tales, Kabbalah texts, early modern legends and diaries, and modern Jewish broadsheets, news reports, and ethnographies. The cards draw on original source documents wherever possible and leverage the best of modern religious writing and academic research.

The Agrat bat Mahlat card. The image shows a woman with wings riding a flying animal with dark houses in the background. The text begins "Do not go out alone at night, neither on Tuesday nights nor on Shabbat nights, because the demon Agrat, daughter of Mahlat, and 180,000 angels of destruction go out at these times."
The Giant Frog card. The image shows a giant frog sitting by a desert river, with the great pyramids in the background. The text ends "When Aaron raised his rod and one giant frog came up from the river. It wasn't until the Egyptians struck at the giant that it split into a swarm of frogs that filled the land.
The Babske Refues card. The image shows stoppered jars of fennel, sugar, wood shavings, and lead. The text ends "Jewish women, trained by their mothers, experience, and medical-magical recipe books, such as R. Joel Baal Shem's Mifalot Elohim, made babske refuse (old wives cures) out of their gardens and markets and were more trusted than schooled doctors.
The Ibbur card. The image shows the silhouette of a man in a hat, overseeing a man with a shovel. The two stand before a gravestone with Hebrew lettering. The ground in front of them glow.

The text begins "The rabbi dug a trench over the grave of the holy tzaddik and then lay in it for the whole night, praying and whispering holy names."

Cards are getting amazing support so far! Check out the amazing crew that have seen pre-production versions!

Kind comments about the cards from Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg, Dr. Esther Hamori, fiction author Laura Samotin, content creator Miriam Anzovin, and podcaster Miriam Brosseau.

The two decks of cards, and a lot of cool extras are being initially sold via a Kickstarter campaign that launches on October 28, 2024! If you’re interested, check it out! If you haven’t supported a Kickstarter campaign, it’s easy! You pick the pledge you’re interested in, e.g., pick the Aleph Deck, both decks, or one of the higher reward tiers, add in an extra if one looks good (see Monster Hunting Kits, below). Assuming enough folks do that to fund the campaign, which is pretty much guaranteed, funds will be collected on December 1st, we send the card order to the printer, and everyone has cards and extras by mid-February. (If you go with the Chanukkah tier I promise to get Chanukkah cards in your hands in time for Chanukkah). If you are a Jewish teacher or active in a Jewish organization, definitely check out the Class/Club tier which comes with an hour Zoom class!

Check them out at my Ko-Fi shop!

Second, the Wayward Children podcast!

Starting about a year ago John Baltisberger and I have co-hosted the podcast “Wayward Children: Jewish Monsters, Magic, and the Stories We Tell!” The goal of Wayward Children is talk about Jewish monsters and magic from a very Jewish perspective. Wayward Children is the English translation of Banimim Shovavim, half-demons, one of my favorite bits of Jewish lore (and one of the trading cards!) I bring more of a research perspective, John brings more of a fiction writers perspective, but we’re both very invested in our Judaism and go deep more often than not. Recent episodes have covered Lilith, Jewish curses, the Giant Wars, dybbuks, and an amazing interview talking about Chassidic magic. The podcast can found, for free, at most podcast download sites including https://waywardchildren.buzzsprout.com. It’s a whole lot of fun. I hope you enjoy it. 

Graphic for the Wayward Children podcast. It shows John and Jack in front of some ruins. If you look closely there's a dybbuk with a balloon in the ruins.

This is us! I’m the guy in the hat. John’s the surly dude in with ass’s jawbone.

Third, Jewish Monster Hunting Kits!

Beyond our world of form and substance, but nearer than heaven, is a middle world full of magic and danger. In it, creatures who change shape hide in the shadows to torment and trick us and where an iron nail, some salt, a bunch of rue can get us home safely. You’d better be ready!

A picture of a monster hunting kit; a bag of string, chalk, an iron nail and a sone, vials of salt, ash, bessamim, and rue, and a hamsa on a red thread.

My Jewish monster hunting kits! Perfect for dealing with Shedim and Estries!

This kit has what it takes to protect you from shedim (demons), estries (female vampires), ghosts, and the evil eye (jealous looks that can harm), so you can be safe on the go:

  •  Hardwood ash. It will help you see where shedim (demons) walk. Sprinkle it around your bed at night. Just to be sure.
  •  Besamim (Havdalah spices). Shedim hate its holy scent.
  •  An iron nail. Repels shedim when you’re away from home.
  •  Salt. Sprinkle salt in the corners of your room to repel shedim.
  •  Rue. An herb that can protects you from the evil eye.
  •  Hamsa. A symbol of a hand that blocks the evil eye.
  •  Twine. Tying up an estrie’s hair takes away her power.
  •  A stone. Killing an estrie isn’t hard, but they won’t stay dead unless you bury them with a rock in their mouth. You can also place the stone on a gravestone to keep the ghost in the grave anchored to its resting spot.

This kit is a small sampling of what a Jew, whether Sephardic, Ashkenazi, or Mizrachi, might carry or have on hand. Also included with the kit is a short zine which provides additional background on the elements of the kit, Jewish magic and monster lore, and points to additional resources to start learning about this fascinating part of Jewish life.

The kit comes with a glossy postcard describing each of the items in the kit. Also at my Ko-Fi store.

Fourth, Articles and Teaching!

Over the last couple of years, I’ve had the opportunity to write two articles for the Jewish Review of Books website. The first, “As The Story Goes: Hanukkah Spears, Cheese, and Goblins” talks about Hanukkah stories from Jewish lore and the second “Total Eclipse of the Bracha” is about how whether or not we say a bracha over an eclipse is based on whether or not we, as many Jews historically do, believe a bracha is a bad omen. 

This week I have a third article coming out that I’m really excited about. Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg invited me to write a guest post titled “Let’s Talk about Angels, Shedim, and Giants” for her wonderful Life is a Sacred Text substack/blog. In this article, I talk about my experiences studying Jewish monsters and magic and why I think it’s important to reintroduce them back into Jewish discourse and spiritual practice. We’ve lost a lot by sweeping them into the corners. Check it out and see if you agree!

I’ve also had a lot of fun teaching. I’ve given two lectures at the Michigan Limmud. The lectures weren’t recorded, but after each lecture I ran home and recorded a version that I could put on YouTube. The first is titled “Practical Jewish Monster Hunting” and the second is titled “Rolling to Jerusalem: Jewish Legends about Death and What Comes After.” Check them out. They’re really fun. 

I’ve also done some teaching and storytelling at Temple Beth Emeth and Congregation Beth Israel in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and at Temple Beth Tikvah in Fullerton, California. If you’ve got a synagogue or group that would like me to come and visit, let me know!

A photograph of Jack telling scary Jewish stories in front of a fire pit. He's wearing his usual hat and button-down shirt with rolled up sleeves and a Marti Fuerst t-shirt with a seraph (fiery flying serpent).

Jack telling Jewish scary stories at Temple Beth Tikvah in Fullerton, California*

Finally, Social Media. I’m really active on social media under the name @AdneSadeh on X/TwitterBluesky, and as Jewish Monster Hunting on Instagram.

This is a long way of saying that while the blog has been quiet, I’ve been super busy with Jewish monster hunting activities. I miss the blog format, though and hope to get back to it someday. 

*The cool t-shirt I’m wearing in the picture is of a seraph, a flaming fiery serpent that God sent to plague the Hebrews during the Exodus. The shirt was made by John and my buddy Marti Fuerst, who’s done a bunch of great Jewish magic and monster shirts and also did the Wayward Children podcast logo. She’s also the Wayward Children podcast archivist! She maintains a GoodReads list of all the books we’ve referenced. Check out her Jewish art and buy her shirts at MartiFuerst.com. I’ve five of them and wear them non-stop!

A Jewish Monsters and Magic Reading List (in English)

I’ve been building a library of books in English on Jewish monsters and magic. Here are the books I come back to over and over again.

Jews are the People of the Book, right? So it figures that if you want to learn about about Jewish monsters and magic then you might want to grab a few. Over the last couple of years I’ve shared a few versions of a starter list. Over time it’s grown into this list here.

Two things about this list. First, the focus here is on books and articles written or translated into English. There’s lots more great stuff out there in Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, and Judeo-Arabic but I’m not able to cover that. I can’t do much past basic prayerbook Hebrew. Someday I’m going to fix that.

Second, the folks who’ve asked me for reading lists have done so for their own, and often very different, reasons and have needed very different lists. These have included:

  • Jewish fiction writers, artists, and game designers wanting a better basis than what our synagogues or pop culture have delivered
  • Jewitch practitioners, looking at Biblical divination methods, Sephardi protection charms, or Ashkenazi folk healing methods to add richness to their daily lives
  • LGBT Jews and others with a complicated relationship with Judaism who approach Judaism with a deep love and a DIY attitude
  • women who realized that their grandmothers, or great-great-grandmothers, had a ritual life that never got handed down to them
  • others, like me, that are just nerds for this stuff and find our lives and Judaism enriched by it

Regardless of why you’ve found this list, I hope that you find resources that are useful. If you want a bigger list, I’ve got a LibraryThing list of all the books in my library. All sorts of wild stuff. For the articles, I’m only listing stuff that is easily available free online. Some of my favorite articles aren’t on the list beause they require JSTOR access. If you can’t find what you’re looking for, or want some help finding the right resource leave a comment on the page, or message me on twitter @adnesadeh and let me know what you’re looking for.

Some of the articles I list are posted on Academia.edu. Free registration is required. In most cases the books are easily available wherever you buy books. Most of my links will be to Bookshop.org, which helps you buy new books from local stores, or Alibris, which is a good used-bookstore aggregator site. In some cases, though, your best bet is to go right to the publisher. Some of these are kinda pricey academic books. But most aren’t.

I’m sure I’m going to update this occasionally. So check back. This version is dated April, 18, 2023, one night before the funeral of my father Dr. Joseph Zaientz ז״ל‎.

Update 1. Dec 26 2022. Added two books on legendary figures (the Baal Shem Tov and Rabbi Ya’aqov Wazana), Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan’s book on Jewish Meditation, and a video of the Moroccan Tahdid sword ceremony for a brit milah.

Update 2. Dec 30 2022. Added essays on Jewish astrology, Jewish “superstitions” in the 1920’s, ruach ra’ah, the “last” Jewish demon (still actively included in Jewish ritual). and an amazing essay on the anti-demon aspects of Jewish weddings which includes a summary of the three main Jewish anti-demon strategies; fight, bribe, and conciliate them.

Update 3. Small update adding Dr. Sara Ronis’ article on Ashmedai, demon king and sometime Torah scholar, and Rabbi Elli Fischer’s video presentation on how smoking pipes was used to replicate temple incense and used to fight plagues.

Update 4. Nov 21, 2025. Added Ginzberg’s Legends of the Jews, Samuel Glauber-Zimra’s on Jewish spiritualism (e.g., seances), and the collection “In praise of Baal Shem Tov [Shivhei ha-Besht].”

Jewish Magic and Monsters 101

Super Fast, Super Fun Intros

Check out Ezra Rose’s one page print & fold zines. They’re free or pay what you want.

Ezra has great art and stickers available too. Check them out!

Articles on Magic

Fast Summaries

Essays

Articles on Monsters

Fast Summaries

Essays

Sources in Translation

Seferia.org – “Sefaria is home to 3,000 years of Jewish texts. We are a non-profit organization offering free access to texts, translations, and commentaries so that everyone can participate in the ongoing process of studying, interpreting, and creating Torah” While not everything at Seferia is translated into English, a lot is. I pretty much live there. Tanakh, Talmud, later writings, dictionaries. Everything crosslinked to commentary. So many wonderful texts. Also check out their Source Sheets, which Seferia users put together on interesting topics. To get you started, here are 5 sources.

  • Deuteronomy 3.11 – “Only [the giant] King Og of Bashan was left of the remaining Rephaim. His bedstead, an iron bedstead, is now in Rabbah of the Ammonites; it is nine cubits long and four cubits wide, by the standard cubit!”
  • Sanhedrin 65b – “Indeed, Rava created a man, a golem, using forces of sanctity. Rava sent his creation before Rabbi Zeira. Rabbi Zeira would speak to him but he would not reply. Rabbi Zeira said to him: You were created by one of the members of the group, one of the Sages. Return to your dust.”
  • Chagiga 16a – “The Gemara returns to discussing the heavenly beings. The Sages taught: Six statements were said with regard to demons: In three ways they are like ministering angels, and in three ways they are like humans.”
  • Berakhot 6a – “In another baraita it was taught that Abba Binyamin says: If the eye was given permission to see, no creature would be able to withstand the abundance and ubiquity of the demons and continue to live unaffected by them.”
  • Otzar Midrashim 2c (alternate version of the Alphatbet of Ben Sira) – “He said to him, “The angels appointed for healing: Sanoy, Sansanoy, Semangalof. When the Holy Blessed One created the first Adam alone, They said, (Genesis 2:18) ‘It is not good for this Adam to be alone.’ They created for him a wife out of the Earth like he had been, and called her Lilith. Immediately they began to challenge each other.”

Books

  • Jewish Magic and Superstition by Rabbi Joshua Tractenberg. Written in 1939, Jewish Magic and Superstition is still the best starting point. It focuses on 13th century Ashkenazi Jewish lore which is as wild as it comes. It’s inexpensive and easily available. JMS is also online at Sacred-Texts.com. Highly recommended.
  • The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic and Mysticism by Rabbi Geoffry Dennis. Exactly what the title describes. Encyclopedic in scope, but very short descriptions. A great gift and great for finding things of interest, but you’ll want more if you want to understand something with any depth
  • Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism by Harold Schwartz. So good. Mostly covers legends up to the Talmudic period and some Zohar. Wonderful writing and great commentary.
  • Legends of the Jews by Louis Ginzberg. 1909. All the best Biblical midrash rewritten into an easy to read continuous narrative from Genesis through Esther. (Link is to Seferia.org, but the Jewish Publication Society has a lovely 2-volume set that I personally think should be on every Jewish tween’s bookshelf though it’s a too bit pricey for that. There are lots of cheaper reprints available too.)
  • Sacred Monsters by Rabbi Natan Slifkin. A thoughtful, well sourced, book on Jewish monsters written by a rationalist Orthodox rabbi looking to debunk them. While the concept is a bit ironic, and a bit frustrating for monster fans, it’s a must read book. You’ll get a better price buying Sacred Monsters directly from the publisher, Gefen.
  • Magic, Mysticism, and Hasidism: The Supernatural in Jewish Thought by Gedalyah Nigal. Nigal describes the Baal Shem “wonder rabbis” and their amulets, holy name magic, kefitzat ha-derekh (“shortening of the path” or Jewish teleportation), transmigration of souls (reincarnation), and demonic possession. This one’s harder to get. As of today Alibris has a reasonably priced copy.
  • Ritual Medical Lore of Sephardic Women: Sweetening the Spirits, Healing the Sick by Isaac Jack Lévy and Rosemary Lévy Zumwalt. An amazing exploration of prekante, or charms, in the Sephardic community. If you want to be ready to handle the evil eye, this is the book. Also, this is a must read if you want to learn more about Jewish women’s rituals.
  • A Frog Under the Tongue: Jewish Folk Medicine in Eastern Europe By Marek Tuszewicki. Serious discussion of folk medicine in the Ashkenazi community, a tradition that is more magical than medical to our modern sensibilities.
  • Ashkenazi Herbalism. “Deatra Cohen and Adam Siegel add a new dimen­sion to our pic­ture of every­day life in the Pale of Set­tle­ment with a high­ly read­able por­tray­al of folk heal­ers, herbs, and med­i­c­i­nal prac­tices.” Great book for a modern practitioner to draw on but its presentation of Askhenazi medical lore is way too sanitized for me. Where are the cures based on wearing a mouse around your neck or eating fried sawdust? Where’s the horse teeth and lead?
  • Golem: Jewish Magical and Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid by Moshe Idel. This is the definitive book on the history of golem in Jewish religious thought.
  • A Remembrance of His Wonders: Nature and the Supernatural in Medieval Ashkenaz by David Shyovitz. “Analyzing a wide array of neglected Ashkenazic writings on the natural world in general, and the human body in particular, Shyovitz shows how Jews in Ashkenaz integrated regnant scientific, magical, and mystical currents into a sophisticated exploration of the boundaries between nature and the supernatural.” The werewolf article, above, became a chapter in this book.
  • Between Worlds: Dybbuks, Exorcists, and Early Modern Judaism by J. H. Chajes. This is the best academic book on dybbuks. A great analysis of how dybbuks fit into Jewish theology and life.
  • Women’s Divination in Biblical Literature: Prophecy, Necromancy, and Other Arts of Knowledge by Esther Hamori. “Hamori examines the wide scope of women’s divinatory activities as portrayed in the Hebrew texts, offering readers a new appreciation of the surprising breadth of women’s “arts of knowledge” in biblical times.” Very readable. Love it.
  • On My Right Michael, On My Left Gabriel: Angels in Ancient Jewish Culture by Mika Ahuvia. “Angelic beings can be found throughout the Hebrew Bible, and by late antiquity the archangels Michael and Gabriel were as familiar as the patriarchs and matriarchs, guardian angels were as present as one’s shadow, and praise of the seraphim was as sacred as the Shema prayer” Fantastic discussion of angels in Judaism.
  • Demons in the Details: Demonic Discourse and Rabbinic Culture in Late Antique Babylonia by Sara Ronis. “The Babylonian Talmud is full of stories of demonic encounters, and it also includes many laws that attempt to regulate such encounters. In this book, Sara Ronis takes the reader on a journey across the rabbinic canon, exploring how late antique rabbis imagined, feared, and controlled demons.”Another book that as academic in depth but very readable.
  • Amulets and Magic Bowls: Aramaic Incantations of Late Antiquity by Joseph Naveh and Shaul Shaked. “Amulets and magic bowls are part of a long-standing tradition of magic in the Near East. They were used to protect the home and inhabitants of the home from evil and disease as well as to arouse love. Texts taken from these items provide insight into the society, religion, and culture of pagans and Jews during the early Christian era which corresponds to that of the Talmudic period.”
  • Jewish Meditation: A Practical Guide by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan. “Students of mediation are usually surprised to discover that a Jewish mediation tradition exists and that it was an authentic and integral part of mainstream Judaism until the eighteenth century. Jewish Meditation is a step-by-step introduction to meditation and the Jewish practice of meditation in particular.” He’s an amazing writer who was deeply involved in the meditative aspects of Kaballah. And yeah, this is the same person who wrote a commentary on the Serfer Yetzirah (see below)
  • Jewish Astrology, A Cosmic Science: Torah, Talmud and Zohar Works on Spiritual Astrology by Yaakov Kronenberg. I haven’t put much time into Jewish astrology yet so don’t really have the context to evaluate this book. I’ve had it recommended to me by a few folks so want to include it.

Jewish Grimoires and Spellbooks

  • Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation. Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan translation. The Sefer Yezirah describes the mystical process by which God created the universe and is traditionally, the text that rabbi’s studied to learn how to make golems. Kaplan’s translation is tiny part of the book, it’s his commentary on the Sefer Yetzirah that makes this a must read.
  • Sword of Moses. Yuval Harari translation. As Harari notes, of the “two Jewish magical treatises – the other being the Sefer ha-Razim (The Book of Mysteries) – that have survived from antiquity in many respects [the Sword of Moses] is the more significant one. It presents a broad assortment of magical practices for accomplishing various goals, all based on the use of a magical ‘‘sword’’ of words, which Moses brought down from heaven.” The link is to a downloadable .pdf from Academia.edu
  • Sefer ha-Razim, The Book of Mysteries. Michael Morgan translation. The Sefer-ha Razim is a “Jewish magical text supposedly given to Noah by the angel Raziel, and passed down throughout Biblical history until it ended up in the possession of Solomon, for whom it was a great source of his wisdom and purported magical powers.” (quote from Wikipedia)
  • Shimmush Tehillim (Magical uses of the Psalms). Attributed to Rav Hai Goan, document by Reuven Brauner. Describes magical uses of the Psalms for protection from demons, protection from miscarriage, and a lot more. The link is a downloadable .pdf from Halakhah.com
  • The Aleph-Bet Book by Rebbe Nachman of Bresolv. Not a spellbook, per se, but tucked in with the Rebbe’s aphorisms on how to live a good Jewish live are a wonderful assortment of segulah (charms).

Beliefs about Death

Jewish Views of the Afterlife by Simcha Paull Raphael. “Jewish Views of the Afterlife is a classic study of ideas of afterlife and postmortem survival in Jewish tradition and mysticism. As both a scholar and pastoral counselor, Raphael guides the reader through 4,000 years of Jewish thought on the afterlife by investigating pertinent sacred texts produced in each era.” Another must read.

Final Judgement and the Dead in Medieval Jewish Thought by Susan Weissman. “Through a detailed analysis of ghost tales in the Ashkenazi pietistic work Sefer Hasidim, Susan Weissman documents a major transformation in Jewish attitudes and practices regarding the dead and the afterlife that took place between the rabbinic period and medieval times.” Ghosts. The walking dead. Here it is folks.

Folklore Collections

  • Lilith’s Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural selected by Harold Schwartz. Great collection from around the Jewish world. Includes stories about Lilith and “The Finger,” one of the inspirations for the Tim Burton film “The Corpse Bride.”
  • Mimekor Yisrael: Classical Jewish Folktales collected by Micha Joseph Bin Gorion, translated [from the Hebrew] by I.M. Lask.
  • Yiddish Folktales translated by Beatrice Weinreich. Includes stories about early modern Jewish monsters including shretelech, who are sprites that, if shown respect and given gifts, will protect the house.
  • In praise of Baal Shem Tov [Shivhei ha-Besht] : the earliest collection of legends about the founder of Hasidism translated and edited by Dan Ben-Amos and Jerome R. Minz. Includes the Baal Shem Tov fighting a werewolf and other amazing stories originally recorded by the Besht’s students and their followers. The book is in print. The link goes to the online Internet Archive copy.

Legendary Figures

In Praise of Baal Shem Tov (Shivhei Ha-Besht: The Earliest Collection of Legends about the Founder of Hasidism) – “In Praise of the Baal Shem Tov is the first complete English translation of the tales surrounding the Besht, a rabbi and kabbalistic practitioner whose teachings bolstered the growing Hasidic movement in the eighteenth century.” He also fought with sorcerers and werewolves, wrote amulets and recommended healing practices.

Without Bounds: The Life and Death of Rabbi Ya’aqov Wazana. “Without Bounds illuminates the life of the mysterious Rabbi Ya’aqov Wazana, a Jewish healer who worked in the Western High Atlas region in southern Morocco and died there in the early 1950s. Impressed by his healing powers and shamanic virtuosity, Moroccan Jews are intrigued by his lifestyle and contacts with the Muslim and the demonic worlds that dangerously blurred his Jewish identity.”

Late Modern period (mid-18th century to the 1920’s)

Og, King of Bashan riding a Unicorn from Aunt Naomi’s Jewish Fairy Tales and Legends

Other Media

There’s a lot of great material out there and a lot of weird stuff that I stay away from. Here are a few bits I know about and want to share. This list is also really short on rabbinic material. I need to fix that. I’ll cover Jewish monsters and magic artists in another posts.

Podcasts

Jewitches – “Talking about all things Jewish witchcraft, mysticism, folklore, magic, and practice. Bi-weekly deep dives into all things magical & Jewish, hosted by Jewitches.com”

Throwing Sheyd – “Better living through Jewish demonology”. 48 episodes deep dive into Jewish demons filled with warm and wisdom. Alan a nd Miriam are great hosts.

Websites

Pulling Threads – Rediscovering the forgotten rituals of Eastern European Jewish Women

Videos

Jewish Monster Hunting – A practical guide to Jewish Monster Hunting. This is my channel. Only one video so far, but it’s a fun one.

Demons in the Talmud and Demons and the Four Cups of Wine at the Passover Seder Sara Ronis

10 Historic Jewish Women Mystics You’ve (Probably) Never Heard of “Are there any Female Jewish Mystics or is Jewish Mysticism just a Boys Club? Join us as we explore ten incredible women Mystics, Martyrs, Mothers, Messiahs, masters of Kabbalah, Educators, Oracles, Patrons, Prophets, Poets and Philosophers who left an unforgettable mark on Jewish History.”

Plagues – Rabbi Elli Fischer. When smoking a pipe became a ritual substitution for burning incense to ward off plague.

Reigning Cats and Dogs: Angelic Animals in the Jewish Mystical Tradition – David Shyovitz

Angels in Ancient Jewish Culture and On My Right Michael, On My Left Gabriel: Angels in Ancient Jewish Culture – Mika Ahuvia

Great Myths and Legends: The Queen of Sheba in History and Legend and Great Riddles in Archaeology: The Ark of the Covenant: Lost, Found, or Forgotten? – Annette Yoshiko Reed. I haven’t watched these yet but they’ve been on my list.

An Expert Explains – How to Make a Golem – Alana Vincent. I havent watched this one either, but it’s been on my list.

The Dybbuk: The Full Original Film and Story

Frieda Vizel, Hassidic tour guide, shows how to do Blei geissen, aka lead-casting and molybdomancy used to discover the source of the evil eye.

Also, check out this twitter post with a video of Iraqi Jewish women performing “Resasay,” an anti-evil eye ritual similar to blie giessen.

Tahdid Sword Ceremony for the Brit Milah in Morocco. Posted by the Jewish Learning Channel. A lot more info is provided by the website https://yalalla.org.uk/ in the article “Jewish Saharans Singing To Birth”

“The word Tahdid comes from hdid, metal, in Arabic, bringing in technologies of metallurgy to protection rituals. The women used to hold the mother and baby ‘hostage’ in the room and barter jokingly with the men who were knocking at the door and begging to come in. Joking negotiations back and forth in Judeo-Arabic were meant to make everyone laugh and ensure that everyone knew where the real power was! Once allowed into the mother’s room, the men sang liturgical poetry in Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew, lightly tapped ritual swords against the walls of the four corners of the room, on the baby’s crib and on the four cardinal points, all the places where the evil spirits are said to hide. They then continued singing mystical poems and murmuring prayers in Hebrew and the women finished with loud yuyus of celebration. Afterwards there is a feast for everyone gathered. This Tahdid, from July 2013, was led by the paytan Jacob Wizman, a student of the famous Rabbi David Bouzaglo. Filmed in Casablanca by Ron Duncan Hart.”