There is something sacred about movement.
From the moment God tells Abraham “Lech lecha—go forth”, the Jewish story is in motion. Revelation happens not in buildings, but in deserts. Jacob dreams not at home, but while sleeping with a rock as a pillow. The Israelites encounter God not in cities but through the wandering, the wilderness, the journey. The road itself becomes the beit midrash.
Traveling through Israel invites the same kind of spiritual unfolding.
It’s an invitation to shift from synagogue-centered spirituality to a dynamic, place-based relationship with God (Makom), one shaped by awe, memory, and wonder. A Friday night walk to the Kotel. A moment of silence looking at the stars and out over the Negev. A spontaneous Mincha among the ancient stones of Tzippori. These are not just logistics. They are opportunities to encounter the Divine in the wind, in the dust, in the sky, in the stories of the people you meet.
At Kenes, we partner with you, the rabbis, to elevate the spiritual dimension of each journey. Together, we co-create itineraries that hold space for both formal and informal spiritual moments. That may mean Yizkor at Yad Vashem, Kabbalat Shabbat on a kibbutz, or Havdalah by the sea. But it also may be less scripted: a hike that ends in song, a quiet conversation after a powerful site visit, or a moment of stillness in the middle of a busy day.
Not every group wants traditional tefillah, and that’s okay. We help you design the experience that reflects your community’s unique rhythm and soul. Because spirituality doesn’t only live in the siddur. It lives in the questions, the connections, the relationships, and in the land itself.
We’ve seen again and again how Israel becomes a living parasha. A conversation about tikkun olam feels different after visiting ADI Negev. A discussion about leadership resonates more deeply after a walk through Har Herzl. A group reflects differently on Parashat Kedoshim after hearing from protest leaders and social changemakers. Every site becomes a page of Torah. Every conversation, a drasha.
When rabbis travel with their communities, the relationship shifts. People open. Walls come down. And suddenly, Judaism isn’t just what we know or what our rabbi tells us—it’s what we feel, together.
This is what we’re here for. To help you build a journey that holds the tension between planning and presence, prayer and play, tradition and spontaneity. Because we believe the most meaningful spiritual moments often aren’t the ones you schedule, but the ones you make space for and allow to happen.
Let us help you create an itinerary where the land speaks—and your people truly listen.
Let’s talk.
Contact: Sarah Cytryn – Sarahc@kenes-tours.com


