In 2011 Ronnie Cahana suffered a severe stroke that left him with locked-in syndrome: completely paralyzed except for his eyes. While this might shatter a normal person’s mental state, Cahana found peace in “dimming down the external chatter,” and “fell in love with life and body anew.” In a somber, emotional talk, his daughter Kitra shares how she documented her father's spiritual experience, as he helped guide others even in a state of seeming helplessness.
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Three years ago, Rabbi Ronnie Cahana
suffered a rare brain stem stroke that left him fully conscious, yet
his entire body paralyzed. It’s a condition known as “locked-in
syndrome.”
Last month, TED Fellow Kitra Cahana spoke of her father’s experience at TEDMED (watch her talk, “My father, locked in his body but soaring free”),
revealing how her family cocooned Rabbi Cahana in love, and how a
system of blinking, in response to the alphabet, patiently allowed him
to dictate poems, sermons and letters to his loved ones and to his
congregation.
Kitra began documenting her father’s recovery in photographs and video, creating layered images that — in contrast to her photojournalistic work — are
more abstract and emotional. “I wanted to try to find a way to take
photographs that reflected the mystical things that were happening in
the hospital room,” she says. “How do I explain, in a photograph, the
power that another human being has to either add or detract from the
healing of another person? I started a process of trying to tell a story
in images.”
As Rabbi Cahana began to regain his ability to speak, Kitra started
recording his voice. She is now in the process of developing this body
of work for an exhibition to help raise support for his ongoing care and rehabilitation.
Below, see Kitra’s stunning images — accompanied by her father’s
poems — and hear more about the thoughts behind them. But first, a
Q&A with Rabbi Cahana himself, in which he describes his own
experience.[...]
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