Vulcan / Kohanim (Jewish blessing)
Double-charged gesture: Jewish Kohanim blessing (two V splits = Hebrew Shin) + Star Trek Vulcan gesture (1967). No conflict, two traditions coexist. Universal positive gesture, no documented offense.
Meaning
Target direction : Jewish priestly blessing: two fingers (index-major of one hand, index-major of the other) spread in a V, forming the Hebrew letter Shin (ש) - corresponding to the Kohanim blessing pronounced by Jewish priests. Syncretized with Star Trek's Vulcan gesture since 1967.
Interpreted meaning : No serious cross-cultural misunderstandings documented. Possible confusion Star Trek vs. Jewish tradition, but two universes recognized as distinct. Non-Jews/Star Trek fans may be unaware of the religious significance of the gesture.
Geography of misunderstanding
Neutral
- israel
- usa
- worldwide
- jewish-diaspora
1. The gesture and its expected meaning
Two hands raised, fingers spread in a special configuration: each hand forms a V (index-middle fingers separated), the two hands together creating the shape of the Hebrew letter Shin (ש). Religious significance: Jewish priestly blessing, Birkat Kohanim, pronounced by Cohens (Jewish priests) during certain services. Traditionally accompanied by Hebrew words of blessing.
Syncretism: this gesture is also identified with the "Vulcan salute" from Star Trek, popularized by Leonard Nimoy in 1967. Nimoy, Jewish by birth, deliberately used the Kohanim gesture as the basis for the Vulcan gesture in the series. The two traditions coexist peacefully today.
2. Where things go wrong: geography of misunderstanding
No serious cross-cultural misunderstandings documented. Jews and Star Trek fans clearly recognize both origins of the gesture. Possible misunderstanding: non-Jews/non-fans may be unaware of the gesture's authentic religious charge.
No documented incidents of offence. Gesture perceived as universally positive.
3. Historical background
Jewish origins attested over thousands of years: Talmud, rabbinic traditions (Litvak-Ashkenaze schools). Gesture codified in Jewish liturgy for priestly blessing. Pop-culture rediscovery 1967: Leonard Nimoy (Jewish actor) includes Kohanim gesture in Star Trek as a gesture of peaceful extraterrestrial civilization. Massive adoption by Star Trek fan-base. Parallel normalization: two traditions mutually recognize each other without friction.
4. famous documented incidents
- **Star Trek, 1967 Leonard Nimoy asks producer to use Kohanim gesture for Vulcan salute. Justification: "it's peaceful and noble". Became an iconic Star Trek gesture for 60 years.
- Modern Synagogues, 2000s-2026 Increased use of the Kohanim gesture by young Jews aware of the double cultural burden (religious + sci-fi).
5. Practical recommendations
- Do: Universal free use of religious blessing or Star Trek salute.
- Never do: no documented cases where gesture would be offensive.
- Alternatives: spoken blessing, traditional Jewish greeting (peace sign), simplified Star Trek defensive pose.
Documented incidents
- — Nimoy propose geste Kohanim comme salut Vulcain pacifique. Justification : »c'est noble et pacifique«. Devient iconic 1967-2026.
Practical recommendations
To do
- Usage universel libre de bénédiction ou salut. Geste sans offense interculturelle.
Avoid
- Aucun cas documenté. Geste résiste à l'offense.
Neutral alternatives
- Words oral blessing.
- Traditional Jewish greeting (open palm, peace).
- Simplified Star Trek defensive pose.
Sources
- Talmud Bavli, Mishnah (various chapters on priestly blessings).
- Nimoy, Leonard (1975). I Am Not Spock. Ballantine Books.
- Star Trek (NBC/Paramount, 1966-1969). Original Series pilot and episodes.