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QUEER TABERNACLE
Project Type
Book
Date
22/04/2026
Queer Tabernacle is a spiritual, theological, and artistic work that proposes a habitable space between faith, identity, and truth. It is neither an ideological manifesto nor a traditional devotional text: it is a contemporary tabernacle built with words, symbols, and lived experience, intended for those who were expelled from sacred languages but never ceased seeking God.
The book begins with a central premise: the sacred does not belong to institutions, but to the living relationship between humankind and the Eternal. From this perspective, Queer Tabernacle reinterprets the great biblical symbols—the tabernacle, the ark, the covenant, the desert, the promise—as mobile spiritual structures, not as closed spaces. The tabernacle ceases to be an exclusive place and becomes a body that walks, feels, doubts, and loves.
The work engages in dialogue with the Torah, the prophets, Jewish tradition, biblical exegesis, and mysticism, but it does so from an embodied voice. It doesn't speak “about” queer bodies: it speaks from a body that has believed, been wounded, studied, and endured. In that sense, the book is both a work of thought and a responsible spiritual testimony. It doesn't seek to absolve without conscience or condemn without mercy.
Queer Tabernacle addresses religious exclusion not as a historical accident, but as a rupture of the ethical pact. It analyzes how power, institutional rigidity, and fear distorted sacred language, and proposes a reparation based on study, memory, and compassion. Faith doesn't appear as an emotional refuge, but as a profound commitment to truth and to the other.
The book's tone is poetic, symbolic, and precise. The writing is not ornamental: each image fulfills a theological function. Language acts as spiritual architecture, creating a space where the reader is not indoctrinated, but invited to enter, pause, and assume their own inner responsibility.
Queer Tabernacle doesn't attempt to “include” anyone in existing systems. It proposes something more radical: to reconstruct the space. To create an ark where queerness and the sacred are not tolerated, but recognized as part of the same mystery. A place where faith does not demand denial of the body, and where identity does not demand renunciation of God.










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