Real Davvening: Jewish Prayer as a Spiritual Practice and a Form of Meditation for Beginning and Experienced Davveners |Jewish Spirit Booklet Series, 1996 ISBN978-1-5114-3313-6
An Open Heart: The Mystic Path of Loving People. Jewish Spirit Booklet Series, 1997 ISBN978-0-9657-1122-7
A Tu BeShvat Seder: The Feast of Fruits from the Tree of Life Jewish Spirit Booklet Series, 1998 ISBN978-0-9657-1123-4
The Life and Teachings of Hillel 376 pp. Jason Aronson, 2000 ISBN978-1-56821-049-0 According to WorldCat, the book is held in 168 libraries[1]
A Person is Like a Tree: A Sourcebook for Tu BeShvat Jason Aronson, 2000 ISBN978-0-7657-6128-6
Manuscripts and drafts of The Light and Fire of the Baal Shem Tov are archived at Cornell University Library.[10]
Storytelling
Buxbaum told stories "in Jewish and non-Jewish settings to Jewish and non-Jewish audiences", with a focus on "the spiritual nature of storytelling."[11][12] He was grouped among "the most active tellers in the Jewish world."[13]
Maggid training program
Building on his ordination as a maggid by Shlomo Carlebach,[14] Buxbaum established a program to train women and men as maggidim (plural of maggid).[15][16] Graduates include Shoshana Litman, described as Canada's first ordained female Jewish storyteller,[17] and Tamir Zaltsman, who states that he is the first ordained Russian-speaking maggid.[18] Some graduates are themselves training maggidim.[19]
He told interviewers that as a young man, he identified as an atheist and felt disconnected from his Jewish roots. But a time of intense soul-searching, and encounters with Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach, led him to devote his life to Jewish spirituality.[20]
In 2007, Buxbaum was one of six spiritual leaders from different faiths who opened the memorial celebration for Sri Chinmoy at the United Nations.[21]
Buxbaum lived in Brooklyn. He was married to actor and storyteller Carole Forman.[22]
^On The Bookshelf (column) (July 11, 1996). "The art of davvening is meaningfully taught in new booklet by Jewish Spirit". Sentinel: The Voice of Chicago Jewry.
^Kurzweil, Arthur. "Light and Fire". The Algemeiner Journal (December 15, 2006).