It is supported by the Bet El Trust, set up in 1983, which finances the publications of the society and its principal tutor Z'ev ben Shimon Halevi.
It organises conferences, often combined with visits abroad to centres of kabbalistic interest, and has a number of tutors and groups worldwide, including, among others, those groups in Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, England, Germany, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Portugal, Scotland, South Africa, Sweden, Spain, and the USA.
While the 16 books written by Halevi form the contemporary basis of the Toledano Tradition, tutors also pursue their own interests, introducing compatible elements of those into their Group teachings.
Papers given over the years at conferences organised by the Kabbalah Society, of which Halevi was the founder member, remain unpublished, though various tutors and students of the Toledano Tradition have produced books.
[3] As well as emphasising the ecumenism that prevailed during Spain's Golden Age (see also, Golden Age of Islam), a further aim of the Society is to promote, in modern form, the ideas of those kabbalists of the 10th-12th centuries living and working in Spain and Provence, among them, Isaac the Blind, Azriel of Gerona and Nachmanides: "This line of Kabbalah follows the Toledano Tradition dating back to medieval Spain where the three branches of the Abrahamic revelation met in a civilised cosmopolitan atmosphere, not unlike our own epoch.