Rising Voices Blog Posts

Rising Voices

Learn more about the Rising Voices Fellowship, JWA's thought-leadership program for Jewish girls and non-binary teens.
Sarina Tasman's Fanny Pack

Creased, Worn, and Covered in Bug Guts: My Sacred Texts

Sarina Klein-Tasman

When I unzip my fanny pack, I see the moments when I chose courage over complacency and curiosity over conviction.

Fight Like A Girl Protest Sign

How My “Wild Feminist” T-Shirt Made Me Rethink My Position in the Jewish Community

Marlo Dabareiner

As I read my classmate’s message to me, I was reminded of the same debate that I had been having in my head about what feminism should or shouldn’t look like.

Western Wall, Jerusalem

In Defense of the Wicked Child

Molly Kurtzer-Ellenbogen

To me, Jewish feminism means asking the questions others want silenced.

Miriam Borgenicht

Learning Reconciliation from My Great-Grandmother’s Poetry

Susannah Abel-Zucker

Having arguments with people you love and still being able to go on loving them is a necessary skill for effective activism.

Topics: Poetry, Activism
A woman with a calm expression wears labels reading "Jewish" on her face and blue dress. The dress features a large pink flower, intricate detailing, and conveys themes of identity.

When Cousins Meet in Torah: Finding Our Place in Tradition

Orlie Weitzman

It’s not unusual among my community for a young woman to read from the Torah, but that is something I will never take for granted.

Naomi Beinart and Classmates and Women's Hall of Fame event

The Fractions of Myself

Naomi Beinart

 I am not just one of my identities, I am all of them, shaped by every box I've had to circle, every affinity space I’ve been a part of.

Naomi Granek Brown at the Bimah

Etz Hayim Hi: How the Torah Shaped My Judaism, Feminism, and Self

Naomi Granek-Brown

Every time I lift the Torah or read from it, I am adding myself to this story, a branch of our collective tree of life.

A white, lacy kippah worn on grey hair

A Kippah of One’s Own: Claiming My Place Within Tradition

Hannah Gumpert

I didn’t think it was the most beautiful kippah in the whole world anymore, but it was my kippah, and that’s what mattered.

Venice Czarnecki-Lichstein and their confirmation class outside the steps of their shul

My Tallit: Sewing My Inheritance

Venice Czarnecki-Lichstein

In wearing that tallit my mother wove for me, I carry the flame of Jewish feminism forward. 

Installation of four kippot with hair coming out against a white wall

Embracing My Natural Curls

Luna Romero

I suddenly wondered why I was trying so hard to erase the one feature that connected me to my family and culture. That thought made me pause, and I put the blow dryer down.

Emerson wearing her kippah, reading her book in a church.

How Rebecca the American Girl Doll Shaped My Perception of a Woman’s Role in Judaism

Emerson Singer

As I navigate life as a Jewish teenager, I hope to think of myself as something of a modern-day Rebecca, but one with the permission to read Torah and the drive to interpret it.

Photo of person wearing a Star of David necklace and the letter M

She Who Wears The Star Chooses Her Burdens

Madeline Gross

I am a Jewish feminist, whether or not the charms on my necklace hide. They are always with me, reminding me of who I am and who came before me.

Collage of shabbat candles

Stoking the Fire: Lighting My Great-Great-Grandmother's Shabbat Candlesticks

Clio Petrulis

When I light candles on Shabbat, using the same candlesticks that my ancestors lit over 100 years prior, I feel connected to everyone who has come before me.

Star of David necklace on a red shirt

I Am the Product of the Women Before Me

Sarah Feldman

Just like my great-grandmother, grandmother, and mom, I try to advocate for people and voice my opinions every day. 

The author and her summer camp cabin posing for a photo

Clothes Hangers: A Quirky Mosaic of Jewish Womanhood at Summer Camp

Lily Plum Gartenlaub

The communal summer camp hangers passed hands, traveled across state lines, and held dresses for girls who just wanted to feel beautiful with the help of their friends.

The author's great-grandmother dancing at bat mitzvah.

Tic Tacs and Torah: My Grandmother’s Loud Devotion

Dilan Payne

I began to see her devotion not as carelessness, but as care expressed in movement, in improvisation, in insisting on presence rather than perfection.

Aviva hugging her grandmother at her bat mitzvah, wearing her tallit

My Tallit is Embroidered with Tradition

Aviva Ehrenkranz

When my grandmother took me to buy a tallit, she was helping me have the experience I deserved, the same as any Jew who is coming of age.  

Annie Katz reading Torah at the Bimah surrounded by 6 men

Finding My Voice on the Bimah

Annie Katz

When I stand in front of the Torah scroll, I want to be an inspiration for girls to step into a space that men have historically dominated. 

Rainbow collage with text reading "God of Vengance: A Drama in Three Acts By Sholom Asch

How A Scandalous Yiddish Play Inspires Me to Write Bold Theater

Meital Fried

Paula Vogel's play, Indecent, explores relationships against the backdrop of assimilation, antisemitism, and censorship. 

Topics: Theater
Colorful collage of a typewriter with stars of david in the top left corner

Writing My Own Queer Jewish Representation

Charli Duchalski

Writing is not only an easy way to share a message, but it is also an act of resistance.

Collage of colorful stars of david

There Is No “More" or “Less” Jewish: Reflections on Jewish Diversity

Murphy Slater

When we allow all members of our community to celebrate their way of being Jewish, we create a more accepting environment for everyone.

Collage of dollar bills

Three Women in Economics You Should Know

Bee Foster

Claudia Goldin, Janet Yellen, and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala shattered glass ceilings so that my generation can go further.

Collage with apples and a snake at the center

Exploring Lilith’s Complex Feminism

Maya Braiterman

As a dual symbol of protection and destruction, the ancient Lilith exists as a contradiction.

Collage of a book with a star of david on the cover

Am I a Bad Jew?

Gaby Brown

The story of Joseph’s brothers teaches us that guilt is not something to fear, but to learn from.

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Rising Voices Blog Posts." (Viewed on June 13, 2026) <https://qa.jwa.org/blog/risingvoices>.