Jewish History

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Exploring My Latin Jewish Roots Through the The Jews of the Americas Fellowship

Deborah Leipziger

Brandeis University's Jews of the America's Fellowship has prepared me to explore themes of migration, the environment, and the arrival of my Italian and German grandparents to Brazil.

Beejhy Barhany Headshot

7 Questions for Beejhy Barhany

Emma Breitman

JWA sat down with Beejhy Barhany, chef, author, cultural bridge-builder, and owner of New York's Ethiopian-Israeli restaurant, Tsion Cafe.

Topics: Food, Jewish History
Song of the Blue Bird

Review: 'The Song of the Blue Bird'

Zia Saylor

The remarkable gift of this biblical trilogy, carefully crafted by Goldenberg, centers on its applicability and relevance to present struggles.

Episode 140: A Jewish Iranian Expat Watches the War Unfold

It is a tense moment in the war between the United States and Israel, and Iran. A temporary ceasefire is set to expire, and it is unclear whether diplomacy will resume or violence will escalate. Roya Hakakian is a writer, journalist, and political commentator and the author of Journey from the Land of No, a memoir about growing up Jewish in Tehran during the Iranian Revolution. She and her family fled Iran for the United States in 1985. In this episode of Can We Talk?, Roya and Nahanni discuss what it’s been like for her to watch the conflict unfold, her hopes for the Iranian people, and what Western feminism can learn from Iranian women.

Bernice and Israel Kazis

Project
General

Rabbi Israel J. Kazis and Bernice Kazis reflect on Rabbi Kazis’s life and career in Boston’s Jewish community, including his leadership at Temple Mishkan Tefila, his interfaith and civic engagement, his wartime service, and their shared roles in religious, educational, and community initiatives.

Episode 139: Inheriting Holocaust Memory

What does it mean to be a third-generation descendant of Holocaust survivors? Jen reflects on her grandparents' experiences in the Holocaust - the ones they shared and the ones they didn't - and her responsibility to learn about and share them with her children. She also talks to Rachael Cerrotti, creator of "We Share the Same Sky," a podcast about her journey tracing her grandmother's Holocaust survival story. Together, they explore how our family stories help us understand our own lives, and how we carry the past into the present and the future.

Amy Levy, January 1889

Who Owns a Story? Uncovering the Archives of Amy Levy

Zia Saylor

In November 2025, the University of Cambridge purchased and promptly unsealed the previously private papers of Anglo-Jewish author Amy Levy.

Ida Meshoulam

Project
Women Whose Lives Span the Century

In this oral history interview, Ida Meshoulam recounts her childhood in a Jewish community in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, her family’s migration to Palestine in the 1930s, her marriage and life in Tel Aviv and the early years of Israel, and her decades of community service, family life, and cultural engagement before eventually returning to the United States after more than forty years in Israel.

Jewish Women’s Committee to End the Occupation leads its first national action

October 2, 1989

On October 2, 1989, the Jewish Women’s Committee to End the Occupation (JWCEO) led its first national action: the “Jewish Women’s Call for Peace—Days of Awe.” On this historic day, women’s groups in Ann Arbor, Berkeley, Boston, Eugene, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Montpellier, New York City, Oakland, Philadelphia, San-Francisco, Santa Cruz, Seattle, Syracuse, Toronto, Tucson, and Washington, DC, held vigils in solidarity with women’s peace groups in Israel and Palestine. 

Sara Stern-Katan

Sara Stern-Katan (1919–2001) was a Holocaust survivor, leader, and politician who played a central role in Religious Zionist movements in Poland, Germany, and the State of Israel.

Galinka Ehrenfest

Galinka Ehrenfest, born in Estonia but raised in the Netherlands, was the chief originator, designer, and illustrator behind “ El Pintor,” a collective that created beautiful and imaginative children’s books published in the Netherlands during World War II. 

Yiddish homework

Undzere mame-loshn: Feminist Yiddishisms

Susannah Abel-Zucker

Yiddishism is marked by its foremothers, like Beyle Schaechter-Gottesman and Adrienne Cooper, and the women who keep it alive today.

Topics: Jewish History
Arielle Zaytsev Headshot

Meet Arielle Zaytsev, the Director Behind 'Ras(Putin)' a Gay Reimagining of Russian History

Sarah Jae Leiber

Playwright and actor Arielle Zaytsev's imaginative new play imagines Grigori Rasputin and Vladimir Putin as lovers.

Maya Erdelyi Headshot

7 Questions for Animator Maya Erdelyi

Emma Breitman

JWA sat down with award-winning animator and artist Maya Erdelyi to discuss her career and recent short film, Anyuka.

Topics: Art, Media, Holocaust

Episode 133: An Israeli Trauma Therapist on Healing After October 7

On October 9, 2023, two days after the Hamas attack, Israeli trauma therapist Merav Roth visited survivors of Kibbutz Be’eri in the hotel they had been evacuated to. Some had seen family members murdered; others were raped or fled homes that were set on fire. Merav stayed and worked with them for weeks. She also helped organize hundreds of therapists to provide emergency aid to survivors. For the past two years, she has continued to work with survivors, with the families of hostages, and with hostages released in every round of agreements—including the most recent one. In this episode of Can We Talk?, Merav describes how some of the hostages coped in captivity, what she's hearing from Palestinian colleagues in Gaza, and what long-term recovery from trauma can look like. This episode contains descriptions of violence.

Episode 132: Two Years Later

Two years after the October 7 attacks by Hamas, we speak with family members of Vivian Silver and Hayim Katsman, Israeli peace activists who were murdered that day. Hayim’s mother Hannah Wacholder Katsman and Vivian’s son Yonatan Zeigen share how they are carrying on their legacies.

Episode 131: Together in Manzanar: A Japanese Jewish American Story

In the spring of 1942, at the height of World War II, Elaine Buchman Yoneda became the only Jewish woman on record to be imprisoned in an American concentration camp. Manzanar was one of the detention centers—commonly known as Japanese internment camps—where the US government imprisoned 120,000 people of Japanese descent, the majority of whom were American citizens, during the war. Elaine spent ten months in Manzanar, along with her Japanese-American husband, Karl, and their 3-year-old son, Tommy. In this episode of Can We Talk?, Tracy Slater, author of Together in Manzanar, describes the bleak living conditions in the camp, the tensions that festered among the prisoners, and how the Yonedas became targets of violence. She also talks about how the anti-immigrant and racist policies of the time tore families apart, and how those same forces are reemerging today.

Hannah Lupton Reinhard Headshot

7 Questions for Hannah Lupton Reinhard

Emma Breitman

JWA sat down with painter, Hannah Lupton Reinhard, to discuss her vibrant portraits studded with Swarovski crystals.

Roza Shabad-Gawronska

A pediatrician trained in Germany and Russia, specializing in the care of infants and mothers, Roza Shabad-Gawronska was president of the OZE/TOZ (Jewish Health Care Society) in Vilna on the eve of World War II. In the Vilna ghetto, she established all the medical and medico-social institutions for young children, including the orphanage and day care center. She was assassinated with the children of the orphanage in September 1943.

Bianca Eshel-Gershuni

Bianca Eshel-Gershuni (1932-2020) was a pioneering Israeli sculptor and jewelry designer known for challenging artistic conventions and redefining the boundaries between craft and fine art. In contrast to the dominant minimalist, conceptual, and abstract tendencies of her time, her work proposed an aesthetic of abundance—a profusion of materiality, color, narrativity, and personal expression—paving the way for generations of artists exploring gender, kitsch, and popular culture.

Birth of Florence Mendheim, New York City librarian and undercover spy for the American Jewish Congress

January 13, 1899

In the wake of Adolf Hitler’s terrifying ascent to power in 1933 Germany, Florence Mendheim, a New York City librarian, went undercover as a spy, infiltrating the Nazi-associated “Friends of New Germany” club and reporting to the American Jewish Congress. 

Gabriele Tergit

Rising to prominence as a journalist in Weimar-era Berlin, Gabriele Tergit, née Elise Hirschmann (1893–1982), was an important chronicler of German-Jewish life. In her journalistic writings and novels, Tergit wrote biting social satires, sweeping panoramic novels, and lucid, hard-hitting commentaries on current events. A liberal whose writings reveal her strong commitments to social justice, women’s rights, and humanism, Tergit was forced to flee Germany in 1933 and settled permanently in London in 1938.

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