LGBTQIA Rights

Content type
Collection

Marc Maxwell

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

This interview with Marc Maxwell documents his life as a Jewish architect and community leader, focusing on his decades of LGBTQ+ activism, volunteerism, and leadership within Boston’s Jewish institutions, and how personal relationships, privilege, and lived experience shaped his approach to advocacy and inclusion.

A New Look at RBG

In the years since her death, Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been remembered as a feminist icon and, more recently, a figure some blame for the Court's sharp rightward turn, the fall of Roe v Wade—even the decline of American democracy. In this episode of Can We Talk?, we take a new look at RBG’s legacy. Actor Michelle Azar, who brings Ginsburg to life in the one-woman show All Things Equal, talks about changing audience reactions in a moment of deep political and legal upheaval. Then, journalist and Supreme Court expert Dahlia Lithwick dissects the stories we tell about Ginsburg—from the “Notorious RBG” phenomenon to the backlash that followed her death—and explores what those narratives get right, and what they miss. Together, we dig into Ginsburg’s legal strategy, her critiques of Roe, and the enduring impact of her commitment to equality and civility.

Gladys Maged and Lorry Sorgman

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

In this December 10, 2021 interview, Gladys Maged and Lorry Sorgman reflect on their working-class Jewish upbringings, evolving identities as lesbians, and nearly five decades of activism, including founding roles in Am Tikva and the World Congress of Gay and Lesbian Jewish Organizations, as they recount efforts to create inclusive Jewish spaces and advance feminist and LGBTQ rights locally and internationally.

Sue Katz

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

In this oral history interview, Sue Katz speaks with Meirit Cohen about her life as a Jewish lesbian activist, martial artist, writer, and organizer, reflecting on her upbringing in Pittsburgh, political and social movements from the 1960s onward, international work in Israel and the United Kingdom, and her advocacy for LGBTQ elders.

Lisa Krinsky

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

On November 20, 2021, interviewer Shira Hartman recorded an oral history with Lisa Krinsky, documenting her childhood and Jewish upbringing, coming-out experience, career in social work and leadership in LGBTQ aging advocacy, intersections of Jewish identity and social justice, community activism, and reflections on family, resilience, and aging.

Susie Tanchel

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

Mitchell Israel interviewed Dr. Susie Tanchel on November 19, 2021, for the Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews project, in which she reflects on her South African upbringing, formative experiences at Brandeis University, career in Jewish education, and leadership and advocacy for LGBTQ inclusion within Jewish educational institutions.

Episode 135: LGBTQ Jews in the Federal City

Step into the history of queer Jews in Washington, DC as Nahanni tours the Capital Jewish Museum’s current exhibit, “LGBTJews in the Federal City” with curators Jonathan Edelman and Sarah Leavitt. Through artifacts, photos, and oral histories, the exhibit looks at decades of federal discrimination and the fight for equality, the AIDS epidemic and national response, and the transformation of Jewish communal life locally and nationally. Highlights include a panel from the AIDS memorial quilt, a purple, sequined gown from DC’s favorite Jewish drag queen, and a pair of rotary phones that dial up oral history clips from local LGBTQ community members. 

Helen Hull Jacobs

Winner of numerous championship victories, including the triple crown, Helen Hull Jacobs was a force to be reckoned with on the tennis court in the 1920s and 1930s. Her love for the court was only rivaled by her passion for writing, to which she dedicated the second half of her life, writing over 21 books, many about tennis.

Roberta Achtenberg becomes the first openly gay person to be confirmed by the United States senate for a political post

May 24, 1993

On May 24, 1993, Roberta Achtenberg became the first openly gay person confirmed by the United States Senate for a major political post when she was voted in by a 58-31 margin.  Achtenberg’s appointment to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development marked a historic turning point in American LGBTQ history.

Episode 129: Idit Klein on a Quarter Century of Queer Jewish Leadership

Supporting and embracing queer Jews has been Idit Klein's mission for over a quarter century. Since 2001, she has led Keshet, which is now the largest organization for LGBTQ+ Jews in America. With her departure from Keshet approaching, Idit sat down with her longtime friend Judith Rosenbaum, to reflect on her career, the impact of today's political climate on her work, and how much has changed for queer Jews in her lifetime.

Emma Goldman with green and blue multi-color stars and a megaphone

Wrestling with Identity Politics

Jess Shapiro

In some ways this “identity revolution” introduces a new type of social order.

Collage of women dancing with a rainbow background

Rhymes with Bike: Reflections from a Queer Jew

Liana Galper

Connected by a visceral understanding of one another, queer Jews are able to widen each other’s understanding of Judaism.

Episode 125: Making Gay History, the Nazi Era: Frieda Belinfante (Special Episode)

In honor of Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, we're sharing a podcast episode from Making Gay History’s current series about the Nazi era. Frieda Belinfante was a Dutch musician and underground activist who risked her life to help save hundreds of Jews from the Nazis. She’s one of several LGBTQ people whose testimonies are featured in this Making Gay History series. Check out the rest of the series at makinggayhistory.org.

Marcia Freedman

Marcia Judith Prince Freedman was an American-Israeli feminist writer, Knesset member, and advocate for women's rights who played a pivotal role in establishing Israel's feminist movement. Her activism included founding consciousness-raising groups, advocating for equal pay and reproductive rights, and challenging sexist religious laws. She also became politically involved in the United States, pushing for a new perspective on the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. 

Birth of Denise Eger, first openly gay president of the CCAR

March 14, 1960

Denise Eger, the first openly gay president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis and known for her trailblazing activism, was born on March 14, 1960. Eger’s rabbinical career spanned several decades and she notably served California’s queer Jewish community at the height of the AIDS crisis. 

2024 Highlights Photo Montage

Jewish Women Who Shaped 2024

JWA Staff

As 2024 draws to a close, the JWA team takes a moment to celebrate some of the incredible moments and achievements of Jewish women and gender-expansive people from the past year. Here are our picks for the standouts that inspired us, made us laugh, and reminded us of the power of resilience, community, and creativity.

Collage of a kippah and a rainbow

How My Kippah Affirms My Trans Identity

Murphy Slater

I feel most sure of my gender identity and presentation when it melds with my Jewish cultural identity.

Claude Cahun

Surrealist photographer Claude Cahun lived their life in a spirit of rebellion and defiance. From their precocious teenage years, defying conventional ideals of beauty and femininity with their shaven head and male attire, to their direct resistance of German occupying forces, they active worked against the suppression of liberty and freedom—a life of resistance. 

Joy Ladin cropped

Q & A with Poet Joy Ladin

Deborah Leipziger

JWA chats with poet and activist Joy Ladin about her two new books, gender transformations, and resisting tyranny.

"Moonstone Covenant" Book Cover

A Jewish Narnia Comes Alive in "The Moonstone Covenant"

Mildred Faintly

Jill Hammer's fantasy debut is an enchanting blend of female friendship, Jewish mysticism, and epic adventure. 

Charlotte Charlaque

Charlotte Charlaque was a transgender trailblazer, actress, and translator in Weimer Berlin and post-Shoah New York City. 

Elana Dykewomon

Elana Dykewomon was a poet, novelist, editor, theorist, lesbian, and cultural worker. Her lesbian and Jewish identities and commitments informed and shaped her award-winning novels and other writings, and she made significant theoretical contributions to lesbian separatism and fat liberation.

Liz Kleinrock Cropped

7 Questions For Author Liz Kleinrock

Sarah Groustra

JWA talks to author and educator Liz Kleinrock about her new book, What Jewish Looks Like, and about making Jewish communities more inclusive. 

Elizabeth Taylor, circa 1955

The Self-Mythology of Elizabeth Taylor

Sarah Jae Leiber

The film shines brightest as a catalog of one woman’s robust self-mythology, written and rewritten to protect herself from the reality of how she was perceived by the world.

Topics: Film, LGBTQIA Rights
Julie Kay Headshot

7 Questions For Julie F. Kay

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with internationally recognized human rights lawyer Julie F. Kay.

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