Spirituality and Religious Life

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.

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.

Rabbi Jill Hammer

7 Questions for Rabbi Jill Hammer

Emma Breitman

JWA sat down with Rabbi Hammer, co-founder of Beit Kohenet and of the Kohenet movement.

Anita Winer

Project
Women Whose Lives Span the Century

These two interviews trace Anita Winer’s life from her early-20th-century Jewish upbringing in Boston through marriage, family life, and mid-century social change, reflecting on identity, gender roles, religion, and the evolution of American Jewish and domestic life.

Emerson Singer Collage

Always an Asterisk: Differing Experiences With Femininity in Jewish Spaces

Emerson Singer

I left Cozumel with a newfound appreciation for my synagogue, our female clergy, and the people who have so graciously accepted my family as part of the community. 

Collage of New York City and Texas

Waking Up in Disconnect

Sarah Feldman

After living in Texas for almost eight years, I’ve learned what it means to be a Jew in my own special way. 

Shabbat candle collage

Connection and Isolation: How Shabbat Shapes My Judaism

Clio Petrulis

The centrality of Shabbat to my family has been something that made my transition to boarding school last year so difficult.

Women Mourners/Keeners

Across Jewish history, women mourners have played a central ritual role in expressions of grief—from Hebrew Bible and rabbinic literature through medieval, early modern, and modern Jewish communities.

Sparking Jewish Joy with Stephanie Butnick

In this bonus episode of Can We Talk?, Jen Richler talks to Stephanie Butnick, founder of the Jewish lifestyle newsletter GOLDA, about sparking Jewish joy through rituals, books, art—and shopping.

Elke Reva Sudin headshot

7 Questions for Fashion Designer and Artist Elke Reva Sudin

Emma Breitman

JWA sat down with visual artist and entrepreneur Elke Reva Sudin to discuss her impressive artistic and entrepreneurial pursuits.

Women in the Secular Humanistic Rabbinate

Secular Humanistic Judaism is an intellectual movement that interprets Judaism as a human-shaped and multi-faceted culture without the involvement of any supernatural entities. In the second half of the twentieth century, these intellectuals formed Secular and Humanistic Jewish communities and ultimately created the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism (IISHJ). Approximately half of the rabbis and community leaders trained and ordained by IISHJ since 1987 have been women. 

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.

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.

Merav Opher Headshot

7 Questions for Merav Opher

Deborah Leipziger

JWA sat down with Jewish astronomer Merav Opher to discuss her work on the heliosphere.

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.

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.

Father and daughter digging a hole for placenta burial

How Ritual Placenta Burial Helped Me Seed New Connections

Lucy Marshall

I unearthed the ancient Jewish tradition of burying my placenta. In the process, I cultivated new connections with my ancestors, my children, and myself.

Peace Bridge in Ontario

Straddling the US-Canadian Border as a Jew

Mara Koven-Gelman

When liberal folks hear that I am also a Canadian citizen, they assume I can return to my homeland with perceived progressive values.

Artist Evie Metz and 613 Sculpture

7 Questions For Artist Evie Metz

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with multidisciplinary artist Evie Metz about recurring motifs in her work, making the familiar unfamiliar, and 613, her new five-foot-tall pomegranate sculpture. 

Salem Section of NCJW, 1957

When Women Led Small-Town Jewish Life

Austin Reid Albanese

In mid-century Salem, Ohio, a handful of women carried Jewish life, interfaith connection, and civic leadership on their shoulders.

Collage of the Kotel with a hand touching the wall and stars around.

Praying for a Feminist Future at the Kotel

Amia Kaplun

Learning about the Women of the Wall made me realize that my discomfort at the Kotel was part of a larger, ongoing struggle for religious equity. 

Collage of Nechama Leibowitz and a torah scroll

How Nechama Leibowitz Helped Me Reclaim Torah

Gaby Brown

Nechama Leibowitz revolutionized the way Torah is studied and played a crucial role in shaping contemporary approaches to scripture.

Episode 126: In Memory of My Mother

In this special Mother’s Day episode, Nahanni interviews her mother, Emma Rous, who died this winter. They talk about how Emma’s teenage activism in a Protestant youth group influenced her politics, her conversion to Judaism in 1971, memories of her first Yom Kippur, what it was like to invent her own Jewish identity, and how Judaism eventually became her home.

Carol and Lucy Targum

L’dor Vador: A Legacy of Love

Carol Targum

A grandmother reflects on the joy, responsibility, and sacred beauty of nurturing Jewish identity across generations.

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