Religious Life
Making History in the Cantorate and the Rabbinate
Apropos of recent conversations on Jewesses With Attitude about diversity and multi-ethnic identities, nine years ago today, Angela Warnick Buchdahl was invested as the first Asian-American cantor.
Happy Jewish American Heritage Month!
What
connects the Statue of Liberty with Emma Lazarus? Susan Sontag with Gilda
Radner? Patriotism with labor protests? Musical theatre and domestic ritual
with potato kugel and halvah? You guessed it: JEWISH AMERICAN HERITAGE!
The American Jewess: Religious Observance in 1896
by Rebecca Honig Friedman. Cross-posted on the Jewess blog.
Some of the articles we're finding in our look at The American Jewess archives seem
surprisingly contemporary (19th century language aside), yet a closer look
reveals the more subtle points of contrast between how we approach particular
issues now vs. then.
Midwives, Oranges, and Matzah Frisbee?!
With Passover fast approaching, now is a perfect time to think about the many roles of courageous women in historical and contemporary quests for freedom.
New Book: Leveling the Playing Field
"Imagine how much stronger Jewish organizations would be if women truly shared leadership with men," says Shifra Bronznick, co-founder of the national non-profit, Advancing Women Professionals and the Jewish Community (AWP). Wouldn't it be nice if we no longer needed to imagine this?
Resource Round-up for a Day of Identity Play
In the spirit of Purim, the spirit of spring, and the spirit of the real and its opposites, here are some cool resources to celebrate your day of identity play. Purim Sameach!
Jewess gender bender, Molly Picon, in "Yidl Mit'n Fiddle"
Queen Esther and Bella Abzug: Costumes, Leadership, and Identity
Chained Wives Sentenced to Marriage
A few years ago, I saw the Israeli film Sentenced To Marriage which documents the stories and experiences of agunot, Jewish women whose husbands refuse to grant them a get (divorce contract) leaving them as "chained wives." It was rather sobering to learn about these women (religious and secular alike) whose self-determination is trumped by oppressive men, and falls prey to the less-than-sympathetic judgments of the rabbinical high court.
Be happy, it's Adar!
Happy Adar, everyone. Get your costumes ready, give the groggers a preparatory whirl, and pre-heat your hamantashen-baking ovens, because Purim is coming! (Well, actually, not until next month, since this is a Jewish leap year, with two months of Adar).
Courage and Dissent: The Work of Irshad Manji
I first heard the word "Refusenik" applied to Israelis who refuse to serve in the Israeli Defense Force. Then I heard it in relation to Jewish citizens of the former Soviet Union who were refused permission to emigrate. I learned the word in a third context -- "Muslim Refusenik" -- a few years ago, when I heard Irshad Manji speak at my college. Ms. Manji is a Canadian lesbian Muslim feminist.
Positioning Our Activism, Getting the Work Done
My friends and I often talk about how our religious and activist identities interconnect when, at times, they seem to be at odds. I've been thinking about this while reading some of the essays in a provocative new anthology entitled Righteous Indignation: A Jewish Call for Justice.




