Lauren Grodstein
…and their counterparts in Israel and Gaza today.
…and their counterparts in Israel and Gaza today.
A new Broadway musical tells the story of a half-Jewish, half-gentile singing comedy group in pre-WWII Germany
“Activate: A New York Woman’s Perspective,” now at he Heller Museum at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York, explores multifaceted expressions of feminine power amidst complex and fraught socio-political dynamics tied to bodies and heritage, intimacy and otherness, sex and religion.
In her newest work, the brilliant memoir “Touching the Art,” Sycamore examines her relationship with her grandmother Gladys.
A new anniversary edition of Night Swim gives us a chance to reexamine our conversations about antisemitism, reproductive rights, and care work– ten years later.
Why would Cormac McCarthy assign Jewishness to his characters in a book so overwhelmingly Catholic?
A mother wrestles with her lullaby during wartime.
I’m waiting for the day that my body isn’t a point of discussion at all.
Four Israeli artists illustrating the victims of the October 7th tragedy.
During a Tahara, the Jewish ritual for sanctifying a body after death, we wash the body in a continuous stream of water, we engage in spacious silence, and we recite words which affirm the inherent goodness of every soul, every life an entire world.