Yona Zeldis McDonough
A comic strip about going into hiding during the Holocaust: Miriam Katin’s We Are On Our Own.
A comic strip about going into hiding during the Holocaust: Miriam Katin’s We Are On Our Own.
Here’s what the Lilith team is listening to this summer.
If we support a women’s right to choose, her right to bodily autonomy, then this clearly includes her right to choose to change her body as she pleases.
Anne Burt talks to Lilith about her debut novel, The Dig, and her character’s struggle to reconcile her own ambitions while remaining loyal to her beloved, idealistic brother.
Alisha Kaplan talks to Lilith about sacrificial offerings, ritual, and her debut poetry collection.
How the novel “Swimming With Ghosts” makes waves.
One woman’s takeaways from getting “old lady breast cancer.”
Author Meryl Ain talks to Lilith about twins, bloodlines, and Jewish identity in her post-Holocaust novel, “Shadows We Carry.”
Do artists have a responsibility to address social issues? If they do, can their creativity motivate us to heal our world? Two exhibitions at the Heller Museum at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (HUC-JIR) in New York offer new artistic responses to these questions.