Foreword by Ruth Messinger
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I. The Jewish Condition
1. The Purpose of Judaism
2. The Exodus-Sinai Continuum of Jewish Life
PART II. Sinai
3. Genesis: Abraham and "the Call"
4. Exodus: Embracing the Covenant
5. Leviticus: Roadmap to a More Perfect World
6. Numbers: From Wilderness to Prophecy
7. Deuteronomy: How Central Is God?
8. Sinai Applied: Seven Core Values of the Rabbinic Tradition
PART III. Exodus and Sinai in America
9. The American Jewish Community and the Public Square
10. Jews and the Struggle for Civil Rights
11. Soviet Jewry: A Cause of Our Own
12. Protecting and Defending the State of Israel
PART IV. A New Era
13. What Is a Jewish Issue?
14. Beyond Self-Interest
15. Social Justice Takes Root
16. Reconciling Exodus and Sinai
17. Conclusion: Responding to “the Call”
Resource List of Jewish Social Justice / Community Service
Organizations
Interviews
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
Rabbi Sidney Schwarz is a social entrepreneur, an author and a
political activist. He founded and led PANIM: The Institute for
Jewish Leadership and Values for twenty-one years. He is also the
founding rabbi of Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation in
Bethesda, Maryland, where he continues to teach and lead services.
Currently, he serves as a senior fellow at Clal—The National Jewish
Center for Learning and Leadership where he is involved in a
program that trains rabbis to be visionary spiritual leaders. He is
the author of Jewish Megatrends: Charting the Course of the
American Jewish Future; Finding a Spiritual Home: How a New
Generation of Jews Can Transform the American Synagogue and Judaism
and Justice: The Jewish Passion to Repair the World.
Rabbi Sidney Schwarz is available to speak on the following
topics:
Jewish Megatrends: Charting the Course of the American Jewish
Future
Tribal vs. Covenantal Identity: Jews and the American Public
Square
Finding a Spiritual Home: Redefining the Religious Enterprise
Reaching the Jewish Community of the 21st Century: Educating for
Jewish Citizenship
Between Conscience and Solidarity
Can Social Justice Save the Jewish Soul?
Click here to contact the author.
Ruth Messinger is the president and executive director of the
American Jewish World Service (AJWS). Prior to assuming this role
in 1998, Messinger was in public service in New York City for
twenty years, including having served as Manhattan borough
president. In 1997, she became the first woman to secure the
Democratic Party's nomination for mayor. Messinger is currently a
visiting professor at Hunter College. For the past four years,
Messinger has been named the fifty most influential Jews of the
year by the Forward newspaper. She contributed to Who by Fire, Who
by Water—Un'taneh Tokef (Jewish Lights).
"One of the most accessible books written on Judaism and social
justice…. Provides the kind of compelling language and story that
can lead to a closer connection with Jewish life."
—Rabbi David Saperstein, director, Religious Action Center of
Reform Judaism
“A bold vision. Will particularly resonate with today's young Jews
who are seeking new definitions of Jewish identity and meaning that
are both uniquely Jewish and universally human. A significant
contribution for anyone who cares about the future of the Jewish
people and our imperative to repair our broken world.”
—Lynn Schusterman, president, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family
Foundation
“An original analysis of the contemporary American Jewish
condition, but, even more importantly, an exciting prescription for
a Judaism that combines a commitment to justice and righteousness
with kedusha, 'holy apartness’.”
—Rabbi Irving Greenberg, president, Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt
Foundation
“Breaks new ground. Connects the deep roots of social justice with
Jewish thought and the American experience … in a voice that
awakens and summons us. Will enable non-Jews to appreciate the
Jewish passion for freedom that we as Jews connect to equality and
justice.”
—David Cohen, cofounder, Advocacy Institute; former president,
Common Cause
“A thoughtful, important and timely book. Not only does it help to
describe and explain today’s exciting revival of social justice
activism among Jews, it is quite likely going to accelerate that
phenomenon.… Helps to redefine Judaism’s moral center in a way that
is both clear and compelling.”
—Rabbi Rachel Cowan, executive director, Institute for Jewish
Spirituality
“Provides a long awaited prophetic vision for the nexus between
Jewish tradition, culture and commitment to social justice. Rich
and nuanced … combines an informative history of Jewish activism in
the worlds of political and social action, and a persuasive reading
of Jewish texts, arguing for their relevance as a source of
guidance for Jews and for the world…. A must read.”
—David Gordis, PhD, president and professor of rabbinics, Hebrew
College, Boston
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