Activism

Joan E. Biren (JEB)

Joan E. Biren, or JEB, is a photographer and filmmaker who documented lesbian life and social justice movements from the early 1970s to today. A member of the influential Furies Collective in Washington, D.C., Biren was among the first lesbian photographers to research and construct a history of lesbians in photography. 

Episode 141: The Quiet Radicalism of Judy Blume

For generations of readers, Judy Blume's novels made growing up feel less lonely. In this episode, Judith Rosenbaum talks with Mark Oppenheimer, author of a new biography of Blume, about their favorite Blume titles, what’s Jewish about her work, and why her novels are radical in ways people often overlook. Throughout the episode, listeners share what Judy Blume's books mean to them.

'Nina Is An Athlete'

'Nina Is An Athlete' Offers A Portrait of Israeli Paralympic Badminton Champion

Sarah Jae Leiber

Nina Is An Athlete succeeds at profiling an athlete struggling with how to end a career on her own terms.

Episode 140: A Jewish Iranian Expat Watches the War Unfold

It is a tense moment in the war between the United States and Israel, and Iran. A temporary ceasefire is set to expire, and it is unclear whether diplomacy will resume or violence will escalate. Roya Hakakian is a writer, journalist, and political commentator and the author of Journey from the Land of No, a memoir about growing up Jewish in Tehran during the Iranian Revolution. She and her family fled Iran for the United States in 1985. In this episode of Can We Talk?, Roya and Nahanni discuss what it’s been like for her to watch the conflict unfold, her hopes for the Iranian people, and what Western feminism can learn from Iranian women.

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.

Paula Brown Doress-Worters

Working with Paula was always a joy. She was witty, hard-working, playful, and always so thoughtful. I continue to admire how she helped so many better understand the injustices we all face by drawing from her own and others’ lived experiences. 

A New Look at RBG

In the years since her death, Ruth Bader Ginsburg has been remembered as a feminist icon and, more recently, a figure some blame for the Court's sharp rightward turn, the fall of Roe v Wade—even the decline of American democracy. In this episode of Can We Talk?, we take a new look at RBG’s legacy. Actor Michelle Azar, who brings Ginsburg to life in the one-woman show All Things Equal, talks about changing audience reactions in a moment of deep political and legal upheaval. Then, journalist and Supreme Court expert Dahlia Lithwick dissects the stories we tell about Ginsburg—from the “Notorious RBG” phenomenon to the backlash that followed her death—and explores what those narratives get right, and what they miss. Together, we dig into Ginsburg’s legal strategy, her critiques of Roe, and the enduring impact of her commitment to equality and civility.

Micaela Feldman/Mika Etchebehere

Micaela Feldman, known primarily as “Mika Etchebehere/Etchebéhère,” was a Spanish-language writer who also published in French, bearing witness to several major political events and intellectual debates of the twentieth century in Argentina and Europe. In particular, she played a prominent role in the Spanish Civil War as the captain of a revolutionary militia fighting against Francisco Franco’s and the Falange’s fascism. She rose to wider fame in 1976 with the publication of her autofiction Ma guerre d’Espagne à moi/Mi guerra de España.

Episode 137: Word of the Week: Zaftig

The word zaftig has been used to describe everyone from 1930s burlesque dancers to Marilyn Monroe to buxom bubbies. But what does it really mean? Is it only for women? And is it a compliment or an insult?
Yiddish-English dictionary editor Gitl Schaechter-Viswanath helps answer these questions in our latest "Word of the Week" episode. Comedian Judy Gold, Talmud explainer Miriam Anzovin, and writer Lizzie Skurnick also share their takes.

Gladys Maged and Lorry Sorgman

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

In this December 10, 2021 interview, Gladys Maged and Lorry Sorgman reflect on their working-class Jewish upbringings, evolving identities as lesbians, and nearly five decades of activism, including founding roles in Am Tikva and the World Congress of Gay and Lesbian Jewish Organizations, as they recount efforts to create inclusive Jewish spaces and advance feminist and LGBTQ rights locally and internationally.

Jewish Women’s Committee to End the Occupation leads its first national action

October 2, 1989

On October 2, 1989, the Jewish Women’s Committee to End the Occupation (JWCEO) led its first national action: the “Jewish Women’s Call for Peace—Days of Awe.” On this historic day, women’s groups in Ann Arbor, Berkeley, Boston, Eugene, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Montpellier, New York City, Oakland, Philadelphia, San-Francisco, Santa Cruz, Seattle, Syracuse, Toronto, Tucson, and Washington, DC, held vigils in solidarity with women’s peace groups in Israel and Palestine. 

Sara Stern-Katan

Sara Stern-Katan (1919–2001) was a Holocaust survivor, leader, and politician who played a central role in Religious Zionist movements in Poland, Germany, and the State of Israel.

Alicia Partnoy

Alicia Partnoy, a survivor of Argentina’s so-called “Dirty War” (1976-1983), is an Argentine author, activist, and scholar who lives in Los Angeles, California. Her best known work is The Little School: Tales of Disappearance and Survival, which was introduced as evidence in the trials against the perpetrators in charge of the secret detention camps in her hometown and in the South of the country. 

Sue Katz

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

In this oral history interview, Sue Katz speaks with Meirit Cohen about her life as a Jewish lesbian activist, martial artist, writer, and organizer, reflecting on her upbringing in Pittsburgh, political and social movements from the 1960s onward, international work in Israel and the United Kingdom, and her advocacy for LGBTQ elders.

Marian Swerdlow becomes New York City subway conductor

July 1, 1981

On July 1, 1981, Marian Swerdlow began training to become a New York City subway conductor. She was one of the first women to hold this position, and her time with the Transit Authority and Local 100 union led her to write Underground Woman: My Four Years as a New York Subway Conductor

Clara Lander

Understanding My Grandmother’s Legacy in a Changed World

Ahava Rosenthal

As my daughter and I walked through the museum that Clara Lander helped grow, I grappled with the meaning of her absence from the walls of this place she loved.

Topics: Art, Activism
Women's Liberation Movement Protest 1970

From ‘Bread and Roses’ to ‘Raises and Roses’

Marlo Dabareiner

It’s our responsibility as Jews, and as women, to be activists. The chain of activism that stretches back to my great-grandmother will continue with my children. 

Topics: Feminism
Gloria Steinem, 1972

Tikkun Olam, Tikkun Our Selves

Luna Romero

Gloria Steinem’s legacy teaches me that activism is both personal and collective, it's spiritual and political. 

Topics: Women's Rights
Bella Abzug at a Press Conference in Battery Park, New York, 1972, by Diana Mara Henry

Batting Bella: Becoming a Blueprint for Jewish Feminists

Madeline Gross

Bella Abzug contributed to the causes that she was passionate about, not afraid to connect her passions and “womanly emotions” to the impacts she made.

Lisa Krinsky

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

On November 20, 2021, interviewer Shira Hartman recorded an oral history with Lisa Krinsky, documenting her childhood and Jewish upbringing, coming-out experience, career in social work and leadership in LGBTQ aging advocacy, intersections of Jewish identity and social justice, community activism, and reflections on family, resilience, and aging.

Jewish Women and the Yippie Movement

The Youth International Party (YIP, or Yippie!) was best known for its role in the protests at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The Yippies, whose membership included many Jewish feminists, merged counterculture with New Left politics by staging theatrical direct actions in protest of state violence.

Susie Tanchel

Project
Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews

Mitchell Israel interviewed Dr. Susie Tanchel on November 19, 2021, for the Ga’avah: LGBTQ+ Jews project, in which she reflects on her South African upbringing, formative experiences at Brandeis University, career in Jewish education, and leadership and advocacy for LGBTQ inclusion within Jewish educational institutions.

Episode 136: How Jewish Women Shaped SNL

From "Jewess Jeans" to "Coffee Talk" to "Jacob the Bar Mitzvah Boy," Jewish women have left their mark on Saturday Night Live as cast members and as characters. In this episode of Can We Talk? we look at the evolving role of Jewish women on the show over its 50 years on TV. Original cast member Laraine Newman talks about how her Jewish identity influenced the characters she played, and how the show reflects changing attitudes about being Jewish. Also, pop culture scholar Jennifer Caplan helps us dissect some iconic sketches—some of which have aged better than others.

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