
Read: Coming Home
At a time of year when many of us travel, this prayer urges the God of our ancestors for safe passage home.
At a time of year when many of us travel, this prayer urges the God of our ancestors for safe passage home.
Rabbi Jen Gubitz offers a healing prayer for the United States of America.
On the eve of American Independence Day, Rabbi Ayelet Cohen’s poem calls on all Americans — and people everywhere — to strive to be their best selves.
Rabbinical student Koach Baruch Frazier offers an inspirational chant that blends a traditional morning blessing with a folk staple.
This meditation on the meaning of freedom by an incoming rabbinical student asks each of us to “remove the shackles of one another.”
This original ritual enables an individual to mark a gender (or any major life) transition surrounded by friends, family and community.
This mediation asks us to imagine ourselves walking in the desert under a night sky, looking up at a canopy of stars.
It’s revelatory to hear the blessings for reading the Torah and haftarah recited in feminine God language.
Sivan Rotholz’s poem for Shavuot imagines a different kind of harvest, one where “we reap and reap but know not what or whether we sow.”