Rabbi Joshua Stanton is the Spiritual co-Leader of East End Temple in New York and Senior Fellow of CLAL, the National Center of Learning and Leadership. Together with Rabbi Benjamin Spratt he writes a column for Religion News Service. Rabbi Benjamin Spratt is Senior Rabbi of Congregation Rodeph Sholom in New York City. Rev Kaji Dousa is Senior Pastor of Park Avenue Christian Church in New York City. Dr. Eboo Patel is founder and president of Interfaith Youth Core.
A powerful antidote to the tired narratives of demise plaguing contemporary Jewish life in favor of a stirring exploration of what Jewish life could be. --Rabbi Rick Jacobs, President, Union for Reform Judaism In making a compelling case for the vibrancy of American Jewry, Awakenings offers a long-overdue counterweight to the dire predictions about the future of the Jewish world's most important Diaspora community. Even as Rabbis Stanton and Spratt rightly celebrate Diaspora, they are keenly aware of the need to strengthen the connection between American Jews and Israel. Along with a vision of American Jewish spiritual renewal, they offer the hope of a deepening and mutually respectful relationship between the world's two largest Jewish communities. This book offers an essential roadmap to how we may maximize the unprecedented opportunities provided by a new era in Jewish history, whose implications we are just beginning to unpack. --Yossi Klein Halevi, Senior Fellow, Shalom Hartman Institute; author of New York Times bestseller A Letter to My Palestinian Neighbor Challenges us to face the truth of it all and create anew. Such nourishment for our pluralistic and struggling world! --Sister Simone Campbell, SSS, Executive Director, Network Lobby for Catholic Social Justice The future of American Judaism looks bright, contend rabbis Stanton and Spratt in their strong debut. The authors argue that the seeds of a new Jewish awakening lie with those cast to the margins of the American Diaspora because of their gender, sexual orientation, or race. Stanton and Spratt highlight historical reinventions of Judaism that created new options for religious affiliation while facilitating the continuity of tradition, such as when Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan officiated the first modern bat mitzvah and helped found one of the first Jewish community centers in the early 20th century. Emphasizing the importance of accepting marginalized Jewish people as part of this renewal, the authors tell the stories of such contemporary figures as rabbi Mike Moskowitz, whose stand against Jewish day schools' expulsion of trans students cost him his job at a synagogue, and Eleyna Fugman, who created a Jewish leadership program to boost the voices of queer Jewish people and Jewish people of color. Stanton and Spratt only summarily address the obstacles that their inclusive definitions of Judaism face, such as the impact of the Israeli rabbinate's position on the matter, but nonetheless, this nuanced portrait of the state of American Judaism proffers a cogent vision of how to revitalize the faith. This is a persuasive case to maintain a positive outlook on the future of Judaism. --Publisher's Weekly