Vulnerability, Judaism, and Palestine: A Conversation with Rabbi Zach Fredman
Spinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
Release Date: 11/16/2023
Spinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
This episode explores how Christian clergy (in the U.S.) can connect racial justice work with challenging US empire more globally. Rev. Mike Kinman and I discuss his work in the uprisings in Ferguson; learning eyewash recipes for teargas from Palestinians; challenging the antisemitism of Christian supercessionism; and standing in interfaith movements for justice for Palestine.
info_outline Vulnerability, Judaism, and Palestine: A Conversation with Rabbi Zach FredmanSpinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
In this hour and 15 minute discussion, Dr. George speaks with Rabbi Zach Fredman about ceasefire, grief, Jewish historical trauma, and the urgency of Palestinian freedom. Questions raised include: To what extent can traditions be changed? Healed of patriarchy and ethnocentricism? And bent toward inclusive justice for everyone? How do we find the streams within our traditions that can challenge dominant models of storytelling, in which our own liberation rests on another's silence and suffering? Rabbi Zach Fredman was previously at the New Shul in NYC for 10 years, and is now the Creative...
info_outline Womanist Theology, Sensual Faith, & Centering Black Women's Joy & Healing: A Conversation with Author Lyvonne BriggsSpinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
In this rich hour of discussion with Dr. George, Lyvonne Briggs will teach spiritual practices that center womanist theology and African cosmology. She teaches with power and wisdom on topics like showing up for both your grief and your pleasure; reparations for Black folks; and men needing healing from patriarchy, too. If you are new to what the rich tradition of womanism is, Lyvonne will walk you through its legacies and its possibilites in its "4th wave." Lyvonne Briggs, MDiv, ThM, an Emmy Award winner, is a body- and sex-positive womanist preacher and speaker. She is the host of...
info_outline Spiritual Activism + Depression and Perfectionism in Gloria Anzaldúa's Writing Process: An Interview With Dr. AnaLouise KeatingSpinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
Gloria Anzaldúa is best known for creating two of the foundational texts of U.S. women-of-color feminisms: in 1981 (co-edited with Cherríe Moraga) and in 1987. But the scope of Anzaldua's body of work is much longer and larger than these two pivotal texts, too. In this interview, Dr. Kimberly George speaks with Dr. AnaLouise Keating, a professor of Multicultural Women's and Gender Studies and the premier scholar of Anzaldúa body of work and archives. Dr. Keating talks about her friendship and collaborations with Gloria. She also discusses key themes in Anzaldúa's life and work including:...
info_outline Men Learning Feminism: A Conversation with Rev. Meghan Mullarkey and Luke AbernathySpinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality
What would the world look like if more men were involved in feminist learning and real transformation? In this episode, Dr. George talks with a a married couple—Rev. Meghan Mullarkey and Luke Abernathy (a therapist)—about their journey bringing feminist learning and practice to their marriage. We talk about women being afraid to feel their own anger around patriarchy and men who want to rationalize inequality instead of face it and change it. We discuss how couples can address invisible labor in the home and what these issues have to do with larger systemic realities across gender, race,...
info_outlineIn this hour and 15 minute discussion, Dr. George speaks with Rabbi Zach Fredman about ceasefire, grief, Jewish historical trauma, and the urgency of Palestinian freedom. Questions raised include: To what extent can traditions be changed? Healed of patriarchy and ethnocentricism? And bent toward inclusive justice for everyone? How do we find the streams within our traditions that can challenge dominant models of storytelling, in which our own liberation rests on another's silence and suffering? Rabbi Zach Fredman was previously at the New Shul in NYC for 10 years, and is now the Creative Director of Temenos, a non profit which bridges spiritualty and the arts. As a musician and composer, he is the bandleader of Epichorus.