Jewish women and addiction • 1960s & 70s feminism roars back • Transforming life in small-town Maine • Choosing Jewish life–thus perpetually “the stranger.” • Food writing that changes opinions • Redefining Jewish art.
Gabrielle Birkner
Addiction is devastating. How women familiar to you got pulled in by opioids, meth, alcohol and more.
Sarah Seltzer
Animating it all: anger. The anger of invention, and diagnosis, and unchartered territory.
Elizabeth Michaelson Monaghan
“Food preparation plays a central role in the ritual repertoires of Jewish women. Excluded from many of the public manifestations of Jewish ritual leadership, women have played key roles in the elaboration of food rituals, and nearly all Jewish holidays, celebrations and even days of mourning are associated with particular culinary traditions.”
Sandee Brawarsky
"When people come in here expecting to see old-fashioned Jewish art, they are taken aback.”
with comments by Poetry Editor Alicia Ostriker
Melanie Weiss
Thanks largely to visionary and energetic women, vibrant community in rural Maine rises up 185 miles from the nearest kosher supermarket. Here’s how.
Emily Alice Katz
Ilana Kurshan and Amy Rose Spiegel
Amy Rose Spiegel's book No One Does It Like You lists 77 affirmations for millenial women—here are a few of Lilith's favorites.
Veiled Women on Display
Don’t Abandon “Sorry”
The Epidemic of Unscientific Anti-Vaxxism
Shtisel, on Netflix
A “Jewish Texican” Teen at the Border
“I’ll be your dissertation advisor if I can give you baths.”
An Unanticipated Birthright Effect
“Can I Borrow Your Wheelchair?”
A Feminist Defense of Barbie as She Turns 60
The Myth of the Modern Dad
Everyone Loves Someone Who’s Had an Abortion
Women at the Tick-Tock
Matchmaker, Matchmaker, Make Me a Socialist Match
A Drummer’s Bat Mitzvah •
The Disappeared Jews of Harbin, China •
Kayama Moms •
An Unusual Holocaust Curriculum •
Honeycake •
LGBTQ & Ally Teen Shabbaton Gatherings •
Life-Affirming for All, Life-Saving for Some •
Who Was Your Heroine? •
Daria Martin: Tonight the World •
Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away. •