Pamela Nadell: Our American Jewish Matriarchs 6:30 PM EST Purchase the
book here! Abigail Franks was pressing for the modernization of
American Judaism even before George Washington set up camp at Valley
Forge. A century later, Rebecca Gratz took action, establishing the
first Hebrew Sunday school. Not long after, Rosa Sonneschein founded
the magazine The American Jewess, which echoed the rising cries for
emancipation from the kitchen. As Jews poured into the US from Russia,
Germany, Spain and the Ottoman Empire, they reinvented what it meant
to be Jewish and Jewish women reinvented what it meant to be female
leading strikes, creating social service organizations, steering a
feminist movement and seizing major roles in government. Pamela
Nadell, author of America's Jewish Women: A History from Colonial
Times to Today, winner of the National Jewish Book Award, will bring
these women to life and talk about how Jewish women found their power,
and in the process, changed not only their own destinies, but those of
their daughters, their community and the nation. Pamela S. Nadell
holds the Patrick Clendenen Chair in Womens and Gender History at the
American University. She is the author of Women Who Would Be Rabbis: A
History of Womens Ordination 18891985. In conversation with Rabbi
Rachel Ain, Rabbi of Sutton Place Synagogue.
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16/03/2021 Last update