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For Times Such As These

For Times Such As These: A Radical’s Guide to the Jewish Year by Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg and Rabbi Ariana Katz, out March 19, 2024 from @wsupress!

94
posts
60
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1.5K
following

Last week the @jewishdiasporamovement was born - you might be curious how we got here -- here's the answer!

Link in my bio or on alissawise.substack.com


121
1 weeks ago


Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago


Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Some favorites from the bookshelf of the Jewish Diaspora Movement:

1. Melanie Kaye Kantrowitz “The Colors of Jews”

2. Rabbi Everett Gendler “To Be A Jew in the Diaspora: An Affirmation”
“No, all space is not the same, but from this it does not follow that there is only one proper place for religious experience and worship. With respect to the Land of Israel, it is helpful to remember that Abraham was spoken to by God outside of as well as within the land. The Torah was given in the desert. Moses, our greatest leader, never entered the land. The most influential Talmud is the Babylonian, not the Palestinian.”

3. Judith Butler “Parting Ways: Judaism and the Critique of Zionism”

4. Aurora Levins Morales “Nadie la tiene: Land, Ecology and Nationalism”

5. Shaul Magid “The Necessity of Exile”

6. Naomi Klein “We Need an Exodus from Zionism”
“Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.”

7. Rabbis Ariana Katz & Jessica Rosenberg “For Times Such as These”

8. Marc Ellis “The New Diaspora and the Global Prophetic”

Read more at: www.jewishdiasporamovement.org/diaspora


756
7
2 weeks ago

Monday, May 11 · 5pm CST · Virtual
@versobooks is bringing together Dean Spade, Autumn Brown, and R. Jessica Rosenberg to talk about the new edition of Mutual Aid — how the work has shifted from 2019 to now, the repression of Stop Cop City activists, and navigating both acute and ongoing crises.

RSVP and give now at G i v e 4 G a z a . ORG

All contributions go straight to the 4 families for food and everyday basics.

Please share widely!
DM us if you want to volunteer to do more for the families.

#MutualAid #MinneapolisFightsBack #GrassrootsOrganizing #VirtualEvent #BookDiscussion


168
4
1 months ago

Alongside the publication of the new edition of Mutual Aid, Verso will be joined by Dean Spade, Autumn Brown, and R. Jessica Rosenberg to discuss how mutual aid efforts have changed between 2019 and 2026, the repression of Stop Cop City activists, and transitioning between acute and ongoing crises.

Tune in May 11 at 5pm CST / 6pm EST – visit our blog for more details.


526
3
1 months ago

Every year on Shavuot, Jews ritualize the receiving of Torah at Sinai through many hours of study: Torah, we are taught, is meant to be wrestled with, challenged, lived, and celebrated, through digging in to the contradictions of the text and asking hard questions. For those of us marginalized in Torah and by much of the rabbinic text tradition, this practice of wrestling with Torah is what makes it possible to to read it. How do we wrestle skillfully, in ways that enhance our Jewish lives and proliferate Torah that is relevant to our times?

For decades, Professor Judith Plaskow has been one of the leading scholars and creators of feminist Jewish theology and culture. Her books Standing Again at Sinai: Judaism from a Feminist Perspective and The Coming of Lilith: Essays on Feminism, Judaism, and Sexual Ethics, 1972-2003 have shaped generations of Torah students and scholars.

Today, while women, queer and trans Jews have done incredible work fundamentally reshaping the misogyny, patriarchy and homophobia in our tradition, there is still plenty of work to do. Everyday we face renewed challenges reading Torah, including texts that condone and celebrate violence, militarism, conquest, and supremacy, while Israel continues its oppressive Jewish-supremacist regime and violent occupation.

As we prepare for Shavuot, Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg is honored to welcome Professor Judith Plaskow for a virtual conversation at Tzedek Chicago about Torah and how we read it. We will discuss ways of reading and interpreting texts and engaging with tradition in politically aligned ways. How can those of us wrestling with Torah today learn from the generations of leftist text wrestlers who come before us and are still here?

Register here: https://tzedekchicago.shulcloud.com/form/shavuot.html


71
3
1 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago


Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

Kate Poole and Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg met over a decade ago through queer community in West Philly, where they were both organizing at the intersection of wealth redistribution and liberatory Jewish practice. In 2017 they co-authored the article The New-ish Jew-ish Economy for Jewish Currents. They recently updated their article! Jewish investing cannot mean endless wealth accumulation, or sending money to a militarized state built on the violence and dispossession of Palestinians, justified by the lie that these strategies will keep our people safe. Jewish investing must mean supporting economic self-determination for all communities. That includes mutual aid, community building, repair, and rethinking what it means to create safety—together.


77
1
2 months ago

A seder is a ritual of storytelling: the Exodus story, overlaid and interwoven with stories of our lives and times. How do we meaningfully engage with the Exodus story year after year, and discern what stories from this year are ours to tell? How do we craft a seder ritual that not only tells stories, but shows and feels our stories, and practices, living into transformative stories?

Join Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg for an interactive workshop to reflect on Maggid, on story, and prepare for Pesach.

NOTE: This will be a two hour session, with 90 minutes of presentation and discussion, and the last 30 minutes for a Q&A about seder planning and leading questions. If you are leading a seder for the 1st or 100th time, looking for a charoset recipe or a salt water themed poem, join us!


70
2
2 months ago


Block by Block, Heart by Heart
Sacred Care Amid Uncertainty

🗓 February 26, 2026 · 10:00–11:30am PST

When acclaimed filmmaker Wim Wenders suggested that art should not be political, and when spiritual teachers encourage detachment and equanimity, a deeper question arises:

What happens when “neutrality” protects injustice?

This gathering challenges the modern myth that inner peace alone is enough. Across ancient traditions—from Confucian ethics to Buddhism to the Egyptian principle of Ma’at—spiritual integrity has always been inseparable from ethical action. Personal healing is not a substitute for collective responsibility.

In this time of repression and rupture, we are witnessing something else emerge: neighborhood networks, quiet care, block-by-block organizing rooted in land, lineage, and relationship. Not reaction, but steady devotion to one another.

Together, we will explore:

* How trauma-informed care, spiritual grounding, and organizing sustain one another
* How understanding state violence as historical—not isolated—changes our response
* How to stay present with grief without collapsing into despair
* What mycelial organizing teaches us about resilient, relational power

This is a conversation about thinking smaller, closer, and more connected. About blending spiritual practice with movement practice. About remembering that care begins near—and grows outward.

Guided by Lyla June, Kaira Jewel Lingo, Jessica Rosenberg, and Rae Abileah.

Let us gather not to escape the world
but to learn how to stay with it, together.

Link for event in bio as well as
https://scienceandnonduality.com/event/block-by-block-heart-by-heart/


71
1
3 months ago

Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg leading song at one of many vigils in Minneapolis tonight after ICE murdered Alex Pretti z”l


724
6
4 months ago

We are reeling from and heartbroken by the horrific murder of Alex Jeffrey Pretti, may his memory be a blessing. This message from Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg of Minneapolis that was recorded one day ago stands as a reminder of what we are doing and must do together in communities across this country. We are so grateful for Rabbi Jessica and our other MN members’ leadership and radical hospitality in this time. As Rabbi Jessica says: We keep us safe. #ICEOutOfMN


1.2K
5
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

What’s happening in Minneapolis?

Federal forces with many guns and weapons and very little training are hunting and kidnapping my neighbors. Not just immigrant neighbors, literally every Black and Brown person in the Twin Cities, because the racial profiling is real and rampant.

They point guns and shoot guns, and eagerly deploy pepper spray, they ram their cars into people.They are openly racist, misogynist, homophobic and transphobic to all of the people they come into contact with.

They are holding three Oglala Sioux tribal members hostage at Fort Snelling, a concentration camp that held 1600 Dakota people captive in 1862-1863.

“When the Oglala Sioux Tribe requested more information concerning this matter, federal officials told us that the Tribe could access that information if we entered an immigration agreement with (ICE) and the DHS. The Tribe does not intend to enter into an immigration agreement with ICE of Homeland Security.”

—Oglala Sioux Tribe President- Frank Star Comes Out

Everyone, literally every single person I know, is showing up in countless ways:

People doing ice watch patrols in cars, on bikes, on foot, and from home, pre-dawn until late at night, to provide warning, witness, documentation, support.

They’re trying their hardest to intimidate us, they’ve shown us again and again that they can and will hurt us, and everyone is still continuing to show up.

School patrols every morning, and at recess (if the students (the ones who are actually going to school) are allowed to be outside, if there hasn’t been tear gas deployed within a few blocks of them), and at dismissal in afternoon. And, still, the students are organizing walk outs.

Rides to and from work and the laundromat. Grocery deliveries. Organizing food and diaper drives. Protesting, and organizing, and offering free acupuncture, and helping elders get on signal, and nightly noise demos outside their hotels, and, and, and...so many things. And all of it in 10-20° on ice rink sidewalks.

What can you do for Minneapolis right now?
Donate to my neighborhood GoFundMe (link in bio)

(Continued in comments)


118
1
4 months ago

pls register at the link in our bio! The workshop will happen during the first hour of our chanukah market (in a separate room).

Market: 4-7pm
Workshop: 4-5pm
Klezmer: 5-7pm

accordion art by @noaheisac


114
6 months ago

pls register at the link in our bio! The workshop will happen during the first hour of our chanukah market (in a separate room).

Market: 4-7pm
Workshop: 4-5pm
Klezmer: 5-7pm

accordion art by @noaheisac


114
6 months ago


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