Painted Pomegranates and Needlepoint Rabbis: How Jews Craft Resilience and Create Community

Painted Pomegranates and Needlepoint Rabbis: How Jews Craft Resilience and Create Community

by Jodi Eichler-Levine
Painted Pomegranates and Needlepoint Rabbis: How Jews Craft Resilience and Create Community

Painted Pomegranates and Needlepoint Rabbis: How Jews Craft Resilience and Create Community

by Jodi Eichler-Levine

Paperback

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Overview

Exploring a contemporary Judaism rich with the textures of family, memory, and fellowship, Jodi Eichler-Levine takes readers inside a flourishing American Jewish crafting movement. As she traveled across the country to homes, craft conventions, synagogue knitting circles, and craftivist actions, she joined in the making, asked questions, and contemplated her own family stories. Jewish Americans, many of them women, are creating ritual challah covers and prayer shawls, ink, clay, or wood pieces, and other articles for family, friends, or Jewish charities. But they are doing much more: armed with perhaps only a needle and thread, they are reckoning with Jewish identity in a fragile and dangerous world.

The work of these crafters embodies a vital Judaism that may lie outside traditional notions of Jewishness, but, Eichler-Levine argues, these crafters are as much engaged as any Jews in honoring and nurturing the fortitude, memory, and community of the Jewish people. Craftmaking is nothing less than an act of generative resilience that fosters survival. Whether taking place in such groups as the Pomegranate Guild of Judaic Needlework or the Jewish Hearts for Pittsburgh, or in a home studio, these everyday acts of creativity—yielding a needlepoint rabbi, say, or a handkerchief embroidered with the Hebrew words tikkun olam—are a crucial part what makes a religious life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469660639
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 10/19/2020
Series: Where Religion Lives
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 1,010,156
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.55(d)

About the Author

Jodi Eichler-Levine, Berman Professor of Jewish Civilization at Lehigh University, is author of Suffer the Little Children: Uses of the Past in Jewish and African American Children's Literature.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Eichler-Levine's compelling account of how to experience religion outside the traditional spaces of focus illuminates how American Jews create and craft a Judaism as a form of resilience, a material encounter with memory, and a physical desire for continuity. This book is testimony and witness to these lives and to these practices."—Ken Koltun-Fromm, author of Imagining the Jewish God



Taking a diligent yet delightful approach, and keeping in view her personal imbrication in her own family's ways, Jodi Eichler-Levine advances a remarkably comprehensive view of Jewish identities in the United States today. Analyzing the various ways Judaism and Jewishness can be understood in cultural, social, political, and religious contexts, she opens up new directions and reveals overlooked spaces, from the personal to the social and back."—S. Brent Rodriguez-Plate, author of A History of Religion in 51/2 Objects

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