"Fragments" is T'ruah's thought leadership journal; a place to explore the pressing questions of our fractured world through a Jewish lens, gleaning insights from Jewish texts and historical Jewish struggles for social justice. This third issue of "Fragments" explores democracy and the particular role Jews may play in building the vibrant multiracial democracy we imagine.

In the modern era, many Jews have viewed the U.S. as a unique democratic refuge. But today, anti-democratic actors are tapping into the fears of different groups of Americans in order to divide the electorate and consolidate their hold on power. They offer imagined protection for some at the expense of the safety of others, mainly racial and religious minority groups. As we prepare for a momentous election, the Jewish community is grappling with questions of power and belonging. The fact is that not all Jews have had access to democracy in the U.S., nor is there yet racial equity within the Jewish community. Our ability to protect and advance democracy will be shaped by how well we address these dynamics, internally and in our coalitions with non-Jewish allies.

Guest editor: April Rosenblum

Illustration of Grandma Nettie

GRANDMA SAYS NO!

by Jonah Canner
In a moment of such high stakes, we take heart and courage from Jonah Canner’s ode to his vibrant radical grandmother.
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Ballot box illustration

VOTING AND DEMOCRACY: One Possible Halakhic Approach

by Rabbi David Polsky
Rabbi David Polsky reflects on what Jewish tradition has to say about voting and democratic practice.
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Ladino socialist publication La Bos del Pueblo. Credit: New York Public Library.

A MULTI-ROOTED MOVEMENT: Sephardic Activists and Horizontal Alliances in the Early 20th Century

by Professor Devin E. Naar, PhD
New scholarly work on how Jews of past generations advanced groundbreaking multiracial coalition work, and what the tensions they faced — including racism within the Jewish community — say about conditions today.
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illustration by Rena Yehuda newman

A DIZZYING INVERSION AND AN URGENT PAUSE: Reading Trachtenberg in the 21st Century

by Ben Lorber
The second half of a debate across time between author Ben Lorber and Rabbi Joshua Trachtenberg about American Jews’ strategies to resist antisemitism.
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illustration by Rena Yehuda newman

Excerpt from “STOP FASCISM: Preserve Democracy” (1937)

by Rabbi Joshua Trachtenberg, PhD, with introduction by Rabbi Shirley Idelson, PhD
The first half of a debate across time between author Ben Lorber and Rabbi Joshua Trachtenberg about American Jews’ strategies to resist antisemitism.
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BEING WITH OUR PEOPLE: Fear, Courage, and Coalition

by Jennifer Margulies
Jennifer Margulies shares thoughts on her family’s life under the Christian Right in Texas and how the very coalitions that can feel unbearable can also give us life.
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CONTRASTING TRUTHS: The Aspirations and Limitations of American Democracy

by Sofi Hersher Andorsky and Aaron Dorfman
Sofi Hersher Andorsky and Aaron Dorfman make the case for Jewish investment in liberal democracy.
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CONFRONTING THE MORAL CROSSROADS: Chile’s Jews from Dictatorship to Democracy

by Maxine Lowy
Author and journalist Maxine Lowy guides us through the story of how Chilean Jews and non-Jews endured when democracy was shattered, and how, over 17 years, Chileans fought successfully to restore it.
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D is for Democracy

by Aurora Levins Morales
Take heart and courage in the words of movement elder, poet, and essayist Aurora Levins Morales.
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Just One Thing We Ask of You

by Rabbi Michelle Dardashti
Prayerful words for democracy by Michelle Dardashti.
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