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A child's art that says "I want to go home" with a house and a person crying and words in Spanish

God’s Children: A Haggadah Supplement for Immigrant Justice

Through this new haggadah supplement from T’ruah, bring the fight for immigration justice into your seder.  

The Other Side of the River, the Other Side of the Sea

T'ruah's haggadah helps transform the seder into a conversation about immigration, racism, workers' rights, and forced labor.

Yom HaAtzma’ut: A Resource for Educators

This resource has been created ahead of Yom HaAtzma’ut 2025 but is designed to be adaptable for year-round use, offering educational tools, programs, and texts that support ongoing learning within your community.

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Photo of the author, Cantor Michael Zoosman

Yom HaShoah: When Human Rights Become “Too Political”

by Cantor Michael Zoosman
I pledge to continue the call to recognize the sanctity of life for all human beings. I vow never to be silent in the face of oppression — no matter how “political” it may seem to some.
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Photo of the author, Rabbi Sarah Bassin

Yom HaShoah: Human Rights Require Human Enforcement

by Rabbi Sarah Bassin
We are born in the image of God, but we must accept that this God-given status exists only within the framework of human enforcement.
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Tazria-Metzora: Tweet Others as You Would Want to be Tweeted

by Dvir Cahana
When the boogeyman of the mob is demystified, we have the humanity to look even our enemy in the face as a real, breathing human soul. 
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Embodying “Never Again”: Learning the Lessons of Pesach in time for Yom HaShoah

by Serena Oberstein
The horror stories we’re hearing about Uyghur people taken in the night, being separated from their families, having their heads shaved, put on trains, interned, forced into slave labor, and systematically murdered are all too familiar to the Jewish community.
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Lessons for Democracy from the Holocaust

by Julian Zelizer
A d’var Torah for Yom HaShoah. In many respects, World War II seemed like a triumph of democracy. When the Allies defeated the Axis powers, the world celebrated that democratic nations had been victorious against fascism. On May 8, 1945, Victory Day, Americans danced in the streets and threw confetti from the rooftops to celebrate...
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