PODCAST · education
The Pluralist Podcast - with Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg
by Orly Erez-Likhovski and Josh Weinberg
Where Israel’s hardest questions meet Jewish values.This podcast brings Israeli lived reality and Diaspora perspective into honest conversation about religion and state, democracy, pluralism, and Jewish responsibility. Hosted by IRAC Executive Director and attorney Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg, Vice President for Israel and Reform Zionism at the Union for Reform Judaism, each episode creates space for thoughtful dialogue — without slogans, and without simplifications.
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Controversy & Conflict in One Kippah: A Conversation with Dr. Alex Sinclair
In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, we speak with educator and author Dr. Alex Sinclair about a moment that quickly went viral — when he was detained for wearing a kippah stitched with both Israeli and Palestinian flags, only to have it returned with the Palestinian flag cut out.But this conversation goes far beyond one incident.Together, we explore what it means to love Israel honestly at a time when many are struggling with the gap between their values and the actions of the state — and what it looks like to hold onto a vision of a more just, pluralistic future.In this episode:What actually happened in the café — and why it resonated so widelyThe challenge of being a liberal Zionist in this momentThe line between criticism, loyalty, and responsibilityWhat gives hope, even nowLearn more from Alex Sinclair:📘 Perfect Enemy (novel):http://alexjsinclair.com/perfectenemy📘 Loving the Real Israel:https://a.co/d/06Ookd4H📝 Alex’s original Facebook post:https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18eLhedZ5v/?mibextid=wwXIfr📰 Jerusalem Post article:https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-894260📰 HAARETZ article:https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2026-04-26/ty-article-opinion/.premium/a-kippa-with-israel-and-palestine-flags-got-me-detained-this-is-why-i-wear-it/0000019d-ca74-d11b-a7df-ef7e1aff0000?utm_source=App_Share&utm_medium=iOS_Native
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Israel at 78: The Challenge of Memorial and Celebration
As Israel marks 78 years of independence, the transition from Yom HaZikaron to Yom HaAtzmaut feels more complicated than ever. In this episode, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg explore how Israelis and Jews around the world are grappling with grief, identity, and the challenge of celebration in a year shaped by war, loss, and deep political tension. Together, they ask: what does it mean to mark independence when so much feels unresolved—and how do we hold onto hope anyway?IN THIS EPISODE· The emotional transition from Remembrance Day to Independence Day, especially since October 7· 1 year since the Ra’anana synagogue Pogrom and what it reveals about Israeli society· The absence of accountability—and its impact on national mourning, reclaiming Zionism, the Israeli flag, and the Declaration of Independence· State Independence Day ceremony vs. alternative torch-lighting in Tel Aviv· How to stay connected and deepen engagement in a time of tension· Why “peace” must return to the conversation—and what that could look like today
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After 16 Years: What Hungary Can Teach Israel and America | Peter Arvai
After 16 years of democratic backsliding in Hungary, something shifted.In this episode, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg speak with Hungarian public figure and activist Peter Arvai about what it actually felt like to live through the erosion of democratic institutions—and what changed in the recent elections that led to a dramatic political shift.This conversation goes beyond Hungary. It asks whether similar trajectories in Israel and the United States can be reversed, and what conditions make that possible.IN THIS EPISODE:How democratic systems are gradually weakened from withinWhat daily life feels like under long-term political erosionWhy change seemed impossible—and what made people believe againThe role of moral “breaking points” in political transformationAs Israel and the U.S. approach critical elections, this conversation offers a grounded look at what it takes not just to defend democracy—but to rebuild it.About the GuestPeter Arvai is a Hungarian public figure and longtime activist in civil society, Jewish communal life, and efforts to promote pluralism and minority rights. He has worked in both the financial sector and academia and has been deeply engaged in Hungary’s political and civic landscape, including service in local government in Budapest. He brings a firsthand perspective on democratic erosion—and what it takes to challenge it. Peter is Vice-president of the Szim Salom Progressive Jewish Community, member of the MAZSIHISZ general assembly, participates in the work of several international Jewish organizations (ARZENU), and a board member of the European Union of Progressive Judaism (EUPJ).
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When Showing Up Is Dangerous with Rabbi Dana Sharon
In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg speak with Rabbi Dana Sharon of Rabbis for Human Rights about the rising reality of settler violence in the West Bank.Dana shares her experience on the ground, providing protective presence to Palestinian communities facing increasing violence and displacement. She describes how these incidents are unfolding, why they are increasing, and the risks faced by those who choose to show up.This conversation takes place at a difficult moment — during ongoing war, fear, and deep polarization. But it is also a moment that calls for clarity about values and responsibility.As we approach Pesach, this episode reflects on the transition from vulnerability to power — and what it means to act on Jewish values in that reality.In this episodeWhat settler violence looks like on the groundWhy incidents are increasing in recent monthsThe risks faced by those who choose to show upWhat responsibility looks like in a violent reality
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When Fear and Hate Rise: How we Confront Racism Together
In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg speak with Samah Darwish, Director of IRAC’s Racism Crisis Center, and Yolanda Savage-Narva, Vice President for Racial Equity, Diversity and Inclusion at the Union for Reform Judaism. At a time marked by war in Israel and growing fear within Jewish communities in the United States, this conversation explores how racism, extremism, and polarization are reshaping our societies. From legal advocacy and policy change to public awareness and shared society work, Samah and Yolanda offer a grounded, values-driven perspective on what it takes to confront racism today. This is a cross-ocean conversation about responsibility, leadership, and the challenge of holding onto democratic values even in moments of fear.IN THIS EPISODEHow racism is rising in Israel and the United States during times of crisisThe work of IRAC’s Racism Crisis Center supporting victims and shaping policyWhy fear and trauma can deepen division — and how to respondWhere hope comes from: small victories, shared society, and everyday actionAbout the guests:Samah Darwish is the Director of IRAC’s Racism Crisis Center, leading efforts to combat racism in Israel through legal advocacy, policy engagement, and public education. Yolanda Savage-Narva is Vice President for Racial Equity, Diversity and Inclusion at the Union for Reform Judaism, where she leads work on racial justice and belonging in North American Jewish life.
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Rabbi Liz Hirsch: The Fight for Women’s Rights in the U.S. and Israel
Women’s rights are facing new challenges in both Israel and the United States.In this episode of Pluralist: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg speak with Rabbi Liz P.G. Hirsch, CEO of Women of Reform Judaism, about the fight for gender equality, religious pluralism, and democratic values across the Jewish world.Drawing on her long-standing connection to Israel, Liz reflects on the tensions many progressive Jews feel today: how to remain deeply connected to Israel while confronting policies that challenge the egalitarian values many in the Jewish world hold dear.Together, they explore how women’s leadership, cross-ocean partnerships, and honest conversations can strengthen the fight for equality across the Jewish world.IN THIS EPISODE• The current challenges facing women’s rights in Israel and the United States• The growing phenomenon of women’s exclusion from the public sphere in Israel• Why progressive Jewish voices remain deeply connected to Israel despite political tensions• How organizations like WRJ and IRAC are working together to defend equality and democracyAbout the guestRabbi Liz P.G. Hirsch is the CEO of Women of Reform Judaism (WRJ), representing tens of thousands of Reform Jewish women across North America and advocating for gender equality, Jewish leadership, and social justice.
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Purim in Real Time: Israel, Iran, and Holding Complexity
As Israel faces a new phase of war with Iran, daily life has again become defined by sirens, shelters, and uncertainty.In this special Purim episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez Likhovski (Israel Religious Action Center) and Rabbi Josh Weinberg (URJ / ARZA) reflect on what it means to navigate a complex and painful moment — from both sides of the ocean.This conversation is not geopolitical analysis. Instead, it models how Reform Jewish leaders think, wrestle, and remain grounded in Jewish values during moments of crisis.Recorded during Purim — with the possibility of sirens interrupting the conversation — the episode explores how Jewish tradition, leadership, and moral responsibility intersect when the world feels unstable.In this episode• What daily life in Israel looks like right now — sirens, shelters, and exhaustion• How American Jews are experiencing the moment from afar• How to navigate a complicated geopolitical situation when trust in leadership is low• Why the story of Purim lands differently in the middle of war• What Jewish tradition teaches about power, fear, and responsibilityAt a moment when many voices are shouting certainty, this conversation offers something different: honest wrestling with complexity.
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Inside the Struggle for Equality at the Western Wall
For generations, Jews around the world have faced Jerusalem in prayer.Now, a bill in Israel’s Knesset could give the Chief Rabbinate the power to define which prayer is “acceptable” at the Western Wall — and potentially criminalize egalitarian worship.In this clip from The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez Likhovski and Josh Weinberg discuss:• Why dismissing this bill as “just politics” is dangerous• What message it sends to liberal Jews worldwide• Why the Kotel is more than a plaza — it’s the symbolic heart of Jewish peoplehood• And what Israelis and Diaspora Jews can do nowAt a time of rising antisemitism globally — and unprecedented support from Diaspora communities for Israel — this debate raises a deeper question:Is Israel the homeland of all Jews?🎧 Watch or listen the full episode and share it with a friend📩 Send a letter to your representative: https://arza.org/send-an-email-to-your-local-consulate/
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Crime, Policy, and Responsibility: Inside Israel’s Arab Violence Crisis with Lama Yassin
Violence in Arab communities in Israel has reached unbearable levels — and many people are asking: what is actually happening? In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg sit down with Lama Yassin of The Abraham Initiatives to unpack the rise in violence in Arab society, the policy failures behind it, and what would be required to reverse it. This is a conversation about policing, governance, shared society, and whether Israel is living up to its democratic commitments. In this episode, we discuss: • What daily life looks like under persistent violence in Arab towns and cities • The dramatic gap in murder-solving rates between Jewish and Arab citizens of Israel • The dual reality of over-policing and under-policing • Poverty, land shortages, and structural neglect • What changed under previous governments — and what reversed under the current one • Why this crisis is not cultural — but policy-driven If you want to better understand the systemic roots of violence in Arab communities — and what can realistically be done — this episode offers clarity, data, and lived experience. ▶️ Watch, listen, and join the conversation. Subscribe and share to help expand thoughtful discussions about Israel, democracy, and Jewish-Arab partnership. #Israel #ArabCommunities #IsraeliDemocracy #SharedSociety #PluralistPodcast
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Our Hearts Are in the East: The War, Israeli Democracy & the U.S.–Israel Relationship
War. Democracy. Relationship.In this special episode of The Pluralist Podcast, we share an edited conversation recorded live at the Religious Action Center’s Consultation of Conscience conference in Washington, D.C.Moderated by Daryl Messinger and featuring Orly Erez-Likhovski (IRAC), Rabbi Josh Weinberg (ARZA), and Michael Koplow (Israel Policy Forum), this panel wrestles with the evolving U.S.–Israel relationship in the shadow of war and growing democratic strain.How are Israel’s internal political battles affecting its relationship with American Jewry?What responsibility do American Jews have — and what influence do they actually hold?How do we remain in relationship when disagreement feels sharp and generational divides widen?This episode opens up a conversation that often happens in leadership rooms and brings it to you.The Pluralist exists to make these tensions speakable — and to strengthen the relationship between Israel and Diaspora Jewry through honesty, accountability, and shared responsibility.▶️ Watch, listen, and join the conversation.Subscribe to The Pluralist Podcast, share this episode, and help keep thoughtful conversations about Israel, Judaism, and democracy going.
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Separate Fate or Shared destiny? Haredi Life in the Jewish State
Haredi society. Shared responsibility. Israeli democracy.In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg take on one of the most sensitive and misunderstood questions in Israeli society today: the place of Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) society in a shared Jewish and democratic state.Sparked by a recent tragedy in an unsupervised childcare setting, the conversation moves beyond headlines to examine deeper questions of power, accountability, and belonging. What happens when a community holds significant political power but feels alienated from state institutions? How should a democracy balance religious autonomy with public safety, equality, and shared civic obligations?Drawing on legal advocacy, Jewish history, and lived experience in Israel and the Diaspora, this episode insists on dignity without demonization — and pluralism with responsibility.▶️ Watch, listen, and join the conversationSubscribe to The Pluralist Podcast, share this episode, and help keep thoughtful conversations about Israel, Judaism, and democracy going.
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The Voice of the Next Generation: Young Reform Jews on Israel and Zionism
What does it mean to grow up Jewish when the only Israel you’ve ever known is a Netanyahu-era Israel — and October 7 made everything harder?In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg listen to three young Reform Jewish leaders — Tamara Upfall, Daniel Block, and Blake Ziegler — as they reflect on Israel, campus life, peer pressure, and identity in a moment that leaves little room for nuance.These voices are not walking away from Israel. They are wrestling with how to hold Jewish peoplehood, Zionism, democracy, grief, and empathy at the same time — often feeling caught between generations and pushed to choose sides.This conversation is about listening, bridging generational gaps, and staying in relationship when it’s hardest.🔔 Subscribe to The Pluralist Podcast for thoughtful conversations on Israel, Judaism, and Jewish peoplehood — and share this episode with someone who cares about Israel’s future.
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Israel's Legal Coup is Back in Full Force: Orly & Josh
What does it mean to stand with Israel without looking away?In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg take on one of the hardest questions facing Jews today:How do we hold deep commitment to Israel while speaking honestly about the actions of its government?While much of the world has been focused on war, grief, and recovery after October 7, Israel’s Knesset has quietly returned to an agenda that threatens democratic guardrails — not loudly, not dramatically, but steadily.From inside Israel’s parliament and from the perspective of Reform Zionism in North America, this conversation explores:- The renewed push to weaken key democratic institutions, including the Attorney General- Legislative efforts targeting civil society, independent media, and academic freedom- How the judicial overhaul is advancing in quieter, more incremental ways- Why accountability for October 7 is a democratic necessity, not a political attack- What real resistance looks like today — in the courts, in Knesset committees, and in civil societyOrly draws on her work leading the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), offering an inside view of how democratic defense actually happens: through legal filings, position papers, and relentless presence behind the scenes.Josh gives voice to what many in the Diaspora are feeling — the pull between solidarity and alarm, loyalty and moral responsibility.This is not a conversation about abandoning Israel.It’s about protecting the democratic foundations that make Israel worth standing with.If these conversations matter to you, please subscribe.Subscriptions help this podcast grow and reach people who are trying to stay engaged — without denial or despair.
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Marc Dollinger: Navigating Antisemitism, Anti-Zionism & Campus Politics After October 7
What happens when anti-Zionism and antisemitism blur together—and the people most affected are left to navigate the fallout alone?In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski (Executive Director of IRAC) and Rabbi Josh Weinberg (URJ Vice President for Israel & Reform Zionism, Director of ARZA) are joined by Marc Dollinger, Professor of Jewish Studies at San Francisco State University, for a deeply human conversation about life on campus after October 7.Drawing on more than two decades of teaching—and lived experience on one of the most politically charged campuses in the United States—Professor Dollinger reflects on what it means to defend nuance in environments that increasingly punish it.“At one university, I was labeled a self-hating leftist Jew,” he recalls. “And after a 400-mile drive north, I arrived in San Francisco as a right-wing Zionist colonial conspirator.” The journey between those two labels, he explains, is not just personal—it reveals how easily complex identities are flattened into caricatures.→ Support IRAC’s work for religious freedom, democracy, and equality in Israel:https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/PluralistPodcast→ Sign up for Orly’s weekly updates from Israel:https://www.irac.org/sign-up→ Get Josh’s newsletter on Israel and Reform Zionism:https://cloud.email.rj.org/blankSubCenter?formid=701UG00000Is8uHYARTogether, they ask:How do we distinguish legitimate political critique from antisemitism—not in theory, but in the lived reality of students and educators?The conversation explores how academic ideas like “constructed narratives” move from theory into real-world clashes, and how groupthink on campus often replaces curiosity with certainty.“If I treated all anti-Zionism as antisemitism,” Professor Dollinger explains, “that’s all I would be doing—and I’d burn out.”They also reflect on the emotional toll this moment has taken on Jewish students, many of whom feel isolated or afraid to speak, and on the limits of institutional responses in spaces driven by polarization rather than care.And yet, the conversation does not end in despair.“My hope is in the humanity of individuals,” Professor Dollinger says. Not in slogans or movements, but in moments when people sit down, take a breath, and allow their souls to be open. In those encounters, he argues, understanding—fragile but real—is still possible.This episode is for anyone trying to hold complexity without hardening, to listen without surrendering values, and to believe that individual openness can still push back against fear, flattening, and false binaries.
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Rabbi Rick Jacobs: What Real Partnership Between Israel and the Diaspora Looks Like
What happens to the Israel–Diaspora relationship when solidarity isn’t enough—and silence isn’t an option?In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski (Executive Director of IRAC) and Rabbi Josh Weinberg (URJ VP for Israel & Reform Zionism, Director of ARZA) sit down with Rabbi Rick Jacobs, President of the Union for Reform Judaism, for a wide-ranging, values-driven conversation on Israel, Zionism, and what it means to be in community through crisis.“This moment demands more than solidarity. It demands partnership.”→ Support IRAC’s work for religious freedom, democracy, and equality in Israel:https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/PluralistPodcast→ Sign up for Orly’s weekly updates from Israel:https://www.irac.org/sign-up→ Get Josh’s newsletter on Israel and Reform Zionism:https://cloud.email.rj.org/blankSubCenter?formid=701UG00000Is8uHYARTogether, they ask:How do we show up for Israel—and each other—when the stakes are this high?🎧 In this episode, Rick, Orly, and Josh explore:• Why liberal Jews must not stay silent on Israeli policy: “To criticize the policies of the State of Israel? It’s not only permitted — it’s required.”• A generation struggling with false binaries: “What have we done wrong, that Jewish students don’t know they can say both: I’m a Zionist and I care about Palestinian dignity?”• A shifting paradigm: “We’ve been living near each other for decades. But now, finally, we’re meeting.”• Showing up beyond solidarity: “We’re not just here to give Israel a hug when it’s hurting. We’re here to agitate, to participate, to be real partners.”They also reflect on moments that shaped their leadership—from college in Jerusalem after the Yom Kippur War, to the streets of Tel Aviv during the pro-democracy protests, to campus conversations and congregational tensions across North America.“I’m a Zionist, 100%. And yes, I believe in the dignity and rights of Palestinians. These are not contradictions.”This episode is for anyone navigating Jewish identity, moral clarity, and the hope of a more just future—on both sides of the ocean.
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Introducing the Pluralist Podcast from Both Sides of the Ocean
What does it mean to be a Jewish pluralist in Israel—and why does it matter right now?In the launch episode of The Pluralist Podcast: From Both Sides of the Ocean, Orly Erez-Likhovski, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), and Rabbi Josh Weinberg, Executive Director of ARZA and URJ Vice President for Israel & Reform Zionism, sit down in New York for an honest, thoughtful conversation about Israel, Jewish identity, and the future of pluralism.Together, they ask a deceptively simple question:What does Jewish pluralism look like in Israel today—and why is it so contested?Support IRAC’s work in Israel:👉 https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/PluralistPodcastSign up for Orly’s weekly updates:👉 https://www.irac.org/sign-upSign up for Josh’s weekly updates:👉 https://cloud.email.rj.org/blankSubCenter?formid=701UG00000Is8uHYARIn this conversation, Orly and Josh explore:Why there isn’t really a Hebrew word for pluralism—and what that reveals about Israeli societyThe current status of Reform Judaism in Israel and how it is perceived by Israeli JewsShared struggles around women’s rights, LGBTQ+ equality, and confronting racism in Israel and North AmericaThe evolving relationship between Israel and the Diaspora at a critical moment for Israel’s democratic futureThey also reflect on their personal Zionist journeys:Orly’s story—from a secular Israeli upbringing to discovering Reform Judaism through a preschool in Mevasseret Zion, and finding her life’s work at IRAC defending democracy and challenging religious extremism through lawJosh’s story—from a Chicago youth movement kid to rabbi and Zionist leader, shaped by the Oslo years, the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, and years of living and teaching in IsraelThis episode sets the tone for the entire season of The Pluralist Podcast:honest, nuanced, deeply rooted in love for Israel, and committed to liberal Jewish values—on both sides of the ocean.
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Law, Power, and Democracy: Lessons from Israel and the U.S. | Dahlia Lithwick
➡️ Subscribe to Pluralist Newsletter: Subscribe to the Pluralist — The Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC)➡️ Support IRAC’s work: https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/PluralistPodcastWhat happens when courts stop protecting us—and start protecting power?In this urgent episode of The Pluralist Podcast, IRAC Executive Director Orly Erez-Likhovski is joined by award-winning journalist and legal analyst Dahlia Lithwick to explore the fragile state of democracy in Israel and the United States. From the refusal to appoint justices in Israel to the partisan tilt of the U.S. Supreme Court, the two legal minds unpack what Princeton Professor Kim Lane Scheppele calls “autocratic legalism”—when leaders use the law itself to dismantle democracy from within.📌 Topics include:– The erosion of judicial independence in Israel and the U.S.– How Netanyahu and Trump use legal systems to consolidate power– Why the courts must be both respected and defended– The public’s role in protecting democracy– What IRAC is doing on the legal front lines in Israel🎧 The Pluralist Podcast is where Jewish values meet the struggle for a just, equal, and inclusive Israel.
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Choosing Judaism is no Simple Act of Faith with Rabbi Galia Sadan
Every Shavuot, we read the Book of Ruth—the ancient story of a woman who chose to join the Jewish people with the words: “Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.” But in today’s Israel, conversion is no simple act of faith. It’s a legal, political, and deeply personal challenge.In this special Shavuot episode of The Pluralist, Orly Erez-Likhovski, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center, reflects on her own connection to Ruth’s story and the ongoing struggle for inclusive conversion in Israel. She’s joined by Rabbi Galia Sadan, head of the Reform Movement’s Beit Din for Conversion and rabbi at Congregation Beit Daniel in Tel Aviv.Together, they explore:Why the Chief Rabbinate's monopoly on conversion excludes so manyHow the Reform Movement provides a meaningful, welcoming path to JudaismWhat recent Supreme Court victories mean for converts—and what challenges remainThe real-life stories behind the headlines🎧 Tune in to hear how the spirit of Ruth is alive today—and why keeping the gates open matters more than ever.
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Israeli Reform Judaism: A Story for Today, A Vision for Tomorrow
In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast, IRAC Executive Director Orly Erez-Likhovski sits down with Anna Kislanski, CEO of the Israel Movement for Reform and Progressive Judaism, for a candid and moving conversation about the state of liberal Judaism in Israel today.From Anna’s personal journey—from a secular Soviet upbringing to becoming a leading voice for Reform Judaism in Israel—to the challenges of rising extremism and attacks on religious freedom, this episode explores what it means to lead with hope in a time of fear. Together, Orly and Anna discuss the dramatic rise in public support for Reform Judaism, the trauma and resilience following October 7, and the role our movement is playing in defending democracy, building community, and offering spiritual refuge to a hurting nation.Whether you’re in Tel Aviv or Toronto, this conversation will leave you inspired by the courage of those fighting for a more just, equal, and inclusive Israel.Listen now—because there is more than one way to be Jewish.
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Against Racism, For Hope: A Jewish Vision for Shared Society with Rabbi Oded Mazor
In this powerful episode, IRAC Executive Director Orly Erez-Likhovski sits down with @Rabbi Oded Mazor, spiritual leader of @Kol HaNeshama in Jerusalem, to explore how Jewish values can—and must—be used to fight racism and build a shared society between Jews and Arabs in Israel. From raising his children in a bilingual Hebrew-Arabic school, to leading interfaith initiatives during wartime, Rabbi Mazor speaks candidly about the challenges and necessity of hope in times of deep division. Together, they discuss the troubling rise of racism in Israel, the legal battles IRAC is leading against hate, and how faith can serve as a bridge instead of a barrier.💬 “We are citizens of a country yet to be formed,” Rabbi Mazor says. This episode is a testament to those actively working to shape that country with dignity, courage, and compassion.🎙 Listen now for a conversation about Judaism, justice, and the radical act of believing in a better future.🔗 Don’t forget to subscribe, rate, and share this episode to amplify a Jewish voice for democracy, equality, and shared society.
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Defending Israeli Democracy in the name of Judaism - Rabbi Talia Avnon-Benveniste
In this powerful opening episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez-Likhovski, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center, sits down with Rabbi Talia Avnon-Benveniste, head of the Reform Rabbinical Seminary at Hebrew Union College, to explore the deep connection between Judaism and democracy — and why both are under threat in today’s Israel.Together, they reflect on how the current government, dominated by religious extremists, is weaponizing Judaism to justify anti-democratic policies, including attacks on the judiciary and the abandonment of core Jewish values like human dignity and the sanctity of life. But the conversation is also one of hope: Talia and Orly speak about the unprecedented awakening of Israel’s liberal public, the growing demand for spiritual meaning, and how Reform Judaism is offering an inclusive, egalitarian alternative rooted in tradition.From Talia’s personal journey from a secular kibbutz to becoming a Reform rabbi, to the responsibility we all share in reclaiming Jewish texts and values from the margins, this episode is both a call to action and a vision for a more pluralistic, democratic future — in Israel and beyond.Want to stay in touch?Sign up for The Pluralist - IRAC's weekly newsletter Contact us about arranging a visit in Israel, North America, or a webinarSupport IRAC's work with a monthly or one-time donation
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*TRAILER* Defending Israeli Democracy in the name of Judaism: Rabbi Talia Avnon-Benveniste
Coming Soon:In this powerful opening episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Orly Erez-Likhovski, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center, sits down with Rabbi Talia Avnon-Benveniste, head of the Reform Rabbinical Seminary at Hebrew Union College, to explore the deep connection between Judaism and democracy — and why both are under threat in today’s Israel.Together, they reflect on how the current government, dominated by religious extremists, is weaponizing Judaism to justify anti-democratic policies, including attacks on the judiciary and the abandonment of core Jewish values like human dignity and the sanctity of life. But the conversation is also one of hope: Talia and Orly speak about the unprecedented awakening of Israel’s liberal public, the growing demand for spiritual meaning, and how Reform Judaism is offering an inclusive, egalitarian alternative rooted in tradition.From Talia’s personal journey from a secular kibbutz to becoming a Reform rabbi, to the responsibility we all share in reclaiming Jewish texts and values from the margins, this episode is both a call to action and a vision for a more pluralistic, democratic future — in Israel and beyond.Want to stay in touch?Sign up for The Pluralist - IRAC's weekly newsletter Contact us about arranging a visit in Israel, North America, or a webinarSupport IRAC's work with a monthly or one-time donationVote4Reform in the World Zionist Congress
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Where Israel’s hardest questions meet Jewish values.This podcast brings Israeli lived reality and Diaspora perspective into honest conversation about religion and state, democracy, pluralism, and Jewish responsibility. Hosted by IRAC Executive Director and attorney Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg, Vice President for Israel and Reform Zionism at the Union for Reform Judaism, each episode creates space for thoughtful dialogue — without slogans, and without simplifications.
HOSTED BY
Orly Erez-Likhovski and Josh Weinberg
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