Make Justice


I understand Jewish justice work as covenantal work.

The prophetic tradition teaches me:

  • Ritual without righteousness is hollow
  • Power must be accountable
  • The vulnerable must be centered

My justice commitments include:

  • Economic justice
  • Labor dignity
  • LGBTQ inclusion
  • Anti-racism and coalition building

I believe justice must be disciplined, strategic, and relational. It is not performance — it is practice.


Gallery of Activism

These images document moments of organizing, teaching, coalition work, and public witness.

They show:

  • Clergy standing with workers
  • Torah studied in public space
  • Interfaith partnerships
  • Protest grounded in prayer

Justice is something I pursue in community, not alone.

Pursuing Justice

For me, justice is not a slogan. It is a sustained practice.

To pursue justice, I commit to:

  • Study
  • Organizing
  • Collective action
  • Ethical reflection

This work requires both moral imagination and pragmatic strategy. I try to hold both.

Pillars Of Jewish Justice

The framework that guides my work includes:

Tzelem Elohim — Human Dignity

I believe every person reflects divine image.

Tzedek — Justice

I seek structural fairness, not charity alone.

Arevut — Mutual Responsibility

I accept that we are accountable for one another.

Emet — Truth

I strive for honesty in analysis and action.

Shalom — Wholeness

I pursue repair rather than domination.