• Skip to main content

New Voices

Journalism by Jewish college students, for Jewish college students.

  • Magazine
  • Magazine
    • Browse by Section
    • Arts & Culture
    • Campus & Community
    • Humor
    • Investigative Series
    • Poetry
    • Politics
    • Archive
  • About
    • About Us
    • Editorial Team
    • Opportunities
    • JSPS Historical Papers
  • Events
  • Get Involved
    • Newsletter
    • Write For Us
    • Donate
      • New Voices Summer 2022 Fundraiser

Archive

Archive

  • Arts & Culture
  • Campus & Community
  • Fiction
  • Investigative Series
  • Opinion
  • Poetry
  • Fresh Torah

Building the Great Student Constituency for Peace

By Joanna Kramer | 2 Comments

“Failure will kill the political constituency of the two-state solution,” warned American Task Force on Palestine Director Ghaith Al-Omari at an event co-sponsored by J Street U Brown and Brown RISD Hillel last week. These chilling words reminded me of why it is so essential to demonstrate support for Secretary of State John Kerry’s current […]

A Jewish Daughter Reads ‘The Jewish Daughter Diaries’

By Dani Plung | 1 Comment

I must have told my mother one too many times that she embodies the Jewish Mother stereotype. (She really does, by the way.  Ask, as one example, the ten cast and crew members of a show I worked on in high school for whom my mother provided enough food for forty people, lest anyone starve […]

Finding Hope in Poland

By Sophie Katzman | Comments Off on Finding Hope in Poland

When I told people I was going to Poland for spring break, I received all sorts of responses: “Why are you going there? Isn’t it just concentration camps?” “Wouldn’t you rather be on a beach?” “I would never go to Poland after what they did to the Jews.” To be honest, before I left it […]

The Black and White Necessity for Grey Zone Judaism

By Deborah Pollack | Comments Off on The Black and White Necessity for Grey Zone Judaism

This academic year I am a part of the Peoplehood Project: a UJA sponsored program that brings together students from Columbia/Barnard Hillel, Oranim College in northern Israel, and ZWST, a German Jewish organization. Each cohort spends time learning in their respective home countries, then, over winter break, all three groups spend time traveling and learning […]

Toward a Queerer, Jewier Tomorrow

By Amram Altzman | 1 Comment

When I was in high school, I had this fantasy where I told myself that I would come out of the closet as soon as I got that one text from a friend asking if they could tell me something, and then they would tell me that they are gay. That fantasy was never realized. […]

White Guilt and Evil Tongues

By David G. | Comments Off on White Guilt and Evil Tongues

As with much of Leviticus, the material found in this week’s Torah reading, Parashat Tazria, can make us, with our modern sensibilities, squirm a bit. With the description of tzarat, a specific skin disease, the text seems to be stating that any who have strange marks on their skin are sinners who must be isolated […]

Learning From Ari Shavit’s ‘My Promised Land’

By Alex E. Lipton | Comments Off on Learning From Ari Shavit’s ‘My Promised Land’

  I My stepfather always told me that all the best books have maps.  So when I opened Ari Shavit’s My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel a map was the first thing I looked for.  I found it on the first page of the book, just after the title page and the […]

Coming of Age as South Dakota’s Token Jew

By Andy Engelmann | Comments Off on Coming of Age as South Dakota’s Token Jew

Two calls, a text, and three Facebook messages, all in less than a week.  That was how I learned about B’rith Shalom, South Dakota’s first Jewish student culture club at South Dakota State University.  You see, for years, I had been known as “The Jew.”  Growing up in the middle the Sioux Empire, we were […]

Questioning the Role of Zionism in Jewish Identity

By Dani Plung | 1 Comment

I don’t remember much about my brief stint on the high school crew team, probably because it only lasted one spring season when I was fourteen. Most of what I do remember is meaningless—and not exceedingly positive—like not being able to carry my share of the boat and thereby forcing a coach to take over […]

Why the Jewish College Student Survey Matters to You

By Derek M. Kwait | 1 Comment

For all its hype, the Pew report missed a lot of college-aged Jews, and therefore might have missed a lot about us. Two professors from Trinity College in Connecticut, Barry Kosmin and Ariela Keysar, hope to get the true picture of who we are and what we want by creating an online survey accessible here […]

  • « Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 88
  • 89
  • 90
  • 91
  • 92
  • …
  • 317
  • Next »

© 2021 New Voices. All Rights Reserved.
Site by Chris Hershberger-Esh