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… a number of memoirs have been published by people who … made the journey away from ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities. Michael Lesher’s beautifully written book explores that trajectory in reverse … a deeply personal account of what religious Jews would call his ‘return’ to Judaism. -Hella Winston, sociologist, investigative journalist and author of books including, Unchosen: The Hidden Lives of Hasidic Rebels
In this memoir of Jewishness, Michael Lesher explores his decision to reroute his life as a secular Jew into Orthodox Judaism. There are many other Jews who, like Michael, have recently moved back toward traditional religion. (There’s even a popular phrase among the Orthodox: B.T., short for the Hebrew phrase ba'alei t'shuvah,
or those who return. ) And this pattern is probably part of a general religious trend rightward in today’s United States.
But Michael didn’t choose a religious life as part of a social trend. Nor is his story as simple as a steady movement in one direction. His questions haven’t stopped, they have only evolved. And he is evolving with them. This is a story, for better or worse, about transformation rather than certainty. About how excavating one’s religious past, with all its values, influences and limitations, carries its own rewards.
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… a number of memoirs have been published by people who … made the journey away from ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities. Michael Lesher’s beautifully written book explores that trajectory in reverse … a deeply personal account of what religious Jews would call his ‘return’ to Judaism. -Hella Winston, sociologist, investigative journalist and author of books including, Unchosen: The Hidden Lives of Hasidic Rebels
In this memoir of Jewishness, Michael Lesher explores his decision to reroute his life as a secular Jew into Orthodox Judaism. There are many other Jews who, like Michael, have recently moved back toward traditional religion. (There’s even a popular phrase among the Orthodox: B.T., short for the Hebrew phrase ba'alei t'shuvah,
or those who return. ) And this pattern is probably part of a general religious trend rightward in today’s United States.
But Michael didn’t choose a religious life as part of a social trend. Nor is his story as simple as a steady movement in one direction. His questions haven’t stopped, they have only evolved. And he is evolving with them. This is a story, for better or worse, about transformation rather than certainty. About how excavating one’s religious past, with all its values, influences and limitations, carries its own rewards.