I am so grateful for the relationships fostered by this community that has taught me that a shul does not stop at the sanctuary walls ...

Margo Hughes-Robinson is a rabbinical student at the Jewish Theological Seminary. A New Yorker by birth, she grew up in communities all over the United States before attending Clark University, where she graduated in 2015 with degrees in Theatre and Jewish Studies. Margo is also a proud alumna of the Conservative Yeshiva Lishma Fellowship and the Hartman Rabbinic Student Seminar. During her time in rabbinical school, she has enjoyed professional endeavors with T’ruah, Kulanu, Inc., Fort Tryon Jewish Center in New York City, Adat Israel in Guatemala City, and as an Interfaith Educator at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. When she is not learning and teaching, Margo still occasionally appears onstage—most recently in Providence, RI, and in Jerusalem.
I am so grateful for the relationships fostered by this community that has taught me that a shul does not stop at the sanctuary walls ...
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
What new depth may we derive from the priestly blessing, in a moment when exile feels all too acute?
...since the COVID-19 virus has disrupted almost every aspect of daily life, I’ve been isolating with my interfaith family—my observant Jewish spouse, Catholic mom, and ...
...since the COVID-19 virus has disrupted almost every aspect of daily life, I’ve been isolating with my interfaith family—my observant Jewish spouse, Catholic mom, and ...
...since the COVID-19 virus has disrupted almost every aspect of daily life, I’ve been isolating with my interfaith family—my observant Jewish spouse, Catholic mom, and ...