Displaying 1 - 10 of 42
Thanks for Your Submission
Thanks for submitting your item to our listings! You're the best! If we have any questions we'll shoot you an email. In the meantime, relax and pat yourself on the back!.
Submit a Class
Use this form to submit your URJ congregation or community's A Taste of Judaism ®, Introduction to Judaism, Hebrew, or other Jewish learning classes that are available to the general public, including participants who are outside your congregation or community.
Submit a Blessing
Use the form below to send us a blessing we can share with the Reform community.
Submit an Event
Please note: this submission form is not for classes or worship services. To add your Judaism class to our listings , use this form instead.
Share your Recipe!
Share your yummy recipe with us and the whole Reform community!
Submit a Job Posting
URJ member congregations and Reform Movement affiliates are welcome to submit job openings to be considered for listing on this website.
Resolutions
The resolutions adopted by the URJ represent the evolutionary changes in its stands on many political, social, economic, and humanitarian issues.
History of the Reform Movement
The URJ was founded in 1873 by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise as the Union of American Hebrew Congregations.
Release to Right the World
In anticipation of the shmita year 5775 (1994), Reform Judaism magazine interviewed Rabbi Kevin M. Kleinman, then associate rabbi of Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel in Elkins Park, PA, and a member of the Jewish environmental organization Hazon’s Shmita Project Network.
The First Battle for a Free Pulpit
In a bitter and ironic twist of history, some rabbis have surrendered two hard-won victories of more than a century ago: the right to a free pulpit and to speak publicly in favor of Israel and Zionism. Both rights were secured largely through the efforts of Reform pioneer Rabbi Stephen S. Wise.