The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Angela Buchdahl: This Passover, have faith in the story of the Exodus

18 snips
Apr 4, 2026
Angela Buchdahl, senior rabbi of NYC’s Central Synagogue and memoirist, reflects on faith, identity and belonging. She discusses rising antisemitism and how Jewish identity has sharpened. She connects the Passover story to resilience and strangerhood. She also speaks about congregational responses to October 7, ties to Israel, and civic conversations in New York.
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ANECDOTE

Book Tour Felt Like Serving An Extended Congregation

  • Rabbi Angela Buchdahl treated her national book tour as an extension of her Central Synagogue pulpit, meeting the livestream community she already preached to weekly.
  • She did 27-city tour over two months (45 events) and felt those audiences were her extended congregants who watch her live streams.
INSIGHT

Antisemitism Pushed Jewish Identity To The Fore

  • October 7 and rising antisemitism pushed Jewish identity from private practice to a primary public identity for many American Jews.
  • Buchdahl says anti-Semitic rhetoric entered workplaces and schools, making belonging and communal events surge nationwide.
INSIGHT

Passover As A Lesson In Empathy And Resilience

  • Buchdahl frames the Passover master narrative as a template: Jews repeatedly experience being strangers, and that experience builds empathy and resilience.
  • She argues the 'heart of a stranger' trains compassion and grit born from historical oppression.
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