cover image Spiritual Activism: A Jewish Guide to Leadership and Repairing the World

Spiritual Activism: A Jewish Guide to Leadership and Repairing the World

Avraham Weiss, . . Jewish Lights, $24.99 (193pp) ISBN 978-1-58023-355-2

What can one person possibly do to change the world? Rabbi Weiss, a Jewish activist par excellence who has participated in hundreds of demonstrations, marches, vigils, hunger strikes and acts of nonviolent civil disobedience, outlines his answers clearly in this handbook. Activism is not reckless or impulsive behavior, he writes.Its goal—to help others and thereby to help repair the world—is based on a serious analysis of moral, political and logistical issues, bound by Torah. Weiss describes the foundations of spiritual activism and delineates its principles: choosing the cause, making partners, designing the strategy, leading other people and seeing the big picture. He expands and elucidates each facet with personal examples, from his efforts to free Soviet Jews to protesting Yasser Arafat’s Nobel Peace Prize and installing handicapped ramps in his synagogue. Though the book has a Jewish focus, its principles are universal.Readers may not agree with all of Weiss’s choices, but it is hard not to be moved when he asks, “For me the question is not, Why go to the end of the world to help another Jew? But rather, How can one not go to the end of the world to help another Jew?” (May)