A Final Stroll Through the “New Jewish Neighborhood”
An advance copy of my concluding May/June 2026 column for Jmore!
My first Baltimore Justice column appeared in the second issue of Jmore in late 2016. Editor-in-Chief Alan Feiler had asked if I would be willing to share some reflections in the new monthly publication. Frankly, I was surprised. What value would a column about Jewish views on urban-oriented social justice hold in a glossy lifestyle publication geared mostly to a Pikesville crowd? Circumstances in America were changing rapidly, though. Donald Trump had just been elected. Many of us were grappling with what this new political reality would mean—for the Jewish community, the city of Baltimore, indeed for the nation.
And less than two years prior, Freddie Gray’s arrest and subsequent death had unleashed rage, reflection and a reckoning here in Baltimore. I had gained some national attention though my writing as an urban rabbi proximate to the uprising, with perspectives on both the history and legacy of Black-Jewish relations and with thoughts about what our robust Jewish textual heritage might have to offer as guidance. I told Alan I was honored to be asked. Thus began my new adventure as a regular columnist for Jmore!
Over the course of ten years and more than eighty columns, I’ve done my best to uplift local stories and challenge conventional wisdom on contemporary topics such as intersectionality, #MeToo, allyship, and America’s reckoning with Confederate statues. I’ve also written about Baltimore City’s relationship with the racism that defined its antebellum and Jim Crow eras and new possibilities for Druid Hill Park. My interest in what I call relational justice has also meant a strong conviction that we Jews need to stand up for who we are (from Baltimore to Israel) and our essential place in American society—and resist the othering that too often comes with America’s majority Christian culture.
The greatest throughline, however, has been my belief that Beth Am’s historic neighborhood of Reservoir Hill should flourish as what I’ve called The New Jewish Neighborhood, mindful of our history while working to soften artificial and counterproductive boundaries in favor of pluralism, inclusion, and mutual-esteem. This approach has also meant reminding our broader Jewish community at times that love for and investment in the city is both a sacred obligation and a win-win proposition. Where to begin? I’ve humbly suggested it all begins with relationships!
In June, I’ll be completing my time at Beth Am and in Baltimore. Miriam, our family, and I depart with abiding love for our adopted home, many enduring relationships, and great pride in what our synagogue, neighborhood, and city have accomplished. Rabbi Tyler Dratch will be taking over as Senior Rabbi here in Reservoir Hill. I leave our work of advancing urban Jewish Baltimore in his capable hands; the shul has never been stronger and more vibrant!
I wish to convey my abiding gratitude to Alan Feiler and Publisher Scott Rifkin for creating space for conversations about justice in the pages of Jmore. I am humbled to have penned this column for so long and hope that my doing so has contributed meaningfully to our discourse around some of Baltimore’s and the Jewish community’s thornier and most pressing issues.
A decade on, much has changed, but unfortunately, much remains to be accomplished. The forces that divide, minimize, and dehumanize are even more ascendent and persistent than when I began.
The equation (and my related hope for you, dear readers) is the same: an honest accounting of who we are, what we stand for and who we’ve been, plus a compassionate and curious approach to our fellow human beings, equals a more just society.
Here’s how I concluded that first column back in late 2016:
To better inhabit our Jewishness, we must be expansive in our concept of community. Baltimore’s greatness, like America’s greatness, is in its people. We Jews have flourished in this country and city because, despite real obstacles, here we have found a place to call home. So, let’s start at home. Making the world better requires making our neighborhoods better. And, wherever you live, city or county, making your neighborhood better requires making mine better too – and vice versa. Why? Because making Baltimore great means also identifying the parts of it that never were.


