Fotografía de autor
3 Obras 140 Miembros 1 Reseña

Sobre El Autor

Rachel Cowan was born Rachel Ann Brown in Princeton, New Jersey on May 29, 1941. She received a bachelor's degree from Bryn Mawr College and a master's in social work from the University of Chicago. In 1963, she met her future husband Paul Cowan while she was tutoring black children bound for newly mostrar más integrated schools in Maryland. They married in 1965 and together registered black voters in Mississippi and served in the Peace Corps in Ecuador. They began exploring Judaism in their mid-30s. She converted in 1980 and became a Rabbi. Rabbi Cowan was a leader in helping couples navigate the shoals of mixed marriage, injecting contemplative practices like meditation and mindfulness into religious life, and designing healing services to comfort the sick and dying. She was the program director for Jewish life of the Nathan Cummings Foundation for 14 years. She left in 2004 to run the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. She wrote several books including Growing Up Yanqui and Mixed Blessings: Overcoming the Stumbling Blocks in an Interfaith Marriage written with her husband. She died from brain cancer on August 31, 2018 at the age of 77. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: Rabbi Rachel Cowan

Obras de Rachel Cowan

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1941
Fecha de fallecimiento
2018-08-31
Género
female
Ocupaciones
rabbi
social worker
Relaciones
Cowan, Paul (spouse)

Miembros

Reseñas

Well-done discussion of the issues that may arise when Jews and Christians marry. The Cowans ran interfaith workshops to help couples understand and, ideally, resolve their problems and used what they learned from the participants along with their own personal experiences in writing this book. Frequently,what someone thought was their partner's idiosyncrasies turned out to be something common to the latter's heritage. The many examples, while interesting and enlightening, made the book long. On the other hand, I don't know what I would delete.
The book was written in a1987, when about 35 percent of American Jews married non-Jews; today the number is much higher and the intermarriage has become more accepted by families and many religious communities. It is not entirely clear how the Cowans define what it means to be Jewish; certainly many of the Jews in the book identify ethnically, but not religiously.

Paul Cowan is the first-person narrator; his wife, Rachel, was busy in rabbinical school. As explained in the preface, Paul wrote and Rachel edited. Paul is also the author of An Orphan in History.
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Denunciada
raizel | Jan 23, 2017 |

Premios

Estadísticas

Obras
3
Miembros
140
Popularidad
#146,473
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
1
ISBNs
5

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