Support

Give Where It Counts

Before you give a cent to us, give it to the communities and causes that make Jewish life possible. That is the honest order of things — and the whole spirit of this guide.


The New Jew was not built in a vacuum. It was built by people who were welcomed back into rooms they had drifted away from — by congregations that kept a seat, and by institutions that kept the tradition legible and alive. If this project has been useful to you, the most useful thing you can do in return is to strengthen those rooms and those institutions directly. Start with a synagogue. Start with a cause that keeps worldwide Judaism strong. We would rather your generosity land there first than here.

First · Congregations

The communities that shaped this guide.

Each of these congregations left a mark on how we think about welcome, learning, and prayer. Give to any of them.

Phoenix, Arizona

Congregation Beth Tefillah

A warm, traditional community in the Valley where several of our editors first learned to daven. Its come-as-you-are Shabbat table shaped how this guide thinks about welcome.

Scottsdale, Arizona

The New Shul

An independent, unaffiliated congregation that rebuilds Jewish life from first principles each year — proof that a community can be both serious and improvised.

Mesa, Arizona

Chabad of Mesa

A Chabad-Lubavitch center whose emissaries meet returning Jews exactly where they are — no prerequisites, no judgment, and an open door on any given Friday.

Scottsdale, Arizona

Congregation Beth Israel

A large Reform congregation with deep roots in adult education and social justice across the desert Southwest, and a lifelong-learning ethos this project admires.

New York, New York

Romemu

A Jewish Renewal community on the Upper West Side known for embodied, musical, spiritually intense prayer — where many people first felt that liturgy could actually move them.

Los Angeles, California

Sinai Temple

One of L.A.'s oldest and largest Conservative congregations, a center of Torah learning whose clergy and classes have guided countless adults back into the text.

Second · Causes

Institutions that keep Judaism strong.

Text, journeys, and the education of the next generation — the infrastructure of a living tradition.

The free library of Jewish texts

Sefaria

The free digital library of Jewish texts — Tanakh, Talmud, Midrash, and commentary, interlinked and translated. Quietly, it is the single most useful tool a returning Jew can own, and it costs nothing to use.

Talmud, opened to all

The Steinsaltz Center

Continues Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz's life's work of making the Talmud reachable — in Hebrew and translation. No single project did more to make Jewish text feel possible for beginners.

A first journey

Birthright Israel

Sends young Jewish adults on a first, free trip to Israel — for many, the beginning of exactly the story this guide picks up and continues.

The next generation

Our Jewish Children

Supports Jewish children's education and care, so that the tradition an adult returns to is still living, still taught, and still waiting for the generation after.


Finally · The Costs of This Guide

Pay what it’s worth to you.

The New Jew is free to read, and always will be. But editors, servers, and the siddur reader do cost money to keep running. If it has been worth something to you, name your price — there is no suggested obligation, and this isn’t a donation.

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