INTERSECTIONS BETWEEN SECULAR & BIBLICAL TORAH

Paolo Botio

The Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming, our largest event of the year, was well attended. This annual event, now in its third year, has become a meaningful way to reclaim, remember, and celebrate these Jewish matriarchs. While Homecoming closed when Zilpah and Bilhah were named for the last time in the Torah, for this year, we have an opportunity to bring their perspectives to our readings of other sections, before Deuteronomy closes the Torah with the accounting of those who become the Israelites. While the final numbers do not name Bilhah or Zilpah, or any woman, the men over the age of twenty could not have been counted without the children these matriarchs, and many nameless women, birthed into the Torah.

The Bilhah Zilpah Project also continues to proliferate–we have been invited into three learning communities over the last six months:

Temple Shalom in Newton Massachusetts invited the Bilhah Zilpah Project for an in-person Scholar-in-Residence weekend which included a Kabbalat Shabbat d’var sermon with learning conversation, Shabbat morning text study, and ritual development workshop.

Dorshei Tzedek in Newton Massachusetts invited the Bilhah Zilpah Project for an in-person Torah service learning. While there, the seventh grade class learned about Igbo Jewry through a report-back on the Teshuva Across the Waters trip to Nigeria on January 11-22, 2025 hosted by the Black Jewish Liberation Collective in collaboration with the Jewish Multiracial Network.

Beit Kohenet invited the Bilhah Zilpah Project for an expanded Bilhah Zilpah: Ancestral Stories virtual text study series exploring midrashic references, that goes through January 11, 2026. Ancestral Stories is the newest offering of the Bilhah Zilpah Project that includes deconstructing fascinating texts and grappling with translating some sections only available in Hebrew… a daunting and exhilarating task that expands the body of study available to know and reclaim these Jewish matriarchs.

Reach out to erica at danserica@gmail.com to explore bringing a customized Bilhah Zilpah Project experience to your learning community, using text study, creative midrash, and creative practice sessions offered in a flexible variety of sessions for a range of ages.

Jews of Color Sanctuary is undergoing some big organizational shifts to strengthen and build on our growth, as we continue to provide a sanctuary where Jewish folks of color can center and ground their relationship with Judaism for their needs in meaningful ways.

While Jews of Color Sanctuary centers Jewish people of color, the experiences of this broadly diverse collective holds vital wisdom for all Jews. That Torah is woven into both affinity and open events. As we enter January and look toward Martin Luther King Day and Black History month, commemorating the birth of a modern prophet and a single month to celebrate influences that black North Americans of African descent had on those in this land, and internationally, is important history for all.

There is profound beauty in weaving the wisdom of the Torah into the mundane everyday of our modern lives. The silent wisdom gleaned from Bilhah and Zilpah offers a powerful invitation through Modern Matriarchs, which links the wisdom of these biblical matriarchs with women throughout history who navigated kindred silences, lack of bodily autonomy, and suffered control exerted over their children.

Borrowing from the Jewish tradition of commemorating yartzeit anniversary of death, modern matriarch Carrie Buck died January 28, 1983 at age 76. Like Zilpah and Bilhah, many don’t recognize the name of Carrie Buck who was sacrificed to normalize controlling women’s wombs. Carrie survived sexual violence, was committed to an institution which controlled her activity, and her child was taken into another family. The events that led to the 1927 Supreme Court ruling that forced the first state mandated sterilization on Carrie, directly affected three generations of Buck women, and continued to sterilize many others, targeting women who were disproportionately people of color and/or impoverished.

Carrie became the test case that weaponized the Virginia Sterilization Act of 1924 as a vehicle of state control over procreation. This bill was enacted on the same day as the Racial Integrity Act of 1924. The flood of surgical procedures performed by Virginia, including sterilizing Carrie’s sister Doris at age 16, encouraged other states to pass similar laws to control women’s autonomy, and influenced using sterilization as a Nazi extermination strategy. Parameters around the sterilization act have been amended, but “the Buck v. Bell ruling has never been formally contested and overturned.” The racialized relationship between these two 1924 acts solicited praise of “Nazi sterilization for economic efficiency” in 1935 and proceeded to have “more black women coercively sterilized under government welfare programs by the 1970s than feeble minded people compelled to be sterilized under the 1920s eugenics laws.”

The tragedy of this history, linking multiple genocides, is compounded through forgetting. The Torah too holds tender parts. Remembering is Jewish wisdom. As we enter a new Gregorian year, listen for intersections between secular and biblical Torah. Listen for the whispers of Bilhah and Zilpah. Remember the sacrifice of Carrie Buck. May learning guide our relationships and actions, and honor the source of creation.

Joyful wishes for continuing sweetness into the Gregorian new year.

BILHAH & ZILPAH ARE COMING HOME

The Bilhah Zilpah Project, which started in 2020 as an independent study project, has become our biggest event of the year since finding a project home at Jews of Color Sanctuary. Homecoming is a series of events open to the entire Jewish community which usually begins on the Sunday before the Shabbat of parashat Vayeitzei, when Zilpah and Bilhah entre the Torah, coinciding during the week Sigd is celebrated as a national Israeli holiday preserved in the history of the Beta Israel people… and is the anniversary of Jews of Color Sanctuary.

After three years of weekly chevruta study, and at numerous events with folks like you, focusing on the lines of Torat Bilhah Zilpah and character exploration, the past year’s study expanded to include relevant midrash and commentary of these matriarchs. This has introduced exciting insight into ancestral connections, divine power, and generational wisdom for survival which will be interspersed throughout and featured at the closing session of this year’s Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming.

However, first, we will welcome Zilpah’s and Bilhah’s return to the Torah through the twenty-four lines that invoke them and explore the ritual dreaming that has percolated up through the spirited engagement of collaborative sessions. Homecoming’s second session will link the wisdom of Bilhah & Zilpah to women throughout history who have navigated kindred silences and lack of bodily autonomy to inspire our community building and care work today.

Today is Sigd, and the Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming begins this Sunday… amidst all of the change happening, these are frameworks that center longing for and returning home, and giving voice to the voiceless… Torah we desperately need right now, and always. There is still time to register. Invite those you are working alongside building up the world to come, to join us as we welcome these matriarchs at three interactive online sessions of ritual dreaming and deepening relationship with the wisdom of Bilhah and Zilpah:

BILHAH & ZILPAH ENTER – 12-1:30pmET November 23: A Homecoming Celebration to welcome Bilhah & Zilpah as they enter the Torah in parashat Vayeitzei. This interactive session will deepen your relationship with the wisdom of these matriarchs, continue ritual dreaming, and mark the anniversary of Jews of Color Sanctuary.

MODERN MATRIARCHS – 3-4:30pmET December 7: Link the wisdom of Bilhah & Zilpah to women throughout history who have navigated kindred silences and lack of bodily autonomy. Explore how their voices can help us understand our modern lives, find community, survive marginalization, and realize abolition.

BILHAH & ZILPAH: ANCESTRAL STORIES – 3-4:30pmET December 21: Catch up on a year’s worth of learning focused on Bilhah & Zilpah through midrashic tales of ancestral connections, divine power, and generational wisdom for survival.

Register at https://bit.ly/BZenter

The celebration of Sigd is powerfully conveyed in the words of Beit Israel scholar Shula Mola in The Sound of Səgd (ስግድ): Reclaiming Language, Memory, and Belonging which invites us into a journey of the power of naming in sacred conversation with a foundational theme of the Bilhah Zilpah Project. May your Sigd be filled with meaning and joy.

Chag Sigd Sameach

SIGD, ANNIVERSARY, AND THE RETURN OF BILHAH & ZILPAH

Jews of Color Sanctuary began as a long-ago seed, many years before its earliest documented memories of 2015. After a multiple year germination, Jews of Color Sanctuary was birthed on Sigd in November 2019. On November 19 of 2025, Jews of Color Sanctuary turns six years old as the entire Jewish community celebrates the Beta Israel preserved, now national Israeli holiday of, Sigd.

It was important to anchor Jews of Color Sanctuary’s beginnings in a way that connected with the Jewish history of people of color. This priority has anchored centering Jewish people of color through holidays, creative practice, text study, and social engagement. Jews of Color Sanctuary strives to be a place where Jewish people of color can turn down the noise of the outside world and ground how we imagine and curate our Jewish identity and journey for ourselves. Whether in affinity or ally-welcome space, we feature the voices, identities, and lives of Jewish people of color.

Jews of Color Sanctuary has engaged more than 596 individuals and collaborated with 22 mission aligned organizations to nurture Jews through hundreds of programs and events. This adds up to a lot of good for the Jewish people.

The Bilhah Zilpah Project grew from independent study that began in December 2020 into a flagship program of Jews of Color Sanctuary with the first annual Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming in 2023. This celebration of silenced Jewish matriarchs has become our biggest event of the year and our fundraising anchor. Bilhah and Zilpah enter the Torah each year in parashat Vayeitzei, which falls on the Shabbat after the Shabbat of the week of Sigd. Homecoming is scheduled before Vayeitzei to foster conversations about the many intersecting topics of this scholarship at institutions across the landscape of participant communities; this often means alignment between the Beta Israel holiday, Jews of Color Sanctuary’s anniversary, and centering Bilhah and Zilpah, a coincidence which feels deeply meaningful.

Registration for the Bilhah Zilpah Homecoming is open. Join us to welcome these matriarchs at three interactive online sessions of ritual dreaming and deepening relationship with the wisdom of Bilhah and Zilpah:

BILHAH & ZILPAH ENTER – 12-1:30pmET November 23: A Homecoming Celebration to welcome Bilhah & Zilpah as they enter the Torah in parashat Vayeitzei. This interactive session will deepen your relationship with the wisdom of these matriarchs, continue ritual dreaming, and mark the anniversary of Jews of Color Sanctuary.

MODERN MATRIARCHS – 3-4:30pmET December 7: Link the wisdom of Bilhah & Zilpah to women throughout history who have navigated kindred silences and lack of bodily autonomy. Explore how their voices can help us understand our modern lives, find community, survive marginalization, and realize abolition.

BILHAH & ZILPAH: ANCESTRAL STORIES – 3-4:30pmET December 21: Catch up on a year’s worth of learning focused on Bilhah & Zilpah through midrashic tales of ancestral connections, divine power, and generational wisdom for survival.

Elul preparations for a new year

I served as staff at Kirva’s recent Spiritual Immersive and was invited to share a short practice during the lead-up to Rosh Hashanah. Kirva’s social justice approach to mussar, an ancient Jewish ethical practice, is a valued collaborative partner with Jews of Color Sanctuary. The five days we spent together at Pearlstone strengthened our practice, reinforced bonds, and built community as we used mussar to align our actions with our values. Learn how to bring Dismantling Racism from the Inside Out into your community. Meanwhile, I hope this practice enriches your preparations for the High Holy Days.

L’Shana tovah

Teshuva Across Waters

Teshuvah Across the Waters (TAW) is an exciting opportunity to bridge African diasporic Jews/Hebrews with African Jewish/Hebrew communities.

As a Jewish person of unknown African and Indian heritage, I have deep yearnings to experience ancestral Jewish traditions that have been severed through colonization, enslavement, and assimilation. Supporting the connections that will be forged through this project will enhance global Jewry’s collective efforts of Teshuvah, aligning values and relationships with ourselves, God, and the world.

TAW seeks to strengthen bonds across the Jewish Diaspora by lifting up the traditions and histories of African Jewry within the global Jewish community needed for an holistic and thriving Jewish peoplehood on our path toward spiritual redemption. Please join the incredible support for this project to increase connection our collective Jewish ancestry. A financial contribution of any amount can help us bridge these waters.

Jewish End-of-Life Practices & Rituals

Jews of Color Sanctuary is honored to have conducted research on Jewish end-of-life practices and rituals among Jewish people of color released in March 2024. The report, contracted by Kavod v’Nichum with the support of the Jews of Color Initiative (JOCI), is an invitation to center the voices and experiences of Jewish people of color in ways that honor connection to and strengthen a Judaism reflecting the richness of Jewish diasporic traditions.

Download the report and read more in JOCI’s Galim newsletter.

Dreaming the world to come

I am proud to have served as the editor for the 5785 Dreaming the World to Come. The planner will begin shipping around Tu b’Av (August 19). I am delighted to offer a friend’s of the editor 18% off discount code TUBAV5785 that is good between August 18 through September 1.

FUN FACT: All three of the editor staff are born in the month of September!

The planner will be a beautiful place to keep your appointments on track during both the Gregorian and Jewish lunar calendar and nourish your spirit with ritual offering from 12 AMAZING contributors! One of the reasons I said yes to shepherding this project was the commitment to feature Jewish people of color, among many other identities, whose creative voices comprise 8 of the 12 contributors.

If you are new to this project, here is a description:

Dreaming the World to Come planner weaves ritual offerings from diverse fonts of wisdom through our Jewish year. It is our attempt to create something beautiful and defiant that shows we are here, fighting to keep Jewishness anchored in resistance, justice, and mystical tradition.

The planner cover invokes the Jewish sea monster Leviathan, who offers medicine needed in these times. Moving through darkness, unperceived; the fugitivity practiced by those whose existence has been criminalized and controlled. The Leviathan is a friend, lover, and protector of those escaping enslavement and incarceration, those whose perspectives are intentionally buried, whose inherent rights have been denied, who are forced underground for survival.

Beneath the face of the waters, in the depths,

the monster Leviathan lies coiled.

She moves in the darkness;

we cannot see her, yet we feel her power.