
If Israel is so central to Jewish life… what does that mean for the millions of Jews in the diaspora?
In this episode of Behind the Bima, the Rabbis speak with Yael Leibowitz about the growing tension between Israel and the diaspora, and the deeper question of what holds the Jewish people together. Drawing from her own journey from the United States to Israel, Yael reflects on how lived experience reshapes identity, perspective, and even the way we read Tanakh.
Through the lens of Ezra-Nehemiah, the conversation explores a moment in Jewish history when not everyone returned, and what that meant for leadership, community, and continuity. Rather than offering simple answers, the episode examines how Jewish life has always required holding competing realities at once, and what happens when that balance begins to strain.
This season of Behind the Bima is sponsored by Julie Charlestein & Darryl Benjamin in honor of their grandparents, Morton & Malvina Charlestein, and their children, Ruby and Maccabi Benjamin.
This conversation explores:
The widening experiential gap between Israeli and diaspora Jews
Living through crisis vs. observing it from afar
The challenge of maintaining Jewish unity across distance
Aliyah as an ideal vs. diaspora as a lived reality
The emotional and cultural differences between communities
Ezra-Nehemiah and the reality of a partial return
Rebuilding Jewish life without full national unity
Foreign leadership as part of Jewish history (Cyrus and beyond)
How Tanakh reflects real-time Jewish challenges, not abstractions
The risk of oversimplifying complex Jewish questions