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- 🎤︎︎ New Five Books Episode: Rabbi Angela Buchdahl on Finding Yourself in the Story
🎤︎︎ New Five Books Episode: Rabbi Angela Buchdahl on Finding Yourself in the Story

Angela Buchdahl was born in Seoul, the daughter of a Korean Buddhist mother and Jewish American father. One of America’s most prominent rabbis, Rabbi Angela discusses her memoir Heart of a Stranger and the importance of finding yourself in a story. She shares how she discovered belonging within the Jewish narrative itself - seeing in Abraham and Sarah’s journey of boundary crossing a reflection of her own. In Jewish folktales, she recognized her own longing to reach deeper truths, and in Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste, she saw her experience of feeling outside the Jewish community reflected back to her. Stories, she explains, are the quickest way to build empathy. In sharing her own, she invites us all to see how our sense of otherness can become a profound source of Jewish belonging.
Profoundly spiritual from a young age, by sixteen she felt the first stirrings to become a rabbi. Despite the naysayers and periods of self-doubt—Would a mixed-race woman ever be seen as authentically Jewish or chosen to lead a congregation?—she stayed the course, which took her first to Yale, then to rabbinical school, and finally to the pulpit of one of the largest, most influential congregations in the world.
Rabbi Angela Buchdahl’s Five Books
1. All-of-a-Kind Family by Sydney Taylor
2. Elijah’s Violin and Other Jewish Fairy Tales selected and retold by Howard Schwartz
3. Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent by Isabel Wilkerson
5. Heart of a Stranger: An Unlikely Rabbi’s Story of Faith, Identity, and Belonging by Angela Buchdahl
Also Mentioned:
Other Episodes Featuring Rabbis and Communal Leaders:
What Else We’re Reading Now:
Over There: A Novel by Jane Loeb Rubin
We hope you enjoy this week’s episode! Tell us what you think at [email protected] or by replying to this email!
The Five Books is a partner organization of the Jewish Book Council, a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying and celebrating Jewish literature and supporting authors and readers. Stay up to date on the latest in Jewish literature! https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/
The Five Books is fiscally sponsored by FJC, a 501c3 public charity.
